The Lincoln home journal. (Lincolnton, GA.) 189?-19??, May 26, 1898, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

f City Owamhlp of Pigeons. BTenice S«s asserted the right of jfeersfelp ■ Mark. over Some the enterprising famous pigeons of street K, lithe who had made a business of kill birds, when brought up in pt, j?al pleaded that the pigeons had no owners, as they were fed by the (bite on the Piazza San Marco. The ry authorities maintained that, the pons were the wards of the old re ibltc, and, therefore, of the present unj.clpality, a view that was adopted • the Court, Che Canadian Governnveht has im sed a tax of two dollars a gallon on . Whisky going into the Yukon conn- 1, It Is/stated that if this tax docs C stop the traffic it will be raised, iubtless It will be raised. Cure Corns With Physic. light Tetter, as 'Eczema, well try that as to attempt the cure affections Ringworm and other eu- et leous with b ood medic ne. 1 ■me isthe only absolutely safe and certain nety. infc, SO With it cure sure. It’s an oint psfrom cents at J. druggists, Shuptriue, or by Savannah mail L r 50c. T. ,(ia. atrimonial matches sometimes kiudle the aes of jealousy. i Since the discovery and i rU rodurtton of I)R SKS) the eethina (TEETHING HOW death rate of small children has tfeeiy Sulates decreased. Teethina Aids Digestion, the Bowels and makes te.-thing mine thorn of experience is worth a whole Aiderneas of warning. San’t Tobacco Suit and Imolie Tonr l ife Array, HM. ffiwBS Quit tobacco easily and forever, he mag full oj life, nerve and vij-nr. take No-To Ijllf the YArruler-worker, All druggists, OOc that or fl. makes Curegnaran- weak men SjwS. Booklet and sample free. Address Remedy Co-, Chicago or New York IreJ sharp dull business mnu is always pro for times. To Cure a Cold in One Day. ’ako Laxative Bromo Quininr Tablets. All uggists refund money if it fails to care. Nearly every man you meet is posing as his ;n ideal. Won .'Jon A Co’s “Pick Leaf” Smoking Tobacco the consumers the very best Tobacco Spy jnningits can get. 2 ounces for 10 cents. It is last ; way to pubiijjfavor. Try it rk. om la politicians begin at the bottom and down. Ijdueate Ijandy Cathartic, Yoor Dowels constipation TVUh CasrarJt forever, , cure y 25c. If C. O. C. fail, druggists refund money. The more promises a man gives the fewer [keeps. jilts tes after perm first !n ntly day’s cured. of No Dr. fl's Kline’s or nervou— Great use prvo k Restorer. $2 trial bottle aud t- eat se free R. H. Kline, Ltd., 931 Arch St., i’hibi, Pa A porous plaster is often a great drawback inn enterprising man. ?. <1. Cheney & Co., i oledo, 0., Props., of ill’s Catarrh Cure, offer $101)reward for unt¬ ie of caiarrh thatcannoi be cured by taking ill’s Catarrh Cure. Send for testimonials, :e. Sold by Druggists, Toe. lon’t let your neighbor know the full ex¬ it of your ignorance. To Cure Constipation To re VC-,, Trite Casearets Candy Cathartic. Me cr 25c. j&C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money. ponTthirik ■abie window that shades. ghosts make tho most de : believe Piso’s Cure for consumption saved ! boy’s life last Mich, summer.— Mus. allik I0GLASS, Le Roy, Oct. 20,18SH. lon’t put off till tomorrow the thing some ly will do for you today. Don’t TRY to keep house without Bins [bbon fB. P. Baking Company, Powder. Richmond, At all Virginia. Grocers. B. hisky floats mere trouble than it drowns Urs. Winslow’s Soothing Svrup for children Tiling, Sn,allays softens the gums, reducing inflaina pain,cures wind colic, 25c. a bottle. Mope Returned iomach and LivcrTroublesCu ed by Hood’s Sarsapari! a. FT suffered from stomach aud Kver trou ps and was conflned to my house for a jog time. I was entirely deaf in one ear. raubjkad great distress in my stomach BKnld not oat hearty food. I had given i jps Hope of ever being well, Reading of by Hood's Sarsaparilla I decided to &e it a trial. Soon after I began taking I could see it had a good effect, I con pued its use until my deafness was cured id my stomach and liver troubles re¬ ived.” W. T. Norton, Canisteo, N. Y. oodVZma America’s Greatest Medicine. $1; six for $5. OOd’S Pills tive. ^Albfrusgists. UsST My wife had pimples on tier face, t but i has been taking CASOARETS and tb ey re all disappeared. I had been troubled b 'tne constipation for some time, but after tak first Cascuret X have had no trouble h this ailment. We cannot speak too high if Casearets." FebdWibtman. 5703 Germantown Are.. Philadelphia, Pa. CANDY CATHARTIC TRADE WARM REGISTERED leasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do id. Never Sicken, Weaken, or Gripe. 10c, 25c. 50c. . CURE CONSTIPATION# ... ling Remedy Company, Chicago, Montreal, New York. 314 CT Sold and all dn ST) TEN CENTS FOR *0 SHEET SOAE BOOK vi*h PICTURE OF BATTLE SHIP MAINE, ^ts wanted. E. C. SLOANE & CO., Merideu, Ct. GS FOR HATCHING! S. C. Brown Leg horns, 50c. per 15. S. M. HITER. Eilisviile, Louisa, Co., Va. IZ^U^Zer !- ,e " the * 4V VmTi 1; :35? CT 311 PISO'S CURE FOR) UUHfcS ffnfcHfc Syrup. ALL fcLSt *A1U>. _ Use In Cough time* Tastes Good. h? flriuririeta CON S p/M RJTI OM " ! % mtemva&eiacMemzmmeiM 1 GOOD ROADS NOTES, s IbCOJiojnJeal Itoad Improvement* A tribute roads, to the superior cheapness made of good by even When of dirt, was paid Captain BroVne, one of the delegates to the Virginia Good Roads convention in 1894. In the course of some remarks Captain Browne said: ’’‘The question of good roads comes home to me with great force, for 1 have in Northampton County good dirt roads to haul over, and in another county bad dirt roads. I put four carts, each one with a mule to it, on the scales, aud the loads which wore hauled over the Northampton roads averaged 246(1 pounds; in the other county, 800 pounds is the In universal load in delivering produce. load North¬ ampton the tax for purposes is ten cents on the §100, And in the other county, where the roads are bad, it is twenty cents on $100 worth of prop¬ erty. This difference is owing to the adoption of improved methods, which reduce cost and give much advan¬ tage.” Captain .Browne's description of the road equipment in Northampton may be of interest to Kentucky farmers who are struggling with dirt roads. The county, he said, owned one road grader, plows, carts, hand implements, six mules, one superintendent for the ivhole county, who enrployed five la¬ borers aud had a tent in which all could shelter. The superintendent was directed to begin the worst roads first and to work in all parts of the county. He began April 16 and by September 30 bad made seventeen and one-half miles of good road, though the force had been idle twenty per cent, of the time owing to the lack of teams. The highway made cost only $55.17 a mile, but this could be reduced half by the purchase of four more mules. The monthly expense was $175.75; the extra mules would add $49 a month, but then thirty-five miles could be made in a year. The whole outfit had cost $1, 011.24. The farmers had been very much pleased with the results and would not now adojit a different plan. In time Captain Browne hoped they would get to macadamized roads. It seems hardly worth while to be¬ gin a campaign for better dirt roads when macadamized ones could be se¬ cured with a little more effort. Still every upward step counts. Communi¬ ties which can not undertake exten¬ sive improvements might combine this plan of working dirt roads with the one adopted by Augusta County, Vir¬ ginia. This; county was not in debt, and the people there, as in a great many counties in Kentucky, were op¬ posed to any issue Of bonds. Tho Board of Supervisors hit upon a.con¬ tractor who agreed to build the road and take a certain sum every year. It took nearly a year to build the road, and he received his first payment the next year from the proceeds of a tax levy. The third year he was paid an¬ other part and the fourth year all. The county in the meantime had got sixteen miles of badly needed mac¬ adam, and the farmers had then been convinced of the benefits of macadam¬ izing and were anxious to continue the work. Many men who had at first re¬ fused to contribute to the building of the road then offered to come in and contribute to an extension.—Louisville Courier-Journal. Touching State Aid, “When public highways first began to receive attention their care was dele¬ gated to those who lived along them, presumably on the principle that they were chiefly interested iu having pas¬ sable roads. At a later period, as towns and cities grew up, aud travel increased over the highways with the development of commerce and the in¬ terchange of commodities, the wear and tear became so great that the bur¬ den of keeping the main roads in re¬ pair was too much to be borne by the inhabitants of the rural districts. Macaulay alluded to this fifty years ago when he wrote his picturesque ac¬ count of the condition of England a hundred aud fifty years before. Even then the inadequacy and injustice of the plan had become apparent, and it was gradually realized that a change must be made. Macaulay says of this : “One chief cause of the badness of the roads seems to have been the de¬ fective state of the law. Every parish was bound to repair the highways which passed through it. The pea¬ santry was forced to give gratuitous labor six days iu the year. If this was not sufficient, hired labor was em¬ ployed, and the expense was met by a parochial rate [local tax). “That a route connecting two great towns, which have a large and thriv ing trade with each o.her should be maintained at the cost of the rural population scattered between them, ? is obviously unjust; and this injustice was peculiarly glaring in the case of the great North Road which traversed very poor and thinly inhabited dis¬ tricts, and joined very rich and popu¬ lous districts. Indeed it was not in the power of the parishes of Hunting¬ donshire to mend a highway worn by the constant traffic between the West Riding of Yorkshire and London. This might be mistaken for a refer ence to American roads and methods of to-day. Every year the tendency to use the public highways for- travel and pleasure becomes greater, while their use for business purposes is also steadily increasing. The roads are becoming more and more used for through travel, and the proportion of those who pass over them to those who live along them is becoming greater. To build aud maintain suitable higli ways is an undertaking that involves expenses, and requires resources, such as can only be furnished by the States, and on them devolves responsibility for promoting the work.—L, A. W. Bulletin, The Highways of New Jersey, Thirty years ago the about State the built first macadam roads in were in Essex County, N. J, The work Was gradually extended, and was taken Up by Union iaid County, and these two Counties many miles Of stone roads before the system of State aid was inaugurated; At the in the present time, nearly every county State is building macadam roads. The State bears one-third of the expense, but so many applications are now made for a share of the annual appropriation that the $ 100,000 appropriated will need to be raised to three times that amount if the contemplated roads are to be built. In 1891 the appropriation increased was §20, 000 ; In 1893 it was to $75, 000 , but only $ 20,000 were spent. In 1894 four counties were building roads, and the whole appropriation was used; in 1895 six counties were at work; in 1896 there were eight counties; in 1897 eleven counties, and now nine¬ teen out of the twenty-one counties in the State have made application for their shares. There are now so many miles of stone roads in the State that it can be traversed in nearly all directions with¬ out leaving them, Luring the past year the expense of building macadam roads was considerably reduced. In order to preserve good roads and im¬ prove bad ones, it is proposed to give a rebate of a dollar-and-a-half iu taxes for each wheel in habitual use on heavy wagons whose tire is four inches or more in breadth. Under the law passed last year com¬ missioners have determined the value of some of the toll roads, and if the policy is pursued the State will soon possess nothing but free public high¬ ways. Economy of Broad Tires. The Missouri Experiment Station (Columbia) recently published an il¬ lustrated bulletin describing a series of interesting experiments on the draught of broad and narrow tired wagon v,-heels. The tests were made with each kind on macadam, gravel and dirt roads and on farm fields in all conditions. The experiments are sum¬ marized as follows: Tho broad tires pulled materially lighter on the macadam streets and the gravel roads; also on dirt roads in all conditions, except when soft or sloppy on the surface, underlaid by hard roadbed, and when the mud was very deep and sticky. In both these con¬ ditions the narrow tires pulled con¬ siderably lighter. It should be borne in mind, however, that the roads are in these conditions for a comparatively short period of time, and this at sea¬ sons when their use has naturally been reduced to the minimum, Tho tests on meadows, pastures, stubble land, corn land and ploughed ground in every condition, from dry, hard and firm to very wet and soft, show, with¬ out a single exception, a largo saving in draft by the use of the broad tires. The bulk of the hauling done by the farmer is on the farm, in hauling feed from the fields and hauling manure from the barns, etc. The actual ton¬ nage hauled to market is insignificant in comparison with that hauled about on the farm, inasmuch as a large pro¬ portion of the products of the average farm is sent to market in the form of live stock or its products.—Farm and Fireside. System in Road Maintenance. No one has ever supposed that rail¬ road corporations spend money for the mere sake of spending it, or adopt ex¬ pensive methods when cheaper ones are better. It must be, then, that there is some pretty substantial rea¬ son for dividing their roadbeds into sections, and keeping men constantly employed on each in caring for them. Precisely the same principle applies to ordinary highways; the only way that they can be efficiently maintained is by establishing a similar system,and the more expensive they are to con¬ struct, the greater the saving that will thereby be made, and increased effi¬ ciency secured. Good Roads Build Towns. Three years ago a little farming settlement in New Jersey was inter¬ sected by good roads. The location was charming and invited the erection of summer homes. With the advent of good highways, the residents came, aud a prosperous village grew up— made possible solely by the construc¬ tion of hard and durable highways. The Pilgrims’ Church Doomed. WJM8I Consul Listoe, of Rotterdam, re¬ ported to the State Department in Washington' that the church from which the Pilgrim Fathers departed in 1620 is in danger of being sold and torn down. It is the Herformde Kirke (Reformed Church) at Delft Haven. The pulpit, altar and some I of the Bibles used by the Pilgrims are still in the church. The church rec ord gives an account of the departure of the Pilgrims. The congregation is poor, Consul Listoe says, and without help may not be able to retain the building. Here is an exceptionally fine chance for some wealthy American to distinguish himself by buying the aucient edifice, transporting- it to this country and erecting it near the fa¬ mous Plymouth Rock and the Pil¬ grims’ landing place.—New York Journal. The Kaiser Wants This Stopped. Kaiser Wilhelm has applied through his Ambassador to the English Censor I of Plays to have stopped a song that is being sung nightly in the London music halls. The lyric which offends His Imperial Majesty is entitled the “Mailed Fist of Germany.” It be gins in this fashion: Fitzsimmons met the Kaiser, ! And they warmly hugged and kissed. Old Fitz be had his gloves on, Bill had a mailed fist. The Kaiser he grew nasty; They had a blooming row; Thu Kaiser hit Fitzsimmons— i Where is the Kaiser now? HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS, Plain Lemon Taffy. When the sugar has reached the “crack’' state, add the juice and of a lemon »nd some lemon sirup boil it until it changes color, Pour into an oiled tin (sweet oil or butter); let it cool a little; then mark into squares with the back of ii knife; Lemon drops u-e made by dropping from a spoon on oiled tins. Other fruit juices may be used in the place of lemon, or the sirup may be flavored with pepper¬ mint or cinnamon. Cocoanut tally is made by adding warm cocoanut, sliced or grated, to the sirup. Slices of orange or any fruit or nuts may be added; sometimes a tutti-frutti is made by adding figs and different kinds of fruit. The candy is then cut into bars when cooling. Aj>i,le 9 anti Asparagus; Oregon apples have made an excel¬ lent reputation this year with the Chicago people who are in the habit of using the best fruit. Just at pres¬ ent the sorts most in demand for table use are the Roman beauties, which are as fine in quality as they are large and beautiful in appearance. The winesapB, which in Oregon grow much larger than east of the Rockies and are more handsomely colored, are also an attractive favorite. Both sorts are selling at $1 per peck. The lady apples, a strictly fancy table sort, also meet with more favor than the eastern apples, both on account -of quality and coloring. White asparagus from California is arriving in better condition than the trade has ever be¬ fore seen. It is almost as tender as butter, and is quite palatable. Sales are made at 20 to 30 cents per bunch. The supply of California cauliflower is fast becoming exhausted. It is of fine quality and color, and sells at re¬ tail at 10 to 25 cents per head. Cucumbers grown in northern hot¬ houses are retailing at 20 to 25 cents each for the ordinary variety, and 30 to 40 cents for the long English seed¬ less sort. California artichokes are in moderate request at $2 to $3 per dozen. —Chicago Times-Herald. l’ot Cheese. There are few more relishable coun¬ try dishes than pot cheese; but only a minority of persons know how to make it to perfection. The milk is allowed to become too soar, or there is a trifling mustiness in the flavor, or it is too dry and chippy, or so wet that it is soggy and unpleasant to the taste. In its perfection it should be light, creamy, and with just enough acid to give it a distinct character, but not enough to suggest sour staleness. The milk should be used as soon as it be¬ comes curdled. If it must be accumu¬ lated, it should be kept in a very cool place, and carefully covered. When a sufficient quantity is on hand, mix well and put in a warm place. Sweet skim milk may be added to that which is curdled, and if kept warm will soon become thick also. Then it should be pi ui a kettle, or suitable dish, and S: i pan of warm water on the back of the rang’e; place a wire rack or an inverted pie-pan under the kettle to keep the milk from scorching and sticking to the bottom of the kettle. Within a few minutes, usually, as soon as it begins to heat, the curd aud whey will separate. Allow the whey to be¬ come scalding hot, them remove the dish from the fire, and when cool enough to handle, pour the entire con tents into a bag or cloth, and hang it up to drain. When firm and dry enough to handle without dripping, work smooth with a spoon, and add a little butter or cream, salt, and a dust of pepper if desired, and serve with watereresses.—New York Ledger, Household Hints. An excellent way to mend large holes in stockings is to tack a piece of net over the hole and darn through it. This also is applicable to merino un¬ derwear. Bits of iron will prevent water from becoming putrid. Sheet iron or iron trimmings are the best. The offensive smell of water in vases of flowers would be avoided by putting a few small nails in the bottom of the vases. Clothespins need washing occasion¬ ally to keep them at their best. A good plan is to drop them in the boiler after the clothes have been taken up, then pour the water off, rinse the pins and dry thoroughly before putting away. Clothes lines should always betaken down after the weekly wash if possible, rolled up and placed in a bag until next time. If the line is a pulley or a wire line and up to stay, wipe off care¬ fully with a damp cloth each time be¬ fore using. Salt preserves the teeth, keeping them white, the gums healthy, and the breath sweet. Put some in an iron shovel, place it over the fire, and when quite hot pour into a thin bag. Apply to any part affected with neuralgia or intense pain. A teacher of laundry work tells her class that “if in ironing a shirt bosom you find a little <Sft, don’t stop to wipe it off, until ikg whole shirt is finished. Then it wul come off easily. The damp cloth, not wet, is your best friend when doing fine ironing.” One of the simplest aud most ef¬ ficient means of driving chloride away rats is to set saucers of of lime around the places which they frequent. They do not eat the lime, but its fumes are very disagreeable to them and will result in their leaving the neigh¬ borhood. JLong Term Servants. Empress Augusta Victoria of Ger¬ many found 144 German servant girls last year to whom she could give the golden servant’s cross for having lived forty years with ODe family. Only one was found in Berlin. New York manufacturers supply the gold x>ens used by Queen Victoria and other royal personages in Europe, A Woman** Barden. From the Evening News, Detroit, Mich. The women of to-day are not as strong as their grandmothers. They are bearing li burden In silence tfiat grows heavier day by day; that is sapping their vitality and clouding Alexanders. their happiness. Clark, of 417 Michigan > Mrs, typical of to¬ Avenue, Detroit, is a woman day. A Wife with such ambition as onlv a loving wife cad have, But the joys Of her life were marred by tti* existence of fiis ^Suffering as thousands despaired of hersisfets of life have iim suffered, she almost yet she was cured. “For five years I suffered with ovarian trouble,” is Mrs. Clark’s own version of tlie story. “I was not free one single day from headncho and intense twitch¬ ing pains in my nod arid shoulders, For months at a time I would be confined to my bed. At times black spots would appeaf and before my blind. •yes I would be- J became come blind. My nerves were in such a state that a step on the floor unsettled me. “Eminent doctors, skillful nurses, the best food and medicine all failed. Then X consented to an operation, That, too, failed, and they said another was necessary. After the second I was worse than ever and the world was darker than betore. “It was then ? heard of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People. I heard, that they had cured cases like mine and I tried them. “They cured mel They brought sun¬ shine to my life and fllledmv eup with hap¬ piness. The headache is gone; tho twitch¬ ing is gone; the nervousness is gone; the trembling lias ceased, and I have strength gained twenty-six pounds. Health and is mine and I am thankful to Dr. Williams’ Pink Piil3 for Palo People for the blessing.” These pills are a boon to womankind. Acting directly on tlio blood and nerves, they restore the requisite vitality to all parts of the body; creating functional regu¬ larity and perfect harmony throughout tiie nervous system. Tho pallor of tho cheeks is changed to tho delicate blush of health; the eyes brighten; tho muscles grow elastic, ambition is created and good health returns. “ Sportsmen ” in Bohemia. Bohemian sportsmen in the year 1895 shot and killed fifty men, women, and children, and wounded 2,014 persons, chiefly gamekeepers. They also killed, among other game, over 15,000 dogs, 8,762 cats, 2 horses, 15 cows, 132 calves, 27G goats, and 129 sheep. For this they had to pay collectively over $500,000 for doctors, fines, and indemni¬ ties, and to spend 74.3S8 days in jail The Austrian government collects the statistics. Joaquin Miller says that Alaska used to be a tropical country. That’s it! Why couldn’t some man have told us of the Klondike in the day when ferns instead of ice packs fringed the edge of. Yukon river? But Fate seems to have ordered that the man who wants money should always be a little too late. Beauty Is Blood Deep. Clean blood means a dean skin. No beauty without it. Casearets, Candy Cathar¬ tic clean your blood aud keep it clean, by stirring up thaJazy body. liver and Begin driving to-day ail im¬ purities from the to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, Casearets,—beauty and that sickly bilious complexion by taking for ten cents. AH drug¬ gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. The practical farmer raises better crops than the theoretical one. ST. VITUS’ permanently DANCE, SPASMS cured by and the all ner¬ of vous diseases use Dr. K iue’s Great Nerve Restorer. Send for FREE $1.00 trial bottle aud treatise to Dr. B. li. Kline, Ltd., 931 Arch Street, Phila., Pa. The human race is but a contest for dollars. Ko-To-Bac for Fifty Cents. Guewnteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. 5‘Jc, 81. Ail druggists. Trees and Vines become hardier, and their products bet¬ ter colored and better flavored when liberally treated with fertilizers containing at least io% actual § FREE An illustrated book which tells what Potash is, and how it ..... . ■ should be used, is sent free to all applicants. Send your address. GERMAN KALI WORKS, jt , Nassau St., New York. ftHARLOTTE COMMERCIAL m UOLLEGE, CflfWLOTTE, H.G. Free KoVacations—FoaitionsQuarantecd—Catalogue mEACHBRH J. WANTED.—1005needed in cities.Union now to cent act for next term. Office., 1.0 Teacheks’ Agencies or Amekica, l’ittsburg, la. ] F yau see what you want, tell the advcrli <er you .an it in this paper. Ho. 3 I vers & Pond Pianos. t Strictly First Class. Require less tuning and prove more durable than any other pianos manufac¬ tured. 227 purchased by the New England Conservatory of Music, the (largest College of Music in the world, and over 500 I vers & Pond Pianos used in two hundred of the leading colleges and institutions of learning in the United States. Catalogue and valuable infor- | mation mailed free.. Old pianos taken in exchange. j I vers & Pond Piano Company, 114 Boylston Street, Boston, Mass. EVERY MAN HIS OWN DOCTOR! .3:.... X.., j. By J; Hamilton mostValuablo Ayers, A. M., K.D. Tilia i£ Household, tt Book for tho teaching as It does ---- the efeSiy-distinguteaed Symptoms of difttoSttf Diseases, the Causes and of P re venting such Diseases, the he Simplest Remedies whichNiB al¬ leviate or cure. 598 Pages, Profusely Illustrated. The Book Is written in plain from every-day the technical English, and is which free •v terms render most Doctor Books so l valueless to tho generality of readers. This Book »» in¬ tended to be oi Service In u:. the Family, i.ud is so worded as to be readily understood by aB % ONIaY 60 ots. POSTPAID. m 1 Not Postage Stamps this Taken. only nuch does Information Book ftela- con- (•? tain so i (*- Mr tive to Disease, but' Very proper- $ ly gives a Complete Analysis of % everything ship, Marriage pertaining the fo Court¬ and Produc-. tion and Rearing of Healthy Families,togeth- Recipes and Proscriptions, with Valuable Ex¬ planations of Botanical Practice, Correct use of Ordinary Herbs,&c Complete Index. BOOK PUB. HOUSE, 134 Leonard St., N.Y.City r AUSK t Bjfesjp. E —z . i --- — . -5*. AND EFFECT. TENNESSEE’S BEAUTY SPEAKS FOR HER SEX. Doyle’s Station, Tenn,* writes: Dr. jMt. A. Sim inoiis Liver Medicine needs W no commendation. It speaks for itself. It cures Liver iU g Disorders and breaks up F Biliousness and Bilious Colic. I think it is far bet L ter than "Thedford’s BlMk Draught.” Menstrual Suppression. womanhood, espec¬ ially This occurs in constitution eariy is not strong when the sudden to .iu It may result from exposure co immersion of the hands and feet in colts water, sitting on the cold confining ground or occupa¬ damp crass, sedentary habits, the feet, irreg¬ tions, continued standing on development or ular hours and forcing the essentia! and. the mind at school. Best is moderate exercise in the open air most bene¬ ficial. <? The bowels should be moved at lease once a day by small doses of Dr. M. A. Sim* mons Diver Medicine, and the restorativ effectsof Dr. Simmons Squaw Xine .Vino should be secured by taking several regularly weeks. a dose three times a day for MV.(3Ue&> s, Ceiina, Teim., writes: Have it used Dr, M. A. Simmons- for Diver Medicine lOyears Sick Stomac.%,- Doss * tem Flesh, tost* Liver Spirits. Diseases also cures Constipated J W Biliousness, Bowels. It does not gripe, f and takes less to operate ‘‘Black on. !fc %, Ilk. me than either and Draught” or “Zeilin’sA Mi reBlEa/ jilH Bfii it h-is a more thorough and gentle effect, and leaves my system in better condition tnan either “Black Draught” or “Zeilin’s.’ 1 Genera! Lassitude. "We are provided with five organs shin, for keep sng the blood pure; they are the t»i« kidneys, tho liver, tho lung* and the bowels. The blood becomes impure for one or both of two reasons: First, something impure has boon put into it; Second, the five excretory org&na have not been sufficiently active. Owing to it3 complicated formation, the blood is liable to many morbid changes. If any of the organs just mentioned are not in perfect working order, so that impurities are retained, the blood becomes disordered and. even diseased. When corrupted** its impurities are absorbed by the tissues, caus¬ ing eruptions,fevers, lassitude and langour. For restoring the above organs to a health¬ ful condition there is no medicine so Modi- encq* tive as Dr. M. A. Simmons Diver Wo deliglit to do an early friend good tarn. The working parts ot K, ANY A Eft KIOTO Isiijjfi EXCHANGED ROLLER vm FOR A BEARING, zephyr-run. ' ■HSUS’ ning, evor . golu6 , everlasting; power eJU donhling, UP-TO-DATE ’08 MOTOR, 8 FT. FOR SS; «-»• tor$12 ; lMt. for *30. 'J’hey ran like a bicycle, and are made like a watch, every movable part on rollers. Doubles geared mill power. The Aei motor ran when all other nulls stood still, and made the fcteel windmill business. the new beats the old as the OLD BEAT THE WOODEN WHEEL, On receipt of amount, revised motor (but not wheel or vane) will be sent to replace old one then to be returned. Offer subject to cancellation at any time, your old wheel is not an Aerxnotor, write for i terms You of swap—new put it for Aeruotar old—to go Co., on Chicago^^T^ oldtoivcr^xw Sv can on. m i MORPHINE HABITS treated on a guarantee. No _____par till cured. Address B.H. „ _ Mgr., Opium Cure VEAL. Ltthla Spring L Co., Loclr. Box 3, Austell, Ga. OSBORNE’S Q^e-Z/eae (slstt'L f t-Z'U-t/' A it gusto.. Short Ga. time. Actual Cheap business. Send No text j/ boo Us. board- for catalojruo. and Liquor Habit cured in 10 to ISO days. No pay till cured. Dr. <T. L;Stephens, " Dept. A, Lebanon, Ohio. If no dealer sells our pianos near you we supply them on time payments to parties living in any city or village in the United States. A small cash payment and monthly payments extending over three years secure one of our pianos. We send pianos for trial in your home, even though you live three thousand miles away, and guarantee satisfaction or piano is returned to us at our expense for railway freights both ways. A per sonal letter containing special prices and tu jj description of our easy payment plans, free upon application.