t'OB 1'AUJi AND tiAIKDlR. Remove the Calf Early. a M. M. writes: It is great cruelty to allow a calf to suck its dam several weeks ani thea remove it. The cow often grieves for her young for many days, as shown by her moans and at tempts to reach it. The calf also has become attached to its dam, and is in continual misery because it can not reach her. Besides, it is. a loss to the owner to have the calf and cow fretting, instead of quietly producing milk and growth. If the calf is removed early, the motherly instinct is not developed, and she pays little attention to it. The calf also learps to drink more readily than if it first learns to depend on suck ing its dam. It is humane and econom ical to feed the calf from tha start Thresh'ng Oati by Hand. Some good farmers are readopting the old method of threshing their oat crops with a flail, 'leaving the work to be dano in tho winter, and thus furnish ing employment to men who would otherwise be idle. There are sorao other advantages in this practice not in cluded in the cmploymsnt it give3 to labor in winter. The freshly threshed oat straw is rcalily eaten by stock, and there are usually enough light oats left in it to make it passably good feed. It is better to leave light oats in the straw than to put them in the bin among the ihreshed grain, for unless the grain is carefully graded some of these light oats will go in the seed and help to deterio rate the crop. "With hand -threshed oats in cold weather there has been no dan ger that vitality of seed has been im paired by heating. While the oat is in the sheaf any dampness in the grain is absorbed by the chaff, and as the head is bulky and porous it dTies out with out injury. Oats threshed by machine as soon as harvested, and then dumped, several Hundred bTshels, perhaps, in one bin, are pretty sure to"heat. It would be better in such case if the seed were entirely spoiled instead of having its vitality impaired. The crop cotne3 up weak, and if the season is not every way favorable it is a partial failure at the best, ani this makes a larger proportion of poor oats for seed the subsequent sea son. American Cultivator. " Hoir to Build a Cistern. The following directions for construct ing a cistern are worthy of all accepta tion. "We find them in an Indiana pa per. "In the fl.-st place, there is no economy in digging a small cistern. Make your cistern not less than eighteen feet deep, jug shape, twelve to fourteen feet across at the widest place. Cement, as usual, on brick wall. Let it dry pretty thoroughly; and, if necessary, put down a fire of charcoal in an iron ing furnace, or something of the kind, to help dry it. AVhcn the cement is suffi ciently dry, give the whole surface a coat of boiled oil and yellow ochre paint, adding a little Japan drier any good painter will know the proportion. This coating should be put on with a good, stiff whitewash brush. Let this stand until quite dry enough to wash off. After it has become safely dry let tho water in until about half full; thea in a few days have it pumped out to take the taste of paint out; and then you can depend upon these great points: Your cistern will never leak; the water will never become hard by coming in con tact with the osment ; the water will never ooze i;i from the outside soil; there will be no insects or animal culae in it The oil paiDt finally makes the cement wall as hard as glas?, and perfectly impervious to any leak age either from inside or outside. I have never built a cistern in any other way; have never had a leaky, one; nor has the water ever become the least bit 'hardened' from the cement, but it i3 always clear as " crystal" As for clearness, no doubt the ordinary pre cautions would be necessary to pre vent tho admission of impurities from above.- Commercial Gazette. Stabled Anlm-ls. Farmers who pride themselves upon their nice horses and cattle are not aware, perhaps, that a dark stable is a source of serious discomfort, to a horse especially. Any one knows how pain ful it is to the eyes to be suddenly forced to face the light after being shut up in darkness, and yet a horse is sub jected to this very pain evefy time he i3 taken from t dark stable into the light Besides this, a dark stable is seldom a dry one. Sunshine and air are both necessary to the healthfulness of a stable. In the matter of bedding you cannot be too careful Give tho animals plenty of clean straw or leaves from the woods. Thev will then re- quire less work in tho way of groom ing than if allowed to ho down in filth. Observe regularity in watering as well is feeding. It i3 a good plan to water before feeding in the morning, as tho horses have been eating dry hay through the night, and are likely to need water before eating their morning's meal. ' Cows, too, are often rendered un. pleasant obj?cts to look at for the want - of cleanliness in - their stables. Their loats should be as clean and glossy as ' :hat of a horse, and would be if proper ittention were paid their bedding. In Switzerland cows are groomed with as much care as horses,, and their fine, sleek appearance and glossy coats as much a matter of pride to their owners. A hasty scratching with a curry-comb is highly appreciated by cows, as may be told by the earnestness with which they ale often secc to rub themselves against, trees and posts, although much of that itching with which cows are troubled may be relieved by merely keeping them well supplied with bedding. Balti more Sun. Farm aid Garden Noted. Salt plentifully sprinkled on the Icy doorstep will have a better and cleaner effect than ashes. It pays to keep eyes and cars open for J the new developments of agriculture. Our fathers didn't know it neither ao their sons. - All old, worthless trees had better bo cut oat of tho orchard and used for fire wood. The orchard will look better in tho spring, and it will pay. "When butter is gathered in the churn in granular form it is never ovcrchurned. Pounding it after it is in a lump or large mass is what ovcrchurns it. To wholly abandon a staple . crop or product because it is temporarily unprof itable is to lose one's hold on the market when it becomes profitable again. Cows fed on meal mixed with straw cut and moistened, sayj Prof.. Arnold, give more milk and considerably richer, than when fed on the best hay alone. Large profits do not always depend upon large crops. 0 10 m:iy grow an extraordinary large crop, but the ex pense of so doing may balance the re ceipts. , Lay in a stock of grocn food for win ter uso by cutting and curing short gra's and clover, or raising a lot of mangel beets or turnips. Eisilag, cabbage, late cut grass, rye or barley is good for this purpose. In this country nearly three dollars' worth of milk, cream, butter, and cheese together are sold and consumed to every dollar's worth of beef. Tho market for dairy products ii practically inexhaustible. Sheep here do not pay as great profits as thosa, in England. Everything de pends on - thd mode of management. Our farmers" compel sheep to forage, while in England they arc treated as carefully as cattle. Old leather contains a considerable percentage of ammonia compounds, which are very slowly soluble. A good way to dispose of old boots, therefore, is to bury them at tho foot of an apple tree. Tho necessity of t keeping sheep on dry footing should not be forgotten. A yard in which sheep are kept should bo one where there is plenty of drainage.! Wet footing is one thiug that shcip will not stand. A Maine correspondent of tho New England Farmer dilates on the utility of the humble wheelbarrow on the farm, but considers it, as usually made, en tirely too heavy. It should bo strong but light, so as to require no unneces sary strength to handle it. During tho past six yean the averago yield of wheat per acre has been greater in Xew England than in any othar por tion of the country, showing 15.1 bush els against 11.9 for ths whole country, taking one year with another, and 11.6 in the great northwest wheat region. A cleanly kept cow. will yield sweet milk, with an agreeable, sweet odor, and quite free from any taint or injuri ous quality whatever. That such milk is very rare is simply because such cows are rare, and this is the reason why the very best purely flavored butter is rare too. The growth and quality of wool, says an exchange, u always an important item as regards the profit ia keeping sheep, and if we allow the sheep to fall into a low condition in" the fall, when wool is making good growth ia order to protect the animal during the winter, not only the quality but quantity will be affected. Small eggs are often caused by fowls getting too fat "When you know it to be a fact that the hen is getting old, tha probability is this is the cause of the small sized eggs and the diminution of the quantity. If she is allowed to go on you will be rewarded for your good-will in keeping her by eggs the size of mar ble, eventually. A hatchet comes in play ia such cases. Most farmei j do not attach the value they should to the milk after the cream has been taken-off. There are possibili ties with milk and eggs beyond the vision of the average farmer. It should be the aim of every' man who get his living out of the soil to strive to add to its productiveness. By attempts ia this direction the productiveness of "Kirby ifomestead" has bean doubled by Mr. Curtis within ten years. In working on this line the income from tho dairy has been largely increased. A Dog Who Wore Spectacles. A-n optician I was tjp'd, some time ago, the following remarkable story of a Kentucky dog that had become almost totally Hind. The sound of the horn no longer aromed his blood, and while the other dogs of tho home went forth eagerly to the hunt, the old afflicted animal remained behind, sad' and dis couraged. While at play one dly some children, who knew the poor brutes infirmity, placed, upon his nose, a pair of common spectacles, the glasses, of which hap pened to bo very strong. Tho dog at once awoke from his stupor and showed, his pleasure in unmistakable signs. Tho glasses were thereupon adjusted in tho best possible moaner so as to remain on the rejuvenated, animal's nose. The next morning he started off to tho hunt with the other dogs, and soon it was he who led the pack. But unfortu nately his spectacles brushed up against a bush and were tora from their resting place. The old dbg allowed the others to pass hirfl, and then-? picking, up the glasses he carried thin to his master to have them readjusted. The dog is now a confirmed spectacle-, wearer, so much so that when any one attempts to remove his goggles he be comes very savage, Jeweller's Weekly. (JLAIM AM tLUlUui. N. Varole, a surgeon and phy icnn of Bologna, is said to htve dLcovcrjd the optic nerves about 153S. A large white swa l flew down Wil liam Henderson's chini icy at Swansea and put out tho kitchen fire. The first CarhtLii church.in E mlanl is said to have been erecte I at Glaston bury, Somerset, about A. D. CO. An Amati violin, whiclt originally belonged to Louis XIV., ha recently been sold at Bui s-Pesthfor 700. There is a mountain of coal in Wy oming which has been burning for thirty years. It sends up dense volumes of smoke. The first book coatuniTj musical characters was mm I ia 1495 from the press of the celebrated "Wynkea do Worde." An object six feet high cannot bo seen at a distanco of 10 miles, owin to the curvature of the earth, which is said to be seven inches to tho mile. , The biggest tree in Ci'afornia and it is a monster indeed :s the ''Keystone State" in the Calaveras grove. It is 325 feet high and 45 feet in circumference. A goat with a red beird inhabits certain islands of the Grecian Archipel ago. It is said to bo found nowhere else in the world. A specimen has re cently been captured and sent to Berlin. In Salt Lake City the houses of the Mormons all have two doors, even the smallest of them. Some have also two wood sheds and two wells. A home that begun with only one room ii fre quently lengthened out room by room and door by door as new wives arc taken. Among the gorgeous, appointments of Robert Garrett's million-dollar mansion i in Baltimore is a bathing pool modelled after the iamous bath of an old French king. It is constructed of silver and Tennessee marble, and the water is con ducted to it through brass pipe3 and gold-plated faucets. An express messangcr on the St. Paul met with a painful and peculiar accident at Kipon, Wis., recently. He had a gold ring on one of his fingers, and as he attempted to swing himself from tli3 car to the ground, tho rin caught ia the door ia such n maiuer as to pull the i finger completely off. For tho fifth year a commou crow has ! come with the lint snow to the h :ne of j a correspondent of tin London Field. He will take a piece of fat from tho hand. There was a heavy fall of snow on December 11th, and the biid then appeared for the first time this winter, received his breakfast, and departed. He returned again with the first sevcra weather. The Learned Laborer. I am indebted for the following anec dote to Mr. Xasmyth, who is not only a great inventor and scientist, but an ex traordinary repertory of anecdote. It relates to Dr. Adam, late rector of the High school of Edinburgh, the author of "Roman Antiquities" and other works. Dr. Adam, in the intervals of his labors as a teacher, was accustomed to spend many hours in the 6hop of his friend Boogc, the famous cutler, some times grinding knives and scissors, at other times driving the wheel One day two Englhh gentlemen attending tho University called upon Booge (fbi he was an excellent Greek and Latin scholar), in order that he might constnn for them some passage in Greek which they could not understand. On looking at it Booge found that the passage ''tickled" him; but, being a wag, he said to the students, '"Oh, it's quite simple 1 My laboring man at the wheel yonder will translate it for you. John !" calling to the old man, "come here a moment, will jonf The apparent laborer came forward, when Booge showed him the passage in Greek which the students wished to have translated. The old man put oa his spectae'e. examinad tho passage, and proceeded to give a learned ex position, in the course of which he cited several scholastic authors in support of his views as to its proper translation. Having dona so, he returned to the cutler's wheel. Of course the stuienti were amazed at the learning of the laboring man. They said they had heard much of the erudition of the Ed inburgh tradesmen, but what they had listened to was beyond anything they could have imagined. Smiles's Anec dotes. Dr. Talmage's Study. The study of the Rev. T. DeWittTal mage is on the second floor of his Brook lyn home. It has plenty of sunlight, but other than that is, not an attractive place.. The floor is of bare hard wood, and the walls are dead white. A big table is drawn up by the window, and on this are strewn letters, newspapers, books, papers, pens, and all the usual litter of a man who writes. A stiff backed cushionless chair stands by the table. Around the walls are rows of book-shelves and files of- newspapers. "My workshop," Dr. Talmage calls it, and the workshop of a hard-working ; man it is. The manager of a large news paper syndicate says that Dr. Talmage's sermons are the most eagerly sought for, tho most read, and command the high.-' est price of those of any preacher fa the world. Harper's Weekly. Durulej's Soft Thing. , "Yes," said Dumley, who has recently received a government appointment, "Ive got a mightj,soft thing." -1 "How long' asked Robinson, "can you keep this soft thiag, do you sup pose?" "I can keep it as long as I don't lose my hoad," replied Dumley confidently. Epoch. Wonders of Electricity. The Electric Club, of New York, was thrown opeu recently. .' At .the very threshold the visitor was dazzled with a brilliant display of electric light, and as his foot pressed a concealed iever in one of the steps, ; the door flew open. Inside, of course, every room was lit by electricity. Electric designs are used in the frescoes, and a maze f wires arc con cealed in floors and vceirlngs and ermits a member at any moment to produce weird displays for visiting friends. Elec tricity runs a stove in the house on which steak may be cooked.. Electricity locks and unlocks the cashier's safe, and elec tricity is the invisible musician which operates the piano. Electricity blacks the visitor's boots. A feature of the en tertainment was the presence of an im proved long-distance telephone, over which the guests conversed with friends in Boston, Philadelphia, Albany, . and other comparatively adjacent cities. Meeting of Suffragists. A notable gathering of women will be held in New York city under the aus pices of the National Woman's Suffrage Association on March 25. The occasion will mark the fortieth anniversary of the suffrage movement. There will be pres ent at this international council repre sentatives from France, Germany, Den mark, England and Finland. It is ex pected that among the half dozen from Great Britain Helen Taylor, the step daughter of John Stuart Mill, will be present. "Now Mary Ann," said the teacher, addressing the foremost of the class in mythology, "who was it that supported the world on his shoulders?' "It was Atlas, ma'am." "And who supported Atlas?" "The look doesn't, say. but I guess his wife supported him." At a b ill given in Paris, by the society of "Tailors and Tailorcsses," most of the men wore dress coats, white vests and varnished pumps, but others aimed jit originality, and appeared arrayed in sky blue "claw-hammers," knee breeches of white silk and cerulean stockings. Happiness is an art, and we have to learn how to le happy, just as we have to learn how to le good. Happy Homes. . Much has been written and said about how to make home happy. The moralist una the preacher have hackneyed this theme until it w ould seem noiliiiifi more remained to be said. But the philosophers have gone far out i the.r way to account for the prevalence of ill-sorted couples and unhappy homes, and have over looked the chi.f cause. Most of the unhappi nessof married life tun t.e traced directly to ihos) functional derangement to which wo-, men are suject. In nine cases out of ten the irritable, dissatisfied and unhappy wife ia a sufferer from aoine "female complaint." A trial of Dr. Werce's Favorite Prescription will produce more domestic happiness than a mill ion sermons or philosophical treatises. It cures all those peculiar weaknesses and ailments in cident to .women. It is the only medicine sold by drupgfcts, under a positive guarantee from the manufacturers, that it will give satisfac tion in every case or money will be refunded. Sec guarantee printed on wrapper enclos ug bottle. Since the War. farm property in Illinois has fallen off J 200,000,000. ronaimipiiau Surely Cured. To the Editor: Please inform your readers that 1 have a positive remedy for the above named disease. By its timely use thousands of hopeless cases have been permanently cured. I bhall be glad to send two bottles of my remedy free to any of your readers who have con sumption if they will send me their Express and P. O. address Hesjiect fully, T. A. SLCX UM, M. C, 161 l'earl St., N. Y. Newcastle, Cal., has a fig tree 8 1-4 feet in circumference, covering 2,500 feet of surface. Man wants but little here below, But wan" a that little strong. This is especially true of a purge. The aver age man or woman doea not precisely hanker for it, as a rule, but when taken, wishes it to be prompt, sure and effective. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Purgative Pellets leave nothing to be desired in point of efficacy, and yet their action ia totally f ree from any unpleasant symptoms, or disagreeable after-effects. Purely vegeta ble, perfectly harmless. The Merced irrigating canal, in California, has been opened. It is JJ7 miles long. Delicate Children, N a ruins Mothers.Overworked Men, and for all diseases where the tissues are wasting away from the inability to digest ordinary food, or from over work of the brain or bodv.all such should take Sc .it's EMt'VuONofPureCod Liver .Oil with Hypophosphites. "I used the Emulsion on a lady who was delicate, and threatened with Mills, S. C Father!! Your poor wear e4 wife losing sleep night after night nursing tho little one suffering from that night-fiend to children and horror to parents, choup, should have a bottle of Taylor's Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gem and Mullein, an undoubted croup preventive and cure for coughs, colds and consumption. "Countless thousands mourn" bepause they have not sent for a free pamphlet on Taylor's Hospital Cure for Catarrh, 2tH B'way, New Y ork. Dr. David Hosteller, of Pittsburg, Pa-, has $800,000 life insurance. Its thousands or cures are the best advertise ment tor Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy. The loas In the last Pennsylvania coal strike amounts to near $4,000,000; the miners lost half. Best, easiest to use and cheapest. Piso's Remedy for Catarrh. By druggists. fiOe. Rheumatism, Lumbago, Backache, Head ache, Toothache. CUBES neuralgia. Sore Throat, Swellings, Frost bites, Sprains, CUBES SdcltlCfl Bruises, Burns, Scalds, "Promptly and Permanently without Return of Pain. - . v . For Stablemen Stockmen, THE GREATEST REMEDY KNOWN FOR HORSE AND CATTLE DISEASE. Bold by Druggists and Dealer Everywhere. Tli Charles'A. Votreler Crf., Balto., VIA ELY'S CREAM BUM GirM relief at onoe for ' . 0LD in HEAD . 1. CURES CATARRH. Applv Balin into each nostril. IKly Brn., 835 Green wieh St,,N.Y. $230 Mr A MOXTH. Agmtt Wanted. 80 ban tell-tn-iirttnlmiiri the world. 1 iimDli fVee. Address J A Y BUOJXSuX, Detroit, itick. nCalClfltlC to soldiers a LiCtlalUnO calara. No I E. II. UELSTON fc C and Heirs. ueiiU for cir- fee unless successful. CO.p Washington, D. C fl1C BTCBT. B ook-lcp! ag, rnmanhlp,A nthmctic, rtUntb Shorthand, Jtc, thoroughly taurbt by mail. Cii r n tanfr-. BHKAHrs COLUM1B, W Bala S4 i afato. ft. X. Druuiu.us. it. pui ner in aucn goou Health ana tlesh, that I must say it is the best Emulsion 1 ever I.. P u'liiniit f Ii U.,k'. ' -CURES ... ill March -April May Are the months in which to pnrlfrthe blood, for at bo o her seasou ts the body ao susceptible to benefit from mod cine. The peculiar purifying and reviv ing qualities of Hood's Sarsaparilla are needed to ex pel disease aad fortify tbe system against the debili tating effects of mild weather. Ever year lncre: sea the popularity of Hood's Sarsaparilla, tot It is Just what people neei at this season. It Is the Meal spring medicine. If you have never tried it, do so Hood's Sarsaparilla 'Tor many months I auff red greatly. My whole system seemed to be be entirely run down, my am bition was gone, had pains In my back, and a feeling of lassitude which I could not throw off. 1 was treated unsucce sfully for kidney trouble. One day at by brother's I saw a ottle of Ho d's Sarsaparilla and determined to try It. Eefore the first bottle was taken I candidly s y I was relieved. " I have used the medicine off and on ever since, an! recommend it for kidney or liver complaints." Has. W. H. Strang, 937 Atlantic Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. Mood's Sarsaparilla Sold by all druggists. $1 ; six for 5. Prepared only by C. L HOOD CO., Apothecaries, lowell, Mass. I Ob Poses One Dollar EXHAUSTED VITALITY A Great Md'cal Work tor Young and Midd's-Aged Mn. KHOW THYSELF. Tl'Bl.lHfcl by l tie I'tAllOOY MEOI. CAl. INSTITUTE, No. 4 Bullfinch tft., lioaton, Man. WM. U. PARK lilt, ill. IK. Consulting fhyslt'Ian. More than one million uoples sold, it treats upon Nervout anl Pnvsk-al Debility. Premature Decline, Exhausted Vitality, Impaired "lKor. and Impur.tie of the Blood, ami the untold mUerles consequent thereon. Contains !KW ptie. substantial emboss d bin linf, full gilt. Warranted the best popular medical treatise published in the Ku-clish language. Price only l by mall, postpaid, and concealed in a plain wrapper. IUuBtratio impleree It you send now. Address a above. Same thU paper. t TRADE JOHN T. LEWIS & BROS., WARRANTED PURE White Lead, Red Lead, Litharge, Orange Mineral, Painters' Colors and Linseed Oil. CORRESPONDENCE SO l.H ITEI). Money Made Easily and Rapidly! REAI THIS AM TI1IXK IT OVER We want 100 men who have energy nd crit. We will Hive them situations in which tuey can make money rap. idly t h labor being light and employment all t he y ar rotind. Requires no capital or (treat eJncation. Some of oor best Mlosmen are country buys. Young; men or old will do. Remuneration is quick and snre. We have need for 1WI men within the next 80 days. Po not waste time! Do not wait till to-morrow ! Write to II. V. III'DCJINS & t:K,.,b.,i?,Sr.. 33 J. Brond Street. ATLANTA, MA. CUREDEAF KaaPaDMs perfectly Restore the H sarin e.wl-taw iM" sv coUu, or Injur la tfet aaiwa) rKS W S I Ma-awvprr- tt- annul. IbvMU, MnferlaMa, ai-ay frXhmrd dl.Ur.cUy. W. nrfer to Ifaow iftbim. writ.tor.Hracox.85X riv, cor. Mia 6t- Nf Vgtk, tat UiuuaUd book af anoii. WUMXm CURE FITS! When 1 say egnt l ao box moan 7 y "yw a time en thaa ham tham return if " I ?? for radical euro I ban mada tha diaeca of its, uriir vpviv- CALLING fcICttMlb3aliI-loas.tuay. arrant my remedy to com the worst cases. pca ethers have failed is no raason for not now Jf. enna. Send at oace for a treatiao and a Frea Botua of mr infallible romoOy. Giro Express and Post OfLe HERBRAND FIFTH WHEEL mSSK unnrovesnent. UEKBUANU CO., ir etuont. O. . ... ... . - ; l 3 St? H S m PURE ol S 5 l0 WHITE I 2 h. S ""The 0 NiY . ' A r Zm, The only medioiHe for wf)fft9fi! peculiar aiiipents, sold by dmgrgists. under a positive guarantee, from. the manufacturerfl, that it will give satisfactipn in every pase. or ni'wey WW bo refunded, is Da, PijTB.CK'9 Favorite Priscription. This guarantee has ieen printed on the fctfle-irFapperiv t'WtMmf $?!led 'out-fpy ur-ireB.'v , " " 1 " . THE OUTGaOWTH OP A VAST EXPERIENCE The treatment; of manr thousands of cases pf those chronte weaknesses and distressing aUments peculiar tq fc-males, at tho Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, If. has afforded Fas experience n nicely adapting and throughly ' Jesting , renwdiei for tbe ae of woroaa'0 pomJiar wmW - r. Fierce" Fror Ite Prescription i the outgrowth, or result, of this great and valuable experience. Thousands of testimonials, received A Boom To Woken. from patients and from physicians who have tested it in the more aggravated and obstinate cases which had batned their skill, prove it to be the most wonderful remedy ever devised for the relief and cure of suf fering women. It Is not recommended as a " cure-all," but as a most perfect Specific for woman's peculiar dueases. as a power mi. in vigoratiug toiilc, it imnarts strcnirth to the TfJMIf! I uterus, or womb and its lUHllfp I anocnaages, in particu v rhstla flVfltAm anil tn thn lar. vf uyerworxeu, "wom-ont," rua t down." aeomtatea teachers, milfipewi, . dfessmakers, geamr stresses, "sliop-giris," hbusekeepejiji. nursr ing mothers, ana teeW womea jgeaerauy. Dr. Pierce's Favorite PrescFinnon greatest earthly boon, being uaequaled a an appetizing cordial and restorative touio. It promotes digestion and assimilation of food, cures nausea, weakness of stomach, indigestion, bloating and eructations of gas. I A PnwPRnn I ff t VMI1 I Many tices women call on their family physicians, suffering, as they Imagine, one anroaer irom uvw or K.umes thev all Dresenx alike to LheuiBcl be DreaeribeB his Dills arid notions." disorder. The physician, ignorant-pf the patient gets nq tHJttar. put proDaoiy worse oy reason ti in? peiay, wrong treatment and consequent complications. A proper laedicine. like pR. Pikrce's jPAVaiTS PRBSCRryrtOK, mricted to tfte bajwr would have entirely removed the disease, thereby dis lielliilgr U (hoss 4i8treasiiig fm'pfo-ind iiwUi'-tintor i$tej$ f 'PmflrWT: ' - - - 3 Physicians Failed. Hsring exhausted the skill of fchre pbyBi? plana,! was eompletely discouraged, f&4 SO weak I could with difficulty cross tha room alone. I began taking Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription and using the iooal treatment reoommenoed in hfs 'Common Sense Medical Adviser.' -1 commenced to improve at once, In three months I was perfectly cured, and have bad no trouble sines, I wrote a letter to my family paper, briefly 'aentiontng how my health had been restored, and offering to send the full particulars to any one writing me for them, and enclosing a ttamrted-enwlovt forreplu. I have received over- four hundred letters." In reply. I have described my case and the treatment used, and have ear nestly advised them to 'do likewise.' From a great many I have received second letters of thanks, stating that they bad com menced the use ol ! Favorite Prescription. had sent the $1.60 required for the 'Medical Adviser,' and had applied the local treatment so fully and plainly laid down therein, and were much h - j . j. r lea nx trnnd i iirimrw t.4.. for which I too two ttle of ttravbritC lhrftptura,,' and BOW feeling like a diifxmrltc--aJi " " ' ff.fTrt a. . - Doctor wrttasi these- parts, using f our ana two c bottles of walk all I care to, and am In better health ve iu tun woria again, a owe it an to your r the -oolden Medical Discovery., also one and a half the 'Pumativa PolWa T ,wn An mo- Mb mwlA w mnA Hood'&Sarsaparllla is prepared fro u Sarsa-arlll Dandelion, Mandrake, Dock, Juniper Berries, and other well known vegetable remedies, in such a pecn liar manner as to derive the full medicinal value of aeh. It will cure, when in the power of medicine, scrofula, salt raettm, tores, boils, pim Iss, all humors, dyspepsia, biliousness, sic z heidache, indigestion, general debility,cataiTh,rheumatlsm,kidney arid U ver complaints. It overcomes that extrema tired feeling. Purifies the Olood "Seven years ag , while my little boy was playing In the yard, he was bitten by a spider. The pois-n enttre his blood, and sores aoon broke out about bis body; they Itched terribly an 1 cause him Intense suffei iug. Several times we succeed id in healing the 'sores up, but In spite of all we could do they would soon bi eak out again Finally e tried Hood's Saroa parilla, and he took one bottle and one-th rd of an other, when the sores disappeared. He has not a sore spot on him now, and I consider him perfectly cured." Wm. H. B. Wabd, Downingtoa, Penn. Sold by all druggists. $1 ; six for 3. Prepared only by C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass. I OO Poses One Dollar WELLS' HAIR BALSAM restore Cray Ilair to origi nal color. Ao elejfantdreea ini. softens and beautifies" Nogreasenor oil. A Tonic Restorative. Prevents hair coming: out; strengthens, cleanses aad Deals scalp. 60c. Druggists I. S. WILLS, JwmtCUj, I.J. ROUQHoNCATAnitH Only absolute. warot ehronle eases. Uneaualed tor Catarrhal throat complete eure affections, foul breatn, onenaive oaora, sore inraai, diphtheria, eold tn the bead. Ask for -Bocoh ojt Canaan.'7 ton. Prog. K. B. Wkua, Jersey City, S. J. LOOK YOUNG aslongasyoaean, pro. vent tenuency to wnn kles or aa-einsr of tho skin by amng- LEAURELLE OIL Removes and prevents Wrinkles, and rough ness of Kleb or skin ) preserves a youmrui, Dlumtx fresh condition of the features; ro- movea pimples, clears the complexion, mi only snbotance known that will arroit aotf pro vost loadrary to -rlaklat L pruRdlstsor .xp, B. 8. WII.Uk, rkcoiM, Jfnoy Ctly, . I. PHHADEH?HIA-Send stamp for Catalogue. J. P. STEVENS & DRO. JEWELERS. Atlanta, Ga, Sfjid rf t't'oqe. S5 is SS a 4ay. Samples worth f 1.90. FBBX. Lines not under the horse's feet, write Brewster Safety RHn Holder Co.. Holly. Mich. G O It U is worth Q 500 per lb. Pettit's Eye Salve is worth $1,000. bat is sold at ihe. a b ix by dealers. Knna ramies enleiii ktanip with JhS Shove TRIPS S1BK. hioTnave t ne "mm bhiwo". sena i't ' COPYBIGHT, 188T.J Af a soothlnsr 4U4 streurtbeiiiiig iiervl . " Favorite Prescription is uoe uajed and is invaluable in allaying and subdu inar nervous excitabil A SOOTB Nervixe. ity, Irritability, exhaustion, prostration, hysteria. siasms and other, distressing, nervous symptoms oommonly attendant upon functional and organio disease of the womb. It induces refreshing sleep and relieves mental anxiety and de spondency. Dr. Pierce Favorite Prescrip tion is a legitimate medicine, carefully compounded by an experienced and skillful physician, and adapted to woman's delicate organization. It is purely vegetable in its composition and perfectly harmless in its effects in any condition of the system. -"r In pregnancy, Fa- prite Prescription is tains common to J that condition. If its use is kept" up in the latter months of gestation, it go prepares " cauge Of ' Suffering, encourages his practice : Ffye rears nao 1 from uteriVie troii rlno. tA ST am A I .Snva-aaaj-ajjjav mm m TianlioiMera stATtS onAfao Atl flan. lutunuu ""5' uiseaao, anuincr iroia uervous exnaueiiun, ur prusi ration, anotner wun paui nere or tuere, ana in tnis way res and their easy-iroing and indifferent, or over-busy doctor. scDarate and distinct diseases, for which aiifeiiminflr them to be such. when, in reality, thev are all rn!v smnntomx cauHed bv some womb riMus, rru.. wnu-s; i wish ui iuiuiiu jy tnnb fmir hnttM ever was, for which I thank your medicines. I too. lPJi of the ' Favorite Prescription ' and ono bottle umDr0M he and four bottles of the ' Pellets.' All of 1 Tflet n disappeared. I do all my own work : am able to be on my feet all day. My friends tell me I never looked so well. . . " ry Send ten penis in stamps for Dr. Pierce's large, illustrated TtisTnijgpSges, paper pqyerp) on Plseaseaof jVomen, Address, Wrld Ispenaary Medical Awoetfttloiiy . No. 063 Main Street, Buttalo, N. T. than T ever expected to wonderful rnediolnes. W. L. DOUGLAS $3 SHOE. GENTLEMEN. The only fini calf $3 Se.iiulrno Shce in t .e world made without tacks or nails. A-t stylish and duri ble at those cos ina; 5 or $, an I hiving no lacks or nails to wrar the stocking or h -h t e feet, makes them as. comfortable and weli fitting as a ban I sewed shoe. Buy the oest. None genuine un less s'auiped on brt.ora "W. I Douglas $3 Shoe, warranted." W.I.. DOUOI. A8 84 SHOE, the original and only ban I kewet welt (4 shce, which equa s custom made shoe- eosting from $6 to $9. W. L. DOlfJIiAS 83.50 SHOE is unex celled for heavy wear. W. Ii. DOUG LIS 82 SHOE Is worn by all Boys, and i the best school snoe in the world. All the a'Kve e-itds are mvte In Cangress, Button and Lace. au4 If not s-ll by your dealer, wr:ts XVk U, DO I'M I. AS, II ocktrn, Nam. CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Use in tune. oia Dyuruggists. I believe Piso's Cure for Consumption saved my life. A. II. Dowell, Editor Enquirer, Eden ton, N. C, April 23, 188. The best Cough Medi cine is Piso's Cure iob Consumption. Children take it without objection. By all druggists. 25c. CURES WHERE ALL ELSE 1AILS. Beat Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Use id lime. rjoia u uruggwus. Painless Childbirth, Particulars of this wonderful book, and other valuable informal ion. sent on receipt of two-ceut si amp to cove mai ins.. I.ndv Agent wanted fur tliis fast selling boolt. Jtdiiresg J.. H. IlltlNJ, tlJI s,(ii DIaiw'a Dill Brett English Gout and mOll S I HIS. Rheumatic Remedy. Oval Bs. 34 1 rsana, 14 Pille. A. N. C Ine. '88. Is lie Best HwaterproofCoa! Ill' ErerHalB. -rrm nvrnbhereoaL ThA FISH BRAKD SLICKEItl raoor. ana win Keep yoa nry ui me naru f 'your stiirekeeper doe awrwstKt the system for delivery as to greatly lessen, and many times almost entirely do. away with the sufferings of that trjripg ordeal, - , "Favorlto Fre- CURES THE I po-e re for TKE Worst Gases. Miv tuna ikiynstxt.;4 and obstinate cases of leucorrbea, or M whites." excessive flowing at monthly periods, painful men struation, unnatural lupprepsion, prolan sus or falling of tbe womb, weak back, "female weakness," anteversion, retrover sion, bearing - down - sensations, cbronlo congestion, inflammation, and ulceration of the womb, inflammation, pain and tenderness in ovaries, accompanied with "internal heat." Favorite Frescrip- 1 tlon, when taken in fcon- D3 TKE I ncction with tbe use of Dr. uu ink I pierce's Golden Medical Dis IinVCV? I co very, and small laxative M'? I doses of Dr. Pierce's Pur- Dnllnt. T1o T - Pills), cures Uver, Kidney ap'd BJaddei- disi- blood teinMfand abolishes cancerous and scrofulous hdtnors" from the eygrPfn; from dyspepsia, another from heart disease. until large bills are made. The suffering oxysms, or spasms, and periodical recur rences pf severe headache, but since I have been UBng ypnr 'Fayprife Prescription' I -3 hi II JK1 Msg Mr (2aJ El 13 R9 aauiMttftratlnmift to A. J. lOWKK-ZUMmmomei., isiiMon. jij" K1WMM MM have had none frf these, l also nan wpran ppaipiainf pg pad that J eould noTwalk fwo blocks wftroul tbe port severe pain, but WreThad taken your KvWttf Ippescilption ' tw IPPPtbs. f could walk all over the city without iaconvenienee . All my troubles peenTto be leaving me under the benign influeppe pf your medicine, and J now feci smart eir than for years before, My physS. told me that I eoiiJanot be cured, and therefore yon win please accept my everlasting tbanks for what you have done f or in&mdn God bless yon in yow good works," ater. she writer ."ItjlU four year since 1 toot : your 'Fa vorite Prescription,' and I have had so return of tbe female trouble I had then." .... Well as I Erer Vraa.-Mrs. John Sttwabt, of Jhiewa . T7T,, ij. .4 r i a r,i that 1 am as cu aa m. bv 7rvggUt9 tbe Wort

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