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About The Lincoln home journal. (Lincolnton, GA.) 189?-19?? | View Entire Issue (June 9, 1898)
Kp!|® Once originally l'oison. -■*> a poison ■ ^■rrows, parts were used to and for that purpose HttfAllced HE'; nfi into Persia. Trans* cultivation have not H:o\(/l Hd Its poisonous qualities. dt into the delicious fruit jBtjjioy. 1B).U'eo Chewers Taxed. ■too- chewing members of the pdist Church in Albertsvllle, Ala., been levied upon by the stewards sgteial tax of $10 a year. Warn Comfort Costs 50 Cents. BMErritatlnr. aggravating agonizing Tetter, Kzema, -Ringworm and all other i ten in / skin fterioe. n re quickly cured by the use of Tet f»!) It hootbing, cooling* hea ing. Costs ’ cent' a box, post Shupfcriue, paid brings Savannah* comfort at Address J. T. Ga. ,T hands n CJub<? are always trumps in the of the police. Jbyoinfc “Pick Leaf”KinoMnsTobacco , *douK not make every mouth as sweet as a rose, but comes “mighty nigh’* does give every - one a most delightful smoke. Try it. Man was made to mourn, but a widower usually outlives it. % lar£© Experienced cities do Mothers and dread Nurses the teethin' of our period not now of children since tli : -v* <nn give -K. MOFFETT’S Tekthina (TEETHING POW¬ DERS). Teeth jna aids Digestion, Regulates the Bowels and makes teething easy and into a period of suffering and dread. A groundless rumor manages to cover a good deal of ground. Don't Tobacco Spit end Smoke Tour I.ifc Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag¬ netic, lull of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To* Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 50c or ?i. Cure guaran¬ teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York. Woman’s no often means yes, but her yes never means no. Pisa’s Cure is a wonderful Cough medicine —Mbs. W. Pick er t. Van Sic Jen and Blake Aves., Brooklyn, N. Y., Oct. 26, 1894. by A his man’s pride would be vanity if possessed neighbor. Fits perm ineatly cured. No fi‘s or nervous¬ ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great Nerve Restorer. $:i trial bottle and trcat.se free Dr R; H. Kline, Ltd., 931 Arch St.. Phila, Pa. The man who buys a gold brick makes a gilt-edged investment. *---- . To Cure Constipation Forever* Take Casearets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 250. If C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists relund money. The highwayman hold up other people in order to support himself. J. C, Simpson, Marquess, W Va.. says: “Hall’s Catarrh Cure cured me o''a very bad case of catarrh.” Druggists sell it, Toe. Some of the revolutions brought about by the bicycle are only somersault-. Don’t TRY to keep house without Blue Ribbon Baking Powder. At all Grocers. B. . K. B. 1’. Company, Richmond, Virginia. Repentance is often confounded with a de¬ termination not to get caught again. To Cure a Cold in One Day. Take Laxative Broino Quinine Tablets. All Druggistsiciuud money if it failsto cure. 25c. T * g g* fe wf women who work for living is 36 years. Educate Yonr Bowels With Casoarets. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. 10c, 25c. If C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money. ... Shoes made of porpoise leather are abso lutely impervious to water. ST. VITUS’ DANCE, SPASMS and all ner . vousdiseases permanently cured the Pr. K Nerve Restorer. by Send use of i lie’s Great for FREE $1.00 trial bottle and treatise to Dr. R. H. Kline, Ltd., 931 Arch Street, Phila., Pa L- —:-- ; ------ ^There are 250 glaciers in the Alps said to be over five miles in length, Mrs. Win slow’s Soothing: Syrup forcJiildren incarna¬ tion,allays teething, softens pain,cures the gums, reducing wind colic, 25c. a bottle. White horses are said to be more delicate than black or brown oucs. No-To-Bac for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit, cure, makes weak meu strong, bloou pure. 50c, $1. All druggists. Prussian burut/hoofs bide paint is made from the ashes of tlie of horses. - -JL Sent free, Klondike Map From Gold Commission’s official survey. Ad¬ dress Gardner & Co., Colorado Springs, Colo. Greater New York has 1.100 churches within its limits and over 130.000 dwelling houses. Beauty Is Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Casearets, Candy Cathar¬ tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring purities up from the the lazy body. liver ami driving all im¬ banish pimples, boils, blotches, Begin blackheads, to-day to and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Casearets,— gists, beauty for ten cents. All drug¬ satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. It takes thirty-seven specially constructed and equipped steamers cables to keep world the sub¬ marine telegraph of the in re¬ pair. (WCBSAjl r> mm Si mm .ySR -1 s m — m Uncle ■ <i mm y mm Sam This Says: M fcwr m is r America's Greatest m Medicine. It will ffl Pm 1 t * Sharpen * Your Appetite, if £ Purify and HI fgg Vitalize Your Blood, Overcome That Tired Feeling. Get a bottle of Hood's Sarsaparilla and begin to take it TODAY, and realize the great "ood it is sure to do you. ''d’s Sarsaparilla Greatest Medicine. Ali drtig^ugis '•’em, tell ’em you saw their this paper. So. 2 ■ ' ? ,, a No°p»yuu fiays. 1 »r. .t. L.Stopi.'Pr.K, a, e anon, o io. Ns* ai. / y v it/ ■ S ; -A-lAS., r* > m Peas For Orchards* There is no grain that can be pro¬ fitably grown in the orchard except the pea. A pit Ulmer growth of buck¬ wheat may not do any injury, but it does not enrich the soil even when plowed under, as does the pea crop. Besides, the pea vines lie close on the ground, and their large leaves shade it just as it needs to be shaded dur¬ ing the hot, dry weather of July and August. Large as its leaves are, the pea vine takes very little moisture from the ground. Usually its leaves are wet with dew in the night, which runs off and fertilizes the soil below, and also keeps it moist. If the peas are sown late and not cut, but allowed to lie on the ground and be fed off by hogs, there is a very material gain in soil fertility over leaving the land un¬ cropped through the season,—Ameri¬ can Cultivator. ; Profitable Poultry. Some interesting data have been brought out In a recent bulletin from the Utah Agricultural Experiment Sta¬ tion. Among the conclusions arrived at were these: The profit in feeding young hens was six times greater than in feeding pld hens; that with intelligent care arid feeding a Leghorn pullet would produce 200 eggs per year; that no advantage was discovered in cross¬ ing the Brahma and Leghorn. In regard to the matter of exercise it was found that hens that had the opportunity to get adequate exercise consumed more food and really pro¬ duced eggs at a less cost. In one trial pen of hens it was found that sixty two centsworthof feed produced|$1.8S worth of fowl, while in some other cases the outlay for feed was nearly as great as the results in fowl. Sunflower Ensilage and I'oildvr, I have been feeding sunflowers as fodder and ensilage for the past seven years, having found by accident that they were as good for milk or butter as corn. I cultivate the same as corn, except I give much more hen manure. I cut when tlie seed reaches the dough state, and run all through the ensi¬ lage cutter. I have fed when newly cut with good results iu helping out short pasturage. The early frosts of autumn do not hurt sunflowers, hence they are very valuable.as a second crop, and by planting late in the fall they will come fetntner yil rapidly in spring, giving an early cutting. I have had plants lj feet higli -when corn was just coming up. They do well on any corn land and, like corn, respond to liberal feed¬ ing. I have never fed the seed to chickens, but have planted largely about the house to fence out malaria. An army surgeon once told me that when stationed in Texas his house was the only one free from malaria because he filled his grounds with sunflowers. We have not had a case at my home since beginning this practice. When saving seed it is best to save that which grows on brandling plants, as the small heads are much easier run through the rollers of the cutter than the mammoth single heads. When filling the silos I put in ono load of sunflowers to two of corn.—J. V. Henry Nott, of New York, in New England Homestead. Profitable Tomato Growing. While tlie canning industry is some¬ what on the wane there is still a de¬ mand for first-class tomatoes for can¬ ning, preserving and catsup making, and also for sale in the open market during the season of growth. To grow tomatoes profitably for a whole¬ sale trade the crop must be large, the fruit of fair and uniform size, aud this is important—properly and uniformly colored. Tomatoes will thrive on any moderately rich soil, but it must be well prepared. The plowing should be thorough, running the plow both ways and making the soil as fine as possible by the use of the harrow aud weeder. The writer, who makes money growing tomatoes for market, has frequently harrowed a piece of ground six times both ways in order that there might not be a handful of lumpy soil. If stable manure is used it should be well rotted and made fine before applying. • If commercial fertilizers are used a high grade complete potato manure will be found more satisfac¬ tory than any other. Sprinkle a handful of this fertilizer about each plant ns set, with a Handful of wood aslie3 and a tablespoonful of nitrate of soda, being careful that none of these ingredients touch the stock of the plant or the foliage. After this appli¬ cation run the harrow or weeder through to thoroughly mix the fertiliz¬ er with the soil. Repeat the applica¬ tion of fertilizer and the harrowing af¬ ter the fruit begins to set. This method of culture gives us strong plants, well ripened fruit and plenty of it of good and uniform size.—Atlan¬ ta Journal. Trees Gnawed by Mice or Rabbits. If the portion of the tree from which the bark lnjs been eaten is at once covered with grafting wax, healing will usually take place and the tree live. Of course, if the exposed wood is allowed to become dry this surface must be bridged over with scions, so that the circulation may be renewed, To make a suitable wax for this pur pose, take five or six parts of resin ' and two parts of beeswax. Melt this j alu j while hot add one part of tallow, j y r y a coa (_ 0 | this on a green stick, ex- ] pose five minutes to the cold air or water. If it is too hard and cracks easily, add a little more tallow. It must not be so soft that when warm spring weather comes it will run off the wood, If beeswax cannot be readily obtained, use only resin and tallow, in which case a greater pro¬ portion of tallow is required. This, however, is not as good as when bees* wax is a part of the mixture, To apply this wax, wind about one end of .a small stick, a strip of strong muslin two inches wide. Let part .of this extend beyond the stick and then tie the whole thing firmly to it with twine. This is used as a swab. Fill an old tin pail three-fourths full ol ashes. On the top of the ashes place a layer of live wood coals, and on these coals a dish of wax. You are now ready to go to work. The coals will keep the wax warm. With the swab put a good coat of wax over all the exposed tissue. Be careful that it is not hot enough to burn the wood and tissues on the bark of the small trees. If the denuded surface is large, after waxing wind a thick strip of old tender muslin about the tree iu spiral form. Then use a little wax to fasten the end. This is an additional guard against the crack¬ ing of the wax or of its running ofi during warm weather. The impor¬ tant thing with this treatment is to apply the wax at once and do not de¬ lay until the wood has in any way be¬ come dry, for then the sap cannot ascend and death will finally result.— American Agriculturist. The Private Dairy. Taking all things into consideration, the private dairy is preferable from point of profit to the public creamery. This statement needs no argument. The former is under the entire con¬ trol of the owner and operator; in the latter much is necessarily left to the management of others, and the ex¬ pense of operating the creamery and everything connected therewith means just so much out of the profits. How just to manage a private dairy it will be the aim of the writer to dis¬ close. There should be some con¬ veniently arranged room where tb« operations connected with the butter making may be conducted outside the kitchen, and this should certainly be provided with some means for supply¬ ing steam or hot water in abundance. A good well of pure water should also be at hand. As to the floor, it will he a labor-saver to have cement, with just sufficient slope to convey water to one side of the room, whefe^ a gutter (water tight) should carry it to the drain. A well-laid board floor of matched lumber will answer very well and will wear a num¬ ber of years, but it is more trouble¬ some to clean and apt to become musty by reason of dampness. Any¬ thing like this, -which is to be in daily use for years, may better be properly done at the first, and the cement will be a source of satisfaction from the day it is laid, Of the various utensils and so forth, for the care of the milk and cream and the manufacture of the butter, much might be said as to the different kinds. Let it suffice to say tri at where there are more than ten cows it would cer tainly be advisable to have a separ¬ ator. With a less number the cold deep setting is probably more satis¬ factory, but in order to secure perfect separation of the cream by this pro¬ cess, the cows must come “fresh” at different periods throughout the year. Milk from cows long in lactation be¬ comes thick and viscous, hence the cream globules do not so readily rise to the surface. Where this class of milk has to be dealt with, sufficient hot water should be mixed with it at setting to thin it and raise the tem¬ perature to something above the nor¬ mal point. This does not in any way hinder the cream in rising—on the contrary it helps the process along by making the ascent of the cream glo¬ bules easier of accomplishment. There must be a cream vat, large enough to accommodate the cream for a churning; a church which is abun¬ dantly roomy inside for the quantity of cream to be handled; a butter worker, scales, ladles, paddle, prints, as well as pails, strainers, dippers and other small utensils for the conven¬ ience of the buttermakers. Plenty of light should be provided for by means of windows, and cold storage of some kind at hand in which to place butter before marketing. The walls of the dairy room (or building, should it be by itself) should be grouted in order to render changes of temperature less perceptible. An abundant supply of ice is indispensable in summer. As to the location of the dairy room opinions differ. Some claim it is an advantage to have it attached to, or near, the house; others that it should be near the barn to avoid the labori¬ ous carrying of heavy pails of milk back and forth, Where the women of the family are expected to do a good share of the work of buttermaking, I should cer ; tainly advise having it near the house, Sometimes there is a room fitted up at the barn where the separating is done, the milk, still warm, being fed to the calves and pigs, while the cream alone is carried to the house for further treatment and subsequent manufac ture into butter.—Mi ( A E. K. Wood, in Jersey Bulletin. —\ - A traveler can now avound the world in fifty days. CHARCOAL BURNING. Methods Employed by Those Engaged in the Work in England. ! The methods employed by the char¬ coal burners of England seem primitive in this day, but the results obtained are satisfactory. First, the young trees are cut down and stripped of their branch¬ es and laid in heaps to be carted away, the burners reserving only oak between two and three Inches thick, Which is cut into two-foot lengths and the bark peeled off. The bark is tied in bundles and carted Off arid the short sticks are laid regularly side by Side in a circular heap sixteen feet in diameter arid six feet high. This heap is covered with rushes and earth, a small hole being left in the center. Through this the fire is introduced and eats its way downward, A little air is let in from pip •i lx - LAYING THE STICKS, the bottom and the fire Is kept burning slowly and steadily. A pit takes two days to burn through. Strong winds are a great enemy to successful com¬ bustion and great screens of gorse are usually made. In burning, the wood loses -10 per cent, iu bulk and 80 in weight. An Ancient Custom. From Republican Traveler, Arkansas City, Kan. Pilgrimages to some shrine of St. Vitus to euro the disease known as St. Vitus’ dance are no. longer made. The modern way of treating household, this affliction is shown is within by reach of every as the experience of Karl A. Wagner, the oieven-year-old son of G-eorge Wagner, of 515 9th St., Arkansas City, Kan. The fath¬ er toll3 the story as follows: “Over a year ago,” he says, “Karl was taken with St. Vitus’ dance and continued to grow worse during five months he was under a physician’s care. His tongue be ; came paralyzed and we could not under¬ stand a word ho said. Ho became very thin, lost the use of his right leg and seemod doomed to become a hopeless in¬ valid. \Ve had about given up hope when Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People wore recommended to my wife by a lady whoso daughter had been cured of a simi¬ lar affliction by the pills. “1 bought a box of them at once and soon n o t i c o d a change for 1 l l —'1 |l the bettor iu . Karl’s con- JPifXi - 3 dition. I was so well / pleased bought that I more them, and when he had taken five k boxes disease dis- the i app eared. A Hopeless invalid. That was six months ago and there has been no return of the disoase. The cure was effectual and permanent, and I feel satisfied that no other medicine could have pro¬ duced so marvelous a result. We feel re¬ joiced over the restoration of our son, and cannot help but feel that Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People are the most re markable medicine on the market.” No discovery of modern times has proved Will¬ such a blessing to mankind as Dr. iams’ Pink Pills for Pale Teople. Acting directly on the blood and nerves, invigor¬ ating the body, regulating tlie functions, they restore the strength and health in the exhausted patient when every effort of the physician proves unavailing. These pills are sold iu hexes at 50 cents a boxer six boxes for $>2.50, and maybe had of all druggists, or dijrect by mail from Dr. Williams’ Medicine Co.. Schenectady. N.Y. Virtue’s Busy Inning. Albert Rockingham and. John Daw ton had been boys together. Albert had always gone to. Sunday school and obeyed his parents, but John had beer a bad boy. He had loved to torture kittens, to destroy birds’ nests, and tc make little girls cry. In time they grew to manhood ant loved the same woman. Julia Birdsall worshiped Albert Rock¬ ingham, until lie was arrested for high¬ way robbery and sentenced for twenty seven years to the penitentiary. Then her heart turned to stone. “Julia,” Ji.e cried, as they were lead ing him away, “Julia, Julia, I am inno¬ cent.” But she gave him the Chiikoo-t Pass and fainted in the arms of John Daw¬ son, who smiled sardonically and mut tered: “So much, Albert Rockingham, foi being a good boy and going to Sunday school!” Twelve years passed—-twelve weary sorrow-laden years, during which time John Dawson made love to the worn at who iiad promised to be Albert Rock Ingham’s wife, and collected the rents that the falsely accused man ought tc have had. But Nemesis had all along been bid ing her tame, and one day, when John Dawson wasn’t looking, .she stole uj and hit him on the solar plexus. Two days later Albert Rockingham emerged from prison, weighing seven¬ teen pounds more than he did when he was sentenced. “Julia!” ho cried, when she stepped forward at the depot. “Albert!” screamed the beautiful girl, and their lips met. Then John Dawson was led away, gritting bis teeth and swearing that he was not through yet. Vain threat! He rotted in a dungeon, while Albert and Julia raised a large family and were truly happy. Thus virtue had triumphed, but, un fortunately, this didn’t happen in real life. It was just a 30c-foMhe-bes.t-»eai melodrama. CLevland Leader. —as*— - ^ ^ ar f» e h eii d is about as much evi deuce of brains as a paper collar is of a shirt •£££&& T-QM =J5 JDqij JL ! ; 3 ft . oa„; if” /j# Si \T—-■*, r A .IK./ " i* S' 1 % -./i fit * U NS % \ %\ % ? r* - ? —* I 0 VS 3 "?! A\ w er ~~ 7 .-J, K* Pr No amount of argument can convince the experienced, honest grocer that any other soap will give his customers such general satisfaction as Ivory Soap. He knows that they prefer Ivory Soap to new kinds, of unknown quality. Ivory Soap will sell because the people want it, the other soaps may look like Ivory, but his customers want the real thing — they may buy a new soap once to try it, but they come back again and again for Ivory Soap, and they insist on having it. Copyright. 1308. by The Procto ft Gamble Co., Cincinnati. Identified l>y Tattoo Marks. Several days ago the police sent out a description of a woman who was wanted for a theft, and a feature ol tlie description was a notice to the ef¬ fect that she was tattooed from her neck to her heels with pictures of drag¬ ons, ships under full sail, flags and oth¬ er devices in India Ink. She had been a circus sideshow performer in her ear¬ lier years, and she would probably have escaped but for those tattoo marks and the presence of a matron in the station house to which she was taken by the officer who made tlie arrest. This in¬ cident led a well-known detective to make some comments. “Tattooing,” he said, “used to be common among a certain class of people, especially sail¬ ors, but it is so no longer. Nobody ex¬ pects to become a criminal, but no man knows when it may become a vital ne¬ cessity to conceal his identity. A per¬ fectly innocent man might be subjected to temporary annoyance if his identity were known, as it would undoubtedly be if be were mfirkfed by. tattoo devices. Very few' professional thieves are la¬ beled in that way.”—Pittsburg Press. The True and the Imitation. Dora seated at the play Weeps to see the hero perish— Hero of a Dresden day, Fit for china nymphs to cherish; O that Dora's heart would be Halt so soft and warm for me! When the flaring lights are out His heroic deeds are over, Gone his splendid strut and sliont. Gone his raptures of a lover, While my humdrum heart you'd find True, though out of sight aud mind. —Athenaeum. Everybody seems to know just where the north pole is and yet no one is able to find it. 1 “I have been insing EASCAHETS Tor Insomnia, with which I have been afflicted lor over twenty years, and I can say that Casearets have given nie more relief than any other reme¬ dy I have ever tried. I shall certainly recom¬ mend them to my friends as being all they are represented.” Titos. Gillaed, Elgin, Ill. candy CATHARTIC TRADE MARK RE0I5T5RED Pleasant. Palatable. Potent, Taste Good no Good, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c, 25c, 50c. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Sterling Remedy Company, Chicago, Montreal, New Yorfc, 1116 K040-BSS^t d s rc«r^acVffl x * .... We delight to do an early friend A good turn. The working pants cf € m A EXCH E A»ok°D r LEG'S iPi lia r-r.r? n im .-:■ N y * DVamwc BEARIN F“, B m»8. ever-going, everiastmi., potrer doubling, UP-TO-DATE 3” Wa, MOTOR* 8 FT. like FOR bicycle, S6; and I2*£t. are for$12; made like 16-ft. a g||g BKM for $30. They run a rolb-rs. Doubles geared Njg| ga 9 witch, every movable part on when a!J oilier nails I mill power. ThoAerniotor raw windmill business. 1 stood still, and made the steel StHE NEW BEATS THE WOODEN THE OLD WHEEL. AS THE SOLD •1 BEAT wheel On receipt of amount, revised motor (but not I 'j ox returned, vane) will offer be sent Mibjeci to replace cuncollation old one then time. to be I 1 R tjk to at any A If your old wheel is not au Aermotor, write for KMk termsof swap-new for old—loro on oJd tower. You can p utiton. Aermotcr £o.. S? Lid EDUCATION AL. LEMSON AGRICULTURAL AND MECHANICAL COLLEGE, ■VSIB/*'.' * Agricultural, Chemical, * Mechanical, Textile, p Literary, Military. o 9 450 Students. 24 Professors. Send Four Cents for Illustrated Catalogue. Henry S. Hartzog, Pres. CIrmson College, 8. V. W HE\ you write ’em. tell ’em you saw tlieir advertisement in this paper. So. 20 am: OmS WHERE SUIS ALL ELSE FAILS. , Seat Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use in time. _Sold by druggists. £ P What a Recent Discovery Reveals. The Smithsonian Institution lias re¬ ceived a collection which is of impor¬ tance to the archeologist. It is known as the Seton-Karr con trlbution, having been discovered by this Englishman in Somaliland, on the 1 ‘ The jmple eastern coast of Africa. iuents were purchased from the di&p ox over by’ the Smithsonian Institution. There are about fifty pieces in the cot lection. made of flint or quartide, and' ranging iu size from an inch or so in length to half a foot, some weighing several pounds. The objects arh sup¬ posed to be spear heads, battle axes -ind wedges, truncheons, bludgeons. whatever they may be termed. U The discoverer had this to say on the subject of his find and tlie locality where the objects were unearthed: “Certain landmarks as to the four rivers mentioned in Genesis led me ;o> think that the Garden of Eden, if it ever existed, may have been here, and . .. that these very tools had been made , and used by Adam and liis numerous descendants. At any rate, my discov ■ erics in Egypt and Somaliland lead m» io the. idea that man’s original home, or the place where he was gradually evolved, must have been in Africa, or, at least, iu a tropical land. where clothes were unnecessary and food plentiful to hand.” Magistrate—You wore drunk, of course, when the hold-up men went through you? Battered-rip prisoner— l was, your honor. Magistrate They got everything you had, 1 suppose? Batter¬ ed-lip prisoner—Everything, your hon¬ or, except a t wo-dollar bill I had in my watcli pocket. Magistrate—The fine will be two dollars. Call the next easel —Chicago Tribune. Xew and Quick your own mattress, try it. I ^ \ cSudmedd OSBORNE'S dueac Ailttusfa. Ga. Actual business. Jioiext (/ booKA* Short time. Cheap board* Send for oacalorac HARLOTTE COMMERCIAL «£ fifi OLLESE, CftfiOlOTTE, H. G. No Vacations—Positions Guaranteed—Catalogue Free- 1 ? n I ByJ. Hamilton Ayers, A. M.,M.D. Book 9 » i This is a most Valuable I ! for the Household, teaching as it | does the easily-distinguished I! | symptoms of dincrent Diseases, the Cause, and Means of ITe ! venting Mich Diseases, aud the ; Simplest Remedies which will al¬ » i leviate or cure. pages, Profusely Illustrated. ft Tlle £ 00 j c j s written 1n plain fet ; Irom every-doy the technical Eugiisb, and u* which | &J/ terms render most Doctor Boolis so valueless to the go’ieiality of /III readers. (elided t« This I.M* ol Book ^ci vict* if* in- Ill , % f f I if J II Fiuuilf, ;<nci rflcd _ cAf\ / the readily k sown l to tie understood by all ONLY Postage (ill els. Stamps POSTPAID. Taken. j'-fA ^ |f ‘ / j i J Not only does this book con- i » w tain no much information Uela- 'rjjfc- *«?r / A\ IlV VI vy\ tire vO Disease, but very proper Jy gives a Complete Analysis of &SL 1 ) WA eve rything pertaining to Court- sSsfiSW ship, Marriage aud the Pro »uc- ’j ’ tion a.nl Hearing of Healthy Families,together Recipes aud Prescriptions, with Valuable Lx- fl planationsof botanical Practice, g J Correct Complete use of Ordinary Index. Herbs, occ K J «U^ ^ JL_: BOOK l*i; H. HOUSE, SA— vf'T. 134 Leonard Sc., N. Y. City CATJSK ^fOf s ; Vi