Newspaper Page Text
Read (he Newspaper,.
Wise Father—"My son, if yon would
succeed in life, you must form two
good habits. First, yon must always
attend strictly to your business; and,
second, you must subscribe for a news
paper, and read it every day.”
Bon—“Why shonlel I take a news
paper?” Wise Father—"Because if you ares
not known as a newspaper reader, yon
will bo constantly called away from
your business to serve on juries. ”—
Jfew York Weekly.
Mr. Longear—“By the way, did
you ever know that long cars are a
sign of generosity?” Mr. Dong
Miss Beauti~“Of course
car. They are a sigu that nature has
been generous."
A Mlngnlar P«rm of .tlonoinnuln.
There l« a das, of peep e, rational enough In
other respects, who sre certainly monoma
niacs slantly In trying etonfna experiments Uiem-elvee. They their a re stom- eon
their howeb, livers upon i their kid
achs, their an When thews
neys with really trashy nostrum,. if they would
organs are out of order, they
only ij-t- Jlretetter’s gtonmeh Wttere,
would. If not houeiesely Insane, peredvs its
»U|e-r,ority.
Kren In dull times the: teamster elors a
driving hustness.
Tonic. It rebuild* aplandid tho {Hood medicine and strengthen* for weak
the mueclca. debt. A
mid I to ted person*.
J$! lue A* Here. Take hold, but don't lake
Dr. Kilmer’s Hwahp- Boot cure*
all Kidney and Bladder trouble*.
Pamphlet and Oon»nltailon free.
Laboratory Binghamton, N. >.
The be*t legacy you can give your children
is a life they c an emu!
tfltt llua. 8 tbo. Clftta From One llu». Weed.
This remarkal? e, almoat unheard-of, yield
Wa# reported to the John A. Hal seer Ht?od 1 o.,
La CroBBf, WH„ by Frank Winter, of Mon
tana, who planted ono bushel of Great Nortli
ern Oat-, carefully tilled and Irrigated rame,
and lit; I if veil that In 1804 he can three grow from hundred one
bu he! of Great Northern Oat a
buOieK It’aawo idarfu' oat. If you wh<i<
CC»THia OUT AND KI’.NO IT Wifll 8c. DOHtage to
the above firm you will receive sample farm package l
. of above oat* and their mammot h
catalogue.
.UmlrarsffimiielTa Bronchial Troche*.” Price 86 ileie cents. uio of Sold ' 71^^?. only in
hoxeg.
.fnpnncae Tooth powder* Ueiiuln**.
A large box mailed for 10 cent*. Lapp Drug
Co., PM lad el jdi 1ft, Pa.
Jf aflllcded with Roreoye* u*e I>r. ImiaeThoinp
tojpH Eye-water.I)niggl«t* f ©II at 25c por bottle.
A wonderful stomach corrector -Beecham’8
Pills. 11(50' ham*" -no other*. 25 cen 1 * a box.
SHS-SS
t I ^
m m, «
Wa m Wy–p
m
Mr, Thomas <7. Barret
Mobile, Alabama.
A 1\T .XRptncr
**'* A Tit- W E-AC A 1 1
, ',:.i That Tired Feeling
full Strength and Appetite Given by
Hood’s Sarsaparilla.
The (o'towing Is from Mr. Thomas C. Bar
rett, of Mobile, Ala., a well known member of
the elty fire department, attached to Hook
and Ladder Oo., Wo. 4.;
*‘(\ L Hoad – Co., Lowell, Mass.
“I have boon taking Hood's Sarsaparilla aa
a flpring medudno and blood purifier. Itislho
best blood madicino I over used and for an ap
petiser it is oxcellont. I have taken noveral
different kinds of medicine) for the blood but
Hood's Ha s–poriUa has proved to he the l>est.
Hood's s, ;> Cures
lwMtRWbU.1 With inellK-ttlananel thattlrj*
feeling. After taking four bottles of Hood’s
Sarsaparilla I toll like a new man. I cannot
recommend Hood's Ssivaparlila to> highly."
TbomabC. JZ... __________________________J-—— Bahhiitt, Mobile, Alabima.
-----
HtuMl M nils Art. prompt ami effluent, yet>aty
i» action, t old by all druggist*. 85 uenta
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦•a
McELREES’
WINE OF CARDU1.
A
IS *wvS.
4ll AHUl
'll I: im
.
j
For Female Diseases.
*•******«***♦«♦<♦♦♦♦♦■♦♦♦•
W. I.. r><>r«T.A8 *0 SHOE
«q tiUtt custom work, costing Iron*
TmtfUtW $4 to $6, bent value for the money
HEHulnEfmTn Iff PIT \m stamped the world. the N.tme bottom. ami Every pnee
• % on *vib*U
vWU!^ V.LU pair warranted. Take no for full
Rati lute, ^t•e hKal pa|>crs ii««
nAHRpDo-^bL Tka description of our cmni
lues for ladies and gen
II w NiT tlemen or scud for 11
■ iHAtmitd Catalan*
MHRH'iATtAt 8TUA5 how to Or.
derby mall. IN^tagefrec. You can f ft
bargains of dealers who pttfh our shoes.
i
* la thekyrb fl. d
\ It Is Impor hM to purify the blood and i
Vtone iwS^RnVd.O^ffi’itta.SE? up t v ays em. Nothing ‘Joe* tin*
iSfMwtnl! 5‘Tiv. 1 --.'• !<1 Drim»i i, K-Vvml«lvvn : S
R:^^^mwSf‘:iGun...#
_____ A txllellilHK t I I i * i .11
*•*
The Opium Hftbit.
W. -!u*r*nle>ei to cure ih« opium disease Iu
t w attenti* m' "sa" fi 1 *.rSut
ORtm - i us t o., or b»ck Hox t At »t«m»Ga.
♦••••*••••••••***•*••***•••**•*•••* HAlMSiSiSffCtiewillGlim
Y LuitM. fuu.i iT*t«ut* iihrUirt*tto«»J, maw fiiton, 3 -- A
m I).V8pb,.sl», Heart hum. O^CWTh aaU A-ttDmic
\ Useful In Malaria sud Lever*. Ckonses thf T
m Teeth «u<t Promotes Ute Apatite. Sweeteo# A
V <he Breatii, Curea the Tobacco Habit. Endorsed f
-* A by tbe Aseuicai Fncu.ty. send for 10,15 or *•
«e»t paekojt*-- Silver. or ihsfal Yof<. J a
H.ALA1 , i*m West SJtft xr„
FOB FARM ASD GARDE!?.
•1ZB OV 8TAIA FOR A COW.
A moderate sized cow of 800 ponmela
weight may rest quite easy in a stall
three and one-half feet wide, The
floor may be no more than four anei
one-half feot long from manger to
end, when them is a manure gutter in
use. This size floor koops the cows
cleaner than a larger one. The par
titions between the stalls should be
long enough to prevent one cow from
standing sidewise, so that she may
step on the teats of the next one, an
accident which may bo very serious.
The safest tie is a chain having a ring
to rim on an iron bar, fitted in front
of tho food trough on one end, anil a
snap hook at the other end to fasten
to a ring in a leather strap on the
nock.—[New York Times.
HAI.VB you TURK WOUNDS.
Tree trimming is in order and many
largo limbs will be cut off unavoid
ably. No stump slioubl l>e left, says
tllB Germantown Telegraph, but the
cut should be made close to the trunk
anil the wound should be painted thor
oughly as soon as it 1ms seasoned for g
few weeks. Left to decay in the
weather it will soon admit water to the
heart of the tree, when rapid and cer
tain destruction follows. No prepara
tion is so cheap to buy and apply, and
nono more efficient, than good white
or red leael and linsecel oil. A very
little mineral paint may be adelcel if
desired to make the paint somewhat
harder. U»o no turpentine. Home
make the mistake of painting tho wound
as soon as it is made. Paint anil oil
cannot adhere to a wet surface, but
will peel off', or will let sap anil water
blister beneath it. Very soon the ap
plication is valueless. I have never
detected any ill effects from such use
of paint.
IIANDUNd POTATOES.
Wherever largo quantities of pota
toes are stored, a good deal of work is
required to keep them in fair condi
tion. At tho host there will be oon
gKlerable waste, but it will bo greatly
increased if the work is neglected. It
is impossible to keep potatoes in cel
lars close to the freezing temperature
lest by accident the temperature slioulel
go below tho freezing point. Usually
the temperature varies from 40 decrees
to 50 eiegrees, and at either of these)
degrees of warmth tho slightest ten
dency to rot spreads very rapidly.
There is considerable evaporation from
potatoes exposed to air, ami this aids
in spreading disease where it exists,
If there is absolute oertainty that po
tatoes are free from disease, they will
keep hotter in pits out of doors than in
cellars. This is especially true of seed
1 potatoes. As tho moisture evaporates
the eyes begin to swell and prepare to
grow, and whether allowed to remain
or broken off, there will be Iosh vigor*
oils shoots from such eye« than from
seed kept wholly secluded from air
and at a uniform temperature a little
nbove freezing, ’
ABSORB I NO SALT.
It is a mistaken idea, says Mr. Cur
tin, a dairyman, that butter absorbs
salt.. To tost the matter I worked up
a pound of butter into a solid lump
with Nlllt . This butter has been kept *
immersed m strong brine until the
present time, when I find on catting
it .. open no trace . of - salt, u except 4 . near
tl,0 Outer surface of tile ball. Salt
properly exists in butter only as elis.
solved in the water remaining in but
ter ; if found in tho butter in an nn
dissolveel state objection is made by
any gooel judge of butter. From this
reasoning it will bo se'eii that the
amount of salt in butter elopends
somewhat upon the amount of water
in the butter when tho salt is fielded.
Let ns suppose we have a quantity of
drained granular butter with 20 per
cent, of water iu it. Our object is to
salt only half the water, but that is an
impossibility; tve must salt, all tho
water in the butter. Hence), if we are
required to have one ounce) to the
pound in the finished product twice, as
much salt must be taken, for half of it
will come out in exuded brine. There
is no elanger of gottiug iu too much
provided no more salt is put in than
will elissolve. Sometimes twenty
pounds of butter, after salting iu the
granular state, will e'vudo three or four
quarts on revolving the churn and
working it- into a nn.ss, and sometimes
not more than a pint. Tho difference
is undoubtedly in the fineness or
coarseness of the granules when the
salt is aeUled.—[Chicago Times.
QUALITY OS- THE BUTTER.
The question whether the cow or
«»' dairyman is most responsible for
the of b «‘ ter was di8ou88e<l v
an eateemeil correspondent elsewhere.
His conelusion that no good butter is
to V)« made exeaept by carefully neat and
deoil processes is unquestionable. But
there is « eolisulerable dift'oreuiee in tho
guahty of milk, dependent partly on
the food that the Cow eats, and also to
gome extent on the individual or per
haps breed character of the cow.
Every dairyman knows that among a
number of cows all feed the same, the
inilk of some will be rioher in butter
fats and also higher colored than that
ot others. The .fersey and Guernsey
breeds of cows have generally this in
herited peculiarity. Their butteris also
firmer in cold weather than Is that o.f-na
tive tows. Wo beliovo this is •gener
ally itrne of cows that give tho richest
milk. It may show that th o untri
meat which in other cows gc.es to make
beof, fat or suet, in them g.oesinto tho
milk priil. These Jereey a nd Guernsey
cows hava for many generations been
fed with succulent and ’yet nourishing
and sweet food, the i/arsnip being the
root that is most often grown for that
piirfMise. In this country Jersoy and
Guernsey cows are. no more likely
than others to be fed on parsnips.
But if their inherited tendency to
produce rich milk and firm butter is
to the cumulative effect of several gen
erations have been fed on parsnips, is
there not danger that stopping thiH
feed jnay lead to ‘retrogression in these
valuable chnriicteristies? —• [Boston
Cultivator.
HEl.KCTION OF COBS FOR SEED.
Too much care «nd attention cannot
be given to tho selection of seeds
)
says the Wisconsin Agriculturist, and
most farmers woivld find it to their ad
vantage to see to it that they have the
very is'St that is to be obtained and
plenty of h.
The d’ifference in the grade of u few
quarts of seed becomes a difference in
bushels in the eiop. Hence it pays
to select it with the most perfect care.
This applies to cairn, and, though a lit
tle late for .this season, farmers might
lay this item ankle for another year
with profit to themselves. Make the
selection of the wed oars early, and
let, it lie the sole business for the time
being. Pass along tho rows with a
half-buehel basket, leaving the ears at.
the ends of therein) to be gathered up
by the team. Get the well-fuled,
early-maturing, deep-groined ears;
have an eye to tho stalk also, giving
preference ten those neither too dwarf
nor overgrown, to those having no
suckers, and to those bearing but
single ears.
One ear is enough. Whether iu hills
or drills tho corn should average a
stalk to each foot of row. With one
ear to tho stalk this would give a yield
of 100 bushels to the acre, Avoid
stalks showing any signs of disease.
Leave ft few husi'ts on so that tho ears
may be tied together in bunches -, then
hang thorn up where they will dry
thorcrughly befoBo cold weather. When
shelling this seed corn it. will pay to
moke a second selection of a few dozen
ot the very choice# oars for pedigree
seed to bo planted by itself the next
yoar from which to make further eelec
lion. Hi is method will improve one's
soed bo that ho need have no fear of
his running out.
farm and garden notes.
For woiik and backward lambs fresh
cow’s milk is nourishing.
Tho oarly bird gets the w orm, and
the early cthiok brings tho price.
The nia* satisfactory cross at the
Ottawa Station was the Brahma-Dork
iug.
Have regu lar times for feeding your
fowls, and feed tho morning mash
warm.
Gut. out your dead apple trees and
burn out the stamps deep into the
ground.
Never plant a yoiuig tree where an
old one has died—not if it can be
avoided.
The ilesli of fowls fattened in the
light is superior to that of those kept
in the dark.
In the garden it is more important
to retain moisture in the soil than to
got rid of it.
Hens which are forced for winter
eggs should not bo placed in the
breeding pens.
When a hen becomes too fat who
will either cease laying or lay only
softshelled eggs.
Guard against constipation in colts.
Bran meshes and roots fed judiciously
will remedy this complaint.
Many a fatal ease of pneumonia iu
horses has resulted from slow driving
after the animal has been heated from
rapid work.
Two or three-year-old turkeys are
better for breeding stock than young
bird*. It is a mistake to sell oil' all
the old stock each fall.
Don’t expect to have good, strong
yearlings and two-year-olds when
spring comes, unless you feed plenty
of clean, wholesome food during the
winter.
The man who breeds horses intelli
gently, breaks them carefully, teaches
them thoroughly, and develops their
speed, will always find a profit in the
business.
The majority of our best grapes are
inclined to bear too much anti over
cropping leads to retrogression iu the
size anti quality of the fruit as well as
the vigor of the vine.
Expecting a cow that stands unpro
tected in the cold winter blasts to give
a large quantity of good aud rich milk
is about as reasonable as to look for
cream from au iceberg.
Large donble-yolked eggs mean the
liens are becoming too fat. Remove
the difficulty by feeding more oats
mixed with chaff', to force tho fowls to
work for their livelihood.
It is a mistake to plant too many
varieties or only one, or a variety that
a .fruit-tree agent advises you to.
Plant Only those that have been well
tested in your neighborhood.
({FAINT AND CURIOUS.
Egytian children are never washed
nntil they are a year old.
The most dignified title among tho
Hollanders was stadtholder.
Bfindwiehes made by machinery are
tho result of a labor-saving device
just invented.
In France the doctor’s claim on the
estate of a deceased patient has pre
cedence over all others.
The roofs of Egytian temples are
composed of lingo blocks of stone laid
from column to column.
Fulton G. Berry, of Oentreville,
Cal., has on his plantation a tree
which last season produced 4,000
oranges.
There is a family in Boston named
Head in which there ure three broth
ers, named Abel Head, Earnest Head
and Willing Head.
Robinson Crusoe and a man Friday
appeared in connection with a eon
tested election case in New York State
a few years back.
A copy of a Chinese dictionary,
which is said to have been made in the
year 1100 15. <)., is preserved in the
museum at Fokin.
The king of Portugal lias the moat
costly crown iu the world. The gold
and jewels of which it, is composed
are valued at 98,500,000.
The inmates of English prisons are
employed in picking oakum, ranking
coal bags for the navy and mail bags
fur the general post office.
A square copper coin, struck by the
Swedish Government iu the Sixteenth
Century, is nearly one-half inch thick
and weighs a pound and a quarter.
Mine. Eve keeps a dressmaker’s es
tablishment in New York, and not far
away on the same street Mr. Adams
makes fashionable attire for gentle
men.
Immense ns is the value of the gold
taken from the California mines since
the discovery of the precious metal
there, it could all be contained in a
room forty feet long, twenty feet wide
and fifteen foot high.
A set. of iron fetters were exhumed
in the church yard of St. Andrews,
Newoastle-upou-Tyne, England, re
eently. It is supposed that a nialo
factor had been buried with the fet
tors attached to his ankles,
"Robinson Crusoe" was offered in
turn to every publisher in London
and refused by all. At last one book
seller, known for his speculative ven
tures, undertook its publication and
made over 1,000 guineas, ft has made
the fortunes of scores of publishers
since its nppearauoe.
The works of Guitillian were re
vived by being discovered under a
heap of rubbish in an Italian monas
tory. Those of Tacitus were found iu
a monastery in Westphalia, where
they were being used as fuel by the
cook. The original manuscripts of
Justinian’s Pandects were found in a
cellar in a little town in Calabria,
Machine Fingers amt ThunilM.
What is there that machinery can
not do? The Dwight Machine Com
pany of Connecticut has just completed
two machines capable of counting and
binding iu packs 500,000 postal cards
in ten hours. The postal cards are
printed and out by another machine,
but this one counts them and makes
them into packs of twenty-five each.
The most ingenious parts of the un
ehiwvare the fingers and thumbs, so
to speak, used in wrapping the narrow
strip of paper around each pack. Tho
paper is pulled off the reel by two
long slender fingers that come up from
underneath ; another finger dips itself
into tbo box of mucilage and daubs
the end of another finger, which in
turn applies the musilage to tho nar
row strip of paper at just the rigid
spot, Tho strip is wrapped about the
pack of cards, a thumb comes up and
presses the mucilage part down hard,
and the thing is done.—[Buffalo Com
mercial.
Hunting the toy ate.
In Southern California coyote hunt
ing has been introduced by those who
are fond of riding with the hounds.
While the music characteristic of a
pack of fox hounds in full tongue is
lacking, the riding after tho eoyotc is
harder ami the sport more exciting.
The dogs employed are greyhounds
and deerhounds. Such a pack follow
ing tho tie. tt'ootcd thief of the plains
sets a furious pace for the horsemen,
and the battle at the finish, if the wolf
be overtaken, is always furious. Our
Idaho valleys would afford a good
field for this kind of sport. We have
the coyotes, while there are vast
stretches of country that would give
au opportunity for long runs in al
most any direction.—[Boise (Idaho)
Statesman.
The Over-Check Rein.
Tying one part of an animal’s body
to another does not necessarily keep
him on his feet- It is tho pull from
the arm of tho driver that makes a
horse regain Mm-,oil when he stumbles.
One might as well say that tying a
man s hea l back to a belt at bis waist
would prevent him from falling if he
stumbled in a race. -
Eight hundred million dollars is the
amount of money represented iu the
dairy inter-'ts of the United States.
ITEMS OF INTEREST.
It is said that fewer men shave them
selves in America than in any other
coan * r y
A Lawrence, Kan., lady has a Bible
175 years old that has been in the fam
i]y ever since it was printed,
A gray, unsized blotting paper was
sold in England, according to Ruges
in his history of price, ai> far back as
1485.
There were in the Confederate ser
vice one commander-in-ehief, seven
generals, 19 lieutenant generals, 84
major generals, 313 brigadier goner
^
Momean, the French chemist, has
succeeded in making diamonds out of
ordinary carbon, but they are so small
as to be visible only through tho micro
scope.
The 20,000,00? men of the United
Statos are wearing an average of 20
buttons each, making 400,000,000 but
tons for all, estimated to weigh 23,000, -
000 pounds.
A “theological” souvenir spoon is the
latest Boston fad. The bowl contains
a mold of Trinity church arid on the
handle is the head of the lute Bishop
Brooks.
There are 11 professors in the school
of pedagogy opened by the Philadel
phia board of education in 1891, and
only one student, who stands at the
head of his class and takes first honors
in everything.
A young man in Wrentham, Mass.,
has been finding amusement in mail
ing postage stumps and sending greet
ings to European potentates. He is
delighted beyond measure at having
already received acknowledgements
from the Czar of Russia, the King of
Greece and a few others.
On March, 4, 1889, when Beoiotniu
Harrison was being inaugurated, the
wife of Robert H, Young, of Swana
noa, N, O,, presented him with a
daughter. About the hour Cleveland
was delivering his inaugural address
Mrs. Young gave birth to another ba
by, a boy, who has been named Gro
ver Cleveland Young.
chief Hungary, as is well known, is the
home of tho gypsies. According
to the published results of the recent
census undertaken by tlie government
there were on Jan. 31, 185,000 gypsies
in that country. Two-thirds of the
members of the various tribes were
nameless. Only about 8,000 could
read or write.
Milk as a Drink.
Milk is an important food and should
not be taken as a drink simply. If
eaten as the Persians use it, holding it
in the month wntii it is throughly
combined with the saliva to uid in its
digestion, as a part of tho meal it is
all right, taking the plaoe of other
food. It requires digestion ns neces
sarily as any other food, but, that it
may digest, it is first formed into a
solid mass—“curd,” and then acted
upon as other solids. Unlike water,
which requires no digestion, as a Jruik,
it cannot take the place of our special
drink between meals without much
taxing the organs of digestion. This
principle is well illustrated by the
fact that tho nursing infant cannot
take its food rapidly, as it must pass
throngh many small orifices, gieve
like, the drawing process exciting the
flow of saliva, aiding iu tho digestion
of tho milk and tho nourishment of
the babe. I repeat, emphatically, that
it is food, and not a proper drink.—
Kc.
Haw's Till*!
We offer One Hundred Dollar* Reward for
n Ha nycaseof l'» Catarrh Catarrh that cannot be cured bv
Cure.
V. J. Orkney – Co., Toledo, 0.
We, the the nnderrtliine l, have and known F. J. Che*
nf)- 'or last 15-years, be levohfm ner
feet v honorable i t all business Iran art Iona
and flnancia ly able to at ry out any ob|i,a
tion m ade by their firm.
Wks t–^Trcax, Wholesale Druggists* Toledo,
Walling, K inn an a Marvin, Whole* a’ e
Hair* Drugjrhta, Toledo, Ohio.
Catarrh Cure L taken internally, act
ing face* directly upon the tdood and inacous sur
lT.ce, of 76c. the’system. bottle. Testimonial's gent free.
|»er Sold by all drngglsts.
Trust in the Lord t v rough the powers of
your own mind and muscle.
Malaria cured and eradicated from the *ys
tei u by Brown’s Iron Ritters, which enriches
t ■ »• s blood, tones the nerves, aids digestion.
Acts like a charm on persona in general! ill
health, giving new energy and strength.
Those who lire only for money 1 ave only
that money to live after them.
Your wife can buy several ral articl 1#3 for II;
you need worth of mailable arti' eles in the
drug Charleston. line; you mail and the order o $1. to Your K. A, wife Hall.
S. C«, sa ve is
happy, yo ur are, and so will Hall be. Free
c–Uuogue,
Shiloh’# Cure
I s so d onaguara tee. It < ure *indolent Con
suiupt ion; it is the Best Coiuh Cure;23e.,50c.,$l.
W
\ 4m
: ,>ii
v ; § \
m m >
KNOWLEDGE
tends Brings comfort personal and improvement and
rightly to used. The enjoyment live when bet
many, who
tei .nan others and enjoy life more, with
less expenditure, by more promptly
the adapting needs the of physical world's being, best products to
will attest
the value to health of the pure liquid
laxative principles embraced in the
remedy, Its excellence Syrup of is Figs. due its presenting
to
in the the form most the acceptable refreshing and and plen^ truly
ant to taste,
beneficial properties of a perfect lax
ative; dispelling effectually colds, headaches cleansing the aud system,
fevers
and It has permanently given satisfaction curing constipation. millions and
to
met with the approval of the medical
profession, because it acts on the Kid
neys, Liver and Bowels without weak
ening them and it is perfectly free from
every Syrup objectionable of substance. sale by all drug
gists in 50c and figs is bottles, for but it is
$1 man
ufactured by the California Fig Syrup
Co. package, only, also whose the name is printed Svrup on every Figs,
name, of
and being well informed, you will not
accept any substitute if offered.
Take no Substitute for
Royal Baking Powder,
it is Absolutely Pure.
Ail others contain alum or ammonia.
A Technicality.
“How did Mietak Jackson come out
wif ’s trouble wif ele deacons?”
“Does yon hub ref’rence to do trial
dnt do hen house 'earrenee gave rise
to?”
“Da’s what I means.”
“He’s reinstated in membership, he
is.”
“Golly! I thought hit were a clah
case. ”
“No’n deedy. What Uey charged
’im w id wue chickens, and dev couldn't
prove nullin’ but tuli’kcys.”—ITa.sA
ington Star.
The business injunction to secure heeded an
article when it is cheapest is not
by the lover, for he gets a wife when
she is dearest,
/
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After reading the following letters can any
one longer doubt I hat a trustworthy remedy
fen- iiasat that terribly been fatal malady, consumption, had
last found! If these letters
been written by your best known and most
esteemed Worthy of neighbors confidence they could than be they no more now
coining, your they do, from wall known,
are, eta
intelligent and trustworthy citizens, who,
in their sereral neighborhoods, enjoy the
fullest confidence and respect cf all Who
know IC. them.
t^–hurxus–is C. Me bin, Eso., of KemjwviUe, Princess
a ■siwwr blood. I jsruresu able to do
spit the least up much work, but most was of the not time was in
bod. 1 was nil run down, very weak, my
head was dlacy and I was extremely despot!
eient. The tot bottle I took had did not seem In
to do mo much goed, but I faith it
and continued using it until I had taken
fifteen bottles and how I do not look nor
feci like the same man I was one year ago.
People are «tcnltb«! and say, 'well, last
«ttaatss5st.>w.«
Won is inherited, it may bo cured, as verified
“u?e f J r ^mv n Auty’to acknowlwlgh
“ long fe lt Pier^k
to VOT what Dr Golden Medilil
Discovery and his 'Pleasant Pellets' have
done for me. They almost raises! me from
the grave. I bad three brother* and one
sinter speedilyfollowing'after'Siem. die of consumption and 1 wai
I had severe
couth eilaramm^ pain ivmtts££dmyfriends copious expectoration and other
all
thought I had but a few month, to live. At
that time 1 was persuades! to try the ‘ Golden
Medical Discovery' and Die first bottle
acted lie magic. Of course, I continues! on
with the medicine and OS ei result I gained aaton
w c - - h Mv friends were
Lessens Pain
Insures Safety
vrU, L Mother to Life and of Child.
the “My ordeal wife, with alter little using 1 Mother’s Friend,’ jiassed through
week after the pain, was stronger in one hour than in
a birth of her former child.
—J. j. McGoldrICK, Bean Station, Tenn.
’* Mothers’ Friend n robbed pain of its terror and shortened labor.
1 have the healthiest child I ever saw.— Mrs. L. M. Ahern, Cochran, Ga.
Sent by express, charges prepaid, on receipt of price, $1.50 per bottle.
Book “To Mothers” mailed free.
Sold by AH Druggets. BRADRELD REGULATOR C0„ Ailanla, 6a,
irf-y] V Th«?person ;iIa.ntinp8aJzer>Sc«*dsnetrr Jcnowscf Ii.arJ time. 1 !,
r because they double all yields! Try It for ISC* and bo happy.
Vegetable nceda for the million. S'* pkrs. EarSlect Veget*t>wseeds. worid.
| $ 1.00i*ogt paid. Tyirtrestcrowc>-scf Karv.i Ceediilnthe rafc'K,
itdogiie sample pkc. “Oct There Eli” Radish lit for uso In 15 days and cat
lor "c postajje. Calaio^ao aloae, Lc. tor postage.
:
ft!®
00000
The 2 ton Aermotor Steel Traci weighs J*5 pounds, has !S inch
wheels with I-inch face. W hen three of the wheels are on the
eo.r. the other enj one u about 1 ^ inches from Iho floor, thus
enaWuig it to swivel easily The body » 28 inches wwi# by ftO
inches > :s- A botioa kK>»rd is caatiy pat m to make the bet-
1 m '.isht. 1* stakesMW required, narrow beards can Be pat m
alsating orer the outer rati and under the inner one; or, d wide
mm
boasts are uscJ. they «ril! practically make side board* By
irukingwese atates tan g er.oanh and patten* ia end cae* sa
the same way bulky maternal may W handled..
ws are making this oder to *iww % ram pic of onr work, w«
want to show how nice a thing -w*? nan ruate. and hoar rack.~
A ch 42 «*-pn«w- This swei Truck i* fuimshed at
.. t e6K44ti.os cent. p*t ,„o.-V t 2 top:ta ot
u per ewiu.2 4a K«. 4. Itiw is .4. Ko S
Itaplil Growth of t'iilifornla Trees.
We leave evidence in California that
redwood t”""3 cut down sixty years
ago have made sprouts which are new
trees from 3 to i» feet in diameter, and
from 100 to 150 feet high. It is the
rapid growth of some of these trees
which le ads people to doubt their great
age, but there seems to bo no reason
for doubting that the method of cal
culating by annual rings of -wood is
sound, and that the great ago imputed
to some of those trees has soliel ground
work to build on. — Meehan's Monthly.
He—“Are you good at conun
drums?”
She—“Yes. ”
He—Well, here is one: “If I were
to propose to you, what would yo*
say?”
tsbixl, When I commenced the use of your
medicines, six years ago, I weighed but 130
pounds and was sinking health rapidly. perfect. 1 now
weigh 135, and my continues
/tyisyo, , Is
“Golden Medical scrofula Discovery” tbo euros lungs), con
sumption (Which i.-i of
by its wonderful blood-puruymg, 'PbrSttf mvigorat
ing and nutritive tf°g« r
ssr-arfasSfes f.evemt coughs it Ktrengthens the system
’Golden Medical j- i n' Ihwovery Arum does n(( not t m make ak«
JW>V fat children, m w^ “'V™ u to r Jttd adults redu«™
m tfe*h from any cause, kta
flesh Musty bmlder cod liver known <nl and to rte mjtogsuen«t are
not to t# build* compared 0* Wl j. h . i j!
rapidly. up r 0
ayrsrttfssifruSTj
^-ryStfSS iratrs.-“rasSiSr
and strength, and to rertot e health andv Igor
SS–SSS-SKSS! into
the heaHMuf Wily functions, rouses and every enrielw* organ the
blood, and action, through purifies it cleanse*, repairs, and
lnvigorataa the entire glrtoe
on OoimmptioD, with phototype, ha If-tooe, numer
ous testimonials or refer
portrait, of those cured. nunwrom Tre
ences, also containing successful He ra©
ment for ebrouie nasal catarrh bronchi mailed «.
Mthma^dkindr^dtov^.wiUbe by the \\ arid s Dispensary M«hcal Aw»
tionof Buffalo N. \ , on: recty ?;t of
m stamps, to payJPeadagc- Or The Fc^le.
Common bensoMedrad Ad'riser1,000 pag««,
300 illustrations, mailed for fl.oO.
January 13. ‘J, . mt.
.
Fruruary^l, .
March ill *
.
TOTAL, Bi percent.
% We . id to in 73
nave our ni»t«mrr«
Profit* part tw ice each moBCa; mni£y can Im»
withdraw a auy tlm *; t'AO to $10 j 0 Cau be invested;
write for Inform tltou.
F1S If E It JL C O O.. Rankers and Brokers,
IS aui il JO Broadway, New Forte*
I
liooklirrpinff. IJiisiuess I'rHctiecs
Land, A*c. Semi for catalogue.
MACLEAN, CERT IK tV WALKER, Al’it^rs.
B*: U in Cough tiroa Syrup. Soid by Tawtes cruggiats Good. Cee IB| gl
_J ,
A. , v N. t- ' Thirteen, 'M.
......