Newspaper Page Text
FARM AND HOUSE.
TOPICS OF INTEREST TO THE
FARMER AM) HOUSEWIFE.
Fertilizer for Potatoes.
The largest and best crop of potatoes
have been grown with artificial fertilizers.
A special potato manure is made express
ly for t.iis crop, put up with a certain
proportion of potash, phosphoric acid,
nitrogen, and lime to meet the require
ments of the plant. Barn manure or any
vegetable matter encourages the wire
worms, which injure the tubers and
cause scab or roughness of the skin, and
so reduces the market value greatly.
The artificial fertilizers contain muriate
of potash, which is poisonous to animal
life, and superphosphate of lime and
ammonia, which arj extremely malodor
ous and distasteful to insects. About 600
pounds per acre of the fertizer is consid
ered a full requirement; half is harrowed
in before planting and half spread broad
cast after York Tinies.
Setting Tarred Posts.
Some posts were being set around our
public square; some farmers were watch
ing the work and one said the ends of the
posts that were in the ground should be
daubed with tar. ,
Another said, no, it would do more
harm than good. A third said the tar
should be put on when the post isdry and
extend some inches above the surface of
the ground.
The first man was right in thinking
that tar was good for preserving posts,
but was wrong in thinking that it was
good to apply under all circumstances.
The second waal to some extent, right in
advising against the use of tar, as it has
been found that when applied to green
posts it not only keeps the water out
but also keeps the- sap in, and thus has
tens decay.
The third was right in saying the tar
should be applied when the posts were
dry and extend some inches above the
surface of the ground, for it has been
ub erved that decay is more rapid at this 1
point than above or below. *
These men had .right ideas as far as j
they went, but not going far enough were ■
likely to result in injury, and in a few
minutes’ conversation in interchange of ,
ideas all got broader views and were bene
fited, — Hural Wtrld.
■ --
Drcugbt.
was in many places unusu
ally moist, and it’s reasonable to expect
considarable dry weather this summer,
This is not so serious an evil as many
farmers think, because it c»n be guarded
against, especially with cultivated crops,
i’hrly planting to j
make a crop of early potatoes on rich soil, I
and this is made more certain by plant- I
ing only on clover sod, who e decay will !
attract moisture during the critical time ,
when the tubcis are forming.
’* The same result may also be obtained
by allowing the young clover to get a
growth of ten to twelve inches in height, ;
and then turning, it under. This sue- I
eulent moss roots so rapidly that it fills !
the soil with moisture which not even a '
protracted drought will dry out. Sowing ,
ashts on the surface of the soil
MflS aW the effect of making it more '
retentive of moisture. Many farmers
believe that the good effects of the gyp-1
Stun are due to the moisture which it j
fronj the Hr and deposits upon
the loaves of pTanlli »■«-«**
Probably the led of all ways to pre-1
vent drought is persistent cultivation, |
and especially whenever there is a little '
’tmoisture from rain or dews. As the I
Wkivntor turns this water under the
surwee it is retained, the loose soil act
ing flfca mulch to protect it from evup- i
oratingL As light summer rains falling
in a dry time arc rich in ammonia,
frequent cultivation increases fertility,
and that., too, in the most available form
for immediate use.— CuUicator.
Fat. or Lean Fork.
“Feeding for lean meat” is the title of
bulletin No. 19 of the Missouri Agricul
tural society. Previous bulletins have
shown that quite marked effects had
been produced on the relative propor
tions of fat to lean in pork by different
methods of feeding; that albuminous
food gives us lean meat, while carbona
ceous foods like corn or corn meul in
crease the proportion of fat. The hitter
experiments registered in buletin No. 10
accord fully with the results of previous
triuh, and, indicate that so far as the pig
is concerned we have it largely in our
power to elect whether our |»urk shall be
mostly grease or sweet nourishing lean
meat. The late trial was with* four
Eigs, one lot being fed on ship stuff and
loud, the other on corn or corn meal.
Both lots weighed about like, but the
piga fed on ship stuff and blood, highly
albuminous food, had about forty per
cent, more lean exclusive of bone than
the lot fed on corn meal. Much cam
was taken to separate the lean from the
fat, two whole days being occupied in
cutting up a single pig. Professor San
born reminds fanners that the “block”
is no test of breed influence in the
character of uncut meat unless measured
by the character of the food given, and
th it managers of Cat-stock shows should
recognise this fact wh. u arranging their
premiums and requirements. Feeders
will learn from these experiments that if
they would increase the palatnbiiity of
pork for American taste they must feed
their pigs on something beside clear
meal or corn. Milk, apples and roots
from the farm, and wheat middlings
firm the markets mixed with meal will
produce a better grade of pork, while at
the same time the cost will be dimin
ished.
notation of Crops.
A MtbwrUw of the .Umoni
tarw? asks for iofonnation about rotation
of crop*. In answer to the inquiry the
says; “This is one of the
most important questions relating to farm
work, and deserves eapccul eonridera
tk«. Jt Jus long been considered as in
dispensable to good and successful farm
ing, and there is no reason to mpppae,
under the light of all the later knowl
edge derived from experiment and study,
as well as improved practice. that the vid
farmer® were mistaken. The old pw ’
tier was to follow grain with a gnus
crop or with one whkhrequired frcqe.nt
culls valson of the «»*ii. Th» was »<
firm-y r-t tb.tshed that- a?a»ug the Eng
iuh amnn whw crops on the average
have more than doubled ours, every ten
ant was bound by his lease to conform
to it and - never to follow a grain
crop with' another one of the
same kind. The reason for this
was, and is, that the growth of consecu
tive crops of the same kind rapidly ex
• hausts the soil or encourages the growth
of weeds. It is found in the natural
growth of plants and forests, that a cer
tain growth is generally succeeded—after
it has attained its maturity—by a differ
ent kind of negetation; for instance,
when a pine forest has been cut off or
lus been destroyed by fire, hard woods
succeed it, and when oaks or other hard
woods have been cut off pines grow in
their place. The old fields of the South
are a standing example of this, and the
‘old field pine’ covers the abandoned land
from which a forest was cut
off, to make room for tobacco and cotton.
The explanation of this fact is, that hard
woods are rich in potash, and taking a
large quantity of this element from the
soil, leaves the land deficient in it and
unable to produce another
growth of hard woods: but
as pine is rich in silica and
poor in potash, the soil exhausted of pot
ash and having an abundance of silica,
product the pine with ease, when it
could not produce oaks, hickories and
other hard woods. The same principle
applies to farm crops, and hence wheat
is followed by grass and clover and these
with corn, and corn with oats and barley;
and then the land is manured and wheat
is grown again. In practice, we think
this rotation is> too short, and would be
greatly improved by a root crop after
corn, and oats or barley after the roots,
with clover following, and the second
year’s clover plowed in for wheat, with
which grass is sown, with clover added
in the spring. But this, too, might be
imnroved, perhaps, by sowing the grass
and clover by themselves in the spring
and not with the wheat, or early in the
fall, as soon as the wheat is removed,
thus permitting the soil to be thoroughly
prepared for the grass seeding, by which
its success is greatly encouraged.”
Ground Bone for Poultry.
Some of our farming friends appear to '
be deeply impressed with the notion that !
hens need no f jod b"t corn in spme of Hs J
forms. But we ought not to forget that;
food me ms the material for everything
that comrs out of the system, and that if
any particular race takes up any special;
branch of manufacture they must have
the raw material. All animals consume i
more or less lime; it is one of the princi- j
pal elements entering into the compos!-J
tion of the bones, bit the h n needs
an extra supply.’ Th ■ domesticated uoil ‘
also needs mere than wild stock i
of any sort, since she is stimulated to a!
greater prodftctlon of eggs. In conse-!
quencc vremurt give her more than is'
contained in the various grains.
The most useful forms in which to give
lime are in the shape of coarsely ground
bone and oyster shells; feed these ar
ticles most abundantly at the time when
the lions are laying the most freely, and
anticipate, if possible, by beginning e irly
in the season, lest your fowls eat a shoi
less egg and acquire bad habi's. The
importance of proy* l* n 3 a by nd suD>dy
of ground bone and oyster shells for fowlj,
Is Toss understood than it should be by .
breeders of poultry. Raw bone, coarsely
ground, say half cis large as grains of ■
com, is grceiily <aten by fowls, espec
ially if they are not allowed to run at
large; and well-conducted experiments:
have proved that it is not only beneficial;
to th- health of the fowl, but it also cer
tainly stimulaten and promotes laying to ;
a very great extent.
Now, while this effort of producing an
; increase in the number of eggsis certain,
; and not a newly claimed merit, we have
i arrived at the conclusion th ft it also in
| creates the size of the eggs; and where
I there is any trouble with regard to the
, shells of the eggs,we have found it spee
i dily remedied by a liberal use of ground
raw bone and oyster shells. Every person
who keeps even a few fowls should own a
mill for grinding such food, as it will
j ro.rn repay its cost. Bone and sh fll should
be led to fowls by putting it in a narrow
j box and nailing it to the side of the coop;
I we prefer this method, as it is less waste
ful than throwingii on the ground. To
' use fine boncbeiK ilcially.it is necessary to
• mix it with the soft food, and we have
found it wry useful in cases of diarrhoea
i in fowls, having cured bad cases of this
' disease in green fowls, in a single day,
by the use of this article: to promote lay
i ing. however, it i< necessary to have it
giour.d coarse.— American Hural ILme.
Recipe*.
Stuffed Potatoes —Mined some cold
meat very tine and season it to taste.
Choose large potatoes of one size and
j peel and core them, taking care not to
’ core them through. Fill them with the
minced meat and put them in a dish t >
bake, with a cupful of water and a little
butter or nice beef driuping. If the jxita
toes are large they will require an hour
to bake; if small, half that time will be
sufficient.
Baked Omelet. —A generous pint of
milk, four well-beaten eggs, one table
spoonful of butter, one of tiour and a lit
tie salt. Rub butter and flour to smooth
pa--?i' and stir into milk when boiling,
stirring eonUantly to keep smooih.
Cool it, then add the eggs h iving yolks
and whites beaten separately,'” Pour
into a buttered dish and bake in a quick
oven twenty minutes. Serve imme
diately before it fills,
Aftle Dessert —Pare and core large,
sweet apples, and fill with butter and
sugar. Set each apple on a round piece
of stale, erustless bread. Put a little
water in the pan, sprinkle sugar over all,
j and bake till done. Carefully remove to
the serving dish and cover with an icing
made of the whites of two eggs and pow-
demi sugar. Dot over with bits of red,
arid jelly. Or the apples may be baked
without the bread, piled up'in pyramid
form, and frosted.
Cabbage Sovr. —Take a couple of
summer cabbages: having removed the
outside leaves, cut them in quarters, put
them into a saucepan. with a gottd-sizcl
piece of bacon (cut into pieces an inch
wide down to the skin, which is to re
main intact, and is easily cut through
with the ladle when helping the soup),
and a bag containing spice-, sweet herbs,
plenty of whole pepper, a clove of garlic
and jwlt if necewwry. Add a miffieient
quantity of cold water to cover the
whole, and then let the soup simmer till
the cabbages are quite done, serving with
a few slices of bread under it
Household Hints.
Prepare the wicks for tallow candles by
steeping them in coal oil. They make a
bright- light.
Put silverware in paper bags and tie
the top with a string, and it will keep
bright as new.
In cutting corn-bread, do not forget to
hold the knife perpendicularly, that the
spongy interior of the loaf may not be
crushed into heaviness.
To remove the tops of fruit jars that
cannot be started by hand, dip a cloth
into very hot water and apply to the out
side of the cap; this will cause it to ex
pand.
A Reminiscence of Chattanooga.
; Dr. Henry M. Field in a letter describ
ing a visit to the battle field of Chatta
nooga in his paper, the Evangelist, siys:
“I had the good fortune to have in
the carriage with me two Confederate
officers (indeed, to confess the truth, I
looked out for this in the first place) who
had been in the battle of Chattanooga,
and could speak of it as eye-witnesses.
So, as we stood on the top of the hill, I
said to one of them: “Now give me the
points of compass and the position of
the armies.” “Well,” he answered, “you
see across the river yonder a ridg ? cov
ered with trees. That way the Federals
came. Though we knew that they were
approaching, yet at last they appeared
suddenly. I remember the first shell
that fell in Chattanooga. It was on
Thanksgiving Day in 1863. The people
were in church. I am sorry to say I
was differently employed. Henry Wat
terson —now of the Courier-Journal, of
Louisville—and I were editing a little
paper ca'led the Chattanooga Reliel. In
stead of being in church, as we ought
to have been, we were playing cards,
when from .the forest beyond the river <
came the booming of a gun, and theshell
seemed to burst ov<r our heads. We did
not stop to finish the game!” Whether
the unaccustomed sound gave a lurid
turn to his editorials afterward he did
not say; though I believe the Rebel con
tinued to appear, whistling to keep its
courage up, until “the Yankees” became
rather numerous, and it concluded that
discretion was the better part of valor,
and Chattanooga knew it no more.
‘-‘Djd you see anything more of thd
war?” ’:”"W *,.«?■
“Yes, indeed; here,” pointing to ar,
ugly scar on his face, “is the mark of a
shot which one of your boys gave me as
they charged up Missionary Ridge.” I
must say that my companion spoke of
this little incideht with perfect good na
ture (as q solder is generally proud of
his wounds), looking upon it as a kind of
“love tap”—a gentle touch which some
sharp shorter had given him “just to re
member him by.” It is very pleasant to
see how the men on both sides talk of
these things without a particle of resent
ment. Like the brave fellows they were,
since they were in the war, they learned
to take it as it came—its ups and downs,
its fortunes and misfortunes, its victories
and defeats; and now th it it is all over,
they speak of it only with the interest
which they must feel in recounting the
most eventful perjed of thejr lives.
Orange Culture in Florida.
The orange groves in Florida, says an
exchange, were few and far between
fifty-five years ago, and they were not at
that early day a source of profit to their
owners. Some of the treos were very
aged. Mr. Bowden, at Mandarin, owned
one in 1835 which was said to be severity
five years old. That year 7,000 oranges
were picked from it. Another tree in
St. Augustine was supposed to be a hun
dred years old. But these trees were
killed to the ground by the great freeze
of 1835. Mrs. Hall, on the St. John’s,
not far from Jacksonville ct that time
ha<l seventy-two trees on three-fourths of
an acre, in skittering form. The year
before her crop had* sold for $3,000.
They were killed root and branch by the
great frost. After this frost for a few
years all orange culture was abandoned,
but in 1838, ’39 and ’4O a wide-spread
orange “craze” broke out all along the
lower St. John’s, and many groves
Avere set out. A Mr. Robertson,
near Mandarin, out distanced his neigh
bors and imported his tie is, and with
them he also imported the scale insect.
This small creature soon made itself at
brane spread from point to point until it
completely killed the orange fever. Mr.
Robertson tried all manner of experi
ments to rid himself of the post, and
finally killed his trees by the application
of aqua fortis. Most of the groves started
at this time were given up to the insect
and abandoned in disgust. One of these
abandoned groves was purchased in 1856
by Colon -1 Hart, who caine an invalid to
Florida to die, though he has not yet ac
complished the object. In 1856 a visitor
described the Hart grove as being deso
late enough in appearance. It was un
fenced, had long been deserted to the in
sect and looked as if it had been burned
through by fire. The trees however,
were fine old stumps, just putting out a
; few sprouts, and it is to-day the most
noted of the St. John> river groves.
‘ From that day to the present there has
never been a frost sufficiently severe to
kill full-grown trees or to have any ap
preciable effect upon the insect.
Result of Eating Thread.
One of the most remarkable cases in
materia medica was brought to light at
Trov, Mo.. recently, by a post mortem
held to determine the cause of Mrs. John
T. Green's death- Mrs. Green only re
cently married. She was twenty years
of age. Her illness dated back two
months, when she began to find it diffi
cult to retain any food on her stomach.
Her condition became alarming, and a
number of physicians called into the case
concluded she was suffering from a tumor,
her mother having died with one. Con
sent wss given to hdd the post mortem,
and the discovery was a most remarkable
one. In the passage leading from the
stomach to the intestines a bull made up
of small pieces of silk thread was found,
weighing one and one-half pounds. The
passage was entirely filled by the sub
stance. Its presences is explained by the
fact that before her marriage Mrs. Green
was employed in a mill upon work that
made it necessary for he r to frequently
bite off the ends of silk threads. These
she swallowed. and they formed into the
ball found. The ends of the threads at
tached themselves to the lining of the
passage, and remained there. Mrs. Grtrn
suffered greatly before her death, due to
her inability to take any nourishment and
retain it.
Gen. Leonidas Polk.
' Gen. Leonidas Poik, the fighting
I Bishop of Tenessee, sat on his horse high
I up the northern slope of Pine Mountain,
iu Georgia, on June 14, 1861, when the
■ eye ol a Federal gunner was caught by
the glitter of the aider’s equipage. The
j marksman poked the black muzzle of a
I Long Tom i>u i tov ard the target, sight
ed sligaily bdow the blue sky-line, °and
sent screaming thither a shot that depri-
I ved the ■ onfederaev of one of its most
! famous Gem-rals. B. F. McCollum, the
; man woo thus picked off Gen. Polk
’ nays an exchage, died at La Porte, Ind ’
I u few days ago.
The man who said that “hope is
brighter when it follows fear,” has just
lini-hed occupying a chair in company
■vidi bis wile’s bonnet.
Col. Wm. Louis Schley, Grand Secretary I. 1
O. M. Grand Lodge, Maryland, found Red Star ;
Cough Cure a perfect and certain remedy. 1
Price, twenty-five cents a bottle.
Americans who return from abroad affirm
! oat the only handsome women seen in Lon
lon society now are of American birth. Brit
ish women are too coarse and heavy in their
make-up lor perfect beauty, and, too, they lack
t.iat gracefulness which characterizes Ameri
can women.
—— ‘ I
rhe manager of the Fort Wayne (Ind.) Ga
zette, Mr. B. M. Holman, says he has often
lead of the wonderful cures effected by St.
Jacobs Oil. Recently he sprained his ankle,
and invested in a cane and a bottle of St. Ja
cobs Oil. The latter proved the better invest
ment, as it entirely cured his ankle.
An effort will be mado to secure a pension
joran aged widow in Portsmouth familiarly
known as “Aunt Ann,” who accompanied her
•iq'dier husband through the Mexican war and
fidni'Tiistered to the wounded and dying on
many cf the battle-fields of rhe conflict. |
Coming Home to Die.
At a period of life when budding woman. >
' hood requires all her strength to meet the de- ■
manus nature makes upon it, many a youiig
woman returns home from the severe menial i
strain of school with a broken-down constitu- 1
tion, and her functions dir-arranged, to go to
an early grave. If rhe had been wis-ely coun
ted and given the benefit of Dr. Tierce’s “Fa
vorite Prescription” her bodily development I
might Lave kept pace with her mental growtn, '
und health and beauty would not have given
way to decline and death.
The Chinese have a sue wav of removing .
dandrub:. They do it wtthsaiir!paper. i
Chron c nasal catarrh—guaranteed cure- I
Dr. Sage’s Catarrh liemedv.
“Evaporate” is the latest slang for “chcast
it.” It is equivalent to “dry up,”
Fob ntsi‘EPSTA, iNDicESTfON, deorossion tn
spirits, general debility in their various forms. I
alsoasa preventive against fever and ague and
other intermittent fevers, the “Ferro-Phosphor
ated Elixir of Calisaya,” made by Caswell,Haz
ard & Co.. New York,and sold by all Druggists,
is the best tonic: and for patients recovering
from fever or other sickness it has no equal.
r , Patent Corset Shoes i
Strengthen and support the ankles. For infants .
learning to walk they are invaluable. Send for !
catalogue. Nathan’s. ftJl Bth Aven, New York. I
Those who take Dr. Jones’ Red Clover Tonic
never have dyspepsia, costiveness, bad breath,
piles, pimples, ague and malaria, poor appetite,
low spirits, headache or kidney troubles. Price
SO r.nuta
A Remarkable Tribute.
Sidney Ourchundro, of Pittsburg, Pa..writes:
‘T have used Db. Wm. Hall’s Balsam fob
the Lungs many years with the most gratify- ;
ing results. The relieving influence of llall’s j
BaraAM is wonderful. The pain and rack of
the body, incidental to a tight cough, soon dis- '
appear by the use of a spoonful according to ,
directions. My wife frequently sends for ’
Hall’s Ba i/jAil qiatead of a physician, and i
leJlla 13 spCwUiiy restored by its use.” j
The Brown Cotton Gin is *‘A No. 1.”
“it is simply perfect.” Has ail the latest
improvements and is delivered free of all
charges at any accessible point. Send to Com
’Wiiipt,. New Lpmlon Ct., for catalogue or ask ,
"fCufr m(ro-»at:'f to order one for yon. .
ft would be proper, we suppose, to call a
sign-painter a melancholy artist. (
Young or middle-aged men suffering from
nervous debility, loss of memory, premature
old age. as the result of bud habits, siiould >
send 10 cents in stamps for large illustrated
treatise suggesting unfailing cure. Address
World’s Dispensary Medical Association, Buf
falo, N. Y.
The devil can never bo entirely crushed ’
while the mule lives. ,
ONE of every five we meet has some form ol i
Heart Disease and is in constant danger of
sudden death. Dr. Kilmer’s Ocean-Weed
Heart Remedy regulates, corrects and cures.
Price $1.00.—8 bottles $5.00. ,
A Word That Makes Von Sick.
What word is t hat w'hich deprived of a letter .
makes you sick 'i Musick : and if from eating
stale triiit, which effects the bowels, take Dr
Biggers’ Huckleberry Cordial. i
The best Ankle, Boot and Collar Pads are I
made of zine and leather. Ti n them.
Piso's Remedy fw Catarrh is agreeable to
use. It is not a liquid or a snuff. 50c. ■
oil
r I f fry ]>ij * g
t'J'A
<T
ijfflw!
BEST TONIC. ?
This medicine, combining Iron with pure
vegetable tonics, quickly and completely
€»rea Dyspepsia. Indigestion, Weak
ness, Impart Biomi, Malaria, Chills
and Fevers, and Neuralgia.
It is an unfailing remedy for Diseases of the
Kidney and Liver.
It is invaluable for Diseases peculiar to
Women, and all who lead sedentary live*.
It does not injure the tee th. cause headache,or
produce etinisUpatlon— other Iron medicine* do.
It enriches and pn rifle* the blood,
Stimulates the appetite. aids the assimilation
of food, relieve* lieartburn and Belching, and
strengthens the muscles and nerves.
For Intermittent Fevers, Lassitude,
Lack of Energy, etc., it has no equal.
ts The cents!ne has above trade mark and
crossed red lines on wrapper. Take no other.
*r ‘ n»>»<st • o_ iHLTtsoEK. an,
• *
Relieved at Last!
“We know a geasleman !n this county who. six
months ng*\ wa« alnuat a hopeless crippie from an
attack <>t rheumatism. He coatd auredy hobbit
aeroaa the rcoßt. ti*>l cross he*, an t sa<>l huu
n-lt 'hat he had tilth U any law of av» r tei-o-et nz.
We saw him ia oar town last wwi. waiMn., about
as lively as any other n.un. a«ai in tin* &•».■«£ health
an.l spirits. Ipcu our to miry as toul-ttaad worked
each i ■»vnUrrt : ehauace in £ii» enn«ti bti V replied
that S. S. S. tunl ■ arm! Stint. After ustn< a done u i-n.t
atealf b> ttov. be h.rs !<eea Wsas&vwwd front a :<»(>
era;. !e cripple to a uappy. healthy m.tn. He i» none
other than Mr. F- H Ijunbert.’’-c>>/i’iM«fa Telephone.
Treatiw a» Blood and Skin Disease* malted free.
Thu Swift Srscinc Co,, Drawer 3, A Cant*. Ga., or
151 W St.. N Y.
•Watsr Wils. Hillstsßes
ond PO t?!Z*2ht M, - us gfeg?
Al. M32C3 4 Ell.Tdasa.
Fnce* tow. Ser.3 so«
laigs touuwtiM. Mazuoa tiua paper. Wkiir
nntTTlff *»*’ HABITS e«rrd
llr’ i ! I s»S *’ l '«“' »viihoai rmi». i’-ook of
UI 1U ill «»*■“» l td ar ■>«*•«»’ Free. .
r - -r -- «s. d. •iTwuLEL ML D.. Atlas •» uq
Brasli and wiry hair becomes soft and pliant
by using Hall’s Hair Rmewer.
Many a mother has found Ayer’s Cherry
Pectoral invaluable in cases of croup.
The American public is fast coming to know
a communist by his breath.
| It is THE GREAT SOUTHERN REMEDY for the
bowels. It is one of the most pleasant and effi
cacious remedies for all summer complaints. At
a season when violent attacks of the bowels are
so frequent, some speedy relief should be at hand.
The wearied mother, losing sleep in nursing the
little one teething, should use this medicine.
; 50 cts. a bottle. .Send 2c. stamp to Walter A.
i Taylor, Atlanta, Ga„ for Riddle Book.
I Taylor’s Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum
I and Mullein will cure Coughs, Croup and. Con
sumption. Price. 25c. and $1 a bottle.
BEMEETI
• A Corrector, Begulator, Nerve-Beet.
!“The, Ileartis the Scat of lAJc." E
One of every five we meet has some form’®
of Heart Disease, and is in constant dari-JS
ger of Apoplexy or Sudden Death!
SYMPTOMS and DISEASE. i
For which this Remedy slxonld.be taken g
Heart-pains Palpitation Heart-dropsy Bl
Skip-Beats Throbbing Spasms (Fits) S
Anmbness Purple-Lips Poor-blood K-
Shaky-Nerves Syncope Faint-spells ®
Hot-flushes Paralysis Heart-sympathetic §
Rash of Blood to the Head, FcMe-eircvla- S
tion.Laborcd-'tfreaihing, Heart-enlargement,
Nervous-prostration, JJeart-rhcumatistn, ii
and Vahndar J)isease. fe
; Ono Medicine will net Cure ell kinds of Dieetscs. ®
! THIS REMEDY IS A SPECIFIC.
IltPrcventsFalsy, Shock,&udde»Death. »
Every ingredient is from vegetable pro- ri
ducts which grow in sight of every unfor-K
tunate sufferer. It contains no Morphine, ®
Opium or injurious drugs. B
tA’/” -Not a jai-ttag-e of impure Blood h
can escape ‘ta jPurify/nt-' Intiuence,
; d Price SLOG —6 bottles $5.00. »
* f37"Preparcd at Dr. Kilmer’s Dispensary, §
I M Jl'ns’icjuton, N. Y.. U. 8. A. E
I & lettei-s of inquiry promptly answered, M
i fi Invalids' Guide to Healtti (Sent iNce). fe
; BY AILIL »»®6UISTB. £
Consumption Can Bo Cured!
“.HALL’S
I=.BALSAM
(tares CoHsnmptlon, Colds, Pn-ntnanin. in
fluenza. Bronchial Dlfflcullieu BronchTix
Hoh r-enes.. Asthma, Croup, Wlioopiug
Cough, and nil Diseases o! (ho B' Cnthinrr Oi -
gans. It snotties nud hen.is t« e .tle-übrni.e n
i the Lungs, intitrnnd f ,, 'd poisoned b.v the dlt--
i ease, and prevents the uiu.it t.weats an.l
tlgstires« across rhe <-h st wu'elt necompnm
; It. Co-~umntio>i Is rot no iocrraWe maf.-td >•'.
I HALT’S BALSAM will cure you, even
I though p' i fe-uioua! old falls.
Etcam Engines.
| AUTOMATIC AKO
Pl A1 N SLI DB VaLVM,
Stationary, Portable «nd
Traction- Chea peat I f...
anti beat for all purjM>»ee.
Simple, Bt-r&up aud dura
ble. Ko Farquhar boiler
! ever excluded, hawMli Is, A
| Thre#>h’.nj It&ebines and ■ > aSPHr ri^? :
• AfiTifluPural ln»pierfi<ura
fchd marbinery gen?rn!iy.
I B< nd for 1 Hu«‘d Catalogue FfUjjy
A. J.'. Eartiuhur, ' -'
—
CREAM* BO
, Cleanses the Head.
< Relieves Pain at
'once. Yw
, fiammation. Heals
'sores. Rest ores
Taste and
I A Positive Cure.sj EEUED
I ” rtV er
»t drugkWts or by mail. Send for circular.
|ELY BROTHERS. Dnigjrtty T ’
Saho CURES D®EESS
and Intemperance, net instantly,
but effectmailr. i heoniv acientinc anti
gn dpte for the Alcohol Httteil and tf-*-
only remedy that osm to wnd trial
Jxtttlea. Highly euiiorKed by the ine.t
teal profession and propurod by well
yr. known New York physicking. Send
stamps for clrcnlara an<l r> r*rcnci‘s.
Address “SALVO RElL'l’Y.”
No. ? Wost 11 th 3t, New York.
! WILSON’S
I / n I CHAMPION SPARK ARRESTER
<4-- ‘•A Rest open draught arreirter in
' / the world. No more rin hettses
' / bunted from engine »p« rkw. Mold
l j ’if?! on guarantee. Write for Circn
sidU‘ I h.r.T.T. UiN'DMHt &• < ()., N -.
I « A2»W«y W) ;t..Mi!lcd;.e-.i!le,>.:.
’ y° ur Bone,
! “ Meal. Oyster Shells.
: —AIIAM f lour sind Cora
j (F. Wilson's Patent >. 100 per
I cent, more made In Keeping pouj-
■ Cry. „ Also POWEH MIJLLMI and YAKM
I FEEDMILLH. Circulars ar.d Testimonials sent
> pa application. WILtsON BKOb., Kasten, Pa.
HELP
alia Sol reirble firn wis I employ ~ne p rrob
in earn county to d atrlbute ctrcvlari do c< 1 e. t
Ing. A |ii sanipV-six! tub j-art eulais fr,*e. Addres
AUASV >rrPI.Y CO.. Albany, N.Y_.
a’>» A"&ZJTTS w “ '•* p ‘ K -» T ° N ’ 8
i Al . , - Best Detective Book.
i vwaProftsxional Tiiitves uelectires.
; pnort »ttt.r ILLUSTRATED, and EAST TO SILL. For fall
Aoerrtpilnelren'arr.tperi. I territory and extra Urrt toar-ota
( AdotoM. a. w. cakutrax a co..Pau.> tß , l ,,x tw
5 8 I ffl B aad Fataleaa
! I B Ulls Imju ,J "a'-Lome. Cvrrexpondenre
! I If 9 80 IEVI Jv'.icltetsand free Snai of cure sect
US itiis? h'tteatln-eat gatorr. ThkHcmaNK
f “ itXMapy Cootakt. Lafayette. lad.
! WELL BORINC mwibct
• Great English Gsut and
| Ula!l SrU-S, ftheumaitc Ramedr.
I Osut Buxj w t A.;-1 round, .’>v cte.
PENNYRtmi. PILLS
“CH IGMESTER’S ENGLISH.”
. . e Ori «rfn»l axsrl Only Cienuine.
i S wh *
< hSebeeter • ilk*.- ©th*?, or
; NAM E* FA Pf
n r ?jr?t**‘A erf * rT * •»*«*• A* sdv •C'Metee*.
t tar* £u<iU FcffLjnea; j'iil.
IpKFOwaSaat
/.’s H V LIV ht II Ererlai?.
”.’2£d 7*** V«vttw-Ton amm or rrhWr «*». The FISH BJMMBSWCXIEI
‘*»^tafeJy w»l kr«p yno dzr in th# hardest »:on»
1A‘kßrtlie-FISH hKASD’’ •ueanand taken#other. It yo«r *rrt«Fr Joe.
Evi ! ■■■“ ■ - ..T-. , f--.r.;ew-iv.iv»r uaVytie A J TOWES. »>
MUSTANG
ISiirvivalofthe Pittest.
|i FAMILY MEDICINE THAT HAS HEALED
MILUOJffI DURING 35 TEARS!
g| A BALM FOB EVEBY WOF3n> OF
MAIV AND RF.ASTI
IlThe Oldest & Best Liniment
EVER MADE IN AMERICA.
E SALES LARGER THAN EVER.
gw. The Mexican Mustang Liniment has
Bfbeen known for more than thirty-five .
PSyt ats as the best of ail Liniments, for
RSNait and Beast. Its sales to-day are
Wlarger than ever. It cures when all
Mothers fail, and penetrates skin, tendon
Ksand muscle, to the very bone. Sold
E3 everywhere.
(?T^tedV rCt,i,i
Praia, a .
Igrisnltarti .
°wo.-kB.
Tcrk,Fa. 3^s*■
liThkot draft m# »
B’.cbs dtircble.?»JC -a
Simplest,
grain, < 3it Bead for 1 C&taiyanc.
vertr fur MiArsvt. -A, Ji, gu.
<ll Peop’s App£9C’atejlansst tads.
MIDDLESEX
INDIGO-BLUE FLANNEL SUITS
ARK ALL PURE WOOL,
Alwsys look we'd and give long service. Coats of the
cenuinc article have on a bilk banger, “Oulyiums
n'.etits made from Middlesex Fiannelsbetir tliishtnx>
EOLB BY Ml LEPJljre CLGTHIEBB.
BEFORE YOU BUY
», MGR OR BUGGY
WRITE TO
HOTCHKIH CARRSASE WORKS,
SYBACUSS, N. ¥.
ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE FREK.
j?- LOW PRICES TO DEALERS. _gl
WITHOUT TARRED BUI LD l NG 1’ A PER under
cue wrather board lag and floors. Warm in win
ter,. coil in Bummer. ABSOLUTE PREVENTIVE -
-vermin of every kind. <,osu nearly nothing*-
only about ninety ceuta a room. Ahli dealers for jtoi»
write CHARLES H. COMER. Manufacturer,
LOUISViLLJS, al
-3 CURE FITS!
When 1 rftv cure i w i.-i. menn wormy to step ui»m ti«
t time r.ad then have t'neni rerorn <iir*to., t , B ’*&
eal cure. 1 have maue the dlsiw.e vs FlrS, ErluKraT
or FALLING SICKNESS* .‘le i> i>e enidy. Iwyrrantmy
rer.wdy to cure a worst eases. Because ethers haro
tolled is no reason lor Bet n-M receiving a extra, bend y,
once for a treaties and a Free Bettie of my inuuliWM
remedy. Give Express and Post Office. It coeta you
nothing lore trial, uml I will enr. yon. .
* \ldtoso Dr. Il O. ROOT, 163 foarl Et., New lotfc.
Free Farms s*
. he irto t d'ciuu rfut Auric.i<tural Park In America.
Surrounded by prosperous t»i*<i!ng and manufactur
ing town*. Fci' Pdrei it- ' Magnifleent eropo
raisrd in HBS. Thotiatio<!k ~f AereH affiov.ni*
incut Lend, subject topm-tnption-re-lhome-read.
Lands for sale to actu.-d settlers a* $3.00 per Aera
Li-ng Timo. Park irrigated br immense«attain. Cheap
rati road rates. Every t?ut I. ,n -liown willere. Fo»
»r.ai *, p.mijihiets, etc., u teas CCLGftAPO LAND *
'.OAX CO., Op : a House E’o k, Denver, < 01.
fatsykitii teietltaal Woife, M Pl
Btaadard Eiginei & 3a w luh
- W >■". Cataloga*.
jlddrers ’ tuTTlc $ R<ll uW .-Or, York. IPm,
You are al lower! a frc e trial of thirty dans of the w*
at Ur. Lye's Celebrated Voltaic B it with Electric 3u>
i cusory Appliances, for the speedy nd.*! ana PJJ»
fciAtt'mf. curs of ASMTOtts Ijetrility, loss of utaiitvuna
and all klmired iroublcF. Also for mwgr
tither tiiseoßCS. Complete to Ifettl li,
cud Manhood imaranteed. JSo rb tfa Incurred, muj»
t utr-d p;<rnr Wt in nroh’ l '’ri mailed frre^tyMs
dre r,s.(uK_VC' f ,T AIC BS7.T f' 3.. Maroba! L flneUs-
No Rope to Cut Ors Moms’ Manes- IK
Cel-brated HALTER Jyjk
itnd IIRIDLE t omblnedt 1
be Slipped by any how. ™' npte
'T.ilter to any part of U. s. tree, o.i s
receipt of sl. Sold by all Saddlery.
Hardware and Harness /C »
Speris'll discount to the Trade. Vs
BFncc, Hand., Feet, and all their ir»-
perlectiona, including Facial Dcvetop
ment, Snis-rfluons Hair. Molea. WarSL ,
Moth, Freckles. Red Nose. Acne. Bi‘ta
Hea-I.i. Scars. Pitting A their treatment.
Dr. John Woudbury.s; N.PearlSt.,Alba-
uy, N.Y. Est'bd isto. Send 10c. torjinok.
A life ex per ioce. Xu?rnxrk*blc cad qnfck ctirei». 7rw pefi*
«££>. Bead Suffip for tested jurUcGtw*.
Dr. WAHD & CO r LOUISIANA.
TBURSWS SfIOTHPOWBEB
K crying Teeth Perfect aad GoaiK Healthy.
E% A *W“ E“ Al “S* g* Obtained. Send stamp fae
J O Inventors’ Guide. L. BUS-
S HAM. Patent Lawyer. D. C.
DU IVnaMK QUICK Sw frot. M<»dy's »»* t'lu.rrass*
L‘ Book on l)rw» Ne» Oetissr.. end
ete. A;«ou Mil lu *'!<» FrertaCfHlV.l 1.-i.axtiXN
«®-h»s taken the lead *SS
the sales of that class of
tenwdie*. and has give*
almost om«rsal
W MUEPHY
among toe leading »Udb
cine* of toe o-idem.
A I_ SMITH.
Bradford. Ffc.
Sold by Dr.icgusta.
PxnegJ.OO.
M_
e\iMs wHtiif Att ust f*nx Sm
S 3 Best Cough Symn. Taxtew grxM. Use gS
jSJ In time. Sold by drnggtoto. s
ffivWIWJaWWMgM
A. N/C jghteen, ’B4s
7