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r THE FARM AND GARDEN.
f ' BOIL FOR HEMP.
! The soil best suited to hemp is a rich
allavial loam; it will thrive in a moder¬
ately tenacious one if well pulverized and
it has good under drainage, either natural
or artificial. Land that bakes hard is not
broadcast, good for hemp. It is generally sown
from a bushel to a bushel and
a half of seed being used to the acre. If
drilled in less is required. When raised
for the seed it may be planted in hills.—
: £ost<m Cultivator.
GOOD USE FOR HOUSE SLOPS.
If you save all the slops from the
house, the wash-water and suds of
sundry occasions during the week, you
will find that you have a supply of nutri¬
ment at hand to draw upon which is far
richer than you had any idea. It will
not make a poor soil permanently rich,
ibut it will afford sufficient nutriment to
nourish such plants as you grow in it dur¬
ing the summer in a very satisfactory
manner. We planted some annuals on a
stiff clay-that had been thrown out of a
cellar. We water them regularly with
suds and slops, and they surpass in
growth and floriferousness those grown
in the garden .—American Agriculturist.
A HOME-MADE BROODER. 1
v People who raise chickens find
many a
good brooder a very useful institution.
There are many plans for making them,
from which we select the description of a
good one that can be easily made: Make
a box three feet square, one foot high,
open at the top and bottom. Over this
nail sheet iron, and then nail one-inch
strips around the edge, leaving a hole at
each comer one inch long. Make a floor
of matched lumber, on the strips, leaving
a hole two inches square in the center,
around which fasten a tube four
high. Then make a cover two feet and
eight inches square. Set on four legs.
Along the edges tack strips of flannel,
slashed every two inches. Place this on
top of the brooder. Set a lamp under
the sheet iron, and the air passing through
the holes left in the corners becomes
warmed, streams through the tube, and
over the chicks, while the floor at the
same time is quite warm. Such an ap¬
paratus, properly constructed and man¬
aged, fills the bill of a good brooder.—
New Yorh Witness.
!
MARKETING FRUITS,
Large cities do not always prove the
best markets for fruits. The best market
is often passed by and the fruit sent to
New York to be sold at a less price than
it would have brought nearer home.
Look well to the question of markets be¬
fore the fruit is ready. If the fruit is to
be consigned to a commission dealer,
select the man, not the one who makes the
greatest promises, but the one who has
best reputation for fair dealing and
promptness.
Conform to the customs of the market
in the choice of packages. Where the
custom is to send berries in roun?l boxes,
those in square ones will meet with slow
sale. Have choice fruits, such as selected
apples, plums, etc., go in bushel and half
bushel crates. Let the crates be built of
bright new stuff, and establish a reputa¬
tion for neatness that will designate your
fruit, even without a label. But do not
omit to mark every crate, barrel or other
package, plainly, with the name of the
consignee, and with your own name.
Make or purchase packages of all kinds
well in advance, so that this important
matter may not be rushed at the time
when the fruit is ripening,
i Too much care canno.t be taken in as¬
sorting fruits. Some make three grades,
the first and second for market, and a
third to be fed out or dried or otherwise
disposed of at home. Some of the most
careful fruit growers make but two
grades, the first and best only goes to
market. All other is kept at home, or
disposed of without having the name of
the shipper on the packages .—American
Agriculturalist.
COWS SHOULD PAY FOR THEIR BOARD.
1 In order that the plants grown may
yield the best return of which they are
capable to the husbandman, his skill
should which be exercised to provide animals
can return to him the most in
products or service for the food which
they consume. It is possible to keep
animals which yield so much less in food
than they eat, that they are veritable
burdens upon the man whose property
they are. Instead of being his servants,
times living and laboring for him, he some¬
becomes theirs, and apparently
lives to keep and feed cows, hogs and
horses. The cow in all civilized coun¬
tries is always a boarder upon some per¬
son. She should be made to pay for her
board at such remunerative rates as will
leave a profit for the boarding-house
keeper. If she fails in that she should
be made to render a service which she
will not unwillingly contribute. Her
carcass should be made into beef and her
hide into. leather, She should not be
slyly sent to board; upon some other un¬
fortunate man. A cow with the business
habit of keeping through her accounts with the
World paid- up the man who
owns and feeds her, is a good business
cow. That is the kind of cow I recom¬
mend. Her power of service will be in¬
dicated by certain external points. She
should have a large long udder, of elastic
fine quality; a mellow movable skin,
covered with soft silky hair; n long large
barrel, hooped with flat ribs, broad and
wide apart; a broad loin, spreading out
into broad, long hindquarters; an open
twist with rather- thin ; hips, and a lean
neck of symmetrical length, prominent carrying a
clean-cut fine face with eyes.
A cow with these points she has ability to
serve a man well, if gets a fair
chan.ce. That her calves should have
powers equal to or rather better than her
own, care shodld be exercised in their
’breeding. The best blood, of the breed
adapted to the farmer’s purpose, should
be used to enlarge and not to lessen the
working capacity to be transmitted to
her calves.— Farm, Field and Stockman.
EFFECTS OF FOODS—LEAN FORK.
The test .iesujfeoea be J»d with breed::
ing sows, writes F. D. Curtis to the
American Agriculturist, by turning them
into a field where there is plenty of pas¬
ture. It is not advisable to allow them
to have pigs where other hogs run, al¬
though, in a large range, there is little
danger of the pigs being disturbed or in¬
jured when born. One thing is sure—
there is no food which will make better
pigs or put the sows in better condition
for bearing young than grass. It seems
to be as natural food for swine as for any
class of animals. I have known sows
which destroyed their pigs in the spripg,
to make the best of mothers in the sum
mer when fed on grass. In the spring
they were feverish and made frenzied by
their physical condition; while in the
summer by the cooling and succulent
character of the grass they were in per¬
fect condition for the ordeal of bearing
young. Feeding vegetables has a similar
effect, and when sows have these regularly
they are always.sure to do well. Fruits
are also natural foods for swine, and sows
will do well if fed nothing but apples.
In the summer hogs should always be on
the earth and given a chance to root.
When it is known that all these cheap
foods are so natural and healthful for
swine, it seems strange that so many far¬
mers persist in keeping their hogs, the
year round, on grain. An acre of sweet
corn, fed stalks and all, will go a long
way toward fattening a lot of hogs.
Sorghum is also excellent. Weeds are
allowed to go to seed, for extra work the
next year, which would make excellent
pork. Here is a maxim: The cheapest
foods make the best pork. The reason
is, it is the leanest. Lean pork then be¬
ing the best, we should try to make it.
Confinement in pens tends to increase the
fat. Exercise develops the muscles.
The muscular part is the best food. The
fat is largely waste. We make fat to
throw it away. People buy hams, not
for the fat, but for the lean. When the
fat is wasted it makes the lean cost just
so much more. Reduce the fat and in¬
crease the lean.
Can this be done? Certainly. In this
way: Keep the pigs all their lives in the
pasture. Feed skim-milk and bran.
Keep corn away from them. Give them
vegetables and apples with the bran.
When the bodies or frames are grown,
give them oat meal or rye, ground entire,
mixed with bran, putting in twice as
much bran as rye. Keep up the vegetable
and apple diet and allow them during this
tune to eat all the grass they will. A
little com may be'fed toward the end.
Pork made in this way will havc
more lean, and will be tender and juicy.
At Kirby Homestead, with our breed oi
hogs, and using turnips, we have pro¬
duced hams seventy-five per cent. lean.
The fat is something more than mere lard
—animal oil. It is meat, with the sub¬
stance and grain of meat. To get such
pork is worth trying for, as it is in de¬
mand. The sausage and the other food
products made from such pig meat are
superior in quality and taste. There is a
tenderness and flavor which enhances the
value. Pigs should no be fed so much
or gorged to such an extent that they will
not go out into the pasture. An active
pig will make better meat than a helpless
one—made so by lack of true muscle and
vigor. It is advisable to plant apple
trees for early ripening, in order to give
the pigs a start. Fifty trees of this kind
have been set this year at Kirby Home¬
stead, including twenty early harvest,
Apples do not make fat pork, but they do
make plenty of lean meat, and that of
extra quality. Pumpkins can be utilized
in the same way. Gradually the require¬
ments of consumers for more lean pork
will open the eyes of farmers to the fact
that the consumers are right and we will
have less of the greasy, indigestible
animated lard tubs called “early matured
pork.” “The most weight in the short¬
est time,” is a heresy which has broken
down lots of American stomachs and set
thousands of people against pork. There
is no animal on the farm which can be
turned to better account than the hog to
utilize wastes and cheap foods, and as a
factor for enriching the farm. For a
steady diet give the pigs grass.
FARM AND GARDEN NOTES.
The creamery is the dairy farmer's
hope.
Have milk rooms well ventilated from
above.
Liquid manure is best applied weak
and often.
Do not allow the ground around plants
to become balked. „
.
Keep swine healthy. Loss begins'when
health breaks down.
Every young weed that is cut down is
one less to go to seed.
Corn isn’t horse feed. Never look for
anything better than oats.
The cows will be more comfortable out
of doors these hot nights.
The three great enemies of sheep are
dogs, foot-rot and parasites.
A member of a famous farmer’s club
says, feed onions to sheep to kill ticks.
Sheep do not suffer from the cold, but
they do not like high winds or to have
wet fleeces.
After a long journey, walk your horse
around the. yard a little before feeding
and until he is cool.
The silo on the “cheap plan” is grow¬
ing in favor, and will help solve many
problems of feeding.
' Timothy when unmixed with other
grasses should be cut while in blossom,
or just before the blossoms appear.
See that there is a shade of some kind
in the pasture. It is for the comfort of
the stock and the profit of their owner to
do this.
Burdocks are everywhere a nuisance.
If you have none, your neighbor has.
Cut them off frequently at the ground’s
surface.
Immediate straining will remove im¬
purities which otherwise might be dis¬
solved to the permanent injury of the
whole product.
See to it that the cream does not get
too “ripe” during hot weather. Pool
cream won’t make good flavored buttei
no matter if the grain, color end.texture
are good-r-a doubtful result.
SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL.
French engineers have undertaken the
sowing of railway embankments with
poppies.
Paint made with turpentine is a better
protector for iron work than it is when
mixed with flaxseed oil.
The cuckoo is an insectivorous bird;
the hairy caterpillar which terrifies many
birds is readily devoured by him.
Forestry has long been made a study in
Japan; no people are more skilled in
grafting and dwarfing trees than the
Japanese.
The Australian beetle is colonized in
California that it may exterminate the
scale bug, an insect that.preys upon the
fruit trees.
Experiments made on the dog anf
rabbit show generally that the quautitj
of water is less in the venous than in the
arterial blood.
Among the curiosities of electricity is
a Frenchman’s claim that he will soon be
able to produce thunder storms at any
desired time and place.
Some forty miles from Barcelona,
Spain, there is an actual mountain of
very pure salt, which is hewn out in the
open air, like stone from a quarry.
It is said that a Paris firm has pro¬
duced porous glass for window panes.
The pores are too fine to admit of a
draught, but they assist in ventilation.
Next to sunlight the incandescent light
gives the best illumination for reading.
All notions of the injurious effects of the
electric light on the eyes are erroneous.
Patridge wood is procured from a
large tree that grows in the West Indies.
The wood is close-grained and hard, and
takes a good polish; it is used chiefly for
umbrella-handles.
To prevent the loss of power in belts,
cover the surface of the pulley with
papier-mache. Apply by chemically pre¬
pared cement. It will firmly adhere in a
few hours, and thus become a part of the
pulley.
A Russian doctor speaks enthusiasti¬
cally of what he calls ‘ ‘utrication”—that
is, pricking with a bunch of fresh nettles
—as a cure for neuralgia and many other
diseases. It has long been in use among
the Russian peasantry.
Sawdust is being used by some build¬
ers instead of sand. It is said to answer
well, as it is one-half lighter than sand,
and can be very advantageously used on
ceilings. Mortar made of quicklime and
sawdust, mixed with cement, does well
for brick or stone work.
The tornado is a funnel-shaped column
of disturbed air, generally about forty or
fifty yards in diameter, rotating about a
nearly perpendicular axis. It forms in
the upper air a few miles overhead and
works down to the earth. Its track is
generally not more than twenty-five
miles until it disappears into the upper
air whence it came.
Sometimes great difficulty is experi¬
enced in making holes in steel that is too
hard to cut or file easily. This is ef¬
fected by the following mixture: One
ounce of sulphate of copper, quarter ol
an ounce of alum, half a teaspoonful of
powdered salt, a gill of vinegar, and
twenty drops of nitric acid. If it is
washed off quickly it will give a beauti¬
ful frosted appearance to the metal.
Length of Man’s Vision.
“How far can a man see?” was the not
extremely definite inquiry made by a re¬
porter, of a physician who is something
of a specialist in matters pertniniug to
the eye.
“To the stars,” was the equally in¬
definite answer.
The line of inquiry in regard to tha
scope of vision was suggested by the fact
that no two persons will agree as to the
limitations of human vision; of half a
dozen persons on the tower of the Wild¬
will er "Building no two will agree. One
claim that the limit is ten miles and
others will insist that they can see sixty
miles.
The physician appealed to said forty
miles would probably be the limit from
the standpoint of the tower of the Wild¬
er Building, to a person with normal
vision. That would be the line of the
horizon. A long-sighted person could
see no farther, but could see objects on
the horizon plainer. A near-sighted per¬
son would, of course, be correspondingly
limited.
Another gentleman who was present
said that he had stood on the heights ten
miles north of Bowmansville, Canada,
on a clear day, and distinguished the
outlines of the south shore of Lake On¬
tario, and at night from the same posi¬
tion had seen the revolving lights at Oak
Orchard. The heights referred to are
400 feet above the level of the water of
the lake.
The use of telescope had verified the
facl that the shore outline had been seen
with the naked eye. The same gentle¬
man said that he had found that on the
ocean the hull of a vessel disappeared at
a distance of about ten miles, if the ob¬
server stood on the deck of another ves¬
sel, and the masts disappeared at about
thirty to thirty-five miles .—Hochcster {N.
Y.) Democrat.
Food Consumed on an Ocean Steamship.
The food consumed on one of the largo
steamships from New York to Liverpool
was as follows: Nine thousand five hun¬
dred pounds of beef, 4000 pounds of
mutton, 900 pounds of lamb, 256 pounds
of veal, 150 of pork, 140 pounds of
pickled legs of pork, 600 pounds of
corned tongues, 700 pounds of corned
beef, 2000 pounds of fresh fish, twenty
pounds of calves’ feet, eighteen pounds
of calves’ heads, 450 fowls, 240 spring
chickens, 120 ducks, fifty turkeys, fifty
geese, 600 squabs, 300 tins of sardines,
300 plovers, 175 pounds of sausages,
1200 pounds of ham, 500 pounds of
bacon, 10,000 eggs, 2000 quarts of milk,
700 pounds of butter, 410 pounds of cof¬
fee, eighty-seven pounds of tea, 900
pounds of sugar, 100 pounds of rice, 200
pounds of barley, 100 jars of jam and jel¬
ly, fifty bottles of pickles, fifty bottles of
sauces, twenty barrels of apples, fourteen
boxes of lemons, eighteen boxes of
oranges, six tons of potatoes, twenty*
foqr barrels of flour.
The Oldest Summer Resort.
Few of the thousands who enjoy the
rest or excitement of the great American
summer resorts are aware that up among
the Jersey mountains, near Scliooley’s
Mountain, is the oldest “resort” of all.
The old Heath House, built in 1793, is
one of the iii’st establishments of its
kind erected in the country. General
Washington slept in it while President,
and his room is just as he left it, all of
the old furniture and fixtures having
been jealously guarded by the several
proprietors. In the early years of the
present rival century Saratoga was the only
of Scliooley’s Mountain, and the
two resorts vied with each other in point
of excitement and entertainment. Each
boasted of its springs, and each at¬
tracted the best people of America, but
“the mountain,” as it was commonly
called, was nearer the great cities, and
the stages from Philadelphia, Baltimore
and New York carried more passengers
through the German Valley and up the
beautiful ravine of Schooley’s Creek than
ever journeyed to Saratoga.
For seventy years the old place led
the watering places of the country, but
and although lively, it is still healthful, beautiful
it has been comparativaly lost
in the growth of great resorts in every
comer of the country. The original
Heath House, now called the Alpha, is
still standing, besides other “Heath
Houses, ” each a generation or so younger
than its neighbor. The present hotel
was built forty years ago.
Schooley’s Mountain is a broad plateau
twelve hundred feet above the sea level,
and overlooking the valley of the Mus
conetcong on the north and the German
Valley which on the it south, its iron springs,
for has always been famous,
are on the side of the mountain from
Hackettstovvn. The Chalybeate Spring
is the largest. A beautifal summer
house surrounds and covers it. The
waters are peculiarly healthful, a iact
discovered by ii the Nariticong .?, Indians
long I__„ , betore (___ the . builders Ot the Heath TT__* 1
„ .
House were bom.—[New York Times.
Milk and Thirst.
It is a mistake to look upon milk as a
beverage. It is a liquid food, and
though it it quenches thirst at the moment,
makes it more intense after it has been
some time in the stomach, and its diges¬
tion has commenced. Healthy infants
who receive a sufficiency of milk, often
cry for long periods, to the bewilderment
and distress of mothers and nurses, sim¬
ply because they are thirsty, and in many
cases the child would be greatly bene¬
fited by a drink of water.
A Chinese Dish.
Hatched eggs form one of the greatest
delicacies in China. They are served in
bowls at the feasts of persons of distinc¬
tion. When invitations are sent out for
grand entertainments, it is the practice
to set the hens to hatch, for it is not till
about the tenth or twelth day that the
eggs are considered as ripe, and exactly
in the state most agreeble to the palate
of an epicure—a friand of the first order.
These eggs cost 30 per cent, more
then the fresh ones.
Paper Type.
A process of making type from paper
has been patented in England. The in¬
vention, in its present state of perfection,
has been found fully adequate to succi ed
the large wooden type now in generiil
use. Finely dvided paper pulp is mixed
with par&fine oil or linseed drying oil,
and pressed into forms or molds. Heat,
under pressure, consolidates the pulp.
Paper type is less expensive and more
durable than type cut in wood.— Union
Printer.
Great Lawyer: “I want you to tell
me candidly, did you really shoot the
man?”
Client: “Do you suppose that I am
such a donkey that I would pay you a
$5,000 fee if I was innocent,
A well-known literateur and hu¬
morist modestly says that his chief lit¬
erary acquirements are the books he has
borrowed and never returned.
“ Mamma’s Gittin’ Better.”
There is gladness in the household;
The shadow fades away
That darkened oil the sunshine
Of many a summer day.
“O, mamma’s happy children getting better,”
The erv.
And the the loving light of husband’s hope shines bright again
In eye. "sick
In thousands of homes women are
unto death" with the terrible diseases so com¬ if all
mon to their sex, and it would seem as
the happiness had gone out of life and the
household in consequence. For when the wife
and mother suffers all the family suffers with
her. never-falling This ought not to be, and it need not ail¬ be,
for a remedy for woman's
ments is at hand. Many a home has been
made happy because the shadow of disease
has been banished from ir Prescription—the by the potent power
of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite diseases un¬
failing remedy for all weaknesses and
peculiar to women, _
$500 Reward offered for an incurable case of
Catarrh by the proprietors druggists. of Dr. Sage’s Rem¬
edy. 50 c te., by
r l he worst hypocrite is the man who tells his
wile that she always looks her prettiest when
dressed in calico.
Pise’s Cure for Enders, Consumption Pa., Feb. 18, 1889,
checked relieved the
cou gh, the night-sweats and emacia¬
tion—in short, gave a new lease of life to a pa¬
tient of mine who was rapidly and surely ap¬
proaching the final stage of this dreaded dis¬
ease.
health, To-day she this is in the enjoyment of fair
and result is due to the beneficial
effects of only a few bottles of Piso’s Cure for
Consumption. If into
we take consideration the duration
of this patient’s sickness, the severity of the
symptoms, the small quantity of the remedial
agent and the brief period of time within
which a cuke was effected, we cannot fail to
acknowledge the truly wonderful effects of
Piso’s Cure for Consumption.
s Levi Jay Enders, M.D.
Jn every community there are living wit¬
nesses Piso’s to Cure testify that in naming our medicine
for Consumption, we have not
claimed more than it can do. Its standing in
the market also proves its merit. We have
not tisements published sensational been notices; signs indicate onr adver¬
have more to the
existence of Piso’s Cure for Consumption. In¬
stead has of endeavoring been to excite hope. fear our pur¬
pose to encourage
Yet Piso’s Cure for Consu r,ption stands to¬
day requiring at the head its of all medicines of its class
for manufacture a factory full of
skilled workers and improved machinery,
whereas about twenty years ago all the work
was done in one little room by one man.
Price, 25 center jjer bottle.
Hazlktxnk. Warren. Pa.
“There is a tide in the affairs of men which
taken at the flood leads on to fortune,” If
affairs are at a low ebb now, don’t fail to
to B. F. Johnson & Co., 1009 Main St.,
Ric hmond, Va„ who have plans that will en¬
able you to make money rapidly.
If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr.Isaac Thomp¬
Eye-w ater,Druggists sell at 25c per bottle.
Remedy for Cat Worms.
Some gardeners protect cabbage plants
from the ravages of cut-worms by wind¬
ing burdock a piece of paper or bark or a bit of
leaf around the plants when
set. The cut worms on" the sur¬
face of the soil, or directly be¬
neath it, when they come to the article
which envelops the plant, will go in
search of something more palatable.
Some always succeed in keeping them
away by using a small quantity of salt¬
peter water around each plant. An ounce
of saltpeter dissolved in a teacupful of
hot water is sufficient to impregnate two
gallons of water. A gill of this solution
poured around each hill, an inch or so
lrom the plant, is sufficient, It is an in
expensive remedy, and easily applied.
Wife (looking up from newspaper):
Here’s “Astronomy must be a fascinating study.
an account of an astronomer
sweeping the heavens with his tele¬
scope."
Husband: “Yes; that's the latest
style of telescope, with broom attach¬
ment.”
Harvest Excursions^
The golden harvest time is near, and fortun
ately The the facilities for enjoying it are ample.
Chicago, Rock Island <fc Pacific Rail¬
way will seil Harvest Excursion Tickets to
all points in Kansas and Nebraska (west of
but not on the Missouri River), Colorado, In¬
dian Territory, New Mexico, Texas, Wyo¬
ming, Utah, Iowa Idaho, Dakota, Arizona, North¬
western and Southwestern Minnesota
a t os, fare for the bound T,m>. Dates of
sale September 10th and 24th, and October 8th,
1889; return limit, 30 days from dale of sale,
ing sections of new country such as were
never before offered, the territory to
excursion. The solid vestibule trains of
the Rock Island are composed of elegant
from Omaha, and via Kansas oily anil St.
Joseph through the most desirable portions of
Kansas and Nebraska to Denver, Colorado
cations Springs and Pueblo, where direct communi
are made with diverging lines (also at
ritories St. Paul) above to all points in the States and Ter¬
named. For more detailed in¬
formation call on or address John Sebastian,
General 'iicket and Passenger Agent, Chi¬
cago, Ill.
Sarah Bernhardt.
is coining to America, and great will be the
enthusiasm aroused amongst her admirers.
But, we have our own bright star, Mary Ander¬
son, who will continue to bear off the palm in
the dramatio, as does Lucy Hinton in the
great tobacco world.
Bradfield’s Female Regulator will cure all
irregularities or derangements peculiar to
woman. Those suffering should use it. Sold
by all Druggists.
The most prominent physicians in the city
smoko and recommend “Tansill’s Punch.”
Why Don’t
You take Hood’s Sarsaparilla, it you hare Impure
blood, have lost your appetite, have that tired
feeling or are troubled by sick headache, dyspep¬
sia or biliousness. It has accomplished wonders
for thousands of afflicted people, and, if given a
fair trial, is reasonably certain to do you good.
“I have been troubled a great deal with head¬
ache, had no appetite, no strength, and felt as
mean as anyone could, and be about my work.
Since taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla I have not had
the headache, my food has relished, and seemed
to do me good, and I have felt myself growing
stronger every day.” M. A. Steinmah, 19 Grand
Avenue, Grand Rapids, Mich.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggists. *1; six for $5. Prepared only
by C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.
IOO Doses One Dollar
Ely’s Cream Balm
GIVES RELIEF AT ONCE FOR
COLD IN HEAD.
-CURES
CATARRH. [W^jl
Apply Balm into each nostril.
ELY BROS.,56 Warren St.,N.Y.
RUPTURE
A written guarantee to ABSOLUTE LY CURE. No
detention from business. Endorsed by the leading
physicians of the United States. Write for circulars.
Dr. O. E. MoCANDLISS, Atlanta, Ga.
Office Z0}4 Marietta Street, corner Broad.
JONES
HJ3
Iron Levers. Steel Bearings, Brass
Taro Beam and Beam Bax for.
„ Every size Scale. SGO.
’ mention For free price list
this paper and address
JONES OF BINGHAMTON,
BINGHAMTON, N. Y.^
THE HARVEST IN TEXAS.
Bountiful crops raised in this wonderful Sts to. Corn
20 cents per bushel. Hay $5 per ton. Cattle *5 per
bead. More cotton than can be gathered. For list of
LADIES
Amenagogue Pills
Irregularities. Safe and certain. Should not be
OPIUM HABIT.
A Valuable Treatise Giving
full informationof an Eaay and Speedy carefree to
the afflicted. Dr. J. C. Hoffman,J efferson,Wisconsin .
ynrj 1 UU MAKE can <p $ f inf) U1/ Gentlemen K month OOh x dungforus. Lady agents
W&ntttd wllO «Jfcr. devote their
time to the business. Spar? time may also he
better positions. profitably. It will Good agenQ* promptly promoted Addresi
pay you to write us.
once, D. W. Thayer A Co., Pubs., Atlanta, Ga.
S25 an MKDICAL hour CO.. Jtiohaoad. V«,
■piSO’S JT^to use. REMEDY Cheapest^ FOR Relief CATARRH.—Best immediate^. A Easiest is
Cure
CATARRH
to by It mail. the is an nostrils. Address, Ointment, Price, of E. which 50c. T. Hazeltine, Sold a small by particle druggists warren, is cr___t applied Pa. r
■Qsh BKbflP MM
BRYANT & STRATTON BusiuesTCollega
LOUISVILLE.
-sjpnELBS
I I FEMALE
^
moo K TO'WOMAN
BRADFIELD REBUIATORCO. ATLANTA
sain or au bmubsists.
WEBSTER
THE BEST INVESTMENT
lot the Fami ly, School, or Professional Library.
JWOlCTMARu /MOHABRtoCi
Has Seen for many years Standard
Office Authority U. in S. tie Supreme Gov’t Printing Ceurf.
ani
ItisHiglly RecoimM ly 38 State leadS^
Sup’ts of Schools and tie ,
College Presidents. School
Nearly all tie Books
Webster, Med ii this country attested are ly based tie leading upon* Sclool
as
Bool Pollislers.
3000 more Words and nearly
2000 more Engravings tlan any
otter American Dictionary.
GET THE BEST.
Sold by all Booksellers. Illustrated Pamphlet
with specimen pages, etc., sent free.
G. & C. MERRIAM & CO., Pub’rs,Springfield,Mass.
1 f F YOU WISH A (smumskt^
GOOD
REVOLVER
purcbaBe on£ of the cele- ^"i l s saJg
brated SMITH k WESSON , s
arms. The finest small arms )J )/
ever manufactured and the i
first choice of all experts.
Manufactured in calibres 32,38 and 44-1CO. Sin¬
gle Target or double models. action. Constructed Safety Hammerlesa and
Ity wrought steel, carefully entirely inspected of best a ual«
manstvp and stock, they unrivaled for wots*
durability am! are for finish*
cheap malleable accuracy. Do not be deceived wt
often sold for the cant-iron imitations whioh no!
only are unreliable, but genuine dangerous. article and are £
WESSON Revolvers all The SMITH thebaS
rels with firm s name, are address stamped and dates upon of patera
and are guaranteed perfect in every detail.
ust upon having the genuine article, and if you*
dealer cannot supply you an order senttoadarra
below will receive prompt and careful attention.
Descrptivecataloime a-\«i nriees furnished upon an
p “ SMITH & WESSON,
I3V“Mention this paper. 'piinglicld, Maaa,
ARE YOU THINKING
OF BUYING A
f. Cotton or Hay Press?
!' We manufacture a Cotton
Press and two Hay Pressea.
will send Circulars and Prion
List upon applieation.
WMr. RO ANOKE IRON AND
masa WOO II WORKS.
CHATTANOOGA, TENN.
After ALL others
fall, consult
CO
5 PHILA., PA.
Twenty and years’ of continuous the practice in the treafr
ment cure awful effects of early
vice, and destroying both mind and body. Medtoiat
treatment for one month, Five Dollars, seat
securely sealed from observation to any address.
Book on Special Diseases free.
BUTCHER’S
FLY KILLER
Makes a clean sweep. Every
sheet will kill a quart of flies.
Stops buzzing around mbs.
diving at eves, hard tickling yets
nose, skips words wiul to
cures Send peace at trifling expens*.
DUTCHBR, 25 cents for a sheets ta
F. 8t. Albans,
DROPSY
treated free.
Positively „ .. Cured frith Vegetable Remedies.
Have cured thousands of cases. Cure patients pro
nounced hopeless by best physicians. From first dose
symptoms all disappear; in ten davs at least two-thlid*
nials symptoms removed. Send for free book testimo¬
of miraculous cures. Ten days' treatment
free by mail. If you order trial, send 10c. in stamps
to pay postage. Dr. H. H. Green Sl Sons, Atlanta,
THE ALP INE FIRE PLACE.
Before Buying Grates.
is get The our Aldine circular, Sent Free.
I 1 Flooru, Perfect produces Ventila¬ Warm
is tion; cleanly. keeps fire Burns over night and
wood Can be coal, coke,
or gas. piped to
common other chimneys, or set like
half grates, and can be run at
the cost of any other.
jnn I Address ALDINE MFG. CO.,
Grand Rapids, • Michigan.
Patronize INDUSTRY! HOME
BUY SOUTHERN—MADE
PRINTING INKS
-FROM—
J. COHEN, General Agent
23 East Alabama St,, ATLANTA, GA.
A HE ii R ■ Sfffl SB and Whiskey Hah. WlUl
8 !tSCTl! i e<1 j^ h0 ™
j
>3 i tboro
u
PEERLESS DYES &S& 5 S
M 1 prescribe and fully an
Ef krd oni, by th. We have sold Big G for
satis
flk Ohio. iJm ■ "d. Kdyche Chicago, * CO., III.
Tnl.^^^B^iurtlSl.OO. Bold by Druggist*.
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