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THE JtAlt.V ANI) HARDEN.
NITRATE OF SODA ON WHEAT.
The wonderful properties of nitrate of
soda are being strikingly exhibited tit
the Ohio Agricultural Experiment Sta
tion, where wheat is being grown ’fcon
tinually under different methods of fer
tilizing. Although the nitrate was not
applied until the middle of April it stim
ulated such a big growth that the plots
which received nitrate in large quantities
carry almost thrice as great a weight of
vegetation as do the plots that had no
nitrate. — New York World.
GUINEAS ON THE FARM.
There is no sale for Guinea fowls in
market, but the Guinea fowl is, never
theless, one of the finest of all table
birds, possessing a certain game flavor
that is not found in other fowls. They
have full meated breasts, and possess but
a small proportion of offal compared with
hens. If their real value for the table
were known they would sell at high
prices. On the farm they cost almost
nothing, being industrious foragers, and
there never was a better insect extermi
nator than the Guinea. Outside of the
eggs they provide, without cost, they de
stroy thousands of insects, and though
their in that direction may not be
apparent, yet the work goe3 on with
them constantly. They are never idle,
being engaged from early mom until
night. —Mirror and Farmer.
HOW TO PLANT A FLOWER RED.
It is no easy matter, writes a corre
spondent, to prepare a flower bed lor the
seeds, and especially if the turf has not
been spaded up for years. After the sods
are taken away the bed should be well
tilled up with earth, so that it will not j
be too damp, It should then be raked i
over and made smooth, after which it is
ready for the seeds. Some seeds, pan
sies lor instance, should first he planted
in boxes, and when large enough must j
be set into the ground. It is well to ;
transplant pansy seedlings two or three
times, and when the seedlings are trans- j
planted it should he done at nirfht rath- |
er than in the morning, unless it is a very
cloudy day. Some seedlings will not
stand it well to be transplanted. The
poppy, for instance, should never be
transplanted. When pansy seeds are
first planted it. is better to water them j
with boiling hot water, because they
will sprout quicker. This must not be ]
done more than two or three times, on
account of killing the sprouts. Seeds
may be planted in r6ws or not, but I
prefer to have them mixed up, ns I think
they look prettier. It is very discour
aging to have a bed all dug over, seeds
planted and sprouted, and then to have
some child run over it. That was my
case with a nasturtium bed, and the
seeds were ju9t sprouting. My brother
was out digging up a bed and playing
with a little girl at the same time, when
she ran straight through the best part.
Of course I shall not know the difference
ten years from now. The weeds should
always be kept out from among the
plants and the earth should be loosened
quite often. The plants should be wat
ered every day, and I think it is better
to do it at night. When the plants are
in blossom some folks seem to be afraid
to pick them. It is very much better
for various kinds of plants to pick off the
I blossoms, as it makes them bloom more
jMreely. —New England Homestead.
BOARDING THE HELP.
Grace Perry wiites to the Farm
Journal that to many a farmer’s wife the
most disagreeable part of farming is the
taking into the family of help that is
needed. It is the primitive custom yet
retained in many locations, but with im
proved methods of farming will come
more enlightened ideas as to the preser
vation of the heart of the home, the wife
and the mother, and her strength will be
husbanded as we do not think of now.
It is too precious to be wasted in prepar
ing immense dinners for brawny men
other than her own family.
And what an absurdity to try and feed
children on food tit for hard working
men; it cannot be done. Food proper
for children would not furnish the
strength necessary for the performance
of hard physical labor, and to feed chil
dren on the hearty food laborers need
would lead to no end of ill-heath for
them. It is almost an impossibility to
deny children food that is on the table
and to hold them to the proper diet with
things before ihem that they want so
bad.
There are so many dishes that a wo
man loves to prepare for her own family
that would be silly to set before laboring
men. Dishes that would be of no more
good to them in the way of nourishment
than so much candy, but that we love
and make good for us—such as custards,
cream puffs, cakes, lemon pies and such
light dishes.
And, too, the meeting of the family at
table should be the pleasantest affair of
the day, and where a man is a busy one
it is often the time to make plans, to
talk over many private matters that one
does not speak of before any but members
of his own family.
One’s evenings, too, should be j-cn
erally spent in private, just the family.
Who is willing to admit to the intimacy
of the heme evening circle those who
may retail all that happens or who may
influence the boys and girls ever so little
in a way we cannot approve of ?
Let the help have their own quarters.
A married man is best, then he has his
own home life and is content.
HOG CHOLERA. t
The most reliable authorities differ in
many points in regard to the disease
known as “hog cholera,” for it seems to
be manifested in nearly as many ways as
ever the “horuail” in cattle was, and as
that baa been found to be in no way a
disease of the horns, though the horn
rnay become diseased in consequence of
some forms of it, 60 the cholera is not
the disease, but a symptom of the efforts
nature is making to throw off the dis
ease. And quite as often the first symp
tom of these diseases are constipation
rather than scouring, but it does not at
tract attention. The feeding of indi
gestible food may originate diseases that
are often called “hog cholera,” and mu
lrequent arc the, feeding of grass uc
clover while wet, weeds that are partially
wilted or have lain in piles until they
have begun to decay, decaying vegeta
bles, and musty or mouldy grain, and
city swill containing more or less of mat
ter which has reached nearly the last
stages of decay. While scouring and
vomiting are among the earliest symp
toms noticed in many cases, others show
duloess, stupor and 10-s of appetite, and
perhaps a breaking out of red or nearly
purple spots back of the ears, on the
rump or thighs, and on parts lain on or
kept too warm by contact with other ani
mals when lying down in the pen. In
nearly all stages the are
poisonous to other swine, and wneu the
disease once appears in a herd the larger
part of them will take it unless the most
effective measures are taken to check its
progress. The rem oval cf all not yet
ailing to clean pens and grounds, the
best of care in regard to proper food,
and a supply of clean water for drinking
and bathing, are usually more effectual
remedies than medicine, but all peti3and
yards in which hogs have been taken
sick should be at once disinfected after
they have been removed, for which pur
pose a solution of carbolic acid or of
sulphuric acid seems to be as good as
anything known, though sulphate of
iron (copperas) may suffice in piace of
mors powerful disinfectants, or a solu
tion of corrosive sublimate. These so
lutions will not be very strong, but must
be used abundantly about all wood
work, to penetrate into all cracks and
crevices. Air-slaked lime upon the earth
of yards and pens may assist very much,
but pastures where sick swine have run
should be plowed to bring up fresh earth
to the surface, and even then it is well
to use the lime around their most fre
quent haunts. All dead animals should
be buried deep or cremated. —Boston
Cultivator.
FARM AND GARDEN NOTE3,
Have your fowls any shade?
Spade up the runs occasionally.
No farm should be without one or two
good brood sows.
Fowls having the run of the farm will
get along with a little com these days. *
Sheep are often a source of economy,
as they thrive on what would otherwise
be wasted.
All plants started in hot-beds should
be exposed to the air a few days before
transplanting.
The little chicks will sooner be big
ones is kept shut up each morning until
the dew is off.
As far as possible, contrive to have
your crops come on successively—not all
at the same time.
Make pot pies of stock you do not
wish to winter, if you have too few to
make a shipment.
What a blessed thing it is that the
weather and the growth of crops do not
depend on politics.
Look to your sources of water supply,
and see that they are not receptacles of
foulness and disease.
No country is ever so prosperous as
i when its labor forces are all employed
and properly directed.
Did you mean to clean out the hen
house yesterday? Did you do it? If
not, stick your head into it to-night at
nine o’clock.
Notwithstanding the good fruit pros
pects tomatoes will find ready purchasers
aud can always be made a salable and
paying crop.
Fowls running at large should be pro
vided with convenient secluded nesting
places known to you or they will find
some unknown ones.
We believe th 6 sooner a sick hen is
killed the better. It saves time, saves
feed, saves health to the rest. Kill and
, bury every mopiiig hen.
Don't pull too many stalks from the
rhubarb bed ; let some of the leaves re
main, for they are the lungs that supply
| life and vigor to the roots.
I Some men pay a great deal of atten
tion to the branches of the fruit tree,
and let the roots take care of themselves.
Both require equal attention.
Don't pick the peaches too green.
Remember that this fruit cannot ripen
after leaving the trbe without losing its
flavor, hence the value of near-by mar
kets and local growers.
Present prices of laud and its products
will not justify a mau in clearing rocky
land for pastures or fields either, unless
it is near some large town where market
gardening can be followed.
To keep borers away from my peach
trees and to keep the trunks nice and
smooth I wrap them with tar paper from
an inch below ground up eighteen inch
es when first set out aud keep it on.
If you do not use a lawn mower save
some nicely cured fine grass where you
can get at it next winter. Run some of
it through the feed cutter and soak out
for the fowls; they will appreciate it.
It cost much more to regain a lost
pound of flesh on a steer than to add a
like weight to a thrifty one. In pur
chasing steers to feed, thrifty ones will
generally be found the more profitable.
We know of nothing that purities the
heu-house better than fresh earth scat
tered on the floor. Kerosene may kill
lice, ashes or dost be good for a dust
bath, but neither of these give the fresh
ness that fresh soil does. Try it.
The improvement in native wild fruits
has made the Northwest more productive
in the line of plums, cherries and cur
rants, while the introduction of pears
aud apples from Russia lias greatly in
creased the production in that line.
The little culls of strawberries, per
haps imperfect on one side, will add but
a trifle to the quantity of fruit and surely
pull down the price for the basket or
orate more than seems possible. Suc
| cessful fruit men agree in the advice to
I assort closely.
A Wonderful Old Man.
Old Uncle Larkin Ilrowu, who keeps a
bridge at Roswell, Ga., is a remarkable
old man. He was born in Washington
county, Geoi b ia, is the youngest of a
family of sixteen children, and his moth
er was fifty-one years old when he was
born. He is now ninety-one years old,
is in perfect health and bids fair to live
many years. He has chewed and smoked
tobacco all his life, never eats vegetables,
except potatoes, drinks coffee three times
a day, and was never siclc but one time in
his life, and tiiat was last summer, when
he made himself sick by rating too much
candy. Two hour’s sleep a nigat is
sufficient for him. He has kept the
bridge for the past fourteen years, and
has drank no whisky in thirty years.
Tradespeople as Soldiers.
The Emperor William’s remarks about
volunteers, “tradesmen masquerading as
soldiers,” might be considerably modified
by a careful reading of American history.
In every crisis our nation has been saved
by the volunteer soldiers drawn from the
ranks of civil life. There is no record of
greater heroism, more faithful service or
persistent courage than was displayed
by these volunteers.—lndianapolis News.
Heard In Boston.
Mrs. Do Hubb—“You say you paid
only fifty cents for those shirts. You
shouldn’t have purchased them. You
should not encourage those manufact
urers.”
Mr. De Hubb—“Why not?”
Mrs. De Hubb—“You must know by
the price that they are a product of the
perspiring system.”— New York Weekly.
Many persons are broken down from over
work or household cares. Brown’s Iron Bit
ters rebuilds the system, aids diKestion, re
moves excess of bile, and cures malaria. A
splendid tonic for women and children.
The fear of future evil is in itself the great
est of evils.
HALL’S CATARRH CURE is a liquid and
is taken internally, and acts directly upon the
blood and mucous surfaces of the system.
Send for testimonials, free. Sold lry Druggists,
75c. F. J. CHENEY & CO.,Proprs., Toledo, O.
There is a sufficient recompense in the very
consciousness of a noble deed.— Cicero.
Ladies needing a tonic, or children who
want building up, should tako • Brown’s Iron
Bitters. It is pleasant to take, cures Malaria,
Indigestion, Biliousness and Liver Complaints,
makes the Blood rich and pure.
Cherish your best hopes as faith, and abide
by them in action.
Van Winkle Gin and Machinery Cos., Atlan
ta, Ga., manufacture Cotton Gins, Feeders,
Condensers, Presses, Cotton-Seed Oil Mills, Ice
Machinery, Shafting, Pulleys, Tarflcs, Pumps,
Wind-Milts, Etc. Write for prices and disc'ts.
FITS stopped free by Dr. Kline’s Great
Nerve Restorer. No Fits after first day’s
use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and $2 trial
bottle free. Dr. Kline, 931 Ar -h St.. Phita., Pa.
if afflicted with Forecyes use Dr. Isaac Tliomp
f on’s Eye-water. Druggists sell at2sc per bottle.
Tried and True
Is the positive verdict of people who take Hood's
Sarsaparilla. When used according to directions
the good effects of this excellent medicine are soon
felt In nerve strength restored, that tired feeling
driven oft, a good appetite created, headache and
dyspepsia relieved, scrofula cured and all the bod
effects of Impure hi.overcome. If you are In
need of a good blood idffmer or tonic medicine do
not fall to try
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Bold by all druggists. $1 j six for $5, Prepared only
by C. I. HOOD & CO, Maas.
I£o Doses One Dollar
DONALD KENNEDY
Of Roxbuiy, Mass., says
Kennedy’s Medical Discovery
cures Horrid Old Sores, Deep-
Seated Ulcers of 40 years’
standing, Inward Tumors, and
every Disease of the Skin, ex
cept Thunder Humor, and
Cancer that has taken root.
Price, $1.50. Sold by every
Druggist in the United States
and Canada,
W* ARB REARING THE MARKET OR Watches;
we have forced the prices of watches down at
least 20 per cent.; as a result of this wo are
making immense salts.
The “Stevens Watch” is extensively known
as the best time-keeper in the market—it ie
umqualed for accuracy and durability. Find
out about our improved watch before pur
chasing. J. P. Stevens<& Bro., 47 Whitehall St..
Al (until. (sa. Send for catalogue.
From the “Pacific Journal.”
**A great invention has been inado by Dr.
Tutt of New York. He hae produced*
Tutt’s Hair Dye
which Imitates nature to perfection ;Tt acts
instantaneously and is perfectly harmless. •
Price, Bf. Otlice, SO & 41 I>ark Place, If. Y,
ShY’S CREAM Btl,M
Applied Into Nostrils Is Qulcklv ]r%tir Cya,
Absorbisi, demises the Head, Mf
Ilealb the Sores and Cures g;\o
CATARRH.Mi
Restores Taste and Smell, quick- -Y&Oj
ly Relieves Cold iu Hoad and CW/yttfaj
Headache. 50c. at Druggists. 5 N
ELY BROS., 56 Warren St., N. Y. iWXc^rv,,
ffl | H ABOUT East Tenneso e’s FINE
AsS a M CI.I.IIATE and Ureat Rksocrciis m
i ■ KNOXVILLE SENTINEL; dally 1 mo„
r. - JTIrS 30c.; weekly l year, $1; samples 5a
A CHICAGO FIRE.
In Which Over a Million in Prop
erty Was Destroyed.
A fire involving a loss admitted to he
at least a million dollars broke out at
1:30 O’clock Monday morning in the
large retail dry goods and notions store
of Siegel, Cooper & Cos,, at the sputheast
corner of State and Adams streets. Chi
cago, The blaze started in the exchange
room on the first floor and spread
through the inflammable stock with tbe|
greatest rapidity. All attempts to save*
the building wgre hopeless, and the fire
department devoted its efforts towards
preventing the flames spreading to the
adjoining buildings. About twenty
five employes were in the store at the
time, but all, as far as is known, man
aged to escape uninjured. There wire
three watchmen in the building at the
time who Lav* not yet been accounted
for. The firm carried a stock of $500,-
000. The loss is believed to be fully
covered by insurance.
Losses were as follows: Biegel, Kohn
& Cos., $500,000 on stock and $40,000 on
building, insurance $500,000; the Leader ,
Demberg, Fleck & Harner lose by smoke
and water SIOO,OOO, covered by insui
ance; James H. Walker, drygoods, loses
by smoke and water $50,000; C. Pen nock
& Cos., crockery and bric-a-brac, $40,000,
insurance $33,000; Costkygan & Bed
rosin, Turkish rugs, $5,000; John A.
Bryant, piano agent, $5,000; I. W.
Baird, pictures $5,000; Women’s Ex
change, $2,000; Bell, dry goods and no
tions. and other minor losses, $6,000.
Most of the smaller losses are covered by
insurance.
THE LAST SAD RITES
Over the Corpses of the St.
Mande Disaster.
A cablegram from Paris, says: Im
mense crowds of people, estimated at
25,000, gathered Wednesday afternoon
at St. Mande to witness the funerals of
the victims ot the tenible railroad disas
ter of Sunday last. The crowds were so
great that it required the presence of the
prefect of the department of the Seine
and a strong detachment of troops to
keep the route of procession clear. There
were twenty-four hearses in black line,
which led from the town hall to the cem
etery, and thousands of mourners follow
ed the bodies to the grave. One would
have imagined that some terrible scourge
or ravages of war had suddenly swept
Away a portion of the inhabit ints of St.
Mande and its neighborhood. All the
people were in mourning. All the houses
were draped with emblems, half masted
flags and other signs of general mourning.
The entire scene was barrowing in the
extreme.
THE ALLIANCE AT THE HELM
While the Governor and Lieu
tenant Are Frolicking 1 . f
A dispatch of Tuesday from Linco’n.
Neb., says that Governor Thayer is in
Detroit at the Grand Army of the
Republic encampment. Lieutenant Gov
ernor Majors’ whereabouts is not known.
He is not in Lincoln, and is supposed to
be at Detroit ills >, or at least out of the
state. Under the constitution the presi
dent of the senate is acting governor.
Po nter, who is a strong Allianceman, slip
ped down to Lincoln Monday afternoon,
and announced his intention of ascer
taining whether Majors was in the state.
He said that if he found that he was not
he would assume the duties of governor
and run things until Majors or Thayer
turned up. He said that he would prob
ably call a special session of the legisla
ture to pass the maximum freight bill.
Republican officers at Lincoln are panic
."trickon, and the wires are kept, hot call
ing on Thayer and Majors to return and
save the state from alliance usurpation.
OUT OF PRISON 7
O’Brien and Dillon Released
from Jail.
A cablegram from Dublin says: Wil
liam O’BiLn and John Dillon. Irish
members of parliament who have been
undergoing sentence of six months’ im
prisonment for inciting tenants of the
Smith Barry estate, at Tipperary, to re
sist the payment of rents, were released
from Galway jail Thursday morning.
They seemed to be enjoying perfect
health. Large crowds of people gathered
outside the jail long before the hour set
for deliverance, and when the prisoners
appeared they were greeted with loud
shouts of “Stick to Parnell 1” These
shouts, however, were intermixed with
others equally loud, “Down with Par
nell!” A deputation composed of tenant
farmers presented them with several ad
dresses of congratulation upon their re
lease from prison.
A TRUST COMPANY
To Manipulate the Assets of the
Moses’ Bank.
A Montgomery d:?rmtch of Tuesday,
says: The assignees of Moses’s bank,
which assigned July 6th, have filed a
schedule of assets of the late firm. The
assignees make no estimate of value, but
the amount is placed nominally at $3,-
000,000, which consists largely of stocks,
bonds, real estate and lands distributed
in various sections of Alabama. The lia
bilities are placed at $1,100,000. The
creditors now propose to form a trust
company, all to take shares to the amount
of their claims, and the plan is thought
to be a feasible one and likely to result
in securing the holders of claims against
loss. There has been no other financial
trouble on account of the failure of
this bank. Other banks have not been
in the least affected, and business is go
ing along as usual.
THE STEAMER SANK
And Over Two Hundred Souls
Went Down with Her.
The steamer City of Pekin, which ar
rived at San Francisco Thursday night,
reports that on July 12th, at 3 o’clock a.
m., the steamer Tarane Marn, of Hako
date, while returning from Suto with 320
laborers on board, came into collision
with the steamer Migos'ii Marn, off S’uau
gami. The Tamae Marn immediately
sank, with loss of 260 persons, drowned
and missing. The captain and first offi
cer and sixty laborers reached the shore.
Altitude and Population.
The census bureau has issued a bulletiu
on the distribution of population in ac
cordance with altitude. It appears that
in the area below 500 feet is included
nearly all that part of the population which
is engaged in manufacturing and in the
foreign commerce of the country, aud
most of that engaged in the culture of
cotton, rice and sugar. The interval be
tween 500 feet and 1, - 500 feet eomprisis
the greater part of the prairie states and
grain-producing slates of the northwest.
East of the ninety-eighth meridian 1,500
feet is practically the upper limit of pop
ulation, all the country lying above the
elevation being mountainous. The pop
ulation between 2,000 and 5,000 feet is
found mainly on the slope of the great
western plains. Above 3,000 feet irriga
tion is almost universally necessary for
success iu agricultural operations.
Between 4,000 and 5,000 feet, and more
markedly between 5,000 and 0,000 feet
the population is decidedly in excess of
the grade or grades below it. This is
mainly due to the fact that the densest
settlement at high altitudes in the Cor
dilleran region is at the eastern base of
the Rocky mountains and in the valleys
about Great Salt Lake, which regions lie
between 4. (00 and 0,000 feet. Of these
the extensive settlements at the base of
the mountains in Colorado are mainly be
tween 5,000 aud 0,000 feet. Above 0,000
feet the population, which is confined,
of cohise, to the Cordillcran region, is al
most entirely engaged in the pursuit f
mining, and the greater part of it is loca
ted in Colorado, New Mexico, Nevada
and California. While the population is
increasing numerically in all altitudes,
its relative movement is decidedly toward
the region of greater altitudes, and is
most marked between the country lying
between 1,000 and 0,000 feet above the
sea.
The density of population is greatest
near sea level in that narrow strip along
the seaboard which contains our great
sea ports. The density diminishes grad
ually and rather uniformly up to 2,000
feet, where the population becomes quite
sparse. The average elevation of the
country, excluding Alaska, is about 2 500
feet. The average elevation at which
the inhabitants lived, taking cogniz tuce
of their distribution, was 687 feet in
1870; in 1880 it had increased to 739
feet, and in 1890 to 788 feet. — Washing
ton Post.
Hard Lines.
Whiffers —“You took all worn out.”
Riffers—“l’m most dead. Hud about
forty letters to write this afternoon.”
“Why didn’t you ciictale them?”
“No typewriter.”
“What’s become of her?”
“I married her.”
“Get another.”
“Can’t.”
“Why not?”
“Costs tco much to live now.” —New
Tori Weekly.
All One.
He—“l never saw clothing so cheap as
it is now . Any man can dress like a
gentleman.”
She—“ Yes, indeed. So can the la
dies.”— New York Weekly.
ONE ENJOYS
Both the method and results when
Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant
and refreshing to tfle taste, and acts
gently yet promptly on the Kidneys,
Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys
tem effectually, dispels colds, head
aches and fevers and cures habitual
constipation. Syrup of Figs is the
only remedy of its kind ever pro
duced, pleasing to the taste and ac
ceptable to the stomach, prompt in
its action and truly benencitu k its
effects, prepared only from the most
healthy and agreeable substances, its
many excellent qualities commend it
to all and have made it the most
popular remedy known.
Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50c
and SI bottles by all leading drug
gists. Any reliable druggist who
may not have it on hand will pro
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it. Do not accept any
substitute.
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP COL
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.
LOUISVILLE. NY. NEW YORK. N.t.
FOR THE BOWELS
T EET HI NG HIL D R EN, fPSESSSSj
DON’T let your druggiet or merchant per-
Miiade yon that no me (king cle will ilo yNj
SHORTHAND
Every one suffers
from Catarrh In the Head. Those
who don’t have it suffer from those
who do. It’s a disease you ’can’t
keep to yourself.
Here are some of the symptoms:
Headache, obstruction of nose, dis
charges falling into throat, some
times profuse, watery, and acrid,
at others, thick, tenacious, mucous,
purulent, bloody, putrid, and offen
sive ; eyes weak, ringing in ears,
deafness; offensive breath; smell
and taste impaired, and general de
bility. But only a few of these
likely to be present at once.
The cure for it for Catarrh it
self, and all the troubles that come
from it —a perfect and permanent
cure, is Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy.
The worst cases yield to its mild,
soothing, cleansing and healing
properties. A record of 25 years
has proved that to its proprietors
—and they’re willing to prove it
to you.
They do it in this way; If they
can’t euro your Catarrh, no matier
how bad your case, or of how long
standing, they’li pay you SSOO in
cash. Can you have better proof of
the healing power of a medicine ?
“August
Flower”
Mrs. Sarah M. Black of Seneca,
Mo., during the past two years ha?
been affected with Neuralgia of thi
Head, Stomach and Womb, and
writes: ‘ 1 My food did not seem to
strengthen me at all and my appe
tite was very variable. My fac
was yellow, my head dull, and I had
such pains in my left side. In the
morning when I got up I would
have a flow of mucus in the mouth,
and a bad, bitter taste. Sometimes,
my breath became short, and I had
such queer, tumbling, palpitating
sensations around the heart. I ached
all day under the shoulder blades,
in the left side, and down the back
of my limbs. It seemed to be worse
in the wet, cold weather of Winter
and Spring; and whenever the spells
came on, my feet and hands would
turn cold, and I could get no sleep
at all. I tried everywhere, aud got
no relief before using August Flower
Then the change came. It has done
me a wonderful deal of good during
the time I have taken it and is work
ing a complete cure. ” ®
G. G. GREEN. Sole Man’fr,Woodbury, N.j.
SMITH’S WORM OIL
Is Undoubtedly the Best, Quicjtest, ntA
Most Reliable Worm Medicine Sold
Palmetto, (U. Sept. k’4.1891.
I certify that on the 19tli of September 1
commenced giving my chiid, z 0 months oid.
Smith’s Worm Oil, and the following day 2i
worms, 4 to t> inches long, were expelled from
it. S. W. Lotto.
Sold Everywhere. 23 Contm.
KINC COTTON
Buy or sell your Cotton on JOtfES
5-Ton Cotton Scale.
s NOT CHEAPEST BUT BEST,
r® efjfl * jo For terms address
W II U JONES OF BINGHAMTOfT,
™ W BINGHAMTON. N. Y.
“ U Eft cYr 5 5 TO B A cco
a. I 8. IS TIIE BEST for
0 Mild, Sweet CHEW. No HEARTBURN nor
HEADACHE. Sml I Ocents in Stamps lor a 5.4 .1/-
t'LK, if your dealer does not KEEP IT. TA V I,olt
BROS.. Manufactuhkkb. Winston, N.
fMh, reM S 1 Mfli mid Whlakey Habile
plflsl ’vz&x ■ 3 awßßt'ured at home with-
Ji -~N BIS M SPISw out pain. Book of par-
Jjw MB E a 0y e! tieuiiirs sent HI IE.
■iiiivuiii—-nm-wm B.M. WOOLLEY,M.I).
Atlanta. Ga. Office 101> B Whitehall St
PENSIONS— line all SOU.MEIIS! H d#s-
A-nied. S ’£ Fjcjs for inoronne. 2d penes experience
White fob Laws. A. W. McCOKMICK Ar.
SONS, Washinuton, D. U. A Cincinnati, o.
PATENTS
V 10-page book tree.
9tAl# Weak, Nkkvocs, Wretched mortals gel
■ vltlK we “ and kee P welK LleaUh Helper
‘•■W ■% tells how. 50 cts. a year. Sample copy
tree. I>r. J. 11. I)YK. Editor. Buffalo. N. Y.
PENSION tef I ?,ft?-
ll—n ■■. 11. II WASHINGTON, - I>. f.
A. N. U. Thirty-two, ’1)1
CURES DIARRHEA.
DYSENTERY,
CRAMPS.
The Best Thing
Thorough, Practical Instruction. Graduates as
sisted to positions. Catalogue free Write to
amsnsmuosEssmeom,
LOUISVILLE. KY. - .