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THE FARM AND GARDEN.
WESTERING SHEEP.
The question that every flockmaster
should ask himself at this season is
whether all his sheep will pay for win
tering. If not, a little grain while there
is fresh grass for the sheep to eat will
help it for the butcher; but if extra
feeding is postponed until only dry hay
can be given, the sheep becomes costive
and soon is worth nothi.ig except for its
pelt, and that not very good. —Baton
Cultivator.
HOW TO DIVIDE YOUR HERD.
A prominent authority in England on
butter and cheese makin g says that the
dairy farmer, no matter of what country
he may be located,to be successful should
divide his herd so as during the summer
season to make fine cheese, and during
the fall and winter to produce milk for
sale in city markets, or to be made up in
fine butter, as in this way the product is
more equalized the year through. The
same authority also advises the dairy
farmer not to keep a cow that will not
average a butter yield of two pounds per
day when her milk is manufactured into
butter. —American Dairyman.
TARRED PAPER FOR ROOFING.
In using larred felt for roofing the
poultry-house, it is important that a coat
ing of gas-tar, or some such paint, be
applied as soon as the paper is put on.
This is a matter frequently neglected,
and the consequence is that the paper is
more liable to be injured by strong winds.
The gas-tar should be applied every six
months until the roof is two years old.
After that time it will be a thick roof,
and as hard as tin, lasting for many
years, and effectually keeping out cold
and dampness. It only requires a little
extra care for the first two years, when
it can be left to do service, and it will
prove to be as cheap and durable as any
roof that can be made. —Farm and Fire
tide.
HOW AN ICEHOUSE IS MADE.
To make an icehouse, there are the
following requisite; First, a dry and
air-tight foundation; second, air-tight
walls: third, an ample thickness of some
porous non-conductor, and last, a com
plete circulation of air over the ice.
The foundation should be in dry ground,
and is best partly under ground. The
walls are double and should have roofing
paper between the boards of the outer
wall, and a foot between, filled with dry
sawdust. The roof must be tight, and
tue games may be left open or have
doors in them to afford thorough venti
lation, by which the covering of the ice
on the top is kept cool. In packing the
1 ice it will lie most closely if it is cut in
y £sular blocks that will match together;
by twenty-four inches is a good
-ee of the blocks will lie across
em when crossed. All the
"ween the blocks of ice should
h the dust and small frag
■ to close the cracks. —New
10GEN FOR WHEAT.
ents made at the Indiana
1 the form of nitrogen best
wheat, and further, if there
.ay advantage in fractional applica
.ons of the different forms, nitrogen was
applied to every alternate plat, so that
each plat that received nitrogen was com
pared with a plat on each side of it that
received no nitrogen. The plats were
forty-nine feet four inches by four feet.
In all the same amount of nitrogen was
applied to each plat receiving nitrogen.
On certain plats the nitrogen was all
applied in the fall, on others one-half
was applied in the fall and one-half at
the opening of spring, and on others
one-third in the fall, one-third April 15
and one-third May 18, when the heads
were just appearing. The results showed
thatjm no c°se was any marked advan
tage derived frocj fractional applications,
while in the case of the ammonia com
pounds a decided advantage arose from
making the full application in the fall.
Nitrate of soda gave a gain of 98.4 per
cent, of grain and 1Q&.5 per cent, of
straw. Sulphate of ammonia gave a
gain of 64.6 per cent, of grain and 73.8
per cent, of straw, while dried blood
gave a gain of 54.4 per cent. 9f grain
and 6.60 per cent, of straw. From the
fact that the applications of nitrate in
one lot in the fall gave as good results
as those in three fractions, it is inferred
that there is really not so much danger
of loss of nitrates as many authorities
would lead us to believe. —New York
World.
A SYMPOSIUM ON DEHORNING.
The Orange County Farmer has*made
up a symposium of notes about the effects
of dehorning cows. A writer in the Jer
tey Bulletin is fully persuaded that a
mooley bull can kill a man as easily as a
horned one, the only advantage in his
favor being that he will not so badly
disfigure the corpse. Does he think the
Spaniards would enjoy a bull fight with
the horns sawed off? That the mooley
bull or cow can hit a hard blow with
their heads is true, but as to being dan
gerous when any reasonable amount of
caution is used, we cannot see it. Again,
an English authority says the highest
English courts have unanimously de
clared dehorning to be cruel and illegal.
The Scotch judges affirm that no cruelty
need be involved. Again, a Connec
ticut farmer while crossing a pasture went
out of his way to pat a “gentle” bull as
had been his amiable but indiscreet cus
tom. He was charged upon by the
treacherous beast and only rescued from
a horrible death by the timely arrival of
muscular neighbors who happened to
witness the danger. We remember old
Mr. Philip Swigert tried this with his
fine Jersey bull that knocked him,down,
put his horns on each side of his body
and pushed him down the hill, the grass
being nicely frosted. When both of them
reached a large log Mr. Swigert thonght
his time had come, but he whipped out a
vge pocket knife and cut the bull’s
mat.
Waldo F. Brown romarto that he is 1
of the opinion that in ten years from
now, or perhaps less, a herd of cattle
with horns will be as hard to find as a
herd of mooleys has been in the past.
The practice of dehorning is growing in
favor, and he has yet to find the man
who has dehorned a herd who is not
pleased with the results, and Mr. Brown
might have added further that such a
man is not only pleased, but continues to
practice it.
From the New York Tribune still an.
other item is taken to the effect that hav
ing referred to the peacefulness and
sociability of polled cattle he says: But
put one horned cow into the pasture with
the polls and she spoils it all. If she sees
the polls enjoying mutual protection she
will scatter their phalanx, if to do it she
has to go across a fifty-acre field with
the thermometer at 100 degrees, Fahren
heit. Could anyone ask better argu
ments in favor of taking off the horns.
EXPERIMENTS WITH FERTILIZERS.
Farmers in the older States are spend
ing millions of dollars annnally for com
mercial fertilizers. In this country, as
in Europe, they have become an absolute
necessity on worn-out soils; but to make
them profitable it is necessary that they
should fit the wants of the soil and crops
for which they are used. If a farmer
buys potash for land which abounds in
potash but needs phosphoric acid, he of
course losses. The fundamental princi
ple in the use of commercial fertilizers
is to select those materials which supply
in the best forms and at the lowest cost
the plant food which the crop needs and
the soil fails to furnish.
In order to enable farmers to find out
the wants of their own soils and the best
way of supplying them, and at the same
time to get light upon the properties of
soils in different sections of the country,
a number of experiment stations are in
troducing soil tests with fertilizers,
which are largely conducted both by the
stations and also by individual farmers
on their own farms. Of course many of
the experiments are failures, but many
practical men who have engaged in this
work have declared that they have thus
learned a great deal which is practically
useful and highly instructive.
The results o' this? tests in general
show that “soils vary greatly in their
capabilities of supplying food to crops.
Different ingredients are deScient in
different soils. The best way to learn
what materials are proper in any given
case is by observation and experiment.
The rational method for determining what
ingredients of plant food a soil fails to
furnish in abundance, and how these un
furnished materials can be most economi
cally supplied, is to put the question to
the soil with different fertilizing mate
rials, and get the reply in the crops pro
duced. The chief use of fertilizers is to
supply plant food. It is good farming
to make the most of the natural resources
of the soil and of the manures produced
on the farm, and to depend upon ar
tificial only to furnish what
more is needed. It is not good economy
to pay high prices for materials which
the soil itself may yield, but it is good
economy to supply the lacking ones in
the cheapest way.”
Probably the most valuable practical
work that these experiment stations have
done has been to analyze these various
commercial fertilizers which are offered
for sale by manufacturers. In some of
the States, in New Jersey, for instance,
the fertilizers are analyzed, and the
qualities of chemicals found m each
sample compared with What the manu
facturer claimed that the composition
contained. So as to make this perfectly
plain, the money value of the chemicals
found in each sample is noted, and com
pared with the price charged by the
manufacturer. Some startling results
have been shown. One fertilizer selling,
say, at $25 per ton would be found to
have a value of $23; another, selling at
S4O a ton, would be found to be worth
only sls; and in one instance I recall
the manufacturer charged $43 a ton for
his complete fertilizer, and the chemist
found that its actual value was only
$2.50. Bulletins like these have cer
tainly done great good, for they have
warned farmers from buying inferior
chemicals, and they have compelled man
ufacturers to keep their compositions up
to the advertised standard. When there
is more universal education amonfr the
farmers it wiii only be necessary to ex
press the values of fertilizers in chemi
cal terms. We have the authority of
the United States*Agricultural Depart
ment 1 for the statment that in the States
where experiment stations have, long
been established the greater number of
the farmers now need nothing more than
these chemical terms to guide them in
selecting the special fertilizers needed
in given cases.— Harper's Weekly.
* FARM AND GARDEN NOTES,
%
Keep enough fowls to buy the
groceries.
A yearling grapevine is best for set
ting, as a rule.
A good hen will lay twice her weight
in eggs a year.
Corn and cornmeal are the best fatten
ing foods for fowls.
Barley and wheat fed alternately make
a good egg-producing ration,
When grain is fed to poultry throw on
a litter and partly cover it up.
Close to large cities broilers briog in
more money than anything else.
On the farm, at least, the medium
sized poultry breeds are the best.
A cooked mixture of the table scraps
make a good morning ration for the
fowls.
Popular gardening commends for low
spots the common elder as a summer
bloomer.
Geese are not only valuable as meat
producers but should annually produce
a pound of feathers each.
Too much salt or salty food at one
time often proves injurious to poultry;
a small quantity is beneficial.
Meteor, the new hybrid tea rose, has
the dark crimson color of the Jacque
minot. The flower is fragrant and
premises to become popular.
Feed and Fed.
Teacher—“ What tense is feed?”
Boy—“ Present tense.”
Teacher—“ What tense is fed?”
Boy—“ Past tense.”
Teacher—“ Correct. “Give an exam
ple.”
Boy—“ After the man feed the waiter
he got fed.”—Street & Smith’s Good
News.
Coinmcn<lab!;.
All claims not consistent with the high
character of Syrup of Figs are purposely
avoided by the Cal- Fig Syrup Company. It
acts gently on the kidneys, liver and bowels,
cleansing the system effectually, but it is not
a cure-all and makes no pretensions that
every bottle will not substantiate.
There has been a steady rise in the average
age at which men and women marry ever
since 1873.
Beware of Ointments for Catarrh That
Contain Mercury,
As mercury will surely destroy the sense of
smell and completely derange the whole sys
tem when entering it through the mucous sur
faces. Such articles should never be used ex
cept on prescriptions from reputable physi
cians, as the damage they will do is ten fold to
the good you can possibly derive from them.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J.
Cheney & Cos., Toledo, O.,contains no mercury,
and is taken internally, and acts directly upon
the blood and mucous surfaces of the system.
Iu buying Hali’s Catarrh Cure be sure you get
the genuine. It is taken internally, and made
in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Cos.
IST Sold by Druggists, price 75c. per bottle.
Cold meats are generally found more easy
of digestion than warm ones.
Malaria cured and eradicated from the
p-stein by Brown’s Iron Bitters, which en
riches the blood, tones the nerves, aids diges
tion. Acts like a charm on persons in general
ill health, giving new energy and strength.
The fear of future evil is in itself the great
est of evils.
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. .Ur. Kline, W3l Arch St., Phila., Pa.
Dn. Swan’s Pastiles Cure female weakneeses;
his T-Tablet s cure chronic constipation. Sam
ples freo. Dr. Swan, Beaver Dam, Wis.
Prevention
la better than cure, and people who are subject to
rheumatism, can prevent attacks by keeping the
blood pure and free from the acid which causes
the disease. This suggests the use of Hood’s Sarsa
parilla, unquestionably the best blood purifier, and
which has been used with great success for thii
▼ery purpose by many people. *
Hood’s Sarsaparilla has also cured Innumerable
csises of rheumatism of the severest sort, by Its
powerful effect in neutralizing acidity of the blood,
and enabling the kidneys and liver to properly re
move the waste of the system. Try It.
“Hood's Sarsaparilla has done me more good
than anything else that I have ever taken, and I
take pleasure In recommending It In the highest
terms." Frederick Miller, Limerick Centre, Pa.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggists. $1; six for $5. Prepared only
by C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.
CHILD BIRTH • • •
• •*• MADE EASY!
“ Mothers’ Friend ” is a scientific
ally prepared Liniment, every ingre
dient of recognized value and in
constant useJiy the medical pro
fession. are com
bined in a manner hitherto unknown
“MOTHERS*
• .FRIEND” •
IWILL DO all that is claimed for
it AND MORE. It Shortens Labor,
Lessens Pain, Diminishes Danger to
Life of Mother and Child. Book
to “ Mothers ” mailed FREE, con
taining valuable information and
voluntary testimonials.
Sent by express on receipt of price SI.GO per bottl*
BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., Atlanta. fa
SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
“ All she lacks of beauty
is a little plumpness.”
This is a frequent thought,
and a wholesome one.
All of a baby’s beauty is
due to fat, and nearly all of a
woman’s —we know it as
curves and dimples.
What plumpness has to do
with health is cold in a little
book on careful living; sent
free.
Would you rather be
healthy or beautiful? “Both”
is the proper answer.
NewYork BowNK ’ Chemists, xja South sth A viols,
Your druggist keeps Scott’s Emulsion ofeod-livir
•U—all druggists everywhere do. sl.
■% ■ H Bia Cured without the knife, and
IS 0 H wL U without detention from buiinese.
£ H Ka Vi Cure Guaranteed. All DISEASE*
I ml OF THE Rkcxcm treated. Also
■ ■OB ” diseases of the Genito-Übinabx
Organs. Best of references Consultation free.
Bend for Pamph'et. Old Capitol Building, At
lanta, (Ja. ltooin (}j). Take elevator. FRED
F. MOOKE; M. O. (Harvard Medical College 1876.)
J. (. HAVES .11. ng mJKng ■■ ■ SB
D. (University of New 0 S£u 15 I1 fl M
York 1881.) All com- la | \ I §OO
inunicatious will be 3 B B Sj Bj tbs
promptly answered. S s U WH m li
ELY’S DREAM BALM
quickly cures
COLD >H HEAD
Apply Balm into each nostril
ELY' BROS- 56 Warren St.. N. Y.
THE SMALLEST PILL !N THE WORLD!
1 TUTT’S
►tiny liver pills
have all the virtues of the larger ones;
? equally effective; purely vegetable.
Exact size shown in this border.
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Wy l tells bow. 50els. a year. Sample copy
tree. Dr. J. 11. U VE, Kditor, Buffalo. X. Y,
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rl.ldE#rS JOSEPH 11. HUNTER,
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HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS.
TO BOIL HOMINY.
A half-pint of large hominy is sulficiea t
fOr a family of average size. It swells
to four times its original bulk. Put it
on the fire in plenty of cold water as
soon after breakfast as possible, in order
to allow it plenty of time to become
thoroughly cooked before dinner. When
the water dries out, add more, but let it
be hot. Four hours at least are required
for the grains to become thoroughly
softened and done, when it is a most
wholesome and palatable article of food.
When ready to be dished for dinner, add
a teaspoonful of butter, and mix it in
thoroughly.
A FONDU OF EOOS.
A fondu is a preparation of eggs,-
chcese and butter. Parmesan cheese is
very often used in a fondu, but any
good cheese will do. Grate two ounces
of cheese into a cooking pan, add half a
teaspoonful of salt and a pinch of
cayenne; mix in a quarter-pound of
butter into the melted cheese, add the
beaten yolks of six eggs and stir thor
oughly. Beat the whites of six eggs to
a froth and add carefully to the other in
gredients. Pour the mixture into little
porcelain-lined patty-pans and bake the
fondus in a moderate oven for fifteen
minutes and serve very hot. —New York
Tribune.
A NICE MINCE LOAF.
Avery nice mince loaf is made as fol
lowsj To the pieces cut from a stewed
knuckle-bone of veal or mutton add a
small cooked slice of bacon and a small
onion which has been sliced and fried
brown in half a teaspoonful of butter.
Chop very fine, season with a quarter
of a teaspoonful of pepper. Break
in an egg and mix lightly into a
loaf. If the bacon has not seasoned it
sufficiently add half a teaspoonful of
salt. Have a small baking dish buttered.
Then take a cupful of cold boiled rice
or hominy and line the dish thinly, bot
tom and sides. Put in a layer of the meat
and another of rice without butter. Put
over the top a layer of fine bread
crumbs,lay the bits of butter evenly over
them and bake in a moderate oven for
half an hour. It should be brown and
crisp. When cold, slice this and serve
for luncheon in a dish trimmed with
parsley. Good beef, mutton or pork
dripping will often effectually take the
place of butter, with even more savory
results. —New York World.
HOUSEHOLD HINTS.
Wash marble with ammonia and
water.
Never leave vegetables in the wate
after they are cooked.
Beeswax and salt will render rustyi
flat-irons smooth and clean.
Ripe tomatoes will remove ink stains
from white cloth and lrom the bauds.
If sassafras bark is sprinkled among
dried fruit it will keep out the worms. *
A bowl of quicklime kept in a cup
board will soon absorb the moisture,
if their be any.
Washing old silk in beer is said to
give it a luster almost equal to that pos
sessed when new.
Catsup keeps better and pickles also if
you put a bit of horseradish in the
mouth of the bottle.
Kerosene will soften boots and shoes
that have become hard from bing wet,
and render them as pliable as ever.
Twelve pounds of peaches, six pounds
of sugar and one pint of vinegar is a
good proportion for pickled peaches.
A perfume lamp, which burns cologne
and spreads a pleasant scent about the
room, is among the late household nov
elties.
To remove ink stains from wood, use
strong muriatic acid, rubbed in with a
cloth; afterward washj off well with
water.
In boiling meat for soup U3e cold
water to extract the juices, but if the
meat is wanted for itself alone put into
boiling water.
When washing fine white flannels add
a tablespoonful of pulverized borax to a
pailful of water. This will keep then
soft and white.
A pound of sulphur burnt in a tightly
closed room will destroy every living
thing in it, from moths and bed bugs to
possible disease germs.
When decorating rooms for reception
use one kind of flowers for each room,
as roses for one, carnations for another,
violets in another, etc.
If doughnuts are cut out an hour be
fore they are fried, to allow a little time
for rising, they will be much lighter.
Try cutting at night and frying in the
morning.
If the hands are rubbed on a stick ol
celery after peeling onions the smell will
be entirely removed. Onions may be
peeled under water without offense to
eyes or hands.
The leaves of the peach tree, a few at
a time, put into the boiling milk of a
custard or blancmange and removed be
fore it cools into shape give a delicate
almond flavor.
The flavor of a young-roasted chicken
is grei.tly improved if you place inside
it a piece of fresh butter the size of a
walnut and with it a bouquet of parsley
and a small onion.
Aged people, invalids or those who
have feeble digestion or suffer from dull
ness, as well as growing children, will
be greatly benefited by taking sweet
cream in liberal quantities.
To cure a felon, wind a cloth loosely
about the finger, leaving the end free.
Pour in common gunpowder until the
affected part is entirely covered; then
keep the powder wet with strong spirits
of camphor. •
Steaming the face atrnight over a bowl
of very hot water, and then bathing it
with very cold water, is the simple
method of giving it a Russian bath and
will tend to make the skin whiter and
smoother and the fleshi firmer.
if CatarHVoi
Queer Ads and Signs.
The Courier, of Hanover, has this ad
vertisement: “For Sale—A piano of
fuperior quality; played upon for some
time by a baron.”
An enterprising dentist in an Ohio
town has in the window of his office the
sign: “Your teeth pulled while you
wait.”—Troy Press.
A London milliner displays upon one
of her “creations” this legend, caught
from a prevailing subject of serio-comic
intesrst: “This style, the Mahatma, 8s
lid.”
A Holland journal, De Klok, pub
lishes an advertisement of a gunmaker
calling attention to anew kind of shot
gun, very cheap, and “specially recom
mended to poachers.”
_ Advertisement in an English provin
cial paper: A young gentleman on the
point of getting married is desirous of
meeting a man of experience who will
dissuade him from the step.
Iu a hotel not one hundred miles from
the top of the Rigi the following an
nouncement gives satisfaction: “Misters
and venerable voysgers are advertised
that when the sun h:m rise a horn will be
bio wed.”
Adorer (anxious to please the old gen
tleman) —“Has your father any hobby?”
Sweet G rl—“Yes, he has, audit’s such
a funny one. It’s dogs.”
Adorer (delighted) —“I am somewhat
of a dog-fancier myself. Which is his
favorite breed?”
Sweet Girl “lt changes constantly.
Every time I’m a year older he gets a big
ger dog.”—Street & Smith’s Good News.
Brown’s Iron Bitters cures Dyspepsia, Ma
laria, Biliousness anil General Dehl iiy. Gives
Strength, aids Digestion, tones the nerves—
creates appetite. The best tonic tor Nursing
Mothers, weak women and children.
Cool tho blood by drinking cold water in
which a little pure , ream of tartar has been
dissolved.
Quit Everything Else.
S. S. S., is the only permanent cure for contagious blood
Taint Old chronic cases that physicians declare incurable;
are cured in every instance where S. S. S., has had a fair
trial.
I honestly believe that S. S. S., saved
my life. I was afflicted with the very
worst type of contagious blood poison
and was almost a solid sore from head
to foot. The physicians declared my
case hopeless. I quit everything else
and commenced taking S. S. S. After
taking a few bottles I was cured sound
and well.
Thos. B. Yeager, Elizabethtown, Ky.
“German
Syrup”
Martinsville, N.J., Methodist Par
sonage. “My acquaintance with
your remedy, Boschee’s German
Syrup, was made about fourteen
years ago, when I contracted a Cold
which resulted in a Hoarseness and
a Cough which disabled me from
filling my oulpit for a number of
Sabbaths. After trying a Physician,
without obtaining relief—l cannot
say now what remedy he prescribed
—I saw the advertisement of your
remedy and obtained a bottle. I
received such quick and permanent
help from it that whenever we have
had Throat or Bronchial troubles
since in our family, Boschee’s Ger
man Syrup has been our favorite
remedy and always with favorable
results. I have never hesitated to
report my experience of its use to
others when I have found them
troubled in like manner.” Rsv.
W. H. Haggarty,
of the Newark, New a c a f a
Jersey, M.E. Confer
ence, April 25, ’9O. Remedy.
G. G. GREEN, Sole Man’fr,Woodbury,N.J.
WOODBURY’B FACIAL SOAP.
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H uftlt Penmanship, Arithmetic, Short-hand, etc..
AA ThoroughlyTauqhtbyMAll.. Circulars free.
Bryant’a College. 4.5 V Main St.. Buffalo. N. Y.
Colds,
jf Coughs,
Consumption,
HOARSENESS AND ALL AFFECTIONS OF THE THROAT AND LUNGS.
TAYLOR'S CHEROKEE REMEDY OF
SWEET GUM and MULLEIN
’ ■ y
IS THE BEST KNOWN REMEDY .
Ask jour druggist or merchant tpr It, AND TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE.
I flit] Thorough, Practical Instruction.
Hr I.u Graduates assisted to positions.
tff\V/
COPYRIGHT 1891^
A feeling of dullness
languor, and depression means that
your liver isn’t doing its part. That
means impure blood, to begin with,
and all kinds of ailments in the
end.
But you can stop them in advance.
Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discov
ery invigorates the liver, purifies and
enriches the blood, and rouses every
organ into healthy action. It pre
vents and cures all diseases arising
from a torpid liver or from impure
blood. Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Bil
iousness, Scrofulous, Skin and Scalp
Diseases even Consumption (or
Lung-scrofula), in its earlier stages,
all yield to it.
The makers of the “Discovery”
claim for it only what it will do.
They guarantee that it will do it.
If it fails to benefit or cure, in
any case, they’ll return the money.
Nothing else that claims to purify
the blood is sold in this way;
which proves, no matter what
dealers may offer, that nothing else
can he “just as good.” Therefore,
don’t accept a substitute.
Send for our
new book on
constitutional
or Blood
Diseases,
mailed free.
The Swift
Specific Cos.,
Atlanta, Ga.
S'? 0 ®
a- po?ic? 1.73
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W. L. DOUGLAS
S3 SHOE GENTLEMEN 1
THE BEST SHOE IN THE WORLD FQR THE MONEY?
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Douglas Shoes, with name and price stamped oa
•ottom. W. Li Douglas, Brockton, Mass. j
tar-take no SUBSTITUTE, mi
Insist on local advertised dealers supplying yon.
IN THE SELECTION OF
A CHOICE GIFT
or of an addition to one’s library, elegance
and usefulness will be found combined in
A New Book from <
Cover to Cover. i
i / WEBSTER’S \
i \ INTERNATIONAL j
; \ DICTIONARY 7
►
)
SUCCESSOR OF THE UNABRIDGED.
Ten years revising. 100 editors employed.
Critical examination invited. Get the Best.
Sold by all Booksellers. Pamphlet free.
G. A C. MERRIAM A CO., Springfield, Mms.
SSO REWARD
bacco than PURR HAVANA Cuttings in ths
Oilers of our DON’T brand of olgars.
Ek 11 SHI buy alO cent Cigar when yon
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\|l B cents. Many smokers now
WWII I uaLANiT lu prefer
ence to 10 cent cigars. UUil 1
W. B. ELLIB & CO., 1
WINSTON, NORTH CAROLINA.
an B BIW and Whiskey Habits
r BLeB & A jq IflEfl cured at home w ilh
rigj (fa Sill IDfl out pain. Book of par
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r nr Ma~ ft M.WOOLLEY,M.I>.
Near Atlanta. Ga. Office 10434 Whitehall
Piso’B Remedy for Catarrh Is the
Best, Fastest to Use, and Cheapest.
CATA R R H
Sold by lruggisjs or sent by maii.
60c. ‘E. T. Haielttne, Warren, Pa.
A.N. -C.
; Revision cost over
> $300,000.
.Forty-nine, ’9l.