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About The Conyers weekly. (Conyers, Ga.) 18??-1888 | View Entire Issue (June 8, 1888)
AGRICULTURAL TOPIC'S or IXTEKKUT RELATIVE TO FARM AND GARDEN. Planting: Fruit. The planting of all kinds of fruit stock should not he delayed after the ground is in condition for it. Currants, black berries, raspberries, Ac., should he first attended to, as they start to grow very early. Nothing ]>lanting. is gained by hurrying the work of far better even to defer planling an orchard for another year than plant in unprepared soil. By this we mean that ground for an orchard should ha e been either summer fallowed or worked up with root crops and hell enriched the year previous. In accepting parcels of trees from the nurserv, see to it that each one has a proper proportion of fibrous roots, as in many instances the workmen who dig the trees from the nursery rows plunge their spades in so near the frees as to ruin them, Indeed, in ordering trees it would be well to make it a condition that the roots should be of certain length in | proportion hole to their height. 1 he should be made much larger in diameter than the roots demand, and the true should be set about the same depth as it stood in the nursery rows, Fid in with only the best and finest earth, and press it firmly about the roots, taking great care that the roots are not crowc led together or bent out of their natural course .—New York Ueral.L Mane and Hair of Horses. An English writer in an article on horses, as to the mane and hair, says: “The 1110 best oust bred ortuauu and tlrnnesf ui nnest Skinned skinned horses have very little mane; it is not only thin and fine, but the hair is short. A heavy, matted mane means a low-bred, coarse brute. I am inclined to think that in a state of na'ure the mane divides upon both sides of the neck, though Vir gil writes of the dense mane of the young colt falling upon the right shoulder, Long as the horse has been domesticated and carefully groomed, this habit of wearing the hair is not yet overcome, and the mane has to be carefully coaxtd to the right side, where for thousands of years man has resolved it should be worn, though the horse himself insists upon parting his hair in the middle, Ancient authorities write of training the mane to the right, but all the hor.es rep resented in the Elgin marbles show the mane close cropped, or, as we say, ’hogged.’ * ‘•I think it is clear that the right side, nowthe ‘near’ side ‘off’side the of ancients. the horse, was the | to The best horsemen use no ‘off’ side or ‘near’ side, except think to conform to their harness. I a man should tea h his horse to be familiarly approached a d allow his stall to be entered on either side of him. Horses driven in pairs should frequently change sides, as the mouth becomes hardened on one side and the m iscles of the neck become affected by the unequal pull the double ’ * of reins. “Coarse hair about the heels is natural, but I confess to a prejudice about it. and have it carefully clipped. Hair growing in a thick tuft inside the ear must never be touched. Ignorant and offensive grooms will remove it with scissors, but it is a great defense against the flies that would, in its absence, secure lodgment upon the sensitive r-kin inside the ear. Long, coarse hairs upon the muzzle and the eyebrow are often plucked away, No horseman should allow’ this t> be done. These hairs are not superfluous ;they have a valuable use. They are like the whiskers of the fo.ine race, having sen¬ tient power and conveying impressions to the brain.” It Graining Cows in Summer. * Mr. N. J. f-trong, an essayist, at a recent referred meeting several of Michigan dairymen to farmers by name as competent witnesses of the profit of feed ing ing grain to cows during himself the usual milk season. He has followed this practice with much satisfaction live successive years, and speaks, first, of a resulting Its advantage value: not always consid ered at true “If cows are fed a liberal ration of palatable, nutritious ground feed night and morning, they require no driving. Xo dog or boy is necessary to chase the fields over to per¬ suade them, but about milking time they aie ready to walk from pasture to i arn has quietly, and pails w 11 be fuller as there been no excitem nt. Keep cows quietand they give better return. Thus a saving of labor and patience pays in part for gram fed." Increased yield and superior quality of milk from grain feeding is another out come to the credit of tiie system: “It is true we have records of a few extra herds that have shown fair returns with out grain, but treat tbe same cows with a few pounds of bran morning and night and note the result. 1 am of opinion that what are called ordinary cows show more improvement by feed ing jvrniii Tonally, than the heavier milkers, pro port ns poor soil is more sensitive to the application of fertilizers than richer soils, but a very poor milker can never make a good one, under any treat input- ’ As to kinds of grain found desirable by practical experiment, we quote what follows: “Say from May to August, I think bran the best. In March and April m.ddhngS’ would feed corn and oats and or bran nnd two of bran one of middlings. Beginning m August the usual feed m fcuutheru Lenawee is corn fodder with corn on. Hus makes a very good feed when pastures begin to dry up and will sustain the flow of milk fairly well, especially if a little bran is added. I have advocated the u-e of bran because 1 believe, pound for pound, it is worth more for feeding the milch cows than most other grams; same number of pounds will return more than meal. and when it is put in at from Md o *lo Per ton. it is very economial food Another consideration which though not measurable by the rules of arithmetic, ought to have influence, is the satisfac tioh the right-minded owner feels in the fine appearance of his herd, to say nothing of the consciousness that cows in good shape in the fail are apt to winter well, and come to another springtime in fine condition for the fr.sh campaign of »-> ' >•-* Farm and Garden Notes. Set young trees always. Numbered with the first hardy vege¬ tables to be sown are spinach, salsify, beets, carrots, parsnips and onions. JBSS& small nd gradually increase I a quantity 2 , the amount. ■ A grindstone is not, Dr. Hoskins thinks, the best instrument for sharpen ing hoes and similar look, “Fasten in a vise, and use a large fiat, file.” The temperature of cream should br ke]lt ]ow soas Vj r( >tard fermentation and : secure an even condition of cream. Then, ’ when two or three or more skimming! Rave been combined, they can be evenlv r j pcne< i j n one batch, Saw ail the soot carefully from stove “ nd P’W? 00 a calm d f" P scatter it th.nly overgrassplots and bed, 0 e,iri -’ ’ s n v 5 e a '■C’ 'V as a manure and besides, ,, ,s . offensive f mm that go abroad abroad If in thr th L dark, Seating eating t u: s 4' e ' ln " P la " ts a ; ,he y come U P' 11 ‘’becks the growth of moss among grass. A good scratching and rolling of the awn in spring is another great benefit t0 ! It is generally conceded by fruitgrow- 1 ers that a ttiff clay is the best soil foi the pear. It is not because sandy soil is hacking in appropriate plant food that it i fails to grow this fruit. Adding stable ; manure only makes the matter worse. It is difficult to add mineral fertilizers in ; amounts sufficient to harden the soil, j This seems to be what is needed to ex elude air and thus preserve an equable tern per." tu re, with moisture enough to ; to keep the roots reasonably cool, lhe sudden changes in temperature in light, dl 7 soil arc always predisposing causes of blight. b I 'ay and Other I _. tpes. “I don’t know as I ought to tell you about it,” said a well-known Newiork dealer to a Sun reporter, “but it is a fact that the soft white clay pipe, which costs only a penny, is the healthiest and clean est of all the pipes now in use. Oi course, the meerschaum is very good when it is new, but it becomes unhealthy the older it gets, consequently it is not lit to smoke after it has been used six months, if you have any regard for your mouth. All pipes absorb, more or less, the nicotine, which is a poisonous juice, and when the pipe becomes full it unsuspectingly finds As way to the mouth and stomach. I am acquainted with several persons who, having used the same pipe lor a number of years, have finally become seriously poisoned. The clay pipe will soak up twice as much nicotine as the mecr schaum, consequently they should not be used more than a dozen times, esp dally when the tobacco is of a greenish color or at all damp. Now, in regard smoked to wooden pipes,they months, ought never and to be more than two in many cases not more than one month; but this is according to the strength of the tobacco people use in them, After the white clay pipe comes the hard the meerschaum; then, third, comes earthen pipe; fourth, comes the wooden and pipe, the then the porcelain metallic pipe, pipe, and last, worst, the The dealer was asked. “Do many persons use cigar holder- dealer replied, “That fashion.” the “is gradually going out of style, i I notice it is either to very young or very old men that cigar or cigarette holders are now sold. They are not very odoriferous or handy to tuck away in the pocket, and generally they ate too ex jiensive to throw away after using them only once.” A Powerful Rival of Iron. “I was talking with Mr. Chamberlain the other day,” said Judge Tomkins, of Atlanta, to a Constitution reporter, “who is a practical man of our coal and iron company. He made a startling sttgges tion. Said he, ‘the time may come when all the iron mines of this country will be abandoned. The most generally diffused metal on earth is aluminum, it isfound almost invariably in clay, especially in red clay. It is now extra: ted front clay by a very expensive and tedious process, a t a cost of more titan five hundred dollars a ton. Some one will invent a process for getting aluminum out of clay |,« a rapid and eh ap process. Then farewell to iron mines.’ ” “I asked him what was the value of aluminum.” “He replied that it has three times the strength of steel, and only one third its weight. This makes it. "of course, the mos t valuable of metals. It was only discovered in t-’S. It is bright, and it never tarnishes. Louis Napolion offered six thousand dollars for a pro: css for extracting it from clay, and two small i als () f aluminum were presented to him by a French chemist as the result. It } la s i enormously established expensive, for but Napoleon it, j 1!K ,j W orks extracting an he used it as a substitute for the silver eagles that were borne above the armies of France. It has all the beauty 0 f silver, is more lasting, stainless, and was on ]y one-fourth the weight of silver, qq ie eagles of France are thus made more resplendent, more enduring, and seventy five per cent, lighter in Some weight. Yon will look out for aluminum. one vet invent a process extracting for digging therefrom up common dirt and t hi s best of all metal.” - A New kind of Glass. A npw kind of class lias been invent e( j - n g we( ] en jt contains no fewer thaQ fourteeu subs tances, wherea- the ! C0mm0 n kind of glass contains only six. I p hosphoru< and borax are included, anc j t bey are not to be found in any other „ 1hss . The result is, according to t bo-e who believe in this new invention, t j m t whereas the highest power of any okl . fashioned micro cop.c lens reveals , / the 1 . 40 o,oOiith part of an inch, thi new g ; aS s will enable us to distin g igh the 1-204,000,700 rart of an inch, tU n e nd 0 us-but. then,' who on earth wants to have a look at the 1.204,700, oooth 1 t of an 5nch ._ 3>!f York Sun. The AT ^ or "‘ n g St3r ,s ,he small est . garner . that has ever made . the , run , be tween England and the Cape. She was desl “ D cd b v her o^er, Captain K Dun - ^ n ‘ .°t f London, , and was l.udt at Leith. bh e « tweuty-s.x tons, yacht measure SSSA*?. i ”, d b” . | tween with perpendiculars, over all fifty six feet, eleven feet two inches depth of hold. The eight bridesmaids of the Princess of Wales are all alive and married. ^ s 5 S“’ **. a vio , ent discussion that ]. m afraid it will end in a fight.” Barker (carelessly;—“No danger of They're both ‘ pugilists ° .”—Detroit jfyee Prett. The Atlanta, Ga., Evening Jour n a 1 , the only daily and weekly paper in that city that advocates tariff reform, under the skillful management of Hon. Hoke Smith ar.d H. H. Cabaniss, is making wonderful strides in the direction of in fl uence an( j circulation. A European steamship line is ^ having constructed a steamship that it ” New York h between and Queenstown in five days, _________ r CAIAKKH. vTaRRH A "•’VV.SiWrinM* Ca.a.rb^t ajarrbJ De ” The micros-ope has proved that these dis¬ Crane “^ t es toThe lining mem of the upper air pa^s^es ani eustachian tubra^ he an'l regular hod . ( al . not be rli-puteti. has i been to apply me o: treat ing these ais n-srs an ^p^ng th?d^LTte^m’mbraSriii allowing it a chance wnstSSt to s . ate of j rr ita ion. XenTcu^h°i no Se heal 0 “^ 4 ra absolute fact that ever , recorded. It an applioa these diseases annot lie cured by any turn Sembrane^muT get^'chine?'to repeat* It»now hal before an appl.'otlon »'££, '.iritomulSESPhto is . new treatment,and «mce then his remedy has be come a household word in every country where the English language is spoken. Cures eft cted bv him seven years ago are eures still, therehavmgbee no r. turn of the disease. j^nt'Inntamre hav-eTt“rted S up everywhere, pretendi g to destroy a parasite, of which tuey £now nothi "f-are is applied dually only tenor? a nt >l wj*ks r . •ixoVsremedv once in t wo ^,4ted B iase-’. sends pamphlet describing his Mr. Dixon a xo“ P S Ee, TH| at TheaddrLs^sT P h“di ? & Kfng street west, Toronto, Canada.—Scien tide American, The “Bureau of justice” is Chicago's people. latest audit affords legaj asvunnce to poor “ Then let the moon usurp the rule of day. And winking taper- show the sun his way; For what my senses can believe.” pe eeive, I need no rove at on to Ladies suffering from any of tne weaknesses or ailments peculiar to their sex, and who will use Dr. Hi*-rce s Favorite Prescription accord¬ ing to directions, will expuie will ce receive. a genuine It revelation in the benefit they Isa p sitive cure f >r the most complicated and obstinate ca es of leucorrhea, excessive flow¬ ing, painful menstruation, unnatural sup¬ pression-, back, prolapsus, or falling of anteversion, the womb, weak ‘female weakness,” reiroversion.bearinr down sensations,chronic •on estion, inflammation and ulceration of the womb, inflammation, pain and tenderness in ovaries, acc- mp inied with “internal heat.” Bishop J. H. Vincent, a native of Ala,, is no¬ ted for promoting religion among young people Conventional “ Itlonnn ” Resolutions. Whereas, The M non Route (L. X. A. & 0. Rv Co.)ties res to make it known to the world at'large jink Pullman that it forms the travel double between connecting the or tourist winter cities of Florida a-d the summer re¬ sorts of the Northwest; and IDiei fat. Us “rapid transit” system is un surpa'setl, its elegant Pullman Buffet Sleeper and Chair car service between Cincinnati Chicago and Louisville, Indianapolis and un¬ equal ed; and Whereon, Its rates are as low as the lowest; then be it Beenlvcd, That in the event, of starting on a trip it is good milieu to con-ult with K. O. Me < ’ormick, Gen’l Pass. Agent Monon Route, 185 Dearborn St.. Chicago, for full particulars. (In anv event send for a Tourist Guide, enclose 4c. pcstage.) tK.'SS-n'rt.wvsa.'s 1 tlei'.r. Presidents, Genet als and all celebitries of the period of the Revolution. Also old snyer, china furniture an i curious arocles anything genetal- in lv tL Parties desiring to dispose of above lino would do well to corresp t.d with that firm. Tlieir address is 8b0 Broadway, and they -were established mlSJl. Presidefit (Cleveland lias received official no tiee from Brazil of the abolition of slavery. Thousands of cures follow the use of Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy. 50 cgjits. In Denver, Col., live of the richest saloon men ask that, the license be increased to $1,000. For The Nervous The Debilitated The Aged. ' Medical and scientific skill has at last solved the problem of the long needed medicine for the ner. VO us, debilitated, and the aged, by combining the best nerve tonics, Celery and Coca, with other effec¬ tive remedies, which, acting gently but efficiently on the kidneys, liver and bowels, remove disease, restore strength and renew vitality. This medicine is ^frame's vt&y. ; Tf fills a place heretofore unoccupied, ar.d marks a new era In the treatment of nervous troubles. Overwork, anxiety, disease, lay the foundation oi nervous prostration pjkI weakness, and experience has shown that the usual remedies do not mend the strain and paralysis of the nervous system. Recommended by professional and business men. Send for circulars. Price $1.00. Sold by druggists. WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO., Proprietors BURLINGTON, VT. DOVOU^lllt a gootl. reliable Inspirator? J ami simple 3 j f isf > 1UT «1WM km VAU))I1I mmmao > (lllllW 1 laaaiixa S = ? 11 I? V 3S i VkASIX J -llilfl |\| 5 c 5 ► 5 ROANOKE ii Cotton and Hay t 7 PHESS. \ Th-* beet and cheapest made. Hundreds BaleScotton/uA/e. in actual use. than any ' rin ROANOKE can pick. 1R Address OS AND WOOD WORKS for our Cot* r ton sud liny Press circulars. * Chattanooga, Tenr.. Boxl6U GOLD, lire at home and make roon* money vrorkhtjrfhr na than ct a rtv fhjng else In the world Kit bet t*x Costly out tit 1 111. Term* FKFI.. Avldret*, TRITE * CO., Aurnsia. Maine. PISOS CURE FOR CONSUMPTION Soldiers’ Monument. The monument committee of the Pick ett Association of Richmond, Va., have in that city. The hexagonal 1 - ^,11 recommended. The entire height Ol the shaft will be about eighteen feet, with six rustic columns and six bronze plates for inscriptions—one for Gen. Pickett, one for each of the four brigades and one for the artillery. Happiness. The foundation of all happiness is health. A man with an imperfect husband digestion of may be a millionaire, may be the an a gel and the father of half a dozen cherubs, With and yet be miserable if he be roubled dyspep¬ sia. or of any of the disorders arising from im perfect digestion or Purgative a sluggish Pc liver lets Dr. Pierc -'s Pleasant ore the safest and surest remedy for these morbid conditions. Be ng purely vegetable, they are perfectly harmless. Most of us eat too much and sleep too little we read too much and think too little. For Rickets, Marasmus and Wasting Dis¬ orders of Children. Scott's Emulsion of Pure Cod Liver Oil with Hypophosphites is unequalled. The rapidity with which children gain flesh and strength upon it is very wonderful. Read the follow¬ ing: "I have used .Scott's Emulsion in cases of Rickets and Marasmus of long standing, and have been more than pleased with the results, as m every case the improvement was mark¬ ed."—J. M. Main. M. D., New York. EXTERNAL s*ns2 USE->/ n*r And Soreness Resulting from (Sg^SS^feSiEA 'Sz J\Ub fte slan\ad\ wa!! wifh S(j Jacobs Oil • Apply flares! sfeaped in fjo( wafer and wpuqg oUf. SOLO BY DRUGGISTS Ar’.O DEALERS. CHA? A.VOGELER C? Balto. Md. ox siiossari.i LEWIS. 'TNLJLT. H rK P 1 MORDECAI cr A ~ WHITE ^ 35 is >ilaO © TRADE MARK. £ JOHN T. LEWIS & BROS., WARRANTED PURE White Lead, Red Lead, Litharge, Orange Mineral, Painters’ Colors and Linseed Oil. CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED. LYMAN’S Patent Combination GUM SIGHT. ■K Up 4C I*er Cent. Send for eeductiox Catalogue of in Price. Slprht*, Rifles, «tc. Address \V 31. A A t Middlcileld, Conn. HERBRAMO FIFTH WHEEL. KS V improvement. UKIL BRAND CO.» r.mout. a rap ;.! ■ 'UYiT;-' .....i'dyy' lnvrunil'ril i r'fci-;;--t/ ipi'i;; -----—AA/tNC^O.g/C'CVS) TkOPRIET OR s Qr . -p Sii 6) Ur.^AGLS CaIA^H r\E MEDy ' • r-i .'T . 1 i r, I W SJSZZJ A **2*9 : : ( For a case of Catarrh in the Head which they cannot cure. i I I * I I oV J> 'pi V 50 CENTS. * m Mi sjv eQ-^ys—I llli:?ril.«!ii i !nt r_ mm f Copyright, issl ] ®&rmm i§® the hems. ■ SYMPTOMS OF THE DISEASE.—Dull, heavy headache, obstruction of the nasal passages, discharges falling from the head into tire throat, sometimes profuse, watery, and acrid, nt others, thick, tenacious, mucous, purulent, bloody deafness, and hacking putrid; the eyes are weak; there throat, is ringing expectoration in the ears, of offensive or coughing together to with clear the from ulcers; voice is changed mat¬ and ter, has “nasal scabs the breath offensive: the smell and taste impaired; a there twang”; sensation of is with mental depres¬ is a dizziness, of the sion, a hacking cough and general likely debility. Only a few above-named symptoms are to be present in any one ease. Thousands of cases annually, without manifesting half of the above symptoms, result in consumption, and end in the grave. No disease is so common, more deceptive and dangerous, less understood, or more unsuccessfully treated by physicians. f» CaMMCH &K ft * If you would remove an evil, gtrflx nt its TgCIYWIPUT I S&ATS ?re d m P ^rify otherwise 0 of r ^ses U faulty som°o i nt.fi! i”,i.n I. I weakness, impurity, system, or in attempting to B condition of the --- cure the disease our chief aim must of this be directed to the removal of that cause. The thousands more wo of see odious disease, and we treat successfully cases an¬ nually at the invalids’ Hotel and Surgical Institute, the more do we realize the importance of combining with the use of a local, soothing and healing application, a th (trough and persistent inter¬ nal use of blood-cleansing and tonic medicines. C3 In curing catarrh and all the various diseases with which it is so frequently complicated, stomach, as throat, . bronchial, and lung diseases, weak ca Qri HlUJUiuC. iiupr a I tarrhal scrofulous deafness, weak syphilitic or inflamed taints, eyes, the wonder- impure --’ blood, and ful powers and virtues of Dr. Pierce's Golden Med¬ ical Discovery cannot be too strongly extolled. It has a specific Size qe pellets. *1 O o o -a WpfGA o m. T1VE: < O o ' - A led- m 9 7jm PLEASA^ m ... T mm m. , . r/ Wfr '/// fHE ORIGINAL € g; c [iTTLE iry: LIVER PILLS. i ft X r •1 /I Sold 25 Cents by Druggists. a Vial. being ptrely vegetable, Dr. Pierce’s Pellets operate without disturbance to the system, diet, or occupation. Put up in glass vials, hermetically sealed. Always fresh and relia¬ ble. As a gentle laxative, alterative, or active purgative, they give the most perfect satisfaction. A Good Name At home is a tower of strength abroach—says the fa ceived from our friends and neighbors, and from tae time it was fairly introduced up to the present there has been, and is now, more of Hood’s Sarsaparilla Sold in Lowell, Mass,Vwhere it is made, than of all other garsaparilias and blood purifiers combined. This “good name” among people who have known Hood’s Sarsaparilla and its proprietors for years should certainly be strong evidence to people in other cities and towns of the excellence and merit3 of this medicine. Send for book contai nin g state¬ ment of cures. Salt Rheum “After the failure of three skillful physicians to cure my boy of salt rheum, I tried Hood’s Sarsapa¬ rilla and Olive Ointment. I have now used four boxes of Ointment an 1 one and a half bottles of Sarsaparilla, and the boy is to all appearances com¬ pletely cured. He is now four years old and has been afflicted sin-je he was six months of age.' — Mrs. B. Sanderson, 56 Xewhall St, Lowell, Mass. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Sold by all druggists. $1; six for $5. Prepared only by C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass. IOO Doses One Dollar MARVELOUS if DISCOVERY. Wholly iinlikp nrtific.ial systems, lur e of mind wandering?. reading. Auv book learned m one Classes of 1087 at Baltimore, 1005 at Detroit, 1216 1500 at Philadelphia, 1113 at Washington, Law students, nt Boston, large chisses of Columbia at Yale, Wellesley, Oberlin, University of Penn., Mich¬ igan University, Chautauqua, &c., Ac. Endorsed by Richard Proctor, the Scientist. Houb.W. W.Astor, Judah P. Benjamin, Judge Gibson, Dr. Brown, E. U. Cook, Principal N. Y. State Normal College, <Sc. Taught bv *>ROF. correspondence. LOIS FT I'E. Prospectus 237 Fifth Ave.. post N. FREE from The BUYERS’ GUIDE ia issued March and Sept., each year. It is an eney jg|y clopedia mation for of all useful who infor- pur. jgWjKi^ 39’' necessities chase the luxuries of life. or Wa the «s can clothe you and furnish you with all the necessary and unnecessary appliances to ride, walk, dance, sleep, eat, cu. 1 ,, fish, uou, hunt., work, _____, go to — 1 church, or stay at home, and in_various sizes, styles and quantities, just figure out what is required to do all these things OQPSFGRTftBLV, and you can make a fair estimate of the value of the BUYERS GUIDE, which will ba sent upon receipt of 10 cents to pay postage, MONTGOMERY WARD & CO. ni-114 Michigan Avenue, Chicago, IB. DALLAS TEXAS. Centre of the r chest i.eit of cheap farming lands in the wor d, population 1SN0, 10,SIS! in ISS8. 10,763. IV.II have way Centre, your objective puiut to visit all por tkms or the State, Address seq’y \mmmm sss mtrm. ^ i j Art yy lO A MONTH can be made working for us Agents preferred five who can furnish their own horses and their whole time to the business. RKWSTffloS Va. SON & CO., lull! Main sc.. Bichin ud. Q A SJH 5.000,000 acres best agricul- 8 LRni v tural end crazing land for sale. Address.(iODLE Y & PORTER.Dallas,Tex. effect upon the lining mucous membranes of the nasal and and restoring- it to its natural, thin, delicate, moist, health J con¬ dition,, As a blood-purifler, it is unsurpassed. As those diseases which complicate catarrh are diseases of the lining- mucous n} 0 ;* 11 " branes, or of the blood, it will readily be seen, why this medicine is so well calculated to cure them. i | loo&l"! a jj com parison the best preparation ever invented. 3 AprUT It is mild and pleasant to uce, producing no smarting | da&ni. or pain, and containing no strong,irritating, or caus fcmTTsrn zgassa t j c drug-, or other poison. This Remedy is a power¬ ful antiseptic, and speedily destroys all bad sincil which accom¬ panies so many cases of catarrh, thus affording great comfort ,o those who suffer from this disease. ■T* 3 ™! The Golden Medical Discovery is the natural birpy^LTMT 1 uiii i-nu-iii “helpmate” only cleanses, of Dr. purifies, gage’s regulates, Catarrh Remedy. and buucfl I* not and con¬ Cures, up the system to a healthy standard, complications, quers throat, such bronchial, exist, and but, lung from its specific when any it aits effects upon the lining membrane of the nasal passages, ulcerated materially in restoring the diseased, thickened, or mem¬ brane to a healthy condition, and thus eradicates the disease. When ^ cure is effected in this manner it is permanent. Sage's Both Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery and Dr. Catarrh Remedy are sold by druggists tbe world over. Discovery $1.00, six bottles for $5.00. Dr. Sage s Catarrh Remedy 50 cents, half-dozen bottles $2.50. hints tc . A complete Treatise on Catarrh, giving valuable as clothing, diet, and other matters of importance, will be mailed, post-paid to any address, on receipt of a 2-cent postage stamp. Address, AVorld’s Dispensary Medical Association? No. 663 Main Street, Buffalo, N. T- PURELY VEGETABLE! PERFECTLY HARMLESS! As a LIVER F1IX, they are Cnequaled! SMA.XiX.EST, CHEAPEST, EASIEST TO TASS. Beware of Imitations, which contain Poisonous Minerals. Always ask f- r Dr. Pierce’s Pellets, which are little Suaur-coated A DOSE. Pills, or Anti-bilious Granules. ONE PELLET SICK HEADACHE, Bilious Headache, Dizziness, Constipation, K ^ Indigestion. Bilious Attacks, and ail.derange- IV ments of the stomach and bowels, are promptly re- A fe 2 lieved and permanently cured by the use of Dr. “ S . Pierce’s Pellets. In explanation of their remedial power over so gTeat a varietv of diseases, it may universal, .__ n * a truthfully be sain that their action upon the system is gland Or tissue escaping their sanative influence. ASSOCIATION Manufactured by WORLD'S DISPENSARY MEDICAL BUFFALO, ~~ Lecture on "ROUGH ON RATS." 1 jji -Fry c= * To clear out bed Bags, uux Rough os Rat with grease and smear about their haunts, and } put a 15 c. bo x BUGShtc?; of it in a pint of benzine and BED be crevices where grease cannot applied. For Water Bags, Beetles, Roaches, &c. For two or three nights * sprinkle Rough on Rats dry powder, in, about and down the sink,drain First thing pipe. in£$£jiL IICCTI I LEw the morning wash it all away down the drain pipe, when cellar all the insects from garret to will disappear. The secret is in WATEB house they must drink during the night. For sSakenhialkeg Potato Bugs. Insects on Vines, BO etc., a table with sprinkling of water, pot, and ACHES syringe, applied whisk broom. Keep it well spray stirred or up. 15 c 25c. and $1 Boxes.—Apr. size. See full direc¬ tions with boxes. GROUND SQUIRRELS, RABBITS. Sparrows, Gophers, Chipmunks, cleared out by Bough on Rats. See directions. ROUGH ON MALARIA higher SS Fever and Ague, Chills, prepaid by than for a $1.50. kite. S’ 50 at Druggists, or Ex. E. S. wells, Jersey City, N. J. Mason SlHamui ORGANS. Highest Honors at ail Great World’s Exhibitions since _337. 100 styles, Catalogue, $22 to $900. For free. Cash, Easy Payment, or Rented. 40 pp., 4ro, PIANOS* Mason & Hamlindonot hesitate to make the extraordin¬ ary claim that their Pianos are superior to all others. This they attribute solely ;ole]y to to the the remarkable ren improvement introduced introduced by by them them in in 1882, 1882, now now known known as as the the “MASON “MASON & HAMLIN PIANO STRINGER.” Full particulars by mail. E A •Mlvi 1 BOSTON, 154 Tremont St. CHICAGO, (Union 149 Wabash Ave, NEW YORK, 45 East 14th St. Square). X II well DSILL All cuttings of the drill in clay, sand, gravel, rock. 4c, are discharged at surface w itlionr rcinovror tools. Noted for success where others fail Itnii TBFFSN, OHIO. OSaV JO ■fe. U. S. Staaiari Saak:. Sent on trial. Frei-lit ^ _ _ liSggTZy paid. Fully Warranted. Tlfclpp^ ‘ 7 ^iHusfratetfCatalogue 3 TON $35. tion ately low. Agents wed ,, paid. -id 1 free. Mention this Paper. n. OSGOOD & THOMPSON, Binghamton, i nISlIr S pT||* B sKiicia Great KheumatiC English Remedy, Gout and 1 it,,, t c rmi'iil. ci l'dl«. jftr-jg pets vor.r address in nur Agent’s Directory and r IWourtarve Magar'n • 4 morth-fre- Cenyof Deect tnry Ga. pentto eic>. me \ddress Record Go., Buchanan, --------------- „ FREB . ^ S 5 to $s a day. Samples worth $1.50, t R ( e ,, 1 ,‘ 0 itf®' t o’..» Mich. <) IJ) is worth $o00 per lb. Pettit’s Eye Salve ii VT worth iBl. QUA. but is sold at 25c. a b vx by dealeri. A. N. U....... ........Twenty-three, '88.