University of South Carolina Libraries
- \ AOKlCULlLtwA Halters fob Heifers. — Heifers should never be allowed be allowed to grow up to milking time without having been halter-broken. Also,while joung, and consequently a great deal more manageable, they should be taught to stand around and become familiar with being handled, so that when an attempt is made to milk them, they will not be frightened or inclined to kick. It does not take any longer to break a heifer when young, and have her accustomed to being handled so that she will sub mit to being milked when the time comes, than it does after she comes in. It must be apparent to any one who gives the subject a moment’s thought, that the latter is the worn possible time to undertake training a heifer, tihe is in an excited condition; wildly afraid her young will be molested; naturally considers that the effort to milk her is interfering with the rights of her young which makes her still more nervous and excitable, and with a motherly instinct she will hold up her milk to save it for the calf. I like the plan of putting hal ters on heifers and tying them up in stalls the same as horses, where they can be taught to stand around, back up and step forward at the word, and by being led out to water, they can easily be taught to follow the halter The udder and teats should be handled fre quently, and the card and brush used often. When these pains are taken, much annoyance may be saved after- wuiu, and when it is necessary to move the cow from one place to another, her docile and gentle habits will be more tlian a reward for the trouble, and in striking contrast with yelping dogs,yel ling boys, whips, stones, clubs and curses, which too often constitute the outfit fc driving unbroken cows. Ihe value ot a pasture consists, first, in a close, strong sward. To have this the soil must be firm, fertile and filled with moisture. By this we do not mean it shall be wet; on the contrary,it must be the reverse. The moisture must be such as is held naturally (me chanically); not the moisture of satura tion, but that of vaporization. Thus a permanent pasture should never be heavily cropped until it is well set. Hence none of the tuberous rooted grasses like timothy are suitable to permanent pa-tures. They cannot stand close cropping nor constant tramping. Pasture grasses, therefore, must be the fibrous and deep rooted va rieties. A loahy soil that hi neither so liuht as a sanuy nor so tenacious as a clay soil is, as a rule, best adapted to fruit orchards. What ate known as calcare ous loams are so prized by the fruit growers; so are the most lands m lime stone districts. Fruit trees make a rank growth in alluvial soils, but, generally speaking, they are neither so hardy nor so fruitful as are trees in soil containing more sand, clay or gravel, and less veg etable mould. The fruit is not so high- flavored as if from a loamy soil. A gravelly soil is not suited to fruit trees, and must be mixed with clay, mu8k, peat and the like to insure any success. The Garden.—The farmer who has a neat and well-kept garden is almost sure to have a neat and well-kept farm, a comfortable and well-appointed home, tidy out-bmldings, and stock in good coudition; and the housewife who takes pride in her garden, generally has a home to take pride in and be proud of. STRAwnERRiEs.—A new seh-teading strawberry bed is the invention of a €aliforman. FJ1 with earth any sort of a barrel that has been bored well all around with inch-holes. Plant straw berries in every bole and in the open top, root downwards and top outwards. It is a great success. It is quite oruate, and it will keep for several months in bearing. Prof. J. P. Stblle, of Alabama, is down ou what he calls the “carp farce.’ He thinks the carp is no better than the buffalo fish. He calls it the “aquatic buzzard,” and says it is the “meanest fish of any waters; a nasty, grisly-flesh- ed kind of mud-sucker, which digs m the muck and feeds on decaying sub stances.” As far as possible the formation of manure heaps in the fields should be avoided. If formed, Jhe practice of turning over the manure should be aban doned, as labor is thus lost and much manure wasted. The best authorities consider it best to cart the manure di rect Irom the barnyards to the land and spread it at once. A Pet Lamb.—By training a pet lamb to come at*the call, and afterward put ting it with the flock, the owner can call his sheep wherever they hear him, as the pet will come, followed by the lest. Milk Tesih.—Jf all butter-makers fcculu get suitable glasses and test each cow’s milk separately, many times they would find that their best cow is the thinnest one. They might also find out that seme cow considered good was really an unprofitable animal. A experimental farm and hospital is to be established near Washington City for the treatment of domestic animals, and to ascertain, by scientific expeiiments, the causes of their va rious diseases and how they may be cured, As a rule less attention is given the pig-pen than the stable, and the swine which are kept constantly in confined quarters are much more liable to become diseased when neglected than any other live stock. Clean quarters for pigs will well repay their owners. A "teaspoonftjl of flowers of sulphur is a good thing to put in the nest of a sitting hen, to kill lice, and as all nits are hatched within ten days, when the mother leaves the nest with her brood, she is perfectly free from nits or lice. An English wri er says that no mat ter what cow a Bed Polled (Norfolk) bull is mated witb, the result is a calf always hornless, and usually red in color, A practical farmer recommends the growing of two crops ot buckwheat in succession as a means of exterminating wire-worms. They will not eat buck wheat, and are starved to death. Thirty thousand head of sheep have recently been shipped from California to Howard county, Texas, where they will be ranched, Austrian toads are largely imported into England for killing insects, eta, in gardens. They fetch from $15 to $20 a nundred. DOMES no. Takino Care of Fresh Pork. -. The livers of old hogs are not healthy .^rnl for people, but the livers of healt- y pigs may be eaten by those who relish them. When cutting meat to cook, al ways out across the muscle. If cut lengthwise of the muscle it is tough and indigestible, and almost valueless. Let the fat meat iry some time before put ting m lean pieces, as the latter fry sooner than the former and become too hard before the fat pieces are done. Do not salt fresh meat while frying un til it is nearly cooked, as salting makes the juice of the meat run out more and the meat is not so tender. Borne peo ple rdiish a sprinkling of sage on freshly tried pork. The sage should be dry, and pulverized and dredged ou while frying. The tenderloins and spare-ribs are used for fresh meat. When the spare- nbs are to be kept awhile, unless tuey can be kept frozen and cool, they ought to have the blood washed off before it becomes dry, and some fine salt rubbed over them. The heads are opened, the brains removed, the eyes dug out the ears cut off, and all superfluous parts, with the snout, removed. Borne fami lies bake the upper part of the head, and salt the lower part with the hams and shoulders to smoke. Before baking the heads they should be boiled till quite tender; a handful of salt should be added to the boiling water, and whether they are to be baked, made into to bead-cheese or scrapple, each family can best decide for itself, according to the circumstances and likings. The legs are sometimes salted with the pork; sometimes they are worked np into head-cheese or scrapple. Borne people wash off the bloody pieces, cut off some of the lean from the side pork which is uot so good salted, and work the pieces into sausage. Borne take a shoulder for sausage. After cutting tne sausage meat up aud grinding it through the machine, it is seasoned with pulverized sage, pepper and salt; then the easiest way to dispose of it is to pack it in long, narrow cloth bags and haug it in a cool, dry and airy place. When wanted to cook, rip down the bag till enough sau sage cau be obtained for cooking. Add a little water and cook slgwly. . Canadian llaznar. Mr. John Osborne, Musical Bazaar, To ronto, Canada, writes that his wife was cured of rheumatism by the great pam- bamsher, Bt. Jacob’s 0.1; that he has found it an invaluable remedy for many ailments. Lamp Shades.—There is a mania just now for subdued lights; even globes take all kinds of faucifol shapes and colorings. A light and pretty lamp shade is made of yellow or red Persian silk or sarsanet, stretched over a wire mount, arranged in six sections. A thick ruching of frayed out silk entirely frames each division, which is partly veiled by a flounce of white lace. The same delicate tissue, but of a narrower width, borders the lower part, over hanging a flounce of the silk, prettily pinked cut It is more effective to have the crimson silk shade for a globe light reach only within two inches of the up per edge of the globe, The effect ot the white light above the rosy color is that of some rare flower opening out of a pink-tin ted calyx; the fringe below must be long enough to conceal the glare of the flame. Only those glass globes that are widely opened below are effectively covered by these silk screens; otherwise too much light is cut off. WUal It Did for an Old Lady. Coshocton Station, N. Y., Dec. 28,1878 Gents — A number of people had been using your Bitters here, and with marked effect. In one case, a lady of over seven ty years, had been sick for years, and for the past ten years has not been able to be around halt the time. About six months ago she got so feeble she was helpless. Her old remedies, or physicians, being of no avail, 1 sent to Deposit, forty-five miles away, and got a bottle of Hop Bitters. It improved her so she was able to dress her self and walk about the house. When she had taken the second bottle she was able to take care of her own room and walk out to her neighbor’s and has improved all the time since. My wife aud children also have derived great benefit from their use. W. B. HATHAWAY, Agt. U. 8. Er. Co. Rhubarb and Rice.—Une of the most wholesome dishes for children at this season is compote of rhubarb aud rice. Rhubarb, just now, is the only seasoua- ble substitute for oranges, which have been plentiful, and it is impossible to oven ate its value in early spring. To prepare, take a bundle of rhubarb, four ounces of rice, one and one-half pounds of loaf sugar, one pint of milk and two drops of essence of lemon or vanilla; wash and pick the rice and drop it into the milk, which must be boiling, and four ounces of loaf sugar and the vanilla; boil till the rice is tender, then remove from the fire and let it get cold; tnm the rhubarb, cat it into one-inch pieces and stew them in a small quantity of water until thoroughly cooked, when the juice from the rhubarb should be poured into another stewpan, with one-quarter of a pound of sugar and one-half a pint of water to boil for eight or ten minates, strain it and pour over the rhnbarb; set it away to get cold, and when needed serve in the centre of a dish with the nee around it. ’•‘^“Figures are not always facts, ” but the incontrovertible facts coaceruing Kid ney Wort are better than most figures. For instance: “It is curing everybody” writes a druggist. “Kidney-Wort is the most popular medicine we sell. ” It should be by right, for no other medicine has such speciflc action on the liver, bowels and kidneys. Do not fail to try it. l&*Tke most brilliant shades possible ou all fabrics are made by the D.amond Dyes. Unequalled for brilliancy and du rability. 10 cents. Make a Warm Suds.—To each pail of suds put 1. tablespoonful of ammonia. Put your white clothes in, cciver close, and let them soak 1 hour. Pi Spare a suds for boiling, making it, if anything,' a little stronger with the ammmonia than the first one. When warm, wring out your clothes, 'sudsing them around well to rinse out the dirt, and put them in your bailor. Bring to a brisk boil Rinse as nsnal. If yon use hard water put some washing soda in. W hooping Cough Remedy.—Dissolve a scruple of salts of tartar in j pint clear water; add to it 10 grs. of finely pow dered cochineal and sweeten with loaf sugar. Give a child within one year } of a spoonful of this four times a day, with 1 spoonful of barley water after it; two yean old, } spoonful; above four yean, 1 spoonful. Boiled apples put into warm milk may be his chief food. This relieves in 25 houn and cures in five or six days. HUMOROUS. The boys were calling names and dis puting on Lamed street when a gentle man halted and said to the eldest: “Boy, this isn’t beginning life right.” “He sassed me fnst 1” “But he is the smal lest. How it sounded for yon to twit him with his father in the penitentiary. He has gone away crushed and degra ded.” “Well, I’m sorry,” replied the boy, after a moment’s thought, “and I guess I’ll run after him and tell him my father is in the work honse 1 That’ll kind o’ take his lonesome feelin’ away I” ***•‘Troubles often cirae from whence we least expect them. ” Yet we may otten prevent or counteract them by prompt and iuteHigent action. Thousands of persons are constantly troubled with a combina tion of diseases. Diseased kidueyc and costive bowels are tneir tormentors. They should know that Kidney-Wort acts on these organs at the same time, causing them to throw off the poisons that have clogged them, aud so renewing the whole system. i’he Diamond D/es for family use have no equals. All popular colors easily dyed, fast and beautiful. 10 cents a pack age. A patent medicine man wrote to the editor of a religious paper enclosing live dollars and saying: “Enclosed please find five dollars, for which I want you to say that my chill medicine is the best in the market.” The editor re plied: “lam thankful for your opinion of my paper as an advei tising medium, but I cannot conscientiously say that your medicine is the best, consequently I decline your proposition.” “That’s an honest man,” mused the advertiser. “Some men would have hello, he didn’t return the five dollars. Dblevan, VVis., Sept, 24, 1878. Gents—1 have taken not quite one bottle of the Hop Bitters. 1 was a feeble old man of 78 when I got it. To-day I am as active and feel as well as 1 did at 80. I see a great many that need such a medi cine. D. BOYCE. In the bar room of a Washington hotel a gentleman was praising the wit and eloquence of a well-known orator. “I have heard him in the Senate and on the stump,” he observed, “but he is always greatest at the dinner table.” “I bet I know a greater one,” chipped in an Omaha man present. “I doubt it, ’ returned the first speak er. “You may doubt it if you will,” said the party from the region of the setting snn, “but it’s God’s truth that I have known him to eat three pounds of steak at a single meal.” *Revelation suggests the idea that from Woman comes the power to “bruise the serpent’s head.’’ The words take a new meaning to-day since this is precisely what Lydia IS. Pmkham’s Remedies do for the physically diseased patient. Her Vegetable Compound reaches the ultimate sources of the evil. Its action is gentle and noiseless, but it is more powerful than the club of Hercules.—-ihizar. “It is held among alienists that a change in habits and characteristics is an evidence of insanity,’' said Fogg. • Now yon know why I won't have any thing to do with your revival meetings, a change of heart and all that sort of thing. Yon want me to advertise myself as a lunatic.” “Oh, no,” replied the deacon, “a change of habits and char acteristics in some persons is evidence of sanity, you know.” Tli p Trull mon.r of » Plijulctan. James Beecher, M D.,of S gronrney.Iowii, says: For several years I have been using: a Cough Balsam,called Dr. Wm. Hall's Balsam f or the Lunro. and In almost every cat-e throughout my practice I have had entire succesa 1 have used and prescribed hundreds of bot tles ever sin: e the d iys of my -Tiny practice (1863), When I was surgeon of Hospital No. 7, Louisville, Ky. Henry's Carbolic Halve It Is the Best Salve for Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Tetter, Chapped Hands Chilblains, Corug and all kinds of Skiu Eruptions. Freckles and Pimples. “Do you Know the prisoner?” asked a Harlem judge of a witness. “Yes, sir, I do; I know him intimately; he and I were in a bank together at the same time.” “Ah, when was that?” was the question of a shrewd lawyer, who was counsel for the prisoner. “Well, as near as I can remember, it was five years ago and about three o’clock in the morning; none of the bank officers were present at the time. ” The witness was speedily excused. For dyspepsia, inaigestloa, depression of spirits and general debility, in their va rious forms; also as a preventive against fever and ague and other intermittent fevers, the “Ferro-Fhosphorated Elixir of Caluaya,*' made by Caswell Hazard & Co, New York, told by all • Druggists, is the best tonic; and for patients recovering from fever er other sickness, it has no equal “It wasn’t a Festival, you know, be cause a Festival, yon know, is a—er— combiuation competition of a—er—sev eral organizations, yon know. It wasn't a Festival, at all; it was a—er—what- youmaycallit concert, you know. I know it wasn’t a Festival, because I don’t feel a bit festive over it, you know. ” Don’t live in tbe House. “Rough on Rats.” Clears out rats,mice,roaches, bedt>ugs,flies,ama,mole8,chipmunkB,gophers. 15c. A New York physician says it is dan gerous to kiss any one who is hungry, as the saliva at snch times is very pois onous. This will probably explain why a young man fills his coat pocket with caramels when going to see his girl. He guards against the danger referred to by the physician aforesaid by appeas ing her appetite with sweet-meats before the oecnlatory exercises commence. Fort Stevenson, Dakota Ter.—Rev. James McCarty says: ‘ Brown’s Iron bitters cure me of severe dyspepsia.” Babnum claims that his thirteen Nu bians have a horror of water tor bath ing purposes. It was a piece of super erogation and a waste of money to im port such “curiosities.” The woods in this oonntry are fall of ’em, Barnum might have lassoed a dozen tramps. * T Murder will out, so will the fact that Gir- bohoe, a deodorized extract of petroleum, the natural hair reuewer and restorer, is the best prenaration ever mveuted and ex cels all other hair dressings, as thousands of genuine certificates now in our posses sion abundantly prove. A Missouri paper proclaims that its prayer for rain went to press at three o’clock, and before six cool and refresh ing bbowers had descended. It is no more than right to grant the request of a man who doesn’t ask a favor but onoe in his life. ANAKESIS Dr. S. Silsbee’s External Pile Remedy Qlvet Instant relief sad It an li$4lUble CURE FOR ALL KINDS OF PILES. Bold ky Dnurgisti everywhere. Price, tl.OO per ho* prepaid by mail. Samples sent free to Physicians and all sufferers, by P. Nenstaedtcrft Co, Box SOU. Hew York City. Solemaaola.tm ere of “Anotuu.” So Uo r». N , n tin -rm— *A Hammer Idyl” A'l- .m » k-rov.deuce 3ftt-reliant. Mr. George H. Davis, a fruit dealer at 297 Westmin ster street, bears his grateful testimony to the un- euqualed excellence of the production of one of our most skill: ul Prov.dence Pharmads s. Mr. Davis -ays: “Last spring I was very greatly troubled with severe Inflammation of the kidney-i, and It be ame so bad that at times I urinated blood, and my sufferings were intense. My condition was so painful that for a while I was scar ely aide to attend to business, and the s > vere pains would come so suddenly end severely that I would be obliged to leave a oust uner whom I might happen to be waiting upon. Durmg a put of the time I was unable to walk, and scarcely knew what to do or which way to look for r Uef. At this time a friend re commended Hunt's Remedy. I took two bottles of it, and it took right hold of my disease and cured me very speedily, and I have experienced no trouble with my kidneys sipee. “Futhermoro, Hunt’s Remedy has strengthened ms very much, and since I began to u e it I have been able to attend to business, and am aU right now. I heartily reoommend it to aU. Waat it has done for me it will do for yon who are afflicted.” Hu tiered fur Twenty Tears. "Hon. Jo hus Tuthdl, of East Saginaw,Mich., says: “Count me among the eaithusias'io friends of Hunt's Remedy. It has proven in my case all you claim for it Having suffered for about twenty years with se vere dis- ase of the kidneys (which our local i hyslcian pronounced Bright’s D sease), I ma ie a Journey East to consult the eminent Dr. Haven, of Hamil on, New York, of whose fame in this specialty I had heard much. Dr. Haven examined me carefully and simply said: ‘Go and get a bottle of Hunt’s Remedy and take according to directions.’ After having traveled so far for treatment, it struck me as rather funny to be di rected to take a medicine which I might have bought within a stone’s throw of my ovn door; but I was in the doctor’s hands, and o' course I followed his advio v, and right glad was I that I did 8), for before I had taken Hunt’s Remedy half a d izeu t mes I found im mense benefit from it, and by continuing the use of it for a limited time I recovered from my trouble en tirely, and am t i-day, I tuink, one of the most rugged ot rugged Michiganders. The world is indebted to you, sir. for the promulgstiou of such a medicine, and I hope you may not go with ut your reward.” Hostetler’s Stomach Bitters meets the require- mm's of the rational medical phlosophy which at present pievaiK It is a perfectly pure vegetable remedy, embracing the three important properties of a preventative, a tonic and an alterative. It fortillestbe body against disease, invigorates and revitalizes the torpid stomach and liver, and effects a salutary change in the enure system. For sale by all Druggist* and Dealers generally. Rememlser This. If yon are sick Hop Bilters will surely aid Na ture in making you well when all else fails. If you are costive or dyspeptic, or are suffering from any other of the numerous diseases of the stomach or bowels, it is your own fault if yau re main 111, for Hop Bitters aie a sovereign remedy In all such complaints. If you are wasting awav with any form of Kid ney disease, stop tempting Death this moment, and turn for a cure to Hop Bitters. * If you are sick w tli that terrible sickness Nerv ousness, yon will And a “Balm in Gilead” in the use of Hop Bitters. % If you are a frequenter, ora resident of a mias matic district, barricade your sysi.m against the scourge of all countries—malarial, epidemic, bil ious, and intermittent fevers—by the use ot Hop Bitters. If you have rough, pimply, or sallow skin, bad breath, pains and aches, and feel miserable gene rally, Hop Bitters will give you fair skin, rich blood, and sweetest breath, health, aud comfort. In -hurt they cure a 1 Diseases of the stomach, Bowels, Blood, liver, Nerves, Kidneys, Bright’s Disease. $500 will be paid for a case they will not cure or help. That poor, bedridden, Invalid wife, sister, mother, or daughter, can be made the picture of health, oy a few bottles of Hop Bitters, costing but a trifle. Will .you let them suffer 7 Or.LlieS’BLmSEmER Nothing in the world equal to it for the eureof Scrofa‘fi, Pimples, Boils, Tetter, Old Sorea, Sore Ejea, Mercurial Dieeatea, Catarrh, Loea of Appetite,- Female Complaint*, and all Blood diseaaee. It never fails. All druggist! and country atore keepers ■*11 It. R. K. Sellers A Co., Prop's, Plttab irgh, on every bottle. KIDNEY-WORT IS A SURE CURE fc>r r.il diseases of the Kidneys and LIVER It has speclflo action on this moat Important organ, enabling it to throw off torpidity and Inaction, stimulating ibc healthy secretion of the Bile, and by keeping the bowels in free condition, effecting its regular discharge. OOaIowSo If you are suffering from IWI Cl I Cl. I d a malaria, have th£ chills, are WUnna, dyspeptic, or constipated, Kidney- Wort wUl surely relievo and quickly euro. In the Spring to cleanse the System, every one should take a thorough course of it. ftl- BOLD BY DRUCCISTS. Price »I. KIDNEYiWORT RUPTURE t-' • - • ___ . •.'.ir-.g,.»i'<tutecd by or. J. B. Mayer. Maiu Office 831 Arch St, Phila, Pa.. Advice free, stamps for re ply. Will be at lirmch Offices these days of each mouth: Keystone House, Reading. Pa 2d Saturday of each mouth; Her,hey House, H Brisbane. Pa. 5-hand 6tli; St Clair H tel. Pittsburgh, Pa . tth and *th: Ous ter House, Port Wayne. Ind . 9th and loth; Commer cial Hotel, Chiuii-'o, 11th, 12th aud Uth. $66 a week In your own town. Terms and $5 outfit free. AddreeeH. HallkttAOo.. Portland.Me OPIUM MORPHINE HABIT, No pay till cured. Ten years established, 1,000 cured. State case. Dr. Marsh. Quincy, Mich. S*id .. Warrant. SyMn. AU.lra.Mlow. rsrfrMkMk.aSdna. JONES OF BIMHAMTOM, ■uuuaioi, *-1. Ttaoae aMwertav an advertise ns emt will cow fere raver upon the advertiser end the pnkllader bjr statla* that tfcev saw the advertisement In this Joarnn) A married man in this city took a yomiR iady to the theatre one night, and after the first act excused himself for a moment, as he wanted to go out to “see a man.” He didn’t oome back. Instead of seeing a man he saw a wo man. It was his wife waiting for him at the door.* * e Lord Byron, in reference to a beautiful lady, wrote io a friend—“Lady has been dangerously ill, but uow she \» danger ous,y well again.■’ American be les, when attackea by any of the il's that flesh is heir to, may be kept killing, and avoid being killed by taking Dr. R. V. Pierce’s “Favor ite Prescript on,” which banishe* feminine weaknesses, and re tores the bloom of h> alth. By ali druggists. “Did you go to the grand ball last evening,” inquired a merchant of a dude. “Yaws, I was there,” was the languid reply. ‘ ‘What co.- tame did you wear?” "O, my wegular dwess suit ye knaw.” “Ah, then you were disguised as a gentleman.’ “First a cough, carry me off, And then a coffin they carried me off in I” This will not be your epitaph if you take your i ough and Dr. R. V. Pierce’s “Golden Medical Discover” in time. It is speciflc for weak lungs’ spitting of blood, night- sweats, and the e .rly stages of consump tion. By all druggists. “My face is my fortune, sir 1” indig nantly responded a fleshy young lady when her suitor delieately attempted to sound her financial prospects. “It is certainly a large one, then,” dryly re sponded the young man as he took his hat an 1 oene to leave. Throat, Bronchial, and l.ung Diaeaaea. a specialty. Send two stamps for large treatise giving self treatment. Address World’s Dispensary Medical Asso ciation, Buffalo, N. Y. Teacher: —“Can yon multiply togeth er concrete nnmbers?” (They appear uncertain ) Teacher:—“What will be the product of forty apples multiplied by six pounds of beef?” Small Boy (triumphantly):—“Mkoe pies,” On Thirty Days’ Tnal. The Voltaic Belt Co., Marshall Mich., will send Dr. Dye’s Celebrated Electro- Voltaic Belts and Electric Appliances on trial for thirty days to men (young or old) who are afflicted with nervous debility, lost vitality and kindred troubles, guaran teeing speedy and complete restoration of health aud manly vigor.—Address as above.—N. B.—No risk is Incurred, as thirty days’ tnal is allowed. Small boy: “Mrs. Simpson, ma sent me over to borrow your wash boiler.” Mrs. S.: “Hain’t your m i got one of her own?” Small boy: “Yes, marm, but I heard her say it was pretty well played out, and she didn’t want to use it too hard.” Catarrh of the Bladder. Stinging Irritation, Inflammation, all Kidney and Urinary Complaints, cured by “Bucbu-paiba.” $1. “I don’t like to have my husband chew tobacco,” remarked a young mar-, ned lady, “but I put up with it, for the tin-foil is just too handy for anything in doing np my front crimps !’’ Out in the world men show us two sides in their character; by the fireside only one. Farmington, III.—Dr. M. T. Gamble says: “I prescribe Brown’s Iron Bitters in my practice and it gives satisfaction.’' 0 Feebleness of means is, in fact, the feebleness of him that employs them. Chrolilhion collars and cuffs will not turn yellow nor grow stiff, like other waterproof goods. It is a good rule to be deaf when a slanderer begins to talk. Malaria, chills, positively cured by Emory’s Standard Cure Fills. Their equal unkywn, suear-coated; no griping. 25c. Whatever makes men happier makes them better. Ladies and children’s boots and shoes cannot run over if Lyon’s Patent Heel Stiffeners are used. It costs more to avenge wrongs than to bear them. Gastrine. The increasing demand for this prepara tion as a household remedy for indigestion and dyspepsia is sufficient proof of its eflicacy. Men mark the hits, and uot the mis ses. ui 1,1 e age ror au nerve diseases. 9,^® stopped, tree. Send to #si Arch str Fhlladelphla. Fa. Folly ends where genuine hope be- gins, —V • • • Ci-.C^AA L 8 Economy is itself a great incom Ladles and all sufferers from neuralgia rm, and all kindred complaints, will find a rival Brown’s Iron Bitters. No legacy is so rich as honesty P , «•«« WHIM AU lit! lAHS. Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Use In lime. Sold by druggists. COfSJSUIVrPTIOM Business CoLLioE,Newark.N.J. 1 'S4a Positions for graduates Write for circ CHARCOAL complexion, wwJenini** bad breath, rmrifyintf the system. Box b cents. Mt. Vernon < Jo. f boutniiurton. Conn. Worms fc the human body ERADICATED by "ring hifAa!ibl^ MRMTrRUP! HERTS WANTED for the Beet and Faeteet. . _ selling Pictorial Book! and Bibles. Prloee re. ueed 88 percent. National Puv. Oa. Phllada.. Ps n<M-t»nne Habit CurMl In M to MO day*. No |UAT till Cared. Dr. J. MTBPincNn. Lebanon, Ohio. $5 to C r~"’KNNIAI. HOUSE. Ocean Grove. New •i.^y, -raougllie uestaloogtheooist Teriuag3 rer dty. afo to $30 per week. Send postal for dr. il-J. J. W. TAYLOR. Proprietor. THE SUN a.VERYBODY’S NEWSPAPER. THE SUN’S first atm la to b; truthful aud _ „cek. II than ever before. Double it! suinoription: <■ Page*), by mail. Me. a month, or M.M Sunday (S pagea). f l.M per year; Wzeklt < •1 per year. L W. ENGLAND. Publisher. New Yorl c And Rttuni to ui* wlfk TEN Cents, UT THIS OUT , by noil, o Ooldv.- box of Ooodt. that will brlaf yoft k monev la Ono Month than anytaing also in Am into CarUialy. M. Y< aytbfng alao ia America. Abao> 111 Oraaowioh Sw, Now Tod* Lumbago, Backache, Headache, Toothache, •ore Throat, ttwel II n**. Npraltift, Bruises, Burns, Frost Bites, IND ALL OTtlEkt HOIIll.Y FAINS AND AFHKS. Sold by Druggist* and Dealer! evervwNera. Fifty Cent! a bottla. Direction! in 11 Languages. THE CHARLES A. VOtiELKR OO. (Buooouora »o A. VOGKLER *C<M Hainnn.i>, Md., C.8. A. LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S VEGETABLE COMPOUND. A Sure Cure for all FEMALE WEAK NESSES, Including Leucorrhcrn, Ir regular and PaJnfnl Menstruation, Inflammation and Ulceration of the Womb, Flooding, PRO LAPSUS UTERI, A c. tWPleasant to the taste, efficacious and immediate In it, effect. It Is a great help in pregnancy, and re- Ueves pain during labor and at regular periods. PHYSICIANS TSK IT AND PRESCRIBE IT FREELY. tTTFou AIXWXAXNRSSXS of the generative organ, Of either sex, it is second to no remedy that has eve, been before the public; and for all diseases ot the Kidvxts it is the Greatest Kerned yin the World, tSTKIDNEY COMPLAINTS of Either Sex Find Great Relief in Ita Use. LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S BLOOD PURIFIER will eradicate every vestige of Humors from the Blood, at the same time willgive tone and strength to the system. As marvellous in results as the Compound. twBoth the Compound and Blood Purifler are pre pared at 233 and 235 Western Avenue, Lynn, Hass. Price of either, |l. Six bottles for $5. The Compound Is sent by mail in the form of pills, or of lozenges, on receipt of price, $1 per box for either. Mrs. Pinkham freely answers all letters of inquiry. Enclose 3 cent stamp. Send tor pamphlet. Mention thie Paper. IWLmiA E. Pinkhan’s Lmat Pills cure Constipa tion. Biliousness and Torpidity ot tke Liver. 25 cents. Sold by all DruggisU.-g* (ay EY-WORT FOR THE PERMANENT CURE OF i CONSTIPATION. .— No other disease is so prevalent in this ooun- r try as Constipation, and no remedy has ever • equalled the celebrated Kidney-Wort ae a E cure. Whatever the cause, however obstinate the ease, this remedy win overcome It, OH KJO THIS distressing com- ■ -“'vs plaint is very apt to bo complicated with constipation. Kidney-Wort strengthens the weakened parts and quickly S cures all kinds of Files even when physicians and medicines have before foiled. i2- DTIf you have either of these troubles PRICE *1.1 USE [Truggigts^etl KIDKEY-WORT DR. T. FELIX GOUKAUD’S . Oriental Cream, or Magical Beaatifler. Removes Tan Pimples, Freckles, . Moth-Patches h.3 _ and every - * blsmlah o n P 9 * /XfU beauty, and j- m tWiW defies dsteo. ** ■< \mS tion. R hat stood tne te>4 ot thirty yean, and u to barn-less we taste it to be sure the Reparation It properly made. Accept no counter feit of similar name. The distinvulBbed Dr. L. A. Sayre, said to a lady of the ■aut ton (a pa- tlent:>—"As you ladles will use them, I recommend •Gouraud’s Cream* as the least harmful of all the Kkin preparations.” One bottle will last six months, usin| It every day. Also Poudre Hubtiie removes srperfla ous hair without injury to the skin. Mmk M. B. T. GOURAUD, Sole Prop.,48 Bond st.N.Y. For sale by all druggist* and Fancy Goods Dealers throughout the U. 8., Caaadas and Europe, eg"Be ware of base iml’atlons. (1.000 Reward for arrest and proof of any one sefflng the same. FPA7PR AXLE GREASE Beat In th« world. Get the rnnnln*. Every pitrkivgo tins onr trade-mark and la marked Fraser’*. BOLD EVERYWHERE. A n.TNTTQ make 150 per cent, profit sailing Au XtAe A O Register’s Liniment. The best in ths World. Write for particular to F. UBGI8TKR, Pro prietor, 824 Mouth tth Mtreet, Philadelphia, Pa. A/fo SHEETS fine writing paper. In blotter, Qw with calendar, by mall for !fle. Agents Wanted. Economy printing Co., Newbury- port, Mass. DR8. J. N. & J. B. HOBENaAtK. fH )SE AFFLICTED WITH I HE EFFECTS OF SELF-ABUSE ANI> MERCriUAUZATIO.N should uot hts tale to consult J. N. and J. 3. HO- BENSACK, of 206 Nor h second treet, Philadel phia, either by mail or b pers n, during the hours from S A. M. to 2 P. M., and 6 to 9 P. M. Advice tree. Wh isoever would know his condi tion and ihe war to improve it biiouM read “WISDOM IN A NUTSHELL.” Sent on receipt ot S-cent s amp. Lay the Axe to the Root If you would destroy the can kering worm. For any exter nal pain, sore, wonnd or lame ness of man or beast, use only MEXICAN MUSTANG LINI MENT. It penetrates all mns- cle and flesn to the very bone, expelling all inflammation, soreness and pain, and healing the diseased part as no other Liniment ever did or can. So saith the experience of two generations of sufferers, and so will yon say when you hate tried the “ Mustang. * HEALTH IS WEALTH, HeaM MyMeaM Mill DR. RADWAY’S Sarsaparillian Resolvent. THI SUIT BLOOD PURIflBL PmMogd sound flesh, strong bone and aelenrskin. If «ba would hnvo your fleeh Ann, roar bones sound without carles, and your com plexion fair, use Rad way’s Sarsaparillian Resolvent. A remedy composed of Ingredients of extraor dinary median! properties, essential to purify, henh repair and Invigorate the broken-down and wasted body —Qotcx, Plusakt, Safi and Phrjca- mmht in Ita treatment and cure. No matter by what name the complaint may ho designated, whether it be scrofula, consumption, araulln, ulcers, sores, tumors, boils, erysipelas, or salt rheim, diseases of the Innga, kidneys, blad der, womb, akin, liver, stomach or bowels, either ehronio or constitutional, the vlras Is in the Blwwd which mpplies the waste and builds and repair* these organs and wasted tisanes of the system. If the blood la unhealthy, the process of repair mast be n&sound. * The SftrsaparlIlian Resolvent Not only Is n compensating remedy, bat secures the harmonious action of each ot the organs. It establishes throughout the entire system function al harmony and supplies the blood ves sels with a pore and healthy current of new We. Tu Skim, after a few days’ nas of the Sarsaparillian, becomes clear and beautiful. Pimples, blotches, black spots and •kin eruptions are removed; aorot and steers soon eared. Persons suffering from scrofula, eruptive diseaaee of the eyes, mouth, ears, legs, throat and glands, that have accumulated and spread, either from uncured diseases or mercury, or from the use of corrosive sublimate, may rely upon a cure if the SaraapanlUan la oontlnued a safOolent time to make tta uapresalon on the system. One bottle contains more of the active princi ples of Medicine* than any other Preparation. Taken In teaspoonful doses, while others requira five or six times as much. One Dollar a Bottle. TfeoCboapest and Boot Medicine for Family Use In tke World. In from one to twenty minutes never fails te relieve Pain with one thorough application: no matter how violent or excruciating the pain, the Rhenmatle, Bed-ridden, Infirm, Crippled, Nervous, Neuralgic or prostrated with disease may suffer, RADWAY’S READY RELIEF will afford instant, ease. INFLAMMATION OF THE KIDNEYS, INFLAMMATION OF THE BLADDER. INFLAMMATION OF THE BOWELS, CONGESTION OF THE LUNGS, SORE THROAT, DIFFICULT BREATHING, PALPITATION OF THE HEART, HYSTERICS, CROUP, DIPHTHERIA, CATARRH, INFLUENZA, HEADACHE, TOOTHACHE, NEURALGIA, RHEUMATISM. COLD CHILLS, AGUE CHILLS, CHILBLAINS AND FROST BITES, BRUISES, LUMBAGO. SCIATICA, NERVOUSNESS, SLEEPLESSNESS, COUGHS, COLDS, SPRAINS, PAINS IN THE CHEST, BACK or LIMBS are Instantly relieved. m ITS VARIOUS FORMS. .Kill V KR AND AGUE. FEVER AND AGUE cured for SO cts. There ia not a remedial agent in this world that will cure Fever and Ague, and other Malarious, BUlous, Scarlet, Typhoid. Yellow and other fevera (aided by RADWAY’S PILLS) so quickly as RADWAY’S READY RELIEF. It will in a few momenta, when taken Internally according to the directions, cure Cramp*, Spasms, Sour Stomach, Heartburn, Sick Headache, Dyspep- Bowela, i Travelers should always carry a bottle of RAD WAY’S READY RELIEF with them. A f«w Crops In water will prevent sickness or pains from ' iter. It la bet “ a stimulant change of water. li is better than French Brandy or Bitten as r -**—’— Miners and Lumbermen should always be provided with It RADWAY’S Regulating Pills Perfect. Purgative, Soothing, Aperi ents, Act without Pam, Always Reliable and Natural in Operation. A VEGETABLE SUBSTITUTE FOB CALOMEL. Perfectly tastelMs, elegantly coated with sweet gum, purge, regulate, punfy, cleanse and streng then. ^ RADWAY’S Pius for the cure of an disorder* of the Stomach, Liver, Bowels, Kidneys, Bladder, Female Complaints, Nervons Diseases, Loss of Ap petite, Headache, Constipation, Costiveness, lh<fl- Billouriuees, Fever, inflamma- on of the'Bowels,'Piles, aiidsu derangements of from Diseases of the Digestive Organs; Constipa tion, Inward Plies, Fullness of Blood In the Head, Addin of the Stomach, Nausea, Heartburn, Disgust of Food, Fullness or Weight In the Sto mach, Sour Eructations. Sinking or Flattering A the Heart, Choking or Suffering Sensations when in n lying posture, Dimness of Vision, Dote or Webs before the Sight, Fever and dull Pam In the Head. Deficiency of Perspiration, Yellowneas of the Skin and Eyes, Pam In the Bids, Cheek, Limbs, and Sadden Flushes of Host, Banting in the Flesh. A few dome of Rahway** Pius will free the system from nil the above-named disorders. SOLD BY DRUGGISTS. Price, ss cerate Her Bex. READ “FALSE AND TRUE." Send n letter stamp te RADWAY ft OO., No. ft! Warren, Cor. Church St., New York. or - information worth thousand* will be sent to you. Te tke Pnklle. Be sure and ask fer Radwayw, and see that thf Tffl— “Radway” la on what yon bey. e WO A WEEK. 812 a day at home easily made Ooctty # I « outfit free. Addron Tavs ft Co.. Augusta, M./. SIS I T*€! STOPPED FREE ■ m Jimrmeieus leccess. I Insane P*r«on» Refttomd UDr.KLINE’B GREAT . wnervcRestoreb 'ra-*2/BaamStVrav* Diskasss. Ontyewr* . cur ' /«■ Nerve 40'ectims, File, FpUe*n, ete. Iksallibl* ifuku at directed. Me Fite n/ter first day's are. Tteetfse sad St trtil bottle free te Fit petients, they pex" 1 ? exprett chargee on boi when receiTed. Send nuAeO. 6. end eirirete ndd-ete e) I afflicted to Dk.KLIMEott Arch 3t.,FhltidelphU.Pa. Druggists. M&WARM OF IMITATING FRAUDS. SeSfSTK’S'S&va.i drej*. F. W.UBCULCiBdfcUO., ©OO] .wo, THE ftftftT Ift CHEAPEST." ■gJHRESHEBSKL” pfps WmED S32I55EM tftng Marlilitr ever inverted. Will kuit s pi stocEtugs with HexI. sod TOE complete nimutes. It will slso knit a gnat var.etg ot I work tor which there la alwsy a ready market foy oreiuar and terms to the Tp ombl-r Kett Meehlae Ce, Ul Tree:oat Street. Boe«u, £ BV RETURN MAIL—A full deeor C I Moody’s Nbw Tailo* System c ie. 0. W, Moody ACo. 31 W.8tb,(3oei