Newspaper Page Text
Hot j&sactly What He Wanted.
“Did you see the notice I gave you?”
•aid an editor to the grocer. “Yes, and
I don’t want another. The man who says
I’ve got plenty of sand, that there are no
flies on my sugar, that the milk I sell is
of the first water, and that my butter is
tho strongest in the market, may mean
well, but he is not the man I want to flat¬
ter me a second time. ”
Mrs. Harriet Beecher Stowe is said to
have aged so much in the last few ycais
that she would hardly be recognized by
those who knew her a decade since. She
was 80 on the 14th of June.
Many persons are broken down from over¬
work or household cares. Brown’s Iron Bit¬
ters rebuilds the system, aids digestion, re¬
moves excess of bile, and cures malaria. A
splendid tonic for women and children.
Women are not crnel to dumb animals. No
womau will willfully step on a mouse,
9100 Reward. 9100.
The readers of this paper will be pleased to
learn that there is at least one dreaded disease
that science has been able to cure in all Its
Stages, and that is catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh
Cure is the only positive cure now known to
the stitutional medical disease, fraternity. requires Catarrh constitutional being a con¬
a
treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken in
tern ally, surfaces acting directly of the upen the thereby blood and de¬
mucous stroying the foundation system, of the and
giving the patient strength by building disease, the
constitution and assisting nature in doing up its
work. The proprietors have so much faith in
its curative power* that they offer One Hun¬
dred Dollars for any case that it' fails to cure.
Send for list of testimonials. Address
V. J. Orkney & Co., Toledo, O.
W* Sold by Druggists, 76c.
If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp¬
son’s Eye-water.Druggists sell at25c per bottle.
A Good Appetite
There is nothing for which we reoommend Hood's
Sarsaparilla with greater confidence than tor loss oI
appetite, indigestion, sick headache and other trou¬
bles of dyspeptic nature. In the most natural way
this medicine gently tones the stomach, and makes
one feel ‘Teal hungry.”
Ladles in Delicate Health, or very dainty
and particular at meals, after taking Hood’s Sarsa¬
parilla a few days, find themselves longing for and
eating the plainest food with unexpected relish ami
satisfaction. Try it.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Eold by all druggists. $1; six for $3. Prepared oaly
byC. L HOOD & CO., Lowell, Hass.
IOO Doses One Dollar
66 AUgUSt Flower”
This is the query per¬
What is petually on your little
boy’s lips. And he is
It For? no worse than the big¬
ger, older, balder-head¬
ed boys. Fife is an interrogation
point. “What is it for?” we con¬
tinually cry from the cradle to the
grave. So with this little introduc
tory sermon we turn and ask: “What
is August Flower for ?’ ’ As easily
answered as asked : It is for Dys¬
pepsia. It is a special remedy for
the Stomach and Diver. Nothing
more than this; but this brimful.
We believe August Flower cures
Dyspepsia. We know it will. We
have reasons for knowing it. Twenty
years ago it started in a small country
town. To-day it has an honored
place in every city and country store,
possesses one of the largest manu¬ and
facturing plants in the country
sells every where. Why is this? The
reason is as simple as a child’s
thought. It is honest, does one
thing, and does it right along—it
cures Dyspepsia.
G. G. GREEN. Sole Mfin’fr, Woodbury,N.J.
DONALD KENNEDY
Of Roxbuiy, Mass, says
Kennedy’s Medical Discovery
cures Horrid Old Sores, Deep
Seated Ulcers of 40 years
standing, Inward Tumors, and
every disease of the skin, ex¬
cept Thunder Humor, and
Cancer that has taken root.
Price $1.50. Sold by every
Druggist in the U. S. and
Canada.
KING COTTON
Buy or sell your Cotton on JONES
4 k 5-Ton Cotton Scale.
NOT CHEAPEST BUT BEST.
For terms address
afi |¥ JONES OF BINGHAMTON,
N BINGHAMTON. N. Y.
For Sale!
SECOND-HAND TWO SAFES.
Must be Sold! Cheap for Cash.
Address JOHNSON, PARKER <fc CO.,
913 Chestnut St., Chattanooga, Tenn.
ALL ABOUT East Tennessee’s FINE
CLIMATE and Great Resources in
KNOXVILLE SENTINEL; 91; dally 1 mo., 3c.
30c.; weekly 1 year, sample*
PATENTS mS*
roil FARM AND GARDEN.
8HEET.
A- small flock of sheep should be
kept on every farm. No kind of stock
has proved more profitable. In begin¬
ning in a small way a dozen or two
native ewes, headed with a pure
blooded Southdown or Merino buck,
will be fouud an excellent method of
making a start. Sheep, however,
should not be subjected to the starva¬
tion process. They should be provided
with a good pasture and changed occa¬
sionally to a new range. Crops should
also bo grown for winter feeding and
cheap shelters provided.—[New Or¬
leans Times-Dcmocrat.
DEPTH TO PLANT.
No arbitrary rule should be fol¬
lowed. In a cold, wet soil the seed
should be put near the surface; iu a
light, sandy soil deep planting is
proper. Iu parts of Colorado and
Kansas corn is often planted ten to
twelve inches deep—a depth equiva¬
lent to burying for good in the ordin¬
ary soil; but in these very dry, sandy
soils such deep planting is necessary.
As a late spring makes the ground
colder and wetter than usual, it is
plain that the depth to plant varies
with the season. When the season is
unusually dry the planting should be
deeper. Oats should have a shallower
covering than wheat, corn should be
covered deeper than wheat, and pota¬
toes deeper than corn. Only finely
pulverized soil should be placed over
seeds.—[American Agriculturist.
THE POLAND-CHINA PIG.
The Poland-China breed of pigs has
never been very popular in the East¬
ern States, but at the West it seems to
have led all others. A recent writer
asserts that nine-tenths of the hogs
sent to the great stock yards have
more or less of this blood. He also
states that an estimate indicated that
eighty per cent, of the pork products
found in the city markets of the
United States were from this breed.
It is greatly in favor of these hogs
that they are good feeders and make a
very rapid growth. They can be easily
made to dress from two hundred to
four hundred pounds when from six
to twelve months old, while by feed¬
ing for a longer period they can be
made very large aud heavy. Another
point in their favor is found in the
fact that they are good breeders.—
[American Dairyman.
THE CODLING MOTH.
The codling moth is too well known
to require description, being found
wherever apples are grown. It is
imperative, however, that the owner
of every orchard should understand
that the time is limited in which this
familiar enemy may be successfully
fought, and combating it at this sea¬
son is a necessity, if the apples are to
be preserved uusoathed. The moths
are on the wing soon after the young
fruit begins to set, and the female lays
an egg in the biossom end of the up¬
turned young apple. As soon as the
egg has hatched and the worm has en¬
tered the apple, the mischief is done
and its effects for that season cannot
be prevented. A knowledge of this
fact emphasizes tho importance of ap¬
plying the principal remedy known at
the proper time and in a thorough
manner, if we would protect the fruit
successfully.
By far the most successful method,
according to tbe Hatch Experiment
Station of Massachusetts, which also
has the sanction of all the other exper¬
iment stations that have tested it, as
well as of individual orchard ists, is to
spray the apple trees with Paris green
iu water, oue pound to 150 gallons of
water, when the apples are about the
size of peas and again in about a week.
This spraying remedy is by no means
a new one, but it is the only one that
has proven uniformly successful. The
manner of mixing and applying the
ingredients has heretofore been given,
bo that it only remains to urge the im¬
portance of spraying the trees thor¬
oughly and at the proper time.—[New
York World. i
BEES AND BEE PLANTS. -
The busy bees have worked their
way into the good graces of the mass¬
es, and their sweet product is welcome
upon the table everywhere, The
apiary is not unknown to many coun¬
tries of the older states, and in many
townships there are several. The sub-
jcct is so important that the leading
farm journals devote space regularly
to the subject. If all this is so it
seems about time to begin to consider
the honey crop as one to bo planned
for ns much as for sorghum or maple
sugar—for maple orchards planted for
tapping are not rare nowadays. Some
plants are pre-eminently honey or nec¬
tar producers, aud it may bo possible
to grow theso as a crop for the sake of
furnishing a pasture for the bees. Pro¬
fessor Cook claims that the greatest
hindrance to bee-keeping is not “winter
killing,” or “foul brood,” but lack of
nectar. It is possible to depend upon
wild flowers for a large share of the
crop, and provide a pasture at tho
times when there would otherwise bo
dearth of nectar. There is a species
of Clcome known as the Itocky Moun¬
tain bee plant that has been tested
somewhat. Then there is the Chap¬
man honey plaut. A mint lias also
been employed. The right plant may
not yet have been found. Those ex¬
perimenting in the apiary are doing a
good work along many lines, and in
time tho bee pasture will bo a thing to
be admired for Its beauty and its,profit
as well.— [American Agriculturist.
WHAT A HOUSE WOULD SAY IF HE COULD.
Don’t hitch me to an iron post or
railing when the mercury is below
freezing. I need the skin on my
tongue.
Don’t leave me hitched in my stall
at night with a big cob right where I
must lie down. I am tied and can’t
select a smooth place.
Don’t compel me to eat more salt
than I want by mixing it with my oats.
I know better than any other animal
how much 1 need.
Don’t think because I go free under
the whip I don’t get tired. You would
move up if under the whip.
Don’t think because I am a horse that
iron, weeds and briars won’t hurt my
hay.
Don’t whip me when I get fright¬
ened along the road, or I will ex¬
pect it next time, and maybe make
trouble.
Don’t trot me up hill, for I have to
carry you and the buggy and my3elf,
too. Try it yourself some time. Run
up bill with a big load.
Don’t keep my stable very dark, for
when I go out into the light my eyes
are injured, especially if snow be on
the ground.
Don’t say whoa unless you mean it.
Teach me to stop at that word. It may
check me if the lines break and save a
runaway and a smashup.
Don’t make me drink ice-cold water
nor put a frosty bit in my mouth.
Warm the bit by holding it half a
minute against my body.
Don’t forget to file my teeth when
they get jagged and I cannot chew my
food. When I get lean it is a sign my
teeth want filing.
Don’t ask me to “back” with blinds
on. I am afraid to.
Don’t run me down a steep hill, for
if anything should give way I might
break your neck.
Don’t put on my blind-bridle so
that it irritates my eye, or so leave
my forelock that it will he in my
eyes.
Don’t be so careless of my harness
as to find a great sore on me before
you attend to it.
Don’t lend me to some blockhead
that has less sense than I have.
Don’t forget the old book that is a
friend tc all the oppressed, that says:
“A merciful man is merciful to his
beast.”
FARM AND GARDEN NOTES.
Clean up the hen-house.
Give the roosts a drenching of ker¬
osene oil.
“Over-production” of inferior
products, causes some men to fail as
farmers.
A littl* troble will give the hen¬
house fresh arr without the fowls
being in a draft.
The farmer needs to be a planner as
well as laborer. Head work is wanted
as much as hand work.
The fowls like a dust bath these*
warm spring days. See that they
have the opportunity to take one.
If you mean to raise pullets for next
winter’s layers it’s time the old hen or
incubator was warming the eggs.
Chicks and lice cannot thrive in the
same nest. If the lice are not killed
the chicks will be. Which are going
to die about your premise*?
lie Careful of Your Eyesight.
It is a well known fact that the eyesight—
the most delicate of our senses—may oe easily
destroyed oy the use of classes not suited to
the It eyes, is or of poor quality. foolishness to purchase
the greatest dealers. The
cheup glasses from unreliable
risk taken in doing this Is a thousand times
greater than the small amount saved.
With the above in view , Mr. A-K. Ilawkos,
well known throughout the country as a lead¬
ing optician, has established a factory In At¬
lanta, where are prepared perfect, glasses of
every shade of strength. Hawke*’ Crystallized
Lenses have ft national reputation and are en¬
dorsed by thousands of the best citizens of tbe
United States, whose names will be given
upon Druggists application. and merchants find these crystal¬
lized lenses tho best paying part of their stock,
because the people want them, and will have
no others. These spectacles are sold in nearly
every town in America, aud supplied every pair ped¬ is
warranted. They ure not to
dlers, remember.
Air. A. K. Hawkes Is the only manufacturer
of these Crystallized fillingocculists’ Lenses, prescriptions. and makes Ad¬ a
specialty dress alt of 12 Whitehall St.. Atlanta, Da.
orders
How to Make Money.
Dear Sin—Having with read Mr. Sargents’s ex¬
perience el, I tempted in plating write gold, silver and J nick¬
am to of my success. sent
to H. K. Delno & Co., of Columbus, O., for a $5
plater. I have had more tableware and jew¬
elry than I could plate ever since. 1 cleared
$27 the first week and in three weeks $97. Any¬
one can do plating and make money in any lo¬
cality the year round. You can get circulars
by addressing above firm. Wm. Okay.
When the editor of a humorous paper sets
his wits to work it doesn’t follow that he
works himself
Ladies needing a tonic, or children who
want building up, should take Brown’s Iron
Bitters. It is pleasant to take, cures Malaria,
Indigestion, Biliousness and Liver Complaints,
makes the Blood rich and pure.
Woman is called the “weaker vessel,” hut
no one would suppose so if they saw the hill
for her rigging.
Van Winkle Gin and Machinery Co., Atlan¬
ta, Ga„ • manufacture Cotton Gins, Feeders,
Condensers, Presses, Cotton-Seed Oil Mills, Ice
Machinery, Shafting, Pulleys, Tanks, Pumps,
Wind-Mills, Etc. Write for prices and disc’ts.
FITS stopped free by Dr. Kline’r Gre at
N’eiive Restorer. No Fits after first day’s
use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and $2 trial
bottle free. Dr. Kline. 031 Arch St., Pliila., Pa.
i 1 8 P
f ' * * K ” T\
COPYRIGHT 1890
In the train
of diseases that follow a tor¬
pid liver and impure blood,
nothing can take the place
of Dr. Pierce’s Golden Med¬
ical Discovery. Nothing will,
after you have seen what it
does. It prevents and cures
by removing the cause. It
invigorates the liver, blood, purifies
and enriches the sharp¬
ens the appetite, improves di¬
gestion, and builds up both
strength and flesh, when re¬
duced below the standard
of health. For Dyspepsia,
“ Liver blood-taint Complaint,” it’s Scrofula, posi¬
or any a
tive remedy. It acts as no
other medicine does. For that
reason, it’s sold as no other
medicine is. It’s guaranteed the
to benefit or cure, or
money is refunded.
SMITH’S
WORM OIL WORMS 3PO H
IS A SAFE AND SURE REMEDY.
Sold Everywhere. 25 Cents.
r%xnrsxo»a-Dm A disabled. 12 lee for Increase. *u souhebsi 28 years
Write ex
■ perience. for Law*. A.W. McCokmick
Sons. Washinstoh. D. C. & Cincinnati. O.
wm t * *
* *
S *
♦
%
FOR THE
CIVE IT TO
TEETHING CHILDREN,
IT WILL SAVE THEIR LIVES.
DON’T let your druggist or merchant per¬
suade you that something else will do
as well, for it WON’T.
«A/N/ i A4 , ^V , *S/N'
LOVELL ni ft
1 STRICTLY HIGH GRADE IN EVERY PARTICULAR. ,
kU Send six cents In stamp* ter ear 100-page illustrated Catalogue ot
CatalogoeFREE, Guns, Rifles. Revolvers, Sporting Goods of All Kinds, etc.
Bicycle Fil.T, AUNTS CO. BOSTON, MASS.
JOHN I*. LOl -
ptSO’S REMEDY nut aiAuua—oesi. Easiest to use.
-L cheapest. Relief is immediate. A cure is certain. For
Cold in the Head it has no cfiuai.
CATAR R H
It Is an Ointment, of which a small particle Is applied to tho WM,
nostrils. Price, 50c. Sold by druggists or scut by mall. ■■
Address, E. T. Hazkltine, Warren. Pa.
4 ft
Nr
jeiLi
ONE ENJOYS
Both the method aud results when
Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant
and refreshing to the taste, and acta
gently Liver yet promptly on the Kidneys, the
and Bowels, cleanses sys¬
tem effectually, dispels colds, head¬
aches and fevers and cures habitual
constipation. Syrup of Figs ia tho
only remedy of its kind ever pro¬
duced, pleasing to the taste and ac¬
ceptable to the stomach, prompt in
its action and truly beneficial ia its
effects, prepared only from the most
healthy and agreeable substanceB, its
many excellent qualities commend it
to all and have made it the most
popular Syrup remedy of Figs known. is for Bale in 50c
and $1 bottles by all leading drug¬
gists. Any reliable druggist who
may not have it on hand will pro¬
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it. Do not accept oaf
substitute.
CALIFORNIA FIB SYRUP CO.
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. M.K.
LOUISVILLE. KY. NEW YORK.
c ^ V
—> X
.wr-v*,
3
\
New styles oe vest chains, we have In
large variety, as well as the latest designs of
Bearf pins.
In the matter of precious stones, our stock
is without a parallel in the South, Don’t
think of buying without seeing our stock. We
are the only merchants In Atlanta in our line
who import goods directly Whitehall from Europe. J. P.
Btekena & Bro., 47 fit., Afiattta . Go.
Send for catalogue.
£ 633 ; PAINT.
7348PAPERS
rith Where active we have merchant*—~Ii« no Agent will & M*—N* arraiij
any
~ /y^nSMITHDEAL » wwSfSWSjS
COLLEGE. Richmond, Va, 1
pa ”
u>
HEADACHE. m.Braass& Send HVcentg m StampsJtor TAYIiOR a SAM¬
PLE. if your dealer does not KEEP IT.
BROS., Manufacturers, Winst on* N. C.
fftl HI Ml 8M5 M ■ f§ n ■■ NM and Whiskey Habite with
B cured at home
wVAtlanta,tia. Office 104)!, Whitehall St.
SICK Weak, Nertouk, Wretched mortals get
well rad keep well. Health Help*
tells how. 50cts. a year. Sample Y. copy
free. Dr. J. H. DYB. Editor. Buffalo. N.
A.. N. U...... .......Twenty-Six, '91-
CURES DIARRHEA.
DYSENTERY,
CRAMPS.
The Best Thing
BOWELS
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