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FARM AND GARDEN.
Hot Water for Plants.
It is a fortunate circumstance that a
plant will endure a scalding heat that is
fatal to most of its minute enemies.
Water heated to the boiling point,
poured copiously over the stem of an en
feebled peach tree, and allowed to stand
about its collar, will often have the hap
piest restorative efleets. Trees showing
every symptom of the yellows have often
been rendered luxuriantly green and
thrifty again by this simple means. The
heat is presumably too much for the
fungus which had inf. sted the vital
layers of the tree, immediately under the
outer hark.
The Loudon florists recommend hot
water, up to 145 degrees hah., as a
remedy when plants are sick!}', owing to
the soil souring—the acid absorbed by
the roots acting as a poison. The usual
resort is to the troublesome job of re
potting. When this is not necessary for
any other reason, it is much simpler to
pour hot water freely through thestirred
soil. It will presently come through
tinged with brown. After this thorough
washing, if the plants are kept warm,
new root points and new growth will
soon follow.
A lady friend had a fine calla in a three
gallon pot, which showed signs of ill
health. On examination the outer portion
of the filling was found mouldly, it
being in large part fresh horse manure.
As repotting was inconvenient, the plant
beingin flower,hot water was fieelv used.
It killed the mould, and the plant began
to revive and was soon all right.— Vick's
Monthly.
Parasites on Live Stock.
Colts, calves, and older stock are very
apt to be crowded with objectionable
parasites. They best thrive upon poor
animals, and are supposed to be bred by
old, woru out, and miserable creatures.
However this may be, there is no doubt
that they find a suitable home in the
dirty mattccl hair in the late winter or
early spring months, and on a sunny day
may be seen litorally in mil.ions, every
hair having nits upon it. (me reason of
so much ruobish accompanying them is
that in the course of their development
from the egg to the mature louse the skin
is cast several times.
To get rid of them is not always etsy,
as the length of coat and accumulation
of dandruff or scuri makes a water
proof covering that resists many remedies
which in themselves are certain destroy
ers if only brought into contact with
the parasites.
A sunny day should be chosen, and the
early part of it, when a bountiful wash
ing with soft soap and hot water should
be undertaken, so as to clear the skin of
grease and dirt before applying the
remedy. Stavesacre is an effectual de
stroyer of lice if prepared by boiling
one-half pound with a gallon of water
and brushing well into the coat with a
hard brush.
Tobacco juice is also much in request
for the purpose, and can be procured
from druggists at a very low rate, as it is
imported now free of duty, or only a
nominal duty, and the old expensive
plan of boiling or infusing good shag
tobacco is not necessary, liy the way,
very few people avail themselves of the
governmental pirivileges of growing
sufficient tobacco for this and fumigat
ing purposes, though they m ght easily
do so.
Paraffin is sometimes vised, but is a very
dangerous remedy, occasionally being
absorbed and causing the death of the
animal, and not unfrequently causing a
blister, and much unnecessary pain, and
subsequent blemish.
There is another kind of louse from
which horses suffer, which, if once seen,
can never be forgotten—we refer to
poultry lousiness. It will sometimes
happen that a horse stabled with fowls
will become affected and literally tear
himself to pieces with them unless
promptly treated with one of the fore
going remedies, either of which is as
effectual against these as against the
ordinary louse.
In washing or applying any remedy,
it should always be commenced near the
eyes and woiked backward, as if any
other plan is adopted the besieged retreat
into the mane and ears, and many escape
altogether, like the lats that are left just
to keep up the breed after the rat catcher
has gone.
It is always well to repeat the dressing
and keep the animals moving about till
dry, or they may lick off more lotion
than is good for them, or staud about
and get chilled.— Chemist and JJruyyi^t.
The Grasses.
For convenience the grasses may be
ranged in two general divisions: the
natural and the artificial. The first divi
sion comprises all the true grasses or
plants with long, simple, narrow leaves,
and a long sheath divided to the base
which seems to clasp the stem, or rather
through which the stem seems to pass.
The artificial grasses are mostly legum
inous plants with a few others which
are cultivated aftd used like the grasses,
though they do not properly be:ong to
that family. The clovers of all the va
rieties, the Alfalfa, etc., belong to this
latter class. The timothy gra-s may
properly be placed at the bead of all the
meadow plants for producing bay of the
finest quality. It is perennial in char
acter, and when well established lasts
several years without the necessity of
ploughing up and re-seeding. But
timothy is not a good pasture grass from
the fact that it will not bear close cTop
ping as well as many othe s. Its chief
excellence consists in 'its production of
hay of the purest and finest quality for
all general purposes and e-pccially for
horses, in which it has no rival. Wher
ever it flourishes it is universally pre
ferred and sells lor the highest price.
In general grasses should be cut not
long after the time of flowering, for al
though there is a great deal of nourish
ment in the ripe seed it is hardly enough
to make up for the loss in the stalks and
leaves, which are most valuable before
the soluble materials, such as starch, gum
and sugar, are irradually changed into
muddy fibre. Timothy is best adapted
to a partially moist, peaty or clayey soil,
and does not suit well on lisrht sandy
lands. When sown alone it should have
half a bushel of seed to the acre and may
be sown in the spring or fall, hut the fad
sowing is the most common, and the seed
is better to be not more than one year
old. A good w r ay to test the vitality
of the se<-d is to sprinkle some on a hot
fire shovel, when, if it mostly burns up
without a- lively popping, it should be
rejected. Another good way to test it
and other grass seeds, is to sow a little
in a box of fine earth, keep warm and
damp for a few days until their charac
ter is determined. Growing the crop
for its seed is quite common in the
Western States, and Chicago is the lead
ing primary' market. While, according
to the definition given, red clover is not,
strictly speaking, a grass, there is no
one entitled to a higher rank unless it
be timothy, and indeed, if we were
wholly restricted to the use of only one
of the two, it wou.d be a diificult matter
to ray which the country could best
spare. The great value of clover as a
nrunuriai"plant and renovator of worn
out soiis fully makes up for any defi
ciency it may have as hay for horses.
For cattle, especially for cows in milk,
where its dusty character is not especial
ly objectionable, it is usually preferred
to timothy.
It is said that more than one hundred
species of clover are known to natural
ists, but in this country only a few are
cultivated, and of these the common red
trifolium pratense is the species most
generally in use and for- general pur
poses the best of all. It is easily grown
on every properly .drained soil. Soils
too much exhausted or too poor to
afford it nutriment naturally, by the use
of a coat of barn-yard manure to give it
a foothold, can, by its persistent use, be
brought vp to a condition of fertility
beyond any that can be obtained from
sowing any of the natural grasses. In
furnishing vegetable mould and changing
hard, compact soils for the better it is
wholly unexcelled.
Leu clover is one of the most im
portant crops lor soiling on account of
its iapid early growth and the large
amount of excellent green food grown on
au acre. Care must be taken when pas
turing it while wet with dew or rain, as
cattle are liable to eat so much as to
cause bloating, sometimes causing death.
It is wholly unsafe to turn them, when
quite hungry, into a large growth of it
to eat their till at any time until it has
been partially eaten down and they have
become accustomed to its use. Red
clover is not really a pasture plant, and
its best results are realized by soiling or
cutting for hay and seed. It is usually
best sown in spring, w th from twelve to
twenty pounds to the acre, according as
the soil may be loam or clay. Clover
should be cut as soon as the blossoms
assume a brownish hue, and the swath
should lie until well wilted, when it
should be turned over, but not scattered
or spread, and when sufficiently dry be
taken to the barn. Great care should
be taken not to let it get caught out un
protected in the rain. —New York World.
Farm and Garden Notes.
Cheap seed is often expensive.
Pigs and poultry are profitable.
Secure pure water for home use.
Let no brute handle your brutes.
Let strange peddlers and agents move
on.
Trite, but timely—“ Breed from the
best.”
Plant trees both useful and orna
mental.
Orchard surgery should be of the mild
est sort.
Good hay comes nearest being a good
cattle food.
Ewes should never be yarded with
other stock.
Trim dead wood out in currant and
gooseberry bushes.
Keep your cows good by regular feed
ing, catering and salting.
C lean cistern water can not be obtained
if pigeons befoul the roofs.
“One part of the farm not benefited
by drainage—the manure heap.”
Flowers, shrubs and trees add both
beauty and value to rural homes.
Plant the quick-growing Virginia
creeper around trellises and out-houses.
The orchard is a mighty poor place to
grow fire-wood. Cut out the surplus
wood before it has grown.
Turn the soil about the roots of the
newly planted trees and mulch the sur
face. That’s a good tree sermon.
The round variety of peas may be
sown much earlier than the wrinkled or
marrow peas. Cover them deeply.
Sow more clover. Clover will smothei
other weeds that would otherwise mature
their seeds with the grain, and will make
a good crop to plow in.
Burn the grapevine prunings, the rasp
berry and blackberry canes, bean vines,
and all such trash, and thus destroy
many insect enemies. Refund the ashes
to the soil.
Potash applied to grapevines causes an
increased percentage of saccharine in the
fruit as proved by analysis, but neither
grower nor chemist can detect any differ
ence in the taste of the grapes.
In laying out your work for the
season give the garden a liberal share of
attention. It may not be labor which
will bring great returns in money, but it
is certain to do so in family health and
comfort.
There is perhaps not a nook or corner
on the average farm but what may be
used for some kind of a crop that will
pay well for the raising, and the corners
that now are eyesores and bugbears may
be sources of income that are not ex
ceeded by any other parts of the farm.
If h( ns are confined in somewhat nar
row limits there is a great advantage in
having two runs to be used alternately
through the season. If possible these
should arranged so that a one-horse plow
can be introduced and the ground be
plowed or dragged over every time a
change in quarters is made. A few sow
ings of oats, dragged iu, will keep the
fowls busy scratching for grain, and
what escapes them and grows will be
worth even more for green food.
Th re is little advantage in relying on
sowed grain for pasture. The soil has to
be loose to get a seed bed, and it poaches
badly after every rain. Animals may
walk on timothy or clover sod and not
destroy it, but this is scarcely possible
where newly-sown grain is fed off. The
only use of spring grain for feed is got
by cutting as a soiling crop. For this
purpose barley is preferable to cats. Its
leaf is broader aud it furnishes a larger
growth in less time.
Montana has a population of 130,000;
cattle, 1,400,000; fcorsee, 100,000; sheep,
2,000,000; assessed value of property,
16,200,000. There are 41,000,000 acres
upurveyed territory.
AM EXCITING WOLF CHASE}
A FAVORITE SPORT OF HUNTERS
IN THE WEST.
The Desperate Fight of a Wolf to
Save Her Young From the Jaws
of the Hounds.
“Chasing wolves with horses and
hounds where these animals abound in
the West, I 'said Ben amin Leed, of Ly
coming Co., Penn.. who recently returned
from a 30 years’ residence in the Norih
western Territories, "has grown to he.
next to coursing antelope with grey
hounds, the favorite sport of the hunters
lor pleasure. The wolf chase is especially
popular in Idaho. In a fair stand-up
fight a gray, white or black wolf will
whip any dog. no matter how bold or
game he is. These species of the wolf
know their own powers, and seem to like
nothing better than to have a set-to with
a dog. I never knewa gray wolf to run
from a single dog in all my experience.
"I was one of the party that camped
between the headwaters of the .McArthur
and .Malade Rivers, near the base of the
Salmon Mountains, in Idaho, in the days
when buffalo was still plenty, but woives
were so numerous in that region, and we
found the chase of them on horseback so
exciting, that many a buffalo owed his
life at our hands to that wolfish presence.
“I remember in particular one wolf
hunt we had while encamped in the cal
mon Mountain region We w-erc mount
ed on the be-t buffalo-hunting hor-es we
could buy, and when a horse is a good
buffalo-hunter he is as good as a horse
can be. Our pack of hounds was large
and every dog a thoroughbred foxhound.
The season was early Fall. (ur route
led to the rocky rises of the Salmon
range, which are famous lurking places
for the gray wolf, the rocks and dense
undergrowth giving them the best of
shelter, and the numerous streams afford
ing them unusual opportun.ties to cap
ture game animals that seek the water
to drink and feed on the tender root*
and plants that grow on the borders of
the striams.
“We had ridden several miles through
this rough country before the dogs suc
ceeded in starting a w olf, but at last
they gave tongue iu a thicket off to the
right, and quickly following the excited
braying a very large but gaunt she wolf
with a litter of whelps tumbliug after
her broke into the opening. She dashed
past us like a flash, and her litter of
young ones huddled close too her, evi
dently finding no difficulty in keeping
pace with he-, although she went Ike the
wind. As the wolf passed us she w r as so
close that a pistol shot could have
dropped her, but not a man raised his
hand against her. There was a stretch
of prairie probably one eighth of a mile
in w-idth between the thicket where
the w-olf had been started and a dome
like but not steep mound or hillock.
She dashed straight for the hillock, and so
swift was her gait that she had disap
peared around it before the dogs broke
from the brush to take up the trail.
They followed it in full c-v, and we
spurred our horses to the hillock, and
up its sides to the summit to discover
the direction the wolf had taken. The
killing pace she had cut out was more
than her pups could maintain, as we dis
covered on reaching the top of the
mound, as the old wolf had slackened
her speed to suit that of her young, two
of which had fallen behind and were
making their way with difficulty.
“The dogs dashed around the hillock
and were quickly clearing the space be
tween them and the young woives that
had dropped so far in the rear that it was
only a question of a few seconds when
the jaws of the leading hounds of the
pack would ciose upon them, and their
future as prowling pests would be de
stroyed. Although the mother wolf
governed her pace to suit that of those
of the litter that had kept by her, it was
plain that it was only by great effort
that they were able to move even at that
speed. The old wolf could easily have
escaped by abandoning her interesting
family, but, wolf as site was, she was a
true and brave mother. She evidently
recognized the fact that the situation
was critical, and she changed her tactics
in a surprising manner. She suddenly
turned in her tracks and charged back
upon the hound that led the pack by
several paces and was almost upon the
wolf cub that was furthest in the rear.
The winded litter kept on at the best
speed they could make. The sudden
charge of the old wolf took the hound so
by surprise that before he could make
any show against her at all she had him
by the throat, and with one terrible
snap of her strong jaws severed wind
pipe and jugular vein, and threw
the dog from her as dead as a stone.
The two young ones kept on in a totter
ing way for a few paces and fell ex
hausted to the ground. The old wolf,
seeing that it war impossible to revive
them, dashed on again and placed her
self in the midst of the family that was
left to her and by various devices tried
to urge them on and encourage them.
But it was useless. They fell behind
singly and in pairs until only one, with
more vigor than the rest, was left
struggling along with the mother.
“Only one result could be foreseen
from the situation, b.it the old wolf
resolved to make one more attempt to
save her youug ones, The dogs were
almost upon her, and suddenly she
struck off at right angles from the direc
tion her weary cubs were taking, and
sped away over the prairie like a rare
horse, passing the hounds almost under
their noses. She could have but one
design in thus apparently abandoning
her cubs and that was a heroic measure.
She hoj ed to divert the dogs from them
by leading them in a cha-e after herself
and she succeeded. The pack followed
her, and now that the chase was in wo
dashed aftei the hounds. Rut it was a
short one, as the wolf wavered in her
course, apparently drawn by her maternal
instinct back to her abandoned young,
and she gradually turned and bore back
toward the spot where she had left them.
The dogs headed her off, and before we
reached the scene of the ensuing conflict
the wolf had been torn to pieces, but
not before she had ripped another of the
pack to death, leaving us but four with !
which to seek sport for the rest of the j
day. —New York Times.
John S. Williams recently died at !
Reading, Penn., from the effects of hav
ing been stung by a fish. His hand and
arm swelled to unusual proportions,
and blood poisoning finally set in. He
died after excruciating suffering.
Worth Knowing.
That Allcock’s Porous Plasters are the
bits aest result of medical science and skill, and
In ingredients and method have never been
equaled.
That they are the original and genuine por
ous plasters upon whose reputation imitators
trade.
That Allcock’s Porous Plasters never
fail to perform their remedial work quickly
and effectually.
That for Weak Back, Rheumatism. Sciatica.
Colds, Lung Trouble, Kidney Difficulties, Ma
laria, Dyspepsia, Liver and St rnach Affec
tions, Strains and all Local Pains, they are in
valuable.
That when you buy Allcock’s Porous
Plasters you obtain the I test plasters made.
The best way to make a balky horse go, is to
Beil him at once.
V Promtne»u .itin Trouble.
Old mone.s bags mopes in Its office all day,
As snappish and ioss as a bear;
The clerks ki.ow enough o keep out of his
way, ~ ,
Lest the merchant should grumble ami
swear.
Even Tabby, th“ cat. is in fear of a cuff,
Or a kick, it she ventures too near;
They all know the master s apt to be rough,
And his freaks unexpected and queer.
What nr-k 'S the old fellow «o surly and grim,
And behave so c nfoundedty m an?
There’s certainly something the matter with
n. in
is it stomach, or liver, or spleen?
We’ve guessed it—his liver is sluggish and bad,
His b.ood is disordered nd foul.
It’s enough to make any on-- hopelessly mad.
And gtee his best friend with a growl.
The world-wide remedy, Dr. Pieice’s Golden
Medical Discovery, will correct a disordered
liver and p ir.ry ike blood, tone your system
and build up your flesh and strengtn.
Of the 10.U00 pian > makers in the country,
one-third live in New York city.
("■< Hines
elerv
"^(Jound
For The Nervous
The Debilitated
€The Aged
Ncrvout Prostration,Nervous Head
ache,Neuralgia, NervouaWeakness,
Stomach and Liver Diseases, and all
affections of the Kidneys.
AS A NERVE TONIC, It Strengthens
and Quiets the Nerves.
AS AN ALTERATIVE, It Purifies and
Enriches the Blood.
AS A LAXATIVE, It acts mildly, but
firely, on the Bowels.
AS A DIURETIC. It Regulates the Kid
neys and Cures their Diseases.
Recommended by professional and businessmen.
Price SI.OO. Sold by druggists.. Send for circulars.
*N£LLS, RICHARDSON & CO.. Proprietors,
BURLINGTON. VT.
All cuttings of the drill in clay. sand, gravel, rock. Ac .
are dischargeri at surface w ithout removing
tools. Noted for success where others fail Drill
drops 70 to IH> times a minute. Profits large.
Catalogue Free. LOOMIS A: NYMAN,
TIFFIN, OHIO.
LJ.UKc A,, > HA Al
[ COPYRIGHT, 1887. ]
ARE YOU SICK?
Do you feel dull, languid, low-spirited,
lifeless, and indescribably miserable, both
physically and mentally: experience a
sense of fullness or bloating alter eating,
or of “goneness,” or emptiness of stomach
in the morning, tongue coated, bitter or
bad taste in mouth, irregular appetite, diz
ziness, frequent headaches, blurred eye
sight, "floating specks” before the eyes,
nervous prostration or exhaustion, irrita
bility of temper, hot flushes, alternating
with" chilly sensations, sharp, biting, tran
sient pains here and there, cold feet, drow
siness after meals, wakefulness, or dis
turbed and unrefreshing sleep, constant,
David G. Lowe, Esq., of St. Agathe, Manitoba,
Rll IftllQ Canada, says: “ Being troubled with a terrible bil-
UILIUUo jous attack, fluttering of the heart, poor rest at
l TT snv night, etc., I commenced the use of your ‘Golden
Hi I AUK. Medical Discovery’ and ‘Pellets,’ and derived the
very highest benefit therefrom.”
“FOR THE BLOOD IS THE LIFE.”
Thoroughly cleanse the blood, which is
the fountain of health, by using Dr.
Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery,
and good digestion, a fair skin, buoyant
spirits, and bodily health and vigor will
Kp DDfaViHßhPti
Golden Medical Discovery cures all
A medicine possessing the power to cure such inveterate blood and skin diseases as the following testimonial portrays must
certainly be credited with possessing properties capable of curing any and all shin and blood disuses, for none are more
obstinate or difficult of cure than Salt-rheum.
“Columbus, Ohio, Aug. 18th, 1887.
Oil T DUCIIM World’s Dispensary Medical Assocla-
OJLI-nnLUm tion, eta Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y.:
•un Gentlemen— For several years I have felt it
AHU to be my duty to give to you the facts in rela-
QlirillllTK'll Bon to the complete cure of a most aggra
-11 fit Urn ft I 10111. vated case of salt-rheum, by the use of your
ihmmbhmmJ 'Golden Medical Discovery.’ An elderly lady
relative of mine had been a great sufferer from salt-rheuin for
upwards of forty years. The disease was most distressing in her
hands, causing the skin to crack open on the inside of the fingers
at the joints and between the finders. She was obliged to protect
the raw places by means of adhesive plasters, salves, ointments and
bandages, and during the winter months had to have her hands
dressed daily. The pain was quite severe at times and her general
health was'badly affected, paving the way for other diseases to
creep in. Catarrh and rheumatism caused a great deal of suffering
In addition to the salt-rheum. She had used faithfully, and with
the most commendable perseverance, all the remedies prescribed
by her physicians, but without obtaining relief. She ufterwards
began treating herself by drinking teas made from blood-purify
ing roots and herbs. She continued this for several years but de
rived no benefit. Finally, about ten years ago, I chanced to read
one of Dr. Pierce’s small pamphlets setting forth the merits of it is
• Golden Medical Discovery ’ and other medicines. The name struck
CONSUMPTION, WEAK LUNGS, SFZTTING OF BLOOD.
Golden Medical Discovery cures Con
sumption (which is Scrofula of the Lungs),
by its wonderful blood-purifying, invigora
ting and nutritive properties. For Weak
Solomon Butts, of North Clayton, Miami
(ifHKIIMPTMN I Co., Ohio, writes: “I have not the words to
uunoumrnun. | express my gratitude for the good your
* Golden Medical Discovery ’ has done my
wife. She was taken with consumption, and after trying one doc
tor after another I finally gave up all hope of relief. Being very
poor and having but one dollar in the world, I prayed to God that
he might show me something; and then it seems ns though some
thing did tell me to get your ‘Golden Medical Discovery.’ My
wife took it as directed, and as a result she is so she can work now.
Wasting Disease. Watson F. Clarke. Esq.,
uAIfiED °f (Box 104), Summcrside, Prince Edward Island,
»> n Can., writes: “ When I commenced taking vour
75 POUNDS 4 Golden Medical Discovery,” I was not Ible to
'■ work and was a burden to myself. At that time
I weighed 121 pounds, and to-day I weigh 147
pounds. Then I used to eat about one meal a day, and now can
eat four or five if I dared to.”
WORLD’S DISPENSARY MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, Propr’s, No. 663 Main St., BUFFALO, N. Y.
Wlml it illenni,
To the man or woman who Stas never been
j ill, the, word ‘health’ is meaningless. But to
i the one who lias suffered and despaired,
I health appears as a priceless boon. To tlie
! thousands of unfortunate women who are suf
fering from some of the many forms of weak
ness or irregul trities peculiar to their sex,
j Dr. Pier. e’s Favorite Prescription holes forth
th , promise of a speedy restoration of th s
“pr.c les boon.”
1 e Bouef, the French marenal whose incom
peiency ruined Napoleon 111, died recently.
Mimic TenrheiV Conv ntion. Chicago,
First week in July. All Southern Music
Teachers and their friends desiring to attend
can s- cure ra es of one end one-third fare tor
round trip by addressing H. A. Hathaway,
Dist. Passenger Agent Monon Route, Louis
! ville, Kentucky.
Health and Strength
If you feel tired, weak, worn out or run down
from hard Work, by lmpovi rished condition of
! the blood, or low state of the system, you should
| take Hood’s Sarsaparilla The peculiar toning,
j purifying and vitalizing qualities of this successful
I medicine are soon felt throughout the entire sys
| tem, expelling disease and giving quick, heril thy
i action to every organ. It tones the stomach,
\ creates an appetite, and rouses the liver and
j kidneys. Thousands v, ho have taken It with
benefit, testify that Hood's Sarsaparilla " makes the
| weak strong.”
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggists. #1; six for S 5. Prepared only
j by C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.
100 Doses One Dollar
Do you want “
>w..£
l If
/*>' v*\
[j* PURE
l| O WHITE to I
TRADE MARK.
‘SiAiar ivaacraoM
ox KHOssa )mw
JOHN T. LEWIS & BROS.,
WARRANTED PURE
White Lead, Red Lead, Litharge, Orange
Mineral, Painters’ Colors and Linseed Oil.
CORRESPONDENCE SO 1,11 ITEI),
GINSENG AND RAW SKINS
Bought for cash at highest market prices. Send for
circular, OTTO WAGNER, 90 Prince St„ New York.
HERBRAND FIFTH WHEEL SSHS
Uuproveaioio. UEKBRAND CO.* Fr*mom* O.
IfteM jrets vonr nddress in nnr Aunt’s Directory and
■ Vonr larpre Magazine 4 months free. Oooy of Directory
sent to each one Address Record Co., Buchanan, Ga.
▼CVAQ IA M 3*000.000 acres best agricul-
I tllriw LHHW tural and crazing land forsale.
Address.GODLEY A: PORT ER,Dalla«,T©x.
GO V* Dis worth SSOO per lb. Pettit’s Eye Salve is
worth sl,ooo. but is sold at 25c. a box by dealers.
IPISOS CURE FOR CONSUMPTION!
indescribable feeling of dread, or of im
pending calamity?
If you have all, or any considerable
number of these symptoms, you are
suffering from that most common of
American maladies—Bilious Dyspepsia, or
Torpid Liver, associated with Dyspepsia,
or Indigestion. The more complicated
your disease has become, the greater the
number and diversity of symptoms. No
matter what stage it has reached, Dr.
Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery
will subdue it, if taken according to di
rections for a reasonable length of time.
If Lot cured, complications multiply and
Consumption of the Lungs, Skin Diseases,
Heart Disease, Rheumatism, Kidney Dis
ease, or other grave maladies are quite
humors, from a common Blotch, or Erup
tion, to the worst Scrofula. Salt-rheum,
“ Fever-sores,” Scaly or Rough Skin, in
short, all diseases caused by bad blood, are
conquered by this powerful, purifying, and
invigorating medicine. Great Eating Ul
cers rapidly heal under its benign influ
Lungs, Spitting of Blood, Shortness of
Rrc-ath, Bronchitis, Chronic Nasal Catarrh,
Severe Coughs, Asthma, and kindred affec
tions, it is a sovereign remedy. While it
Inspirator?
If so, write RItOWM A- KING
Manufacturers and Dealers in
o’otlnn, Woolen mid Gcu
ernl .Mill Supplies.
Wrought Iron Pipe Fittings
nn ill t(ru a. floods.
41 S. Broad St., ATLANTA, GA,
E)sta.t>li shed
1772.
Mrs. I. V. Webber, of Yorkshire, Cattaraugus
i IVFR Co., N. Y., writes: ’ For five years previous to
LlfLli taking ‘Golden Medical Discovery’ and ‘Pellets,’
flierier I was a great sufferer; had a severe pain iu my
UioCAOC. right side continually; was unable to do my own
work. I am now well and strong.”
ence. Virulent blood-poisons are, by its
use, robbed of their terrors. Especially
has it manifested its potency in curing
Tetter, Eczema, Erysipelas, Bolls, Carbun
cles, Sore Eyes, Scrofulous Sores and Swell
ings, Hip-joint Disease, “White Swellings,”
Goitre, or Thick Neck, and Enlarged Glands.
my fancy, and seeing that it was essentially a blood-purifler, I im
mediately recommended it to the old lady who had been so long a
sufferer from salt-rheum. She commenced taking it at once, and
took one bottle, but seemed to be no better. However, I realized
that it would take time for any medicine to effect a change for tne
better, and encouraged her to continue. She then purchased a
half-a-dozen bottles, and before these had all been U6ed she began
to notice an improvement. After taking about a dozen bottles she
was entirely cured. Her hands were perfectly well and as smooth
and healthy as a child’s. Her general health was also greatly
improved; the rheumatism entirely lelt her, and the catarrh was
almost cured, so that it ceased to be much annoyance. She has
enjoyed excellent health from that day to this, and has had no
return of either salt-rheum or rheumatism. The ‘Discovery’
6oems to have entirely eradicated the 6alt-rheum from her system.
She is now over eighty years old, and very healthy for one of such
extreme age.
I have written this letter, of which you can make any use you
see fit, hoping that some sufferer from salt-rheum might chance to
read it and obtain relief by using your ‘Golden Medical Discovery ’
—for ‘Golden’ it is in its curative properties, and as much above
the multitude of nostrums and so-called ‘patent medicines,’ so
zealously Haunted before the public, is above the baser
metals. Respectfully yours,
F. W. Wheeler, 182 21st St.”
M'-g. N. W. Rice, of Neufane, Vermont.
nniiPU nr says: "I feci at liberty to acknowledge
UUuun Ur the benefit I received from two bottles o|
C|i/r Vripc’ the ‘Golden Medical Discovery,’ which cureq
FliL ILAna a cough of five years’ standing, asid dyspep.
QTiUntUP Bia . from which 1 had suffered for a long
UIAnUIRu. time. I have also used Dr. Piefce’s Extract
■ii ' of Smart-Weed, or Water Pepper, in my
family, with good effect.”
w. R. DAVIS, Esq., of Beavcle, Florida..
WORTH SI HDD writes: “I have taken your wonderful
ii winn i* i wwu -Golden Medical Discovery’ and have been
I Datti r cured of consumption. I am now sound and
II UUI ILL. well, and have onlv spent three dollars, and
x would not take three thousand dollars and
be put back where I was.”
Discovery SI.OO, Six Bottles for $5.00; by Druggists,
I?UP,NSS|CAU!S
(1/ are cured bij
(, with cart) BnTTl^^
and DeaLeks
TheChas-A’VogelerCo-BaltQ’Md'
WELLS
INVISIBLE
Velvet
Cream.
A Magic Com- j
E lexica Bcmiti i
er for Face, I
Neck and Arms
Elegant for
dressing and
white.-uug the
skin. Unrivaled
for Theatre,Re
ceptions. Balls,
Parties, &c. Un
equalled for
delicaU’ trans
parent white-
ness, soft youthful effect and fine finish. Harm
less, does not roughen, draw, wither, nor in any
way injure the most delicate or sensitive skin.
Superior to any Powder, Paste or Liquid for
toning down red or flushed face. Effaces Tan,
Sunburn, Freckles, Pimples, Coarseness, Sal
low Skin, aii blemishes and imperfections. 81.
bottles at Druggists and Fancy Goods Dealers,
or by Express, prepaid, on receipt of price.
E. S. tVells,Chemist, Jersey City, N.J..U.S.A,
“ROUGH ON NEURALGIa7 ,t sl.oo. Drug.
“ROUGH ON RHEUMATISM,”SI.SO. Drug.
“ROUGH ON ASTHMA," $1.50. Druggists.
“ROUGH ON MALARIA.” 81.50. Druggists.
orjjtrejmKHt^EXj^^JiXjS^VELij^Jersej^Citj.
RQUGH° w CORNSsoAfS)Ess 15c.
RODGHowTOOTHACHE'as* 15c
MARVELOUS
MEMORY
DISCOVERY.
Wholly unlike artificial systems.
Cure of mind wandering*
Any book learned m one reading.
Classes of 1087 at Baltimore. 1005 at Detroit,
1500 at Philadelphia, 1113 at Washington,
at Boston, large classes of Columbia Law student**, at
Yale, Wellesley, Oberlin, University of Penn., Mich
igan University, Chautauqua, Ac., Ac. Endorsed by
Richard Proctor, the Scientist, Hons. W. W. Astor,
Judah P. Bfnjamin, Judge Gibson, Dr. Brown, E.
H. Cook, Principal N. Y. State Normal College, Ac.
Taught by correspondence. Prospectus post FRES
from PROF. LOISETt’E. 237 Fifth Ave.. N. Y.
$ I 00 to S3OO made working for
ua Agents preferred who can furnish their own
horses and .ive their whole time to the business.
Spare moments may ne profitably employed also.
A few vacancies In towns and cities. B, F. JOHN
SON & CO.. 1013 Main st., Richmond. Va.
Dillre Great English' Gout and
Dials S I IIIS» Rheumatic Remedy.
Ural Box, 34) round. 14 Pitta.
TflT Live at home and make more money working for n* than
vUbmPI «t anything else in the world Either sex. Costly outflj
yiiEK. Terms FREE. Address, TUBE St Co., Augusta. Maine.
Mto §8 a day. Samples worth $1.50, FRM
Lines not under the horse’s feet. Write
Brewster Safety Hein Holder Co.. Holly. Mich.
A. N. U Twenty-five, ’BB.
liable to set in, and, sooner or later, in
duce a fatal termination.
Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discov
ery acts powerfully upon the Liver, und
through that great blood-purifying orgun,
cleanses the system of all blood-taints and
impurities, from whatever cause arising.
It is equally efficacious In acting upon the
Kidneys, and other excretory organs,
cleansing, strengthening, and healing their
diseases. As an appetizing, restorative
tonic, it promotes digestion and nutri
tion, thereby building up both flesh and
Strength. In malarial districts, this won
derful medicine has gained great celeb
rity in curing Fever and Ague, Chills
and Fever, Dumb Ague, and kindred
diseases.
promptly cures the severest Coughs, it
strengthens the system and purifies the