Dade County news. (Trenton, Ga.) 1888-1889, June 15, 1888, Image 7

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    FARM AND GARDEN.
Oil Meal for Colts.
An Ohio stock farmer states that he
has been using oil meal for some two or
three years, and thinks it excellent for
cows giving milk, mixed with ship stuff,
and for colts that have just been weaned.
Last fall he weaned three colts, and be
gan to feed some oats, and when cold
weather came on added some oil meal.
He has got up to one bushel of oats and
a half-gallon of oil meal per day, which
is as high as he will go as long as they
look as well as they do now. They run
to hay at their pleasure, being out of
doors all the time. He has a Clyde mare
thiee years old last May, that weighed
1 1)80 pounds in October, that was raised
out-of-doors.
Points on Potato Planting.
Select a piece of ground well manured
last year, and apply rotted manure di
rectly with the manure spreader. Plow
and harrow thoroughly to the depth ot
seven or eight feet. Plant in rows three
feetapart. Perfectly formed medlum
s zed tubers should be selected for seed
and kept at a low temperature so as not
to sprout. Two weeks before planting
they may be spread oa the barn floor e x
posed to the light and ar. Cut to two
eyes in the piece. Avoid s rail pieces,
plant the same day cut and in a fre-h
‘furrow. Cover immediately about four
inches deep. Never drop in an old fur
row or leave seed e posed to the sun.
A paper tead at a recent New York
Institute also has the following hints: A
strong clay soil is better than a light soil.
'An old tough sod is l est. Do not let
seed sprout before planting. If not
planted at once after cutting mix seed
av.th plaster to prevent drdng. 4 Cover
three or four inches deep in straight rows
with a horse hoe, throwing a ridge over
them. Go over two or three times with
a harrow.
When to Cut Timber.
The best time to cut timber is when the
foliage is mature, or in September, be
fore it is in ured by frost; the tree is
left intact with branches and leaves un
disturbed, so that the sap is evaporated
completely through the leaves. When
the leaves are diied and withered the
tree is out up. The timber is then free
from sap The bark should then be re
moved, aud the tree cut up as intended.
If logs .ire made, these should be put
into water, as a pond, but better iu a
running stream, until winter, when they
are sawed up or split into posts. The
lumber or posts thus made should be
piled up loosely to dry, aud will season
very quickly. Timber so prepared has
been found as durable as that which has
been treated with antiseptic prepara
tions. Fence posts are made very dura
ble by saturating the ground part in
slacking lime,-by standing them on end
ki a pit with fresh quicklime about
Snem, and then pouring water to slack
Ihe lime. The heat drives out air from
Ihe ports of the wood and coagulates the
fclbuinen; and in cooling the lime solu
tion is forced info the wood and causes
R to resist decay. When setting posts
he holes should be made large and tilled
with stones rammed hard, among which
lirmay c.r -ulate aud assist iu keeping
he wood from saturation with water,
uwl in drying quickly after rain. —New
W>rk Thu s.
{Sunflower's and Malaria.
planting of sunflowers as an anti
lote to malaiia has been recommended
w several neisons who believe in its
dn'cacy in this direction. The various
pecies of the eucalyptus, a tree which
;rows to immense proportions,and covers
arge areas in Van Diemen's Land and
■Australia, have also been recommended
■or the same purpose. No adequate
Scientific explanation of the supposed
weliet in the sanitary and antiseptic
Aature of these plants had been given
Spntil recently, when Dr. C. T. Kingzett,
Bvho has investigated the nature of
■aniplior and other essential oils, dis
covered that these oils undergo a
ftrocess of oxidation, iu which peroxide
■f hydrogen, or oxidized water, which
Is a most active antiseptic, is given off.
■he essential oil of some species of the
luealyptus and of various pines have this
■roperty, and as they are given off in
laormous quantity in large lorests, the
product has an important influence in
Bestroying noxious impurities in the
atmosphere which we cali malar a. Dr.
Bingzett figures out the quantity of es
■ential oil existing at any one moment iu
Ie leaves of the Australian forests at
airly 1,000,000,000 gallons, from which
,785,0211 tons of hydrogen peroxide
nbe given off. This large quantity
n be usefully diffused over a very ex
nsive area.
The evaporation of essential oil from
liitie forests is known to exert a health -
ul effect, but so far nothing has been
fearned in favor ot the sunflower's claim
> any hygienic or antiseptic agency.
Kingzett failed to procure any hy
togen peroxide from this plant, but as
he oil is taken from the seeds and not
(y.n the leaves,this may possibly account
pythe failure, as the active principle in
hr pines and eucalyptus is contained iu
Deleaves. Nevertheless, as sunflowers
re useful for various purposes, a 3 for
re seed when ground with bran or oats
■ -feeding, the leaves for fodder, and
hi stalks for fuel, farmers who are
orced to live where malaria prevails
aay plant as many as they think proper
nd find comfort, if nothing more, in the
ielief that by so doing they’ may evade
he disagreeable effects of a poisonous
tmosphere.—A etc York Time?.
i Roomy Orchards.
. John Rutledge, who moved to
ar County, lowa, “before there was
iring orchard in it,” and became a
issful fruit-grower, gives, through
Farmers? llevitw , excellent counsel
1 on experience—his own and that
lany others in his locality—against
setting of apple trees:
Don’t plant closer than th'rtv feet
way; plant wider, even thirty two
rather than dpser, unless you want
onomize land: you might plant some
e narrow upright growers (such as
ntelligent nurseryman can name) a
closer, say twenty-four or twenty
leet each way, and this, I think,
d be a good idea to assort the trees
plant all such varieties together,
n 1 planted my orchard twenty-five
* ago I followed the advice of the
pomologists of lowa and planted
, about 16x20. Various arguments
advanced in support of this theory,
_ -h seemed plausible, but now the
mistake is apparent. If half of my trees
were removed there would be plenty left,
but this cannot be done without taking
varieties that 1 would not like to spare.”
The sufficient reason for libe:al spac
ing are set forth as follows:
•‘Trees p'ante 1 too close will soon run
together, and make it dt : cult to get
through with a team, and after they be
g n to crowd each other they will be
gin to make a kind of an unnatural
upward growth, and all the fruit you :ret
that is of anv value will be on the top of
the tree. It is very difficult to gather if
you pick it, and if you let it drop it will
be badly bruised by coming in contact
wi: li the spreading limbs below. All the
fruit that the lower, limbs t*ear will be
almost worthless, except for hogs. If
you want a spreading, symmetrical tree,
give it room to spread. Think of some
forest tree you have seen growing in
some old pasture field in an Eastern State ;
compare it with the trees of the wood
that are crowded together, and you can
get a pretty good idea how a full-grown
apple tree will look if it has room.”
Planting a screen around each orchard,
at least forty feet removed from it, “not
to modify temperature, but to prevent
the trees from getting a leaning position
while grow ng and to keep the fruit
from being blown off,” is another item
of good advice; and beginners are urged
against “being persuaded to sow grass
seed of any kind be'ore the trees come
into b aring. Cultivate the ground in
some hoed crop each year until the fruit
appears pretty plentifully.” —New York
Triune. ,
VegfiJables Too Little Grown.
Artichoke (Globe). The portions of
tins plant u-ed for culinary purposes,
are the lowest part of the leaves or scales
of the calyx (the flower cover), and also
the r.eshy receptacles of the flowers freed
from the bristles and seed down. The
latter are commonly called the “choke,”
on account of their disagreeable character
when eaten; the plant is easily raised
from seed, but will not be ready for crop
until the second season, as it is a
perennial. The plant somewhat re
sembles the cardoon, and bv the French
the leaves are sometimes bleached and
used the same way in cooking.
Scarlet Kunner Bean. This bean can
be used as a snap short or a Lima. The
flowers are scarlet and readily furnish an
ornamental plant and vegetable at the
same time. For example, it will form a
good boundary plant between the flower
and vegetable garden; will cover un
sightly fences or buildings with its
showy flowers, and at the same timp
furnish all summer a mess of snap short
beans
Celeriac is a turnip-rooted celery. Its
swelled root has a peculiarly celery-like,
nutty flavor; it is of German introduc
tion to our vegetable lists. Is no trouble
to earth it up, like the common celery—
is splendid for cooking, making a very
nice vegetable flavoring for stews, or is
good cut up as a salad. Sow in the
Spring, ’in beds; afterward transplant
in rows fifteen inches apart. It needs no
further care, except to keep clear from
weeds. Should be taken up in Winter,
the same as common celery.
I ecks are a kind of mild onion, used
mostly for mixing among the “soup
greens,” which consist of a bit of leek or
onion, turnip, parsley, thyme, etc., tied
together in a small bunch and sold for
soup flavoring. This is a good idea, as
a f.,miiy can get a pinch of each, and at
the lowest possible cost. Wherever the
Germans a' e, the soup green*, when they
get their family supplies, are a regular
commodity.
Okra, or Gumbo, isa Southern vegeta- <
ble, but is sometimes met with North.
The eatable part is the seed-pod, used in
stews, soiqis, etc. It is considered very
nourishing, and when boiled has the pe
culiar property of thickening the water
into a jelly-like condition. In the North
it must first be raised in a hot-bed, and
afterward transplanted. The Martynia,
is somewhat the same, but the seed pods
are used for pickels only.
Oyster plant, or Salsify, is a famous
winter vegetable, not half enough
known. The edible pait is the roots,
which are similar to carrots, parsnips,
and the like, and maybe treated exactly
the same way, except that it is perfectly
hardy and may be left out of doors the
same as parsnips for late spring use,
when it is very relishable. —Prairie Far
mer.
Farm ami Garden Notes.
Put in onion seed as soon as the ground
can be worked.
Salt on the asparagus bed helps to
Keep down weeds.
Try to make the sheep shear more and
Lave better lambs.
The green pea season may be made a
long one by successive plantings.
Good seed from hardy tr es is essential
to the production of good seedings.
A hen will eat anything a hog will
eat, aud make a good deal better use of
it.
Most seeds that are planted eariy re
quire only light covering and no pressure
of the earth.
A most excellent remedy for many sick
i fowls is composed of a sharp hatchet and
a good spade.
Beans prefer a rather light, dry soil,
I and dwarf sorts are in general earliest
and most hardy.
• Hot milk in the morning will benefit
the little chicks, according to a success
ful poultry woman.
Nitrate of soda applied just before a
rain is recommeuded as an excellent
manure for the lawn.
Plant onions, parsnips, and other
crops that are to be weeded by hand, in
straight aud narrow drills.
Trim judiciously, not too heavily;
there is more of the life of the tree in
the limbs than many suppose.
Cabbages, onions, turnip*, beets, ap
ples, potato parings or other vegetable
refuse should be given the poultry.
Sweet corn will not grow well till the
weather is warm. Choose a warm soil
and exposure, and plant late enough to
avoid the risk of rotting.
Careful poultry growers will Dot use
for setting the large overgrown eggs.
These are commonly doubled yoked, and
either become addled under the hen, or
; else produce some monstrosity of no value
except as a curiosity.
Plan to give each tree worthy of stand
| ing room its own bed of enriched soil,
inplundered by any other crop. This is
the only wav to secure fruit good enoogk
for market,'and therefore fit for tht
farmer’s own table.
Celery is often grown as a second crop
among the onions, five rows ot the
onions being sown twelve or fourteen
inches apart, and the sixth row being
; left vacant for the later sowing of celery
seed or the setting of celery plants.
According to Vick. A. .7. Caywood
deprecates the practice adopted by some
grape growers of ringing the vines for
the purpose of coloring the fruit early,
claiming that the result is obtained at
the expense of sweetness and flavor.
The carca*s of every animal that dies
of disease should be t urned. ( nly by
this process can the virus aud germs be
annihilated and the spread of the disease
be prevented. This is especially tiue of
animals dying of diseases known to be
contagious.
•labez of Zin has practised, and rec
commends, distributing among the
garden or field thin slices of raw potato
a* traps for the first crop of Colorado
beetles. The bait may be poisoned with
Par s green or 1 ondon purple, if there
be no danger thereby to roving pouliry
or other useful life on the farm.
Where economy of land in the garden
is an object! An erican Cultivator sug
gests that spaces be left between the
rows of early pea* sufficient to admit the
setting of tomatoes, cauliflower or late
cabbages short'y before the peas are
ready for picking, so that they may fol
low a* a second crop after the pea har
ve t s o er, ......
It is by no means necessary that hens
be supplied with lime for the manufac
ture of egg shells. As a rule no one
thinks ot giving lime to ducks, and yet
they iay an egg every day for several
weeks at thi* season. Fowls will find
all the calcareous matter they want, and
burned bones will b« swallowed very
eagerly and furnish all the lime required
for all the eggs that may be laid.
SELECT SIFTINGS.
Shakespeare’s chair was sold at auction
in London recently for S4OO.
The United states has paid out more
than ninety millions for public buildings.
Fu'lie Occurrences, th“ \ rst American
newspaper, appeared in Boston in ltiiiO.
Dried sharks’ fins are found in every
Chinese store iu New York, and sell for
§4 per pound.
Shakespeare died in IGIG, four years
before the Pilgrim fathers landed a(
Plymouth Rock.
Buekland, the traveler, declares the
taste of the hoa-constrictor to be good,
and much like veal.
The heaviest locomotive in the world
belong to the Canadian Pacific railroad.
Weight, ItSO,OUO pounds.
The little son of an Arkansas cock
fighter has just been gaffed to death by
one of his father's gamecocks.
A funny fellow in Portland, Oregon,
snapped a bean at a boy and put out his
eye, and a jury said it was a fifteen hun
dred dollar snap.
The spice known as mace is the out
ward covermg of the nutmeg as it grows
on the tree. Nutmegs (aud mace) are
cultivated in the Dutch possessions of
Java.
An old lady of seventy-six living in
Dooly County, Ga., is able to perform
the feat of dancing a jig with a tumbler
of water balanced on her head without
spilling a drop.
In a mile of railroad there are 311 rails,
each 30 feet in length and weighing 04
.tons; spikes 24 tons; splices (plates used
in securing rails) 330; ties 2040, one tie
being laid every two feet.
Little Laura .Tones, at Eatonton, Ga.,
is the latest baby wonder to be heard
from. Atlthough only eleven years old
she invented a plough and a grain ele
vator that are said to show remarkable
ingenuity.
The apricot seems to have had a
Chinese origin, for it grew in China two
or three thousand years before the
Christian era. Perhaps it was a century
before our era when the apricot was in
troduced into western Asia, from whence
it spread to Europe,
Concord, Fla., is terrorized by a sup
posed wild man, who comes out of the
woods clothed in skins and bark, armed
with a rusty axe and long flint lock,
and, instead of speech, makes a queer
gutteral noise, gnashing his teeth the
while, as in furious anger.
The muddy bottom of Chippewa
River, Ontario, Canada, is being raked
for gold. During the war of 1812 some
$25u,000 in gold was dropped over
board by a British paymaster, who was
hotly pursued by Yankee troops, and
the money has laid there ever since.
At Mount Pleasant, Penn., a farmer
sold a load of oats to a business firm.
A S2O bill was found in one of the bags
with the grain. The purchasers claim
that the money belongs to them, and
the farmer maintains that it is his. It
will probably take a lawsuit to decide.
J. Wyatt, a Tennesseean, hasjwhittled a
clock in imitation of an old Norman
church-tower, gable, steeple and all, out
of native walnut, using more than 500
pieces, all of which are so accurately
fitted and polished that the result is a
thing of beauty and the maker of it un
reasonably proud.
The Salaries ot Freaks.
“With respect to the dime museums,”
said Mr. Kohl, “our salaries vary enor
mously.”
“What is a fat lady’s salary!”
“Fifty dollars a week. But we once
paid as much as SSOO a week.”
“To whom?”
“A colored fat lady. She was im
mense ; the biggest women you ever saw.
And then we worked her up. We had
Ivor delivered at the museum from a four
horse wagon. And we put a rope over
her chair so that she might hoist herself
up when she wanted to rise.”
“Was she worth $500?”
“Every cent of it it. We paid Chang,
the giant, about the same, and Zo-zo,
the dog-faced man, and .Millie-Christine
the two-headed nightingale. ’
“Did Millie-Christine draw one salary
■ or two?”
“One. I wanted the Sherman House,
where she lived, to sue me for board for
two. But they were too smart.”
“And do your performers grow rich?”
“Nearly always. There’s not a
wealthier class iu this community than
the freaks of a dime museum.”— Chicago
Tribune.
She Couldn’t I lidrutnpd If.
“What io the world has happened to yvn
since th lust, time I saw you'/”’ r.ske I onelafly
of another when vl.ey me on the street the
oth r dav; “I c an’t understand it. i lien you
were pale, haggard and low-spirited, and I re
member you said t a’ 'ou hard v c-airti
whether \ou lived or died. T-dny jou loot
ever so much younger, and it isvor' evident,
trom your beaming: face th it your low sp rits
have t ken flight.” “Yes, indeed.” was the
reply: “and shall I tell you what dr ve them
away? It was Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescript
lion. 1 was a martyr to tunc-tlonal derange*
ment until 1 began eking the ‘I re-eript on.’
Now lam as well as 1 ever was In m > iiie. No
woman who suffers as I did, ou-cht to let an
hour pass tie.ore procuring this wonderful
remedv.”
The great New York faster. Dr. Tanner, Is
the owner of a great ranche in New Mexico.
NERVES! NERVES!!
What terrible visions this little word bring*
before the eyes of the nervous.
Headache, Neuralgia,
Indigestion, Sleeplessness,
Nervous Prostration,
All stare them in the face. Yet all these nervous
troubles can be cured by using
C*(Pa ines
tor ,
{om|jound
For The Nervous
The Debilitated
The Aged.
THIS GREAT NERVE TONIC
Also contains the best remedies for diseased con
ditions of the Kidneys. Liver, and Blood, which
always accompany nerve troubles.
It is a Nerve Tonic, an Alterative, a Laxative,
and a Diuretic. That is why it
CURES WHEN OTHERS FAIL.
si.oo a Bottle. Send for full particulars.
WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO , Proprietors.
BURLINGTON, VT.
The BUYERS’ GUIDE ia
issued March and Sept.,
ikim each year. It is an ency-
S*j clopedia of useful infor
mation for all who pur-
SSjP chase the luxuries or the
necessities of life. We
can clothe you and furnish you with
all the necessary and unnecessary
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eat, fish, hunt, work, go to church,
or stay at home, and in various sizes,
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COMFORTABLY, and you con make a fair
estimate of the value of the BUYERS’
GUIDE, which will bo sent upon
receipt of 10 cents to pay postage,
MONTGOMERY WARD & CO.
111-114 Michigan Avenue, Chicago, 111.
LYMAN'S Patent Combination GUN SIGHT.
4 0 Per Cent, Send for
KEPUCTIOyf Catalogue of j
in Price. Sight*, Rifles, Ac.
Adtirrf.-* \VM. LTMAN, Middlefield, Court.
MIS m oTiT.
fig IS f nEC! 160 new crazy Stitches, 1 doz.
fail s Fringed Napkins, (awhile, oral,
5 Curious Puzzles, with our Paper 3 months on
trial, for 12 cents. YOUTH. Boston, Mass, j
'tHE Only . rrl , /A ;
"[topvKiuHT, ISB7. ] 1 . " 1
The only medicine for woman’s peculiar ailment*, sold by druggists, under a positive guarantee, from the manufacturers,
that it will give satisfaction in every case, or money will be refunded, is Du. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. Thin guarantee has
been printed on the bottle-wrappers, and faithfully carried out for many years.
THE OUTGROWTH OF A VAST EXPERIENCE
The treatment of many thousands of cases of those chronic weaknesses and distressing ailments peculiar to females, aif ftK.
Invalids’ Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. inis afforded a vast experience in nicely adapting and thoroughly testing
remedies for the cure of woman’s peculiar maladies.
Dr. Pierce’s
n Rfinii ite Prescription isthe
" wuur * outgrowth, or result, of
Tf) WfIMFN this great and valuable
IU ITUnILn. experience. Thousands
■ iiiHiHiiniminmfl Q f testimonials, received
from patients and from physicians who
have tested it in the more aggravated and
obstinate cases which had baffled their skill,
prove it to be the most wonderful remedy
ever devised for the relief and cure of suf
fering women. It is not recommended as
a “cure-all.” but as a most perfect Specific
for woman’s peculiar diseases.
i,Mini. As a powerful, in.
I 1 n.......... vigorating tonic, it
t U HQtfERFUL imparts strength to the
I m whole system, and to the
I fIKIP uterus, or womb and its
I Until. appendages, in particu
i ihii. ■■■ m i .ia j ar _ For overworked,
“worn-out,” “run-down,” debilitated
teachers, milliners, dressmakers, seam
stresses, “shop-girls,” housekeepers, nurs
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Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription is the
greatest earthly boon, being unequaled as
an appetizing cordial and restorative tonic.
It promotes digestion and assimilation of
food, cures nausea, weakness of stomach,
indigestion, bloating and eructations of ga3.
TREATING THE WRONG DISEASE.
Many times women call on their family physicians, suffering, as they imagine, one from dyspepsia, another from heat* disease,
another from liver or kidney disease, another from nervous exhaustion, or prostration, another with pain here or there, and in this way
they ail present alike to themselves and their easy-going and indifferent, or over-busy doctor, separate and distinct diseases, for which
he prescribes his pills and potions, assuming them to be such, when, iu reality, they are ail only symptoms caused by some womb
disorder. The physician, ignorant of the cause of suffering, encourages his practice until large bills arc made. The suffering
patient gets no better, but probably worse by reason of tho delay, wrong treatment and consequent complications. A proper
medicine, like Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription, directed to the cause, would have entirely removed the disease, thereby dis
pelling all those distressing symptoms, and instituting comfort instead of prolonged misery.
_ \ Mrs. E. F. Morgan, of No. 71 Lexington St.,
3 Boston, Mass., says: “Five years ago I
-* i ii i uiuinno ■ was a dreadful sufferer from uterine troubles,
till CQ I Having exhausted the skill of three phvsi-
I uilulj, | cians, I was completely discouraged, and’so
> weak I could with difficulty cross the room
alone. I began taking Dr. 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 T was perfectly cured, and have had no trouble since. I
wrote e letter to my family paper, briefly Mentioning how my
health had been restored, and offering to send the full particulars
to any one writing me for them, and enclosing a stamped-envelove
for reply. I have received over four hundred letters. In reply,
I have described my case and the treatment used, and have ear
■estly advised them to ‘do likewise.’ From a great mnnv X have
received second letters of tuanks, stating that they had com
'menced the use of ‘Favorite Prescription,’ had sent the $1.50
required for the * Medical Adviser,’ and had applied the local
treatment so fully and plainly laid down therein, and were much
better already.’’
Retroverted Womb,—Mrs. Eva Kohler, of Crah Orchard.
Nen., writes: Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription has done me a
great deal of good. I suffered from retroversion of the uterus,
for which I took two bottles of the ‘ Favorite Prescription,’ and I
am now feeliug like a different woman.”
Doctors Failed.—Mrs. F. Corwin, of Post Creek, N. Y.,
writes: “I doctored with three or our of *the best doctors in
these parts, and I grew worse until I wrote to you and began
using your ‘ Favorite Prescription.’ I used three bottles of it
and two of the ‘Golden Medical Discovery,’ also one and a half
bottles of the ‘ Purgative Pellets.’ I can do my work and sew and
walk all I care to, and am in better health than T ever expected to
be in this world again. 1 owe it all to your wonderful medicines.”
57JACOBS
trade MARK
SPRAINS, STRAINS, INJURIES.
1311 Seventh St., Louisville, Ky.
While helping to remove & frame building of th*
City Railway Co., it fell over on me, pressing me
to the ground and spraining my back. I was car
ried home on a stretcher, and the doctors attended
me two weeks, when my wife persuaded me to us*
St. Jacobs Oil, and the pain was soon gone entirely.
JASPER BROKER.
Sold by Druggists and Dealers Everywhere.
THE CHARLES A. VOGELER CO.. Baltimore. Md.
Do you want 'CiCF Aspirator?
□UR LITTLE OERI TIME-KEEPER.
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« p*~ -- rv-*,fo ro
f' ‘nOTitluiJs;.. .. .1 pic
bn? :uium absolutely FRKF cl
WjFXs’il *"5 cost the (Jem Tim -
n keeper, ii a Hands r.e
y,n : I*iano poiiM »*d woodCsse,
oEk^ ifra(seecut . For 10cts. extra
« ■ijZH.F?. . IySR will seiuj an elecaut watch
m ,;-.' {■ iIS Chain and Charm. Monty
Mr - V.. 7 returned iinotastl’irribfa
Li.& For a club of 3 and sl. JO I
we ■willsend .1 subscriptions ar d .VJ’iine-keepers.Write to-day.
YOUTH Via. CO., Milk St., BOSTON, MASS*
DALLAS WAS*
, of cheap farming lands in the wt rtl. Population
INNO, 10,3t35| in IBSS. 4«f«703. WII have
14MMI00 in »> years. s;i7 hou t s now building.
Largest aud most progressive city in Texa -. Ex
traordinary inducements for innnufactuioiß: De
lightful climate. Make D4L L A the vieat Rail
way Centre, your objective point to visit all poi
tions of ihe State, Address
SECY IMMIGRATION JSSOGiJJIDV.
_.|*g Plantation Engines
etu r N FLUE BOILERS,
j J[COTTON GINS and MILLS.
Illustrated Pamphlet Free. Address
■' LEFFEL 4, CO.
HPHIN«FIEI.D, OHIO,
\ii. Butcher’s-:- Lightning
FLY KILLER
yHWPjfr—w. Is quick deat h : easily Luvparett and
£ *i list'd ; no danger ; flies uon*t live loiiii
f j enough to get away. Use it early
freely; rid the house of them and b»
* at pence. Don’t take anything “jn -t
es good.” There is nothing like the geuuine Dutv li
t T’s. Fit F.ir Iv 1H Ti ll Kir St. All 4UIS, Vt.
DaSifk Great English Gout and
DlQai § riliS, Rheumatic Remedy.
Oval Box, 34s round. 14 Pill*.
(Act. gets yoni* address m our Agent’s Directory and
8 “our large Magazine 4 months free. Copy of Directory
sent to each one. Address Record Go., Buchanan, (ia.
Afff to SS a day. Samples worth $1.50, FRSI
\•% Lines not under the horse’s feet. Wrtte
Brewster Safety Re*n Holder Co.. Holly. Mich.
■■ As a soothing
4 Soothing I
~ I Prescription is une-
HCQI/jUC I qualcd und is invaluable
niniim. lin allaying and subdu
ing nervous excitabil
ity, irritability, exhaustion, prostration,
hysteria, spasms aud other distressing,
nervous symptoms commonly attendant
upon functional and organic disease of
the wouib. It induces refreshing sleep
and relieves mental anxiety and de
spondency.
Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescrip
tion is u legitimate medicine,
carefully compounded by an experienced
and skillful physician, and adapted to
woman’s delicate organization. It is
purely vegetable in its composition and
j>erfectly harmless in its effects in any
condition of the system.
lanraHi 1,1 pregnancy, “Fa
■ 11., vorite Prescription" is
A mOIHtRS a “mother’s cordial”
_ relieving nausea, weak
iiflßniAl n(,Ba °* stomach and
uunuinu other distressing svmr
toms common to that
condition. If its use is kept up in the
latter months of gestation, it so prepares
Mrs. Ed. M. Campbell, of OaUand, Cali
|D RE fomia, writes: “I had been troubled all
m3’ life with hysterical attacks and par-
Ponil nil irnDMH oxysms, or spasms, and periodica! recur
■ uoHl wmlii utißlU. rerices of severe headache, but since 1 have
——■mi i imin inn [■mil been using your ‘Favorite Prescription ’ 1
have had none of these. I also had womb complaint so bad that
1 could not walk two blocks without the most severe pain, but
before I had taken vour ‘Favorite Prescription’ two months, I
could walk all over the city without inconvenience. All my
troubles seem to bo leaving me under the benign influence of
your medicine, and I now feel smarter than for years before. My
phvsieians told me that I could not be cured, and therefore you
will please accept my everlasting thanks lor v. bat you have done
for me, and mav God bless you in your good works.”
Later, she writes- “It is now four years since I took your ‘Fa
vorite Prescription.’ and I have had no return of the female--
trouble I had then.”
Well as I Ever Was.-Mrs. John Ptewart, of C/iippcu- a
Falls, Wis.. writes: “I wish to inform you that * am as wUI as 1
ever was. for which I thank your medicines. I took Mvtannvlrv’
of the ‘ Favorite Prescription ’ and one Lottie of Jour 1 leco tly
and four bottles of the ‘Pellets.’ All of the h »d S3 mptonis have
disappeared. Ido all my own work: am able to be on my feet all
day. My friends tell me I never looked so well.
tW~ Favorite PrescrijMon is Sold by Druggists the World
Over ! Large Bottles SI.OO, Six for ss.oo.
Send ten cents in stamps for Dr. Pierce’s large, illustrated
Treatise (ICO pages, paper covers) on Diseases of Women.
Address, World’s Dispensary Itledical Association,
No. 663 Main Street, Burr.xo, N. T.
fLOOK
YOUNGr
Leanrelle Oil
PREVENTS
WRINKLES,
AgelngofSfcin
Preserves ayoutliful, plump, fresh condition
of features. If you desire a transparent, clear
fresh Complexion, free from biemish, or
roughness, use LEAURELLE OIL, it cures
anil prevents cracking, chapping, roughness •
or coarseness of skin. Keeps face, neck ana
hands soft, plump. Preserves tho tone, life/-
and transparent glow of the smn as in vouch.
This is a remarkable article ; though called an
oil is more the nature of an expressed juice,
and is a superb tonic and elegant dressing for
the Hair and Whiskers, which it stimulate*
and tones. Without grease, yet keeps the hair
and whiskers soft, glossy, luxuriant and vigor
ous. 31.00 at Druggists, or by Express, free of
Exp. charge. E. S. Wells. Chemist. Jersey City
——imcia—h—BL-tJv fmu mb—ii* ~nr ~r.- 'sr.vwa* -
GRAY HAIR
if it is desired to gradually darken or restore
gray hair to Its original or natural color use
WELLS’ HAS* BALSAM
Restores GnAY Hair to origina! color. An.
elegant dressing, softens mjd beautifies. No
grease nor oil. A tonic restorative. Prevent*
the hair coming out; cleanses, strengthen*
and heals scalp. 60c. and SI.OO at Druggists..
The SI.OO size sent prepaid by Express for SE.
E. S. Wells. Jersey City, N. J.
MARVELOUS
MEMORY
DISCOVERY.
\\ liolly unlike artificial systems
l ure of mind r. nfierintr.
Any hook leurned in cue rcatlimv
GliiHses of 1087 nt Baltimore, iilO-9 at
1500 at Philadelphia, II IB at Washington, |*>H„
| »t Boston, large ctasset* of Columbia Law students, a&
Yale, Welieslry, Oberlin, University of Penn., Mich
i ’can University, Chautauqua, Ac., Ac. E dorsed by
IvicHAitD Pnocrou, the Scientist, Hons. W. W. Astok*
.Judah P. B. njamin. Judge Gibson, Dr. Brown, E.
H. Cook, Principal N. Y. State Normal College. Ac.
Taught by correspondence. Prospectus r- sr fhkb
trom PROF. LOISKTI’E. *37 Fifth Ave.. N. Y.
JW ’JONES
xx xc
FREIGHT
yFJ 5 Ton IVaKOti .Seales,
lr*u Levers, Steel Hearings, Bras*’
rvyL Tare beam and Beam Box for
S6O,
Every else Scale. For free pro* l!«i
mention thin paper and ad.lrea*
V JOKES OF BIHGHAMIBN,
x BINtiHAMTON. N. V.
YfiSYlPlf zatlßMi Mils
kAIm Ingirss, Wcod-PUn«r». 4c. - C
K MANI'FACTURKD BY THE
i.SALEM fttOX WbffHS.SAtH. X.CJ»
rASTHMA^Df
|W f - erm anAathmaC’ure Tt*ve r fa iLi to give tr* - JJa
K{ mediate relief iu. the worst cur>es,iijHureH comfort- Hf-
B able sleep; effects cares where ad other* fail Ara
B 8 (rial convince* the most skepiical. Price 50c, and
fißßi.oo 9 o£Drugsrißtflorbymfiil Sumrfl:*. FREJiII
Ml 41 live at homo and make more mem y working ruathm*
UUmi *1 anything else in the world Either Costly outfit
Term* full. Address, Till k Sc Co., Augusta, Alaine.
■a*a|*p By return mail. Full Description
eC, la fa Moody'* New Tailor Kysteiu of Dren*
Ifectlw Cutthicr. MOODY A CO.. Oincinneti, Oa
A. N. U Twenty-four, ’BBv
the system for delivery as to greatly
lessen, and many times almost entirely do
away with the sufferings of that trying
ordeal.
“Favorite Pre
n„__. •criptiou” is a
LURES THE positive cure for
... _ the most complicated
WOR'vT f.4?CQ and obstinate coses
mmdl uaoco. of leucorrhea. or
iih " ■«? “whites,” excessive
flowing at monthly periods, painful men
struation, unnatural suppression, prolap
sus or falling of the womb, weak back,
" female weakness,” anteversion, retrover
sion, bearing-down sensations, chronic
congestion, inflammation, and ulceration
of the womb, inflammation, pain and
tenderness in ovaries, accompanied with
“internal heat.”
Prescrlp-
k n tiT si,” when taken in con
rOß THfc net lion with the use of Dr.
Pierce’s Golden Medical Dis-
KinMFVQ covery, and small laxative
munc.lo. doses of I)r. Pierce's Pur
gative Pellets (Little Liver
Pills), cures Liver, Kidney and Bladder dis
eases. Their combined use also removes
blood taints, and abolishes cancerous and
scrofulous humors from the system.