The Abbeville press and banner. (Abbeville, S.C.) 1869-1924, October 17, 1894, Image 7
Hardy Old Fellow.
( Alexander Brownlie, of Tumut,
New South Wales, who has reached
the venerable age of 76, was loaf- recently
while prospecting In the ranges,
and wandered absolutely without
food for eight days. But he had
.water to drink and a pipe to smoke,
and be came back to civilization, 11
pot well, at least alive.
The Chicago policemen who took
the field against the desperadoes
who committed robbery and murder
on the IChicago, Milwaukee and St I
!Paul Railwav train and caDtured I
them are entitled to the highest
credit for the skill acd energy of the
pursuit and for the courage displayed
!n the hand-to-hand encounter leading
I to the arrest* Two men who
Are walking arsenals are a formidable
force to attack, even if the assailants
outnumber them five or ten
to one. The two men are sure to be
overpowered and captured, but they
may kill a portion of the attacking
force. Each of the dozen or twenty
bolicemen in pursuit of the land
pirates took his life in his hand, for
they were desperate, had powerful
weapons, with abundant, ammunition,
and had evidently determined
to sell themselves as dearly as possible.
The capture was a highly
predltable event to the police.
in early every rarmer wno ilves
.close to a town at some time in his
ilife thinks of laying out a burying
ground. ____
i The plumes on a hearse do not alI
ways imply angels' wings.
Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root cures
x all Kidney and Bladder troubles.
Pamphlet and Consultation tree.
Laboratory Binghamton. N. Y.
Tax wheat product of Texas this year is
estimated to be 6,000,000 bushels.
$100 Reward. 9100.
* The reader of this paper will be pleased to
learn that there is at least one dreaded disease
that science has beeu able to cure in all its
stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh
Cure is the only positive cure known to the
medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional
disease, requires a constitutional treatment.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally,
acting directly on the blood and mnoous surface*
of the system, thereby destroying tha
foundation of the disease, and giving tne patient
strength by building up the constitution
and assisting nature in doing; its work. The
proprietors have so much faith in its curative
powers, that they offer One Hundred Dollars
for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list
Of testimonials. Address
P. J. Chsnby & Co.,Toledo, O.
|VSold by Druggists, 75c.
When Suture
Seeds assistance h, maybe best to render it
asi. i
promptly,but one sh: uld remember to use even
the most perfect remedies only when needed.
The best and most s mple and gentle remedy is
the Syrup of Figs jxanufactured by the California
Fig Syrup Co.
Dr. Hozile'i Certain Croup Care
Is as cheap as it is Rare. One hundred doses
tot SO cts. Cares tin family colds for a whole
fear. No nausea.
Mrs. Winslow's Soot aing Syrup for children .
teething:, softens the sums, reduces inflammation,
allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle
Doirt Neglect a Cough. Take some Hale's
Honey of Horehound and Tar instanUr.
Pike's Toothache Drops Cure in one minute.
Earl's Clover Root, the great blood purifier,
gives freshness and clearness to the complex*
ion and cures constipation. 25 cts.. 80 cts., 81.
/ If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thompson^
Eye-water. Drrigartsts sell at 26o per bottle
FALL MEDICINE
Jb fully as important and as benefloial as ]
Bjring Medicine, lor at this season there is
great danger to health in the varying temperature,
oold storms, malarial germs, and
the prevalence of fevers and other serious
diseases. All these maybe avoided if the
blood is kept pure, the digestion good, and <
the bodily health vigorous, by taking Hood's i
rl?| ood's Sar,a- i
iM JL%%%%%% parilla ,
Saraaparilla. "My lit- ? ^ \ <g
tie boy fourteen years ? U1 Vu
old had a terrible _ _ _ _ i
scrofula bunch on his
neck. A friend of mine said Hood's Sarsaparllla
oured his little boy, so I procured a
bottle of the medicine, and the result has
been that the bunch has left his neck. It
was so near the throat, that he could not
have stood It much longer without relief."
Haa. Ina Hood. 324 Thorn dike St.. Lowell,
Hass. Be sure to get only Hood's.
Hood'e Pilla are prompt and efficient. 25 cent*.
FDADWAY'S
? PILLS,
I Always Reliable, Purely Vegetable.
I Perfectly tasteless, elegantly coated, puree, rexaporiry,
cleanse and strengthen, had way's
EKiJi lor toe cure of aU disorders of the Stomach,
5;Bowels, Kidneys, Bladder, Nervous Diseases, DizxlI
ness, Vertigo, CostKeness, Plies,
|;8ICK HEADACHE, |
FEMALE COMPLAINTS,
BILIOUSNESS,
INDIGESTION,
DYSPEPSIA,
CONSTIPATION
A-ND
All Disorders of the LIVER.
Observe the following symptoms, resulting from
diseases of the digestive organs: Constipation, Inward
piles, fullness of blood la tbe head, acidity of
the stomach, nausea, heartburn, disgust of food,
fullness of weight of the stomach, sour eructations,
sinking or flattering of the heart, chocking or suffocating
sensations when In a lying posture, dimness
of vision, dots or webs before tbe sight, rever and
doll pain In the head, deficiency of perspiration, yellowness
of the skin and eyes, naln In the side, cnest,
limbs, and sudden flushes or heat, burning In the
flesh.
a few doses of rad way's pills will free the
ystem of all the above named disorders.
Price 25c. a Box. Sold by Druggists, or
sent by mail.
Send to DR. RAD WAT & CO., Lock Box 363, New
Tork. for Book of Advice.
WALTER BAKER & GO.
fargCBt JIanufacturers of
RE, HIGH GRADE
AS AND CHOCOLATES
Oa this Continent, have rectlrtd
SPECIAL AND HIGHEST
AWARDS
i all their Good* at the
CALIFORNIA
IIDWINTER EXPOSITION.
If | IIV^Tbdr BREAKFAST COCOA,
VPa j vf j I f'j VThich, uolike the Dutch Proc*?i,
fffy* I :tH f??;l?mad? xithoutthe u?eof Alktliei
or other Chcm'cil* or Dyet. 1? abiolutely
J par* and toluble, and coiU
lm this on* cent a cap.
SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE.
WALTER BAKER t CO. DORCHESTER, MASS.
a
ICoaramptlTe* and people til
who have weak lungs or Aith- H
Mi should nH Plao's Cure for M
Consumption. It has cared Bw
tteauad*. It has not Injur- Bfl
ed one. It is not bad to take. HR
It Is the best cough syrup. FSj
Sold everywhere. 15c. g|
'
\r
AGRICULTUEAL
TOPICS OF INTEREST RELATIVE
TO FARM AND GARDEN.
making the calves gentle.
Calves should always be treated gently.
It is the only way to make them
docile when they come to be cows.
By beginning early and handling the
teats when small their size may be increased,
while at the same time the
animal will become used to it so that
she will be broken to milking even before
she has a calf. A calf thus treated
is worth much more when she becomes
a cow than one who has to be
broken in to milking at iMt time.?
Boston Cultivator.
to vtt.t. tu n boeeb.
The owner of a quince orchard of
6000 trees keeps the borer from them
by going through the orchard and
killing the borers with a sharp wire.
He claims complete exemption can be
had by protecting the trunk from an
inch or two below the surface to the
height of twenty inches or two feet
The mam thing, he says, is to prevent
the beetle from depositing its eggs.
For this purpose he procured stout
cloth and had it cut in fifteen-inch
squares. These he dipped in hot gas
tar and pitch mixed, and when coated
he wrapped a piece around the trunk
of each tree. The prevention was
perfect. He found afterward that
paper would do as well. He explained
that the borer, which enters some distance
above the ground, differs from
the ordinary variety. It is called the
flat-headed borer, which does its mischief
near the ground, even below the
surface in the roots of trees.?Chicago
Times.
FAEMDTO WITH PLAJJT FOODS,
Manures or fertilizers should be
substances which, when applied to the
soil, will increase productivity by virtue
of the plant food which they either
contain, or dissolve from the soil particles.
The value of this plant food
has a double meaning, according to
P. Schweitzer, of the Missouri station,
as tt both feeds the growing crops and
restores soluble fertility formerly taken
from the field. All crops demand soluble
plant food in proper amounta
The plant foods most deficient in used
Boils are potash, phosphoric acid, and
nitrogen. All plants respond readily
to applications of potash and phosphoric
acid, and all bnt the leguminous
plants to fertilizing with nitrogen.
These leguminous plants are able to !
gather and appropriate nitrogen in
abundanoe from the air enclosed in
the soil through the microbes in their
root tubercles. Large crops on poor j
soils mean the buying of potash and
soluble phosphorio acid fertilizers, and 1
unless a proper rotation is adopted
that of nitrate or other nitrogenous :
manures. Potash salts maybe applied
either in the fall or in spring, but i
soluble phosphoric acids and nitrates 1
should be applied only during spring
months. For deep plants, deeply ;
plow under the potash and phosphorio i
acid, and also top-dress the fields. Indirect
fertilizers, such as lime, salt, or <
land plaster, often give beneficial results.
To make farming a profitable
and satisfactory occupation, a vital
tneafiTTTA in A cnntinnnTia and w?ll
planned rotation of orops.
SORE SHOULDERS.
It behooves every owner and worker
of a horse, says a good veterinary
authority, to see that collars fit properly
at neok and shoulder and that the
Lining is in proper oondition. It is
hia duty also to keep the collar clean
and sweet by careful brushing and
drying in the sun, and should the .
Deck or shoulder become sore in spite
of all precaution regarding the harness,
he must do his best to prevent
bis horse from suffering pain. The i
moment a sign of soreness appears at i
the point of the neck upon which the 1
collar rides the trouble should, if ;
possible, be remedied. A zino pad ]
sometimes does all that is required,
as it is healing in nature and at the ;
same time smooth and cooling. Often
the simple application of a little lard (
over the abraded surface will prevent '
the harness from doing further damace.
but where there is considerable
wound of the skin it is well to apply
an ointmeut composed of sugar of ,
lead (or Bulphate of zinc), one ounce; ,
lard, eight ounces; thoroughly mixed j
together. We object to this application
somewhat on account of the fact
that, being greasy, it is apt to cause i
filthy harness, and so can more confidently
recommend the use of an astringent
lotion for the galled Bhoulders
and necks?viz., 6Ugar of lead,
six drams; soft water, one pint,
Label poison and shake well frequently.
Apply to sore shoulders and
necks with a sponge three times a day.
It will be found admirable for treatment
for all shallow wounds.?Connecticut
Farmer.
SEASONABLE POULTRY HINTS.
Give the hens intended for breeders
sweet, nourishing food, and keep them
in motion, but do not overfeed with
corn in any form, for very fat fowls
are poor breeders and are more liable
to lay soft-shelled eggs.
If you have not a plenty of pine
needles on hand, do not fail to lay in
a stock this fall, for they make excellent
nests all the year round, and are
particularly good for the sitters in the
spring. They are clean, cool, and being
free from anything green, are no
attraction for the hens to scratch in
for food.
The symmetry of the stock and the
size and color of the eggs can be influenced
largely by care in selection
of eggs for hatching, using only those
wnicn are large, darK ana irom weuformed
fowls.
Keep the house clean, and when
space is limited and the fowls cannot
get out much be all the more particular,
and do not overstock. A flock of
eight or ten is about right, and can
be nicely managed and kept in good
thrift. Clean off under the roosts
each morning and scatter dry sand on
the boards at each oleaning. Bake
and stir up the ground at every oleaning
so that the bottom will be fine and
dry for the dusting of the fowls.
The tools handiest for cleaning Are
a large sheet iron bucket of the capacity
of two ordinary pails, a piece
of olapboard about two feet long for
cleaning off the roost board, and a gar
?
den rake for taking up the feathers
and litter from the bottom of the
honee. "With the use of these it ia but
little work to keep a house clean. ?
American Agriculturist.
HOW TO OATH KK HOKEY.
How can we get the most surplus ir
a given season ? The above query if
simple and easily answered, says e
writer in the American Bee Journal,
if one takes into consideration the facl
that answers must not be applied
locally, but generally. Localities vary
in their conditions as do seasons, and
we must apply our information to tne
location and the climate in which we
keep our bees. Generally speaking,
however, the rule is strict that we
must have forager bees, and plenty oJ
them, at and during the nectar-yielding
season. To determine this we
must know the flora of our locality;
for, knowing this, we shall know how
to get ready for our honey crop. We
will start then with the fact that it is
practically twenty-one days from the
egg to the bee emerging from the celL
Early in the season we must give these
younp: bees fifteen days or so ere they
become foragers, but during this time
they are not idle by any means; they
do the nursing and the home work
until they become able to forage advantageously.
"With the above faotors
and the added factor that if the queen
is "any good" brood-rearing is constantly
going forward, the problem is
easily solved theoretically. Experience
will teach us the rest, and if we
follow her teachings as we ought we
shall have no trouble in getting our
honey crop if there is any neotar to
gather. To sum up the rule is this:
Know -where there is neotar to be gath
ered and have your foragers, and
plenty of them, to go for- it. To be
sure it requires common sense, diligence,
and knowledge to bring about
the required result. But so it does to
be successful in any pursuit in life,
and be sure of one thing, don't ask
"A," who lives in "Alaska," when
nectar is ready to be gathered in his
locality and apply the answer to your
own surroundings, but study your
own field in those respects and work
your bees in accordance with the
knowledge thus gained. Thus shall
yonr lives be stored with honey and
your bees wax fat and vigorous.
1 i
FABSI AND GARDEN NOTES,
In picking pears always aim to leave
the stem on the pear.
An improved farm invites industry
and the love of agriculture, while"
money invites expenditures and bad
habits.
If ft wis have plenty of good, sharp
grit their food will not sour and they
will get on very well without charcoaL
uru is preveuuuu, uuuiuuai 10 uuic.
Fill your hotbeds with litter in the
fall so that the ground will not freeze.
Replace this with manure in the spring
and the planting can proceed without
delay.
Do not forget the dust bath. This
is to poultry what the bath is to persons.
With dust the fowls clean theiz
bodies, drive away vermin and exercise
themselves.
Cattle will eat almost any amount
of grain if given a chance, but there
is a limit to the amount they can digest,
and this marks the limit of profit
in grain feeding.
The manscript record of the great
dairy tost consists of about twentyfour
thousand columns, containing two
and one-half millions of figures, according
to Alvord.
If not already done, it is now time
to cut out all the old stalks among the
raspberries and blackberries. Leave
but three or four of the strongest oi
the new canes and treat the rest as
weeds.
The producer should carefully
study just what the market demands
and try to exoel in conforming to that
demand and put the product on the
market with the most attractive appearance.
It is authoritatively stated that the
white pine of the Northwest is so
nearly exhausted that there is practioally
no further supply for timber.
We have certainly reached the point
where timber culture holds out a fair
promise of profit.
The benefit resulting from the prunning
of trees and vines, and the pinching
baok of melons and tomatoes, has
led to experiments with potatoes. It
is said that pruning them to two stalks
in each hill nas produced larger tubers
and a greater yield.
Some dairymen jSractice packing direct
from the churn, doing away with
the working. More moisture is re*
tained in the butter when this is done,
also more casein; consequently ih<
Vint+oi? dooolAno flaTrnr nninlrflT; it, n.1
so become rancid sooner.
The wild chestnut is rich in flavoi
and sweet. A number of varieties art
propagated by budding and grafting
and show much improvement. Whj
not devote large tracts to them, anc
have a valuable produot in the nuts
and still further value in the timber'
A pinched-back raspberry becomei
self-supporting and needs no staking,
if the work be done as soon as th(
young cane reaches the proper height,
It is probable that if pinched off latf
in the season, a few branches onlj
would co me out near the top, whicl
would make it top-heavy.
To prevent head lettuces from going
to seed prematurely a | German
paper advises to cut half through the
stalk, just at the surface of the
ground, with a sharp knife. The remaining
half of the sfcalk allows the
passage of sufficient sap to keep the
plant alive, but not enough for much
future growth.
Judicious rotation of crops is
thought to be the best precaution
against club-root. Cabbage or any
allied crops should not be put on the
same soil oftener than once in three
years. If lime is frequently applied,
or if the soil abounds in it, this question
of rotation will not need to be so
strictly regarded.
The tin cans filled with sweetened
water, and placed at various points in
the orchard of the Oklahoma Experiment
Station, proved very efficient
bug traps. Several hundred May
beetles, crickets and grasshoppers
were caught. This plan of utilizing
these hitherto useless articles is fully
justified by results.
" 'Y . WOMEN'S
HATS. !
I
ODD SHAPES FOR THE FALL
AND WINTER.
Jet and Steel Ornaments to Be
Largely Used ? New Colors
That Will Be Worn ?
Fashions' in Furs.
"1 ~TALL and winter hats show
Y=/ shapes of two distinct types?
J perfectly straight brimmed
(Z and severe, or the more or less
picturesque variations of the Char-1
lotte Corday bonnet or the picture
hat. The latter hats are often ridicu'lously
large and sometimes are betrimmed
and befeathered until they i
verge upon the grotesque. But certain
types of faces are made all the
more attractive when enhanced by
such bizarre settings as the ruche
brims more often than not afford, and
are rendered all the more fetching and
chio by these quaint substitutes for
the now almost discarded fluted brim.
Indeed, hats are almost without
? A X X _ xl
dents, quite in contrast to iuu Biiupeo
of the past season. This is especially
true of felts, whioh, as a rule, are
stiff, straight and severe. Oftentimes
there is no brim at all?only a very
high, pointed crosra, softened at the
base by huge bows of trimming.
Jet and steel ornaments are largely
used; cut steel ornaments and buckles
will lead the style this winter. Bead
buckles will also be in great favor.
Handsome crescents of lace, appliqueing
the corner of the now fashionable
soft mortar board crowns to the brims,
are very artistic and are correspondingly
expensive.
Antique satins and rich miroir glace
velvets of exquisite new shades enter
FOTJB AUTUMN AS
largely into all trimming. Satin and
?-* xi?1_
velvet riDDon are euureijr auppiuuucu
by ribbon of a new sheeny texture, resembling
the old fashioned sarsanet
and of such startling- hues as were
wont to dazzle our grandmothers' eyes
in the first years of this century. Taffeta-glace
ribbons also are popular; so
are gros grain. Huge rosettes of the
ribbon are used on most hats, and are
sewn close against the high crown in
preference to being placed on the
brim. Paradise plumes resemble
coques' plumes in shape, but are long
and soft in effect, as they are made of
narrow, downy feathers. Quaint new
braids of soft chenille make the
shapes of evening hats and those for
dress occasions. These braids are
much softer than velvet, and come in
all of the delicate new shades.
The favorite new colors used in millinery
are an odd purplish bine, called
bluet; a rich yellow, suggestive of
shrimp pink, called Sarah, and with
the favorite felts in brown (ortolan),
ligneum (delicate bark brown) and
black, the rich new red called Jacqueminot
making a striking and becoming
combination. Pivoine, a handsome
improvement on the cerise of last season,
is a trying shade, while that exquisite
new pink, rieu. will be coveted
by all, but would better be studiously
avoided by those who do not boast a
clear and perfect complexion- Cornflower
blue, in all of its many shades,
is very fashionable, but woe to her
who has not a milk white skin and
rosy cheeks if she attempts to deck
herself in this color. Colibri, a very
dashing shade of blue green, and
azurine, a shade of the sky when it is
dark (blue), are fashionable and very
correct.
Perveneh, that quaint blue, deepening
into purple, is very closely akin to
the blue of the cornflower, and is
quite as fashionable. Mousse, an exceedingly
rich, artistio shad of green,
will afford pleasure to every brtistic
observer, and. fortunatelv. -is very
popular. Meteore, a rich scarlet, is
sometimes combiued with the mousse
for evening w,jar. Roseau and eedum
are two pleasing shades of green for
evening hats. The former, though
bright, is soft, and is of the color of
;he cup of the rose. Violetta, an
uld purplish brown, is affected by
londes and old ladies with 6oft gray
aair, who are unwilling to confine
themselves to black. Coquelicot,
though not entirely new to Parisians,
is quite so to Americans, and is a rich,
delicate shade of red that will doubtless
be pleasing for a long time to
come. It combines happily with almost
every other shade, and can be
worn by both blondes and brunettes.
Fuchsia remains popular also.
Many of the felts are very bright,
or are double faced, one side being
rlnrlc. thfi othfir heinc lifflit. Golden I
yellow and bright green shapes are
trimmed with black ribbon or with a
profusion of birds and feathers. Huge
Alsatian bows and feathers and aigrettes
grouped in Alsatian bow effects,
instead of standing perpendicular to
the brim, as heretofore, prevail. Such
grouping gives a very broad effect to
the front of the hat, and this is extremely
trying to Bome faces. Many
of the new hats seem to have been
chopped off suddenly behind, while
the old fashioned flaring bonnet effects
are characteristic of many of the
dressy hats for afternoon.
: VV-r-H- ' ; <v<?
FASHIONS IN FCBS.
Already the fur dealers are arranging
their stock. Among some of the
a bride's fur jacket. ^
earliest orders attended to are those
for fall brides. It is customary for
brides to receive as part of their
trousseau some fine furs. For biides
of this fall are being made handsome
fur-lined and trimmed jackets. These
are to be worn very generally this
winter. One for a wealthy young
woman is made with deep cuffs, a rolling
collar and handsome braid frogs.
~D VTINTEE HATS.
It looks now as if a great many ideas
in braid decorations would accompany
any fur trimmings. If you can afford
to have your winter furs attended to
now it will cost much less than later
on, when the rush comes.
HOME DRESS IN DUtECTOIRE STTXiE.
This home dress is made after the
Directoire style. The skirt is of light
green woolen poplin, slightly gathered
at the waist, and falling in straight
HOME DRESS.
folds at the sides; it opens in front,
showing ail underskirt of biscuit cloth,
embroidered with silk and beads; the
bodice is turned back, with wide
pointed revers of dark green velvet;
the waist-band and half-sleeves are of
the same; narrow vest of embroidered
cloth; full puffed sleeves to the elbow,
finished with frills of the same.
THE USE OF PERSIAN WOOL.
Entire costumes this winter will bo
made of Persian lamb and other
varieties of fur. One day last week a
noted importer exhibited among other
winter garments a coat and skirt of
Persian lamb, the skirt made exactly
as one of serge or tweed would be
fashioned. The jacket, which was
quilt? UX9Iixiuu uum IUU oivn t,
made after the style of a doublebreasted
walking coat, with wide
revers pointed at the top.
HIGH COLLARS AND HEADACH.E.
The stiff, high collars, particularly
when worn by short necked women,
are being accused of producing
nervous headache. They press at the
back directly upon the sensitive base
of the brain, and compress, often to
the point of injury, the veins aud
arteries of the neck, frequently causing
a congestion that ends in headache.
The value of property held for charity
in Italy is $325,000,000, an average of
312 to each inhabitant.
w-t'-'.t - = ' 7 a'.; ' ,;
- ; r ' ' - . . . .
Highest of all in Leavecing Pi
AggOW
The Cliameleon Spffier.
"It has always been a hobby of
mine," said T. L. Grimshaw, oi
Raleigh, N. C.f "to collect strange
bngs and insects during my travels,
and I think I have succeeded in getting
together a pretty choice collec
tion. Of the whole assortment I tbink
the chameleon spider, whioh I got last
summer on the coast of Africa, is the
most valuable. The capture of this
insect was highly interesting to me.
One afternoon, while tramping along
a dusty road, I noticed in the bushes
which grew along the side what appeared
to be a singular-looking white
flower, with a blue centre. Stopping
to examine it I found, to my astonishment,
that it was not a flower at all,
but a spider's web, and that the supposed
light blue heart of the flower
was the spider itself, lying in wait for
its prey. The mottled brown legs of
I the spider were extended in such a
way as to resemble the divisions between
the petals of a flower.
"The web itself, very delicately
woven into a rosette pattern, was
white, and the threads that suspended
it from the bushes were so fine as to
be almost invisible. The whole thing
had the appearance of being suspended
in the air upon a stem concealed
beneath. Upon knocking the spider
from bis perch into the white gauze
net which I carried, my surprise was
i* riomncorl Vitr flPoiTl Cf mV AftH
I D ^ W
tive instantly turn in color from blue
to white. I shook the net, and again
the spider changed color, this time its
body becoming a dull greenish brown.
As often as I would shake the net just
so often would the spider change its
color, and I kept it up until it had assumed
about every hue of the rainbow."?St.
Louis Globe-Democrat.
TAKE STEPS
in time^ if you are a suffererfrom
that scourge xJR^ ?I*
of humanity known as
consumption, and you
can be cured. There is f ^
the ^evidence ^of
in? witnesses to
the fact that, in^^M^7 /jr^drntib
stages, consump-^VTw ' /mSiB
tion is a curable , L* ///YSmbK
disease. Not / w?
every case, but a I I/*** aft
large percentage a/ I f /y.
cases, and we believe, I L M/ft//// MlTJ
fully 98 per cent, are t \
cured by Dr. Pierce's
Golden Medical Dis- ~
covery, even after the disease has proSessed
so far as to induce repeated bleedcs
from the lunars. severe linarerin? cough
with copious expectoration (including tubercular
matter), great loss of flesh ana extreme
emaciation and weakness.
Do you doubt that hundreds of such cases
reported to us as cured by " Goldeu Medical
Discovery " were genuine cases of that
dread and fatal disease ? You need not take
our word for it They have, in nearly every
instance, been so pronounced by the best
and most experienced home physicians,
who have no interest whatever in misrepresenting
them, and who were often
strongly prejudiced and advised against
a trial of "Golden Medical Discovery,"
but who have been forced to confess that
it surpasses, in curative power over this
fatal malady, ^11 other medicines with
which they are acquainted. Nasty codliver
oil and its filthy "emulsions" and
mixtures, had been tried in nearly all these
cases and had either utterly failed to benefit,
or had only seemed to benefit a little for
a short time. Extract of malt, whiskey,
and various preparations of the hypophosphites
had also been faithfully tned
in vain.
The photographs of a large number of
those cured of consumption, bronchitis,
lingering coughs, asthma, chronic nasal
catarrh and kindred maladies, have been
skillfully reproduced in a book of 160
pages which will be mailed to you, on
receipt of address and six cents in
stamps. You can then write to those who
have been cured and profit by their experience
Address for Book, World's Dispensary
Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y.
cnn cnrir r> a r> a i vtk*
criuur a iv? rai\nt?i a
and NERVINE INSTITUTE
<67 Massachusetts Ave., Boston, Mass.
(If ear Washington St.)
Tor the treatment of epilepsy, paralysis, brain and
nervous diseases in all their forms The only paralytic
instUoto in the United States. Consultation
free. Patients boarded, nursed and cared for.
Office treatment if desired. Institute open daily.
Bend for circulars.
fcO YOU We 0lTer employment to 3 men or
1 w women in each county that will
WANT Pfty $43 a mouth. N'o capital required,
address P. W. ZIEGLER &
WORK? CO , Box 1750. Philadelphia, i<a.
BEECHA3
(Yeg'
What The
Biliousness indigestion
dyspepsia bad taste in
sick headache foul breath
Diiious neaaacne loss 01 appct
when these conditions are cauj
stipation is the most frequeni
One of the most import;
learn is that constipation cai
ness in the world; and it ca
the book.
Write to B. F. Allen Com
York, for the little book on C
sequences and correction); sen
reach of a druggist, the pills wi
k OTAfilT ill 0
n w i nil i m a
Eastman College, Poughkeepsle, N. V., On-The-Hudsoi
:lallty of training Youug Men and Boys for success In 1
ind become enterprising, useful citizens. The Oldest
tuccess.'ul In providing positions for Graduates. Refei
ixpenso of complete course, $100 to Sl'.O. No class sys
Catalogue, showing numerous graduates In business, a
CLEMENT C. GAINES, President,:
" To Save Time is to Lens
Life? T
Dwer?? Latest U. S. Gov't Report
S
zrowmr
TEB.V PURE
There are said to be only four survivors
of Napoleon's Grand Army, tha
oldest of them being Jean Sab^tier,
who was born April 15, 1792.. Tha
others are also more than 100 jeara
Old.
J. L. Powell, of Goshen, Ind., who
has just died at the age of ninety*
three, has been a Justice of the Peaoa
continuously for the past fifty yearc.
I Valued Indorsement
I of Scott'9 I
j Emulsion
is containled
in letIters
from
the medi;cal
profes
ision speaking of its gratify
;ing results in their practice.
Scott's Emulsion
;of cod-liver oil with Hypo[phosphites
can be administered
when plain oil is out of
[the question. It is almost
as palatable as milk?easier
to digest than milk.
. Puparid by Scott k Bowne, S. Y. All dnggtttt.
r ?* ?
' X Y S U?40
i
TW^BSTMR^SXXXXX !
[; INTERNATIONAL j|
DICTIONARY
?'! [ "u2S3I?#?& ;
| ! ^Dictionary of j
] [f&jfiij ' 8t*Bd*r4ottbeU.8.!!
J'ftSfe Jt u?S. S npr f mt*Co art ! i
''hSuEs?? 1 book? 7 ^1118 ?cl1001*' I
1 Hon. D. J. Brew?r, !
'' ttnii*^lFli JoMlce of tie 17. 8., >
J i M^end?lt^"iiU<M' f
< the one great standard authority. |
' [ Send for free pamphlet containing specimen page*. < '
i > G. 6s C. MERRIASf CO., Publishers, ]1
Springfield, Mass., U.S.A. < |
J i tO" Do not buy reprints of indent edltlrms. '
W. L. Douglas
CUrtC ISTHCKIT.
Q0 Oflvb NOSQUSAKINa
CORDOVAN.
ENCH&. ENAMELLED CALF! tesmmumm
3.iP POLICE, 3 Soles.
L^BOYS'SCHOOlSHflESL
SEND FOR CATALOGUE .
W*L>* DOUGLAS*
JROCKTON, MASS. '
X?B can tare money by wearing- ch?
! W. L. Douglas 83.OO Shoe.
Because, we &ro the largest manufacturer* Qi
this grade of shoe* In the world, and guarantee theli
Tilue by stamping the name and price oa the
bottom, which protect yon against high prices and
the middleman's profits. Our shoes equal custom
work in style, easy fitting and wearing quail ties.
We hare them sold everywhere at lower priest for
the value glvqp than any other make, fake no substitute.
If your dealer cannot supply you, we caa. *
i tnuiiikv a
AND BOILERS \
f . For all purposes requiring r.
\ power. Automatic, Corliss a
w & Compound Engines. Hor- r
\ izontal & Vertical Boilers. >
r Complete Steam Plants. r
( B.W.PAYNE&SQNS, t
$ Elmlra N. Y. 9
\ . r?. Y. Offlcet > i
( 41 Jejst. ?
A ITff|Boys.^lsa^dwoMD
II Qnp W IU D % to sell our goods to
AUuli 1 UStrsEt'i':
Send postal for ??mpl?
A. E. Spencer, 792 W. Madison St., Chlc*g?
1'S PILLS
:table)
y Are For
sallow skin
the mouth pimples
torpid liver
itc depression of spirits
>ed by constipation ; and cont
cause of all of them,
ant things for everybody to
ises more than half the sickin
all be preven'ed. Go by
pany, 365 Canal street, New
Constipation (its causes cont
free. If you Lre not within
11 be sent by mail, 25 cents.
USINESS LIFE
a. The best school In America devotef. the ?p?ILfe,
tuacnlnc them how to get a living. maice money
and only Practical Business School and the most
rs to patrons in nearly erer.v city and town. Total
tem, no vacations. Applicants enter any day. Far
ddresa *
iO Washington Street, Poughlceepsle, New York.
;then Life." Do Ysu Value
ben Use
DLIO