The Camden journal. [volume] (Camden, S.C.) 1866-1891, February 21, 1889, Image 3

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birds aremT^^^I^PPi^^Orightcned often break the eggs, or stay away from the nest altogether, associating it with danger. The female bird is often a bad breeder, and females possessing such qualities jis -being bad ^ breeders, laying their letting their young, and usually killing them, are frequent, so that a good female breeder is a rare tiling." "What kind of food must be given the birds when breeding?" "The ordinary food" is sufficient,' although a hard-boiled egg is greatly relished. Extra food should be provided during the second week of incubation. The ci)t^^^'V.^^g^dt^Jiis';faiiyly as .-^long as he behaves himself, but the moment lie shows ill temper he should be taken out. Some male birds arc great j family men, and seem to enjoy taking *'%he place of the lien on the nest while she leaves to feed or rest. After the j birds arc hatched the best plan, and in fact the only one, is to leave them alone. The old lady will raise them herself withoiit^^^ystancc. . , ^ "the Villi c ohcs*Ieave flit'ir nCfet'whfcn they arc about three weeks oh1. If you wish to hatch another brood he loublc cage sliouhl be employed, as ,... .aotuer bird commences to lay before the young ones leave their nests. If you have a i double cage the young may be transferred J to one. The male bird will see they do j not want for something to eat. When it jfcUpdft ty fpe^thej. .young birds J have found," said tho bird man, "that hard ' boiled eggs mixed with crackers or toasted bread made the. best food, al _lhougli soaked rape seed is used by many. Birds should not hatch over tiu-ee times a scSSTo-x. "Certain peculiarities can frequently be secuied in breeding," continued the bird man. "For instance, to produce a handsomely colored bird, the cock must possess the same color and marks as those you wish to reproduce. Top knots, or, as we gaU^hem^ cont'd birds, _ are produced bj one of the birds being provided with a cap. Good singers make the best breeders," he continued, "and care should be taken that the birds are not over six years of age. Birds too closely related should never be mated." "IIow can you tell the age of birds?" asked the reporter. "It is easily ascertained by the coarse, lnird skin seen on their legs and by their long claws. When a bird has an abundance of such hard skin, don't take it, it's sure to be an old bird." "Many breeders make a special study of crossing canary birds with other seedeating birds. The result of such breeding is called the mule bird. The female canary, crossed with the German goldfinch, linnet, sisken, ehnllinch, and even the German sparrows we sec about the streets, produce the best mule birds." A Costly Error. j. An architect in Berlin has just receive*i 1 a criminal sentence on account of an I error in judgment, by which the lives I oT workmen were lost. The architect in question, M. Ilillcr, had designed a hospital, with a terra-cotta cornice. The upper members of the cornice overhung considerably, and the problem of supporting it; which is always a serious one with projecting members of terracotta, was solved by laying an iron plate on the lower portion of the cornice, held K,- lw.Hc thrpp fcor lorn', nlaced six feet apart, near the ha- k edge of the plate, aud extending down into the backing of the cornice, which was composed of brickwork 14 inches thick. The terra cotta blocks for the upper portion of the cornice, which projected 15 inches from the face of the wall, were delivered irregularly, and were set in place as they arrived. Apparently, this preyertted tying tliom properly togethgr^f fou, Igfore the cornice was finished. gP feet of it gave way, carrying to llitr ground with it nine workmen, of whom eight were killed. It is hard to toil, without seeing the testimony, just how the blame was apportioned between the architect and theco^^fctor, but both havc^b^mouths1 iA m firnHnSg^^ 10 a BmMma|KCHWfe^g^j^^^^y be a pnc^ Hm3aKifl^l^^mojif^P'-^f^ua^ t^s~ r c - The IjgKBflESnBff^^ Northern the fall or bill is prcfcrpropagate rhuroots; each eye with a root will ia3W|^fflilaEBi^y I* a permanent bed Bc^^ffiffl^^HJpull the crop too close the first after transj^BsSgjlJBS^Era, Field and Stockman. Black Teeth in-AidfDa.k It is a common delusion that T>Tn?k~ ' " Iiiil t V.m- ..? <> n'mrrlT IVUIU IS il UlSViWVj L/llb UI\,J t4?v> W.M4J/.J I the consequence of a disease. In the case referred to, feeding to excess with sour buttermilk was the cause of the disease, and the disease was disturbance of the digestive organs, a sour stomach, as it is commonly called, by'*\\luch' the tnatrfel' of the teeth is decomposed and turned black. For the wholesome feeding of any animal a certain variety of food containing requisite elements of nutrition i3 indispensable. These elements consist of matters containing nitrogen compounds in the ratio of one part, with matters containing corbon compounds in the yatu^ of five and one-half parts. Butter M>k*con>ain.< Wo nnd'/orie-fcajf' part^ojf the latter to one of the former, a ratio fnr mit nf tlu* hulnnoo nnd whollv unflt for healthful feeding. Whey is a better food in this respect, containing six and one-half parts of carbonaceous elements (but of an objectionable kind, being too acid) to one of nitrogenous. If buttermilk is mixed with ctrnmcal, pumpkins, rice, bran, corn bran, potatoes or other fsjaychy food, it may then be fed without danger.?New York Times. Hair Balls in Stomachs. Ilair balls are found in the stomachs of cattle of all ages, and in sheep and goats. They are produced by the auimals licking themselves or one another, and swallowing the hair that is loosened in this way. The hair enters :folds -of the Jctfeulem, the second stomach, where the peculiar movement of this organ soon forms it into a ball, which, as the time passes, grows larger by accumulation. These balls vary in size, from one inch in diameter up to three inches or even more. We have seen one which was formed in the stomach of a buffalo and was five inches ocn nroeon f I ILL UiUlUlll'l Hi oviuv; UWUO UiWV |?V?JVUK a rough surface, hair sticking out all over then),and in othei^ney arc smooth, having been longer in the stomach, l&^\rl^wyo;(tt'(\;OVCT ,jyj?U' salts of lime, etc. It is not always easy to determine whether these balls are present. They cawfe* indigestion, aud the animal shows a depraved appetite. Frequent attacks of colic are often the result of these concretions in the stomach. No way has yet been found for removing them, and where they increase in size rapidly they sometimes prevent the passage of food into the intestines aud cause the death of the animal.?Picayune. -*- ' ? f ' . ' "Winter Pastures. One of the great mistakes made by many of our farmers is that of ovcrstocking their pastures. Too many have an idea that they should he kept bare the season through, and especially that all grass must be eaten up by October, or at latest November. There is nothing that pays better .than to let a field of blue grass grow up during the summer, j j and when other pastures arc eaten up, *say about November,^-turn'thc stock in and let them graze it, thus saving all expense of cutting and stacking the grass as hay. Experience has proved tliat, acre for acre, it is worth more than any acre of hay cut and put into a barn. Stock will cat it and do well at any time the snow is oil the ground. There is nothing that will so deplete profits as over-stocking. It is much better to have some grass left on the field than . to starve your stock. As a rule fanners are canying too much stock on their farms, yet we find here and there one that has more grass than cattle. In such cases we always find good stock, and when sold thrv bring good prices; while the over-stocked farmer has poor cattle, arid gets poor prices. A winter-pasture, once tried, will be re peated. Less stock and more clear profit, should be our motto.?Prairie Farmer. i Apoplexy in Swine. Apoplexy is usually a disease of fat hogs, although an animal that has long been thin or suffering from excessive irritation of the intestinal canal would also be predisposed to it. It must be understood that the process of fatteniM| an animal in a few weeks destaj^ttjjjggfij MSHS^^^pMaH^WMmscasc. The economy muscular de-. |iM^^M|^^wrj^kcomc weak of the BHS^^MBBHBenndcd by n. strong, that in a state of perresist any force that the raByAlS^^HBKan put upon those canals. process weakens these SBK^yMden or unusual strain rupej||H|^^Kn the brain, and wd. call, it 1 HnSH^Py. It is not as common in the one would expect, but occurs so wj^m that the breeder should understand |Hmd know the right thing to do. It is Kipossible to foresee when this is going to occur. If the rupture is a very small one, when the blood is oozing out in tiny drops, the hog wiH sometimes be found lying insensible and breathing heavily,? No effort will arouse it. It is more usual to find a big fat ., hog lying dead, with no external marks or signs of the cause of death: Cut open the skull carefully, and a clot pf blood of greater or less extent Nvill be; found inside. If alive, however, .tie a stout cord above the knee and. with :a . .... .. .... ' * suck taKe a twist in tne coru unni on the inner side of the leg below the knee the brachial vein can. be felt. Open it with a sharp-pointed "knife,, and if the blood will run take a*pint and a half or a quart. Don't guess at i An ounce of blood spread; oven^ne ground or on the floor has beo^^nistaken for a pint. If the blet^K is <o any-good^ there must bo^rafisiderable taken. IJ tlm^Broken vein is asmall one, find the case .is observ|d soon after it occurred, the^mknal nrffcy be saved. If it partially revives it will be proper to evacuate the . bowels. A large stock syringe would be ^valuable here to throw up a quart of warm water. In most cases, however, the owner will have a chance to sell the animal for soap-fat.?American Agricul\ turist. . : *r Farm and Garden Notes. Always use a thermometer while churn! ing- i . .. "{ [. Churn at forty to forty-five revolutions 'per minute. ' Bran can usually be bought in the fall for about one-third less- than^in-. winter. . ?? '. ? Stop churning immediately the butter] comes. The butter should bq like grains of mustard-seed. It is always best to water horses before, feeding them. If they are watered soou after they have eaten much of the grain will lw. wnshod out of the stomach and I " v | do them no good. ; ' ' t I In the feeding of animals it should i not be forgotten that the manure is to be valued as the feeding is. poor;, or rich. Poor food makes poor manure; rich food makes rich manure. - -Far making thrifty cams oats come next lo milk, either ground - or whole, but p cferably ground for young calves, since they learn to like them quicker and masticate them better. Farmers generally do not'jrct fu[Iy np? prcciate the value of bran' as a feeding substance. It contains less oil than corn meal but onc-fqurth more flesh-forming, bone-building material. If a hen lays one egg a week she will pay all expenses of keep. Every egg over is profit. The greater the number of eggs secured the lower the cost of each egg proportionally; 4 ' ' ? -2. I Always assort your eggs. uu uui have several colors aud sizes together. Put the dark eggs in one basket and the light ones in another, and pick out tho small ones to be sold separately. In relation to tests in breeding and feeding stock, a member of one of the societies remarked that they were generally of little practical value to the great mass of farmers who own from 40 to 80 a.ul 160 acres. The profits of dairying are made up of the small daily savings*of the difference between the cost of production and value of the milk or buttch A saving of ten cents per day in a herd of fifty cows amounts to $5; in a month to $150. Agriculture in Japan. Japan has an area of 150,000 square miles, or about 100,000,000 acres. This approximate approaches the area of the ef-itn r>f ('nlifm-nin Of this firm Annan has only 12,000 acres in cultivation by the spade, mattock or plow. From this cultivated area all the food and textile plants arc grown to feed and clothe 38,000,000 people. The land outside of this cultivation docs not contribute by grazing to their support as with us, as the Japanese wear no woolen clothing and cat neither beef, pork, mutton, milk, nor cneese. i nc unuaeci area yiei?s them only fuel. Their 12,000,000 acres do even more than to clothe and feed their 38,000,0o0 people. They yield 40.000,000 pounds of tea, 25,000 bales of silk and large quantities of rice, tobacco and hemp for exportation. In a population of 38,000,000 there are 20,000, 000 who belong to the agricultural class. There are 4,500,000 landholders. The landlords average two and two-thirds acres. There are few men who own and till ten acres, and there are many who have one acre and less. It is not to be understood that all the labor of 20,000,000 of people is expended upon 12,000,000 of acres of land. Every farmer's family has its wheel, reel, warping bars antHi^m', as the eajrly settlers of the and their cotton, linen. mg?ffire|Bth is made- for family sale.?[Picayune. r ^ QUAINT AND CURIOUS. Every French bank has a photograph Lof eveiy employe. A Philadelphia lady's \vill leaves $75,000 to found a home for infirm ani: mals. The United States can boast of 493 mountain peaks that are more than 10,000 feet high. - The number of men's linen collars made in this country every year is 4,000,000: AnnA V?oo l\AAn /uilfirofA/1 fr\y* JLIIU augai tUUC iiao i/ttu uuiUTOkwt iui so long a period that its native country is unknown. J . l The yellow-eye bean is the standard for the manufacture of the famous Bos- [ ton baked beans. The first recorded eclipse of the moon is that observed by the Chaldeans at J Babylon on March 19, 720 B. C. 1 The' latest "automatic" is a horse car j change box, which returns small change < for any amount up to a silver dollar. 1 i It is said that cattle in transit on some of the western roads are allowed to reipain three days without food or water. f Shawnee County, Kan., claiming a j population of 60,000, has not one criminal case on her court docket, it is said. I "ATouisvilie landlady seized a love , letter addressed to a delinquent boarder,. i and held it in lieu of payment for rent. < A Metrical lawyer owns the only ex- J isting copy of the first book published j in Canada. It is Archbishop Languct's ' catechism, bearing date of 1765. 4 Morosco, a Cossack chief, discovered Kamtschatka in 1690. It was taken pos- j session of by Russia in 1697, and proved j to be a peninsula by Bchring in 1728. 1 Instruction in the art of embalming j dead bodies by Professor Sullivan, of i Boston, was a feature of a recent gather- i ing of undertakers in Syracuse, N. Y. An American gen%man, Mr. Bonsai, j heard the casual crack of a Parisian cab- 1 man's whip close to his ear; and there- ' upon rounded to and whaled him with 1 his walking stick, much to the approval of English critics. "" R. Bass is known as the "ossified inan.". He-is fifty-eight years of age, blind; nn<Tn living skeleton, weighing Jrat seventy pounds. His limbs are so ./ossified that he is perfectly helpless, and all his body seems to be turning slowly to hone. (' James Watt, a boy who kept his eyes wide mien as he went alnnrr. made a veiw thoughtful, practical man; and, from the examination of a lobster shell, with its singular head and dangling claws, he | learned how to carry water in pipes under the Clyde in Scotland. Lead pencils contain no lead. -The term lead pencil is as much a misnofiier as it would be to call a horse a cow. Red lead is an oxide of lead, and white lead/ is a carbomrnfof^cad; but the black lea(d is neither a niital nor a y ~ metal. It is plumbago or graphite, op of the forms of carbon. \ Before it rains it is said that dog^ throw up the earth with their pawn, horses rub thcmsblvcs and shake t^eir heads and sniff the air, bees will .'not leave their hives, all domestic an/mals become restless, birds plume and point themselves, geese squawk, swaliOTtj and larks fly upwards and ants work harder than usual. The Tools of Animals. Animals do not know enough to raako ' their own tools, as men can, and God has given them ready-made ones. The tail of a fish is his sculling oar. He ' moves it first on one side and then on the other, using his fins as balances to guide his motion. If the fish moves fast and wants to stop, he straightens out his fins just as the rower docs his oars. A man ??rt /Imlliri/v Tt'AA/1 l\nf flirt UllltVCd (I UUUl iUl WUj K/Klft liUVf woodpecker lias a drill in his own bill, and when lie drills holes in trees in search of food you can hear the click of his i tool just as you would the man's. Tliis j drill of the Xvoqjipeekcr's has another ' tool inside, a sort of insect catcher. On i the end is a bony thorn with sharp teeth 1 like barbs o!Ka fish hook. As he works 1 and finds an insect he opens his drill and , sends out this barbed tongue and draws 1 it into his mouth. Some animals have i tools to dig with. The hen digs for herself and her chickens. The pig uses his | snout and roots away under the mud. The elephant uses his strong tusks, and ho nnppr underjrround cralleries of the mole arc made with his heavy claws, with . which he nlows and digs. The woodchuck, too, is a great digger. His feet are shovels to dig the hole where he lives and the beaver uses his broad, flat tail as the mason does his trowel, spattering and smoothing the mud as he builds the walls of his cabin, while his sharp, powerful ^ teeth are his saws? with which he gnaws off large branches of trees to build his ^ dams. There is no limit to God's power , in supplying the needs of the creatures he has made.?[Picayune. How One Should Live. i To be honest, to be kind?to earn a ! little and to spend a little less;'to make, j upon tTie whole, a lamiiy happier lor his ; presence; to renounce when that shall be ! necessary, and not to be embittered; to j keep a few friends, but these without J capitulation?above all, on the same grim condition, to keep friends with himself?here is a task for all that i man has of fortitude and delicacy. H< has an ambitious soul who would ask mofc; he has a hopeful spirit who should loo)^|n suV an enterprise to be success Facial Expressions of Workers. A man's occupation or condition has a good deal to do with making his facial expression. Intellectual pursuits, like studies or the scholarly professions, when coupled with temporal and moral habits of life, brighten the face and give a per son a superior look. Magnanimity of nature, or love of studies and arts, will make a bright, glad face; but, contrary to this, a man may have a face that does not please anybody, because of a love of self to the exclusion of all others, notwithstanding his learning and worldly shrewdness. Soldiers get a hard, severe look, overworked laborers constantly look tired, reporters look inquisitive, mathematicians look studious, judges become grave, even when off the bench; the man \vbo has bad domestic trouble looksf all broken up. An example of the ludicrous side of this subject is to see a third-class lawyer stalking around a police court looking wise as an owl. The business makes the' face, I say. There's the butchers face, the saloon-keeper's face, the ministerial face, the lawyer's face, the doctor's face, the hoodlum's face, nil so distinct each from the other and singly, that I seldom fail to recognize those callings showing throuch the faces. And what citv bdv o t cannot recognize a genuine farmer on the street as a farmer the moment ho sees him?? Herald of Health. Put castor oil on tho soles of yonr shoes, letting them absorb all they will; In several applications, and this will stop the creaking noise. From Kepnhlicnn Headquarters. Moravia, If. Y., May 5. 1837,?O. F. Wood-] ftard: I have beoij using Kemp's Balsam and,'" [ find It very effectual In relieving a cough; ivith which I have been afflicted of late. Onrj Irnggists tell me they sell more of this than any] jther cough remedy. I can cheerfully recoinnond it. Yours Truly, J. J. Pease, Editor Re-i yublican. At all druggists'. Large bottles, 50o tnd $1. The production of the silk manufactories of \merica now amounts to $60,000,000 a year. If Bnflerers from ConsnmpttoB, Scrofula, Bronchitis and General Debility will xy Scott's Emulsion of Cod i.iver Oil with Sypophosphltes, they will find immediate relaf and permanent bsnefit The Medical Profession universally declare it a remedy of the ireatest value and very palatable. P.eai: "I lave used Scott's Emulsion in several cases of Scrofula^and Debility in Children. Results nost gratifying. My little patients take it vith pleasure."?W. A. Qulbert, M.D., Snlis)ury,lll. ' A Radical-Cnre for Epileptic Fits. To the Editor?Please Inform your readers that I have a positive remedy for the above Darned disease which I warrant to cure the worst cases. So strong is my faith In Its virtues that I will send free a sample bottle and valuable treatise to any sufferer who will give me his P. 0. and Express address. Resp'y, H.G. ROOT. M. C.. 163 Pearl St.. New York. Bronchitis is cored by frequent small doses )f Piso's Cure for Consumption. Last Winter I was troubled so badly with rheumatism in my right shoulder and joints of my leg as not to be able to walk. I took Eood's Sarsaparills, and now I don't feel any aches or pains anywhere, and It not only stopped tbo soreness In my shoulders and Joints, bat make* me feel aa lively as a ten-year-old boy. I sell newspapers right in THX KTDDLX OT TUB ST71TFT. and standing on the cold stoneMln't no picnic. I can> tell yon." And if Hood's Saraaparllla cored me itcer-. tainly ought to be good for those people who don'N stand on the cold stones.' I can be seen every day in, the year at comer Tompkins nud DcKalb Avenues. W. W. Howabd, Brooklyn, H. Y. Hood's Sarsaparilla Bold by all druggists, SI; six for $5. Prepared only by & I. HOOD A CO.. Apothecaries, Ix>weil, Mao. IOO D ses One Dollar WWW^aCATARRH ELY'S CBEAI Bill | C0LD IN HEABELY BBQ8 fcJ^rren 8L. N. Y IFOR THE BLOOD. j Swift'a Spociflc has cured me of a malign n?nt breaking otlt on my leg. which caused Intolerable pain. It woe called Ecaem* by the doctors?four of whom treated me with no relief. I candidly confess that I owe my present good health to S. & 8.. which In my estimation is Invaluable as a blood remedyMiss Julia DaWrrr. zm N. 10th St.,-St. Louis, Ma Our baby when two months old, was attacked with Scrofula, which for a longtime destroyed her eyesight entirely and caused Us to despair or her Hfc. The doctors failed to relieve her, and we gave Swift's Specific, which soon cured her entlrely.snd she is now bale and hearty. E. V. Dklk. Will's Point, Texas. Scrofula developed on my daughters welling and lumps on her neck, we gave her Swift's Specific, and the result was wonderful and the cure prompt.' S. A. Djubmojo). Cleveland, Tenn. t2r~Send for book giving history of Blood Diseases and advice to sufferers, mailed ft ca THE swirr sPEcmo cq.. ^rawu o, auguus ua. MONEYwnini We offer on easy way to make hundreds of dollars between now and July 1st, 1889. We pay Good Wages, K/OfTfe as'a free present besides offering to the person who shall do tne best work for us; $400 to the second, and so on down. These prizes are EXTRA compensation to the best workers. A good chance to pay off that mortgage, secure a home, or start housekeeping. CURTIS PUBLISHING CO. PHILADELPHIA. PA. Here It Is! IVant to learn all about a Aa Hotso I How to Plek Out a 1 3oodOne? Znowimperfeo-^rf^ 'V Lions and so Guard against . \ TV FVaud 1 Detect Disease and /t" ' Effect a Cur# when same Is / \ 4< / \ xwslble? Tell the age by # \ / Y the Teeth? What to call the Different Parts of tho Lnlmal? How to Shoe a Horse Properly ? All tht md other Valuable Information can be obtained by reading oar 100>PAGE ILLUSTRATED. HORSE BOOK, which we will forward, pojt ?old, on receiptor only 25 contain stainpa, , BOOK PUB. HOUSE. 134 Leonard St., New York City " CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH" DcyyvonvAi phis hlfll IIV nih I IMBSV jT^&K 2sd csoss IUiI0HI5 B2AKD- A 7Tt!s\ Orlwlnil, best, onlj genuine end &Jf\ yjynY reliable pill ferule. Jicter7?ll. Aek for CX (cheater'a t'ngliah GC JR>\ -v .^LSfcjv.d Diamond Brand, lo red me_ LJ '^v PJATI uJlle 6mm. eealed with blue rib- \wBy 3r ^lJIboD. At Druggleta. Accept \/ / ,fD no other. All pllle In pwte- v W boarl boxes, pink wrappers, ire a dungcri ^C* O oni counterfeit. Scod 4c. (stamps; for \ /Zj pertlculare and "Kellef for hurtlee,* in V__? letter, br return mall. 10,000 tee tins onJule from f ^OiES'bobive oied tbem. Seme Paper. Chichester Chemical Co.,Madison Sq.,Phils.,I'a. WHY WEAR EYE-GLASSES? DR. YEAZIE'S CUKES Eye Restorer^^^^^p^ W??K RESTORES DISEASES) SIGHT EYES. , At all Druggists. Send for Circulars. EYE RESTORER CO.. - ALBANY. N. Y. : 1 n/rrxr w/ivTP/n Wo want jt few( | UUJi.1 fV XJ.JL1 A JUl/i mom 'jpjwi uion | 28 years of ago and over, to canvass for a fnll lina it nursery stock. Onr stock Is guaranteed flrstdass ana trcte to name as ordered. We givo STEADY EMPLOYMENT ind hire on SALARY or COMMISSION is preferred. Address (stating ace and enclosing <tamp) H. W. FOSTER A CO.. Nurserymen, Geneva. N. Y. (IIECT MIKIP VT HALF PRICK. Snrt ancci mUOlU wr. in stamps for 160-p?pv catalogue and n?w Laurel Waltzes Valentines In new le'Inns and Fancy Envelopes mailed for inc. each. W. T. DODOE. Stationer. 1T6 Broadway. S. Y. City. UntlC STUDY. BooJc-kecpinc.BnrlncssFr.rnis. M UmC Penmanship, Arithmetic, Short-hand, etc., II thorouKhly taught by MAIL. Circulars free. Brynni'a College; 457 Main St.. Buffalo, K. Y. DImSm'a DiiL Grcat English Gout and Dlall $ lillSa Rheumatic Reiruidy. Ovnl ltox, 341 round 14 Pills. l/~h ? rrtATlD 18ay | JACOBS Oil ONCE CURED NO RELAPSE. OHiIM Statement, 1882. Odsinal statenesT, 18BL R?n?w?d Wot., 1881. Btnovtd Hot. 1, 1188. *7,r H. WaU, 514 X. Hlll,AppoaisttoxOo.,Vs., v?n wriwt: "IM mvU ran* Z V \ ' ; loTonl ytiri; Eoftrid tcut4 S 9*9 w worst; ?mlB?nl months In both kntes; so b.dconld up expartadtoUvaforhour.; ?* !? Appli* St Jarubbad ull or?r with St cob* Oil at aifht; amch Zaeoba Oil; ftrit appllea- rallarad in tha antnlnu. tlon raUarad; second ra- Triad It again; pain 1*3moTtd pain; eoatlaaed \j uit aa entirely. Z um ourad aa; no relapse have had aerator* of pain la bur jraars; do aa auch slues. 1 aa completely wort aa arar." cured." at ssvBoisn a wD dealsm mmnm. THl CHARLES A. VOQELER CO.. Btlttmore. Hd. DIAMOND VERACURA FOR DYSPEPSIA. A POSITIVE CUBE FOR INDIGESTION AND ALL Stomach Troublea Arising Therefrom. Tour Druggist or General Dealer will get VeraCur*for pout/ not already in stock, or it will be tent by mail on receipt of 38 eta. (8 boxes $1.00) in stamps. Sample ?gn< on receipt eflcent stamp. The Charles A. Vogelcr Co., Baltimore, Hd. TF you. WISH A/->, _T^?a REVOLVER jrarcbase one of tha cele- iffio aftsC < bra ted SMITH & WE880N fS^PglgS. arms, The finest small arms ((\V\f Afw\ ever manufacturrd and the \V }) )j Am! AiteJM rrf all nvnerfr vt SJ "V*R > A1AO* UiVJW VI* ?MA UAJ/V* bC. 'S | Manufactured in calibres 33,38 and 44*100. Sin- Ml elo or doable action. Safety Hommerleat and ?2E3' Target models. Constructed entirely of best qual. Ity wrought steel, carefully Inspected for workmanship end stock, they are unrivaled- for flnlsb, durability andaccuracy. Do not be deceived fay cheap malleable cast-iron Imitation* which are often sold tor tho genuine article and: are not only unreliable, but dangerous. Tho SMITH k WESSON Bevolvera are all stamped upon the barrels with firm's name, address and dates of patents and are guaranteed perfect In every detail. Insist upon naving the genuine mrticle, aad If your aealer cannot supply you an order sent to address below will receive prompt and careful attention. Descriptive catalogue and prices furnished upon appuwtion. sMiTH & WESSON, tyMcntlon this paper. Springfield, Ma**. Wonderful BERMAN DICTIONARY m OF 624 PAGES FOR ONLYjONE DOLUR.wT^U) A FUST-CLASS DICTIONARY ^rC AT VERY SMALL PRICE. Vit It gives English Words with the German Equlva lente and Pronunciation and German Words with English Definition* Sent postpaid on receipt of gl READ WHAT THIS MAN 8AY3; - Sat.em. Mass., May si, 111], JSook Pub. House, 131 Leonard St.: The German Dictionary la received and I am much pleased with It. 1 did not expect to find such clear print In so cheap a book. Please send a copy to ?, and Inclosed find $1 for tame. M. M. Haskell. Address BOOK PUB. CO., 184 Leonard Street, New York City. I APHIS 10 ADA!! % WAGENTS WANTED! IVU iiannM raw T ^ 1000 Brewster1. Safety Beta Holders GIVEN AWAY to Introdace then. - Every hone owner bnyi from 1 toe. Llneenever under boree"* feot Send 28cts. Initsropstopsypostage and packing for Nickel Plated , SanplethataeUeforOBcenta. Address Brewiter Mfg. Co., Holly, Hfch. CONSUMPTION I haveapontlTB remedy for the above disease; byltsuse thousands of cane of the worst kind and of long atandliu have been cored. Bortrongtamyfaithtnlteefflcaorthrt i ?<ll ~ tnirtJKm- wl>K . treatise on thl* disease to any sufferer. Giro Entrees an I P. 0. a/tdreaa. T. A. 8LOCUM. M. a, lM PearlSt, N. If SALESMAN liil J-eeut stamp. Ware 183 Par Day. Panaanm poritioo. Xo DC3tA.i iniwerftl. Money adrtLCcd ror v&m kAvrtirinm *u Centennial Manufacturing Co., Cincinnati. <?hio.' SOLlAERSi^pS McsCormick & Bona.Waahlngton,P.O. ?Clfldnnatl, O. is YOUR FARM FOR SN.ES&&&I If bo address Cubits & Weight, 233 Broadway, n. Y. ?9? ? : Nnen Lire at he ma anl'makc mora mousy workfn j n?T ni fh in Went at anything else In the world. Either ae*. Coatlj outfit rata. Terms jraxa. Address, Tbd* a Co., Auforta, Maine. ' Kcgt^ CAUTION JWir?isr?s ?uiu uj juur ueuiur, wr * Colored Maps of each State am Also Maps of every The letter press gives the squ settlement; population ; chief cit of officials and the principal posti farms, with their productions ai manufactures and number of en of each Foreign Country; form c cipal products and their money v size of army; miles of railroad ai cattle, sheep, and a vast amount < EVERY NEWSPAPERS All newspaper readers arc < reference in order to intelligently perusing, l^fcmrprising how n away in th^^^B|^hQ^ the chief HHfi fXcr^HnB8 IjRVnnk (u.\Q,La^HRflH MUn^Bk OF ?aiMHB I hu do?? vran * e??d th.nV3| I , known remw^HH For SPR AINS, BRUISES, BACKACbHBH PAIN In the CHEST or SIDES, HEiJBM ACHE, TOOTH ACHE, or any other wHH TERN AL PAIN, * few appltcatlojS^^^H like mailt, cousins the PAIN STANTLY STOP. BHH For CON6E8TIONS,INFLAiaLMnC^nfl9 SORB THROAT, BRONCHITIS. CO?fl in the CHEST. RHEUMATISM, NEHBG RALOIA, LUMBAGO, SCIATICA. PA?^B| In the Small jf the Back, etc,, snore e^H tended, longer contlnatd asd repcate^H applications are . neceaaary to effect iH| cure. ' B All INTERNAL PAINS (ft the BowtliV or Stomach), CRAMPS, SPASMS, SOUR STOMACH. NAUSEA, VOMITINO, HEARTBURN, D IA HRHffi A, COLIC, B FLATULENCY, FAINTING SPELLS, are B relieved Instantly and QUIC KL Y I CURED by taking Internally M direct- I ed. Sold by Drag glata. Price, 80c. I m nuiiu'A 1 HA II IT n I V I PI LIS 01 fiftilLimttBlftiiiyj For the cure of all. di?orilrr? of (B STOMACH, LIVER, BOWELS, KlJHBK KEYS, BLADDER, NERVOUS DISE/fl ES, LOSS Of APPETITE, HEADACH^^K CONSTIPATION, COSTIVENKSS^-ULS^HHj GESTJtON, BILIOUSNESS, PEVEbT^ INFLAMMATION of the BOWELS,PILES and all derangements of the Internal * Vlscerai Purely Vegetable, containing no mercury, minerals,, or DELETEBe IOl'S DRUGS. 4 PERFECT DIGESTION will be uo- I compllsbed by taking RAD WAV'S PILLS# By so doing DYSPEPSIA, fl SICK HEADACHE, FOUL STOMiCnH BILIOUSNESS, will be aroided, aJ^HB the food that is eaten contribute il^H nourishing properties tor the support o^HS the natural waste of the bod jr. SOO^H BY ALL, DRUGGISTS. Prlea M?. per^| box, or, on receipt of price, will be sent bp mail. 5 boxen for One Dtillnn. 11ADWAY & CO., 33 Warren St., W. Y, ay* B-3 * * GRATEFUL-COMFORTING. EPPS'S COCOA BREAKFAST. "By a thorough knowledge of the natural laws which govern the operation* of digestion and nutrition. and by a careful oppllcation of the fine properties of well-eelfcted Coooa, Mr. Em* has provfded our breakfast table# with a delicately flavoured bev erogo which may save us many heavy doctors' bllla. It js by the Judldoua nee of such areolee of diet that aconsututlon may be gradually built up until atrong enough to re slat every tendency to djaeaee. Hon dreda of aubtlo maladies are floating around uanady to attack wherever there la a weak point We Blay escape many a fatal shaft by keeplngonr?elvea Wall forttfled with pure blood ond a properly nonrlahed frame."?Otvu Service Gazette. Made aimpiy wltn boiling water or milk. Sold only in half-pound tlna, by Grocera, labelled thru: JAMES BP PSSc. CO., Homoeopathic Chemista, London. England. , MAKE CHICKENS ' PAY. If yon know how to projierly care ?/\ (firing the experience of a prsotl- Jmf ? cal Poultry Ralsor-nfta-afr imi. >/) teur, but a. man working for d?-/ V % larsandcente?during a period ofi" ..T * rears. It teaches you how Detect and Cure Diseases: to Peed for Em and also for Fattening; IK i wMcfiFowls to Bare for Breeding J\ Purposes: and everything, .ndeeu. ,1-4 \ yon should know cn this subject to male It jwflt able. Bent postpaid for UO?. BOOK Py5 BOUSE, 134 leonardStreeiill, Y. CUy ^ 10c. Pm^HS.10. ?0m. 0. r.XMmr.WWt IB* 8?. ??>? >. , PEERLESS PTES . L. DOUGLAS I SHOE GENTLEMEN. 13.00G NE?HAND3E^D8HQK. *'' Wi50 P^Lira FAimEK^SHOE. . 12.30 EXTRA VALUE CALK 8HOE. 12.23 WORKWOMAN'S SHOE. 13.00 and 81.75 BOYS' SCHOOL SHOES. All made In Congress, Button and Lace. , L. DOUGLAS ! SHOE uafd?.r... Material. Beat Style. Best Fitting. has the W. L. DOUGLAS SHOES without aped on bottom, put lilm down as a fraud. If not lte W. L. DOUGLAS, BROCKTON. MA8B. "SHE NEGLECTED AH OPPORTOUTI JIB SHOWS IT IN HER FiCE. fron't you be equally foolish, but send at once for the CHEAPEST ^ FAMM ATLAS KNOWN. ONLY 25 CENTsfl 191 Pages, 91 Foil-Page Mapl J Territory in the United States. I Country in the World. I are miles of each State; time of H ies; average temperature; salary .1? Hi masters in ttie stare; numuci ui h id the value thereof; different Hi lployes, etc., etc. Also the area H f government; population; prin alue; amount of trade ; religion^^B id telegraph; number of ho|^^^H of information valuable to^^^^^H mould constantly f understucMSHB^^^^RH^H inch