The Fairfield news and herald. (Winnsboro, S.C.) 1881-1900, August 14, 1883, Image 4
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AGBiO CJLiTUBE.
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The tnrnip crop is one of the most
important in our system of farm rotation
but it is one that is more generally ne
glected than any other. It is not so
valuable a crop as parsnips, carrot* or
b'^ets, so far as its feeding value is con
cerned, but it can tie produced at leas
cost than the others. Beets, canots
and parsnips should go in early, in or
der to get a good start in growth, but
we have the advantage of being able to
defer the putting in of turnip seed tili
July, after the new crop of seed is rea
dy, ana cultivation is carried on during
a period when no other crops are being
seeded. Considering the cost of pro
duction, the turnip crop should be a
special one on every farai. They keep
well during winter, and not only serve
an excellent purpose when sliced and
fed in the law state, but can also be
cooked and mixed with other food. Not
only are the roots valuable, but the tops
also—there is no part waited. By weignt
they produce heavily, and are not defi
cient in bulk when compared with many
other mops.
The most essential feature connected
with the cultivation of turnips is to
make the seed bed fine. The seeds are
very small,and must not be deeply cov
ered, and no lumps or other obstruc
tions should be tolerated on the loca
tion intended for them. In procuring
seed get that which has matured this
season, and use it liberally,as this plant
is often attacked by the turnip fly, which
is very destructive. Turnips may be
sown broadcast on ground that has been
cultivated and kept clear and free from
grass and wteds the previous ye»r;”but
they should never follow com, experi
ence having demonstrated that such re
lation does not result well.
The seed may be sown in drills—the
drills to bo of such distance apart as
serves best for either the hoe or the cnl
tivator. When they arc high enough
to thin out, an oidinury hoe will cut
away all that are not desired, leaving
the most vigorous plants; and hand
picking is sometimes necessary to thin
out the siouls that are left During all
stages of growth the crop should be
kept free from intrusion oi weeds ana
grass, as turnips are sometimes over
taken ty drought, during which time it
is absolutely essential not only to keep
down weeus but also to keep the soil
loose by irequent cultivation.
The best lertilizer lor turnips is su
perphosphate; but the addition of a
proportion el guano and potash in some
shape will he benehOiul. Above all,
however, there is nothing better foi
them than a liberal application oigood,
Une, well-lotted stable manure, espe
daily if it has betu broadcasted and
well worked in wnh (he hanow before
drilling in the seed.
The position tnat the ‘‘coming cow”
is to oe one well auaph d for botn bet f
and milk production we be believe to
be correct, if it be not pushed too far.
There is an increasing number of dairy
farmers who uud it best to give almost
exclusive attention to the quantity and
quality ot 1 he milk given by their cows,
caring liitie about t.ieir merits as beef
makers, bo there are beet producing
farmers who properly couut it a disad
vantage it a cow gives a large How of
mnk. This is true on the Western
plains. It is true ol such lariners as J.
D. Gillette, who only asks for a cow
that snail produce and feed a call each
year. Bain these classes form but a
minority ot cattle raisers. The most
succesotul dairymen and the producers
of the very Quest beef animals may be
fouud in these classts,but the great ma
jority ot cows and ot steers for beef ale
and long will continue to tie, raised by
men wno cannot afiord to ignore either
the milk-giving or tue meat producing
quality. Tor such men the popular
breed must be one with deserved claims
io good quality in both directions. It
is quite possible that several breeds
may, in the tuture be claimants for
highest merit ior this double purpose,
but the couise of breeding uow adopted
by the special friends of most leading
bleeds is calculated to develop one ot
these qualities at the expense of the
other. The shorthorn has never been
surpassed, if equaled, as a ‘‘general
purpose cow.” Ought she to lo^e all
leputat.on as a dairy uow?
The Plow.—it Will ou found that a
two-nurse ste» 1 plow that cuts a width
of twice the distance of a one-horse
plow, breaking three acres a day to the
one acre of the one-horse plow, saves
the farmer the labor ot two men each
day the plow is at wurk. A good culti
vator, that plows Irom seven to eight
acres a day, dees the work of two sin
gle plows, and saves tUe labor of one
hand every day it is in use. Tne econ
omy and perfection ol the mower,reaper
and horse-rake are too well known to
require comment.
Thorough prevention of the mouldy
smell of stoied corn or other cereals de
pends almost absolutely upon thorough
ventilatioa. And, by the way, a bad
odor anywhere in homes, cilices, stores,
is a hint from Nature that something is
wrong which requires prompt and thor
ough attention. All this business ot
applying disinfectants and so-called
antiseptics do more harm than good
for the most part They simply mask
poisons, to put the matter strongly,
leaving the prime cause as fertile of
disease, producing germs as before.
Mixid husbandry is theouiy sure way
to success m farming. Repeated crop
ping with a single cereal will bring a
waste of tue plant-food elements in the
soil that will, >n the end, so reduce the
yield as to entail certain loss upon the
laud c icr. Tins fact will do more
toward forcing the Dalrymples to cut
up and dispose of their immense laud
areas than anything elae, though they
may not now see it in that light.
Am authority on silk culture Buys that
most oi the failures result irom undue
haste to realize. The inullnury leaf,he
hays, is slow to ripen. Until the tree is
five years old its leaves do not contain,
either in quantity or quality, sufficient
silk-forming material lor profitable re
sults. He is convinced that it would be
belter for the health of the tree and the
silkworms if not a leaf wore stripped
until its tenth year.
A cheap square box without b <ttom
and oov rad ou the lop with mosquito
netting, is the best pr tect.ou agaiust
the bug-* that attack the squash and
melon Vines; when placed over the hill
see that the box tits uowu ou all sides
so that ttie insects cannot creep under
it
A good horte power on a farm will
each year save many times the interest
on its cost in furnishing power to do a
great many things, that would else have
to be perioimeo by hand, such as saw
ing wood, cutting teed, grinding gram,
eto.; and with proper care it Mould be
jnade to last for years.
DOMESTIC.
Glass Stadjino.—This is another
branch of art that is very fascinating,
and then the results are so admirable if
done at all well, and when skillfuly ex
ecuted the work is very beautifuly and
wonderiully effective. The process is
simple, requiring delicacy of touch and
a taste for color blending to a marked
degree. These dualities are not so very
scarce, and when Jacking a little
patience and close application will over
come all such drawbacks. Spread over
the glass to be worked upon gum water,
and when it is dry lay it over the paper
on which the design is sketched, and
trace with a fine hair pencil all the out
lines. The lights and shades are mere
dots, lines and hatches, worked in after
the style of engraving. Dip the tube-
like pencil into the colors aud let them
flow out upon the glass; have a care
and touch the pencil to the glass; the
lights and shades are produced in a
variety of ways; one of the easiest, and
especially to beginners, is to take a
goose quill out it in the shape of a pen,
without the slit; then carefully take out
the lights by lines and little dots. This
part of glass staining is really the most
particular since so much of its beauty
is dependent upon the shadings being
artistically effected. After this process,
the glass is ready for the kiln, on the
bottom of which is quite a thick bed of
slacked lime in a peifectly dry state, ou
which the sheet of glass is laid. The
heat must be very gradual or the glass
will break, and when the colors are
properly burned in, the fire may cool
down, and when out the glass is remov
ed and cleaned. The colors required
lor staining glass are red lead and red
enamel. Tnese mixed together will
give the flesh tint required—one ounce
of the lorrner and two ounces of the
other well mixed with alcohol—black,
dull and brilliant black, rich brown,
tine red, green, yellow, blue, violet—
any shade may be had by more or less
flux, which is made ot borax, flint glass,
white sand and pipe clay well mixed
together.
Soup wtth Poached Egos. — The
Germantown Telegraph has this to of
ten Posen some eggs—one for each
person, and one over—in salted water,
with a little vinegar, some pepper
corns, and a few leaves of parsley in a
shallow pan, just long enough to set
the yelks slig itly; take out eacu egg
with a slice, tu ush it elean, with a paste-
brush, and cut it wild a round, fluted
paste-cutter, about two inohe* lu diam
eter, so as to get all the eggs in unitorm
shape, and leaving neitUer too much
nor too little white around tUem, Turn
tue egg over carefully, blush it dean,
uud lay it in the soup tureen, ready
filled with boiling hot, clear jelly broth,
ihe water iu which the eggs are poached
should be kept at a boiling poiut, but
never bod.
Canaries should never be exposed to
draughts of air in door or out, nor
sUould they huug in the suu as a rule,
if out of doors they require a warm,
dry, sheltered, shady place. The only
lood of flour given them should be
crackers or dried bread. New or warm
bread or biscuit are uot good for either
a bird or a person to eat. If the birds
are infested with mites cover the top of
the cage with a piece ot white flannel
at night, aud early iu the morning take
it off uud snake over a hot stove. The
mites, lustead of hiding about the old
wires of ihe cage, will seek the cloth,
aud may be captured.
Fresh Pineapple —When properly
prepared this is a delicious fruit for des
sert, but as usually served, cut iu
round slices, it is not. It should lie
Carefully peeled, and all the ••eyes”
taken out, iu tne morning of the day on
winch it is to be served. Leave the
topmost plume of green leaves, and set
tue truit ou the dish in which it is to
be served, Tnen dust it thickly with
powdered sugar, aud let it staud uutil it
is to be served. Tear it apart with a
fork, holding the plume of green leaves
with the leit bund, Tula mode of serv
iiiK iusmes the leteutlou of the rich
juiies.
Very Palatable.—Nice little tea
cakts, to be baked iu muffiu rings, are
made of one cup of sugar, two eggs,
oue cup and a half of milk, one heaping
teaspoon of baking powder, a piece of
butter the size of au egg, and flour
enough to make a stiff batter. Iu this
batter stir a pint bowllul of fruit—
vurrants are nice; fresh berries in their
season, aud even canned ones, with the
juice drained off. Serve whde warm,
uud they are a dainty addition to the
t >a table.
HUMOROUS.
He was a Buffalo man. The school
teacher had been talking about finance
to her scholars, and young John came
home to ask:
“Father, is there such a thing as a
call loan?”
“Yes, of course.”
“Well, what is it?"
“Why, old Swipes, the doctor, comes
bustling in some afternoon—note tc
meet—needs just fifty more—hand it
back next day—and I’m fool enongh to
lend It. That’s the loan part of it.”
“Yes.”
“I wait two weeks, need the money,
and call at his office. He isn’t in. I
call again, he is ont. I call forty or
fifty times, always miss him. call to him
on the street and he doesn’t hear, call
him a dead-beat, and that ends it.
There’s the call and there’s the loan,
and here’s the idiot. That’s all."
Boston Bloods.
Mr. C. 8. Hollis, Veterinary Surgeon,
Boston, Mass., certifies that he has made
the great nain cure, 8L Jacob’s OU, the
sole remedy in his practice for horse ali
ments, ami considers it sunerior to any
cure he has known in forty years. He
tned the same great pain banisher on him
self for rheumatism and by which he was
completely cured.
Baby is very exacting at table. Her
mother lias, in consequence, been oblig
ed to iorbid her to ask for anything.
The other day there was a dish of
magnificent strawberries upon the table.
Baby coveted them with longing eyes.
She threw a supplicating glance at her
mother and another at her father, bnt
this characteristic mimicry was unsuc
cessful.
Baby was disconsolate. She uttered
a deep sigh, and, leaning over to her
father’s side, in a way to be well heard,
she said:
“Papa, tell mamma that I have not
asked for any strawberries 1”
Woman’s Friend.
Paving been doubled tor mauy years with kldnef
dlsettst 1 , with severe pains In my back and limbs—
my ankles were at times very badly swollen—I
was advised to go to the hospital for treatment,
which I d.d ou toe advice ot a friend, bat found
no relief, at least only of a temporary nature, aud
I had given up all hupe of a cure until my husband
was advi-ed to use Hunt's Remedy by a friend
that had used it aud been cured of a severe case
of dropsy aud kiduey trouble. 1 procured a botlle,
aud had not used one-half ot the botlle before I
began to be better, no pain In the back, aud tha
swelling of my limbs commenced to go down, and
my appetite was much better, for 1 had become so
bad that all I ate distressed me very much. It
was reaily dyspepsia, combined with the other
troubles, and I ba.e used four bottles, and am
abb- to do my work and attend to bousebold
duties, which before nad been a burden to me.
Ami 1 can only thank Hunt’s Remedy for the health
and happlnes- which I now enjoy, aud esteem It
a great privilege and duly to give you tbla letter
In benalf of my many sulfermg lady fnenda la
Boston aud ihe country; and can only say m con
clusion t hat i r you once try it you wl 1 be convinced,
as 1 w as, even against my own will, that Hunt’s
Remed) is Indeed a womau’s (rieml. You are at
liberty to use this for their beneut, 11 you so
choose. Respectfully your ,
MRS. WM. GRAY.
Hotel Goldsmith, 1410 Tieinont Street, Boston.
April 26, 1386.
A Baggage-Master’s Praise.
Mr. H. Bakny, baggage-master on Eastern
Ruihoa i, Bustou, say
“I have used Hunt’s Remedy, the great kidney
anil 1 ver medicine, in my lauiuy for mouths. It
was recommeuded by friends lu Portsmouth who
have been cured of kluuey troubles, and 1 And it
just as represented and worth Us weight iu gold.
My w.fe is usmg it for dyspepsia, and has improved
so rapidly that I cheerfully indorse U as a family
lued.cme of reai merit, aud 1 would uot be without
It.”
April 97,1S83.
A railroad cooipauy in Ohio has
adopted a new system of time-tables.
The hoars are numbered from one np
to twenty-fonr, the latter being mid
night. The other night one of the rail
road officials went home an honr before
midnight, and when his wife remonstra
ted with him for coming in at such an
unseemly hour, he stammered: “W-why,
my dear (hie), its only twenty three
o’clock.” Then she knew he was pretty
far gone.
To Steady ttie Nerves
Is a task to the accomplishment of which nar
cotics and sedatives are Inadequate. The effect
they produce Is paralytic. They destroy sensa.
tion without beneiltnng the nerves. Hostetler’s
Stomach Bitters, ou the contrary, strengthens
and soothes the nervous system. Overwork and
mental anxiety weaken and relax it, and there
Is no more reliable means of bracing it and
restoring nerve quietude, nan by reinforcing
digestion and promoting assimilation of the food
—two effects always consequent upon the use
ol the great siomachlc. Failing stieugtli is re-
cuper .ted, a regular aablt of body restored, aud
appetite Improved by the Riders. Disease must
be regar led as au exceedingly remote possibility
by any one whose sy .tern has been thus reinforced.
Malarial disease, constipation, dyspepsia, rheu-
inatism and kidney troubles are overcome by
and prevented by this standard medicine, which
has no peer among American tonics, and is ib
constantly increasing demand In Mexico, the
West Indies and South America.
Delicious French Piokles.—Here is
a recipe ior French pickles; delicious;
one colander of sliced green tomatoes,
one quart sliced onions, oue colander ot
pared aud sliced cucumbers, two hand
fuls salt; Jet all stand twenty-four
hours, then dram through a sieve; add
one-half ounce of celery seed, one-half
ounce ail-spice, oue teaspoon pepper,
oue tablespoon of tumeric, oue pound
brown sugar, two tablespoons mustard
and oue gall >n vinegar.
Ink.—While the stains are still wet
upon the carpet, sponge them with
skim milk thoroughly. Tueu wash ont
the milk with a clean sponge dipped
again aud again iu clean, cold water.
Exchange this presently for warm; then
rob dry with a cloth. If the stain is
upon any artioia ot clothing, or table or
bed lint n, wash well in the milk, after
ward iu water. Dry ink stains can be
removed from wnite cloth by oxalic
acid or lemon juice and salt.
Pretty wall baskets can be mad by
taking one of the rough straw hats so
much worn at the seaside a year or two
ago. Ii a flower or vine is net already
embroidered ou it, add some such deco
ration; then line the hat with muslin or
silesia, finish the edge with a pleating
oi ribbon, and lie a ribbon in a knot aud
fasten to it ior a handle. The hat may
be flattened by pressure, or by usmg
stout linen thread for that purpose.
“I am waiting,” said Mr. Credulous,
“for that newsboy to come back with
my change. 1 gave him a quarter for a
two-cent paper nearly an hour ago. He
ran away to get it changed.” “Well?”
said his friend. “Well,” replied the
old man, sadly, “I haint seen him
cents.” “I should dollar,” replied his
friend, and they went away to talk it
over. And they talked it over the usual
thing—ice cold and drawn from the
wood.
I would recommend Ely’s Cream Balm
to any one having Catarrh or Catarrhal
Asthma. I have sutlered tor the last five
years so I could not lie down for weeks at
a time. Since I have been using the Balm
I can lie down and rest nicely. I thank
God that you ever invented such a medi
cine—Frank P. Burleigh,Farmington,NH.
Pleasant, odoruerous pastiles for
fumigating purposes may be ma le us
follows: Gam benjamin, one ouno ;
cloves, half ounce; cinnamon, iwo
drachms; a stick of calamus and inucii-
ai’e enough to make the parte adhere
togetner. Mix and then make them in
snape to dry.
A Hot-Water bag is a very great
convenience iu tne sick-room. A rub
ber bag, with a funnel closing by a
metal screw’, while more yielding than
the liotile oi soap-stones ordinar iy used
to apply hvat to the laxly, it letains
heat as long as can be applied any where.
Rubber and drug stores usually have
them.
Out in Illinois if a man washes his
faae twice a day aud -wewrti a collar aod
necktie they call him.a dude.
OrHur 9our Term*.
T ike to Die rixut, said a man to aiiottier aorow tha
riwr who Uad iuquirod Uie way io th - ford. The mau
(lid Wl au 1 was drowned. My dod I meant MV right,
nut 1113, aa d th • ttrht So wueu Sl ll mar l P 111 are
liroooaocod au infallible panacea it means that ad
ui-eaMM have email b irmn lira .n simple diaord rt of
theortta i* of dimotiou, nutrition aud secretion, and
by purifyitur the biood .md removing comr-ation,
ac’tia (h-e (Me m iy tie pre.entel. No remedy h ta yet
been d aeon-re i like the old SL Bernard TOIa. “
drustfieiu acil them.
All
It is a consolation to see a plumber
compelled to buy something at a retail
drug store.
“From the worst stages of Heart Du-
ease 1 consider myself cured by the use of
Dr. Grives’ Heart Regulator.—T. M.
Towns, Tilton, N. H.” 80 years have
proved the Heart Regulator a sure remedy.
Slid by druggists at $1 per botlle.
Bismarck is said to look like a doliar-
store wiudow when he wean all his
decorations.
Don’t Die In the House,
“Rouehon Rata.” Clears oat rats, mloe .roaches,
bedbuga,mes,ante,iuolee,chipmuDk8^|ovher8. 16c.
True dignity: In Boston the gnat is
known as Nathaniel
Garfield, Iowa.—Or. A. T. Uenak says: “Omv
using Brow u‘s ifua Bitters proves Us auperiuruy
over all other tonic tieparations ”
Our of the weigh—Broken-down
soaks.
Henry’s Carbolic Salve
Is the Beet Salve for Cuts, Bruises, Ulcera, Salt
Rheum, Tetter, Chappe i HluIm Chilblains. Corns
and all kinds of Skin Eruptions, Freckles and Pim
ples. Get Henry’s Carbo.le Salve, as all others am
counterfeits. Price 35 eta.
How to Shorten Life,
Abernrthy. the great English surgeon asked a lady
who told him she only had a cough: ‘‘What would
you have? The playlet” Beware of “only coughs!”
The worst cases can, however, be cured by Dr. Wm.
Hall’s Baisam for the Lungs. In Whooping Cough
aud Croup it immediately allays inflammation, and ia
sure to prevent a fatal termination of the disease.
Bold by all druggists and dealers in medicine.
Fathek to his from-the-universlty-
back-returning-son. “Well, thou hast,
of course, no debts?” Won—“Three
thousand marks.” Father—‘What I
Three thonsand marks?” Son—“Well,
art thon not proud that thy son a su
great credit hath ?”
TRADE
ILLS
MARK.
The pills are warranted to be PURELY vege
table, free from all mineral aud other polsou. us
substances. They are a certain cure for Consti
pation, Sick Headache, Dyspepsia, Biliousness,
Torpid Liver, Loss of Appetite, and all diseases
arising from tue
liivcr, Stomnch, Bowels or
Kidneys.
They remove all distractions from the channels
of the system and purify the blood, thereby Im
parting health, strength and vigor. Sold by drug
gists, or sent by mall for 26 cents in stamps by
P. NEUSTAEDTER & CO.,
83 Mercer St., New York,
Sole Manufacturers of ST. BERN ARD VKGB-
TABLE PILLS.
Send for circular.
Hop Bitters sre tbe Forest ond Best
Bitters Ever Hade.
They are compounded from Hop*, Malt, Bnchn,
Mandrake and Dandelion,—the oldest, best, and
most v&lnable medicines in the world and contain
all the best and most curative properties of all
other remedies, being the greatest Blood Purifier,
liver Regulator, and Life and Health Restoring
Agent on earth. No disease or 111 health can pos
sibly long exist where these Bitters are used, so
varied and perfect are their operations.
They give new life and vigor to the aged and In
firm. To all whoso employments cause Irregu
larity of the bowels or urinary organs, or who re
quire an Appetizer.Tonlc and mild Stimulant.Hop
Bitters are Invaluable, being highly curative, tome
and stimulating, without intoxicating.
No matter what your feelings or symptoms are,
whai the disease or ailment is, use Hop Br.tera.
Don’t wait until you are sick, hut if you only feel
bad or miserable, use Hop Bitters at once. It may
save your life. Hundreds have been saved by so
doing. $600 will be paM for a case they will not
•ure or help.
Do not suffer or let your friends suffer, but use
and nrge them to nse Hop Bitters.
Remember, Hop Bitters is no vile, drugged,
drunken nostrum, but the Purest and Best Medl-
•ine ever made; the “Invalid s Friend and Hope,”
and no person or family should be without them.
Try tbe Bitters to-day.
KIDNEY-WORT
HAS BEEN PROVED
e, Th* SUREST CURE for
IKIDNEY DISEASES.
Does a lame -. .ole or disordered urine Indi
cate that you aru a victim P THEN DO NOT
HESITATE- ose Kidney-Wort at once, (drug
gists recomT-ioad it) and it will speedily over
come the diceaM and restore boalthy action.
I orliAfi For complaints peculiar
kClUICOa to your so*, such os pain
and weaknesses. Kidney-Wort is unsurpassed
as it win act promptly and safely.
Either Sex. Inoontiuenoe, retention of urine,
brick dust or rouy deposits, and dull dragging
pains, (Y'l speedUy yield to its curative power.
43- SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. Trice $1.
K1DNCY WORT
Cata
1 was troubled from lioyhood
with Catarrh aud Hay-Fever .and
never obtained permanent relief
until I used lily's Cream Balm.
It cured me. E. L. Cliokkneb,
New Brunswick. N. J.
Having been afflicted with
Hay-Fever ior years I gave Fly's
Cream Balm a trial. I have had
noattaik since using it. E. R.
Rauch Editor Carbon Co. Demo
crat, Mauch Chunk, Fa.
Cream Balm wil!,when»pj>lte<?.
by the ituger into the nostrils, be
nsoriie 1, effectually cleansim
kver
mg
hal
the nasal pa-sages of catarr
virus causing healthy secret ons.
It allays inflammation, protects
ROSE-4'OLD. th- membranal linings of the
A POfliTivi? r-n«Fi head from colds ;comp;etely heals
AFUSlllVECUKE! thBgoregand the „« nHe
ELY a <>t taste and smell. Beneficial re-
rDCAM DAI M HU ts are realized by a few appll-
lntAm bALin.cations . . . 4
A thorough treatment will cure.
Unequalled fo- cold in the head. Agreed>le to use.
Send lor circular. 60 oen s a package, by mail or at
druggists BLV BROTHERS, Uwego, N. Y.
RUPTURE
Aar- a .^i\*Aikocd jy or. J. fl. Mayer. Main Oifioe
83i Aren Ht, Pliila. Pa.. Advice free, stamp* for re
ply. Will be at Bftnch Offices these day* of each
month: Keystone House, Reading. Pa. 2d Saturday of
each mont>i; Herdiey House, H orisbuTv, Pa . ftih'and
titti; st (’lair H tel, Pittsburgh, Pa . 7th and Hth; (Ju»
ter House, Fort Wayne. Ind . 9th and 19th; Commer*
dal Hotel, ChicoKo, Uth, 12th aud Uth.
^STOPPED FREE
Marvelous success.
Insane Persons Restored
Dr.KLINE'S GREAT
NerveRestorer
,'or all Brain & Nsnv s Diseases. Only turt
turt /or Nrrvt AfftcHans, Fits, E/Urpty, €tc.
INFALLIBLE if uken as directed. JV* Ftlt a/ter
first day' i ust. Treatise and $a Irljl boltle free te
Fit patiena. they paying express charge, on bos whea
received. Sind naraes.T. O. and crpress address of
, afflicted to OK KUNK.OT1 Arch St .Philadetohia.Pa.
Druggists. BE WARM OF UtlTAl lNC FRAt/DS.
DRS. J. N. & J. B. H0BENSA0K.
THOSE AFFLICTED WITH IHE EFFECTS
OF .SELF-ABUSE AND MEKCURULIZATION
■honld not hes.tate to consult J. N. and J. B. HO-
BENSACK, of 206 North Second street, Philadel
phia, either by mail or br pern in, daring the hoars
from 8 A. M. to !U>. M., and 6 to 3 P. M.
Advice free. Whosoever would know his condi
tion and the way to improve It should read
“WISDOM IN A NUTSHELL.”
Bent on receipt oi i-cent ssamp.
BEFORE-AND-AFTER
Electric Appliance* are tent on 30 Days 1 TrluL
TO MEN ONLY, YOUNG OR OLD,
"TTTHO are suffering from Nertocs Debilitt,
Lost vitautt7Lacx o» Nkbve Fobcb Ann
Kioor, W ammo Wkacrbsses, and all those diseases
of a Personal Nature resulting from Abuses and
Otem Causes. Bneody relief and complete resto
ration of Health, V 100a and )Lax-hood g u aranteed.
The grandest discovery of the Nineteenth Century.
Sendetonoe for illustrated Pamphlet froo. Address
WOlTAIt HIT CO.. MAMHAll, BUM.
Iolxman Businkss COLLEGE. Newark. N.J. Terms
J S40. Positions lor graduates. Write for circulars.
PP/PT? f BY RETURN MAIL—A full cUvcnptim
K AXiKi • 0 f if code's New Tailor by-stein of
DBase cutting. D. W. Moody 4t Co., 31 W. HtU, chi.
cinnru 1 "
A «»t.N 'Its f* An i svik tor UteBeet and Paeusu
selling IVtonal Books and Bibles. Prices re
duced Boer cohL National Pub. Uc. Phil Ada. Pa
t7Q A WEEK. S13 a day at home easily mado. Coatiy
# * re outfit free. Address Taux A do.. Augusta. Me
IUT THIS OUT
|by MMtU, » Golden Bos of Goods, that will bring you in mom
* ~ Month thna nuytkinf else in America. AUo-
Stf4
And Return so *«,
with TEN CenUg
nml you’ll rece'rn
liitonev tn On* Month thna nuytl
' Dw OetsUly. M. Yms*, III (>i
awtch Sl, h.w Yore.
A native of whatever eountry you
/ike, except our own, called upon one
of his friends, who bad just been made
a Cabinet officer, and squarely asked
him for a sinecure.”
“Liook around in my department,’’
replied bis Excellency, “and when you
find one I will think of it”
Some days aiterward the applicant
called upon tbe government officer and
told bim that he had found a sinecure.
“A sinecure?”
“Yes.”
“Ah, so much the better.”
“You will give it to me!”
“No, I will suppress it 1”
“Best of All.’*
Gr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, New York.:
Dear Sir—My family has used your “Favor
ite Prescription” and it has done all that is
claimed for it. It is the best of all prepara
tions ior female complaints. I recommend
" to all my customers.
. S. Waterman, Druggist, Baltimore, Mil
They were telling before M. Calinaux
the story of the house where the build
ers had forgotten only the windows.
“Yes, yes,” replied Calinaux, “yon
may laugh at your ease. I find thet all
forgetfulness are in the nature of things,
and they alone who do nothing never
deceive themselves. Bnt the example
of others ought to serve as a teaching
for ns. Thus, in the house that I am
going to build, I shall begin by the
windows!”
The Bilious,
dyspeptic or constipated, should address,
with two stamps and history of case for
pamphlet, World’s DispensaryM edicai
Association, Buffalo, N. Y.
A Parisian lady, wno is soon to be
remarried, has a little daughter 8 or 9
years old.
One of the little girl’s friends invited
her to dinner for the following Tuesday.
“O, I can’t on Tuesday,'’ replied the
child, with a most important air, ‘
marry mamma on that day!”
“Golden Medical Discovery’’
for all scrofulo us and virulent blood-poisons,
is specific. By druggists.
An interesting oil transaction took
place in the Third Ward yesterday.
Though the little boy bellowed like a
bull and said he couldn’t bear it, the
old lady cornered him and made him
take it. It was castor oil.
Mo 1 id mes admire the benutifu', and this
accounts in some measure for the thou
sands upon thousands of b illies of Carbo-
hne, the deodorized petroleum hair renewer
and dressing, which have been sold yearly
since its invention by Messrs, Kennedy &
Co., of Pittsburgh, Pa.
Shingles were split by hailstones in
Tennessee tbe other day, and women
who are obliged to split kindlings in tbe
morning are thinking seriously of mov
ing to Tennessee, where the elements
are more considerate than thonghtless
hnsbands.
Purkst and best cod-liver oil, from selected
livers, ou die se (shore, by Caswell, Hazard It Co.,
N. Y. Absolutely pure and sweet Patients who
have once taxen It preler It to all others. Physi
cians declare it superior to all other o.ls.
Chapped hands, face, pimples and rough skin
enred by U3iU!i Juniper Tar Soap, made by Cas
well, Hazard A Co., New York.
A cross counter: Jack Oldstock—
“We’re very proud of our anoestry. you
know.” Tom Parvenu -“Yes, I know,
but how would yonr ancestry feel about
you?”
“Rousli .€»•» 4JO(i.s.”
Ask for Wells’ “Rough on Corns.” 15c. Quick,
complete, permanent cure. Corns, warts, bunions.
Nor a match: “No.” said a bride, “I
am not willing that oar wedding tour
should include the Yellowstone Park.
Yellow don’t agree with my complex-
ion.”
Lewis, Iowa.—Dr. M. J. Davis says: “Brown’s
Iron Liueis give tue best of satisiaction to those
who use II”
Even a man whu has had both legs
amputated, when he opens his month to
teil some startling stories of the war,
will occasionally pat his foot m it.
Gaatriue.
Elegant aud palatable remedy for indiges
tion. Should be taken before or after meals.
Gastrine is in liquid form. By druggists.
An Oil City man has died after eating
a pmeapple. It is fair to say, however,
that he ate the pineapple forty-nine
years ago, when he was a boy.
%
Ladies and ctuiureu's coots and shoes
cannot run over if Lyon's Patent Heel
Stiffeners are used.
To be anything at Newport a young
lady mnst have a village cart and a don
key of her own. The donkey calls about
lunch time.
Dr. Kline’s Great Nerve Restorer is the marvel
of tbe age for all nerve diseases. Ail fits stopped
free. Bend to »3l Arch street. Philadelphia. Pa.
A California man choked himself to
death with a tape-measure. The coro
ner s verdict was that he died by inches.
Malaria, chills, positively cured by
Emory’s Standard Cure Pills. Their equii]
unknown; sugar coated; no griping, 26c.
An exchange sadly wonders that no
on« asks whether a man may marry his
deceased wife's mother.
Dr. Graves' Heart Regulator cures all
forms of Heart Dtteise, nervousness and
sleeplessness.
Cookino Dandelions.—To cook dan
delions prop rly, simply first bring
them to a boil in water in which has
been brown in a small quantity of sal-
eratns; then cook as in any other case.
So .says a writer in the Prairie Far
mer.
Once try Chroluu.oa collars and cuffs
and you will wear no other kind. They tit
so well and feel so nicely.
Rheumatism,Neuralgia, Sciatica,
Lumbago, Backache, Headache, Toothache,
AMD ALL OTMH BODILV PAIMS «MD ACHES.
Boldbv DruoxiaU and Dealers everf where. Fifty Oentan btUfc
1 Directions in 11 LLDguaKeB.
THE CHAKLE8 A. V©ttEI.ER O*.
i»A. VOOKLKR A CO.) Baltimore, MA.(T.S*A
KIDNEY-WORT:
HE GREAT CURE
FOB.
—B-HE-O-M AU-SM—
Aa It u for all tha painful diseases of tnaj
KIDNEYS,LIVER AND BOWELS.
It ol sanies tha system of the acrid poison!
that causes the dreadful suffering which]
only the viotima of Rheumatism can realise
THOUSANDS OF CASES
ei the worst forms of this tsrrlbls diseawi
have been quickly relieved, and In short time!
PERFECTLY CURED.
ilraicE, at- uqciD or dry, sold by decoodts.
I 44- Dry can be sent by malL
IWELLS, lUCHAJIDCON A Co.. Burlington Vt.
KIDNEY-WORT
I
AGENTS WANTED
tine Maeblae ever invented. Wi:i knit a pair of
atockiUKH with HKKL and TOE complete In *0
minutes. It will also knit a great vur.ety oi fancy-
work tor which there is alway a ready market Send
for circular and terms to the Twombly Knitting
MMhtne In, 166 Tremout street, Boston. Mass.
AGENTS SSMijM*- ISJLffflK
World. Write for parttoulaea to F. KSOISTJtlt, ftrw
prietor, CM South Ate Street, Philadelphia. Pa.
TYTOimATIOW REG AHOIJfO DKNYMK
land the NK M CARBONATE FIELD OF COLOOA-
DO sent free. Address A. C. FISK, Denver, Ool.
ABIOaTH and board in your own county
*3 Young Hi ell or lakdies* outfit free. Ad
dress. P. W. KlWiliEB A CO., Philadelphia. Pa
$65
, SHEETS flu wrlttsf paper, la blotter,
’ wtth ettleidar, by mall for SSo. ~
OO with calendar, by mall for SOo. Agents
Wanted. Koomoxt Pam tiro Cos, Nowbury-
port, Musa.
situations tea-4ta«
FRAZER
AXLE GREASE
Beet !■ tbe world, ttet tbe sewslne.
Bvery park nice baa our trndo-Biarb
Bind Is marked eraser’s. HOLD
JEVEBY WHERE.
troa LsT.it. ausl Brertacs, Brut JMI (TAR.
jokes, hk rave the raicraHT.
a*ld os trial. W.rrmU * rears, i
rsr Am book, odiirwt
JONES OF BIN8RAMT0N,
BlIBHABTOM. E. I.'
“ THB BEST IS CHEAPEST.”
IN6INE8, TUQCQUPRC SAW MILLS,
ItnePoven ■ ••ntOIILfl'J cis.srn.iiM
Clom Hillen
(Suited to all sections.) W rite for fome Ulus, lamphlei
aod Prices to The AnlkaanA Taylor Oa. Mansfield, Okie.
DR.
WM.
insumption Can Be Ci
HALL’S
FOR THE
LUNGS.
Nothing lu the world rquiil to it for the
of Scrofula, Pimple., Roils, Tetter, Old Sore., ‘
Byes, More ii rial Diseases, Catarrh, Lies of
Appetite, female Camplait 1. aad all Rlood
disea-.s. H never fails. All -dmgtlsts sod '
country store keepers sell It. U. K„ hellere
A Co.. Prep’s, Ptttabsrgh, on every bottle.
tftfn <90 lor day ai nomn.Samuies worth So tree
SW WJ Address Stinson h Co.. Portland Me.
CURES WHERE AU USE FAILS.
Beet Cough Byrup. Tauten good.
Use In lime. Sold by druggists.
Worms!
In the human body ERADICATED by using I
When buying tin covers for kettles be
sure that they have nugs of wire ou the
lop instead ot flat hand.es soldered on,
as these will not last any length of time,
aud the cover must then be thrown
aside.
Liver disease, headache, and constipation,
cau.-ed by bad digestion, quickly cared by Brown’s
Iron Bitiers.
In the human body ERADICATED
CLARK’S WORM
INFALLIBLE
R,,d effeetu-
Ml In its action* Price 2o cents a bottle* ■
KF-FOU sale BY ALL nUf OOIST?
MORPHINE HABIT.
No pay till cured. Ten
years established, 1,000
cured. State case. Dr.
Marsh. Quincy, Mich.
OPIUM
S«KS
—rrCfjn
YOUNG MEN , “ 1 2.,T!L L * a,UPHT,1 ® rB,u,a
-T v AteJaAv we will give you s situation.
Circular! free. VALENTINE BaOK.. Janesville. Wla
The Sugar Beat o.ula the attention of
farmers to the advantages of hill culture
for beets,saying the French and Austri
ans have largely adopted it This plan of
culture seems to present the most prac
tical advantages.
Catarrh of th* Madder.
Bunging Irritation, Inflammation, all Kidney and
Urinary complaints, cured by “Buchu-paiba.” $1.
A Mississippi mau has discovered
that an excellent quality of sugar can be
made from sweet potatoes. If this proves
true, a new use has been found for one
of the beet and moot prolific of Ameri
can products.
A SURE
RECIPE
For Fine Complexions]
Positive relief and immuni
ty from comnlexional blem
ishes may bo found iu Hagan’s
Magnolia Balm. A delicate
and harmless article. Sold
by druggists everywhere.
It imparts the most bril
liant and life-like tints, and
the closest scrutiny cannot
delect its nse. All unsightly
Discolorations, Eruptions,
Ring Marks under the eyes,
Sallowness, Redness. Rough
ness, and the flnsh m iatigne
and excitement are at once
dispelled by the Magnolia
Balm.
It is the one incomparable
Cosmetic.
liLH IS WEALTH,
BALSAM
Care* C*Mwnaprtoo, Culda. Pnenmoalau In-
Uiicnz*. Brsiirbial IrifllcukfeH. Bronchltla,
llawrarMu, AMhma. Cr*up, Wbooplug
C**gh, ana all Dinraaea af tha llreathlng
Organa, It seal bra and krala the Membrane
»flhe t.nnn, Inflamed and naiaoned by the
diseaac. and prevents the night eweatH and
tightness aeresa the ehes* which nrcoinimnv
It. Consuninttoa la n«t an Incurable malady.
HALLW BALMAM will cure you, even
MMBoifyiSnffll'MMM
DR. RADWAY’S
Sarsaparillian Resolvent.
THE GREAT BLOOD PURIFIER.
Fare blood makes sound flesh, strong bone and
a clear skin. If you would have your flesh Arm,
your bones sound without carles, aad yonr com
plexion fair, use
Ratiway’s Sarsaparillian
Resolvent.
A remedy composed of ingredients of extraor
dinary medical properties, essential to purify,
heal, repair and Invigorate the broken-down and
wasted body—Quick, Pleasant, Sap* and Perma
nent in Us treatment and core.
No matter by what name the complaint may be
designated, whethei It be scrofula, consamptlon,
syphilis, ulcers, sores, tumors, bolls, erysipelas, or
salt rhenin, diseases of the lungs, kidneys, blad
der, womb, skin, liver, stomach or bowels, either
chronic or constltnUonal, the vlrns is In the Blood
which supplies the waste aud bnllds and repairs
these organs and wasted tissues of the system.
If the blood is unhealthy, the process of repair
must be unsound.
gans. It
functlon-
The SarsaDarilllan Resolvent
Not only is a compensating remedy, bat secares
the harmomons action or each of the ori
establishes throughout the entire system
al harmony and suppl es the blood ves
sels with a pure and healthy current of
new life. The Skin, after a. few days’ use
of the Sarsaparillian, becomes clear and
beantifol. Pimples, blotches, black spots and
skin eruptions are removed; sores and ulcers soon
cared. Persons suffering from scrofula, eruptive
diseases of the eyes, mouth, ears, legs, throat and
glands, that have accumulated .md spread, either
from nnonred diseases or mercury, or from the
use of corrosive sublimate, may rely upon a cure
if the SarsapanlHan la continued a sufficient time
to make its Impression on the system.
Ons botUe contains more of the acUve princl-
les of Medicines than any other Preparation,
'aken in teaspoonful doses, while others require
five or six times as much.
ft
One Dollar a Bottle.
R.
R. R.
The Chenpest and Beat Medicine for
family Use lu the World
In from one to twenty minutes never falls
relieve Pain with one thorough application
no matter how violent or excruciating the pain,
the Rheumatic, Bed-ridden, Infirm, Crippled,
disease
Nervons, Neuralgic or prostrated with disease
RADWAY’3 READY RELIEF will
>UB, N<
may saner,
afford instant ease,
INFLAMMATION OF THE KIDNEYS,
INFLAMMATION OK 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
u. xJMBS are ins'antly relieved.
IN ITS VARIOUS FORMS.
FEVER AND AGUE.
FEVER AND AGUE cured for 60 eta. There ts
not a remedial agent in this world that will cure
Fever and Ague, and other Malarious, bilious,
Scarlet, Typhoid, Yellow and other fevers (aided
by RADWAY’S PILLS) so quickly as RADWAY’S
Ready RELIEF.
It will tn a few moment!, when taken Internally
according to the directions, cure Cramps, Spasms,
Sour Stomach, Heartburn, Sick Headache, Dyspep
sia, Palpitation ot the Heart, Cold Chills, Hysterics,
Pains in the Bowels, Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Colic,
Wind in the Bowels, aud all Internal Pains.
Travelers should always carry a bottle of RAD
WAY’S READY RELIEF with them. A few
drops in water will prevent sickness or pains from
change of water. It is better than French brandy
or Bitters as a stimulant.
Mlnern aud Lumbermen should always
l* provided with it.
RADWAY’S
Regulating Pills!
Perfect, Purgative. Soothing. Aperi
ents, Act without Pain, Always
Reliable and Natural
in Operation.
A VEGETABLE SUBSTITUTE FOR
CALOMEL.
Perfectly tasteless, elegantly coated with sweet
gmm, purge, regulate, purify, cleause and streng-
Radwav’s Pills for the cure of all disorders of
the Stomach, Uver, Bowels, Kidneys, Bladder,
Female Complaints, Nervous Diseases, Loss of Ap
petite, Headache, Constipation, Costiveness, Indi
gestion, Dyspepsia, Biliousness, Fever, Inflamma
tion of the Bowels, Piles, aud all derangements of
the luternal Viscera Purely vegetable, contain-
Ingno mercury, minerals, or deleterious drugs.
•V" Observe the following symptoms resulting
from Diseases of the Digestive organs; Constipa
tion, Inward Piles, Fullness of Blood In the
Head, Aciditv of the Stomach, Nausea, Heartburn,
DiSguat of Food, Fullness or Weight In the Sto
mach, Soar Eructations. Sinking or Fluttering at
the Heart. Choking or Suffering Sensations when
!■ a lying pasture. Dimness of Vision, Dote or
Webs before the Sight, Fever and dull Pam in the
Hsad. Deficiency of Perspiration, Yellowness of
the Skin and Eyes, Pam m the *.8iue, Chest,
Limbs, and Sudden Flushes of Heat, Burning in
the Flesh.
fTT*—'5,-* •Eam.ara.-anm ]>.ua wUl 4k
system from all the above-named disorders.
BOLD BY DRUGGISTS.
»8 Cents Per Box.
READ “FALSE AND TRUE.”
Send a letter stamp to RADWAY A CO., No. *
Warren, cor. Church SL, New York.
w information worth thousumls will be gent
to yon.
To tbe Pnblle.
„ tor Radway’b, and see that the
name “Radwxt” is on what you hoy.
TTYANTEp—AGENTS for our wonderfully «uo-
w»(r.‘ilV,HL b -° k ' “O kUUM 1EKK OF AM-
G ®‘ Celebrated Stencil plate. 60c. Key
ecucckj6c. Agtewanted.H48Hud.Av..lUbany.N.Y
T HE HANNAH HoBE ACADEMY forUlrlS
^Ujv. AblHUU J. KICU, M u., Ue.uieruiwu. Md.
nR»MR^«* 0 VE AND LANDS FOB SALE-
UllMIltlk Adore*,i.M.MoMaJU.N.McMoekin.f’la,
GATES F. 01 8 “Pie 9 * »nd Meet Dura-
a** AJW. ble H IfO.ieuing Date, that always
opena away ir (in the team, add e-e
«i. W. TEETEB A MB OS., Trot wood, Okie.
£ nNOK 1-Bend S6n for Ja i’d, or 80c. for Nick led
rei , L. P . roof _P ,or ' ner - A vent'd ci ren lar
UUA<,BLR '
PHOTOS R * r «' • »*»r fil M-
AAAWAUD a E. M.LLEu, Defiance, Ohio.
••JMsstyto »f PHILADILPMA
SIMM. Equal to aay Kagar to
’tea market. Bnilii mkto. Mfl
—r-rmtiiiRijbis
KHWAef*. Thiel.teeM*
3^°^fc2SS5£5S.S
U L talk
-•-.-I -to, >