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About Dade County news. (Trenton, Ga.) 1888-1889 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 2, 1888)
farm and garden. To Make Hons Gay. ► Most of the special foods to cause hens to lay are secret preparations, but the following is recommended as a good for mula: Two pounds each of bone, linseed cake, dried meat, oats, oyster shells, all finely giound: one ounce of sulphur, fv/o ounces of red pepper, four ounces each of common salt and copperas, and one ounce of baking soda. Mix the w hle thoroughly, and allow a teaspoon - ful of this three times a week to each fowl. As the cost of these substances 4* ill be but little, quite a large quantity can be made at once. Making Sweet iintter. A great deal of butter is spoiled by bad management of the milk and cream be fore churning. Every butter maker should remember that the excellence of butter depends on its delicate flavor and aroma, which cannot be described, but are at once recognized by all lovers of good butter. Nobody can make good butter from the milk of cows that have musty and unwholesome food or that get their drinking water out of stagnant pools. Neither can it be made from cream that has been raised in cella 3 full of the of decaying vegetables or where the walls are damp and mildewed. In a word, wholesome food and drink for the cows, clean utensils and a perfectly sweet milk room, with the skimming and churning done at just the right time, are ► each and all indispensable in making good butter. —New York World. Early Fattening of Pigs. Young growing hogs should not he heavily grain fed, especially as in this country grain usually means corn. On the other hand, relying wholly on pasture »is almost equally bad. Digs in clover has parsed into an euphemism for the height of pig prosperity, but the idea is an illusion. If the pig in clover gets nothing else it will clo more squealing than growing. But the clover makes an excellent base on which to build a substantial ration. Grass is just as good, and on an old, rich sod is even better than clover, as it does not dry up in midsummer. The pig cats more and wastes and musses less. On grass as the foundation the farmer can now build up a delightful variety for the pig in refuse potatoes, small apples, the thinnings of the beets, or after these are gone some of the mam crop, and pumpkins. Any or all of these boiled and then mixed while hot with bran, corn and oatmeal, or in fact anything nutritious, make a dish that will give the pig the variety that it craves, and so exercise its digestive organs that they can endure the heavier straiu of high grain feeding when the t time for that has come. Cultivator. Heaves in Horses. The difficulty in breathing and the cough are the u>ual symptoms of heaves in horses. This disease is very common l in all of the 1 astern [states and rare in the Western, where horses are fed on prairie hay, oats, and corn. It is often brought on by feeding musty hay or that containing clover, and may be cured by feeding only well-cured corn fodder and good clean oats, or oats and corn ground together and the meal fed upon moistened cut ha} r and straw. Some veterinarians recommend sprinkling the hay with weak lime water,also giving a feed of raw car rots once or twice a week during the winter months. Turning out to pasture in summer will usually give some relief to the afflicted animal, but in winter only the sweetest and cleanest food should be given, for the least dust or mustiness in the food w,ll only aggravate the disease. If the food given does not keep the bowels open ar.d free, then it is well to give an occasional dose of sulphate of soda—two ounces di.-solved in a pint of water—and in this soak two or three quarts of oats. Dr. Low advises giving arsenic in live-grain do-es daily, con tinuing for a month or two. This should be given in addition to the other remedies, such as roots, dampened hay, &c.— New York Sun. "War Against Weeds. Mr. T. M. Harder, Summit, N. Y., la ments, in the New York Tribune, that so little is said in the agricultural papers about the different weeds, and he sends a specimen of one which appearing in his locality within a few years is causing much uneas'ness among the farmers on account of its rapid spread ‘‘all over, in poor and good laud alike, and plough ing only checks for a time. The seeds are very small,attached to a down which floats off with a slight breeze; it also spreads by the roots, runners starting out in all directions.” Mr. R. has ap- fine salt when in blossom. “Sprinkle it on.during a clear day and the heavy dews are just enough to dis solve it, which, running down on the roots, kills them.” The plant is ahier aceum; is commonly c dled hawkweed lt becomes perennial by its runners. The old plants are annual, but they do not die till they make a liberal provision for a future generation by seeds and runners. In plant, as in all other life, the battle is to the strong; hence, if ground infested by hawkweed be planted with some thing of ranker growth—such as corn or potatoes—the intruder would, after a time, be choked out. Any crop that re quires trequent stirring of the soil early in the season, before the flowers and runners of this weed form, would .aid greatly in its destruction. A prime rule for the farmer is: Do not let wetfs Propagate, and do not let them breathe. If this ha’wkweed has invaded grass land cutting will not kill it, as its lungs or leaves are at the base of the stalk, close to the ground. If sheep will eat it, early, close pasturage by them would probably he effectual. Feeding Corn Fodder. fomc twelve years ago, while putting to the test the German theory of proper nutrient ratios, says Professor J.W. San horn, I noted the great value of corn fodder when properly fed, and subse quent years of experiment and experience have emphasized the points involved. A ton of corn fodder may be so fed as to give the growth and nearly the economic result of a ton of timothy hay, when fed against the timothy fed alone. This as sertion is based, upon corn fodder cut at the right time, nicely cured and housed before damaged by continuance in the field. Clover hay and corn fodder is the most economic method of feeding known to me. Corn fodder and cottou ®eed meal, three to five pounds of the latter, form a continuously growing ra tion, and, in view of the mauurial value of cottonseed meal, a cheap one. My usual way of feeding cheap fodder is to so feed it that a little is given daily all winter. A foddering of corn fodder, then <*pe of timothy in the morning, and at night clover and straw arc given. The above ration will keep youngstock grow ing all winter. For better growth of course concentrated food is added, con taining cottonseed meal or bran in mod erate quantity. I secure four-fifths,or eighty to eighty five per cent, of the corn fodder eaten when managed as stated, without cutting it. The uneaten portion is used for bed ding, being cut for that purpose. By using the Lion cutter and crusher I have had our heavy Western corn fodder all eaten up clean, even when cut low down to thdground. -The above remarks refer to corn fodder. Of course fodder corn will be better eaten, especially when not too edarse. If, however, it is to be fed whole, I should prefer to grow the smaller sorts, as the heavy Southern kinds are hard to handle when fed in box stalls. lor the dents. Sibley’s Pride of the Norfh is a small sort, and bears thick planting. There is no trouble on this score with the flints. In conclusion, I know of no more economic method of feeding the small kinds of fodder corn than its use whole, and fed in association with clover hay. This opinion is based on considerable experience. I perhaps should say that clover hay furnishes the albuminoids that corn fodder is deficient in; this timothy does not do. I could quote fine results of the use of clover hay ami corn fodder, with tables of nutritive ratios used. This I judge to be uncalled for aud unnecessary. Grafting. Grafting is the insertion of a cion of one species or variety, on the stem or branch of another. As a general rule, shoots of the previous year's growth are used as cions. Do not use fruit buds. They should be cut in the fall, after the leaves have fallen, or during the winter. Pack them in dry earth, and keep in a cool dry cellar until wanted for use. They should never be taken from trees that are not sound and healthy. Firm, well ripened wood, taken from the up per branches of the tree are the best. A small, well ripened, sound cion is better than one as large as a man’s finger, if un ripe or pithy. Anything, from a yearling seedling to a tree forty years old may be used as a stock, but it must be sound aud healthy, whatever its age. The tools used in grafting are a saw, chisel aud grafting knife. A grafting composition of wax. made of two pounds of rosin, one and one-fourths pounds of beeswax and three-fourths of a pound of tallow, will answer every purpose. If preferred raw linseed-oil may be used in the place of tallow. For whip grafting on the root of small trees, thin calico cloth soaked in the composition is better than the composition alone. Thoroughly soak and tear in strips wide enough aud long enough to make two or three wraps about the stock, and the graft will be secured. The two modes of grafting most com monly used are whip-grafting and cleft grafting, the former used in grafting roots and small trees. In whip-grafting on the root, seedling stocks one or two years old afe generally used. As the graft is always made at the collar, the steins are cut off at that place. The small tap roots aud cumbrous fibers are removed, leaving them about four inches long. After being washed clean they are ready for the operation. Make an even, smooth, sloping cut an inch long, up ward on the collar of the root. In the center of this cut make a slit or tongue downward. Have the cion three or four inches long; on the lower end of it have a sloping cut downwards, in all re spects like that in the stock, and in this have the slit or tongue cut upward®, this to match or correspond with that in the stock; fit them neatly together, the tongue of one within that of the other, and the inner barks of both placed in close and perfect contact, on at least one side. The fit ought to be so complete that they will .yt close and firm in all parts. After putting on the wax, wrap firmly with a strip of the soaked cloth. Keep in a dry, cool place until ready to plant in the spring. The only tool needed in whip grafting is a sharp knife. Whip-grafting on small tree 9 in the same way. ( left-grafting is u=ed when the trees or branches are too large for whip-graft ing. In this case the cion is cut like a wedge. The wedge part, cut for plac ing in the stock, should be from an inch to an inch and a half in length, with a bud at the shoulder, where it is to rest on the stock. The outer edge of the wedge shape should be some thicker than the inner. When your cion is ready, m ike a sioping cut upon the stock an inch and a half long, in such a way that it comes to a point, About half way down the length of the slope cut the stock off square; then split the stock on one side of the split by placing the chisel on the square or horizontal surface, and striking with a light mallet: keep the split. open with the knife or chisel until the cion is put in with the thick edge out. The cut parts should be completely covered with the wax. and the work is done. Where large branches are to be grafted, they are cut off horizontally, with the saw. made smooth with the knife, then a split made by the chisel being placed in the centre of the cut. and two cions being inserted, one at each end of the split, taking care that the inner bark of the cions on one side conies in contact with the inner bark of the stock. Cover well with wax. If both cions grow so as to make branches that are too close together, one may be cut out. The three points to be sure of are: 1. Have sharp tools that make clean, smooth cuts. 2. Have the inner barks of the cions and stocks in perfect con tact. 3. Have every part of the cut, sur face and split perfectly covered with wax. — Farm, Field, and StockmaK. Farm and Carden Notes. There is money in poultry. Provide shade for your fowls. (live yo.ir fowls fresh water twice daily. It is not good practice to feed grass fields. Feed the unsalable vegetables to the poultry. , It costs no more to keep good fowls than poor ones. The application of salt water to the bark of apple trees will destroy the bark louse. Scaly legs are caused by a parasite, which collects iu immense numbers under the scales, and, multiplying, causes the scales to rise. Bees are no respecters of lines, lands or persons, but roam at will for miles j around in quest of .honey, which tliay carry home and store away. It is a good plan to dig up the earth around a clump of bushes, and throw on a pan of ashes occasionally. The hens | like to wallow in such places; it keeps ! them free from lice. If the ground be well limed after the | grapes are harvested, and later in the season all leaves,grass and weeds burned, I with another application in the spr.ng, the rot can be urevented. • In germination, heat and moisture are the powers which awaken the germ of action, aud no plant food is needed at this stage of the plant's life, except what the seed in itself contains. As soon as the plant begins to send out its little rootlets it must have food in abundance, of suitable kind and iu suiw. ole shape fqr its assimilation, or it will starve, the same as an animal would if deprived of food. As acid phosphate contains soluble phosphoric acid, aud ground phosphate rock is practically in-otuble, the former is worth more than the other; 100 lbs. of the acid phosphate is more usfui to growing crops than 500 lbs. of the grouud rock. I'se the very best seed, and you will realize from the products more than enough extra to pay the difference in cost. This same rule will apply to j breeding stock aud poultry, aud in fact I everything on the farm should be of the best quality you can get. There is probably no more beneficial wild animal living iu America than the skunk, which does an untold amount of good in digging up and devouring tha common grub worm, the larva of laeh nosterna l'usca, a pest to all grass land aud a curse iu strawberry beds. The time to trim young trees, whethei for shade or fruit, is the first season, as pinching oil a bud here and there will save labor in the future. * If deferred, the saw and pruning kuife must be re sorted to. The first year of the life of a tree is the period when it should be given the most attention. All goods sell better if put upon the market in neat shape. This is true ol honey; crates or surplus cases for hold - ing the section boxes should be made neat in form. Sections of honey well completed aud nicely arranged in suck crates will bear very rough handling, and will .remain well preserved if thn sections have not been removed after taken off. A firm obstruction iu the teat which prevents easy drawing of the milk, should be treated by cutting with a proper surgical instrument—a tube with a concealed knife in it, which is released by a spring when the tube has been in - serted. Ur a plug of hard wood or bone may bo inserted to stretch the tissue. Tne plug is made slightly thicker iu tht middle aud must have a head on it to prevent it passing into the teat. WISE WORDS. Envy is ignorance. Practice is nine-tenths. Never trust much to a new friend. Life only avails, not the having lived, Concentration is the secret of strength Always scorn appearances, and you always may. Trust thyself; every heart vibrates tc that iron string. Falsehood can make the best sport, but truth can do the steadiest trotting. Fashion is only gold front jewelry, it may appear well but the value is not there. blander is a slime which envious peo ple throw on others better than them selves. The lightning is vivid against a dark cloud, so the bravest lives sometimes arc amid trials. We build barriers against Ihe flood tide; we should place some sestraints to all prosperity. Flags, brass bands and fireworks may intluenee weak minds, but they are not real arguments. Knowledge, like money, increases our responsibility in proportion to the amount obtained. There is no man at once either excel lently good or extremely evil, but grow's either as he holds himself up in virtue or lets himself slide to viciousness. High minds are as little affected bj unworthy returns for services as the sun is by those fogs wh ch the earth throws up between herself and his light. We understand what we ought to do, but when we deliberate we piny booty against ourselves; our consciences affect us one way, our corruptions hurry us an other. Teaching Hogs. The pointer is the most easily trained of short hair dogs. The bulldog is much more intelligent than is generally sup posed, aud, while less ferocious than is commonly believed, none is capable of greater affection. Mr. Stevens insists that kindness is the principal factor in training dogs. Other fanciers, however, have long contended that brute force only can be relied upon. Most stage tricks are done by cues or signals, with out attracting the attention of the au dience. “Romeo” selects any number given by one of the audience. Blocks upon which the ten numerals are painted are arrayed in a row on the stage. The dog has been taught to commence at the extreme right, and a slight clearing in the throat by the master unheard beyond the footlights, is a cue for the dog to pass the first, second, third, etc., until he reaches the correct block. Silence then gives consent, and the trick is suc cessfully performed. It required two years of patient training to teach Romeo to pick out. those numbers, Mr. Stevns said, although the dog is a remarkably bright animal. —Neicarlc Advertiser. A Fleet Man-of-War. The fastest armed cruiser in the world is said to be the German vessel Greif, which has a displacement of 2000 tons, and is fitted with engines of 5400 indi cated horse power. On the voyage from Kiel to Wilhelmshafen a speed of twen ty-three knots, or almost twenty-seven miles, an hour was obtained. Too Near the Stage. If ever a young man has a need of all his fibbing resources it is when he is try ing to make a cold, cruel and inconsider ate girl believe that the rear row of seats in the balcony are just as good, if not really a little more desirable, than the $1.50 orchestra seats. As they take their seats he say’s, cheerily: “I never like to sit too near the stage, do you?” “Well, I don’t know,” she says in a discouraging way. “Of course I don’t like to be too near.” “No; I don’t either,” says the young man a trifle gloomily. “One is more apt to see all the sham and pretense of the thing; don’t you think so?” “Well, I—I —suppose so,” slie says in a tone that no girl of any feeling would ever use after she lias had 75 centa squandered on her. “X rather prefer the balconv to anv part of the house,” says the young man cheerily and falsely. “The front seats are very desirable,” she says. “Yes, I like them; and yet, do you know, it always makes mo feel a little dizzy to sit and look over the balcony railing?” “Does it?” she asks in a kind of I know-you-are-fibbing tone. “How strange! I like the front row best of all.” “I tried to get seats there,” he says, “and I had a messenger boy stand in line three hours”—this is a big one— “but there wasn’t an orchestra or front balcony seat to bo had when he got to the window. All sold four day’s ago.” “How strange’” she says, “they must have told the boy a story, for brother Fred got three splendid orchestra seats this afternoon.” • “Got them from speculators, didn’t he?” says the desperate young man. “No; he got them right at the box office, and he said there were lots left; so if I were you I’d complain about it.” “I certainly will,” he says earnestly, while he makes a solemn vow that he certainly will not take that girl to the theatre again as long as he lives. “Holds Up” a Car. The Louisville Post tells this story:— Louis Nevin, recently returned from Hot springs, Ark., brought a tarantula as big as a tea-saucer to Dr. Vanderespt as «present. Mr. Nevin was at a great deal of trouble in catching the insect and in bringing him to Louisvillp. It was bagged in the wilds of the hilly country about Hot Springs. While Mr. Nevin had it in his possession he was quaran tined from his boarding-house and had to leave his pet in the woods to eat his meals. He had a highly exciting time in getting the bug to Louisville. He carried it in a glass bottle with a stopper with air holes in it. While riding on the narrow gauge road between Hot Springs and Little Rock the stopper fell out of tne bottle, and following closely after it came the tarantula. The coach was full of passengers at the time, with a large number of women and children among them. Before Nevin had an inkling of the spider's escape he saw it in the middle of the car aisle. He tided to recapture it without creating any furor, but the tarantula was bent on a little fun, and refused to be captured. With masculine good taste he made straight for the petticoats of a pretty girl. The girl discovered him, jumped upon the seat and gave the alarm. All the women went promptly’ into hysterics and the men were thrown into a state of equal excitement. The tarantula had the car at his mercy for half an hour, but was finally run into a cmner by his owner and captured. ™ Novel Regulations. The Seventh-day Adventists of Minne sota have organized a school in Minnea polis, the rules and regulations are: Nobody who uses profane or unbecoming language, -who uses tobacco or intoxica ting liquors or is in any way immoral will be admitted. Manual training is to be one of the features, and tent-making is mentioned as a very pleasant as well as useful employment to be taught. It is also the plan to have the general do mestic work of the school done by the students and the work embraces dining room, kitchen and laundry work, saw ing and splitting wood, etc. Aside from the ordinary branches, physiology, civil government and algebra are named in connection with missionary and Sab bath-seliool work, as a part of the course. A novel feature is that the young men are required to provide themselves w'ith flannel dr colored shirts and with cellu loid collars and cuffs, as linen shirts, cuffs, etc., will not be laundered at the school. Interviewer: “To what do you at tribute the falling off in your passenger traffic?” Railway manager: “To the fact, sir, that we spent $1,000,000 in blasting the roof of a half mile tunnel and making an open cut of it. (Bitter ly.) Our chief competitor, with a quarter mile tunnel, calls itself the Great Lovers’ Route noiv, sir.” A Valuable Remedy. Brandreth’s Pills purify the Blood, stim ulate the Liver, strengthen the Kidneys, regu late the Bowels. They were introduced in the United States in 183.). Since that time over fifty millions of boxes of Brandreth’s Pills have been consumed. This, together with thousands of convincing testimonials from all parts of the world, is pos itive evidence of their value. Brandreth’s Pills are purely vegetable, ab solutely harmless, and safe to take at any time. Sold in every drug and medicine store, cither plain or sugar coated. There are 493 mountain peaks in the United States more than 10,000 feet in height. A Madman at Large! He is a well-known citizen, and his nearest and dearest friends do not suspect his insanity. How do we happen to know about it'.' Listen: his appetite is gone, he is low-spirited, he don t sleep well, he has night-sweats, he is annoyed by a hacking cough. These symptoms ate th« forerunners of consumption and death.ana yet he neglects them. Is it any wonder that wi call him a madman? If you are his friend.telJ him to get a bottle of Dr. Pierce’s Golden Med ical Discovery without delay. It will cure him if he takes it in time. It will not miraculously create new lnngs when the old ones are nearly gone, but it will res ore diseased ones to a healthy eonditiou. J ell him about it, and warn him that in his case delay means death. The Princeof Wales te said to be a first-class banjo player. If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp son’s Eye water. Druggists sell at 33c. per bottle. VVliat Next? If this sort of thin-- keeps on they will be giving away houses and lots soon! We now learn I list W. Jennings Demorest runs an im mense Pattern .Manufactory, and yet does not sell a single pattern. Wliat nonsense? Not at all! They are all given away to the pur chasers and subscribers to that Wonderful Family Magazine. Demorest’s .Monthly. Each -Magazine contains an order entitling the holder to any pattern they manufacture. We do not see how they can afford it, for their editions are immense, and it seems incredible that each Magazine (Price, 20 cems), contains, an order for a pattern worth from 20 to 30 cents. This will certainly hurt the pattern trade, for ladies will soon learn that they can get their patterns free by simply buying or subscribing for Demorest’s Monthly Magazine. Published at 15 East 14:h Street, New York Ciiy. Send 10cents for asamp’e copy containing “Order” for pattern worth 00 cents. The bustle is not wholly discarded, but it has certainly gone to the rear. Wonderful Popularity. The fact that the sale of Dr. Pierce’s Pleas ant Purgative Pellets exceeds that of any other pill in the market, be it great or small, is on account of the fact that they are tiny, little, sugar-coated granules, and that in most cases one little “Pellet” is sufficient for a dose: that they are purely vegetable and perfectly harm less; and for constipation, biliousness, sick headache, and all diseases arising from de rangement of the liver, stomach or bowels, they are absolutely a specific. A gentle laxa tive or active cathartic, according to size ol dose. France has over 3,500,000 tree - growing along the high roads; mostly nut-hearing trees. A Wonderful Pood anil Medicine. Known and used fry Physicians all over the world. Scott’s Emulsion not only gives flesh and strength by virtue of its own nutritous properties, but creates on appetite for food that builds up the wasted body. “I have been using .-eott’s Emulsion for several years, and am pleased with its action. My patients say it is pleasant and palatable, and ail grow stronger and gain flesh from the use of it. I use it in all cases of Wasting Diseases, and it is specially useful for children when nutrient medication is needed, as in Marasmus.”—l. W. Pierce, M. D.. Knoxville, Ala. The original si irit-rappers, the Fox sisters are lecturing and laying bare the cheat. Dangerous Negligence. It is as unwise to neglect a ease of constipa tion or indigestion as a case of fever or other more serious disease, for, if allowed to progress as great danger to life may result. A few- Ham burg Pigs will put the bowels m a h- althy con dition,! n which they may be kept by occasion al use ol this medicine. 25 cents. Dose one r ig. Mack Drug Co., N. Y. Diseases Peculiar to Women, especially monthlv disorders, are cured by the timely use of Bradfleld’s Female Regulator. New Yo k City 1 as ten reformatories for the rescue and he p of falUn women. Use the great specific for “cold in the head” and catarrh—Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy. Short a- counts nmke ion r friends. Use not < redit to . often without oiling with currency. The best cougli medicine is Piso’s Cure for Consumption. Sold everywhere. 35c. sggoK'ciNx. T hk true American has a warm pl ac e in his heart ior the old Log Cabin.lt’s iWkffilfeißfil! not “'’- n gl’- s h y° u know,” k u t from the Log Cabins xs&s- of America have sprung m en in every respect greater than any from the grand castles of Europe. Warner’s log Cabin Sarsa parillais the best in the world. Ely’s Cream Balm, Is Sure to Cure | YFEVER i|icOLD IN HEAD | QUICKLY. jy|X& Apply Balminto each nostril. Lear?! Telegraphy AT THE GEORGIA TELEGRAPH SCHOOL. Thorough Knowledge. Avnp’e Facilities, Large Expe rience. We Ladies and! Gentlemen. Telegraphy always afford posit ions. Out this out and send for circulars. Address A. <«. ( OUCH, Kriifitn, Ua. mm Said by nil.Ch'twgisl?. ‘ atoanta ca. K FISTULA and a l Rectal Disease 8 treated by a painless pro' cess. No loss of time from business. No knife, ligature or caustic. A radical cukic guaranteed in every case treated. Reference given. Dr. R. G. JACKSON, 42* Whitehall St., Atlanta, Ga. WANTED-A MAM! (lull Earn u Snlarv from SIOO to S2OO n. Month ! We want a Live, Energetic man, who is not afraid of work, in every county in thh Southern Slates. Such a man can make the above amount, handling our goods. No capita! required. Work tne year round. I•. < . 11IJDG1NS dk t 0.. I*ub iwliei-M, ATLANTA. GA. JONES WSttmFR EIGHT Ton Wagoti Scale*, in Lever*, Steel Bearing*, Bra** rc Beam and Beam Box for S6O. Ererv *iie Scale for free pn.te ilal ancr.tinn this paper and address JONES OF BiNGfcAMTIN, BINGHAMTON. N. T. QH*jj£^SHOTGUN laiiist upon getting the 44 Champion 99 | If your dealer hun t it, *e»«l to u*. Send sc. in stamp* for Illustrated 100 - l'»cr Catalogue of Gun.. Rifle*, Revolver., rouce Good*, JOHN F. LOVt-LL ARMS CO., K.uut r., Bo.lou, Mua QnillU UflDlT Painleaaly cured in 10 to ® rlUnl nAall Days Sanitarium or Home Treatment. Trial Free. No Cure. No Pay. The iliuniiue Remedy Co., La Fayette, Ind. n T.lveathome and makemore money work Ins Corn, than uUaUII »' .nvthmg.Ue In the world Kitlier *ex Co«t]voutfit riillK. Terms ritvl. Addrew, Tat S k Co., Augusts, Maine. Shot Guns Breech Loaders $6.50 Catalogue free-. Pjcuce X’B GUN HOUSE, Oalrkubh. Wi*. COI. Oil AHO lor Consumptive* and AstUmat ics. Send 2c. for it. Du. BARTLETT, Boulder, Uol. PEERLESS DYES Sold by Druggists, i New and Second-Hand Machinery. H e are Headquarters for Engines, Boilers, Sate Mills, Shingle anti Lath- Mill Outfits. fortable Com and Wheat AliUs, Millstones. Hotting Cloths* < otton >erd llullers and Grinders, Belting, suus, riplng, l.tc. In addition to New Machinery, we have a large stock of Second-Hand Kngiaes, Boilers, Shingle Machinal Planers, etc., etc., all sizes, ut Astonishingly Low Prices Terms e«*y. We can Save You Money! Write oft. ~iAt IIIM.KI 1 t1.,«7 S. Bioad and iBS. Forsyte Streets, ATI,AS I'A, GA 4 *** *i* *l* ►!* *i* *i* Hf* *l* A sjs ►£« VyA sjs .Js *T:.e man who has invested lrom three JUft Wc oiler the man who wants service to live dollars m a Kubbcr Coat, and W M (not style) a garment that will keep Ut Ills tlrst half hour's experience m m m mmm mSSS him dry in the hardest storm. It is a storm llmls to his sumiw that it Is \JShS Egg ■ called TOWEK’S FISH liRANI> hardly a better protection than a mos- WW EL a “ SIACKEK," a name familiar to every quiio netting, not only feels chagrined ™ m ■ Cow-boy all over the land. Y.’ , th them at being so badly taken in, bui also H ■Bint ■ the only perfect Wind and Waterproof lee sif lie does not iook exactly like Km Rds Kfcfl Coat is “ Tower's Fish Brand Slicker.” Asktor the “ FISII BRAND" Slickx* I |ln I V and take no other. If your storekeeper doe-imt have the fish brand, send ior descriptive catalogue. A. J. Tow kr. JO Simmons Sr., Boston, Mass. ►*« V sjt *Js ►][-< »- T ' 4. ►!* >|« »£« ►£< »Js ►*-< *i* *o* 'i* r * < "I* V►£* ‘T* "J* *l' 'i* If You Are Sick With Headache, Neuralgia, Rh umatism Dyvpejv sia, Biliousness, Blood Humors, Kidney Disc— Constipation, Female Troubles, Fever anti AgiMv Sleeplessness, Partial Paralysis, or Nervous JTmk tration, use Paine’s Celery Compound and bm cured. In each of these the cause is mental ut physical overwork, a-i.vkty, exposure nc rmdaria, the effect of which is to weaken the nervous sys tem, resulting in one of these diseases. Keiooig the cause with that great Nerve Tonic, and Lb* result will disappear. Paine's Celery Compound Jas. I* Bowen. Springfield, Mass., writes: — “ Paine’s Celery Compound cannot be excelled <u> a Nerve Tonic. In mv case a single txrttl* wrought a great change. My nervousness entirely disappeared, and with it the resulting atfectio* of the stomach, heart and liver, ar.d the wltol* tone of the system was wonderfully invigorated. I tell my friends, if sick as I have boon, Puanef* Celery Compound Wili Cure You! Sold by druggists. SI; six for 85. Preparer! only by WtLis, 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 aiMl durable colors. Ask for the Diamond, and tolur no other. A Dress Dyed i A Coat Colored !- Garments Renewed ) cents. A Child can use them ! Unequalled for all Fancy and Art W/orlt. At druggists and Merchants. Dye Book free. WELLS, RICHARDSON & C 0„ Props., Burlington, Vt “far HSEFAILS: beS Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Use JSJI til in time. Sold by druggists. b I believe Piso’s Cur© - for Consumption saved >£ my life. —A. H. Dowell, M Editor Enquirer, Eden- j* : T ton, N. C., April 23,1887. i IPISOI The best Cough Modi- cine is Piso’s Cure foil H Consumption. Children 05 P; take it without objection. If U By all druggists. 25c. _ IS CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. lS» aSa Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Use f Ed in time. Sold by druggists. g*l HOUND BOYS l How to Shoe n. Horae All ihiaw and other Valuable Information relntinac lo the Equine Species can be ohlniuedl hy rending our 100-PACE ILMISTUATK* HOUSE IKIOK, whirli we will forivnrd, c p e o ."p‘rJ,t’ only 25 CIS. m STAMPS* HORSE ROOK CO.. 134 I.eonard St., N. IT. FMMEB’S /lw WIFE M/t . Sees some of her Poultry Jfif, f , die each year without ijMv’ vmjN knowing wliat the manor Rmiir 1 1 iil. \ was or how to effect a [fijlli, MHSSft remedy If she does n<s«- IX’tv'd| 1 1 . pH' "Ks nine the Disease. TbSsat tMßSMlil j ijLljß] 'ok not right, as at au «»- affirS.'iiVi ril /jf uN pense of 25 cento I.Ui/Mf Iwl stamps) she can prorm SaU o 1110-l’iige BOOM, giving the experience of a practical Poultry Katara (not aa amateur, but a man working for dollar* moA cents) during a period of 25 years. It (cache* sum bow to Detect and Cure Di*ca*c*; how t* Ford lor Eggs and also lor iiiiiniinr; which Fowl* to Saxe lor Breeding F«r» p o*c*; and every thing, indeed, yon NhstiiA know on thiw Hiibjcet. Sent postpaid for HOOK PUK. HOUSE, 134 I.eonard Street* N. Y. City. FARMERS flfc ■•'"unks, »«i SAW MILL. SALEiI'mOS WORKS, SALEM, N. C. lASTHMA^RiDI 58 German Asthma Cure never/mi, to give <S-B relit/m the worst cases, insures comfort-tS H able sleep; effects cares where 11 others fail J M Hlrt'ot ronwncfl# the meet ekevtical. Price oOc. ar-dS* ■ Sl.OfKotDTUgglstsorbymaU. SampleFß.EF.flß ARE YOU MARRIED? llrriSSi this society, which pays its members itVT.O to SI.tNW at imirriiijfo. Circulars free. N. w. MUTUAL. £Jt- DOWMKiNT SOCIETY. Box 846, Minneapolis, Sliiixu DlaavVßill* G feat English Gout ao# Qiair S* IllSa Rheumatic Remelt, Oval Box. 31; round, 1-1 Fill,. RI rSA C UDY. Book-keeping, Business Form* L rnC Penmanship, Arithmetic, Short-hand, etc, ■ I thoroughly taught by MAIL. Circulars free*. Bryant’s College, 457 Main St, Buffalo. N. X. np to S‘4 a day Samples worth *lg» FKKK. K Lines not unite the horse’s feet Write __ 0 V Brewster Safety Kem Holder Co.. Honey. XlirSL. WHITCn TO BUY t KAR'I in this lucCkr. 1? All I Lll Curtis A Wright, 233 Broadway. N_ N. U For y-four, XBw