Dade County news. (Trenton, Ga.) 1888-1889, October 05, 1888, Image 7
FAKJI AND GAR I) EX, |
". , i
Growing; Clover. ,
The growing of clover is \ to i
deep plowing, because its long roots !
penetrate deeply in search of lood for ;
the siems aud leaves, which, if plowed j
into the land will undergo decomposi
tion and leave, near the surface, ele- i
ments taken from the subsoil. Its leaves
take carbonic acid large;y from the!
atmosphere, and the plowing in of tk:s
crop augments the carbon of the soil
very materially, which changes its
color and gives it a greater capacity to
absorb solar heat and to retain manures
and ammonia, whether resulting from
their decomposition or absorbed from
the atmosphere. — American Agriculturist.
Remedy for Arango.
Mange is not a disease in the common
cense of the term, but is caused either
by a vegetable parasite or by an insect
■which grows in the skin. There are
two kinds, but both are treated alike.
The treatment is as follows: The skin
is first washed with warm water and
carbolic soaff to soften it and open the
pores in which the parasites are im
bedded: it helps to rub the skin with a
corn cob or something rough to break
tip the vesicles and remove the crusts
The parts are then dried and rubbed
thoroughly with an ointment made as
follows: Four parts of lard, one part of
sulphur, and one part of kerosene; a few
drops of creosote are added, about
twenty drops to an ounce of th; mixture.
This should be well worked into the
skin with a hard brush, and the applica
tion should be repeated weekly for three
or four weeks, so as to destroy any new
growth from eggs or spores. This
disease is contagious, and the stables
where a mangy animal has been kept
should be well white-washed with Line.
—Frairie Farmer.
Durability of Tiiyiber.
Timber varies exceedingly in its power
of resisting decay, and the more resinous
the wood is the soouer it decays under
ground. Thus, pine and hemlock posts
will rot off in two years if made of green
timber, but will last four years if the
timber is seasoned, and will resist decay
for eight or ten years if well saturated
with hot lime and tamped with coarse
broken stone when set. Seasoned locust
and chestnut posts thus treated with
lime and tamped with stone have re
mained sound for thirty or forty years,
but if the timber is green when set the
posts have rotted off in half this period.
The frequently-appearing statement that
posts set in the ground top end down
ward arc more durable than if set the
other way has also been disproved by
tests, as might be reasonably expected.
As the matter of the durability of fence
posts is important to farmers—and it is
well proved that locust is the most dur
able of all timber for that purpose, and
chestnut is next to it—the planting of
groves of these trees for this use should
not be neglected. By it will be
easy to collect the seeds, and this should
be done in season. — New York Times.
Weed Killing 1 .
It is true that weeds still keep grow
ing, and must be destroyed that they
may not ripen seed to till the ground, to
the detriment of future crops. It is not
the labor to keep them down now that
it was while crops were smaller and did
not shade the ground. To gq through a
field and pull up the larger weeds which
in some way escaped destruction at the
last hoeing, or with a hoe to cut up
those that are starting in certain spots,
is not like the labor oi giving the field a
thorough hoeing. Then those which
fringe the borders of the fields should be
mown down, and the spots from which
the early crops have been taken should
be plowed or gone ovej* with the
cultivator, even though no other crop is
to be put in this fall. Better the land
should lie fallow than to be growing a
crop of foul seeds to infest the neighbor
ing soil.
Then there are weeds and bushes in
the pastures and along the roadsides to
be mown down. Let them lie where
they fall until dry enough to burn, and
then apply the match, so that the fire
may assist in destroying the sprouts that
may start from the roots. With the first
growth cut down, and the second burned
down, the third, if there shall be one,
may be so feeble and tender as to be
destroyed by the winter. Those weeds
which are sufficiently mature to ripen
their seeds should also be destroyed by
fire if it can be done. If not they should
be subjected to the gentle heat of the
compost heap. —American Cultivator.
Poultry as Wheat Producers.
It has been claifned that one-fourth of
the profit in poultry is in the manure
they produce. From the evperince of a
wheat grower in Ohio, it would appear
that the whole expense of keeping his
poultry was paid by the droppings taken
from the poultry house. This is the way
it was done:
In the fall, after he has his corn in the
shock, he goes to the fie.d and gets a
number of loads of nice, fine, dry dirt;
this is placed under cover; once each
week the hen house is cleaned out and
and the droppings covered with some of
this dry dirt., in bulk about half as much
as the droppings. This absorbs the
moisture and retains the ammonia. Two
or three times during the summer the
pile is shoveled over, to have it thor
oughly mixed and dried. The whole is
then sifted to remove leathers, straw or
anything else that would clog a grain
drill. When he sows his wheat he lias a
phosphate attachment to his drill and
uses a barrel of this home made fertilizer
to the a re. The result is an extra live
or ten bushels of w heat to the acre.
This, he says, pays for the keep of his
fowls, so all the income from the flock is
profit except the cost of caring for them.
If poultry can be made to increase the
fertility of our farms to suc h an extent,
what branch of farming pays belter?
This u not the experiment of a single
year, but has been carried on for a
number of years. Results e ptal to those
obtained by the use of commercial fer
tilizers upon meadows have been secured
by the use of this home made wheat fer
tilizer. We have used it sow n broadcast
in early spring.— Farm, Full and Stock
man.
Practical Hints on Raisinc Calves.
The important point in raising calves
is to give them a good start, lor which
purpose nothing equals milk as it is
taken from the cow. Though some peo
ple practice separating the calf from the
cow the day after it is dropped, it is gen
erally preferred to let it run with the
cow for fonr or five days, taking all the
milk it trill. At least this period should
elapse after a calf is dropped before the
milk will be fit for use at human food.
After separating the calf from the cow
new milk should be liberally fed for
two w T eeks, and if this can be continued
even longer it is advisable. Mo substi
tute for new milk should be given under
tw>o weeks. After that, however, more
economical food may be compounded,
if desired, and the calf will still thrive.
If skim-milk can now be afforded, the
calf will thrive on liberal feeding.
AVillard says that if whey and oat
meal be properly prepared it can be
made to serve as a very good substitute
for milk. The whey should be dipped
off when sweet from the vat, then bring
to the boiling point aud turn it upon the
oil-meal. Let the mixture stand till
night, then feed. In the morning whey
sweet from the vat may be fed. At the
commencement a little less than a pint
of oil-meal per day will bo sufficient for
four calves. This may be gradually in
creased till each calf has a daily ration of
half a pint. At first it is better not to
feed calves all the whey they will drink
at a time. A large feed of whey cloys
the appetite and deranges the health.
A half pail of whey at first is
enough for a feed, which may be increased
to three fourths of a pail and a pail as
the calf increases in age. Two meals a
day, if the calf runs in a good pasture, is
sufficient. Calves fed in this way ought
not to be weaned until they can get a
good bite of after feed from the early cut
meadows. It is important to keep them
in a growing, thrifty condition with no
check. When weaned earlier their
growth is often checked by reason of
short, dry or innutritious feed in ‘pas
tures.
When whey is not to be. had for feed
ing young calves the following is some
times used: Take three quarts of linseed
meal and four quarts of beau meal
and mix with thirty quarts of boiling
water, when it is left to digest for twenty
four hours and is then poured into a
boiler on the fire having thirty-.one
quarts of boiling water. It is here boiled
for half an hour, being stirred with a
perforated paddle to prevent lumps and
produce perfect incorporation. If is
then set aside to cool and is given blood
warm. When first used it is mixed with
milk in small quantity. The milk is
gradually decreased till they get the
mucilage only. Indian meal may be
used in place of bean meal. Buckwheat
meal < ooked into porridge and added to
whey is reported to have been used with
good results.
It is considered a desirable point to
hasten the maturity of the young animal
by good feeding and care so that it will
come into milk at two years, as such
heifers make better milkers than those
that come in at three years, besides the
profit of milk for an extra season. —New
York World. S
Farm and Garden Notes.
Wilted food is not good for cattle.
Reject a horse that is light below the
knees.
You can’t make good butter out of
stale cream. m
A cross cow in a herd will worry the
others and lessen the milk flow.
All animals should be trained by kind
ness to love, not fear their owners.
Do not be afraid of taking too much
pains in the manufacture of any dairy
product.
Removing crop after crop from the
land without returning something in its
place destroys the fertility.
Don’t throw the tops from the potato
field into the pig pen if there has been
any Paris green used on the crop.
A recommended cure for garget is to
bathe the udder in Water as hot as the
hand can well bear; rub until dry and
apply vaseline.
Manure thrown out of a stable window
and allowed to accumulate against the
barn eats off paint and hastens decay of
siding and of sill.
Go through the fields, pulling up the
larger weeds and cutting down with a
hoe those newly starting. Every such
stroke now makes the work easier next
year.
The greater the decomposition of milk
the more will the cream be affected, and
as a consequence the more difficult will
it be to obtain a nice quality of butter
from it.
A horse that is used to running away
should be put in the hands of a good
driver, be provided with a strong strap
around the neck,and a stout rope halter,
and should never be left standing with
out being securely fastened.
After the sweet corn has bee» thor
oughly picked, there is nothing better
than the stalks or fodder for keeping up
the production of milch cows. Cut for
each day’s feeding the day before and
let it lie and wilt for twenty-four hours.
Caulifloweis and such vegetables
should be set out toward night or uu a
day when the sun does not shine, and
well soaked with water. This gives
them a chance to come up through the
night and they will not wilt so badly
next day.
Packing the soil by rolling after sow-.
ing seed is not beneficial. On the con
trary the laud is injured in dry weather,
as a crust forms over the seed and the
surface dries, thus checking the growth
of the young plants. Thorough harrow
ing after the sowing packs the soil suffi
ciently.
"In a wet time the sheep, especially the
fine woo!ed\ should be ctosely examined
to see if they have any maggots in their
wool, hatched from the eg vs of the blow
; fly. These maggots can be killed by
shearing off the wool and washing the
skin with tobacco.juice or carbolic acid
diluted ten times.
Old hens may be, and sheuld be fat
tened so as to be quite tender by proper
feeding now. They should be put in a
yard by themselves and fed four times a
day on coarse oatmeal boiled in milk so
as to make a thick stiff mush, and fed
when nearly cold. As mu -li as will be
eaten clean should be given.
Every weed that g.ows near a plant
takes from the soil the elements for its
support, and struggles for existence with
the plants for that purpose. In the dry sea
son weeds will appropriate the moisture
that may he te pared for the desirable
plants. The best mode of withstanding
the effects of drought, therefore, is clean
cultivation, whereby the grass and weeds
arc prevented from injur jpg the crop
plant*.
A BAN* BURGLAR’S BOLD TRICK.
IntheGuiso of a Pinkerton Detect
ive He Kidnaps a Bank Cashier
I
lowa City, la- —One of the most dar
ing exploits of a gang of burglars which
narrowly escaped success has just come
to light here. For a few days previous
to the bold attempt to rob the Bank of
Wellman, a town near this city* four
suspicious persons were seen about the
streets, but it was not dreamed that they
had their eyes on the bank, w hich has
but recently been started. The cashier
is a young man twen ty-threo years of age,
who carries the keys to the bank, and
with tlxe President of the institution is
the only person who knows the combina
tion of the valuts. A few nights ago
while Mr. Moore, the cashier, was
spending the evening with his prospect
ive bride, a carriage drove up the house
and a stranger knocked at the door. Ho
demanded with an air of authority to see
young Moore, and taking him to the
buggy grasped him by the shoulder and
said: “You are my prisoner.”
The cashier was much astonished, but
he was informed that he was a forger
and that the stranger was a Pinkerton
detective, and the best thing that could
be done was for the cashier to go along
with him. Said the alleged detective :
“If you want to go to the bank to get
any money or papers that you need I
will go with you, hut I am in a great
hurry.” Moore said ho would not go to
the bank, but that he had a friend that
he would like to see to borrow some
money from if he had to be taken away.
A this point a country doctor came up,
and, being & friend of Moore, asked to
see the papers on which the latter had
been arrested. The bogus detective
said : “I am a Pinkerton man and I
don’t have to show my papers.”
Then Moore was taken to the friend
he wauted to see, who proved to be the
President -of the bank, Mr. Nicholas,
who wanted to know why Moore was ar
rested. and who finally said that it
would foe best for Moore to go with the
officer. The pretended detective started
out to take his prisoner to lowa City.
The arrest aroused some half dozen peo
ple in the small town, and the detective
seemed in a hurry to get off. Finally he
started and when a little way from the
village ho gave Moore something to
drink from a bottle; In a few minutes
he was taken violently ill. ‘He is still
sick from the influence of the drug that
was undoubtedly administered to him.
When lowa City was reached the man
told Moore he was sorry, but he made a
mistake. He bad found a telegram at
the livery barn imforming him that a
mistake had been made, and that he was
the wrong Moore. The men then
separated, Moore going home and the
pretended detective taking a train
North.
From investigations made with
in the last few days it is pretty certain
that Moore was in the custody of a burg
lar. It is believed that had the bogus
detective succeeded in getting his man
off without arousing the President of the
, bank and so many other citizens he
Would have taken him to the bank and
forced him to tell the rest of the gang
the combinations of the vaults which
then held over §25,000.
YELLOW FEYER.
Prevention Better Than Cure.
The following statement speaks for itself:
“This oertifies that I was, with my family,
a resident of New Orleans during the terrible
Yellow Fever epidemic which visited that
city in 1878. We were strangers there,, and
unaccliinated, but having previously used
Ayer’s Ague Cure for malarial disorders, I
fully believed it would prove a preventive of
the Scourge. I took the Ague Cure mysalf,
and had my little girls take it daily,
but I could not persuade my husband to use
it. He fell sick of the fever and died, but
my children and I were not attacked. Our
exemption from sickness at this time was
considered miraculous, but I believe it was
Ayer's Ague Cure, and feel sure that we owe
to this medicine the fact that we survived
the epidemic.”—Mrs. L. E. Osborn, Prescott,
Ark.
Measured.
One of the most valuable lessons to be
learned, in any course of education, is
that of exact conformity to rule. The
half educated person is apt to be a slov
enly one; he acts on the supposition that
work imperfectly done will “do well
enough.”
A laborer in a ship yard was one day
given a two-foot rule, to measure a piece
of iron plate. Not being accustomed to
the use of the rule, he returned it after
wasting a good deal of time.
“Well, Mike,” asked his superior,
officer, “what is the size of the plate?”
“Well,” replied Mike, with a smile
which accompanies duty performed,
“it's the length of your rule and two
thumbs over, with this piece of brick,
and the breadth of my hand and arm,
from here to there, bar a finger.”
They Look Alike.
The members of the Chinese legation
at Washington try very hard to make
themselves popular in society. They of
ten make handsome presents, rare jewel
ry, perhaps, or costly silk—to casual ac
quaintances. They are very assiduous
to paying calls. Tlity start out together
and go from house to house, leaving
their cards and photographs. They seem
to think that their names will not be
recognized, so they leave their pictureu
to establish their respective individuali
ties. But to most Washingtonians the
photographs all look alike.
Excellent Bracers.
The increase, says a New York paper,
in the consumption of milk by business
and professional men of late years, has
been marked. Where once the potent
cocktail was considered essential as a
concomitant of a day’s work, in many
cases a glass of milk is now preferred.
To inen of sedentary habits, whose
brains are at fever heat a good part of
the time, miik is one <»f the best “bra
cers” in the world. It is easily digested
and is a great
ing popularity in that city is a promising
sign.
They are heroes, indeed, these teleg
raphers at Jacksonville, Fla., who. night
and day, in the midst of the pestilence,
tell the story of sickness aud death.—
Charleston, S. C., News.
Biting the- Finger Nalls.
Dr. Jerome Tuthill, of Chicago, 111.,7h
the Medical Record , says: A novel acci
dent, resulting from a habit of very
common prevalance among nervous peo
ple, was brought to my notice recently.
A young lady presented herself at my
office complaining of a constant irrita
tion in her throat. Two weeks pre
viously she had been taken with a severe
“sore throat,” which was treated by a
neighboring physician. Under his care,
she says, the inflammation quickly sub
sided, but there still remained a sensa
tion of irritation. Examination revealed
a small fleshy-looking object, about the
size of a kernnl of wheat, adherent to
the tissues posterior to the left tonsil, by
ono end. The other parts of the throat
were normal. The little mass could not
be detached by a cotton-oovered probe,
but by the use of forceps it was easily
removed, and on examination proved to
be a piece of finger nail, which lmd be
come covered by a cheesy deposit. A
broken piece of the nail was also re
removed from under the mucous mem
brane at the same spot by a sharp-point
ed probe. The patient then confessed
to the habit of biting her finger nails,
atid, moreover, could remember that a
day or two previous to the onset of her
throat trouble a piece of nail which she
had bitten off had become lost in her
mouth, but after it had caused a fit of
coughing, she had forgotten about it un
till reminded by my discovery.
Thebe are on exhibition in the rooms
of the State mining bureau at San Fran
oisco, four “desiccated human bodies”
that were found by Signor S. Marghieri
in a sealed cavern at an elevation of 4,-
000 feet on the eastern side of the Sierra
Mad re Mountains in Mexico.
Tlielr Only Medicine Chest.
Deerlodge, Montana, Dec. 16,1885.
I have been using Biiandreth’s Pills for
the last thirteen years, aud though I have had
nine children, I have never had a doctor in the
house, except three times, when we had an epi
demic of scarlet fever,which we soon banished
by a vigorous use of Brandretii’s Pills. I
have used them for myself,two or three a night
for a month, for liver complaint, dyspepsia,
and constipation. In diarrhoea, cramps, wind
colic, indigestion, one or two Brandretu’s
Pills fixed the children at once. A box of
Pills is all the medicine chest we require in the
house. We use them for rheumatism, colds,
catarrh, biliousuess, and impure blood. They
never have failed to cure all the above com
plaints in a very few days.
Wiliam W. B. Miller.
The Prince of Wales is said to be a first-class
banjo player.
A Gencrnl Tie.up
Of all the means of public conveyance in a
large city, even for a few hours.during a strike
of the employes, means a general paralyzing
of trade and industry for the time being, and
is attended with an enormous aggregate loss to
the community, How much more serious to
the individual is the general tie-up of his sys
tem, known as constipation, and due to the
strike of the most important organs for more
prudent treatment and l)ette-r care. If too long
neglected, a torpid or sluggish liver will pro
duce serious forms of kidney and liver dis
eases, malarial trouble and chronic dyspepsia.
Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Purgative Pellets are a
preventive and cure of these disorders. They
are prompt, sure and effective, pleasant to
take, and positively harmless.
The labor press continu'es to agitate for the
eight-hour rule.*
Warner’s Log Cabin Remedies — old fash
ioned, simple compounds, used in the days of
our hardy forefathers, arc “old timers’ but
“old reliable.” They comprise a “Sar-apariia,”
“Hops and Buchu Remedy,” “Cough and Con
sumption Remedy,” “Hair Tonic,” “Extract,”
for External and Internal Use, “Plasters,”
“Rose Cream,” for Catarrh, and “Liver Pills.”
They are put up by H. 11. Warner & Co., pro
prietors of Warner’s Safe Remedies, and prom
ise to equal the standard value of those great
preparations. All druggists keep them.
All dramatic artists’, when off the stage in
Russia, must wear a uniform.
Children Starving to Denth
On account of their to digest food,
will find a most marvellmts food and remedy
in Scott’s Emulsion of Pure Cod Liver Oil
with Hypopbospint.es. Very palatable and
easily digested. Dr. S. W. Cohen, of Waco,
Texas, says: “I have used your Emulsion in
Infantile wasting with good results. It not
only restores wasted tissues,bnt gives strength
and inoreases the appetite. lam glad to usu
such a reliable at tide.”
President Diaz, of Mexico, recommends a
new extradition treaty with the United States.
Woman’s Work.
There is no end to the tasks which daily con
front the good housewife. To lie a successful
housekeeper, the first requisite is good health.
How can a woman contend against the trials
and worries of housekeeping if she oe suffering
from those distressing irregularities, ailments
and weaknesses peculiar to her sex? Dr.
Pierce’s Favorite Prescription is a specific for
these disorders. The only remedy, sold by
druggists, under a positive guarantee from tha
manufacturers. Satisfaction guaranteed in
every case, or money refunded. See printed
guarantee on bottle wrapper.
Life is too short to be spent in nursing ani
mosity or registerin'? wrong.
The Coming Comet.
It is fancied by a grateful patron that the
next comet will appear in the form of a huge
bottle, having “Golden Medical Discovery” in
scribed upon it in bold characters. Whether
this conceit and high compliment will be veri
fied, remains to be seen, hut Dr. Pierce will
continue to send forth that wonderful vege
table compound, and potent eradieator of dis
ease. It has no equal in medicinal and health
giving properties, for imparting vigor and tone
to the liver and kidneys,in purifying the blood,
and through it cleansing and renewing the
whole system. For scrofulous humors, and
consumption, or lung scrofula, in its early
stages, it is a positive specific. Druggists.
Miss MacTavish, of Va., will marry the Dukl
of Norfolk, the premier duke of England.
Bradfield’s Female Regulator will cure all
irregularities or derangements peculiar tl
woman. Those suffering should use it.
If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp
son’s Eye-water. Druggists sell at 2oc. per bottle.
Warner’s Loo Cabin
Remedies. “Sarsapa
fin I “" a *” —“Cough and Go
a Hemedy,”
T'ti “Hops and Buchu,” -t
“Extract,” —“Hail
Tonic,”—“Liver Fills,”—
“Plasters,” (Porous-Electrical , “Rose
Cream,” for Catarrh. They are, like
Warner’s “Tippecanoe,” the simple, ef
fective remedies of the old Log CabiD
days.
PINE-NEEDLE OIL.
Extracted from the needles of the Pine Tree, cures
Lung Tronb e, Cough* and lliplitlieri>i, also
.Uiiecnlnr Kheiimitil.iu. Swelling*, I’lcrre
and Putrid Sample bottle3s cts. Addreas
W. M. WHITE A CO , Box US, Atlanta, Ga.
ODIIIU ||ADIT Painlessly cured in 10 to »
rllfin nAull Days. Sanitarium or Home
Treatment. Trial Free. KoCure. No Pay. Th®
Human® Hemedy C®., ha Purcltr, Inti,
PtSO-S CURE FOR CONSUMPTION
Los Cabin Success.
What ails the young men?
Robert Garrett's futher left him a fortune
of twenty millions. He was from childhood
reared in luxury; he received a sp'endid
education with an especial training into a
thorough knowledge of railroad management
and was expected to succeed his father as a
railroad king.
• Within three years after the responsibili
ties which his father's death threw upon him
were assumed, ho is reported a broken down
man, with mind and health permanently
shattered.
George Law is another young man left
with millions of money, who is reported
among the “wrecks.” His father, bred a
stone mason, was of gigantic size and strength,
with commensujsftte brain power, so he be
came a great contractor, then a railroad
king and left half a dozen millions for his
sou to dissipate. The young man is a suc
cess as a dissipator.
The founders of both of those great estates
were born in the most humble walks of life,
grew strong, mentally and physically, by
simple living and honest labor and developed
into financial giants. Their sons were reared
in the lap of luxury and developed into in
tellectual pigmies.
The great men of our country have not, as
a rule, come from the elegant mansions of
the cities, but from the l.og Cabins of tiio
jural districts. Simple ways of living, free
dom from dissipation and enervating pleas
ures, simple remedies for disease, effective
aud which leave no poison in the system, de
velop brawny, brainy men, who compel the
world to recognize their strength and power.
The wholesome, old-fashioned Log Cabin
remedies are the safest and surest for family
use. Our grandmothors knew how to pre
pare the teas and syrups of rbots, herbs and
balsams which drive disease out of the sys
tem by natural methods and leave no after
ill-effects. The most potent of these old
time remedies were, after long and searching
investigation, secured by H. H. Warner, of
safe cure fame, and are now put out for the
“healing of the nations” in the Warner’s Log
Cabin remedies.
Regulate the regulator with Warner’s Log
Oabi sarsaparilla, and with pure blood
giving health, strength, mental and bodily
vigor, you may hope to cope successfully
with the most gigantic financial problems of
the age, without wrecking health and man
hood.
A I'leaMinit Laxntive.
Whoever has taken Hamburg Figs will never
take any other kind of laxative medicine. They
are pleasant to the taste, and are sure in their
action, a few doses curing the most obstinate
case of constipation or torpidity of the liver. Lo
cents. Dose one Fig. Mack Drug Co., N.Y.
Bronchitis is cured by frequent small doses
of Piso’s Cure for Consumpuon.
If You Are Sick
With Headache, Neuralgia, Rh umatism Dyspep
sia, Biliousness, Blood Humors, Kidney Disease,
Constipation, Female Troubles, Fever and Ague,
Sleeplessness, Partial Paralysis, or Nervous Pros
tration, use Paine’s Celery Compound and ho
cured. In each of these the cause is mental or
physical overwork, anxiety, exposure oc malaria,
tlie effect of which is to weaken the nervous sys
tem, resulting in one of these diseases. Remove
the cause with that great Nerve Tonic, and the
result will disappear.
Paine’s Celery Compound
Jas. L. Bowen, Springfield, Mass., writes:—
“ Paine’s Celery Compound caunot be excelled as
a Nerve Tonic. In my ease a single bottle
wrought a great change My nervousness entirely
disappeared, and with it the resulting affection
of the stomach, heart and liver, and the whole
tone of the system was wonderfully invigorated.
1 tell my friends, if sick as I have been, Paine’s
Celery Compound .
Will Cure You!
Sold by druggists. $1 ; six for $5. Prepared only
by Wells, Richardson & Co., Burlington, Vt.
For the Aged, Nervous, Debilitated.
Warranted to color more goods than any other
dyes ever made, and to give more brilliant and
durable colors. Ask for the Diamond, and take
no other.
A Dress Dyed 1 FOR
A Coat Colored IO
Garments Renewed j cents.
A Child can use them!
Unequalled for all Fancy and Art Work.
At druggists and Merchants. Dye Book free.
WELLS, RICHARDSON & C 0„ Props., Burlington, Vt.
Grasses-South.
—SEND TO THE—
ATLANTA SEED CO.,
83 readilreeSf., - ATLANTA, GA.
For price list Granges, Clovers, Georgia Rye. Barley,
Etc., and our circular, * ‘Grasses For the South. ”
B#r~Mention this paper.
feprsag Ely's Cream Balm,
Pr,ce 50
■ i^ c oGLLo LAM WILL CURE
fWFEVERfj ..
igkjp' , * R h
Balm into each nostril.
u ELY BROS., 66 Warren St., N.Y
rSHOT GUN
In*f*t npon petting the “ Champion if
dealer haunt it. a**n<l to ua. Sendee, in at amps for Illustrated
100-I'ajr* Catnlneue <>f Gun*. Kitten, Revolvers, Police Good*,
JOHN P. LOVELL AIISS CO., Uaiairra, Button, Mas.*.
□Oft BRDOdA « Catch them alive with
FLIES’ Styner’s Sticky Fly
B hlhVl PAPER. Sold by all drug
gists or grocers, or ma-ied, i»>»ta<re paid, on receipt
of 3 cents. T. K. IIAWLEY, Manufac
turer, 5 7 Heckman Sti cel, New lurk.
• 1 »
nO Full of thrilling adventures,
yufik\ The book you have been
B nnltw looking for, but did not
& <y!) know where to get. Nearly
m BAR rv> ©t \3 500 pages. Beautifully
F 5 *,9 KU V bound. Price 50c. «. W.
U W WS £LS W? I ■ MALLOKY, ileardstown, 111.
Great English Gout and
tj|9li SrillSa Rheumatic Remsly.
Oval Box.Jli round, 14 Fill*.
T ft? f\ Live #t home and make Atore money working for na than
«fy Owl at anythin*? eiae in the world Either a*-* Coatty outfit
FKKK. lenua > KILL. Address, TKL'K L Co., Augusta, Maine.
COLO K A• to for ('outvmptim and Asthmat
ics. Send 2c. for it. D i. B ABTIJtTT, Boulder, Gol.
M FISTULA
and a 1 Rectal Disease 8
treated by a painless pro" I
cess. No loss of time from ]
business. No knife, ligature
or caustic. A radical cwke
guaranteed in every case j
treated. Reference given, i
dr. r. g. Jackson, 423* 1
Whitehall St., Atlanta, Ga.
The 111.111 who has invested lrorn three lUk We oiler tile man who wants sersiee
to five dollars in a Rubber Coat, and JV « (not style) n garment that will keen
at his first half hoar s experience m Bmm mm mmm him dry in the hardest storm. It is
a storm finds to his sorrow that it is BJ&Jf Kjj H called TOWER’S FISH BRANI>
hardly a lietter protection than a mos- If ■ “ SLICKER," a name familiar to every
euito netting, not only feels cliagrined m m ■ Cow-boy all over the land. With them
at being so badly taken in, but also M ■MUMR ■ the only perfect Wind and Waterproof
tecis if he docs not look exactly Ilka I** SU Coat is “Tower’s Fish llrand Slicker.”
Ask for the ‘“FISH ‘BRAND” Sucks* I ■M B V and take no other. Ifyor storekeeper
does not have the fish crash, send for descriptive catalogue. A. J.Towkr, 20 Simmons St., Boston. Mass.
■
DR. SCHENCK’S
PuLMOmC S YRUf *
Is the oldest and best establishccLjnedici*®
for direct treatment of ConsUaHptioa
and all affections of lung,
Sit ripens and loosens the tubercles.
Rids the Lungs of purulent matter,
Cleans and heals the sore spots,
Makes new blood and helps circulation
V /Prevents other deposits of tubercles^
Jjj I Helps the return of flesh and spirit,
\Cures where other remedies fail.
Do not fail to send for Dr Schenck’s netr
and admirable treatise on the Lungs, th*
Liver, and the Stomach, with theij diseases
and cure. It abounds in excellent informa
tion, and will give you ideas about these
vital organs and the laws of health yam
never had before. Sent free.
DR. SCHEIMCK'S MEDICINES*
PURELY VEGETABLE.
PULMONIC SYRUP,
SEAWEED TONIC AND
MANDRAKE PiLLS
are for sale by all Druggists. Full printed
directions with each package. Address all
communications to Dr. J. H. Schenck icSon
Philadelphia, Pa.
A. P. SIZ.WART & CO.,
Of) Whitehall Street,
ATLANTA, - - GEORGIA.
U ' J CURES MEREALL
Best Cough Syrup, Tastes good. Us© raj
Ex. in time. Sold by druggists. 5
I believe Piso’s Care ■
H for Consumption saved
■ my life.—A. H. Dowell, w
Editor Enquirer, Eden- ■
I ton, N. C., April 23, 1887. |
IPISOI
■ The best Cough Medi- a
$ cine is Piso’s Cure foe a
H Consumption. Children U
fe take it without objection. I
H By all druggists. 25c.
"cures WHele ILL
KH Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Us® J3S
SIMRVEL©US~
MEMORY
DISCOVERY.
Any book lenrned tn on© rending*
Mind vvandrring cured.
Speaking witliout note*.
Wholly unlike artificial NVMtem*.
Piracy condemned by Supreme Court.
Great inaucementß to correKpondence rlinomi
Prospectus, with opinions of Dr. Win. A Ham*
mond. the world-famed Specialist in Mind dii»«kam.
Ilaniel Greenleaf Thomi’uon, the great l-'*yrJb«Z>
o«nst, .1. M. Buckley. !>. I)., Editor of the CAH**
tian Advocate, Itrcliuri Pr,«ctor the ScicntiaL,
and others, sent post free by
PROtf. A. DOISETTE, 237 Fifth Ave., New ¥c*4l
WEBSTER
3000 more Words and nearly 3000 more I!Io®-
traUons than any other American Dictionaty.
An Invaluable Companion
in every School and at every Fireside.
Sold by all Booksellers. Illustrated
sent free.
C. C, IWERRIAM CO,, Pnb’rs.Springfield. Msast
CMOfft FARMERS at K-'-inbl
pIUU SAW j h.
SAhEIMItON WORKS, KAI.I U. N. C.
Jik JONES
3EZ3R3
W9P' AYSthe FREIGHT
Jy 5 Ton W agon Scales,
Iron Lever*, Steel Hearing*. Jinn
PjJL Tore Beam and Beam Box for *
Br*ry it e" pTw* Wm
HWrSgJ Mention thi«« paper and addram
O* Si 10NE5 Of BINGHAM TBS,
BITKIHAMTON, BCi*
ZRs WE SELL AI.L AMERICA!®
iH BICYCLES.
\r jlv And guarantee LOWEST PRICIOS.
V/ A- W. (IllM P ifc CO., Dayc®, O,
L stock iaAmcrka,
S 2 In OTTO, lactory price *OO.OO, our price «oga
M in. “ “ “ 55.00, “ “ as 'm
*8 lu. 50 00 “ » S 3
.6 in. “ “ •* 45.00, “ “ S 3
44 in. •• •• •• 40.00. “ “ 27j*
Order quick. A!a0250 second-hand Wheel*. RenS
lng £ Nickeling. Bicycles d: Uuus taken iu treda
|"sTHMA ,, cy^^|
ga German Asthma Cure nvserjain to give wS
mmtdiatr relief in the worst ca*o.<,ii:3U---es coinltgiJß
■ ablesleep; effectscnres-wherea.! others fail zn
PS trial conviur.es the tnoet skeptical. Price OOe. and S®
MSl.oC‘,otDrngariet»orbrmail. SampleFilKgS
ARE YOU MARRIED?
tins society, which pay* its members *aso to
{*• .marring,-. Circulars free. N. W. MUTUAL kii-
POWMii-NXaOCIETY, Box 546, Minneapolis, Mat®.
IlflUC STUDY. Book-keeping, Business Form*
Penmanship, Arithmetic. Short-hand, etc,
SB thoroughly taught by MAIL. Circulars In.
Bryant’* College, 457 Main St., Initialo.XX
BA C to SN n day. Samples worth 21.40FKJKa
JL Lines not under the horse’s feet. Write
0 V Brewster Safety Rein Holder Co.. Holley .Mic^
A. N. U F%ty,~tia