The Columbia sentinel. (Harlem, Ga.) 1882-1924, July 01, 1886, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

fOR THE FARM!ASD HOME. Th . Beat Tree for Ptaßtln*. The locust is an excellent tree for farm planting, because it makes the most dura ble posU. It grows quickly, and when vUt sprouts from the root. It should be crown 8 feetapart, which gives 680 trees to the acre, and it is not difficult to pro duce trees to cut two or three posts each, d thus make 1300 to 2000 posts ]>er acr( . worth 25 cents each. The future fence will be post and wire, as it is the cheapest nnd most durable. Chestnut is the next best tree, and inferior to lo cust only in durability; but it grows na>re rapidly, and this may perhaps equalize the two, as it is certain two crops of chestnut posts may be grown for one of locust. This tree also sprouts frec ly from the root and makes, a second growth more productive than the first. The seeds may be planted in the fall, and the ground should be plowed early in the fall and replowed before planting. It is a good plan to drop the nuts on the plowed ground four feet apart both wav3 , then cover them by the second plowing two inches deep, and then cut the first growth when large enough for stakes.— JYw York Times. J tiraas Seeding. An exchange says that whether to seed to grass in spring or autumn depends on circumstances. On some lands when the weatner is favorable fall seeding will seem to do best. But often when tire autumn months are dry the grass gets such a poor start that unless the winter is very favorable it makes but a poor showing the following spring. Crickets and grasshoppers often do much damage to fall seeded land. In dry weather the young grass starts slow, and makes but little growth, and at such times these in sects are usually very plenty, and on the borders of the newseededland they often eat the tender grass as fast as it grows until it is entirely destroyed. By seed ing in the spring we avoid these causes of failure. By seeding in spring with grain we save the ploughing and harrow ing of the land for one crop, as two crops arc sown together. When grass seed is sown in spring with grain on good, well prepared land it is almost sure to start add grow well till the grain ripens and is harvested. If the grass fails it is usual ly at this time. We have noticed that when the grain was cut green for fodder the grass did much better than when it was left to ripen. Itlpe Experience. An old man who has tilled the soil for forty years, and is out of debt, prosper ous and happy, has given the world seven valuable maxims. They constitute a very good creed: 1. One acre of land, well prepared and well cultivated, produced more than two which received only the same amount of labor used on the one. 2. One cow, one horse, mule, sheep or hog, well fed, is more profitable than two kept on the same amount necessary to keep one. 3. One acre of clover or grass is worth more than two of cotton where clover is raised. 4. No farmer who buys oats, corn or wheat, as a rule, for ten years, can keep the Sheriff away from the door in the end. 5. The farmer who never reads the pa pers, sneers at book farming and im provements, always has a leaky roof, poor stock, broken down fences, and com plains of bad “seasons.” 6. The farmer who is above his busi ness, and intrusts it to another to man age, soon has no business to attend to. 7. The farmer whose habitual beverage is cold water, is healther, wealthier and wiser than he who does not refuse strong drink. Purchasing Earm Implements. If the farmer goes to the city to buy his farm implements, he finds them in such great variety that it is very difficult for him to determine which will prove best for his particular farm. When a farmer can do so, it is a safer way to get a chance to try a machine befor purchas ing it. Even then he may make a mis take, and buy one that is liable to get out of order, or is so constructed that some parts of it will wear out in a short time. Fortunately for the farmers, the manufacturers of agricultural implements are much more particular in construct ing and finishing machines now than they were fifteen or twenty years ago, so that now there is not the risk in purchas ing agricultural implements that there formerly was; but the improvement in the work on the machines has kept the price up where it makes it very burden some for the small farmer to buy a com plete set of improved farm implements; many farmers do not feel that they can afford it, so they use their old ones; thus the large fanners have the advantage over the small farmers, unless several small farmers unite together and pur chase a set of improved implements. This may be done to good advantage in good neighborhoods, but there is always dan ger of having some one of the number thus united who is so selfish that it is very difficult, if not imjmssible, to get along with him unless he is given his own way, as to how and when he will use the machines of joint ownership. In some neighborhoods it is the better way for each farmer to buy a different imple ment and let the use of it to the others who have a different machine that they can let him; in this way each fanner is master over his own property. If it were only the cost of the machines that the farmer has to meet, a much larger num ber would be able to buy a full set; but it is important that all farm implements should be housed, so extra store room has to be built at an expense that often equals, if it does not exceed the cost of the implements; then there are the re pairs and taxes to meet, all of which the farmer has to consider when he settles the question as to what number of im proved implements he will buy. This question comes up every spring, and is usually decided by the amount of cash or credit the fanner possesses, and not by the real saving which he can make.— Ploughman. Protect the Wells. The idea that the water of our wells is the purest obtainable was long ago ex ploded. Well water may be pure, but its degree of purity depends wholly upon its distance from all filth. It is now ad mitted that in many soils both air and water travel very freely under the sur face. Some are so porous and deep that water will easily settle through them and the bulk of the filth be retained in the top loam; and in such cases it may be said that ordinary cultivation and the growing vegetation will absorb the ob jectionable element. Water in such lo cations is regarded pure and safe. But where wells sre shallow and dug in clay ey or impervious soil, having near to or at their bottom an impevious stratum they are likely to be receptacles for filth contamination for many rods around. It does not follow that because the contents of sink drains soak out of sight that the deadly element theiVin is gotten rid of; it too frequently finds its way to the water which the family are prone to ex tol as the very perfection of purity. It is never safe to depend upon taste in this matter; if there is a source of contamina tion near the well rid yourself of it with out delay; at least do not rest content until you have had the water subjected to a thorough chemical analysis. Dr. Folsom who was so long connected with the Massachusetts Board of Health, Lun acy and Charity said that “it is impossi ble to say that a well is safe at any or dinary distance from a source of constant pollution to the neighboring soil, like a privy, cesspool, barnyard, etc.” He fur ther remarks that “there is always a risk,’’and that “the ordinary privy should be abolishad.” There is no doubt that many cases of scarlet fever, diphtheria, etc., have often their parentage in the cesspool. Typhoid fever, which has in so many cases been traceable to polluted wells, was some years ago found to be most prevalent in the rural districts. To provide proper sanitary measures, will to be sure, take a little time; but it need involve very little expense. Where there is an abundant supply of running water near by, underground drains will satis factorily dispose of animal filth from a sanitarian point of view; but on the farm it is desirable to use this for fertilizing purposes, and an abundant supply of peat or ashes daily thrown into the vault, sink-drain, barnyard, etc., will keep noxious odors from the air. If you seek a rule as to how near a well may safely be located to any filth collection, know that if you describe a circle about the well as a centre, with a radius three times its depth, and if there if no cause of pollu tion within the circumference, the water is probably uncontaminated.— Cultivator. Recipe*. Johnny Cake.— One egg, two table spoonfuls of sugar, three of melted shortening, one large cup of sour milk, one teaspoonful of soda, a little salt, one third flour, two-thirds meal; make the batter only just stiff enough to run from the dish nicely; pour in a buttered dish and bake twenty minutes in a hot oven. Broiled I’otatoes. — Cut whatever num ber may be needed of cold, boiled potatoes into slices lengthwise, about a quarter of an inch thick; dip each slice in flour and lay them between a folding broiler. Have the fire clear, and when both sides arc nieely browned, lay the slices on a hot dish, put a piece of butter on each, and season with pepper and salt. Stewd Steak.— ln a small saucepan place about half a pound of thick and tender steak, with a little of the fat left on. Pour in a cupful of boiling water, shred a tiny onion very finely and season with pepper and salt to taste. Then put all over the top of the steak small pieces of celery heaped up. The saucepan should stand about two inches above the level of the fire, and by no means ought to be uncovered until the steak is to be removed to the dish. Half an hour is sufficient time for it to be done to a turn. Mushrooms instead of, or even with, the celery are an improvement. Feast Beead. Yeast: Soak one and a half cakes of yeast in one cup of warm water until soft; add one tablespoonful salt, one of sugar, two of flour and let rise. Pare and boil one quart of pota toes, mash fine. Add one pint of hot water and one of cold. W hen cool enough pour in a stone jar; add the yeast. Let it stand until the next day. For the bread take a pint of the yeast and half as much warm water. Set a stiff sponge. Put in a warm place until quite light, then mix it from twenty minutes to half uu hour, taking care not to get in too much flour. Form into loaves. Let them rise to the top of the greased tins and bake about twenty minutes in a quick oven. Apples with Hire.— Wash a pint of rice thoroughly, scald it with hot water, drain and cool; add to the rice a quart of rich milk, a quarter of a pound of sugar and a saltspoonful of salt; simmer gently an hour. When done, beat it with a wooden spoon. Wet an oval mold with water; press the rice in it and keep on ice until wanted. Peel, quarter and core five fine apples; put them in a stew pan with three half-pints of water, three cloves, two slices of lemon and half a pound of sugar (dissolve the sugar in the water first); simmer until the apples aro tender but will not break when removed from the pan. When done strain care fully ami boil down the syrup until quite thick. Now turn out the rice on a glass dish, add the apples as a border, and pour the syrup over all. Ilousehold Hint*. To cut warm bread or cake, have your knife quite hot. Fried slices of apples are good for a spring breakfast dish. A stale loaf of bread, dipped quickly into cold water, then l>aked for half an hour, is better than when fresh. Half a loaf is generally enough for a family of three. Bread and cake must be thoroughly cooled before being put into box or jar; if not, the steam will cause them to mold quickly. Pieces of stale bread can be used for toast, griddle cakes and pud dings, and for dressing for poultry and other kinds of meat. Stale cake can b made into puddings. Lime slaked with salt water and then properly thinned with skim milk, from which all the cream has been taken, makes a perma nent whitewash for outdoor work, and, it is said, renders the wood incom bustible. It is an excellent wash for pre serving wood and for all factory pur poses. The Favorite House Page. There is a sunny-haired little page in the House of Representatives who has be come quite a pet among the members, says a Washington correspondent. Ila is a little tot of a fellow, with a bright, open face, large blue eyes and sunny blonde head of hair. He wears little knee breeches and is as lively as a crick et at all times. When the members want an errand done fast and well they always try to get this little fellow to do it. His very politeness ami good manners have brought many little tramps to his feet, because the members all want him. But he does not mind an extra run, and goes as chirpy and happily on a new errand as possible. He never seems to grow weary, and always is polite. But this is not the worst part of his troubles. His very ap pearance is pleasing, and every time any one secures him, they tap him on the head or run their hand over his hair. Now for three or four people to do this would not amount to much, but to have 325 members and as many more strangers to rub bis head only once a day, it is not only tiresome but is having a serious effect. When the little boy came here his hair was long and thick, but this con tinual patting and rubbing is wearing his hair off. He begins to fear that before the session ends, if this thing keeps up, he will be bald. Not that Kind of Boy. For an hour yesterday afternoon a woman walked up and down the ladies’ waiting room at the Third street depot in her efforts to hush the screams and yells of a child about two years old. The lit tle one washopping mad about something and could not be soothed by soft words or sticks of candy. There finally came a moment when everybody saw the moth er’s face take on a look of grim determin ation, and at that moment a newsboy who had been warming himself at a reg ister broke for out doors. “What’s the row?” asked one of his outside friends as he joined them. There’s a woman in there goin’ to spank her young ’un.” “Why didn’t you stop and sec the fun?” “Um! 'Spore I want to be hauled up as a witness in an assault and battery case and have the lawyers givin’ me sass?”— Detroit Free Preu. Surviving a Fall of 250 Feet. Dr. Evans relates in the Bristol (Eng land) Medical Chirurgical Journal the history of a girl who attempted suicide by jumping from the Clifton suspension bridge. The bridge is two hundred and fifty feet high and has been a favorite place for suicides. Sixteen persons have, been known to have succeeded in self destruction by making the same leap. One other only was picked up alive, but survived only thirty minutes. Twenty days after the fall the patient was con sidered convalescent and able to walk without pain. There was apparently no permanent injury. As far as the writer knows no case of survival after a fall from as great a height as one hundred and fifty feet has hitherto been recorded, and he considers tills instance as proba bly unique. A Wider Vision. How sad they seem—the houses of the dead— And how the shadows of the trees advance And then withdraw, as they were spirit led, And meant to mock u« with a prayer unsaid, Or goblin dance. It is not well, methinks, to revel thus; It is not well to stir in such a place. The dead are wiser than the best of us; They lie so still, and yet, while we discuss. They win the race. No d<K>rs are here! The dead have need of none, They hold aloof; they pray beneath the sod. \V itb sightless eyes they see beyond the sun; , And they wilt hear, in truth, when all is done, The voice of God. Yes! they will hear it; they have learn’d at last A wider wisdom than the world bestows. Hunger is ours to-day; but theirs is post. They toil no more, and in the wintry bias* They find repose. —George Lancaster. HUMUKOUS. Foot pads—Corn plasters There is generally an “if” in the way. Frequently the sheriff. A petrified clock has been found in Rome. Another indication of hard times. Every man has some hobby, and every girl looks forward to the time when she will have a hubby. There is any amount of good reading in the dictionary, but it is distributed in a very tantalizing manner. A carp said to be 268 years old has been taken out of the river Spree. This shows that fish can stand sprees better than men can. It is reported that Henry Bergh is car rying his sympathies for animals so far that he is cultivating a bald spot on his head as a pasture for flies. More than four thousand devices for coupling have been patented, and yet thousands of bachelors and maidens go it alone in this country. A lady who lost a pct canary bird by death was inconsolable until somebody suggested that she have it stuffed and put on her bonnet. She is now as happy as ever. “What a murderous-looking villain the prisoner is!” whispered the old lady to her husband in the police court room. “I’d be afraid to get near him.” “Sh!” warned her husband, “that isn’t the pris- j oner, he hasn’t been brought in yet. It’s the judge.” The Air Gun. The air-gun is simply a pneumatic en gine, for the purpose of discharging bul lets by the elastic force of compressed air. Itjis not known exactly when or by : whom it was first invented, but it was certainly in use in France three centuries ago. It is probable that had not the gunpowder been discovered at so early a date air-guns might have been made very effective. They are usually made in the form of muskets, having a hollow stock, which is filled with compressed air from a force-pump. The lock is nothing more than a valve, which lets into the barrel a part of the compressed air from the stock when the trigger is pulled. The gun is loaded with wadding and bullet in the ordinary way, and the bullet is driven from the barrel by the expansive action of the air. The range of the gun de pends upon its size and the amount and degree of compression of the air. The velocity of the bullet is proportioned to the square foot of the degree of compression of the air. Under the pressure of fifty atmospheres, or 750 pounds, for instance, the impulse given to the ball is almost equal to that of an ordinary charge of gunpowder. Air-guns are sometimes made in the form of walking sticks, so they can be readily used for purposes of defense. Air-guns are generally regard ed as somewhat unsafe, but it is not known that any law has ever been enact ed against them. In the hands of inexpe rienced or malicious persons they are cap able of jloing much mischief.— lnter- Ocean. A Big Baptizin’ by Military Order. Gen. Stevenson relates the following incident of the war. He said that in his command was a very devout and energetic chaplain, exceedingly earnest in regard to the spiritual welfare of the soldiers, especially before going into battle. “The preacher,” said Gen. Stevenson, “came down to where Billy Wilson’s Zouaves were incamped and had a talk with Billy. He said that his efforts had been wonderfully blessed; that he had baptized fifty men from one regiment, a hundred from another, and so on, enum erating the fruits of his religious labor, and he suggested to Billy that as they were on the eve of a battle it would be well for him (the chaplain) to talk with Billy’s men. “Billy was very proud of hie command, and he turned to the chaplain and said: ‘That ain’t necessary; I’ll save you that trouble. Adjutant,’ said he, calling an officer, ‘you just go and make a detail of 300 men, and take ’em down to the creek and have ’em baptized. No blamed regi ment in this corps shall go ahead of Billy Wilson’s Zouaves.’ “And,” continued the General, laugh ing hcartly at the reminiscence, “blamed if the Adjutant didn’t obey Billy’s or- . dors.” WHAT SCIENCE SAYS. The "Fm rful and W an.lrrl'iil*' Mechnnlam ol the Huhihu hi Graphically I'ui- I rayed. 111, (he editorial column, at the New York 4nali/<e H. lAHslng. M. D editor,writt’M the following beutill fill description ol" the lulKtraUii'ire of the human imn We think we uewr read n liner or more trustworthy one ] "Man is the greatest of all chemical labor* Rtoriea. Magnify tin*small M < e.l of the body and wh it a lacto y is s reu i lieforu the eves —count ess < hamlmrs in which are of ntr, masse* of solid mat ter, globulin of dying liquid; a Harh comcn an I the while is von sume.l nnd nee ”ul hen- is <at t ied into every part of th ’ tout? n. Electrical forces also generate and are conveyed to the brain, the muNcleaand the various nerve ctntrea. "In another H*t of a million chambers we see various gasses and vapors. By chemical action this' are < hang si and nurftled in the Kings and the skin The bio xt wo often say is a groat living river In its current are inasaca which the air in the lungs di I not af fect: blocks of chalk; slabs of tartar; pie ei of bone-ash, strings of albumen; drops of molasses, anti lines of alcohol. How are these waste masses d spossl off Begin wheie you will in this great stream, you must come to the purifying places of the sys tem. Hero is all activity and an invisible force reaches out into the stream seizes and ’ arrrvs th s mass of waste into vast trenches, thence into a smaller reservoir, and finally into a larger reservoir, which regularly dis charges its contents. "This separation of lime, uric acid and other waste material from the bio. si, without rob- i bing it of a particle of the life fluid, nnwus human comprehension, in health this blood, purifying process is carried on w ithout our knowledge. The organs in whi hit is done are faithful servants whose work is silent as long as health remains. “People strangely wa t until pain strikes a nerve before they will realize that they have any trouble. They do not. know that pain concerns chiefly the exterior, not the interior of the body. A certain set of nerves connect these blood purifying organs with the brain. They may not gnaw and bite as does the tooth-ache or a scrut h. but they regularly, silently report. When these organs are fad ing these nerves indicate it by drawing the blood from the face and cheek, leaving the lip and eye blanched, by sending uric acid poison into the smallest veins, the skin then becoming gray, yellow or brown. They also f)revent the purification of the blood in the ungs and < ause pulmonary difficulties, weari nrss and pa n. Who enjoys perfect health, especially in this land w here we burn the candle in one mass! 1 The athlete bnaka down in the race; the editor falls at his desk; the merchant succumbs in his counting room. These events should not have been un expo’tel, for nature long ago bung out her ‘lanterns of alarm.’ When the “accident" finally comes its fatal effect is seen in a hundred forms; e.ther as conges tion, chronic weakne s, as w rong action, as variable appetite, a-; head troubles, as palpi tation ami irregularities of the heart, as premature decay, as dryness and harshness of the skin, causing the hair to drop out or turn gray, as apoplexy, as paralysis, as gen eral debility, blood poisoning, etc. “Put no faith then in the wiseacre who says there is no danger as long as t hen' is no pain. Put no faith in the physician, who ever ho may be, who say.* it is a mere cold or a s ight indisposition. He knows little, if any. more than yon do about it. He can neither see nor examine those organs and de {lends entirely upon exjierimental tests, that you can make as wed as he. “If the output is discolored or muddy, if it contains albumen, lymph. crystals, sweet or morbid matter, is red with os aj»ed blood, or roily with gravel, mucus and froth, some thing is wrong and disease and death are not far away. “These organs which wo have doscrils d thus at length, because they are really the most important, ones in the human system, the ones in which a large ma jority of human ailments original * and are sustained, are the kidneys. They have not been mwh dis ussed in public, liecause it is conceded that the pro fession has little known power over thorn. What is wanted for such organs is a simple medicine, which can do no harm to the most delicate, but. must be of the greatest benefit to the afflicted. Buch a remedy tried and proved by many thousands all over the world, is Warner’s safe cure. With those in whom disease is deep seated it is the only specific. For those in whom the seeds are sown and the beginning of illness started it is an unfailing reliance. It may lie recommended to the well to pre vent. sickness, and the sick to prevent deat h. Wit h its aid the great filtering engine- of the system keep on in their silent work without interruption; without it they get out of gear nnd then disease and death open the door and cross the threshold." Such writing ought not only to please but to carry conviction that w hat Editor Miss ing, M. I).—so high an authority—says is true, and that his counsel is worthy the at tention and heed of all prudent, right minded people. In itself lying in a base passion, but its tendency to injure others renders it also a dangerous one. “Wood Will Tell.” Yes. the old adage is right, but if the liver is disordered and the blood becomes thereby cor rupted, the bad “blood will tell” in di-eases of theskin and throat, in tumors and ulcers, and in tubercles in the lungs (first stages of con sumption), even although the subject be de scended in a straight line from Richard Coeur de Lion, or the noblest Roman of them all. For setting the liver in order no other medi cine in the. world equals hr. Pierce’s “Holden Medical Discovery. 'Pry it, and your “blood will tell” the story of its wonderful efficacy. Imj.ri-onrnei't lor debt has b<cn al (dished in New York St: te. The purest, sweetest and best. Cod Liver Oil in the world, manufactured from fresh, healthy livers, upon the seashore. It is absolutely pure and sweet. Patients who have once taken it prefer it to all others. Physicians have, de cided it superior to any of the other oils in market. Made by Caswell, Hazard <fc (Jo., New York. Chapped hands, face, pimples and rough skin cured by using Juniper 'far Soup, made by Caswell, Hazard <V Co., New York. Laihe-C Those dm- tired looks and feel Ings speak volumes I Dr. Kilmer’s Female Rem edy corrects all cm (litions, rcs'Die- vigor and vitality and brings back youthful bloom and beauty. Price SI.OO •> hot I'm $5.00. Het Lyon’s latent Heel *ttffencrs applied to those new boots an I they wdl never run over. Icebergs have been seen off the Labrador coast two miles .'( ng nnd feet high Perfection is attained In Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy. The Pill ll'ilbr Is th-- name of a new publica tion at T( xarkana. Ark. Insfd nt ly Relieved. Mrs. Ann Lacour, of N»*w Orteanx, La., writes •• 1 ha ea non who has been mm-Ic for two years; he haa been attended by our leading physicians, bm all to no purpose. This mornlnx he had h.'ft usual »pell of coughlnr. and was o greatly prostrated In conne quenre that death seoined inirnl ent. We had In the home a bottle of Die. Wm. Ham ’s Hainan roa thk Luxua, purchased by my him) and, who noticed your advertisement. V/e admlniatereJ It and he waaln ■tuutly relieved.” "Hall’s Hair Ren**w»-r k-cp. m ,■ indr in good cond tMr S. H. rcott. > o Id trd. N. H. \yers Ague < ure is a pure y v. g ' t'de com pound. anti is free from d.t .g-*rou > drugs. r BESI> IN THE world. . Magazine Rifle. >or Iar?» <■» t '.a . all ,rn ”l . e ihootirtf r ?'■ IF.ivh. acconwy guaraf.!-«, »i'l i‘>* only aba/«biUly •••'■/ r<f.« un th* inuitt. ■*BALLARD GAlXl.r.y, HOKTIXG AND TARGET PlH.es wwM rmown.et. Bend for UJuatrau.l (aul MARLIN FIRE AR.MM CO., New Haven, Conn. ■ tbe hardaet eteran. Ibe »»w POMMEL RIJCKER la s pe-D'» r.dir.y eoat, 1 ■ 4 /X U T> D K I* ovareUi" entire a add I**. Hewara of IrnlUHoue. gone yenulnfl wlttout Uie "Wlw. ■ D B ’ Wrend” trade mark llluatrat.d Catalogue free. A J Hoatun, Mass, “Men must work and women Weep, Ko rune the world away I’’ But they need not weep so much If they waw Dr. Pierce’s “Favorite Prescription,” wblrK vurea ull the painful maladiee peculiar to wo men. St M by druggists. The pooling privilege »lie St. Louin raa» track i bis yen i h-omrld C’O.COO. mont hs’t rent incut tor 60a. Plso’s Rcmcdv for< atarrh. Sold by (iiuggisis. A QUESTION ABOUT Browns Iron Bitters ANSWERED. The question has probably I’sen asked thousand i • of times/ How can Bmwr’s Iron Hitters cure overy Hung*" Well, it <1 -esn’t . I'ut it «l<s* cure any dlames* for wnich a reputable phyalcun would prescribe lU<>* Physicians reesgnire Iron ns the i»eat owtorMavw M» nt known to the profession, and hniuiry of anj» loading chemical tirni eill substantiate thsaaasrtin* that there are m<>i« tireparntloiiN of iron than of mb* other substance used in mrdlcine. Thia abows <u»n chiHively that iron ih > kn -wlodned t > ts» the important factor in ar.n< oral til medfcml practice. It m however, a reinsrkable fact that prior to the disoor .ljof HItOWN’S IKON HrrTK«M»<>p»rt«rt ly aat-isfartery iron combination''uwJ ever l»een found BROWN’S IRON headache, or produce conatlt at lon-nil other Iron* medlclnmdo. HROWN’S IRON BITTRKK rurrs Indigestion. BilionsncMS, Wrtikneaa* l>yspeneiM, .Mn!nriu« (’hills nnd Fevrrw r Tlrrd Debility, Pain intUe Kide f Bark or ldmbs,!lrndaclir and Nrnrni gin—for all thsee ailments Iron Im prescribed daAr. BROWN’S IRON BITTERS.HITX hT: minute. like all other thomnsh medicines, it sst» slowly When taken l»y w»*n the first aymptommd benefit is renewed energy. The muscles then her, cbm* firmer, the digestion Improves, the bowel* are aertvsk. In worn#* the effect is usually mon, rapid and inarkwA The eyes begin at once to brighten . the akin chsi* up. healthy color come* te the cheeks; nervouetrwsa disappears; functional derangements become lar. and if a nursing mother, Abundant austenan w i» supplied for the child. Remember Brown** In ss Bitters is the ONLY iron medicine that is nsk aa«> jurious. rhyticiant an<l Drwjgintt rtcommtnd A. The Genuine has Trade Mark and crossed red Hoag on wrapper _TAKV_NOOTHIER. WILSON'S champion spark arresti C F V Rrsl open drn light arrears nil 1 the world. No more a■*• *»•*** . burned t'rum engine spu rfrriKMl ' t on giinrnrlee. U rite las C’lmC. H Ihi . T. T. U INDspR A f’O..,»U. •ZB A 2L Wayne tt.,Mille<lg«'vin<MJab. Ji?"Responsible Agents wanted for sale of AlrrSata<st | a PROF.3AfeDhAL KILMER. M.D. HINOHAMTON. N.V. THE INVALIDS BENEFACTOR. DiHeovcn r <>f Dr. Kllmer’u Complete Female Remedy Ladin' Homt Nprelul nn<l Specific treatment for all Complaints iiiid Dlhchsch peculiar IhuighterM, Wives iui<l Mot hern. Lach package co nt ai iim 3 botftfra* l-'.H( li kind in iilno Hold Kcpm-ately: Female ■Ccincdy. (Blood nnd Hystem)* | . % li I ii ill 11-Lea I ICxl.,(l.ocalTieatin’t)A 1, (J A O A nnl ill me nt,( External ” ,50 LV"Oi- the three in one Pm-ktige|:*.<NL Recovers the “run-down;” lied-ridden*’ or “abandoned.” It Elhuiniitca Humor* and Blood I niimrif ivn tlmt, ( iiiihc Scrofula, Cancer, 'rumor, pimplen and blotches, The sire for Pc.-warlcs nnd Exposures nasi. Womiiii n Health mid usefti hires sun in rcstoiriL Dr. I<ihner t rents internal Tumor, Cimccr. You ran'tsfford Io neglect early symptoms. ■ l/otterH of inquiry promptly hi in wired. * ■ Dr.Kllmrr's Ermiite I •iMpciuMirv, Ringhnmtoii, N ¥. ■ ■ hivalittn'aide t«> Health" (Sent PrefP/, H ■> NOLO BY ALL OKDGGIhTM. ■ ("asthma cured tI ArA German Asftemu Cure never /ui/« to > M rrlit/hi lh<> w<>r <1 chmiw Inmircs SOSS-M fortabln uh <p ; rffeeta cures where all others fall. frmt rnnvinre/t ihr m<>«( nkrfticul. Price ftllL*tS ♦ 1.00. of Drusidß's or by mail Hnmple FHr'r. Irwß stamp. I»R. It. nUHIFFMAN. Nt. Paul. MhuuK No Rope to Cut Oft Horses Manes. hW Celrbrsted •ICCLII*'* ’ II (I.TER and IIIIIDLE i uniblnsd, ■•iimnil be Slipped by any horse, .hunple Halter to any pnrt of ’ s free on receipt <»f 01 Sold bv ail H;vt Ih ry Hanlwnrr un>l diiriie.x liruh-rx Special discount to ths Trade. JLgiMr Bern! for Price i («» J. C. JGIITIIOCKK, CONSUMPTION. I have a poaiU ve rsinudy for Die above <llaea«o; b» ite see ihnimands of cases of the worst Hod and of lung ■tandlmr have !••««(> cured. I mlsml _• oaiiiitigls myfettb lo He efficacy, that Iwl I a*n.|TWO BOTT).EH F» <«, tegetbor with a V A l.b’ A KI.ETRR.ITIRK on UiiedUMtaa to any sufferer. <Jlv»ex press Mtt«l •’ Oaddr'et. Dlt T A HLO-JUAI, Hl ToariMt., hew Yerlk MBtaaiCrSlio It AHUM l li.iir and for* V. Wlimnr. I-IUIMIH. lO® par ■ cent, lin.rn miKle In keeping •'role try. *l» POWF.H M11.1.H and FAMcMt FEUD Mll.lJt r lrcular. and Teallinnnlala anak ouuppllratlon. WII.MON IlltUM , Huston. >«a» npniM morphine UriUln hmitcure*. A NKW IMKTfIOaU OK. J. C. IIOVF.MAX, Jefferwn, Wla. ;OM uk •Water Wheels. W.'Httcr.naMMa A.A. A Bra.. Pr<e«« wonderfully lo*. Snud f®, Larg® cateiugue. Meutioa U»i* face, hands, feet, an* l <helr iinp«rl«llona, Includtar Dav«lo|<®n>ebl, hup«rrtuoo« Hair, Bhlk Neto*. e .jF Mule, Warta, Motb, Erwiilaa, B«d Nm«. .■Ws Haada. Rrara, riltlne and (h-'r JOHN H. WOODBURY, a*Z N. I’m,! 81, Albjey. N. T. Eat’bM llffb. Bend IO«. foe toe* ' VpFHIMTf VMaY. A lifeexi>eri«eco. Remarkable and qnleir curro. Tr.al re** arte. Consultation and Bonke hy mail FREE Address Dr. WARD A CO., I ot I'-LC' -, "O. JAMS JELLY Vinegar, < Mt»up. Ca .rung readl li null* 'lliking lor farmer's wives, • Prsw » t'| cv'-ry rli fi- i» •< h *'f Fall Tnrmii Roe I ■ any kirwt.s IW-PAFER Ol WINTER BEETK TIHtOWTV fM, JAMES IIAKIJ.Y, Hpod (Irower, P.-ujison. Arfc. m nor,MRS ea'h fnr A>™ and gML ■ Fer/"tWit I 5« S*< U!MIH.'MtoIM| I # Wa.ra.u., kjdg low- "I. hr y florrt and ••»» | ' I* • ' Orranaylvan ■* pen in, Wriia I i.lrPiu cMar *ilh WO ie. «.« .al’ •> ■ OKO.FAYNk. A <4 WVenr •M. fliiea®*. dlair’s Fills a Rheumatic Remedj. Oval P.AX.SI.OO: round, 60 eta. a-j •» -je* r* -r- o Obtalued Baud stamp f<w I A I fc. S W I O InvcnltiM'Ginda. I V|gg ram, I'ateut lawyer, Washington, D. (J. 0 Q ELEOTRJC BELT for Kidneys Pain, Nerwnto Jg vd weak. B< «.k fra*. I LBTCHKh A ()O .Cievelsn-l. O a. N. I 'i wcnly-flve.