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jpARM AND GARDEN.
Treatment for Founder.
In *hc first stages of founder in horses
mode ate do-es of aconite should be
given, and ihe animals covered with
warm blankets, to cause or encourage
perspiration. But in advanced stages,
and wh' n the feet have become tender,
poulti.es should be applied after remov
ing the -hoes. If the in ury is but slight,
then turning out to pasture in summer
will usually effect a cure, especially if
the ground is low and somewhat moist.
The main thing is to remove the fever
from the feet, for as long as these are
tender and sore the horse will be lame.
—New York Sun.
Ttomodv for Wire Worms.
There are two kinds of wire worms, so
called. <neis a small round, hard worm
with only six legs; this is the larva of a
long na row beetle, which lias a habit of
jerking its body and making a snapping
noise, hence it is called the snapping
beetle or elater, because »of its jerky
motion when it snaps. This pest is not
so troublesome as the other, which is not
an insect, but a myriapod, or thousand
legs ; >t has legs at each ring of its long
thin body, and curls itself spira ly when
at rest. This is an injurious pest, as it
cats the roots of grass, wheat, and other
plants. Either kind will cut slices of
patato or leaves of clover rolled into
balls, so that if these are poisone' 1 with
l aris green the -worms may be destroyed.
These pests aie encouraged by leaving
ground uncultivated, but are starved out
by plowing the land and leaving it
fallow for a few months. Strong
smelling superphosphate will drive them
uway.
Feeding Places for Chickens.
It arouses my wrath to Sfe the wav
“some folks’’ feed their chickens after
the hen has weaned them. They seem
to think ihat because the o 1 lien has
weaned them the c*iickens/ai take case
of themselves and so take uomitrj pa:ns
to sec that they, have their food where
the older hens cap not 10b them. The
feed is thrown doWn to old and young
alike, and all alike apramb e for it, but
the young chickens are crowded, hustled
about and pecked at so ipu h by the
older fowls that they rarely,Nf ever, get
enough to satisfy their hunger. There
is no need of having such work. Make
some feeding-racks and feed the chickens
inside where the old fowls cannot get at
them. The racks are just frames of
scantling, with the top and four sides
covered with p asterjng-lath, the lath on
the sides being far enoti b apart to al
low the chickens to get in easily, but not
to let ihe old fowls in.— Mrairie Farmer.
Top-Priced Butter.
The manufacture of extra choice but
ter i, cleverly and briefij summed up in
the following from the Agricultural Ga
zette. “Anyone who has a good sweet
pasture, who keeps his dairy and every
utcns.l in it scrupulously clean, who
never (burns cream more than sixty
hours old from the cow, and always at the
proper temperature, tested by a ther
mometer, who uses a proper churn (there
ate lots of them), tentilating his churn
at intervals by taking out the plug; who
stops churning the moment the butter
shows itself iu small grains not so large
as wheat; who then lets the churn rest
until the butter all floats up to the top,
and then carefully lets out the butter
milk, and replaces it w.th clean cold
water, turning it very slowly; who again
lets the churn stop to let the butter f oat
up and then lets out the milky water and
replaces it with a fresh supply of cold
water; who then gives the chum very
few slow turns round, and then a little
faster, so as to gather the butter into a
sort of lump, and then lets out the butter
with a doth over both hands, so as not
to touch it, and then, when cool, works
it with a proper butter worker and never
touches it with his hands, but only with
‘wooden hands,’ will most assuredly
make top-priced butter.”
notations ill Crops.
1. Rotations are valuable because
plants vary in the area of the soil in
which their roots grow and from which
they derive the sustenance of the plant,
bus more completely utilizing the soil
within their reach. 2. There is a re
markable variation in the power of plants
to appropriate the various elements cf
plant growth, due, at least in part, to
the character of the acids secreted by
their roots. Thus one plant, like clover,
has a high power of gathering nitrogen,
and another, like wheat, a very low
power. 3. i'lants vary in iheir weight
of roots. As au illustration, clover car
ries several times the weight of roots
that wheat does, and masmu h as clover
roots are very much richer in nitrogen
than wheat, and carry enough nitrogen
to g:ow a crop of wheat—wheat will
most advantageously follow clover.
Thus, likewise, other plants follow each
other advantageously. 4. Rotation of
crops bau.es, in a large measure, the
root enemies, both insect and fungoid,
that prey upon the various crops. Each
plant havmg its own peculiar enemies,
the changing removes them to fields un
occupied by such eneni es. This is true
of the enemies of ti e above ground
growth of plants to an important de
gree. 5. Plants vary in the amounts of
• the varying elements of nutrition ac
tually taken up by its growth. Thus,
while wheat takes only 11 pounds of
potash for every pound of phosphoric
acid, potatoes take fit pounds of potash
for each pound of phosphoric acid.
Continuous growth of potatoes would
exhaust the potash of the soil or of sup
plied manure long before the phosphoric
acid could give out. 0. The Reaves of
plants vary in their power of gaining
food and of vaporizing water, and are
roughly divided into broad and narrow
leaved. 7. Leaves vary in their season
of active growth. Those plants matur
ing in midsummer and early fall, gener
ally gather nitrogen, (corn and turnips
are good examples), following in their
growtli the decomposing influence of the
sun, more easily and mors fully than
other crons do. 8. Rotation conserves
soil fertility and yet aids in soil decom
position by alternation of grass or clover
crops and hoed crops. Under a contin
uation of plough and tillage crops,
leaching, volatilization and washing of
fertility are more rapid and more of it
may be and is carried away by crops, es
pecially nitrogen. Rotation of crops
distributes labor over the year and there
by economizes it, gives regular help and
aids in the solution of the labor problem
iof the farm. 10. Rotation is the system
best calculated for home consumption of
erops and the return of the fertilization
of the farm. 11. Practice of 2000 years
conlirms the value of rotation. Each
of these factors has the bearing that can
not be here presented, but, all together
afford very strong and almost, if not
quitq, imperative reasons for rotations.—
Coleman’s Mural World.
Signals lor the F^jm.
A code of signals tor use on the farm
may be made very useful for communi
cation between persons out of speaking
distanep. The writer has long used a
loud whistle for making signals to his
hired men and others about the farm,
which have been found quite intelligible
and useful after a little training. The
common ‘ mile whistles” sold under the
claim that they can be heard a mile o 1
are frauds, and tit only for children’s
playthings; but a loud whistle can be
made of a brass tube half an inph in di
ameter, plugged, and cut with a file in
the required manner. The best whistle,
however, is made of the half shell of a
common filbert or Barcelona nut sawn
lengthwise or across the middle. T his
is placed between the third and fourth
fingers inside the hand, at the space be
tween the knucKle and the next joint,
with the opening in the shell between
the fingers. The hand is then closed so
that an orifice is left between the fingers
opening into the nutshell. Then by
placing the bent joints of the fingers be
tween the lip's and blowing forcibly into
the nutshell, a very shrill and loud
whistle may be given ihat can be he ard
half a mile with a ease, and further when
a gentle breeze is blowing in the direc
tion the sound is to be sent.
It seems that this system of whistle
signals or language is by no means a
novelty, for a regular vocabulary, so to
speak, of whistling sounds has been in
use for many years iu an island of the
Canary group. The inhabitants o! this
island (Goniera, which consists most of
precipitous rocks and deep ravines
through which rivers flow,) make use of
this code of whistle signals to communi
cate with each other across the rough
country, which can only be traversed by
long, circuitous routes, on account of the
deep ravines. The people use both fin
gers and lips in whistling, and can carry
on a conversation with neighbors a mile
distant by the use of tli s peculiar lan
guage.
This useful addition to the faculty oi
speech may be made available in many
ways by adopting a familar code or key
of sounds to that which is used in tele
graphy. ’i bus in our system three short,
sharp whistles blown quickly mean that
that the man or men at work iu a distant
place are to come to the house or to quit
work. One loug whistle gradually taper
ing olf to a finish, means that the fore
man must send a man to the barn; one
short, sharp whistle, followed by the
long, tapering one, calls the teams home;
two short whistles and the long one from
the foreman call the employer to the field
to settle some difficulty; three short
whittles and the long one call the fore
man and announce meal t ines. Thus by
the use of long and short sounds dif
ferently disposed all sorts of directions
may be given and information conveyed.
Each man employed is provided with a
whistle, if ha cannot use his fingers in
the usual way, which makes a loud,
piercing sound, and a card of signals;
but this is not of much u-e except at
rare intervals.
Flags are usefully employed as signals
when the hou-e or barn can be seen from
ail parts of the farm. A pole with arms
such as make up the old fashioned
“semaphore” telegraph may also be used
when it can be seen or the persons are
too far to hear a sound. A triangle made
of a steel bar bent with the ends free,
and stru; k with another piece of steel,
can be heard more than a mile away. But
this and the bell are not sutiic cutly va
rious iu sound for ordinary use. The
whistle, on the other hand, maybe made
to vary quite sufficiently to afford all
necessary means of communication over
the area of an ordinary farm, and the
signals may be so codified as to give in
telligent meanings, as in the case of the
islanders above referred to.
But it will be most convenient to con
dense as much as possible the code of
signals. Thus the signal come to the
house or baru when repeated quickly will
mean there is something wrong and haste
is required. This will answer for all
emergencies. Each man, too, should
have his signal, to which he only will
answer in person when the men are to
gether or scattered. Fome such method
of communication will be found very
useful, and, as it will tend to save time
in the work of the farm, and as time is
money, it will be found a means of
economy, and therefore worthy of adop
tion.—New York Times.
Farm ancl Garden Notes.
Remove the hot sweaty harness from
the horse at noon.
The best of breeding can be neutral
ized by poor feeding.
Paris green will certainly kill the
large green worm which eats the leaves.
Breeding flocks of poultry should
con-ist of the best in the whole number.
When the sheep pastures begin to
grow scanty supplement them with
other food.
Mark or otherwise note the largest and
earliest maturing vegetables and save
them for seed.
Farms always sell most readily and at
the highest prices where roads are kept
in the best repair.
The plantain can be killed by cutting
it olf at the crown, and putting on top
of the root a drop cr two of kerosene oil.
Distemper often leaves the house in an
unhealthy condition from the absorption
of impure matter the product of the dis
ease.
No money can be invested to better
advantage than in buying enough mos
quito netting to tack over the stable
windows to keep the flies out.
Wherever commercial fertilizers are
sown with the drill, the bulk of clover
and grass seed will be found in the rows
with the grain. It would be better for
both if they were a little separated.
Since manures are the nourishing ma
terial of plants, and other things being
equal, the higher profit of the field de
pends only and alone on the greater and
easily-extracted quantity of the same
found in the soil.
Chicks that refuse to eat, throw their
heads back, tumble over on their backs,
and act as if they are bewitched gener
ally, are probably troubled with large
chicken-lice that at first are found only
on the heads of the victims.
The Lncky Oil Driller.
“Bob” Green, of Washington, Penn.,
an oil driller who became famous in
Western Pennsylvania from the many
Iqcky hits he made, especially at the
time of the Fergus oil boom, from which
he got the reputation of being a mascot,
died a few days ago in Mercy Hospital,
PPtsburg, and the Co nn ercial Gazette
gives an interesting ske'ch of his career.
The cause of Green’s death was nervous
prostration.
“Bob” Green wis well known to oil
producers everywhere as “The 1 ticky
Driller.” When S. P. Fergus, a well
known Washington county oil-producer,
first started to drill iu that section he
engaged the services of Green. The
territory where the wells were to be
located was entirely new and some
distance from where the producing wells
of that country were located. Mr.
Fergus was not over sanguine, but
“Bob” Green was, and assured his em
ployer that he would strike a bonanza.
Fergus said to him:
“Well, ‘Bob,’ if you are so confident,
I will enter into an agreement that you
are to receive one-eighth of the 0.l pro
duced in that territory for your services
as a driller.”
Green replied: “I will take your offer,
and it will make me rich.”
The drilling began. The fir t well
proved to bo a gusher. The next was
an e ptally good producer. The boom
continued, and it was not many month?
before Green’s prophecy that the agree
ment would make him a comparatively
rich man proved true. The title, “The
Lucky Driller,” then fell to Green, and
his services were sought for by producers
everywhere.
Recently he left the employ of Mr.
Fergus, and leased territory in the Baker
town district, and hal been ope.ating
for himself ever since.
Books as Disease Propagators.
A good deal of discussion having
taken place in England on the suuject
af the spread of infectious di-ease> by
means of the books in circulating lobrn
ries, the Dresden municipal authorities
have had a thorough experimental in
vestigation of this question conducted.
A number of much used volumes from
the town library were taken for the pur
pose. The dust from the leaves and
covers was sown in nutrient media and
cultures reared, the result being that
no initrobes belonging to infections dis
eases were found—the du<t being, in
fact, nothing but ordinary dust of a
harmless character. Again the dirtiest
leaves in the books wcie rubbed first
with the dry finger and then with the
wet finger. In the first case sea: cely any
microbes were found on the finger; in
the seroud case plenty were found, but
all appeared to be of a non-infe ‘tious
character. Especially is it noted that
the e were no tubercle bacilli. Lastly,
books were soaked for two days in spirit
contain ug ten per cent, of carbolic acid.
This treatment dc-troyed all the bacilli,
and proved harmless to the volumes.
The conclusion arrived at was tint the
danger of circulating libraries spreading
infection is very slight, but a recoinm ni
dation is given to dust books well before
reading them, and never to wet the
finger in the mouth for the purpose of
turning over the leaves.— New York lost.
A Mysterious Experimenter.
A species of Parisian Dr. Jekyll has
been unmasked at Auteuil, France.
Tills person went down to that pleasant
suburb aud racing rendezvous some days
ago. lie hired rooms in a very secluded
villa on the borders of the Bois aud shut
himself up in it, after having provisioned
himself in the town. He stuffed up the
kev-hoies of the doors, pasted white
paper on the insides of his window panes,
and surrounded himself with asmmh
mystery and secrecy as did thehy poehon
dria, Mr. Hyde, or the “strange lodger”
who took apartments in the mansion of
Samp-on and Sally Brass. His neighbors
—just as semi-provincial suburban people
will do—fell to gossiping and all sorts
of theories, vague and vapory in detail,
were constructed to account for the
problematic attitude of the stranger.
The police were at last appealed to, and,
having burst in the door of the “Jekyll of
Auteuil,” they discovered that he was
inoculating three ill-fated terriers with
his own blood in order to ascertain if a
bite which he had at one time received
from a dog was likely to prove fatal. He
was aiso, he contended, experimenting
in the interests of humanity, in order to
enable every man to be bis own Pasteur.
—ljondon Telegraph.
Directions for Self-Shampooing.
Half the pleasure of having the hair
washed and groomed, says the New
York Sun, is to have someone do it who
knows how. In England, in the large
stores, there is a department of hair
dressing where an accomplished barber,
with every convenience for showering
and drying, will wash the hair of ladies
lor one shilling. In this country a good
shampoo costs from fifty cents to $1 —
which is a large sum for so simple an
operation.
After combing the snarls from the hair,
braid it loosely and bind the end with a
small elastic band. Draw tepid water in
a basin and first wash the scalp thor
oughly with enstile soap; then let the
braid fall in the water, soap and wash as
if clothes. Afterward thoroughly rinse
and wring the braid in a towel. Wipe
the head dryj undo the braid and brush
out, beginning at the lower end, when it
will not tangle. Let the hair loose in the
sun and air and it will dry in less than
half an hour. A woman’s hair should
be washed at least monthly if kept fine
and healthy.
A Street Car Utopia.
A Baltimorean, writing from Dresden,
Germany, to a friend in that city, says
“it was here that 1 saw the best managed
street car lines. The hill boys are men,
and the ‘jaded’ hill horses are ‘fiery
steeds;’ all the company’s employes are
uniformed, and such uniforms are not on
our police; they look more like our
military dress. The cars are spotless,
double-decked, first and second class,
roof cheaper; first-class fare, fifteen
pfennigs, or less than four cents from
end to end of the route, and ten pfen
for shorter distances. The horses go
like race horses, and are evidently not
overworked. There are waiting rooms
at numerous crossings along the route,
and the morning papers are kept on the
racks—two papers to each car.”—Com
mercial Advertiser.
THE FOUNDER OF CHICAGO.
Ho Was a Coal Black Negro from
the Island of San Domingo.
[From the Chicago Times.]
The name of the real founder of Chic
ago, which has been left unsung by the
proud Caucasian and permitted to drift
into oblivion, is hereby rescued. It was
Jean Baptiste au Sable, and its owner
was a San Domingo negro, with com
plexion as black as the character of the
fiend who would attempt to bribe au
Alderman with a block of imaginary
stock in a mythical railroad. The name
gave rise to a suspicion of French blood
in Jean’s veins, but there was nothing
in any feature to show it, and no doubt
lie was an African of the purest type.
He had in his mind the founding of a
great empire in the wilderness, and be
lieved that a commingling of negro and
Indian would produce the typical race'
of the world—large in brain and invin
cible in war. He had doubtless heard
legends of the most famous of his race.
Hannibal, who, descending the Nile,
crossed into Europe, and after over
throwing the Roman legions advanced
upon the “Mistress of the World” with
a myriad of men. In order to do this,
too, it was necessary to march his hosts
across the Alps, and this was accom
plished in a manner so superb that the
later effort of Napoleon was but a feeble
imitation.
It is certain, however, that Au Sable
had dreams of power and empire. He
thought first to ingratiate himself with
the neighboring tribes of Indians,
eventually consolidate them, and be
come chief of a great nation. As a pre
liminary step, and to provide for a
future capital, lie prospected through
out the vast wilderness, aud with pro
phetic vision chose this as the locality.
Nothing could change this determina
tion, and despite the wiles and blandish
ments of real estate dealers at Marquette
and Fort Clark (now Peoria) he took
ftossession in 1799 of a strip of ground
ying north of the river and extending
from what is now Clark street to the lake,
Thereon he built a hut and proceeded
to negotiate.
Like many a white man before and
since, Jean seems to have a great head
for schemes, but a poor one for diplo
macy, and after two or three years ol
incessant toil and increasing intrigue
his vision of power faded away. Lo
was suspicous, aud would have none of
it, and this distrust of his motives
seems to have broken the adventurer’s
spirit, as he soon abandoned his claim;
and being desirous of ending his life as
soon and easily as possible located on
the Illinois river near Peoria, where he
soon died of break back ague. Thus
ended the dreamed of-empire and per
haps obviated the necessity of civil
rights law enabling white people to en
ter negro hotels and theatres in Chic
caero.
DISCLOSED BY A CLOUD BURST.
A Buried City Strangely Brought to
Light in New Mexico.
The propriety of a bill introduced a
day or two ago by Chairman Holman of
the Committee on Public Lands into the
United State? House of Representatives,
to set apart a large tract of land near
Coohite, on the Rio Grande, in New
Mexico, as a national reservation, on
account of its many archaeological re
mains, was illustrated aud confirmed by
the Hon. Amada Chavez, one of the
leading citizens of the Territory, who
lives not far from that section of coun
try, and who comes occasionally to El
Paso on business.
He discovered a short time ago, one
mile north of the little town of San
Maeto, the ruins of an extensive city,
the existence of whjjh had never even
been suspected bef™». The action of
the windshado covered the larger por
tion of the ruins with sand aud other
detritus, and converted the whole into
an extensive mound, and it was only a
severe rain storm and cloud burst,
sweeping away one angle of this mound
and disclosing some heavy stone walls,
that made the discovery possible. Mr.
Chavez has since uncovered one or two
of the ruins and obtained a number of
interesting relics. A skeleton was found
having three strands of beads around its
neck—one of turquoise, one of jet, and
the other of bone. There were also
large earrings of jet and turquoise with
the skeloton, and remains of the hair,
which was not black, but light brown,
besides ornamental pottery arrow-heads,
with a quantity of maize, partly carbon
ized.
This skeleton, with the articles enu
merated, was found in a small chamber
of masonry built up with a very adhe
sive cement. The excavations thus far
made have discovered a large building,
with massive stone walls and a tower at
each coiner. It looks more like the re
mains of a citadel than an ordinary
dwelling. The masonry is of the best
kind, and the interior chambers are
plastered and painted white. Iu the
centre of this structure was found a
water reservoir, from which stone aque
ducts led in many directions. A dim
tradition among the native Pueblo In
dians located here a prehistoric city
named Guato, which was still in exist
ence at the time of Cortez’s coming to
America.
Letter From the Ex-Shcrifl'nf Chautauqua
Con my, Jiew York.
Mayville, N. Y., Dec. 2, 1885.
I am glad to say, from a long personal ex
perience with Allcock’s Pohous Plasters,
that I am able to endorse all the good things
that have ever been said about them, and sup
plement these by saying that I frankly believe
their value cannot be estimated. Their breadth
of usefulness is unlimited, and for prompt and
sure relief to almost every ache and pain that
flesh is heir to, no other remedy, in my opinion,
either external or internal, equals them in cer
tainty and rapidity. I have used them at one
time for rheumatism, another for backache,
again for bronchitis, always with the same re
sult—a speedy cure. L. T.Tlaiuuxqton.
The Princes of Uajpootana. India, have vol
untarily abolished infant marriages.
SLoo Cabins were not
hot houses and the people
who dwelt in them were
not hot-house growths.
They were a hardy, healthy
generation and the rem
edies used were simple
r v»Lu ■ preparations reproduced in
Warner’s Log Cabin Cough and Con
sumption Remedy and Warner’s “Tip
pecanoe,” the great stomach tonic.
Tlieir Platform.
The convention of wholesale liquor
dealers find distillers, who met in Chick
ering Hall, New York, was in favor of
the i olio wing principles, regard lets of
politics: “Fewer saloons; higher li
cense; closing saloons on Sunday; dis
couraging saloons where women and
children are allowed to buy liquor, either
for themselves or others; refusing to
supply money to disreputable men in the
liquor business, and prosecuting any li
quor dealer who may violate the law.”
In South Africa there are 223 Presby
terian congregations, numbering 54,320
communicants, and controlling live col
leges—one each at Cape Town, Welling
ton, Burghersdorf, in the Orange Free
State.
A Dream of Fair Women.
Tennyson in his exquisite poem, dreams of a
long procession of lovely women of ages past.
This is all Very well, but the laureate would
have dono the world a greater service if he had
only told the women of the present how they
could improve their health and enhance their
charms. This he might easily have done by
recommending the use of Dr. Fierce’s Favorite
Prescription. Health is the best friend of
beauty, and the innumerable ills to which wo
men are peculiarly subject, its worst enemies.
Long experience has proven that the health of
womankind and the “Favorite Prescription”
walk hand in hand, and are inseparable. It is
the only medicine for women, sold by (Irtig
gists, under a positive ffuaranUe from the man
ufacturers, that it will give satisfaction in
every case, or money will be refunded. This
guarantee has been printed on the bottle
wrapper, and fathfully carried out for many
years.
There aro 493 mountain peaks in the United
States more than 10,000 feet in height.
I,lllla Tronb cs nnd Wasting
Diseases can he cured, if properly treated in
time, as shown by the following statement
from D. C. Freeman, Sydney: “Having been
a great sufferer from pulmonary attacks,
and gradually wasting away for t lie past two
years, it affords me pleasure to testify that
Scott’s Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil with Liihe
and Soda has given me great relief, and-I
cheerfully recommend it to all suffering in a
similar way to myself. In addition, I would
say that it is pleasant to take.”
Laura Schirmer, a singer in the harem of
(he Turkish s ultan, was by poisoned by cream
Offensive breath vanishes with the use of Dr.
Sage’s Catarrh liemedy.
The Adams Express Co., have made arrange
ments to introduce its system into Europe.
Leave hope behind,
All ye who enter here!
So ran the dire warning which Dante read on
the portals of the Inferno. So runs the cruel
verdict of your friends if you ai e overtaken by
the first symptoms of that terrible disease, con
sumption. “Leave hope behindl .Your days are
numbered!!” And the suggestion against death
is given up in despair, liut wliilo there is life,
there is hope! Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Dis
covery has cured hundreds of cases worse than
yours; and it will cure you, if taken in time.
But delay is dangerous. No power can restore
a wasted lung; the “Golden Medical Discov
ery,” however, can and will arrest the disease.
Charleston, S. 0., has appropriated ?5,000 for
the erection of two free bathing houses.
Children Cry for It.
If a child will take a medicine with pleasu e,
you may know that it is not in any way offen
sive to the taste. Children like Hamburg Figs,
and it is no longer necessary to disgust them
with castor-oil. 25 cents. Dose one Fig. Mack
Drug Co., N. Y.
Much Pain and Suffering may be avoided by
child hearing woman by the timely use of The
Mother’s Friend.
Bronchitis is cured by frequent small doses
of Piso’s Cure for Consumption.
If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp
son’s Eye'water. Druggists sell at 25c. per bottle.
IPpSlEly’sßalm,
■ brill *® the best remedy for children
I %4j COLD iD HEAD, shuffles
c a tar R H.
cGteirekvS Apply Halm into each nostril.
ELY PROS.. 56 Warren St.. N. Y.
(El! k ii!' &sYsj
J-ASCfyjf usei a Jew montXe
beforo confinement. Writefer look
PINE-NEEDLE OIL.
Extracted from the needles of the Pine Tree, euros
Lung Tronlt r, Cnnglis and Diphtheria, also
Muscular Rheumatism, Swellings, Ulcers
anti Putrid Sores. Sample bottle2s cts. Address
W. M. WHITE A GO., Box 418, Atlanta, Ga.
mf nn FISTULA
|] i] | J II land al Rectal Disease®
- II I treated by a painlftßs pro"
jj 3 0 * wk cess. No loss of time from
KT# 4 q* business. No knife, ligature
I ■ i ■ ■ or caustic. A radical CFKE
II «Kuaranteed in every case
Ej | | || |treatcd. Reference< given.
I £ 8 Uft iDit. K- G. JACKSON, 42*
A &Am tmm IV# Whitehall tit. , Atlanta, Ga.
BBAtcr STUDY. Book-keeping’, Business Forms
tfuUHriC Penmanship. Arithmetic, Short-hand, etc..
Efi thoroughly taught by MAIL. Circulars free.
Bryant’s College, 457 Main St., Buffalo, N. Y.
OD3IIM 13 AO IT Painlessly cured in 10 to 2D
rium ■ .££?! I Days. Sanitarium or Home
Treatment. Trial Free. No Cure. No Pay. The
Humane Rem edy Co., Lu Fayette* lnd,
• T“*
ft Rl to Live at horo« and make more money working for u* than
yU!»l »t anything else in the world Either sex Costly outfit
fUUt. Terms FREE. Address, TKL’K Sl Co., Augusta, Maine.
PIS OS CURE FOR CONSU M PTI ON I
tiJAMTSiri TO HI V A FAIt!H in this locolity.
WAN I CsJ Curtis A Wright, 233 Broadway, N. Y.
/Mr WIFE
Mu.\ Poes some of lier Poultry
tile each year without
lib It \ WS. knowing what the matter
PT wit i jffiek was or how to effect a
if, ■■ . ' Sl'O A remedy if she does recog
■RMMi ?< nlze the Disease. This Is
lNßjfjfc 1 li-i! r;; r*« 5 tsi\ hot right, as at an ex
''ufht Hl.).' ili'i'ii ( rense of 25 cents (in
*«*;£>( k Mg At stamps) she can procure
Si a 1 00-l’nge BOOK
giving the experience of a practical Poultry Kaiser
(not au amateur, but a man working for dollars and
cents) during a period of 25 years. It teaches you
liowto Detect and Cure Discuses; how to
heed for Rugs and also tor i aliening;
which fowls to Saxe lor Breeding Pur
poses; and everything, indeed, you should
kuow on this subject. Sent psittpaid Ktr 25c.
BOOK J I B. Ilhl sfc,
134 l.eouard Street. S. 4 . City._
New and Second-Hand Machinery.
ire ft re Headquarters for Engines , toilers, Saxo Mills, Shingle and Lath
Mill Outfits, Portable Corn and Wheat Mills, Millstones, Bolting Cloths,
Cotton Seed Butters and Grinders, Belting, Saus, Piping, Etc.
In addition to New Machinery, we have a large stock of Second-Hand Engines, Boilers, Shingle Mschino%
Planers, etc., etc., all sizes, at Astonishingly Low Prices. Terms easy. We can Save You Money! Write os.
PEKKI Sts iMAt ll INEK Y CO., 67 s! B.osd and D 8 S. Forsyte Streets, ATLANTA, LA.
£• *f* ►!* v< ►I” -I 4 •i* *l*' *1" Sk * “l" v *l* •i* 'J* "i'' •J 4 ►!«
The man wlto has invested from tinea #L£k. IV e oiler the man who wants service
to !ivc dollars in a ltubber Coat, and aim (not style) a garment that will keep
at his first half hour's experience m aa a M fraa him dry In the hardest storm. His
a storm finds to his sorrow that it is Kiffatf |fc« | caUed TOW He’S FISH BRAND
hardly a better protection than a mos- es!' S? 9 “ SLICKER,” a name familiar to every
quito netting, not only feels chagrined w ™ ™ Cow-boy all over the land. With them
at being so badly taken in, but also 3 ■ JSHi BA B the only perfect Wind and Waterproof■
locla it' he does not look exactly like fesw Sam Coat is “ Tower's Fish Brand Slicker."
ksk for the “FISH BRAND” Slicker B I■■ I w and take no other. If your storekeeper
does not have the fish brand, send for de ertptive catalogue. A. J. Tower, 20 Simmons St., Boston, Mass.
[JpJIJp
Possesses many Important Advantages over all
other prepared Foods.
BABIES CRY FOR IT.
INVALIDS RELISH if. *
Makes Plump, Laughirvg, Healthy Babies.
Regulates the Stomach and Bowels.
Sold by Druggists. »5c., 50c., #I.OO.
WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO., BUKtISQTOH VT.
Baby Portraits.
A Portiolio of beautiful baby portraits, printed
on tine plate paper by patent photo process, sent
free to Mother of any Baby bom within a year.
Every Mother wants these pictures; send at ono&
Give Baby’s name and age.
WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO., Props., Burlington, Vfc
It’s Easy to Dye
WITH
DiJmoHD IJyis
J* Superior J
in
Strength,
Fastness,
Beauty, m
AND
Simplicity.
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. 36 colors ; 10 cents each.
WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO., Burlington, Vt.
For Gilding or Bronzing Fancy Articles, USB
DIAMOND PAINTS. %
Gold, Silver, Bronze, Copper. Only 10 Cents.
M CURES WHERE ALL ELSE!FAILS lia
pjrJ Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Use PSf
EH in time. Bold by druggists. *
* I believe Piso’s Cure (§
i; for Consumption saved Jj
1 my life.--A. H. Dowell, I
■ Editor Enquirer, Eden- |
ton, N. C., April 23, 1887. 8
PISO
The best Cough Medi- a
U cine is Piso’s Cure tor S
H Consumption. Children H
M take it without objection. gj
By all druggists. 25c. I
CURES WKEREALL ELSE FAILSL (g
Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Use fgj
in time. Sold by druggists. gl
MENANDBOYS!
How lo Shoe n Horae Property , AII I hi*,
and other Valuable Information relating
to |he Kduitie Specie. mi be obtained by
rending our 100-PAGK ILLUSTRATED
HORSE BOOK, which we will forward,
eWof’ only* 25 CTS. IN STAMPS.
HORSE BOOK CO.. 134 Leonard St., N. Y,
I.onfrPartridge. Br mail postpaid.
Biw Handle. Octagon Barrel. Finest Y
Pocket Revolver. B«nd 6c. in btarap* I^lSS■'"%
f.r llhl.tr.Ud I0«-p.r. Cmt.lora. of Our,,
Kevolvcr*. Police Gokla, Ac. JOHN P
IdOVKLIi ARMS CO. # ttanuf’r*, Boston, Mass*.
FARMERS at wins, w«»d n..m,
tNBQU SAW MULL
WORKS, SALEM, N. C,
fH JONES
SwFf lrtn L * veri * Sled Bearing*, Erato
Taro B«am and Beam Box for
I Terr ri stoical* Tor free pn<* Ujft
«e»KOD this paper and address
& E? JOMCS 3F BINGNAMTMb !
* BINGHAMTON. N.
HGerman A si harm Cure never fails to give Gt-B
Bj me'Liate relit/ In tho worst Cto»©e.iri«iiroe com fort-H
m able sleep; effect* euros where ail others fail a H
HE trial ormvinest the r*ot *k+ptictxl. Price 50c, a&dH
ARE YOU MARRIED? KSS
this society, which pays its members to if t.ood
u! inurriuge. Circulars free. N. w. MUTUAL EK-
LiOWMhh r SOCIETY, Box 846, Minneapolis, Minn.
Ulmr’cDille G o flat Engl,sh Gout an <*
PlCSif Rheumatic Remady.
Oval Box, 34i round. 14 PM S .
nP to SS a day. Samples worth *1.60 FREt
K*% Lines not under the horse’s feet. Write
10 V Brewster Safety Rein Holder Co., Holley, Mich.
COLORADO for Consumptives and Asthmat
ics. Send 2c. for it. Dr. Bartlett, Bontder, 001.
A. N. U For.y-two, ’BB.