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SI 7 V mss RDEN
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IULL F:
* ATS AND MICE IN THE GRANARY.
1'he only effective way to keep out rats
And mice from a granary is to line the
aides as well as the door and sills with
tin to a bight of two feet. It can bo
done at a modeluto expense, and will
shut out thieving rodents effectually.
The loss and constant trouble from this
one cause is very great on some farms.
Frequently stock will rofuse grain that
has a taint of rats or mice, anti should
ur.t be permitted to endure it while you
have power to remedy the difficulty.—
New York Independent.
FEItN CULTURE.
A constantly warm and moi3t atmos¬
phere is essential to ferns. The stock of
terns can be increased by dividing the
roots in early spring, but when growing
for profit, it is more usual to bring on
seeding pioduced from spores sown in
late summer or autumn. The spores
should be sown in pans of fibrous peat
mixed with sand aud broken crocks,
pressed firm, and kept perpetually moist
by beiDg stood in saucers of water. The
pan should be shaded with paper until
germination has taken place. As soon
as the seedlings are large enough to han¬
dle they should be pricked off into
thumb pots. Tho best time for repot¬
ting ferns is February, aud large plants
may then be divided. In potting on
ferns the roots should be disturbed as
little as possible, only the surface soil
should be removed, and the outer part of
the ball. Once in two years is often
enough to repot ferns as a rule; old
plants require repotting less often than
young ones. While repotting, old and
withered fronds may be cut away, but at
no other time of the year should the
leaves be cut back. The roots should
never be allowed to get dry in winter or
summer.—New York World.
best time to shear siieep.
Tliere is considerable differ cnee of
to . tl.e nest . time .. for , shearing .
opinion as
sheep. Leaving out ot the account the
few who shear very early sometimes
even in wmtci), in order to fit their an-
unals for Show purposes, there are two
classes of owners—one who think it best
to remove the wool from their sheep as
soon as a few warm days come in the
spring, and another who believe it o be
wise to wait until the nights as well as
trie days are warm, anu the summer heat
has become strong and permanent It
seems to us that there are valid object-
tions against either extreme, if deprived
of their wool too early in the season,
shqep suffer a great deal from cold ami
are also liable to contract severe lung
diseases. The removal of a fleece of
average weight must make a great dif-
ierence in the condition of the animal,
and a which i • , it •. cannot . safely ( i uith- -.i
one
stand in cold weather or if it is soon to
be exposed to sharp winds or heavy
storms. On the other hand, the heat of
some of the ear.y summer days is very
their 'fleeces, and roust 'not only be "ex-
tremely uncomfortable but also decddedly
Si d telr tVilvoiV'either 0 :?
these extremes. It is not well to do the
until ... the weather ,, is warm . and i
shearing
there can be no gain, and there may be
much loss, in delaying the work after
that ,, , time .* has arrived.-American • 'a Dairy-
lnaD '
HORSES sriorrl.13 WEAR LIGHT SHOES.
Horses are commonly made to carry
too heavy shoes. The shoe is designed
merely to protect the hoof, and the
lighter it can be made aud still serve its
purpose, the better for the horse. Horses
tnat are devoted to farm work, and on
land where there are few or no stones,
may dispense with shoes, except while
the ground is frozen. This would be of
great advantage to the horse, to say
nothing of the saving in the horseshoer’s
bill. But most horses requires shoeing,
and the shoes worn are generally heavy
iron ones, Steel shoes can be made
lighter, will wear longer, and the first
cost is not so much more that it need pre¬
vent their being used. Light horses and
driving horses should always wear them.
For horses of 1100 pounds weight, and
with well-shaped, upright feet, the fore
shoes should weigh about one pound
each, and the hind ones twelve ounces.
If four ounces are added to each shoe, let
us see what a difference it will make.
In plowing, cultivating, mowing, reap¬
ing and many other farm operations, miles a
horse will walk from teu to twenty
a day, aud advance about four feet at a
step. At each step the horse lifts a half
pound extra o'n its two feet or COO pounds
in every mile. In a day’s work of fifteen
miles, they would lift 9900 pounds extra
or nearly five tons. If the force required
to lift this five tons of iron couid be ex¬
pended in the work the horse is doing,
much more could be acco.mpolished. wonder In
the light of these facts, is it any
that when young horses begin to wear have
shoes, they soon grow leg-weary,
their step shortened aud acquire a slower
walking gait?—American Agriculturist.
MANAGEMENT OF GEESE.
Although geese are aquatic birds, they
do not require water except at tho breed¬
ing season, when they need a stream or
pond to mate in. They are mostly grass
eaters, and five of them will eat as much
grass as a sheep, and spoil more, unjess
the pasture is changed frequently. Dur¬
ing the winter they are usually fed on
oats, with cabbage leaves and chopped
onions, of which' they are especially
fond. For rearing goslings, young the gan¬ old
ders only should he used, as
ones will pair off with one goose and
neglect the others. A young one will
take care of three or four geese. A suit¬
able place for the nests is to be provided,
and short str-‘w, old rags, and such ma¬
terial is given to them for making their
nests; or a straw nest may be made in a
shallow box for each goose. The geese
are shut up at night and kept in until
they have laid. The eggs are removed
and kept in a cool place until the litter
is complete, when the bird is set and
shut up and fed and watered daily.
When the goslings appear they and the
goose are put on a good grass pasture,
which is all they will need, but where
pasture cannot be provided the food may
consist of stale, dry bread, soaked in
sweet skimmed milk, curd of sour milk,
and chopped onions. Later, oats steeped
in sweet milk may be given, and by good
feeding of this kind the young birds
will grow rapidly. with It is necessary to
supply them small pebbles unless
they can obtaiu them otherwise. A good
gander should be kept, as these birds
vary much in disposition, some being
quarrelsome and apt to kill the goslings
and especially young chickens. Ganders
will be serviceable for twenty years.—
New York Times.
FLAVORING BEEF.
Rich, juicy beef is the product of
breed and feed. If a good breed is ob¬
tained, a good system of feeding then
becomes essential for the highest perfec¬
tion of meat. There is such a thing as
flavoring beef by feeding it,and breeders
could make a distinct and noble depar¬
ture in this line. Feeding in this way
is not simply to give tho auimals any¬
thing that they can convert into flesh,
but only the food that will add to the
beef certain flavors and richness which
will make the meat desirable.
It is the wild celery which makes the
delicious flavor of the meat of the
canvas-back duck. Chestnuts and other
nu *' 3 make turkeys and chickens pro-
duce meat of a superior flavor and it is
now demonstrated beyond S a doubt that
clover . made P k (a refcrable to
enti re i y from corn. In many
other ways every i article of food flavors
mcat ’ Itulld £ it better or worse for
° m , th(j aQiraa(
.
"
t previous P to slaughter, ” beef takes
frQm he food T ivea t0
[ ^ correct m( thod of
^ k Q * ; 7e the cattle oaly * sucU
aU the meat sweet jui
aromatic . A really / choice article in
b( * f ’ vell M in an J other food, will
“ B ht af r aad paid r for at
°
fa ®he
feeding f for flavor is not con-
flned entirel J t0 attle . The same truth
holds . .. the . poultry ,, and other ..___
among swine
aclm careful f a 3 ‘. in feeding , ^cessful their dairymen cows, are because very
°
J , h food will directly * af-
milk . Rich julcy ^
JuQe
which is very different from the butter
^ {wm ^ dry _ CQarse todder of the
willtcr ‘ 11 is inl P 0rtant Jf aU
“tlm^SSufSftJ? it
adopt simBar methods in their feeding,
Vary the diet and feed for bone, muscle
and fat, but also feed for flavor. Even
I10 j J ulce or fl avor i 3
not desirable. , . *,
very
The French £ produce for market the
^ the worldt and they
have succeeded in studying the question
in this respect better than any othei
farmers. The meat of their poultry ex¬
cels, and is of a remarkable flavor. They
do it by feeding the fattening birds
with cloves and spices, which become
mixed in the meat so that there is a de¬
licious aroma from it all of the time. So
excellent are their methods in fattening
poultry that farmers of other countries
adopt their rules.
Feeding for flavor is thus founded up¬
on a law of nature which should not be
overlooked. There is a wide field for
investigation and experiment. The im¬
provement of poultry, swine and cattle
flesh is annually becoming more essen¬
tial, and those who lead in this respect
are sure to reap the profits.—Boston
Cultivator.
FARM AND GARDEN NOTES.
Do not dog the cows.
Do not frighten the sheep.
Look out for the gentle ball.
Do not keep the hogs in a filthy pen.
Pruning should not be done after
blossom time.
Oil meal will “fat” up the skim mdk
for the calves.
There is no sueh a thing as a moth¬
proof bee-hive.
A wet fleece is not comfortable even
in hot weather.
Eight is the proper number of frames
in auy bee brood chamber.
Clipping the wings of a queen bee
does not injure her usefulness, but is the
mutilation necessary?
Bees are only made profitable in pro-
portion to the manner and degree of in¬
telligence with which they are man¬
aged.
The best time to transfer bees is at
the beginning of apple blooming. Then
there are not many bees, and but little
honey.
Women can prune as well as men, and
often better, but are apt to find it tiring
to stand on the rounds of a ladder.
Ladders made with broader steps are bet.
ter for them.
If our crops were properly diversified
a nd we were growing every product oi
agriculture that we use, with the area
n ow being cropped, there could not
possibly be any over-production.
SCIUSTIHC AND INDUSTRIAL.
Compressed air io to be used for run-
ning the street cars in Leavenworth, Kan.
Bain making experiments, conducted
in India, have resulted in eornpiet*
failure.
The signal officer at Cape May, N. J.,
reports the discovery of a new tish re¬
sembling the sea trout.
Platinum has been discovered in tin
Southern Hills, twenty-five miles south¬
west of Bapid City, South Dakota.
The bark of the Australian Mimosa n
now used as tannin for hides to make
morocco leather, as it gives a slightly
reddish tint.
The redevelopment of lost limbs is de¬
clared by an English naturalist to be not
unusual among insects, in which it may
take place either during the larvel oi
pupal stage.
ft is said that in all the forests of the
earth there are no two leaves exactly the
mine. ft is also said that amid all peo-
pies of the earth there are no two faces
precisely alike.
Wood glucose bread is used in Ger-
many as feed for cattle. The cellulose is
transformed into grape su ar, and added
to it is about forty per cent, of meal of
wheat, oats, or rye.
A specimen of capped petrel, a bird
supposed to be an extinct or at least a
lost species, was found , recently , . in ,, Eng-
land. The original home ol the petrel is
said to have been the islands ot St. Do-
mingo and Gaudaloupe.
The viscid secretion of galls upou tho
British oak attract small auts,' which,
according to Dr. E. Rathav, benefit the
tree by killing great quantities of cater¬
pillars and otner injurious insects. In a
single day the inhabitants of a single
ants’ nest may destroy more than 1U0,-
000 insects.
An insect of South America has it:
fangs so like the flower of the orchid that
smaller insects are tempted into its jaws,
while certain spiders double themselves
up in the angle between the leaf stalk
and the stem, and so closely resemble
flower buds that their uususpecting prey
approach their destruction.
Wonderful thiugs are related concern¬
ing the work of photography of the stars
now in nrogress at the Cape of Good
Hope, South Africa. One negative, rep-
resenting a space ouly one-fourth the
apparent diameter of the moon, con-
tained impressions of 50,000 stars, most
el which are invisible to the eye even
when , a , telescope , ot .., high . *__ power is used.
Of all menagerie stock, the monkey
tribe is the most precarious. ’I he com-
parative comfort of a roof tree does not
compensate for the activity of their
natural life, and, considering that they
feed on fresh fruits in their primeval
forests, it is not amazing that after a
time an unlimited dietary of hazel nuts
and stale buns is apt to disagree with the
quadrumanal digestion.
A new evaporating apparatus for sugar
beet juices is attracting attention in Ger¬
many. The temperature aud pressure
are uniform throughout each compart¬
ment. Juices are introduced from the
top upou tubes which are not hermeti- , .
cally closed. Toe concentrated juice
that falls to the bottom is drawn off by
pumps, and the juices are not allowed to
remain at the bottom of a compartment.
Consul-General Playfair, it) his report
upon the agriculture of Algeria, gives
some details about the measures taken
there to preserve the crops from the dep-
redations of the locusts. Iu the De¬
partment of Algiers the amount of labor
with this end in view equalled 20,931)
days’ labor of monitors, 234,417 days’
labor of soldiers, 1,195,573 days’ labor
of natives, and 4fi,96l days’ labor oi
animals, ’ to say J nothing -p of private meas-
ures of protection t .. adop , ed j rm lhe um »
thus expended was nearly 3,000,000 .,
but with the result of saving nearly tho
whole of the crops.
A Successful Sub marine Boat.
George C. Baker lias demonstrated
that water can be navigated at any rea¬
sonable depth below the surface. A final
test of his submarine boat, upon which
he has been at work since December,
1890, was made in the River Rouge, five
miles from Detroit, and was entirely sat¬
isfactory. deep,
The river is ouly sixteen feet
which admits of the. boat being sub
merged two feet. It was run up aud
down and across the stream several
times, turning, sinking and risiDg at the
pilot’s pleasure. The boat is cigar¬
shaped, made of oak, the shell being
forty feet long, fourteen feet high, nine
feet wide amidship and seven inches
thick. The motive power is a storage
battery of 260 cells, which is believed tc
be the largest ever made. This also gen¬
erates light. The course of the boat is
directed by a pilot who stands in a
small couning tower which is provided
with lookout holes. It is necessary, in
taking bearings, to rise to the surface,
but in so doing only a few iuches of the
top of the tower appears above the sur-
face. With the conning tower hermeti¬
cally sealed, the interior of the boat con¬
tains 1500 cubic feet of air. The wheels
are on each side, midway between bow
and stern and one foot below the centei
line. The boat is raised and lowered by
letting water into the hold and by de-
fleeting the side wheels. Mr. Baker is
confident that this will eventually revo¬
lutionize present methods of naval war
fare. —St. Louis Republic,
A Cow and Calf as a Wedding Fee.
Some of the tribes of India have a
marriag# custom which calls the for the
presencirof a cow and calf at cere¬
mony. The principals and the priests
drive a cow and a calf into the water,and
there the bride and bridegroom, as well
as the clergyman, clutch the the cow's
tail, while the officiating personage pours
water upon it from a glass vessel aud ut-
ters a religious formula. The couple are
now united in wedlock, and the priest,
for his part in the ceremony, claims the
animal, and also receives auy sum in
money which the groom thinks it ueces-
sary to propitiate the idols.—Yankee
Blade.
Where Perfume Oils Come Prom.
' The Amonoan made perfumes are ex
aotly aa good in quality as the French,”
•ay* a druggist. “Tha popular impres
sion that many of our best extracts for the
handkerchief and t diet-tearing tho names
of sweet flowers are simply chemical imi¬
tations of the genuine odors is entirely
wrong. The fact is that genuine American oils of
flowers, of made, which all imported, pure nrincirally per¬
fumes are are
from France, and genuine rrursk and am¬
bergris, the two most important and val¬
ued bases for tine perfumes, must be ob¬
tained in other countries. While the best
American made perfumes are equal in
quality to the finest Freich preparations, had
such could not be the fact if we not
that country to depend upon this for our is that es¬
sential oils. The reason for
no entirely successful effort has been
made here to ratse flowers of sufficient
richness and density of perfume to sup¬
ply essential oils in sufficient quantities
to make it profitable to extract them,
although it is held that the odorous
blooms of some of the southern states,
especially Florida and other gulf states,
have the same bouquet as the same flow-
er9 grown in southern France, that great
garden of commercial odors.”—New York
Kvooing Sun.
Fasting is Beneficial.
“I h'.ve never felt any but good effects
from experiment,” said Dr. H. S.
T9nner> whose f a9l of forty days some
years ago made him famous. “Iu fact, I
am should firmly convinced forty that if a man
fast for days every ten years
in his life, there is no reason why he
should not live to be a hundred years
old. He renews his youth every time ha
does it. The truth is that the American
people are all digging their graves with
their teeth. I am a strict vegetarian.
I eat but two meals a day and nothing
at all after noon. Meat eating is expen-
sive at the best. You feed an animal ten
pounds of grain to get a part of one
poun( j 0l - mea t. R is like putting teu
g 0 i ( j dollars in the bank and then a
year afterward giving the bank a receipt
f 0 r fifty cents.”—Chicago Inter-Ocean,
An Exclusive Meat Diet is Injurious.
Without for a moment lending counte-
nance to the vegetarian who would cut
off butcher’s meat from human consump-
tfon, we may concede to him that animal
unbalanced by a due proportion of
the “kindly fruits of the earth,’ is du¬
tme ly prejudicial to the consumer, par-
ticularlv J to the resident iu cities, whose
ni[ie3 o( open air exercise are few
aud far between. We are still in want
, d guc fl a series of experiments on the
nutriment and sustaining values of foods,
vegetable and animal, as the late Prof,
parkes, of Netley, instituted with ^uch
conclusive results on the various kinds of
drink, from water up to spirits.—London
Lancet,
Pleuty Like Her.
Mrs. Spankers—“I wish to get a house
in a quiet neighborhood.”
Agent—“Yes, madam, we can house accom¬ in
modate you. I have a vacant a
street which is as quiet as a Sabbath
morn all the year round . No barking
kiiTd.” do ora ( no children, no nuisince of any
Mrs. Spanker—“That’s exactly what I
want. How lucky I happened to come
to you! How many rooms has it!”
Agent—“Ten.” “That’s just _ right. Ve
Mrs. good Spanker deal of We have nine
need a room.
children. I hope there’s space at tlie
hack for a dog-house. We have three.”
Some Snakes Easily Tamed.
The ringed . or common snake is . easily
‘ ara « d - and W! ! 1 P la ! B ‘y rtco - t ‘ lze ,h,!
master who feeds f and caresses it, some-
tiraes even ne8tli ng ” spontaneously ^ h ad in some
” of his dres Mr . BeU one
hjch wben let out of its box would
crawl up the sleeve of his coat and hiss
at any stranger that meddled with it.—
Quarterly Review.
Lady (with high hat)—“I opera-glass, beg your
pardon, but I forgot my
Would you kindly lend me yours just r a
moment?”
Tyrant man (in seat behind)—“Very
sorry, madam, but I need it to sit on.
To Cleanse the System
Effectually yet gentiy, whoa costive or bil¬
ious, or when the blood is impure or si uggish,
to permanently cure habitual constipation,
to awaken the kidneys and liver to a healthy
activity, without irritating or weakening
them, to dispel headaches, cold or fa vers, uss I
Syrup of Figs.
Tho only true way to conquer circumstances
is to be a greater circumstance to yourself.
BROwn’s Iron Bitters General cures Dyspepsia,Mala^ Debility.
ria. Biliousness and Gives
Strength, aids Digestion, tones the nerves—
creates appetite. The best tonic for Nursing
Mothers, weak women and children.
A judicious reticence is difficult to learn, but
it ia one of the greatest lessons of life.
iWMfe; Thousands
Of dollars 1 spent trying
yaw to find a cure for Salt
: i Rheum* which I had 13
mm . years. Physicians said
they never saw so severe
a case. My legs, back and
arms were covered by the
.humor. I began to take
ia t *PARILLA, ! HOOD’S SARSA-
“ and tlje
Ml’ .. S. G. Derry, flesh been heal¬
me more
thy, the sores soon healed, the scales fell
off, J was soon able to give up bandages and
crutches,and a happy man I was.” G. Deu-
ry, 45 Bradford Street, Providence, R. i.
HOOD’S PILLS cure liver ills, constipa¬
tion, biliousness, jaundice and sick headache.
“Mothers’
Friend”
MIKES CHILD BIRTH EAST.
Colvin, La., Dee. 2,1886.—My wife used
MOTHER'S FRIEND before hor third
^ntoomentandeaysshewouidnot be
without 14 for
D o C k M IL LS.
Sent by express on receipt “(price, $1.50 p« b°t-
te ' 00 ° 0 lerj nau re '
braofielo REGULATOR CO.,
r£N SALK BY ALL DIUmaiATS. ATLANTA. GA.
A Two-Dollar Prewnt.
Mother— "Why did you put this hor¬
rid postage stamp on this bcantilul little
Japanese birthday vase you bought for your sister's
Dutiful present?'”
Bon — ‘‘You gave me two dol¬
lars, an’ said l shouldn’t spend any of it
’cept for dollar sister’s present, an’ the vase cost
only a nn’ ninety-nine cents, an' so
I bought a postage stamp with the other
cent an’ stuck it on.”
Up to the Times.
Little Boy (doorkeeper at Juvenile
circus performance)—“Where’s your live
cents?”
Small Visitor—“I come on a invita¬
tion."
IJttle Boy—“Yes, everybody got invi-
tions, out ouly those wot pays five cents
can get in. This is a reg’lar McAillister
show, this is.”
Deafuea# tau’t bo Cured
Hy local Applications, us they cannot reach tbu
diseased portion of the ear. There ia only on«
way to cure deafness, and that i« by constitu¬
tional remedies. Deafness is caused by an in¬
flamed condition of the mucous lining of the
Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets j Q .
flamed you have a rumbling sound or imper¬
fect hearing, and when it is entirely closed,
deafness ia the result, and unless the inflam¬
mation can V taken out and this tube re-
•tored to its normal condition, hearing will be
destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are
caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an in¬
flamed condition of the mucous bu rfaces.
W e will give Ono Hundred Dollars for any
case of deafness (caused by catarrh) that we
cannot cure by taking Hall's Catarrh Cure.
Bend for circulars, free.
F. J. Chemiy * Co„ Toledo, o.
Sold by Dru gg'gya , iso;
--
The fear of future evil is in itself the great-
e " s '-----
—
Malaria cured and eradicated . from the
system Ac*s'?lke^I by brown’s iron Bitters, which eu-
tionf* charm on personVlii general
111 health, giving now energy and strength,
As every thread of gold is valuable, so is
every moment of time.
Only One Ever Printed.
CAN YOU FIND THE WORD?
There is a 3-inch display advertisement in
this paper, this week, which has no two words
alike except one word. The same is true of
each new one appearing each week, from The
Dr. Harter Medicine Co. This house places a
“Crescent” on everything they make and I
publish’ Look for it, send them the name j j
of the word and they will return you book,
BEAUTIFUL. LITHOGRAPHS Or SAMPLES FREE. !
Wm. Sprague Smith, Providence, It. I
writes: “I find Bradycrotine always M
headache.” All druggists, fifty cures
cents.
Beecham’s Pills are a painless and effectual !
remedy box. For for all bilious disorders. 25 cents a I
sale by all druggists.
- -Xour vvV-
BU?-
—— I
breaking out leg (
I had a malignant wascured on my dwell ;
below the knee, and sound a r
StXSidiSK m2 ESS
to do me any good. Will C. Beaty,
Yorkville, S. C
TRADE MARK-
I was troubled from childhood with an ag- j
srav ated ca se of Tetter, and three bottles of •
s:s;s H I cured mo permanently. Wallace Mann, ;
_— Mannville, I. T. j
Our hook on. Blood and Skin Diseases mailed
free. Swift Specific Co., Atlanta, La.
‘August 99 !
—
“One of my neighbors, Mr. John
Gilbert, has been sick for a long j
time. All thought him pastrecovery. I
He was horribly emaciated from the j
inaction of his liver and kidneys.
It is difficult to describe his appear- !
ance and the miserable state of his
health at that time. Help from any
source August seemed Flower impossible. and He effect tried
your the
upon him was magical. It restored
him to perfect health to the great
astonishment of his family and
friends.” John Quibell, Holt, Ont.®
®©®©@®©©®©
A torpid liver ia the source of dyspep*
^ sia, slok headaches constipation, piles*, ^
TuffsTiny Pills
have a specific effect on the liver, re¬
storing: it to healthy action. »5cts.
r m
0 § 4
P“th NO lLt B E D IS E F A. and mints
e s. m which stain
tlio hands, injure the iron, and burn off.
The Durable, Rising Sim Stove Polish is Brilliant, tor Odor¬
less, and the consumer pays no tin
or glass package with every purchase.
LOVELL DIAMOND CYCLES Sni
In Wot PneumaticCushion Ladle? and Cents. and Six Solid styles Tires. Jvk l| |
«« a
V Diamond Frame, Steel Drop Forgings, Steel
\ Tubing, Adjustable Ball Bearings to all running parts,
including Pedals. Suspension Saddle.
Strictly HIGH GRADE in Every PArtie uImt.
Send 6 rents in stamps lor oar 100-page illustrated eataTi
Bley el e Cstahpe FkBK. ioyne of Gan g, Eli tes, B erolr ers. Sporting Go ods, etc. |
JOHN P. LOVELL ARMS CO., Mfrs., 147 Washington St.,BOSTON, MASS- IV’
i
KINSHIP MACHINE CO.,
0-V ATLANTA, CA.
iv Cotton Gins and Cotton Presses.
A O
Up-Packing, Down-Packing, Self-Packing, Steel Screw#,
4 inches and 5 inches »n diameter.
Our Cotton Cin with New Patent Revolving Card
.Straightens mantis the the Fibre and improves the sample so that it com.
Highest Market Price.
ALL THE LATEST IMPROVEMENTS.
Gins furnished with Revolving: Heads when wanted^
WfilTE 2TOB OiaCULASUI 4iJD VRICJCS.
r,
y (
"I copywcht\
Set right
— all the proper functions of wo¬
manhood. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite
Prescription is the remedy. It
regulates and and promotes their obstruc¬ ac¬
tion, removes the
tions and suppressions misery. which the cause
trouble and At two
critical periods in a woman’s life——
the change from girlhood to woman¬
hood, and, later, the “ change of life ”
—it pecially is a valuable perfectly safe and an es¬
remedial agent,
that can produce only good results.
ft’s a powerful, invigo; strengthening ting tonic,
and a soothing and
nervine; a legitimate medicine—
purely and vegetable, carefully perfectly by harm¬
less— adapted, an
experienced delicate needs. physician, to woman’s
larities, For all the weaknesses derangements, irregu-
and peculiar to
the sex, the “Favorite Prescription” 1
is • a remedy , so certain . . that , it . can , be
f^rante.ed. If it doesn’t give satis-
faction in every case, the money IS
^turned. No Other medicine for
women is sold in this way.
No other medicine can be.
* ;:v
r THE
If ONLY TRUE
IRON
-TONIC
Will purify BLOOD, regulate
KIDNEYS, tier, remove LIVER
disor build strength, renew
appetite, vigororyouth. restore Dyspepsia, health and
Indigestion, ing absolutely that erad tiredfeel¬ leatedl
Slincl brightened, brain
i n •vver increased
ones , nerves, mus¬
cles, receive complaints new force,
suffering their from it, nad pe-
i culiar to sex, using Return*
HL cheeks,beautifies a safe, speedy cure. Complexion,
VAjfl rose hlnA.n bloom c Mn u ,
Sold ev "erywhere. All genuine goods bear
“C resceni it.” Scud us 2 cent stamp for 32-pag#
pamp Qplilet.
08. HARTER MEDICINE CO.. St. Louis, Mo.
DH. S. C. PARSONS,
t “EMALE REGULATING PIUS
v Made for women and the
diseases peculiar toiler box.
fj J etmal They flow, regulate safe the and men-
are re.
A] liable, have been sold foi
ffl years, and cure all discharge*
W and inflammations of the
8L womb.
e< \ Sold by druggists and
•< Baft? sent by mail.
V Price S&X.OO.
* Dr-S. C. Parsons. “Family
Physician” tells how to get well and keep well;
400 pages, profusely illustrated. For pam¬
phlets, question lists,or with private information free
of charge, address stamp,
DR. S. C. PARSONS, Savannah. Go.
A
* fectual. purify (he The blood, arc safe and ef-i Z
0 .^VAa best general family
• /&> I medicine K&.iBt.Si: known for Biliousness,!
6 «i»,‘ ^Basaa Mgr"
of Appetite, Mental Depression,#
® Painful Digestion, Pimples, Sallow#
tom
DROPSY Treated FREE.
Positively Have cured Cured thousan with ds Vegetable Remedies
of case's. (Jure patients pre-
nouneed hopeless b.v disappear; beat physicians. From first noa#
symptoms rapidly in 10 days two thirds of all
symptoms removed, bend for free book of testimonials
of miraculous cures. 10 days’ treatment free by
mail. If you order trial, send lOc. in stamps to pay post¬
age. DR. II. II. BREEN X: SONS. Atlanta, Ga.
KILLER.
Du teller’s Fly Killer is sure death. Every sheat will
kill a quart of flies, and secure peace while you ea W,
quiet when you read anti the comforts of :v U &p ia
the morning. Get Dutcher's and secure best re rtlllU.
FRED’K DUTCHER DRUG CO.,
St. a lbajsb, Vt.
_ _
Mg'! H Best, Plso’s Easiest .Remedy to Use, for and Catarrh Cheapest. is the OB
Sold by druggists or sent by moil,
50c. E. T. Hazeltlne, Warren, Pa.
$5
mrlfo iHtli .old.ll—r or nlokfl. plating. Koexp.rten.f. U.II Dtu. N. C.,,C.limbtu,u. ..pit.! KTwy
bou.e !.guod. adeding .
PATENTSswiSS:
A.. N. U.. ........Twonty-four, ’92.