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AGRICULTURAL
TOPICS OF INTEREST RELATIVE
TO FARM AND GARDEN.
Mixture of Stjuash or Pumpkin.
The squash and pumpkin, blossoming
at nearly the same time, are very liable
to mix if planted iu the same field. Bees
may carry the pollen of one plant to the
other, even beyond the probability of
this being done by winds. Hence culti¬
vating squashes and pump kins on dtffer
ent seed farms is the meth od adopted by
some growers to secure reliable seed. To
grow either squash or pumpkin for home
use or for market does not require this
tar e.—Boston Cultioator.
Swine on the Farm.
If there are sows to farrow separate
them from others a week or more before
their time is out, and put them where
they will have warm and dry beds and
where they can be quiet. Keep them
where they may be easily handled, if it
is necessary, as it sometimes is, to take
care of the pigs to prevent them from
getting chilled. Do notallow them,nor
even the store pigs, to sleep under the
manure in it and heap. Encourage them to work
they will, root by over throwiug it during the day, if
a little corn
among the manure, but see that they
have a good bed in some other place.
! Do not feed breeding hogs too heavily of
grain. Keep them iu thriving condition,
hut not fattening .—New York Herald.
Soil for Onions.
The soil for onions should be a deep
mellow loam resting on a dry, porous
subsoil, and should be finely pulverised
and freo from stones, etc. Tho ground
should be prepared in the fall, and
again best in the spring to get it into the
seed. possible state of preparation for the
Onion ground needs high manur¬
ing and well-rotted barnyard and hog¬
pen manure are the kinds generally pre¬
ferred. The bulk of the onion crop is
raised from the black seed. The seed of
the last year is to be preferred; seed
over two years old should not be used.
At the South and West propagating by
sets is a favorite mode. Large quantities
are raised in the New England States
and New 1 ork, which furnish the prin¬
cipal supplies for the Eastern cities.—
Htw Y&rk World.
An Unthrlft-v Horse.
The poor condition in which horses
are so frequently in seen is chiefly due to
worms the intestines, which prevent
the proper digestion of the food, and as
■well cause a drain upon the animal by
the copious secretion of mucus in the
bowels. Worms do not come naturally,
that is as the term'is meant in this case,
spontaneously, which but from eggs of worms
are voided by llor.-es on pastures
or in meadows, and find their way with
the grass or hay into the stomachs of
other, or it may he the same, animals.
The usual treatment for this disease is
to give half an ounce of santonine or
wormseed in the food once daily for
three days, and then give a pint of raw
linseed oil, with one oimce of turpen¬
tine. For the small pin worms which
inhabit the large intestine, an injection
of one pint daily of the following mix¬
ture: Dissolve one ounce of common
soap in one quart of hot water; udd one
ounce of quassia chips: simmer half an
hour, -and when cooled to blood heat
inject with a proper syringe or by means
of a bladder with a small pipe of elder
wood attached.— jVJai Yonc Times.
Orchard Surgery.
In light, fibrous, fertile soils wheie
mice can readily harbor, one of the most
common vexations of the orchadist ]S
the finding that under cover of the
snow these vermin have made runs lead
ing bark to young The apple trees and eaten the
off. easiest preventative of
this in ayoung orchard is to pile a spade
ful of the raw subsoil rouud the collar
of the tree, compacting it well. If left
through the next summer till the end of
August it will prevent the borer-beetle
from placing the eggs there. If ihe
misfortune lias occurred a tree may be
saved if taken before winds drv the de
nuded parts by covering them close
with earth. This, however, only an
swers when bits of bark left will suffice
by the extension of the cambium be
death them during June to cover the
gnawed spaces. Small areas left un¬
healed may be protected with wax or
paint. If the bark is nearly all gone the
recourse is to cut the tree off and train
up anew stem. Some advise to insert
grafts around the tree, connecting the
bark above with that below. Few will
fake the trouble, orsecureallsu hciently,
but when the tree is large and valuable
it is worth doing. Cover alt with earth
until united .—New York Trilune.
«»»• vp...... Groit.
For weeks if not months before the
opening ot the recent fruit congress in
a£u..ed"fi
that would probably come before‘the
congress. One of the writers stated that
one of the causes of failure of the apple
crop was unsuitable stock. Upon visit
ing several orchards he found that the
proprietors did not know upon which
stocks their trees had been worked.
Others had bought their trees with the
assurance that they were on dwarfing
stock, but when asked what dwarfing
stock, disclaimed all knowledge of there
being more than one. While English
nurserymen kinds of employ three or four or more
stock, each claimed to dwarf
the trees more or less. The Doucin, a
French apple, dwarfs but slightly, but
produces handsome pyramidal trees.
The Paradise apple produces a decidedly
dwarfied tree or rather bush; indeed, the
English nurserymen claim '.hat there are
two kinds of Paradise apples, each hav¬
ing its local preferences. dwarf There are besides
some stocks used in Eng¬
land pagated which, from like the Paradise, are pro¬
orchard tree3 cuttings. Ordinary
be dwarfed, and are not grafted expected to
are upon
‘•free stock,” or cuttings of ordinary
apples, such seeds being usually worked
out of pomace. If we could see these
apples before they were ground and
pressed to make cider, and the trees
•which bore them, we should find in both
tree and fruit the greatest variety of
form, making it evident that a lot of
seedlings from seeds thus procured, so
far from being of uniform character,
would present many peculiarities which
they would impart to the grafts upon
'them* Their peculiarities may not b*e so
great stock, as but those they from a sufficient regular dwarfing affect
are to
tho form, color and quality of the fruit
and the character of the tree. We have
long held the opinion that the differences
often seen in samples of well known va¬
rieties of apples, and which frequently
puzzle the expert the pomologist, may be
accounted for by differences of the
cellent stock used topic in for grafting. investigation This is au ex¬
at any ol
our experiment stations .—American Ag■
riculturiat.
Keeping Eggs Fresh.
There in are moderately various modes fresh of preserving condition;
eggs a several
still an old egg or one kept for
months will be quite different from on«
fresh laid. The process adopted and
recommended by the United States
Butter and Cheese Association is prob¬
ably as good as any known. In pickle brief, ll
is as follows: To make the use
stone lime, fine salt, and water in the
following proportion: One and bushel gal¬ oi
lime, eight quarts of salt, sixty
lons of water. The lime should be of
the best quality, and of a grade that will
slack white, fine, and clean. Slack the
lime with remainder a portion of the water, then
add the and the salt. Stii
thoroughly three or four times at inter¬
vals, and then let it stand until well
settled and cold. Either dip or draw off
the picklo into the cask or vat in which
the eggs are to be preserved. When the
cask or vat is filled to the depth of
fifteen inches begin to put in the eggs,
and when they lie about a foot deep
spread over them a little of the
piekle that is of a milky ap¬
pearance, made so by stirring up
some of the light lime particles that
settled last. The object of this is to have
the fine lime drawn into the pores of the
shells: but not enough of this lime should
be added to coat the shells, thereby mak¬
ing moved it difficult to clean them when re¬
from the vats. Continue in this
way until the eggs are all placed in tho
pickle. When the cask has been filled
to within about four inches of the top,
cover the eggs with cloth, and spread
over this two or three inches of the fine
lime that sattles in making the pickle; it
is of the greatest importance that the
pickle be kept continually over this lime.
When the time comes for marketing the
eggs they must be taken out of the
piekle, cleaned, dried and packed. To
clean them secure a half of a molasses
hogshead, or some similar vessel, and fill
it about half full of water. Have a suf¬
ficient number of crates of the right size
(to hold twenty or twenty-five dozeu
eggs) made of laths placed about three
quarters of an inch apart. Sink one of
these crates in the half hogshead and
raise it up and down until the lime is
washed off; then set the eggs in a suita¬
ble place to dry in the orates. The eggs
should dry quickly and be packed as soon
as dry. In packiug the same rules should
be observed as iu packing fresh eggs, and
it may be well to add that eggs should
be kept in a temperature a few degrees
above freezing .—Ntw York Sun.
Farm and Garden Notes.
Color goes for a great deal in a horse.
Trim up the grape vines before the
sap starts to grow.
Use all the coal ashes as a mulch
among the small fruits.
Corn should have a fertilizer with a
good percentage of ammonia.
If you want honey, transplant young
linden trees (basswood) in the spring
from the woods.
under Terracing circumstances, is believed to be better,
most than hillside
ditching.
Cattle can live unsheltered in the win
[ , and - tho ... but t far ,
’ 80 ca ? vlne8 i 11 JS
better for , both .
to protect them,
* s sa ’^ tbat va3t numbers of good
cow s are ruined each year by carelessness
or ignorance in regard to milking,
Air. Hale used a spoonful of sulphur
in each planted hill. Since using nitrate
of potash as a fertilizer he had noticed
a decrease of white grubs,
a stable floor of good sound spruce or
pine piauks, thorougtily soaked through
with crude petroleum, will resist damp- P
ne ss and decay for a long time.
A . 8 °° d dally A ratlon .. lor .. a cow is, . it- .. is .
Stute . 'V '\ wcu ty P ou « ds , > ot hay, three
U ouud ? ot oat8 , aud tbre ® P ounlis of corn
g™ UIld t0 S ether and thite pounds of
Queens are usually in their prime dur¬
ing the second season, after which, with
a few exceptions, they should be re¬
placed by younger and more vigorous
queens.
Villagers should not allow leaves to
decay on their premises near the dwell¬
ing. Compost them with sod. Next
year your roses and vegetables will want
such food.
The best tools are the cheapest. If
s
far outbalance the saving iu price on the
poorer Article.
? od '- lbey "’ dl ^ almost r vt* anything
that , the table > and
aa 10 “ a ^ uelttr ’r, r , u sT u C ° * P
The last corn crop was satisfactory,
but many have had no hogs to cat it;
and it cuts to the quick to sell corn
cheup, and invest in breeding stock at
the present pricos.
When an animal shows a tendency to
food deposit consumed a large it amount is well of consider fat for tho
to tho
advisability of retaining that animal ou
the farm to breed from.
Gypsum, or land plaster, sprinkled on
the floors of stables, absorbs the am
monia, thus destroying that foul odors and
making a fertilizer the thrifty far¬
mer can make very valuable.
Keep the early pullets, sell the early
cockerels. The pullets will furnish eggs
the latter part of autumn and during thu
winter if they are kept warm and aro
well fed on different kinds of grain, with
fresh-meat scraps once a week.
In feeding corn to hens it is better to
shell it by band and then scatter a few
grains at a time, than to throw a quantity
down and allow them to gorge them
selves. It is still better to throw small
grains among straw and let them scratch
for it.
Too much cornmeal will make butter
soft and oily; too much bran will make
it pale, retard the risiog of the cream
and the churning process, and cause the
butter to be dry and crumbly. A mix¬
ture of meal, bran and middlings is pre*
ferublc to either of tho above.
OLD HUTCH’S SECRET.
E. H. Hu’cliison, better loiowii as OldHuteb,
astonished the world by the manner in which he
manipulated ing, the Chicago wheat market—mak¬
’lis said, the enormous sum of 85,000,000,
on his wheat deals, in less than a month. Ec¬
centric ; possessed of little education, his success
seemed marvellous!
His friends and those who know him best are
nut A surprised.
knows prominent resident broker of Chicago, who
him well, tersely sums up Hutchison in
thesejwords: and that’s Old ‘‘What Hutch’s lie secret.” knows, ho knows well,
We once heard a prominent stock operator,
speaking of Jay Gould, remark: “He knew a
year ago what the balance of us are just finding
out. Gould knows his business thoroughly and
we don’t, else we, too, would be Goulds.”
A noted manufacturer of certain medicinal
remedies has achieved a world-wide reputation
simply edge because he possesses a thorough knowl¬
of his business.
posed Enterprising and progressive, he was not dis¬
i o rest content with the introduction of
the only genuine remedy for the prevention and
cure of all kidney and liver disorders, the name
and character of Warner’s Safe Cure being fa¬
miliarly the known in every household throughout
entire civilized world—but he concluded to
further benefit the world and revive some old
fashioned remedies which have, for a period been
lost.
and lte-discovered, the best. they are the oldest, the newest
Used when tho Pilgrim Fathers landed, they
have been much improved upon and are now
known as “Warner’s Log Cabin Remedies.”
Chief among them being “Log Cabin Sarsa¬
parilla,” and for the blood, and “Log Cabin Hops
Euehu Kemedy,” a tonic and stomach
remedy.
Old Hutch’s secret is worth its millions of
dollars to him, and millions of people in the
United States will rejoice that they aro now
enabled to secure the best of those old-time Log
Cabin ltemedies through tho use of which our
grandparents healthy attained and enjoyed rugged,
old age.
A Precious Lot.
Lord Carnarvon’s bill, which has just
been introduced into the House of
Lords, aims to prevent disreputable peers
from sitting in the House of Lords. The
Lords are beginning to reorganize, and
t is the general impression that they will
have a fertile field for work. The new
bill is aimed at such disreputable speci¬
mens of mankind and the British peer¬
age as Lord Ailesbury, who by his un¬
tiling efforts has managed to reach a
point where he can be warned off any
race course in England as a blackleg and
sharper, but he is still empowered to
vote coercion for Ireland. Ailesbury
himself, by the way, with his music hall
wife, Dolly Tester, is imparting a lurid
light to a constantly increasing portion
of the Continent. The efforts of the
distinguished pair are meeting with more
than national success. The begin a new
cycle daily, and wind up at sunrise help¬
lessly drunk and proud of the fact.
Viscount Mandeville, the heir to the
Duke of Manchester, who in the Bank¬
ruptcy court pleaded guilty to obtaining
money by false pretences, would not be
disqualified. The fact was brought out
that Mandeville, when his father dies,
will be the owner of 12,000 acres iu
Armagh, 14,000 acres in Huntingdon¬
shire, and 1,000 in Cambridgeshire;
but he has already incurred liabilities to
the amount of $600,000, of which the
Bankruptcy court can not rid him. His
unsecured creditors will be lucky if they
get sixpence in the pound.
Europe’s Position.
The outlook in the financial world of
Europe at the present moment is any¬
thing but good. All it eyes are turned on
Paris, and at present is difficult to say
how and where the situation will end.
At any rate, we shall not see the full ef¬
fects of the downfall of the copper shares
the crisis in the Comptoir d’Eseompte
until the usual liquidation in Paris is
well over. The latest news is that the
Russian loan, which was to have floated,
has been indefinitely postponed. This
shows at once how ugly the financial po¬
sition really is, as full arrangements had
been made to bring out the loan. Lon¬
don stocks seem more demoralized than
for a long time past, and is generally be¬
lieved that the market is being manipu¬
lated to suit the New York hear party.
The short interest is enormous, and any
attempt to cover would send prices up
rapidly.
The colored people of Illinois have an
organization incorporated, which propo¬
ses to erect a monument at the state cap¬
ital to Lincoln, Seward, Sumner, Wen¬
dell Phillips and John Brown. The cost
of the structure is to be $180,000 or
$200,00°.
_
A low condition of health is common with
many who allow themselves to worry. Mental
anguish causes bodil, sufferings. Anxiety and
care has broken down many constitutions. A
train of disorders usually follow mental dis¬
tress. Heart affections, nervousness, sleep¬
lessness, dyspepsia, liver the complaint, kidney
troubles, etc., are among list. A sure rem¬
edy i or relieving all Iron mental Bitters. and physical dis¬
tress is Brown’s It at once
strengthens every and part of the body, making
woi k a pleasure earo unknown. *
A crowded railway train is a good place to
study the development of the hog.
Many People llefuso to Take Coil
Liver Oil on account of its unpleasant taste.
This difficulty has been overcome in Scott’s
Emulsion of Puro Cod Liver Oil, with Hypo
phosphites. It being as palatable as milk,and
tho most valuable remedy known for the treat¬
ment of Consumption, Scrofula and Bron¬
chitis, General Chronic Debility, Wasting Diseases of
Children. Coughs and Colds, lias
caused physicians in ail parts of the world to
use it. Physicians report our little patients
take and it willi convinced. pleasure. Try Scott’s Emulsion
be
There is alwi >iys an exciting inaugural bawl
—the howl of t the new-born babe.
A Radicnl Cure for Epileptic Fit*.
To the Editor —Please inform your readers
that I have a positive which I remedy for the above the
named disease warrant to cure
worst cases. So strong is my faith in its vir¬
tues -that I will send flee a sample bottle and
valuable treatise to any sufferer who will give
me his P O. and Express Pearl address. New Resp’y, York.
H.G. HOOT. M. C.. 183 St..
Notiiino so. completely robs confinement of
the rain and suffering attendingit as the use
of The Mother’s Friend. Sold by druggists.
^S..S,S. % ¥
with My little disease boy, 5 years old, was pick
10 a for which doctors had (0
no name. The nulls came off his fing¬
ers, middle and tho fingers For Caine off to tho
dreadfully; joint. is 3 years he suffered
C0 satisfied Swift’s now getting Specific well, and tho I CD
am 1s
chief cause of hia improvement,
(O John DEinr,, CO
Jan. 13,1S83. Peru, Ind.
I_j little POISONED boy broke out BY with A CALF— and My 1__
sores
ulcers, the result of the Tim saliva ulcers of a cr.If coming deep In con¬
tact with a cut finger. were and pain¬
ful and showed no inclination to heal. I gave hlra
Swift's Specific, and he is now well.
Feb. 15, ’89. John F. Heard, Anbnrn, Ala.
Send for nooks on Blood Poisons & Skin Diseas -.s,
tree. ______ Swept Srecino Co., Atlanta, Ga
An Important Fact.
Persons afflicted with impure blood frequently
experience a constant miserable feeling, aching
joints, indigestion, skin eruptions, sleeplessness,
extreme lassitude, nervous excitability, gloomy
imaginations, and general ill health. Good
blood gives strength. Bad blood causes weak¬
ness. thi best Keep your blood pure. Spring time is
season to use a blood purifier. Asa
matter of course, in selecting a remedy, you
should choose the best. One that will give
satisfaction from the start. One that will
not leave any evil after-effect. One that physi¬
cians endorse. Such a remedy is 13. B. B.
It is an important fact to remember that
this remedy is the prescription of an eminent
physician, g°°d than and that one bottle will do you more
100 bottles of decoctions more largely
advertised.
I>r. W. J. Adair, Rockmart, Ga., writes: “I
regard B. B. B. as one of the best blood medi¬
cines.”
Dr. A. H. Boscoe, Nashville, Tenn., writes:
AJ reports of B. B. B. are favorable, and its
speedy P action is truly wonderful.”
gc I confess r * «!• W.Rhodes,Crawfordville, B. B. B. is best quickest Ga., writes: med¬
icine tne and
for rheumatism I have ever tried.”
JDr. I cheerfully S. J. Fanner, recommend Crawfordville, B. B. B. Ga., fine writes: tonic
alterative. as a
Its use cured an excrescence of the
neck aftfcr other remedies effected no percepti¬
ble good.”
Dr. 0. II. Montgomery, Jacksonville, Ala.,
writes: “My mother insisted on my getting B.
B. B. for her rheumatism, as her case stubborn¬
ly resisted the usual remedies. She experienced
immediate relief and her improvement has been
tr.uly wonderful.”
A prominent physician who wishes his name
not given, says: “A patient of mine, whose
case of tertiary syphilis was surely killing him,
and which no treatment seemed to check, was
entirely B. cured with about twelve bottles of B.
B. He was fairly made up of skin and bones
and terriblo ulcers.”
Catarrh Cared.
that A clergyman, loathsome after disease, years Catarrh, of suffering and vainly from
prescription trying every which known remedy, at ‘ last found a
him from death. Any completely sufferer cured and saved
from this dread¬
ful disease sending a self-addressed stamped
envelope to Prof. J. A. Lawrence, 88 Warren
St.. N. Y„ will receive the recipe free of charge.
Hamburg Figs fur the Liver.
Habitual constipation and torpidity of the
lit ir are functional derangements which
should not be so long neglected as to generate
actual disease. Hamburg Figs should be taken,
and the deranged organs restored to health. 25
cents. Dose one Fig. Mack Drug Co., X. Y.
Rheumatism
and Neuralgia
These twin diseases cause untold suffering.
Doctors admit that they are difficult to cure—
so do their patients. Paine’s
®\C \A jj IT manently Celery compound cured the has woret per
J// Jj cases neuralgia—so of rheumatism those who and
A\ // say
have used it
with "Having rheumatism been troubled
at the knee
and foot for live years, I was
FOR SALE. almost unable to got around,
and was very often confined
NO USETO to my bed for weeks at a
[OWNER, time. I used only one bot¬
tle of Paine's Celery Com¬
/ \\ pound, cured. around, a boy.” and and I Frank can feci was now Carom, as perfectly lively Jump as
Eureka, Nevada.
“ Paine’s Celery Compound has been a God'
send t» me. For the past two years I have suf
fered with neuralgia of the heart, doctor after
doctor failing to cure me. I have now taken
nearly four bottles of the Compound, and am
free from the complaint. I feel very grateful '
to you.” Chas. IL Lewis, Central Village, ct.
Paine’s
Celery Compound
“I have been greatly afflicted with acute
rheumatism, and could And no relief until I
used Paine’s Celery Compound. After using
six bottles ot this medlolne 1 am now cured of
rheumatic troubles.”
Samuel Hutchinson, So. Cornish, N. H.
Effects Lasting Cures.
Paine’s Celery Compound has performed many
other cures as marvelous as these,—copies of
letters sent to any address. Pleasant to take,
does not disturb, but aids digestion, and entire¬
ly vegetable; a child can take It. What’s the
use of suffering longer with rheumatism or
neuralgia?
$1.00. six for $5.00. Druggists.
Mammoth testimonial paper free.
Wells, Richardson & Co. .Props. .Burlington, Vt.
UlfiMUNU DIAMOND urto n Kro Give Faster and, Brighter
cWorn than any other Dyes.
BAB /ES Li Jj n{J TS£n***xVne^aled^*
Diamond Vera-Cura
FOR DYSPEPSIA.
AND ALL STOMACH TROUBLES SUCH AS
Indigestion, dma«s, Constipation. Sour Stomach,Heartburn, Nausea,Gld
Ris.ng the Month Fullness alter eating. Food
m and disagreeable taste after
eating-. Nervous ness a nd Lo w Spirits.
At Druggists end Dealers or set ent by mail on re
ceipt offsets. (5 boxes $1.00 )in sta nips. Sample sent
on receipt of 2-cent stamp.
The Charles A. Vogeler Co., Baltimore, Md
MOTHERS' mm
MAKES CHILD BIRTHJASY
IF USED B EFORE CON FINEMENT.
Book to “Mothers” MaxleddFrek.
UBA»FIELI> REGULATOR CO., ATLANTA,!® A.
Bold by all Druggists.
WStF* i: LV’S YOU WILL SAVE MONEY.
Time, Pain, Trouble
lisasj CATARRH and by will using CURE
Ely’s Cream Balm.
Apply Balm into each nostril.
ELY BROS.,56 Warren St.,N. Y.
CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH
PENNYROYAL PILLS
BED CEOSS DIAMOND BEAND
reliable Original, bwt, only genuine and
v* pill for sale. Never Fail.
Ank for Chichester's English
Diamond Brand, in red me¬
tallic boxes, sealed with blue rib¬
fb bon. At Drugglnte. Accept
no other. pink AlTpills iu paste¬ danger
board boxes, wrappers, are a
i F/f) otin counterfeit. Send 4c. (stamps) for
\ particulars and “Relief for Lodlea,** in
r letter, by return mail. 10,000 Paper. testi¬
monials from LADIES wb( > have used them. Name
Cbicliester Chemical Co. > MadlsonSq.,I > liUa.,Pa.
DO YOU SEE THIS.
I WANT to bear only from sensible men and women
that are tired of bogus, deceptive , Non-Sensical adver¬
tisements. do offering honest much for nothing That are willing
to easy, work for liberal pay. (Not peddlinr).
Address FRANKLIN PUTNAM, 483 Canal St.. N.Y.
Bl Dlail ’J. S DSIlfa lilSs draatEnglish a.u*ahl
I Rheumatic Remedy.
Oval Box. :i4i round 14 Fill,.
FARMC I MilmOW.C.OAULDING,Att’y,2a7MainSt.Cin’ti.O. 1 ' vririt t0 Vn ’>'» Farm in this locality.
JHL A gents and wanted. $1 an hour. 50 new articles. Cat’lgue
samples freo. C. E. Marshall, Lockport,N. Y.
JL T>A Scholarship I.M’S It and I S. positions, COLLEGE. 850.Write Philadelphia. Pa.
for circular.
Best, Flso’s Easiest RomeOy to Use, fbr and Catarrh Cheapest. 1, ths ■
CATARRH
Sold by druggists or sent by mail.
60c, K. T. Hazeltlae, Warren, Fa
Your Blood
A thorough cleansing this spring, in order to expel
the Impurities which have accumulated during:
the winter, or which may be hereditary, and
cause you much suffering. We confidently recom¬
mend Hood’s Sarsaparilla as the very best spring
medicine. By its use the blood is purified, enriched
and vitalized, lhat tired feeling is entirely
overcome and the whole body given strength and
vigor. The appetite is restored and sharpened, the
digestive organs are toned, and the kidneys and liver
invigorated.
“ I had boiis all over my nock and back, troubling
me eo much that I could not turn my head around,
nor stoop over. Hood’s Sarf aparilla cured me in two
weeks.” Daniel Read, Kansas City, Mo.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggists. $ 1 ; six for $6. Prepared only
by C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.
IQO Doses One Dollar
ml
1
sc^ V
§1
li
n
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MIRACULOUS RESTORATION.
That dainty lady tripping by,
How light her step, how bright her eye.
How fresh her cheek with healthful glow,
Like roses that in Maytime blow'
And yet few weeks have passed away
Since she was fading, day by day.
The doctor’s skill could naught avail;
Weaker she grew, and thin and pale.
Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription is the world-famed, invigorating tonic and
nervine, adapted carefully compounded by an experienced and skillful physician, and
to woman’s delicate organization. It is purely vegetable and perfectly
harmless in any condition of the system. It is the only medicine for the dis¬
tressing under weaknesses and derangements peculiar to women, sold by druggists
a positive guarantee, from the manufacturers, that it will give satisfaction
in every case, or money will be refunded. This guarantee has been printed on
the bottle-wrappers, and faithfully carried out for many years,
Copyright, 1SS8, by World’s Dispensary Medical Association, Proprietors.'
Dr. Pierce’s Pellets, or Anti-bilious Granules, are
Laxative or Cathartic, to size of dose.
Webster
S' 7 A ■ M JSfc
WmtABRlDCfd LIBRARY
WIGTIONAlhM j lN in*
ITSELF
3000 more Words and nearly 2000 more Illus¬
trations than any other American Dictionary.
An Invaluable Companion
in every School and at every Fireside.
Sold by all Booksellers. Illustrated Pamphlet
sent free.
G. & C. MERKIAM & CO ., Pub’rs, Springfield, Mass.
SENT FREE!
Every reader of this paper, who expects to buy
A WATCH, Illustrated Catalogue 1889,
send for new for
which we send Free.
J. P. STEVENS & BRO., Jewelers,
*7 Whitehall Street, ATLANTA, GA.
Road Carts!?, ! SS
10 per cent, cheaper Baggies!
than anybody.
loP Name , % this t I l¥ paper. ggE NASHVILLE. TENN.
SOUTHERN DYE HOUSE
All kinds of Silk, Cotton or Woolen Goods
handsomoly dyed or cleaned.
^■Swits a Spociftltjr.^l
EXPRESS PAID ONE WAY.
24 Walton St., ATLANTA, GA.
CONSUMPTION
liave been cured. So strong is my faith in its efficacy that
I will send two bottles free, together with a valuable
treatise on this disease to any sufferer. Give Express and
P. O. address. T. A, SLOCUM. M. C., 181 Pearl St., N. Y
FLORIDA! Free Information,
For map. Stats bulletin, pamphlet and Samplo
valuable, a M. CROSBY, 9tf Franklin St., N. Y.
m m t*s SOLDRY Aro tho DELGUIST3. HEIST,
W. L. DOUGLAS
$3 SHOE GENTLEMEN. FOR
Best hi tho world. Examine his
85.00 GENUINE HAND-SEWED SHOE.
84.00 83.50 POLICE HAND-SEWED AND FARMERS’ WELT SHOE.
V 82.60 EXTRA VALUE CALF SHOE. SHOE.
82.25 WORKINGMAN’S SHOE.
82.00 and 81.75 BOYS’ SCHOOL SHOES.
All made in Congress, Button and Lacc.
W. L, DOUGLAS
ft pF S3 SHOE LADIES. FOR
CAUTION
The man who naa invented from three MU& We offer the man who wants service
to five Ills first dollars half in hour's a Rubber experience Coat, and Jf“*8 (not style) a garment hardeit that will keep
at In M Uf m m turn ET no T 1dm dry in the storm. It is
a storm finds to his Borrow that it ie called TOWER’S FISH BRAND
quito hardly netting, a better not protection only feels than chagrined a mos- fV w ® MSB BlL B H Cow-boy 44 SLICKER,” all a name the iand. familiar W'ith to every them
taken in, over
at being so doe badly not l ook exactly but also ■ ft— B BOBI t®. |%H B the only perfect Wind and W'aterproof Slicker.’*
feels if he s like H Coat is “Tower’s Fish Br and
Ask tor not the have “ FI the SH^t RAND’ send SuckbH ft E flwffl M and take no Simmon* otlier. If your storekeeper
does pish brand, for descriptive catalogue. A. .T. Tow kr, 20 St., Boston. Mass.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla is the best blood purifier before
the public. It eradicates scrofula and all humors,
cures salt rheum, boils, pimples, etc. The reverest
cases of blood poisoning have yielded to its superior
curative power. It-accomplishes remarkable cures
where other preparations utterly faiL Try it this
season.
“For years at irregu'ar intervals in all seasons,
I suffered the intolerable burning and itching of
blood poisoning by ivy. It would break out on my
legs, in my throat and eyes. Last spring I took
Hood’s Sarsaparilla, as a blood purifier, with no
thought of it as a special remedy for ivy poisoning,
but it baa effected a permanent and thorough cure.”
Calvin T. Shute, Wentworth, N. H
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold by all drugg sls. $1; six for prepared onlj
by C I. Hood & Co., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mas?.
IQO Doses One Dollar .
At last, while in a hopeless frame.
One day she said, “There is a name
I’ve often seen—a remedy—
Perhaps ’twill help; I can hut try.”
And so, according to direction.
She took Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription,
And every baleful symptom fled.
And she was raised as from the dead.
Look Here!
Orders for the Shannon Letter
Files and Cabinets, Document
Filing Cabinets, Rapid Roller
Coppiers, the Schlicht Indexes,
Metal Roller Shelving; many
styles of Office Desks, and the
latest improved Bank and Office
Furniture and Devices solicited
at the Atlanta Agency, by
H, FRANKLYN STARKE,
28 Peachtree Street, Manager,
ATLANTA, CA.
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Ml pPwiBSi EH3k V agents W^CmCTJLAIW wanted!
Wm mSSN W FREE.
nr 1000 Brewster’s Safety Rein
Holders GIVEN AWAY to intro
VVIliiWlS duco from them, ^Svery Lines horse owner buyi
1 to 6. never under horse’*
ihilsil ;!W/S0U foot. an<l Send racking 25 cts. in for stamps Nickel to nay Plated post
Mlllll a *°
^ am P le tturt sella for 65 cents. Addrees
MSSRIuilmSil IB a revvs f cr M tg. Co., Holljr, Mich.
DETECTIVES
Wanted in every County. Shrewd men to act under instr UCtioBS
In our Secret Service. Kxperieuce not necessary r. Particuli »rs tree.
Gnuman Detective Bureau Co.41 Arcade,CiacimutU).
\TEW Strawberries, Boses and Trees, Writ* now
j_v for new the Pocket best by Catalogue mail. Plain & report directions of Trial bed", cul¬
and order to
tivate Roses. J. W. ADAMS & CO., Springfield. Mass.
■ I prescribe and fully en
dorse Big O as the only
W r l TO Cure* 6 dats.^H in specific of this disease. for the certain cure
}oarant*ed not * G.H.INGRAHAM,M. D.,
cause .Stricture. Amsterdam, N. Y.
is Iffd only by ths Wo have sold Big G for
Itui Chested Ct. ma ny years, and it baa
H * Cinch given the best of satis¬
faction.
Ohio. D. R. DYCHE A CO.,
Chicago, 111.
Trade kl&l.OO. Sold by Druggists.
A. N. U....... ’80.