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AND GARDEN.
HOME-MADE IMPLEMENTS.
Days -when no outdoor work can be
done can be turned to good account by
making various conveniences. For ex
ample, a light-stone boat, or what is
better a sled to carry the harrow, plow,
bags of seed, rakes, water jug, etc.,
to the field. Men drink much less water
when it is close at hand than when they
have to go some distance for it. Another
useful implement to be made, is a marker
for laying out the corn ground. Boxes
in use about the farm should be of a size
to hold a bushel or half a bushel. They
will save a great deal of grain and per
haps a great deal of hunting for the half
bushel measure. —American Agriculturist.
HOW ROSES BLOOM.
Hybrid perpetual roses bloom mostly
upon shoots that grow from the old wood;
that is, canes of one or more years’ growth.
The best blooms are found upon the
canes which start from near the root the
•previous season. Therefore, it is best
every spring to cut out all canes which
have bloomed one season. As you value
good roses and a quantity of them do not
fail to do this. To increase the quantity
and richness of bloom with hybrid per
petuals practice what is called “pegging
down.” This is to bend all the canes
that have been left after pruning nearly
to the ground. The outermost ones may
be within six inches of the surface and
the others a little higher. This horizontal
position of the canes somewhat retards
the flow of the sap as it returns to the
roots, and more of it is used in forming
buds and flowers. If you prefer to grow
your roses upright, do not fail to cut
back the canes about one-half. If you
wish to have seed for new varieties, it is
well not to have the .soil too rich, else,
according to my experience, you will get
fewer seeds and not the best roses. All
the roses should be where they will have
plenty of sunlight, and yet be protected
from high winds. —New TorTc Herald.
A TRIBUTE TO THE SWINEHERD.
The swineherd has commonly been
considered a rather degraded person, but
little better than bis companions to whom
he dispensed the husks and garbage upon
which they subsided. But this is all
wrong, as we are informed by a manu
facturer of “pig condiment.” This in
dividual takes a much higher ground,
so to speak, in considering the ancient
status and the present possibilities of the
swineherd. Formerly this person was
held to be of much importance and was
highly respect \ He was all the more
highly considered as he might possess
“an agreeable voice and a musical talent
that he might lull the pigs to sleep after
their meals by his sweet singing, so that
their fattening might be promoted.” He
was also well versed in the science of
feeding, and able to select 1 ‘such food of
the proper astringent property as would
correct the propensity of his greedy
herd to disturb their digestive faculties
and improve their appetite and health.”
And this enterprising person impresses,
upon the swineherds of America espe
cially, the great importance of buying his
condimental food of barks and spices to
avoid the risks of cholera from the preva
lent system of running hogs in the corn
fields after cattle to fatten them on the
unwholesome ordure. Possibly a diet of
aromatic herbs and spices with accom
panying music might give the ordinary
hams and bacon a better flavor than is
acquired from the filthy food which the
rough, uncultivated, coarse-voiced Ameri
can swineherd now dispenses to his hogs.
—New York Times. j
K CULTIVATION OF WHEAT.
1 Professor A. B. Blount says in the
American Agriculturist: In growing a
crop of wheat the seed is all important.
There is much difference in seed—even
that grown on the same stool—that the
most careful selection is necessary. The
seed must be good, prime, well-ripened,
plump and with active germinating pow
er. The only way to secure such is by
selection at the time of ripening. Selec
tion is absolutely essential to good aver
age crops and good average quality.
Non-selection is a great drawback to all
crops. It entails upon the grain ele
ments of deterioration which cause so
many varieties to “run out.” The habit
of the wheat plant is to tiller or stool,
and tills habit must be indulged and fa
vored by giving grain more room and
substance enough to develop its val
uable properties. To have good seed
therefore, that must be selected which
is nearest like the original and found
upon the parent stalk of the stool. It
ripens first, contains the best elements
and is the best in all respects. The phy
siological laws governing the production
of the animal kingdom also hold good in
the vegetable. The transmission of good
and bad qualities from parent to offspring
are inherent; hence to have good wheat
we must sow good seed.
Next to good seed we must have well
prepared soil. Rich, stiff, calcareous
soils are best for wheat. Corn stubble
and potato land slightly harrowed and
without manure make very fine land for
good crops of wheat. The application
of fresh or even well rotted barn-yard
manure directly to the soil in which
wheat is to be sown is unwise and in
jurious. It produces too much stalk and
too little grain. Such manure should al
ways be applied in its fresh state to the
crop preceding wheat. Clover sod
turned in the fall for spring wheat is ex
cellent, but alfalfa sod .excels them all.
Its roots penetrate to a great depth, not
only enriching the soil but making it
porous and remarkably well adapted to
the growth of all crops. So superior is
it that as high as sixty and seventy bush
els of wheat per acre have been produced
upon land thus treated. Wheat, espe
cially in arid reigions, should never fol
low oats, rye or barley. So dry is the
winter that the seed scattered in the har
vesting germinates in the spring and be
comes badly mixed with the wheat, and
they arc not the proper crops to rotate.
As many opinions are held about sow
ing as there are farmers that sow. In
Europe, Australia and other wheat coun
tries two or three bushels per acre are
sown, while in our own country about a
bushel and a half is the rule. Almost all
the experiments made with thick and
thin seeding are favorable to the latter;
indeed they have reason to be, because
the greatest enemy to the successful ger
mination aqel healthy growth of the
wheat-plant is wheat. Like people,wheat
cannot flourish when sown too thickly.
If a bushel of wheat were sown evenly
over an acre of ground, no two grains
would be more than two inches apart
each way, and a half bushel would place
them less than four inches apart —thick
enough for all soils under favorable con
ditions. However, different preparation
of both seed and soil will vary the amount
of seed. Kich land requires less seed
than poor, and a long season in some sec
tions less than short ones. The proper
depth to sow grain varies with soil and
climate. In rainy sections where the
frost heaves the surface of the ground in
the spring, wheat should be sown at least
two inches deep and on a rough surface,
while in dry, arid climates, one and a
half inches is deep enough. The heavier
the soil the shallower the sowing, and the
lighter the soil the deeper.
The cultivation of the wheat crop adds
much to its growth and yield; however
absurd this may appear to some, it is
nevertheless true. Most people, and 1
might say ninety-nine hundredths of all
farmers in the United States, never touch
their wheat from sowing time to harvest.
A cultivation of the wheat crop does it as
much good as a cultivation of the corn
crop or any other crop. As soon as the
wheat is well up and begins to stool, a
light harrowing not only kills the weeds
but helps the growth of the crop, and
when the wheat begins to make stalks
another and a heavier harrowing will often
increase the yield ten to fifteen per cent.
These harrowings not only kill the little
weeds and give vigor to the plant, but
they keep the surface of the soil open and
mellow for the better action of the atmos
phere upon the roots. If the wheat is
sown in drills a foot apart a small culti
vator is better than a harrow, especiallj
in those sections where the crops are irri
gated. All crops do better when irrigated
from below. The water, when put on
the surface, comes in contact with the
tender plant and injures it.
Harvesting should be done early, when
the wheat is in the dough state, to make
good returns for the mill, but seed wheat
should not be cut until fully ripe. Earlj
harvests often escape rust, make heaviei
grain and of better milling elements, less
wheat is lost in the cutting and-handling,
and the farmer is better satisfied, having
his crop out of the way.
FARM AND GARDEN NOTES.
Farmers should limit and control the
cost of production. ,
Corn should be grouud in the ear; it is
better than to shell it and feed the cow
separately.
Everything points to the silo as one of
the best and probably the best way to
harvest corn. »
Farmers who raise rye should sell the
straw and buy grain and fertilizer with
the proceeds.
Careless, hasty seed-sowing accounts
for the failure of many amateur attempts
at gardening.
A mixture of kerosene and lampblack
is a good application to keep steel sur
faces bright.
One speaker thought that a little pure
water added to thick cream would assist
in its separation.
If the whifiletree breaks, don’t
it into a corner. Remove the irons.
They can be fitted to new wood.
Corn for ensilage should not be cut
when the kernels are in the milky state.
It should be allowed to glaze a little.
By keeping the cattle off the pasture
one day longer in the spring you may
keep them upon it two days longer in the
fall.
Farming is like other industries; if
you expect to be successful, you must
adopt some special line and make it a
study.
Cows should have plenty of fresh water
and salt daily. Always feed and milk
regularly. Keep stables clean with good
bedding.
The farther you are from market the
greater is your need of condensing pro
ducts by feeding grain and stover to your
animals.
A handy thing to have is a box con
taining an assortment of bolts, nuts,
rivets, nails and a hammer, pinches and
cold-chisel.
Rye straw is considered to be worth
only $3.50 per ton as a fertilizer. It
brings from $lO to sls a ton at the straw
paper mills.
Trees about the house make it more
homelike and attractive, and shield it
from the cold winds of winter and the
hot sun of summer.
“If I were to preach a sermon or
horticulture I would take as my text .
‘Stir the soil,’ ” was said by one of oui
best horticulturists.
Forty pounds of good corn ensilage,
with five pounds of hay and six pounds
of cotton-seed meal and shorts is a full
ration for a 800-pound caw.
A silo and good ensilage is necessarj
to making good butter in winter. It
cheapens cost of production, and im
proves the quality of the butter.
It is impossible to make a first-rate
quality of butter from poor milk; hence
the making of good butter commences
with the cow, her food and care.
A grapevine over the out-building will
not injure the building, will increase the
attractiveness of the premises, and will
furnish wholesome, agreeable food at
slight cost.
The best land you have got is not any
too good for strawberries, but any land
that will raise a first-class crop of corn oi
or potatoes will raise a good fair crop ol
strawberries.
Many people make a mistake in turn
ing their flock out in the pasture too early
in the spring, before there is sufficient
food for them to nourish themselves, and
in that case the wool will commence to
shed, affirms a sheep-owner of many
years’ experience. . ... . _
SELECT SIFTINGS.
A lion lives twenty years.
Garter snakes are harmless.
Charlie Ross was lost in 1874'.
Opal is worth sls to S4O per carat.
Mystic, Conn., boasts of a singing
rat.
Brazil has a prohibitory tariff on hand
organs and monkeys.
A Gat nineteen years old belongs to
N. B. Shaw, Area, N. Y.
Fatjo is the peculiar name of one of
the trustees of San Jose, Cal.
The average weight of a carload of
freight is about 20,000 pounds.
A snake with two distinct heads, both
perfect, was recently killed by John
Dennett, of Santa Cruz, Cal.
A new industry in Hackettstown, N.
J:, is the manufacture of “beef lard.” It
is made from pure beef suet.
A head of cabbage, grown by George
Berry, near Pensacola, Fla., measured
twenty-five inches in diameter.
The library of the British Museum will
not hereafter supply novels to readers
until five years after publication.
Experiments in France make it appear
that the safest and easiest way to shin
and store milk is in a frozen state.
The so-called antique oak is ordinary
American oak sawed in a peculiar way,
and stained to look like the old English
oak.
A florist at Lancaster, Penn., has so
improved the dandelion that he has pro
duced specimens twenty inches in di
ameter.
Mineral paint of various hues has
been discovered on the borders of Bayou
Chico, in Florida. It has the appearance
of clay.
A white oak tree recently felled near
Baraboo, Wis., measured nearly seven
teen feet in girth, and was more than 100
feet in height.
A curiously twisted root of an oak tree,
exhibited at Punta Gorda, Fla., is said
to show all the letters of the alphabet in
its convolutions.
Hamilton Disston says that there are
villages of 2000 inhabitants on some -ol
his Florida lands which two years ago
were two feet under water.
Mrs. Nathaniel Noyes, of Stonington,
Conn., found upon the beach near the
Latimer Reef Lighthouse, a diamond
ring that was recognized as lost by C. P.
Noyes just twenty-three years ago.
The cats, dogs and poll-parrots of
England having been properly provided
for, a hospital for fish has now been es
tablished. Fish are much exposed to
dampness, and pulmonary diseases -would
naturally be most common.
A floating saw mill is in use at Flor
ence, Wis. The boat is 40x80 feet in
size, and draws seventeen inches of water.
The mill hands live aboard, and the boat
is moved along the river to where there
is a fine lot of timber near the banks.
The Texas umbrella tree is becomings
favorite for shade and ornamental pur
poses in California. It is a large and
beautiful tree, resembling an umbrella in
the spread of its foliage, which is so dense
that it affords perfect protection from
either rain or sun.
James Crumb, of Lyons, Kansas,
dreamed that his brother, who lived in
Western Kansas, was in some terrible
danger. He hastened to his brother’s
home, and not finding him began a
search. He soon found him in a well
nearly dead from exhaustion. He had
been there three days, and must soon
have perished.
When an Irish-born workman in the
employ of the city, or of a contractor in
New York city, is killed or disabled,
leaving a dependent family, his friends
get up a ball in his benefit, and it yields
anywhere from SSO to $l5O. The money
to pay the lawyer’s fees for defending a
criminal is often raised in the same way.
Such entertainments are almost entirely
unknown among Germans, nearly all of
whom belong, or have relatives who be
long, to some benevolent social lodge.
Causes of Sudden Death.
Sudden deaths are most frequent, ac
cording to the Lancet , when the condi
tions of life change suddenly, or are espe
ciallv liable to change—and this without
necessary reference to whether the change
effected be relatively for the better or for
the worse; for the change may be so rap
idly effected, in cither direction, as to
throw upon the circulatory and respira
tory functions a strain which the organs
are not able to bear. In this way, per
sons with unsound or weak hearts or
weak arteries die suddenly under- rapid
changes, although, if there were no special
strain consequent on the change, it would
in itself prove advantageous to them. It
may be accepted that sudden deaths art
especially likely to occur at periods ot
seasonal change, and at times when rapid
variations of temperature are taking
place.
Peking’s Predominant Peculiarity.
Above all other characteristics of Peking
one thing stands out in horrible promi
nence. Not to mention it would be to
wilfully omit the most striking color of
the picture. I mean its filth. It is the
most horribly and indescribably filthy
place that can be imagined. Indeed im
agination must fall far short of the fact.
There is no sewer or cesspool, public or
private, but the street; the dog, the pig
and the fowl are the scavengers; every
now and *ken you pass a man who goes
along tosiiug the refuse into an open
work basket on his back; the smells are
simply awful.—- Washington Star.
Cunning Seekers for Tips.
Women in the west end of London go
about armed with small squirt guns filled
with dirty water, with which they slyly
soil the coats or dresses of persons whom
they pass. Then they meet the persons,
ind, with elaborate bows, beg pardon for
•ailing attention to the fact that the dress
or coast is splashed, and offer to wipe it
off with a clean white apron. Nine times
out of ten the trick brings a generous
tip.
EARLY AMERICANS.
Simplicity in their mode of living was the
marked characteristic of the early settlers of
America.
Everything which pertained to them was plain
and unostentatious.
The food which they ate was frugally served
and of the substantial kind.
Their clothing was home-spun and tho mocca
sins which oovered their feet were a home pro
duct, being made from the hide of animals and
ornamented with beads after the Indian fash
ion.
Their homes were simplicity itself, consist
ing of roughly hewn logs and home made
shingles—tho whole cons ituting the old Log-
Cabin home of frontier life.
Yet thos3 were model homes.
'1 he wives and mothers were well verted in
the art of all that pertained to housewifery.
Conspicuous in the early home was the strik
ing figure of th ■ old grandmother.
Not only was she the advisor in social affairs
but she was the medical adviser and ptvseriber
for (he sick. Often were her hands engaged
in the preparation of some healing potion or
remedy for tho relief of those in ill-health.
Fully versed in all the bountiful supplies con
tained iu the grand store-house of nature, she
wisely knew how to utilize tho curative proper
ties contained in certain roots and herbs and
according y she transformed them into cer ain
remedial agents, which have made the old Log
Cabin famous for all time to c >mc.
Con cions of the great value of some of those
old time home cures a successful effort has been
made to re-diseover the lost secret of their pie
paration, and, coupled with all the improve
ment which human ingenuity and progress
suggests, they are no-.v widely known under the
name of Warner’s Log Cabin Remedies, the
most prominent being Log Cabin strsaparilla
and Log Cabin cough and consumption cute.
Tire suffering public has been quick to r. cog
nize and appreciate their true value and lie
manufacturers are daily in roceipt of much
praise for the re-discovery and revival of these
old time r> medics against sickness and disease.
To tho old Log Cabin homo however is justly
duo the praise for all the good which may,
thereby, be affected.
A CameJl Market.
Neatly three hundred thousand camels
pass in and out of Aden, Arabia, every
year laden with the various products of
the interior. The camel market is a
large space devoted to the sale and pur
chase of the camel-loads as they are
brought in. Every morning hundreds
of laden c .mels come streaming in from
the interior. Filing into the camel
market, they lay down beneath their loads
in the place assigned them and complt
ccntiy chew the end or ruminate on the
subject of their woes, while a motley lot
of merchants, middle men an 1 traders cir
culate among them, bargaining and
chaffering over the piles of fire wood,
charcoal and fodder, un ler which they
are almost hidden, or for the bales of
hides and skins, the bags of coffee, or of
country produce for the city market.
Strength to vigorously push a business,
strength to study for a profession, strength to
regulate a household, strength to do a dav’s la
bor without physical pain. Do you desire
strength? If you are broken down, have no
energy-, feel as if life was hardly worth living,
you can be relieved and restored to robust
health and strength by taking Brown’s Iron
Bitters, a sure cure for dyspepsia, malaria,
weakness and alt diseases requiring a true, re
liable tonic. It acts on the blood, nerves and
muscles, and regulates every part of the sys
tem.
There are several men and women in Henry
county, Ga., over 90 years old; 2 men over 100.
A Itnd’rnl Cure for Epileptic Fits.
To the Editor—Please inform your readers
that I have a positive remedy for the above
named disease which I warrant to cure the
worst cases. So strong is in its vir
tues that 1 will send fi eeRMn pie bottle and
valuable treatise to any sufferer who will give
me his P O. and Express address. Resp’y,
H.G. ROOT, M. C.IS3 Pearl St.. New York.
Cntnrrh Cured.
A Clergyman, after years of suffering from
that loathsome disease, and vainly
trying every known last fwSL a
prescription which completely (••red aniHel
him from death. Any sufferer from this Kid
ful disease sending a self-addressed
envelope to Prof. J. A. Lawrence, 88 WWi en
St.. N. Y„ will receive the recipe free of charge.
Keep them In the Nursery.
Hamburg Figs should be kept in the nursery,
where they are i articularly useful in case of
constipation or indigestion, as they are liked by
children, and are prompt and efficacious in ac
tion 2j cents. Dose one Fig. Mack Drug Co.,
N.Y.
Bkadfield’s Female Regulator cures all ir
regularities peculiar to woman. Those suf
fering shou'd use it. Sold bv all druggists.
SsnA
vw
Tike Chief Reason for the marvellous suc
cess of Hood's Sarsaparilla 1» found In the fact
(hat this medicine actually accomplishes all
that Is claimed for It. Its real merit has won
.• _ ... . <>/' for Hood's Sarsaparilla
Merit \Ar ins a popularity and sale
greater than that of any other blood purifier.
It cures Scrofula, all Humors, Dyspepsia, etc.
Prepared only by 0.1. Hood A Co., Lowell, Mass.
BRAOFIEID’Si^
Cures all Diseases Peculiar to Women !
Book to “Woman” Mailed Free.
liUADFIKI.II KEOCLATUK CO.. ATLANTA, GA,
SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
SOUTHERN DYE HOUSE
Ail kinds of Silk, Cotton or Woolen Goods
handsomely dyed or cleaned.
ITSults a Spoclalty.jjJ
EXPRESS PAID ONE WAV.
24 Walton St., ATLANTA, GA.
/flVw - .»■ who have used Piso’s
3L lia'ffff Cure for Consumption
ItJ 8* sf-x it is best of all.
Sold everywhere. 29c.
is YOUR FARM FOR SALE
If 60 address CuiiTie A Wright, 233 Broadway, N.Y.
to S 8 n <l»y. Sample, worth $2.15 Free.
Lines not under the horse’s feet. Write
Brewster Safety Rein HnlderCo,, Holly, Mich.
a gentswanted. *1 un honr. 50new artic es-Cat’lgue
and samples free. O. E. Marshall, Laokport, N. Y.
PEERLESS DYES Sold by* Dsuooism
HEALTHFUL EXERCISE.
Only a few months ago these romping, rosy-chcckcd lasses were puny, deli
cate, pale, sickly girls. By the aid of Dr. Pierce’s world-famed Favorite Pre
scription, they have blossomed out into beautiful, plump, hale, hearty, 6trong
young women.
“Favorite Prescription” is an invigorating, restorative tonic and as a
regulator and promoter of functional action at that critical period of change
from girlhood to womanhood, it is a perfectly safe remedial agent, and can
produce only good results. It is carefully compounded, by an experienced and
skillful physician, and adapted to woman’s delicate organization. It is purely
vegetable in its composition and perfectly harmless in any condition of the
system. It imparts strength to the whole system. For overworked, “worn
out,” “run-down,” debilitated teachers, milliners, dressmakers, seamstresses,
“shop-girls,” housekeepers, nursing mothers, and feeble women generally, Dr.
Pierce’s Favorite Prescription is the greatest earthly boon, being unequaled as
an appetizing cordial and restorative tonic. It is the only medicine for women,
sold by druggists, under a positive guarantee, from the manufacturers, that it will
five satisfaction in every case, or money will be refunded. This guarantee has
een printed on the bottle-wrappers, and faithfully carried out for many years.
Copyright, ISSB, by World’s Dispensary Medical Association, Proprietors.
The cleansing, antiseptic and healing qualities of
Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy are unequaled. 50 cents.
SEE WOULD CU3H2
The world ought to
done for me in the euro
w hich was so bad as to
hie by the physicians
v ent to be treated. One
me a copy of an adver-
Suift's Specific, and I
relii f from the first few
gradually forced out of
soon cured sound and
months since I quit talc-
had no sign of return of the dreadful disease.
51ns. Ann Bothwell.
Au Sable, Mich., Dec. 129, ’3B.
Send for books on Blood Diseases and Cancers,
mailed free. The Swift Specific Co.
• Drawer 3, Atlanta, Ga,
MEN
MINERAL
PASTILLES
FOR CATARRH
fioltl bf nil nrastists. 50c. a box.
SODKN MINERAL SPRINGS CO. (Limited),
Solo Agents,
__ 15 CEDAR ST., NEW YORK.
AFTER all others FAIL
CONSULT 1 w
Drs. LINN & LOB 3
New York Office* 5'2 Clinton Plnce (Eighth S'.),
or 329 North Fifteenth St., Philadelphia, Pa.,
for the treatment ef Blood Poison*. Skis Eruptions.
Nervous Complaints. Bright’s Disease. Strictures,
Impotency and kindred diseases, no matter f how
oag standing, or Com whet cause originating.
l* r T-n days' m-dioines furnished by mall rare
S.-nd for Book on SPECIAL Diseases. rntt.
C-'Jfi TO $250 A MONTHcau be made workiu;
o*o for us. Agents preferred who can furnish
a horse and give their whole time to the business.
Spare moments may be profitably employed also
A few vacancies In towns and cities. B. F. JOHN
SON A 00., iua Main St., Richmond, Va. N'. I?.—
I’lease state ag » and bustards experience. Mevei
mind about sending stamp for reply. B. F. J. <& Or.
IMPORTANT— Insurance Agents, Bank Clerks, Es
press Agents, Society Secretaries, male or female,
wanted all over the country to act as our agents; will
not Interfere with other duties. No capital required.
Liberal Inducements. Write for particulars to
INTERNATIONAL BANKING CO.,
31 (U)d 33 Bi#*dway, New York City.
OR ANG li GROVES in Florida. Injured to pay
K per cent, on investment annus ly. Address
F. SHIMER, Mt, Carroll Seminary, Carroll Co., 11.
—B I prescribe and fully en
dorse Big G as the only
s&B&r Cores 1 a NC| specific for tb e certal n euro
ASari TO 5 of this disease.
f&tfXiz-.'snuei not »1 G.H. INGRAHAM,M. D.,
sense Stricture. Amsterdam, N. Y.
Rfd only by the We have sold Big G for
Cherniy 0«. d of‘sat"
Y-ph. <1- :.r--:.A3EpI faction.
Ohio. D. R. DYCHE&CO. h
81.00. Sold by Druggists.
XX w. L. DOUGLAS
A \ $3 SHOE GENTLEMEN.
V Beat in the world. Examine hi*
sj&fJt' -am*. (NWHaS *5.00 GENUINE HAND-SEWED SHOE.
ygg»3 *4.00 HAND-SEWED WELT SHOE.
V v ’ v ’?J *3.50 POLICE AND FARMERS’ SHOE.
VajMsA I *2.50 EXTRA VALUE CALF SHOE.
... 'A, ! *2.25 WORKINGMAN’S SHOE.
Mtiisl i ■ *■l *2.00 GOOD-WEAR SHOE.
Srf a *2.CO and *1.75 BOYS’ SCHOOL SHOES.
yL jgmg&rj: All made In Congress, Button and Lace.
W. L. DOUGLAS
$3 & $2 SHOES LADIES.
\ Best Material. Best Style. Heat Fitting;.
.\ w. L. Douglas’ #3.oo Shoe.ehown incut below Is
rnarie of fine Calf, on last* modelled for the foot; smooth
: lnsitlc as liand-eewerl shoes, ami no tacks or wax tnreaa
10 burt lbs fecl - Evory v * ir
tjilU 1 lUII gSWjff
inferior good-,. If toy arl^hto ILrtS «SS, do not be )
and price stamped P° B>cm, and says they are kno .^ n that are not war- f jggSf 4
.il.ipa'on'ih/bowo.. ro; 1 ■*« cAf fsjtl
' V U wmnjfrt fou'tbe kind or "‘7 1 * sS
r*tarn mMl*posLMF?K'ee^onsequaltw” you
gSwfL. i>6uolas> shoes.
asd width yon wear; if not sure, tend for an order blank
giving full instructions how to get a perfect fit.
W. L DOUGLAS, Brockton. Mass, '
so mow it.
know wnat 8. S. S. has
of a malignant Cancer,
bo considered incura
in Chicago, where I
of my neighbors sent
I tisement in regard to
began taking it. I got
doses; tho poison was
my system, and I was
well. It is now ten
I in" S. S. S. and I have
CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH
PENNYROYAL PILLS
✓-gv EES CEOS3 DIAMOND E2AND. A
r* Original, best, only genuine aud
reliable* pill for sale. Never Fail.
£■' •'CiAAak for Chichester'a Kngliahy iF JL\
6 /J/j i)i*mond Brand, red \
ml lie boxes, sealed with blue rib- Ywgy
- At DruKffUtH. Accept
J no other. AIT pill* in past©- v
board boxes, pink wrappers, are a danger*
. «g*a on* counterfeit- Send 4c. («tsmp*) for
\ w rj particulars aud clief for Ladle*,** in
*—V - litter, by return mail. 10,000 teatl*
monlalafroin LADIES *bo have used them. Name Paper.
Chichester Chemical Co., JludisonSq.,Pliila..Pa.
Road Carls! HE
"E3STBuggies I
W - Don’t buy before g. tting our i rices ind cata
toguea, THE GEO. W. sTOI KKLL CO.,
Name th s pacer. NASXIViLLE. TKN*f
CONSUMPTION
1 have a positive remedy for the above disease; bv It* tist
thounands of cn-ses of the worst kind and of Iona: standing
have been cured. So strong is my faith in its emcacv that
I will two bott'es free, together with a valuable
treatise on tills disease to any sufferer. Give Express and
P. O. address. T. A. BLOCUM. M. C., 181 Pearl BL, N. Y
DETECTIVES
Wanted in everr County. Shrewd men to act under instructions
(n our Secret Service. Experience not necessary. Particulars fre«k
Grtmnan Detective Bureau Co.li Arctic,Ci£;i&niti.Ql
gH<*Nt<’e Plfle Great English Gsutan*
DBCall S I IllSa Rheumatic Remedy.
Oral Hoi, G4i round 14 Pills.
IJU.JI’S 111 S. COLLEGE. Ptat'adelphia. Pa.
.Scholarship ar.d positions, SSO. Write for circular.
A. N. U Nineteen, 'B3
1,000 0-A.SIES
TINWARE.
$15.00 Per Case. Freight Prepaid.
RETAILS FOR £85.00.
CONTENT* AND DETAIL PUICSS:
6 Coffee Pots, 1 quart @.lO f 0.60
12 Coffee Pots, 2 quart @ .15 1.80
6 Coffee Pots, 3 quart @.20 1.20
6 Stamped Wash Basins, 10 in @.05 .30
6 Stamped Wash Basins, 11>£ in @ .10 .60
6 Stamped Wash Basins, 13 In @.15 .90
4S Cups, 1 pint @.05 2.40
12 Cups, 1 quart @ .10 1.20
12 Covered Buckets, 1 \ pint @ .05 .60
24 Covered Buckets, 2 quart @ .10 2.40
6 Covered Buckets, 3 quart @ .15 .90
6 Covered Buckets, 4 quart @’2o 1.20
6 Milk Buckets, 4 quart @ .10 .60
6 Milk Buckets, 8 quart @.25 1.50
12 Stamped Dippers, y t pint (<4 .05 .00
12 Cocoa Shape Dippers, bl’k handle @ .10 1.20
18 Stamped Plates, 9in @.05 .90
12 Stamped Milk Pans, 8)s in ”... @ .05 .60
12 Stamped Milk Pans, 11 in @.lO 1.20
6 Stamped Milk Pans, 13 in @ .15 .90
6 Stamped Milk Pans, 15 in @ .20 1.20
3 Dish Pans, 8 quart @.lO .30
6 Dish Pans, 10 quart @ .20 1.20
3 Dish Pans, 12 quart. @ .25 .75
Total Retail Selling Price $25.05
Shipped promptly to any point in vour State,
and freight prepaid, on receipt of $15.00.
L. F. BROWN, Charleston, S. C.,
Importer and Jobber of
Earthenware, Tinware. UI ana ware.