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I FARM AM* (.ARJ)!\
Trimming' Ro ,es.
gard to trimming roses, an ex
ed cultivator advises the readers
Sew York World, that when the
ive swelled sufficiently to show
indition, the plants should be cut
> the niuinpest hud, cutting iuthe
t growers to within lour or six
hove the ground, particularly if
gfor exhibition purposes; if large
are not required, the shoots may
longer. The strong growers must
iis long as so md buds and wood
mit. Intersecting shoots should
cut out so as to leave the centre
riant with a free exposure to the
sun, for it is among these short
hat the r ed spider and other pests
in the summer. Another impor
int to remember a few weeks later
leason is that for growing large
a certain amount of disbudding
e practised. Around the central
;er bud will be noticed two or three
,!ler buds, which must be removed to
>w the entire strength into the central
’* then, if proper.y cultivated, the
;le stem will carry a splendid flower.
Fillins Out Orchards.
a almost every orchard are vacant
nes caused by the death of trees lirst
If this happens the first year or
the vacant piaces may be filled, and
li a little extra care the later-set tree
l be able to hold its own, and come
> bearing about as soon as its fellows.
; among older trees a vacant place
I not so easily be filled. There seems
be room enongh, but there is not.
! tops may not intermingle by many
ard,.but close examination of the
shows that the roots of surrounding
is have interlaced throughout the
ancy.- Generally, if a young tree is
among a lot of older ones, the farmer
s his best to befriend it. He digs a
p, sude hole, partly fills it with
(ure, covers with dirt, and sets his
over.it. If it lives, it is a sickly,
:arious existence. All around it are
/er trees, whose roots started for this
foraging ground as soon as it was
ed there. They establish themselves
ly under the little tree. Perhaps the
jr, after a desperate struggle of a
years, yields a little fruit. It is
ire’s effort to offset attempted de
ction by an unnatural stimulation of
means of reproduction. Much the
er course, if a vacancy occurs in the
lard, is to fill the vacant place with
ure, and omit the tree planting. Al
t all orchards are too crowded, and
iccasional vacancy is really an ad
:age. — American Cultivator.
Ider Cfops fora Small Piece of
Ground.
.uite a large quantity of feed can be
|/wn on a small lot. Cut oats when
I ripe, bind in small sheaves, allow to
d in small shocks until the straw is
d, then store away in the mow to be
out in the bundle during the winter
ths. They form an agreeable va
r, and a horse will eat them, straw
all, with a relish. After the oats,
f {Jotatoe3 and other vegetables are
■es’dd, the ground may be sown to
et, which in a fair season will make
irge Quantity of green feed. It
cut and fed or converted
seed forms. After the
et is harvested the ground may be
red and sown to rye, which will be
y cut for green feed in the spring
; before anything else. If the land
st needed for other crops, follow the
evkh outs and the oats with millet.
Ithe soil is kept moderately rich, a
sd crop of each is almost a certainty,
ith this rotation an immense quantity
I green and dry horse-feed can be
Imply grown on a small patch of land,
11 there will be no chance for weeds.
Iwever small the lot some carrots
I mid be grown, to be stored in the
liar for feeding in winter and early
■ing. For this purpose the Half-long
Bimp-rooted is best, as it grows to a
Bid size, yields heavily and is not diffi-
Bt to harvest. It rarely pays to grow
Bn for horse feed on a small lot. Imms-
Be corn, ehher green or cured, is not
Bd feed for horses.— American Aqri
murist.
nnt-Lice ami t heir Insect Enemies
two features in the life of plant-lice
the enormous rate at which they
iltiply, and * the suddenness with
ieh they sometimes disappear. The
jrry-trees may be black with them iu
y, and in a mouth hardly a specimen
them will be found. This welcome
dance is due to their insect enemies,
syphus maggot with a pointed head,
s Mr. A. J. Cook, of the Agricultural
liege, Michigan, just revels in plant
s' It seems never satiated, and it is
'd to understand how so small an in
t can make so large a meal. The
y-birds, and especially their larvm or
ibs, do signal service in the same di
tion. Several species of the genus
aidius of the ichneumon family, very
rote parasites, destroy the lice by the
'U-ands. Thus, plant-lice on outdoor
fetation, which may threaten dire
tchief in the spring, are almost van
ished before summer comes. In some
irs, however, probably favored by
•ught, the plant-lice live out of pro
ton, and succeed in spite of their
-Jes, when they do most serious in
!■ They are sometimes favored, too,
misguided cultivators, who destroy
h enemies, mistaking them for mis
evous insects. The aphides may be
troyed by the kerosene-and-soap
tture, which consists of a quarter of
ound of hard soap or a quart of soft
Pj and a quart of water, heated till
1 soap is dissolved, to which a pint of
osene is added, and the whole agi
till a permanent emulsion or mixt
-lis formed. It is applied with a
ce-pump, of which some are made for
'purpose. — Pop YLar S ieuce Monthly.
The Shape of Seed Corn,
lumpness and weight are generally
ar( led as important ’characteristics in
UH ser j grain. In very rich soil this
I not make so much difference, but
®P> full weight oats and barley will,
I 'faer conditions are equal, give better
I than that which is somewhat
Seeled. The latter shows a lack of
I material which nature stores in all
■j* for nourishing the germ until the
1 S e fs hold of the soil. It has not
■u generally thought that this was im-
in selecting grains of corn. Yet
be, and some experiments show
probably is. A few years ago at
■ hew York Experimental Station a
■ Was made of corn from various
parts of the ear. Father curiously, that
from the tip end produced the strongest
and best plants, that from the butt the
next, and that from the middle of the
ear the poorest. All were equally sound
and dry. The explanation seuned to be
that the tip end grains had room to ex
pand into the round, full proportions
that this grain naturally produces if
given room. The grains at the butt end
were somewhat compressed, but not so
much so as th se in the middle of the
ear, where they set so closely as to crowd
each other. We hai e often seen the tips
and butts of corn broken off, and only
the middle used for seed. In fact, we
have doue this ourselves, bat this ex
periment by I)r. riturtevant taught us a
lesson on this subject. In most corn
with poorly fertilized blossoms there are
many ears imperfectly filled out. In
these the grains stand widely apart and
grow in fine shape. This corn, if it lias
been thoroughly dried before freezing,
makes Letter seed than the handsome
ears that are generally selected.— Lotion
Cultivator.
Making Hav.
The best quality of hay, everything
considered, is made in dry but sunless
weather, with little dew, and as little
handling over as is practicable. Too
long exposure to a burning sun renders
the hay brittle, and consequently some
of it will be lost in the handling.
Clover hay. it is generally conceded, is
best when the clover was only fairly
wilted before being put in the cock,
there to remain a few days, the cocks, in
the mean time, to be opened two or three
times.
Experimental evidence largely favors
the idea that early cut forage is superior
to late cut, not only as regards its
chemical composition but its diges
tibility This is explained by the fact
that young plants, while in a state of
active growth, contain relatively more
protein and less fibre than do mature
plants.
Professor Armsby, of Wisconsin, says
on the subject: Three elements enter into
the problem of selecting the best time
for cutting the grasses, viz., the quality
of the fodder, its quantity and the
amount of labor expended upon it.
While any grass is ripening a large part
of the protein and starch passes frOm the
leaves and stem to the seeds, which are
so small that they are seldom masticated
or digested. Moreover, these are easily
lost in curing. The hay made from fully
ripe grass is essentially straw. If only
one crop is to be obtained, the best time
tor cutting is usually when the plants
are just beginning to blossom. At this
time a larger crop is obtained than if cut
earlier, while the digestibility of the hay
is not materially impaired. If cut early,
there is a great advantage to a second
crop. In deciding which :s the proper
stage of growth for cutting grass for hay,
one ought not to forget that a late
growth of the plants nearly to seeding
impairs their strength. In case of red
clover, it greatly interferes with the crop
of seed which is obtained from the
second cutting.
Professor Sanborn’s (of Missouri) ex
periments in feeding hay appear to in
dicate that the value of early cut hay
may have been over-estimated. He says
results obtained make it appear that, not
only is the amount of hay cut from a
given area larger when cut after bloom
than when cut in bloom, but the late cut
hay is most nutritious. Professor Beal,
Michigan, thinks it very doubtful
whether it is best to cut all forage plant!
at the same stags of advancement. Most
farmers, as a rule, prefer to cut clover
when a few o, the first heads begin to
turn brown. Common sense must be
used in tbe matter of deciding when
each special kind of grass should be cut
Much will depend upon the weather. If
the weather be cloudy with a fall of rain
every few hours, the grass designed for
hay must be left standing until the
atmosphere becomes dry again,no matter
at what stage of growth it may be.
Timothy hay is easily cured, heavy for
its bulk, presents a good appearance and
suffers less than many grasses when
allowed to go to seed before cutting.
Professor Sanborn believes that timothy
is worth oj to 40 per cent, more per acre
for cutting when sufficiently out of
bloom in preference to cutting in bloom
or before blooming. — New York World.
Farm and Garden Votes.
Nothing pays as well on the farm as a
good garden.
A Minnesota farmer believes that no
fodder is equal to green amber cane for
producing butter.
The curculio should be watched for
and the plum trees jarred daily, if fine
plums are wanted.
The more cattle the more manure, the
more manure the more grain, the more
grain the more cattle.
With the many excellent insecticides
now known, insects should not be al
lowed to get the lion’s share of crops.
As the farmer sees the wealth of blos
soms in his orchard, he should be
reminded that it reqires an enormous
amount of plant food of various kinds to
make the fruit mature.
The onion-bed should only be culti
vated shallow. As far as possible the
weeds should be kept down and the sur
face of the soil mellow. They grow very
near the top of the ground and not in it.
Ordinary buttermilk is a valuable food
not only for pigs but for the family. It
contains 5 per cent, of mdk sugar, near
ly 1 per cent, of mineral salts, as well as
nitrogenous materials and a proportion
of butter fat.
Soaking seed corn in tar water is
claimed to be an excellent remedy for
protecting the plants against the ravages
of both worms and crows. Some believe
; it to be quite as effective as soaking in
copperas water.
Examine the collars and the horses’
shoulders if the weather is warm. Cold
water is a preventive of shoulder galls if
used properly and in season. A strong
decoction of “kill lamb” is good for
healing galls and sores.
Dr. Salmon says there are two con
tagious diseases known as hog cholera,
one affecting the bowels, the other the
lungs. The one is the genuine hog
cholera, the other the swine plague. It
is possible for an animal to have both
diseases at the same time.
The report of the National Department
of Agriculture says the condition of
sheep is unusually good, and shows a
marked degree of uniformity throughout
tlm country, the exceptions being of
merely a local character. The status in
regard to healthfulness, in particular, is
far above the average.
For the purposes uf fodder you should
sow two and one-half bushels oats and
one and one-half bushels of peas to the
acre. The land should be harrowed well;
the seed is then sown and worked in with
a shovel-toothed cultivator or an Acme
harrow; a common spike-tooth harrow
will not cover the peas well. They need
to be covered at least three inches deep.
W. D. Hoard, the Wisconsin dairy
editor, writes: Under no circumstances
would we run the risk of deiiorning a
maie or female in whom we placed any
reliance for breeding or butter purposes.
We believe farmers have gone into this
business, and especially dairymen, with
out sufficient kuowledge of its physio
logical effects. Not one farmer in a hun
dred has ever made any study of the
machinery of butter production. How
should they know whether it is safe ;o
dehorn a dairy or butter cow ? Yet they
drive ahead just as if they knew all
about the future of its effects.
The best time for killing a weed is
when the seed has just germinated. It
is comparatively innocent then. It has
done no harm as yet, and if destroyed in
its helpless infancy, all the good it is
capable of doing by fertilizing the soil
will be utilized. There is no more
dangerous heresy in farming than the
idea that it is better to let the weeds
grow large, so as to have more green
manure to plow under. The extra growth
of annual weeds takes from the surface
soil where it is most needed, and is less
available in the weed than it was in t.he
soil before the weed took it. ■
SCIENTIFIC AM) INDUSTRIAL.
A prize of $l2O is offered for the best
work on electro magnets, by the Italian
Electrical Society.
Scientists say there is no plant that
does not serve as food for some animal:
but the only article used as food from
the mineral kingdom is common sail.
In some improved English dry plates
the developing mixture is fixed to the
back of the glass, so that the photo
graphic negative is developed by simple
immersion in water.
A new theory is that shaving the
beard, if long continued, tends to
weaken the hair of the head and cause
it to fall out. The increasing number
of bald heads has to be accounted for in
some way.
Electric rifles are the latest. Instead
of tire ordinary percussion firing device,
a dry chloride of silver battery and s
primary coil will, so it was lately stated
before the American institute, fire the
rifle 35,000 times without recharging.
A Nuremburg inventor has produced
a shoe sole composed of wire net, over
laid with a substance resembling india
rubber. These soles, which cost but
half the price of leather, have been tested
in the German army, and found to be
twice as durable.
The meteorologist of the Pic-du-Midi,
in 4 ranee, attaches much importance to
the systematic observation of clouds at
his mountain observatory, and stated
that such observations since 1880 have
enabled him to issue local weaaher pre
dictions which have acquired great ac
curacy.
One of the most remarkable mechan
ical changes of the day is the setting
as.de of steel and the re-adoption of
iron for some of the most important
parts of locomotives.on many railroads.
It is only comparatively' a few years
since the change was made, on most
roads, from iron to steel.
The smallest circular saw in practical
use is a tiny disc about the size of a
British shilling, which is employed for
cutting the slits in gold pens. These
saws are about as thick as ordinary
paper and revolve some 4,000 times per
minute. The high velocity keeps them
rigid, notwithstanding the thinness.
The binanna is mentioned by Dr. B.
W. Richardson as one of the best of
foods. It may almost be looked upon as
condensed milk, its composition being
seventy-four per cent, water, twenty per
cent, fuel, five per cent, flesh formers,
and seven one-tenths per cent, min
eral; while milk contains eighty-six per
cent, water, nine per cent, fuel, four
per cent, flesh formers, and seven
tenths per cent, mineral.
The use of oil for the fuel with which
to fire brick kilns is a rather novel idea,
which seems to be now in a fair way to
be reduced to practice. Mr. D. V.
Purington, of Chicago, a brick manu
facturer, has been making experiments
in this direction, and as a result he
thinks he has solved the problem of how
to burn brick. He recently superin
tended the burning of his first kiln of
brick with oil for fuel. The oil used,
while called “crude oil,” was iu reality
nothing but the waste from which the
naphtha has been extracted.
Disease of the coffee-plant caused many
successive failures of the crops in Cey
lon, ruining many planters and produc
ing great distress, and ultimately led to
the growing of tea in place of coffee. A
like revolution in planting may have
been averted in Java by a recent timely
discovery. Dr. Burck, of the Botanic
gardens at Buitenzorg, has found that
an attenuated solution of chloride of
iron prevents the disease applied to the
under side of the leaves, while touching
with strong sulphuric acid kills the
germs in the spots that may be seen on
the plants already attacked. These
specifics will be somewhat expensive,
but, if successful, will prove an inestim
able boom to Java planters.
The Executioner Was Unpopular.
Tbe office of public executioner at
Vienna is not a very desirable posi ion.
A few days since this official, ac
companied by two assistants, went to
Trieste to polish oT some poor wretch
who was under sentence of death.
While sipping bear in a “brasserie” they
were recognized, and the place wa3 im
mediately turned into a battlefield. They
were mobbed and narrowly escaped with
their lives to the nearest police station.
The proprietor of the “brasserie” then
broke the glssses out of which they had
been drinking, and after chopping up
the chairs upon which they had been sit
ting he made a bonfire of them in the
street. The principal barber in Trieste
was obliged to publish a card in all the
ocal papers denying a rumor that the
executioner had been shaved in his shop,
as in consequence of the story getting
abroad every one of his regular customers
refused to continue their patronage.—
London Truth.
Invenfinr h of the lUtli C'enlat-y.
The steamboat, the real er, the Bowing ma
chine,
Cars ruunimrbv might and by day,
Hou-es lighted by gas and hea ed by stoain,
And bright eleetr city’s ray.
Thetologr iph’scliek speeds like lightning re
leased.
Then tbe telephone com s to excel it;
And, to put ou the Hu sh, the last but not
least,
Is tlio famed little Purgative Pellet.
L’s but licit least is Ur. Pierce's Pleasant
Purgative 1’ Pot, b joins* it relieves human
suit' ring, adds t - i lie sum of human comfort,
an enables the relieved sufferer to enjoy all
the bL-ssiugs and luxuries of the age we live in.
The Knights of Labor organization is spiead
ing rapidly in England.
Conventional ‘‘ .dlejjnn " K(’.solution*.
V’hr-’rm. TfteM non tl„ K. A. A .
Ry Co.) es res to make ii known to the world
:,t large that it forms the double connecting
link of Pullman tourist travel between the
winter cities of Florida a d the summer re
sorts of the Northwest; and
I Vlienas, Its "rapid transit” system is un
surpi se.il, itse!eg-nt P illan Lfurt'e' irleeper
and Chair ca • service between ( hicago and
Louisville. Indianapolis and Cincinnati un
equal ed; and
IVhcrcas, it . rates ai'6 as low as the lowest;
then be it
Resolved, That in the event of starting on a
tripit is (/(-id yil icy to con nitwit > i-. (). Me
t orm cfc, Gen’l Pass. Agent -Monon Route, 185
I) arnor i St. Chicago, for full partieul -rs. (in
any event send lor a Tourist Guide, enclose 4c.
p: staged
If you are going to buya Cotton Gin this year
don’t fail to write to Ihe Brov, i Cotton Gin Co.,
New London, t onn., for their prices and testi
monials or the thousands who have used them.
Warm Waves
Are rolling in. You can’t escape
them; but you can escape the
sleepless nights, loss of appetite,
and languid feeling that result
from draining the nervous force
by muscular or mental exertion
in summer’s torrid days. The use
of Paine’s Celery Compound, that
great nerve tonic, will at once
strengthen the nervous system,
and fortify it against the attacks
of summer debility. This pre
paration is a 'N
not a drink. / ,4 I
It is a sci- J
entific /SCrfF
combi Cljp/ I l'jPVlVv|nation
of the best! Ii \ ]/} \W7 tonics,
giving URTing ben
efit to bo j VyV dy an< l
brain. It . | cures all
nervous I diseases,
and lias J brought
new life and\ I J health to
thousands \ \ whose
weakened nerves
were the cause of their many ills.
It is especially valuable at this sea
son, when feeble persons are so lia
ble to sunstroke, a disease which
is nearly always fatal. Paine’s
Celery Compound, by restoring
perfect health, almost entirely re
moves the liability to this dread
disease. If you feel the effects of
summer’s heat, you can’t afford to
delay another day before gaining
the vitality only obtained' by the
use of this great medicine.
Sold by Druggists, fl.oo. Six for f 5.00 ,
Send for eight-page paper, with mfmy
testimonials.
WELLS. RICHARDSON & CO.. BURLINGTON,VT.
-& BQ DSQN’S -H
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ATLANTA, GA.
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THE LIVER.
Works with the Stomach and the Stomach
with the Liver. You must have good bile
to have perfect digestion, and free liver ac
tion to have pure blood. Therefore beware
of a congested Liver, which is nothing more
than a thickened and clogged Liver. The
great reducer of congestion is Sciienck's
Mandrake Pills.
BILIOUSNESS.
An early and ugly form of liver trouble. It
is blood poison. The Liver is not taking the
bile ingredients from the blood. Treat it
with Schenck’s Mandrake Pills and make it
do so.
BREAKING DOWN
If you have neglected the laws of health too
long and feel that your lungs arc involved
in any way, send for Dr. Schenck’s new book
on the Lungs, Liver and Stomach. It is sent
free, and will be of infinite service to you.
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LL Li*t.
Seines, Tente. Breech lomlJnir donbl' Slioltjnn at $9.00;
liable narrel Breech-loaders at $4 to sl2; Breech-loading
Kiflo-s $5.50 to sls ; Double-barrel Muzzle loaders at $5.50
to s>d: Repeating Rifles, iff shoot'*:, sll to .530: Revolvers,
?1 to S2O; Flobert Rifles, $2.50 to Gum* sent C. O. D. to
Txamino. Revolvers by mail to any P. O. Address JOHLN
HON'S GREAT WESTERN' GUN WORKS, FitUburg, Peso*.
EH Oftfl Cancers, Tumors, Scrof
-BLuUU u!a and all Diseases of the
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Full size sample bottle gent Iree on receipt of 25
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MKDICIM: CO.. Ilox 301, Union vi lUs Cl.
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c? q CTTm? FOR
OXI Will. GENTLEMEN.
The only fine calf $3 Se miles* Sh e lathe world
nad ' without tack* or nail*. A- stylish and
durable at; those costing $5 or SB, and hiving no
larks or nails to w< ar the stocking or h u t i e feet,
makes them as comfortable and well fitting as a
ban 1 sewed shoe. Buy the best. None genuine un
less slamped on bottom “W. I- Douglas $3 Shoe,
warranted.”
W. 1,. DOTJGI.AS S 4 SHOE, the original and
only hand sewc 1 well ) 1 sin e, which equu s custom
made shoes costing from $5 to $9.
W. L. DOUGLAS 82.50 SHOE Is unex
celled for heavy wear.
W. L. DOUGLAS 82 SHOE 1* worn by all
Hoy*, and Is the best school shoe In the world.
All the above goods are made In Congress, Butto*
anil Lace, and If not sol 1 by your dealer, writ*
W. L. DOUGLAS, B nekton, Mas*.
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O H-l ( T PURE °C
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Wholly unlike artificial systems
Lure ot mind wandering.
Any book i< urnnl m one reading.
Claseea of 1087 at Baltimore, it Detroit.
1500 at Philadelphia, II IB at Washington,
at Boston, large classes of Columbia* Law students, si
Yale, Wellesley, Oberlin, University of Penn., Mich*
igan University, Chautauqua, Ac., Ac. K dorsed by
RICH Alii) Pr.oCToH,the Scientist, Hons. W. W.ASTOB,
Judah P. Bfnjamin, Judge Gibbon, Dr. Bbown, E.
H. Cook, Principal N. Y. State Normal College, Ac.
Taught h.v corn spondence. Prospe tus p.'Kr hikb
from PROF, LOiSKTI'E. 2J7 Filth Ave.. N. Y.
RtP'ViRS?
Hew Model 1888.
Works easier . is simpler. Juil Out.
stronger, lighter, than any other. \
i>ow’t buy till you ike it.
BitLARD
JALLERY, HUNTING AND TARGET RIFLES. mMST
Send for I:'nitrated Catalogue.
MARLIH FIRE ARMS Sion, HEW HAVEN, CT/A
WF. BELL AM. AMERICAN
M\ BICYCLES.
V5>SnC-IL. And guarantee LOWEST PRICES.
V , y : JI A - w. GUMP * CO.. Dayton. O.
„ retail **ock In America.
52 in OTTO, factory price $60.00, our price *40.00.
50 in. “ “ “ 55.00, “ “ 35.00
48 iu. “ “ " 50 00, “ “ 33.00
46 in. “ “ “ 45.00, “ •• 30.00
44 in. “ “ “ 40.00. “ “ 27.00
Order quick. A 150250 second-hand Wheels. Repair
ing<£ Nickeling. Bicycles it tiuus taken iu trada
" UnSU DRILL
All cuttings of the drill iu clay. sand, gravel, rock. Ac ,
are tlisrliaigrtl at KMiTarc without removing
too In, Noted for t-ml ess where others fail Drill
(Iron** 70 to HO time* a minute. Profits la.ge.
Catalogue Floe. LOO MIS cV NYIIAN,
TIFFIN, OHIO.
MEDICAL DEPARTMENT
TBLAHE DSHERSITY CF LOUISIAM.
[Formerly, 1847,-18*1, the University o' Louisiana.)
It. adv ntages for practical ii b,ruction, and esu- cially
in the diseases of iho South-, est.a e unequalled,as th.
law aocures it superabundant materials Ir. in the great
Charity Hospital with its 7«l bed*, and 20.146) patients
annually Students have no bospitai-fecs to p.ij and
special instruction is daily given in tli. b d.siite ol
1 In- sick, as in no other institution. For catai. gues
or information, address
Prof. 8. E. <TlAll.lt M. D., Dean,
ty~P. O. Drawer26l, New Or'cane. La.
Wesleyan female college
G--A_.
Begins olst Annual Session October 3d, 188?. The
oldest and the leading college for girls in the
south. All modern improvements looking to
health, safety, comfort and advancement of pu
pils in Literature, Science and Art. Pun water,
mild climate, generous table, thorough teaching.
Apply early for catalogue to
REV. W. ('. BASS, D. D , President.
Monroe Female College,
FQHSYTH, CA.
This Institution, “ one of the best for the highet
education ot young ladies to be found in the
South,” will resume exercises September 17,
ISBS. For Catalogue and particulars applv to
It. T. ASBI'R V. President,
Or I. It. BRANHAM, Secretory.
Send for a Catalogue rf the
COLLEGE OF
PHYSHTA IS AM) *! ROEONS.
ISA I.TIMOItE, MB.
which offers the Student of Medicine superior
advantages.
Dr. THOMAS OPIE (Dean'. 600 N. Howard -t.
Great English Goul and
Ulull Si sliS* Rheumatic Remedy.
Oval Box, 31; r»nml, 1 i l ills.
GOLD is worth SSOO per lb. Pettit’s Eye Salve is
worth SI,OOO. but is sold at 25c. a b »x by dealers.
A~ N. U Thirty one, ’BB