The Conyers weekly. (Conyers, Ga.) 18??-1888, January 04, 1888, Image 4
fakM and garden. Pork for Home Use. It may, possibly, pay best to have large, fat porkers for market purposes, to suit the needs of the packers of pork, but who want the large, heavy pork, when it comes to the home supply, we want our pork with but breeds a small of-pigs, portion of fat. There are some noticeably so the small English York¬ shires, which produce a while very they large pro¬ portion of fat, and, may please the eye of most persons, when in the living fonn,wnen kiiled and dressed the large proportions of tat makes 1 meat undesna j e foi mos p e. does not pay to raise pigs so eh, o - most so for lard h ith the exception well-known’ brads'of pigs are" in their purity, rather too much inclined to lay on fat to make them desirable for home use, and we have for a number of years been experimenting to find out woublVst bow to produce just such porkers as meet, the requirements.', While the breed - ing has a great deal to do with having P nhffs *• a°very important ‘ 1 ’part* U l and the quality »f - the pork depends m a great , measure hftvinw on proper feeding. confined We de not 11k.. Itke having Ihf. the rtnrlrora porkers confined to tn small small pens, even quickly though the pigs have may fatten up more than if they plenty Of exercise room, hot let them have the run of a good clover lot during the sum mer and fall, ringing the pigs so that ; they cannot with destroy the sod, different then supply them grain, in forms, , daily, with plenty of fresh water, at 1 least once a day, as much as they will drink. ITogs can be* kept in fair condi tion on plenty of clover and water, but to make tliem improve as they should, grain should be given. A good summer feed is oue made by having corn and oats ground together, say in proportion of one bushel of corn to two of oats, then making a slop ot this. Our plan is to half fill a barrel with this mixture and then‘moisten the mass (with cold water in summer and hot in winter), do ing this in the afternoon or evening, and then feeding it, diluted to the proper consistency, next morning, by which time it will have soured sufficiently. It is well to add a couple of handfuls of salt as well as a half peck or so of bits of charcoal. I hi^ charcoal can readily be secured on the farm, where wood fires are used, by sieving-^ie wood ashes and using the bits ot charcoal which remain in the sieve. Breeder*' Journal. Cultivating the Pear Tree. m V1 "f mt *V estin S l> a ptT was read ‘ recent meet the Horli a a ini' ol “KToSTtf.MU™SThh C SIX’ limit, out belongs to Luiope ana Asia, where It may be found in its wild or primitive state. There it exhibits more tnrilt tnan t lie apple, and grows t° greater dimensions. From the East it hiw b«en carried to our continent, wlier, it has found a sou adapted to its growth, develop the fruit Z-! CUl rh The d pear t0 n, is - 0rc said ™! to y of seasons r‘m^ for <>00 years SUrVi r,. (pi o bah | 1C n y that was before the introduction ot blight), and to attain to an enormous size, as wbifh st, f ° “ er ° 0, lU ’ which shades b halt an acre and 1 lias pro ?™lf d oftl 0I, ‘ f season ,S trC ° 600 ln thC bushels V1C1 f ty •Hil TT’ o the T • ° °r U f f, f* T V ./ e ,™’ C ° UUtry P ro ’ - , bU * , M ; 1S (, f f la,r fr ; nt ? bev r; , , V ably heavy clay loam, with heavy clay subsoil, well underdrained, although some varieties do well on a gra\ r elly sub soil. In fact, the pear will succeed in a greater variety of soil and climate than anv anyotnei Other of OI our 0U1 tuitivatqailtuts. cultivated fruits There IJiue fore, ll you have the most desirable situation, all will be well; if not, select the best you have. J laving determined where and how many trees we will be'de- plant thc selection Ftht of varieties obS should plant!* term ned 1 markct^I would'phnR for which w«. If for few varieties, say Madeleine, for very Bartlett, Duchessc. Beurre d'Anjou and Lawrence. If for amateur purposes, or for home use, 1 would plant aboiit as follows, which 1 will name in the order of Sheldon, ripening: Madeleine, Tyson, Bartlett, Seckel, White Doyenne, Ducli esse, Beurre <TAnjou, Lawrence and Beurre Easter, or some other late variety. This will give us au abundance of choice fruit the season. If possible, go in person to some rcli able nurseryman and have him take two or three stout assistants to his two-year old trees (have have none it older); select in a good j i stocky tree, taken up your presence and immediately mossed, that it j may not dry or come in contact with the i air for any length of time, for therein lies the length ol life and thrift of your j \ trees. Then pay the nurseryman well for his extra trouble. The ground hav-1 plowing ing been in previously the fall, turning prepared under for deep lib a eral supply of manure, aud marked twenty-live feet each way, deep, dig two feet square and one and a half till with rich loam to the proper depth to receive the tree, which should be a very little deeper that it stood in the well nursery. The the soil should be tramped around roots aud watered,' if dry; then two inches of dry soil should be put on top. The soil should be carefully cultivated for a few years, or until thc trees com menee top-dressing, bearing. Then, w witi ith be an oeca sional and they able invite to care for themselves, you may your friends to accompany you to the pear orchard, where, with honest pride you may call his attention to the golden tints of the Bartlett, the magnificent size °f the Huchesse, and tlic rich brown russet ol the ever loved Iseckel: and there HU your basket: carry them to your better halt, and then to the better half of your friend, and together enjoy a feast fit for the gods. In closing I must add that most varieties are better d ripened in the house, especially the lattei sorts, although there are exceptions >hf ui!e. Farm and Garden Xotps,, . It is . always , , better to teed the surplus of the farm than to sell a off the same. The bull thisde. unlike the Canada thistle. d(K*s not propagate from under ground r»>ots. but eau easily be got rid of in two season 5 by not allow ingany plants to go to seed The better farmers understand botany the better success might attend their sowing seed, and better fruits and crops might be grown. The manure made upon the farm should all be employed first, and then if there is a deficiency, resort to artificial means of supply from without. If farmers , fully , „ they appreciated would , , take the , better value , of wood ashes, care of them, and spread them upon mow - ing land or apply them to growing crons, They contain the essential inorganic elc meats of plants. Those who have mulched tree trunks during the summer, to retain moisture in the soil, should be careful to remove the arse litt in t ; me or ; t w ju become a refugef ormiceduring the winter. Again, j he re be so much mnhhihg done ns t0 mchne . roots to come loo nea. the sur fare. Because „ pigs huddle together a nig ^ f."' 1 th " s Jmn’ fo'r ,uk lat ft 5 rt int Jem J than J. oi J ^ • { alw;( ' £ mt ted 1Vo m wind-.' The P*S 1,as littIe hair on its Uody, mid is more sensitive to colcl than any other f arm stock. . .. Aitci After belli" bein huddled nuoaiea ■up un u,1 ^ er cover il ‘* m £ ht > tllC,l exposure in o ig * all thc more Ukely 3 to be in . . J ullous - - It has generally been supposed that tomatoes which, matuic (lining cloud \ or rainy seasons are more acid than those that mature in bright, hot sunshine. We have found, however, that the late to matoes, which were picked those off to which ripen under cover are notso acid as ripened on the vines. they still are notso add Wgh-flavored, it is true, but abundant less Nearly all the tomatoes ripened now under so in the markets are cover, and they are larger, more shapely, with less crack and rot than the earlier supply. -Rural New Yorker. , Roots for table use should not be al lowed to freeze, or shrink from drying. The supply for the kitchen may be packed dry in barrels or boxes, covered with earth, and placed in the cellar. Large quantities should be stored in trenches. Cabbages may also be stored in trenches. Onions may be placed in barrels and Jha whole deeply covered with hay. Onion sets are best kept by planting, if the soil isopen. Parsley may be iiad when wanted, by planting roots in a box ot' ! soil and keeping it in the kitchen or other light room whore it will not freeze. We have long thought that much of the soft com almost wasted in fattening to'cows, pork Iniiffiit he more profitably fed ; The well-fed pig rejects, the soft green co p which in this stage has a good deal 01 .Hi 8 digestion, good contrary ttut to Of P»""i" i>»“'. » “t »S 0 . the cow. (five the fattening pig n greater J () t j 00( ] iUlr l ] ie will not only thrivc better but make more healthful, jf not quite so fat, pork. The corn judi ~i l^ter'returnB, mis lv fod tn keepiBglhcm'fromgrow- milch cows will u-ive far : 1U r poor ns cows are ant to do at this when not given extra feed. w from lon? experience and observation that a groat mistake is | j tl ordering ^ large f? size 6 to 4 year ]d f it treps j n ' re rc „ce to a smaller y f 0 kl the freight or express ‘r charges are double. Second, j la trees .ire more likely to die be f .„use of poorer roots, in proportion to the size of the tree. Third, they can not be packed as well and tret”s. go a long journey as safely as smaller In our long ex H we have found that a medium \ ir, m rjtji kke mysteiy of the foimatron of the scab is explained by the Connecti cut Experiment Station: the skin of Die potato is a layer of cork-cells, and when injured it heals by the formation ol anew cork layer. When thc tuber grows IU •• hcr watei, . net sou,_ .. tne 1|u coik ,, layer or in a . thickens at various points, pioducuig numy little warts on the surface, andien dering thc cuticle less resistant of decay. If the excess of water continues fora con »iderable time, decay sets in and the starch and tissues of the tuber become discolored. Hut it the deca\ u auesten, the cork layer iorms between the dc caved and healthy parts and the potato I s scabby. Some farmers have tried especially banking the up the basement of barns, roadway to the doors, with loose stones, covering the whole with dirt. This makes a dry roadway, but the objection is that these covered stone heaps become the harbor for rats, and it is almost im possible to destroy or drive them away, The best rule is to keep farm tools housed when not iu use. If, however, they have been left out until now, uo time should be.lost in getting them in.. The wastage from exposure of costly implements respousi- is enormous every year, and it is ble for considerable of the hard times that some farmers complain of No mat ter how soon tools are rusted out, the farmer cannot escape paying for them, The principle is well settled that it is a mistake to have a great variety of apple trecs i n the same orchard. There is even danger that a near neighborhood jurious of maU y kinds will lead to in “cross jug” 0 f qualities by thc implantation of differing kinds of pollen orchardists in thc of same New C alyx. The great York, on thc Hudson, who used to ship thousands of barrels annually to the Lon don market, planted and engrafted but f cw varieties, and brought their fruit to fjreat perfection. Better have an orchard of one thousand trees of pippihs "ten hundred or some otke r specific kinds, than t ree>g) each hundred of differing species disposed hap-ha/.ard over the ground, even though planted systematically forty feet An ohio apiarist . x lr . H . H . Buff, says cellar-wintering; it is.essential to j ^ the bees very quiet, in perfectly ters< and that a cel ar ca> liee ^ e( j to the dwelling-house, where I vc „ etabks and other things arc kept, doit. A cellar containing bees, he adds< sWd „ bp visite d except for tbe A , mrpose K e f examining into their con di( n If we expPl . t to winter bees in tbe ce ]j ar we can let them remain on their summer stands until cool weather sets in. at which time we have every thing ? in readiness. The cellar should be so a ranffed lhat W( . rau nMe nd to the wants of any colony that mav need pur attention. The hives sDomd be so qrranged that uo adjusting of them is to j )P done alter 1 enter ing them to the cellar. * Hands All Bound. A curious ending of an ancient ven¬ detta is reported from Bitti, Sardinia, where, in the presence of the Archbishop, Perfect and other dignitaries, 670 mem¬ bers of two families knelt in church, for mally foreswore their long-standing feud, and received the prelate's benediction. TM whole popu iation of the vicinity held, was present, and later on a barbecue was w jj ere p en oxen seventy-fonr pigs and ; two hundred weight of macaroni were consumed ’---»-——_— One of the most paying features of some farms has been the raising of geese. The best quality of feathers can be produced for much less cost than the poorest quality of wool, and will bring readily in our markets four times the price of thelatter. Thebe was more money made, in pro portion to amount of truck shipped, at 0s vka > Miss -> last season, than at any - other point on the railroad. They watched the markets and shipped nitelli -™tly. How to Save Money, and we mi&ht also say—time and pain as well, in elieniU our advice the to good housekeepers necessity existing and ladies al , g r ea t Ways lent to the have a perleetlv and safe remedy of conven- the ail for relief prompt cure nn-uts peculiar to woman—functional trregu iariiy, constant pains and all the symptoms Pierce’s “Favorite Prescription”—woman’s best friend. It will save money. wit)lin six years a 12-mile Alpine tunnel through the Simplon, will be constructed, . .J.'wlm had headache o"f«en be sub-' uni jeet to const ip.ition. As these seem to ^^SSt^SSS advdee maybe m order, .viih n luscatmg purgative pills, etc., which -icken and debilitate, when such a pleasant ^jj, ^mfitliy’and and 3 ’ bowels, effectively and ^on at the the liver, kidney,-stomach same listressiug evils to quickly disappear, tiou surely Cured, To the Editor.-Flease inform your readers mat i have a positive remedy for the above shall ^^‘S^shavlteenpermaiwn^^ed?^ be glad to send two bottles of my remedy fkee to any of your j^ders who have address 8LOCUM, Respectfully, M.C., lol Pearl SU, N. Y. T. A. “ lt( . hi)lg 1>n ,. s sytnptnms— Moisture; intense itching and linking; worse by scratching. If allowed to IwAY^foS^ tent s^opp the itching and bleeding, heals ul efficKfn &SON, STaMK Philadelphia. Diseases. DK.SWAYNli druggists. rient by m ail for Spots. Also sold by iceeiy, the motor man of Philadelphia, calls hfsmoiiey drawing power,vibratory sympathy. .„ a „,t Bliglit 000,1, iu morning, or on first lying down at afflicted night, should be looked to in time. Persons with disordered liver, leading to bad digestion and imllefrect assimilation of food—hence the IKSSS.'SS that SX, blood-cleansing, %?SZ use ot greatest ol’ all covery.” Tile Kentucky Court of Appeals has affirmed that drunkenness Is no excuse for crime, Many imitators but no equal, fi ts Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy. Dr. Hell and Thomas Edison are going to Jaw to decide who invented the phonograph. The Ulna in lEie.ttoon. How does the sailor know there is a man in t he moon? Because he has been to see (sea) and states that whenever he has a coug li or void he takes Taylor’s Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum and Mullein. We are all liable to err and every one is who does not realize for Catarrh. t lie full value Pamphlet of Taylor’s free IIos- 264 oitnl (lure at Broadway, New York. If afflicted with ore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp son’s Eyewater. Druggists sell at 25c. per bottle. Last Winter lUadaverysevereattackotlnflammatoryrheumn tUm , ray feet and limbs swelled out of all proportion, Iwasconflnedtothe hollse fOT several weeks and , vaaa very great sufferer, scarcely able to walk at all. After trying medical acivico and various prepara tions.aii to no purpose, i was induced to give Hood's Sarsaparilla a trial. I have taken two bottles, with the best results. My pains aud aches have au teit than i do now. 117 appetite is first rate, for rdi of which 1 give credit to Hood’s Sarsaparilla.—t rank L .x b. hatch, 73 North Third st„ Brooklyn, N T. HOOCi’S S31*33 pOPI lid S nid by ail druggists. $1 ■, six for $>. Prepared only by o. 1 . hood & co., Apothecaries, Loweu, Mass. | OO DOSOS Otl0 Dollar L m a a IT 15 A PUftELYVEQF.TABLE PREPARATION 1 SEKNA-WIANDRAKE-aUOHU ’.AND I OTHER EgUAUYEFflClENT REMtOlES. || It has stood tha Test of Years, in Curing all Diseases of the BLOOD, LIVES, STOM¬ mm ACH, KIDNEYS,BOW¬ ELS, &c. It Purifies the BOTEES T&ASHi: } Blood, Cleanses Invigorates the System. and DYSPEPSIA.CONSTI CURES PATION, JAUNDICE, feiiOIScASESDFTHE SICKHEADACHE,BIL¬ LIVER IOUS COMPLAINTS, &C KIDNEYS disappear at once under its beneficial influence. STOMACH It its is purely cathartic a Medicine AND : as pxopex BOWELS. -- ties forbids its use as a | | beverage. ant to the taste, It is and pleas- as i easily taken by child i HRUGS^S _ ! ren as adults. Ml i* PRICK! V ASH BITTERS CO ’ PRICE] OOLLAB 1 Solo Proprietors, St.Louis and KaJISa °itx ELY’S CREAM BALM. Gives relief atonce and cures COLD in HEAD, Catarrh and Hay Fever. Not a Liquid or Sit ul?. \ppiy Balm into eaoh nostril. Ely Bros.,SS5Greenwieh St.,N.Y. GFiUi Morphluo Habit Core* 1 b 1® to 20 day,. So *»v Hit cured. Ur. J. Utepbeo*, Lebanon. Ohio. P 1 SQ 1 S CUR CONSUMPTION GftAB I^O!S£. X*^kX3*. CURES Sciatica, . Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Lumbago, Backache, Headache, Toothache, Bore Throat, Swellings, Frost Bites, Sprains, Bruises, Burns, Scalds. IT CONQUERS PAIN. ETsryapFlkidiMtoh* 7 ® 5 - ~~ tT 7 *hel£ should hws It, Every bottle is a sere care. Every testineslil is trui. Every bottls is tsstod. Erery day sow demands. Every geaaiae bottle bears Every patient is eared. the firm’s Signature. Every pain Is eoagaered. Every home will have it, Every druggist praises it. Every laagaage speaks it, Ev ery ehemist fitds it per Everyjoaraalccmmeadsit feet. AWARDS FOR BEST PAIN-CURE, Medal. mw Zealand exhibition—1882— Gold CALCUTTA INT. EXHIBITION--1883-4--Gold EXPosiTiox~’84~Silyer MetlAl. Medal. CINCINNATI 1ND. 1884—GrOltl Medal. CALIFORNIA STATE FAIB — louisvillb so. exposition— ia84—Gold Me dale At Druggists and Dealers. Pricb 60 Cents. THE CHARLES A. VOGELER CO.. Baltimore, Md. KIDDER’S DIGESTYLIN ; ' • -• ■ - ■■ A SURE CURE FOR INDIGESTION and DYSPEPSIA. Over 5,000 Physicians have sent us their approval of DIGESTYLIN, saying that Have it is the best used. preparation Tor Indigestion that heard they of ever of Dyspepsia wpara We have never a case DIOESTYLIN was taken that was not cured. FOB CHOLERA INFANTUM. it Will cure the most aggravated PREGNANCY. cask. IT WILL STOP VOMITING IN CONSTIPATION. IT WILL RELIEVE Diarrhoea, For Summer Complaints and Chronic which are the direct results of imperfect digestion, DIGESTYLIN will effect an immediate cure. of Take DYGESTYI.IN for all pains aud disorder, the stomach; they all come from indigestion. AsR 1 -our druggist for DIGESTYLIN (price »1 per large bottle). If he does not have it send one dollar to ui and wo will send a send bottle to yon, express Our prepaid. houM i. Do not hesitate to your money. reliable. Established KI1>1>ER twenty-five years. dc CO., W!U. F. S3 ohn St*. „ un nnfactor! ns Chemist s» J N,«. MARVELOUS MEMORY DISCOVERY. Wholly unlike artificial sjBtems, Any book learned In one reading. Recommended by Mark Twain, Richard Judah P. Proctor, Benja the Scientist, Hons. W.W. Astor, *in, Dr. Minor. &o. Class of 100 Columbia Law stu dents ; 200 at Meriden : 250 at Norwich ; 350 at Oberlin College ; two classes of 200 each at Yale; 400 at Uni¬ versity of Penn, Phila.; 400 at Wellesley College, and three large classes at Chatauqua University, Ac. Prospectus post free from PROF. LOISETTE. 237 Eifth Ave., New York. ACEMTSj^ Send for„ f E n - e 5b 0 T n S^T’?. - _ ing MOTHER, HEAVEN^ HOME, tm !in( j propa i and poetry ; by 400 best . i 1 f $l author! egRuliy for outfit.. ill., 140.000 $2.75. Also sold. 5000 Send El* BibimiS.eo. Curiosities of the? nyxnau. Li.n.ii-bija. .T, 7 57 Broadw ay,N, Y. isp^ am a Nk.fl 1 1’“jk. m iiilf ■ ! 4 ' ~ i w % 1^ j .S-C/UiWMWi r i 3:1 i m i mgr | ■ St Ifer/f | ill - —yCtrt.T T Ur -------- ___ ..'-j^ss sss tjsSS9M SK The following words, in must praise be of of Dk. interest Pierce’s to every Favorite sufferer Prescription from ^atadies. as a remedy ^ey for aje thore f delicato V diseases whicfi an^^ nesses peculiar with to which "women, thousands give utterance to their sense of gratitude for the inestimable boon o 0 health lias been ex])rcssions medicine. sioo Thrown I nnilWW hmy Hnfil. prescription and it did her more good than .................... gjj the medicine given to her by the physi cians during the three years they had been practicing upon her. yltS ml t s’lfflerer D-om)racOT Tnr THE Pnr.TrnT GREATEST 1; a great ] Earthly Boon. ---nine months, without receiving any benefit. poor*suffering wS” 0 "’ ^ ^ e “ thly b °° n t0 “ TREHTIHG THE WROMG DISEASE. anot^Vr^l^r « rilfDl^erTe^vofe womb disorder. The physician, K|tToTdi ignorant of y J“ the cause of suffering, encourages his fSSwJtiJIft-<nm thereb> A proper medicine, those P dispelling aii and comfort instead of misery. SV** 3 Physicians " immmnr Mrs. E. F. Morgan, of 1 Vo. 71 Lexington St.. Fill i Hikku. FII sieians. Having I exhausted completely the skill discouraged, of three and phy- so vaB weak I could with difficulty cross the room alone. I began taking Dff. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription and using the local treatment recommended in his ‘Common Sense Medical Adviser.’ I commenced to improve at once. In three months I was perfectly cured, and have had no trouble since. I wrote a letter to my family paper, briefly mentioning how my health had been restored, and offering and to send the full stamped^en- particulars to any one writing me for them, enclosing a velope for reply. I have received over four hundred letters. In reply, I have described my case and the treatment used, and have I earnestly advised them to ‘do of thanks, likewise.’ stating From that a great they many have received second letters had commenced the use of ‘Favorite Prescription,’ had sent the $1.50 treatment required for fully the ‘ Medical Adviser,’ laid down and therein, had applied and the local so and plainly were much better A VAST EXPERIENCE. The treatment of many thousands of cases of those chronic weaknesses and distressing ailments peculiar to females, at the Invalids’ Hotel an d Surgical Institute, Buffalo, nicely N. Y.. has afforded a vast experience in adapting and thoroughly testing remedies for the cure of woman's peculiar maladies, Dr. Pierce’s Favorite result, Prescription of great is the valuable outgrowth, experience. or Thousands this of and testimonials, received from patients and from phvsicians who have tested it in the more aggravated and obstinate cases which bad baffled their skill, prove it to be the most wonderful remedy ever devised for the relief and cure of suffering women. It is not recommended as a “ cure-all,” but as peculiar a most ailments. perfect Specific for woman’s It As imparts a powerful, strength invigorating to the whole system, tonic, and to the uterus, or womb overworked, and its ar pendages, “worn-out,” in “run-do«-n,”debilitatedteaoh- partioular. For ers, milliners, dressmakers, seamstresses, “ shop-girls.” and feeble housekeepers, generally. nursing moth- Dr. ers, women Fierce’s earthlv Favorite Prescription being is the great est boon, unequalled as an appetizing cordial and restorative tonic. It ASSOCIITIOS No. 663 Jtoln’ Street, nrrPiiiL »« * w w. X. Address, WOKII )’ 1 DISPENSART MEDICAL it TO EVERYBODY. 271 Franklin Street, Chicago. Ill. ASTHMA whicn is now recognized by the medical world as Uie only one that will positively and and permanently all blood cure Asthma, its kindred affections other methods diseases. Not onlv does it excel all the in giving quick relief, but it absolutely have cures been worst cases permanently. Thousands proof Will cured by It. Convincing end conclusive be found in my 64 page Treatise, sent free. Or. B. W. HAIR, 233 W. FOURTH ST., CINCINNATI. OHIO. EXHAUSTED VITALITY A Great Medical Work for Young and Middle-Aged Men. for. life HOW THYSELF. JP TtUBI.ISHED by the PEABODY MEDI CAL, INSTITUTE, No. 4 Bullfinch St., Boston, Mass. Wilt. H. PARKER, million copies Consulting Phvsician. More than one Debility, •old. It treats upon Nervous and Physical Impaired Premature Decline, Exhausted Vitality, and untold Vigor and Impurities of the Blood, the miseries consequent thereon. Contains M0 pages, substantial embossed binding, full gilt. Warranted the best popular medical treatise published in tha English language. Price only *1 by mail, Ittxutrativ* postpaid, and concealed in end a plain wrapper. Address above. sample free it you 3 now. as Name this vnver. * I SURE FITS! them When L say cure I do not mean merely to atop l radkiaTcure.^ ^have’made the SSMFlT « EPSY or FALLING SICKNESS a life-long study. I warrant my remedy to cure the worst cases. Because others have failed is no reason for not now receiving a cure. Send at once for a treatise and a Free Bottle of my 6. infallible remedy. Give Express and Post Office. 11. HOOT* Al* C.. 183 Pearl tot. New York. $200 a Month and e xpenses. Solicitors Magnificent everywhere opportunity in the country. for Canvass- Ad ers an na dress immediate! J 75l relieved; 22 years' practice Success or no fee v Laws se nt f ree. A. W. McCormick & S on. ^ash«»s <on 4 D READ thelG SAMANTHA H SARATOGA » : ' FUNNIEST . W vvantbb. S BOOK.yet. by josiah allen’s wife, things. agents they faMe*# £M ~'s7z he, angrily, Them dumb fooh believe in supernatural bo^ Why can't sunthin' sensible. Why can't they be Methodists ."-Extract from “ T ■ mj same delicious humor that has made her works a joy jorever " There are parts so excruciatingly funny we have had to sit back aud laugh till the tears m came”— Weekly Witness. “ Unquestionably her best.’’-D etroit Free Press. MMff.. N E A R L Y 50,000 SOLD nin It It takes takes off off S&rato ^aratosa follies, tolhcs, flirta- mru*. 1 ... tions, low necks, dudes , pug dogs, etc., /' AGENTS are taking THOUSANDS of ORDERS killing." The (100) pictures Peonle by “Opper” are it# “just for HOLIDAY GIFTS. crazy to #et. ....... . ■ ———a A«u Mrs Sophia F. Bo3WHll, Threw r» oUrrOnTER. n "“L r»T Tn ',. j,,,. your medicine. I have had to wear la*d a . i „m nww J gU pportcr most of the time; this I have and feel ns wed as i ever did.” t (f J WflRyTl WORKS e%^gondersJn Mkh' writc^^You'r ° f FOTO?ite ’’pSscription’’ Wo^ my case ^ “ “ T, ^ ^ day, at^nfflng'tHhe , dlffiesof^y lo”C w be on my feet aii i A Marvelous Cni-e.--Mrs- G. P. SPRAGira. , OOTOBS persuaded me to try your medicines, which I wm because I was prejudiced against (them, and the doctors they would do me no good. I finally told IjmKltry* 0 he would get me some of your medicines, mejiix bottles ot tne against the advice of my physician. He got four years.” cures nausea, weakness of stomach, mdi gestion, bloating and eructations or gas.__ As a soothing and strengtncniBg nervine, “ Favorite Prescription is un equalled and is invaluaole in aiiaylng and subduing nervous excitability, irritability, exhaustion, prostration, hysteria, symptoms spasms and other attendant distressing, nervous functional and commonly disease of the upon womb. It induces organic sleep and relieves mental anx refreshing despondency, iety and SMeree’s Favorite Prescription Dr. carefully is a legitimate experienced medicine, and skillful compounded physician, and by adapted an to woman's delicate organization. It is perfectly purely vegetable harmless in in Its its composition and effects in any condition ot the svstem. posi “Favorite Prescription” complicated is a and tive cure tor the most obstinate cases of leucorrhca, or whites, excessive Bowing at monthly periods, pam ful menstruarhm. unnatural suppressions, prolapsus or falling of the womb, weak back, “female weakness,” aptevermon, chron- re troversion, bearing-down sensations, ic congestion, inflammation and ulceration of the womb, inffemmation, pain and ten derr.ess in ovaries, aecompamed with ln- TOtlWS DON’T' HOUSfi , , JDKBJTHE Gone Where the Woodbine Twineth. Rats are smart, but “ Rough on Rats” beats them. Clears out Rata, Mice, Roaches. Water Bugs, Plies, Beetles, Sloths, Ants, potato Mosqffltoes, Bugs, Bed-bugs, Hen Hen Uce^ .Lice, Insects, insects, niiaw .ougb, Sparrows, -------, Skunks, Weasel, Gophers, Jack RabW#. Chip munta, Moles, Musk Bats, Squirrels. 15c. and 25c. Druggists. •• rough ON PAIN ” Plaster, Porosed. 15c. “ROUGH ON COUGHS.” Cou ghs, colds, 25c. "all skin humors cured by R0U6H°EITCB “Rough on Itch” Ointment cures Skin Ho' Ivy Poison, Barber’s Itch, Scald Head, Eczema 50c. Drug, or mail. E. S. Wells, Jersey City. ROUGHiPILES Cures Piles or Hemorrhoids, externa! Itching. Protrud¬ ing Bleeding. Internal and Druggist** remedy in each package. Sure cure, 50c. or mail. E. S. Wells, Jersey City, N J & k JONES m I I3C 3B1 pays & the freight Ton Wagon Bearings, Scales. Irom L«Ters, Steel RrtAt Tare Beam and Best* Box Hi m: » BTeTT »lieScale. For free pn <z ilafi Ti.i menilOB this paper and address W ^ BIN(itHAiifTpN. iONIS 0 ? S 1 HGHAMT 0 H. Hr J.P. STEVENS&BR0. JEWELERS. Atlanta, Ga, Send for Catalogue. BUSINESS Education, a specialty at MOORE’S BUSINESS UNIVERSITY, Atlanta, One of tti« best schools in the Gauntry. Send tor Circulars. m HlASr S n;|g-. rllSSa Great EnglishGouiawv "vat Rlieumatic Hemeujr BoX, 34 ) round, 14 Fill.. p AT ENTS ston&T co.?’wS»I’ instruct!' 8 ington, I). C. Send for our book of onf Wv « R u d n a df; tStff Brewster Safety Rein Holder Go.. Holly, Micb>, v --—---—---- 7 ----- A MONTH. Agents Wanted. 90 best xeU ’ O Ir I) iS worth $n00 sold per lb. 25c. Pettit’s Kye by Salvo “ » worth $1, 000. but is at a box (ionlorf.* , N. U......... .Filiy-hvo. ’81 Ill precrnaiicy, ** Favorite Prescription naiise®; is a “mother’s cordial,” relieving distressm? weakness of stomach and other it symptoms common to that condition its vise is kept up in the latter mom - - O’ gestation, it so prepares the system for • ° f “Favorit^F're C scrlption,’’when taken in connection with the use of Dr. Pi f r t (Little Liver Pills), cures mver, Eidmw a,^ Bladder diseases. Their combined use a.w removes , blood taints, .and 'abolishes can cerous and scrofulous humors from me t ssjjtenL Favorite *»w>aci-i-Dtioii Presc P ” is druggie- the only medicine for 2"^*°?°-. bT the under n positive j from f? anu ?® c ^SS fr sstiefac > or money will be re tion fun dcd. m c This vcrj guara has faithful! "been nrte T d tb e bottle-wr-..,-', 1 ' ew¬ on _Farge hott!' 6 or eix bottles for gw aosesi for Dr. Sena __, ten S? ln stanans Ofr Pierce s large, in nstrated Treatise - Disease: 8 w