FARM AND GARDEN. Poultry Items. Bran and shorts moistened with water or buttermilk should con>titute the morn* ing feed of every flock of laying hens. Nothing affords a woman more satis faction than administering to the wants of a slender pocket-book. With a flock of fowls intelligently cared for she has a power in her hand. The best drug for poultry is carbolic acid. Get a pint of the crudest for fifty cents, put one ounce in one gallon of water, and sprinkle it with a broom all over the chicken-house and its furniture once a month. Ducklings—the young quacks—that are not allowed to run to poods where frogs and tad-pools abound, must have meut. Unlike chickens, milk will not suffice. The duck will not thrive on an entire vegetable diet. Sitting hens should not be fed while They need all the exercise they are likely to get. Too con tant sit ting makes them of bird disposition and dithcult to manage when they come off with brood, iiggs will rtand a wide range of temperature without injury. Winter Food for Swine. • i Now, while we would not be under stood as saying that pumpkins, any more than mangelwurt/.els or other root crops, are equal to corn as winter food for hogs, yet we do say th t when fed to growing hogs, along with corn, either of such crops is better than all corn for the complete development of the aninal. They are the next best sub titute for grass—the best we get can in winter—and should be more extensively r. ised. Not that when fe i aloe at any season of the year they can be made to take the place 0> corn, for theycontaiu to > l.ttle of the | fat and flesh firming constituents to make a comp ete ration of the animal; but as winter food for growing hogs they are giand adjuncts to graiu leed of any kind, as well as a most excellent 1 correct.ve of the bowels. The stomach of a pig under six months old has not J the digest ve capacity to assimilate har monious development of form. As well ! might we expect ycarlin : calves, win tered on straw, to develop into propel form. They may live ou it and grow plenty of j launch, and that is all, but there is not nutriment enough in such food to keep up the animal heat, without which there can be no complete de clop anent of form. Like pigs confined tc grass or vegetable diet there is bulk 1 enough and to spare in food, but it is I not composed of such constituents as 1 will meet the demands of nature in the i full development of the carcase On the other hand, pigs as well as calves fed on grass alone have their di- 1 gestive organs so di-arranged by the ' over production of fat as to prevent the full development of the s .stem. We .-ay ' such food is too heating, and so it is ] when fed alone; but that is no reason i why we should jump at conclusions and ] denounce it while running wild ovei 1 pumpkins, mange.wurt els, or anything 1 else. They both have their plac ein ju dicious feeding, and in the winter time, ; when there is no grass to be had, stock < require along with their corn food some- • thing more succulent and easy to digest. i To illustrate: A ton of corn in the eai I ' contains but 228 pounds of water and ! 568 pounds of nitrogenous, albuminous, | ( and fatty matter, while a ton of pump- , kins contains as much as 1,890 pounds ' of the former and only twenty-eight pounds the three latter. A ton of oats j contains only 260 pounds of water and 610 pounds of nitrogenous, albuminous, ■ and fatty matter, while a ton of mangel* wurtzels contains 1,770 pounds of the , former and only thirty-two pouuds of the three latter. It is evident, then, that we cannot profitably feed pumpkins oi mangel-wurtzels alone, but their chief value is as a complement to grain food. In other words, we cannot make fat ai d muscle as cheaply with pumpkins and mangels as with corn and oats. Eut as corn is too heating and constipating a food when fed by itself, and pumpkins and mangles too washy, science and com mon sense both tell us to fee l enough ol each if we would have a complete ration. It is from such a course of feeding that the best results come, whether for health or profitable growth. Pumpkins may b? planted in the corn-field as late as the first of June, and the yellow or cow pumpkin is the best for hogs.— ‘Baltimore American. Farm and Garden Notes. A dust of sulphur while the dew is on is said to be effective against the striped *>ug. To check onions running too much to to tops bends the tops over near the ground. By cutting all the grass they can eat and fe- ding to the pigs, the latter will grow rap dly. Keep no more animals than can be ] comfortably accommodated—the excess is more loss than profit. Onion seed sown now and protected with litter during the winter, will give early onions next spring. Budding is in season whenever ma tured buds may be had and the bark peels readily from the stock. Somebody says set fence and gate-cor ner posts in water-lime and gravel, to insure solidity and durability. It is well said, that a week of expo sure to the hot fun, will injure the horse rake, m #wer and reaper more than a whole season’s use. Calves should grow spring and sum mer to be worth keeping through the winter. Never et nt their growth, if it is intended to raise them. Do not plow land when it is too wet. If it unfortunately becomes cloddy, run a heavy roller over it. ora “crusher/’and harrow it thoroughly before sowing it with grain. There are few things so important on the farm as sowing good seed, A few cents saved in using seed which can not be relied on often causes considerable positive loss. Two or three cats kept in the bam summer and winter may keep it free from rats, but they will not trouble the rodents much if pampered and petted about the kitchen stove. Every farmer should prevent the kill ing of birds on his place. Boys with cheap shotguns pepper away at every thing with wings; and when the birds are dead the insects eat up the farmer’s produce. r the northern part of To prevent wet from penetrating boots | take half a pound of tallow or mutton j suet, four ounces of lard and two ounces of new beeswax and olive oil, dissolve over the fire, mixing well, and apply to the leather. Whoso overstocketh the range, writes a far Western man, the same shall come to want and prowl for a job, for it is so that the tiarapling of many hoofs de stroyeth the range and rendereth it un safe for the winter. The farmers know well that thousands of dollars are lost every year by planting bad seed corn. Take time by the fore lock and look ut> crood seed corn in time l Keep it through the winter where the germs may not be injured by frost. If you have a stable, make it as dark as you can, and shut it up during the lay. and put the cows in it at night, and you will find that very few flics will fol low them. If you have no stable, build a shed in a shady, cool spot, on purpose for milking. It will pay for a single summer. One of the first requirements in suc cessful bean culture is to have the lands as free as possible from weeds. Foul land is the cause of more fa lures in rais ing this crop than any fault of the soil or climate. When our farmers get into more careful and thoiough ways of farm ing, and fewer weeds are grown, f special crops will be more successful. To clean and dry seed—Such as toma to. squash, pumpkin, cucumber, or any kind that the seed is held in or floats in a glutinous matter, cut and press out into a pail or crock ; metal vessel not good for that ue. Let stand in warm place till fermentation takes place, say twenty-four hours; wash in three or four waters, pour off gent y, leaving *-eed at bottom of vessel. Spread out on thin cloth or sieve to dry. Every living, active part of a plant contains a certain amount of water. From many juicy parts 90 per cent, of water can be expo led by drying; many green leaves hold f:om 75 to 80, while from seeds which we call “dry” it is sometimes possible to drive out 10 per cent. Part of this water is so intimately combined with the plant structure that if it is once expelled it can iot be again taken up in such a manner as to restore the plant to its former condition. Make, the rose bed in the fall, digging it deep, manure it well and thoroughly incorporating the manure with the soil. You can scarcely have the soil too rich for roses. Early in tie spring dig it over and mix more rotten manure with the soil. In selecting plants of roses se cure those having an abundance of roots, rather than great size of tops. Set your p’ants about fifteen inches each way, firm the roots well in the ground, give a good soaking of water and they will soon start into growth. Oxen are better adapted to slow,heavy work, especially on rough land, than are horses. They serve equally well for common farm labor and are more easily raised. Oxen become more valuable as they gain in size and weight, and may be sold for beef when no longer fit for work. Horses work faster and are there fore more profitable on farms that are easily tilled. A good plan, and one practiced by many, is to keep a yoke of oxen for slow, heavy work and save the horses for labor better suited to them. Virginia creeper grows best from the seedlings. Cuttings seem to take a year or two to get properly rooted. A wheel barrow load of compost when the plant is set is a good persuader. A pail of slops every other day, with a tablespoon ful of lawn dressing, follows it up well. The roots should be protected by coarse litter the first few winters, or a slow spring growth is the result. The wis taria needs protection by evergreen boughs, or by tying up in straw to en dure the winter in most sections of New England. Otherwise its buds are killed, and no bloom is the result. The peach “curl” fungus grows within the tissue of the young peach leaf. The fungus does not confine itself to the leaves, but works in the young stems, causing them to take on strange shapes and unnatural colors, and to finally wither or turn brown, and at last to die. This pest, though somewhat different in its manner of growth is a close relative of the black knot, so destructive to plum and cherry trees. The on y remedy for the “curl” is the knife. All the branches with their leaves, which are affected, should be cut and burned. This disease is propagated by means of small 6ores that are found in the leaves later in the season. By burning they are de stroyed. Those who h-ive tiai plum or chards ruined by the black knot know something of the way in wh ch the fun gus can destroy valuable fmt trees. The peach “curl” belongs to the same de structive class. A Distinction Without a Dlffc^ncc. The fine legal distinction an ingenious j lawyer is capable of di awing is well illustrated by a horse case recently deci ded in .\ew Hampshire. The defendant in the suit was the owner of a horse whi h “had a vici us disposition aud a constant inclination to in ure mankind.” In short, it was “a notorious kicker.” On one «ccasion, when the plaintiff was passing in front of it, the beast “reared, squealed, struck foreward with his fore feet, hit the plaiutiff on the knee and did the injury complained of to the oint.” For this in ury an action for damages was br ught. It is a well-known gen eral princi|)al that the owner i 9 liable for injuries done bv a vicious animal which he knows to be vicious. Tiie defendant in this case did not deny that he knew his bor eto be,a lively kicker, but he pleaded ignorance of the animal’s pro pensity to indulge in suen demonstrations with his fore feet. Thereupon his law yer advanced the theory that while his client might be liable for any kicking done by the horse with his hind feet, he could not be held responsible for the in jury caused in this instance unless it could be shown that he knew the animal would “kick with its forward feet in a manner similar to that in which the plaintiff was struck.” • The t-uestion thus raised was taken to the Supreme Court of the State, which promptly swept away the subtle distinc tion by declaring that “the law re cog - ni.ed no such absurdity.”— Heu> York Herald. m Three hundred million dollars is a low estimate of the direct cost to the people of this country of fires that occur in a year, DANGEROUS DRUGS. How to All Such Hor- Koehetter JV. F. Ptt.Bceprm A gentleman who has spent the summer abroad, said to our reporter, that the thing that impressed him most of all was the num ber of holidays one encounters abroad and the little anxiety the people display in the conduct of business affairs. “Men boast here, he said, “that they work for years with out a day off; in Europe that would be con sidered a crime.” Mr. EL n. Warner, who was present at the time, 6aid: “This is the first summer in years that I have not spent on the water. Been too busy.” “Then, I suppose you have been advertis ing extensively?” “Not at all. We have always heretofore closed our laboratory during July, August and September, DUt this rummer we have kept it running day and night to supply the demand, which has been three times greater than ever before in our history at this sea son. * “How do you account for this?” “The increase has come from the univer• sal recognition of the excellence of our preparation*. We have been nearly ten years before the public, and the sales are constantly increasing, while our newspaper adver ising is con la itly diminishing. Why, high sc:en ific and medcal authori ties now publicly com eJe that oar Warner’s safe cure is the only scientific specific far kidney and liver diseases, and for all the many ditea-es caused by them.” “have you evidence of tbs/” “Abundance! Only a few weeks ago Dr. J. L. Stephens, of Lebanon, Ohio, a specialist for th* ure of narcotic, etc.,habits, told me that ii mini oro, eminent scientific medical men b»d b en e perimenting for years, test ing and analysing all known remedies for the kioneys and 1 ver; for, as you may be aware, the excessive u e of ad narcotics and stimulants destroys tho e organs, and until they can be restored to health the habits cannot be broken up! Among the investi gators were such men as J. M. Skill, M. D., President of the State Board of Health of lowa, and Ale ander Neil, M. D., Professor of .Surgery in the Col ege of Physicians and Surgeons and president of the Academy of Medicine at Columbus, who, after exhaustive inquiry, reported that there was no remedy known to schools or to scientific inquiry equal to Warner’s safe cure!” “Are many persons addicted to the use of deadly drugs?” “There are forty millions of people in the world who use opium alone ? and there are many hundreds of thousands in this couniry who are victims of morph.ne, opium, quinine aud cocaine. They think they have no such habit about them—so many'people are un conscious victi ns of those habits They have pains and symptoms of what they call ma aria and other diseases, when in reality it is the demand in the system for these terrible drugs, a demand that is caused largely by physi ians’ prescriptions which contaiu so many dangerous drugs, and strong spirits, and one that must be auswered or silenced in the kidneys and liver by what Dr. Stephens says is the only kidney and liver specific. He also says that moderate opium and other drug eaters, if they sustain the kidney and liver vigor with that great remedy, can keep up these habits in modera tion.” “Well does not this discovery give you a new revelation of the power of safe cure?” “No sirffor years I. have tried to convince the public that nearly all the diseases of the human system originate in some disorder of the kidney’s or liver, and hence I have logically declared that if our specific were used, over uiuety per rent, of the e ailments would disappear. The liver and kidneys seem to absoi b these poisons from the blood and become depraved and diseased. “When these eminent authorities thus pub licly admit that there is no remedy like ours to enable the kidneys and liver to throw off the frightful effects of all deadly drugs and excessive use of stimulants it is an admission of its power as great as any one could desire; for if through its influence alone the op.nm, morphine, quiuine, cocaine and liquor habits can be overcome, what higher testimonial of its specific power could b * asked for f” “You really believe then, Mr. Warner, that the majority of diseases come from kid ney and liver complaints ?” "Ido! When you see a person moping and groveling about, half dead and half ali «e, year after year, you may surely put him down as having some kidney and liver trouble.” “Tho other day I was talking with Dr. Fowler, the eminent oculist of this city, who said that half the patients who < arao to him for ej'e treatment were affocted by a Ivan ed kidney disease. Now many people wonder why in middle lifo their eye sight becomes so poor. A thorough course of treatment with Warner’s sale cure is what they need more than a pair of eye glasses. The kidney poison in the blood always attacks the weak est part of the body : with some it affects the eyes; with others the head; with others the stomach or the lungs , or rheumatic disorder follows and neuralgia tears them to pieces, or they lose the powers of taste, smelt , or be come impotent in other functions of the body. What man would not give his all to have the vigor of youth at command?” “The intelligent physician knows that these com plaints a i e but spmptoms; they are not the disorder, and they are symptoms not of disease of the heai. the eye or stoma b, or of virility, necessarily, but of the ki«iney poison in the blood and they n.ay \re vail and no pain occur in the kidneys. ” It is not strange that theeuchusiabro which Mr. Warner displays in his appi e iation of his own remedy, which restore! him to health when the doctors sai l he could not live six month*, should become infectious and that the entire world *>b >uld pay tribute to its power. For, as Mr. Warner says the sales are ronstantl* in reusing, while his newspaper ad ertismg is constantly di nin isbmg i bis s;«aks volumes in pi&Ue of the •xtraord.nary merits of bis preparations. An Escape From a Shark. A very rem rknble story, of whose troth, however, there is not the slightt st doubt, is told in the lust number of the London L nc.t. It is an account by F. En&or, renior Surgeon nt the Provincial Hospital, Port Eli abe h, of a man whose leg was comple ely bitten ofi by a shark, who ha 1 tho stump immeJiately ampu tated and who recovered. The sub ect of the story had been having a swim in the sea at « a. m., and came out, in end ing to take one more header from the jetty. He plunged in, and “on rising to the surface felt a sharp pain in the th gh. and before he could cry out received another horrid crunch, and down he went in the jaws of a huge shark. He struggle i for a moment, and felt twisted about and shaken, then free, and with an instinctive effort as he rose to the sur face, made a supiemo attempt to >oach the landing stairs which w re close by.” Fortunately there were some people on the etty who pulled him out and did their best to stop the bleeding with towels, etc., while they sent for a do> : tor. He was carried to the Pro vine al Hospital, and the stump wai imtr.edi -1 ately amputated under chlmofotm, and in a few days he recovered and was a >ie to get about with cru che*. “It is very rarely, lima ine,” says Mr. En-or, “that a human being who has once been in the terrible „aws of a shark has been saved, and more randy still saved by surgical aid.” A m >nth aftc th" accident the only trouble from whi h the patient auf j sered was pain in the absent foot, but i this the brain, ty and by, would cease to remember. A uniform and naturaEresult is produced by using Biic.kingahm’s Dye for the Whisk en. For a slight cold, a hacking cough, er lung troubles, take Ayer s Cherry Pectoral. Ths Tlmi. When politics are getting hot And rife are campaign lies. Concerning plot and counterplot, Os most gigantic size, The papers sell like hot cakes then And all far-seeing business men Resolve to advertise. —Boston Courier. Jliss Ltownei is the regular pastor of the Methodist church at Kewanee. HI. Mr Ed. P. Wells, Thetis P. 0., Stevens Co., Wash. Terr., wus entirely cured of rheu mutism by tho use of St. Jacobs Oil. He says- “I consider it a wonderful reraeajr and will always speak ag< od word for it. Imaginary evils soon become real ones by Indulging our reflections on them. Architect Edmond Legendre, 419 Sutter st.ec-t, Sau FrancLco, Cal. states that hav ing suffered for a long time with a severe cough, and failing to obtain any relief from doctors and tho numerous preprations he took, ho became alarmed. Tried Red Star Cough Cure, and one bottle entirely cured iihn. A Holstein calf in La *e county, Cal., weigh ed 441 pounds on tho day ho was six montfcs old. During the Jast three months his gain « as two ana one fourth pouuds per day, and the average gain from birth was two pounds per day. Why Will Yon Die* SCOVTLL’S SARSAPARILLA, OR BLOOD AND LIVER ,SYR CP for the cure of Scrofulous Taint, Rheumatism, White Swelling, Gout. Goitre. Ccn bUmption, Bronchitis, Nervous Debility, Malaria, and all diseases arising from an Impure condition of the blood. Certificates cau be presented from many leading physicians, ministers, and beads of families throughout the land, endor-ing SCOVILL’S BLOOD AND LIVER SYRUP. We are constantly in receipt of certificates of cures from the most reliable sources and we recommend it as the best known remedy for the cure of the above diseases. It is not by war that war is conquered, but by peace and fui Learance. Money Maker* don’t let golden opportunities pass unim proved; there ore times in the lives of men wh**re more money can be made rapidly and easi.y, than otherwise can be earned by years of lab >r. Write Hallett & Co., Port land. Maine, who will send you. free, full particulars about work that you can do. and live at homo, wherever you are located, at a profit of at hast from $5 to $25 daily*. Borne have made over SSO in a single day*. All is new. You are started free. Capital not requi ed. Either sex; all age;:. The French say Talleyrand was the only one who could give a* perfect dinner with thirsty guests. Stop that Cough that tickling in the threat! Stop that Consumptive Condition! You can be cured! You can’t afford to wait! Dr. Kilmer’s Cough Cure [Consumption Off] will do it quickly* and permanently. 25 cents. When fowls are kept in a yard it is best to dig up a small corner occasionally to let them hunt for worms. If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Tlionip son’s Eye water. Druggists sell at 25c. per bot tie ’ Better lose a jest than a friend. .Somethin? About Cuinrrh. A great many people are afflicted with , Catarrh who do not know what ails thems and a great many more continue sufferer; who might be cured. Thickening of the membrane which lines the nasal passages, thus making breathing difficult: a discharge from the nostrils, more or less copious, watery or thick, according to the stagc> of the disease; a sense of fullness in the head; a constant inclination to spit; anil, m advanced cases, a dropping of intensely disgusting matter into the throat, ore a few of the prominent symptoms of Catarrh. Deafness, inflamed eyes, neuralgic pains, soro throat and a loss of sense of smell, are very often caused by Catarrh. All those troubles are cured by Piso's Rem edy for Catarrh. Relief is had immediately after beginning its use, but it is important that it in? continued without intermission until the catarrhal virus is expelled from the system and healthy secretions replace the diseased action of the mucous membrane. Manifestly it is unreasonable to expect a euro in a short time of a di ease that has been progressing for months or years. This question of time is provide*l for in the | putting up of Piso’s Remedy for Catarrh. It j is so concentrated that a very small dose is ! directed. The quant it v in one package is i sufficient for a long treatment, consequently ! the expense is a mere trifle, and there is no i excuse for neglect nor reason for it but for getfulness. A cold in the head is relieved by an appl cation of Piso’s Remedy for Catarrh. The comfort to be got from it in this way is worth many times the cost. The foliowiug letters are specimens of those received every day, testifying to the worth of Piso’s Remedy for Catarrh: Allegheny, Pa., Bent. 16,1555. P so s remedy lor Catarrh is doing wonders for me. I believe it will cure any case of Catarrh, if used according to directions. Mrs. F. JOHNSON. 49 E. Diamond St. Spring Hill, W. Va., Oct. 20,1885. Enclosed find or e dollar for two packages of Piso’s Remedy ftr Catarrh. The sample package received in June, gave perfect satis faction. GILL. MESSER. Harford Mlls, N. Y., Aug. 8,1885. I have used a liittle over half u package of Pi o k P.emeity lor t atari h, and it bos helped me more than any of the different medicine- I have used. 1 feel confident that it will cure mo. 1 can and do recommend it to others who are troubled with the disease. Rev. A, DAMON How easy it is to work when we are happy low delightful to labor for those we love. If a cough disturbs your sleep, take I iso’s Cure for Consumption and rest well. Soldier* A Heirs. Send atari p f* f, ’ r nr-talare. » OL. L. BlNv, I bai MOHd ham Att’y.Waahington- fc>. C UHAVE HART) OR SOFT 66 m| J* Miut hurt. >cr « 2r. p<>&-■■ || Bfl tarn- utainp-.. 1- 111 •nlllflln receipt that will surely U 0 Imll w I cure: for Sc. extra, receipt for pimples, freckle*, also | 'ne for warts and bunions. Aleuts make you t own ; g iOi-* and save money. J. O. Brokaw. Elizabeth, N\ J. PENSION L c Vvl Tr 1 - Two teaks’ bx j I'EltlLMJfc. £|TtomßirbM»2'lCß So LICIT ao MILO B. STEVENS ft CO. j WASHINGTON D. C. CLEV LAND. OHIO, j CHICAGO.ILL. DETROIT, MICH. WE WANT YOU! profitable employment to repreeent a* in every | county Saiary Sift per month and enenaea. or a huve commission on aalee if preferred. Goodaatapto. Every one buy a Outfit and particular* Frve. STANDARD SILVERWARE CO.. HOMON, Mau ■ Plan’s Remedy for Catarrh H the MS Best. Easiest to Use, an t < heapese Headache, Hay Fever. Ac. So cunts. M§ Inuincftsaai lUIIILLOSiS^ -Tks Mai *«.*!.• r) „«u. PETERSON’S MAGAZINE. EVXKY LADY SHOULD TAKE IT. PrmsogFa MAoanxr: is the beet ni»u cfce»pe« It, tmmflQM circulation *nd lcnf ct^>ll«li»lrcpa MAMMOTH COLORED FASHIONS! the latest Pari, style*. *teel plates, , TERMS, (nlw«r» In ■<«■«) »9 A YEAR. | UN PARALLELED OFFERS ?° 2 Copies hr $3.50 j JfTmy i lustra, m 3 •• “ ♦so|is?uMr“‘ or *“' 4 Copies hr »40|E£AKM5;£? 6 •* “ 9.00 u»w itettlug up Urn club. fob x.arufrcm^£T|lugreateb “’SKfcHs ..mew*. 306 Chestnut St., Philadelphia- Pa. Specimens sent grain. If written for In good CCOTCH THISTLE FT ME!* elves n*!£f from 5 Asthma In 5 mln *te>. Certain cure and Bronchitis. Prkx per box. aLOOitboxc* Poet mM to all parts of the world. Address, JAMEb F. MORRISON, Beuaibe, Ohio. "DON'T PAY A BIG PRICE!” AamFc P*”* toT a Year*« «üb«er»p- OO OCfllS tlcn to the w.x-kly America « Rural Horn *, Roche-rer, N. Y.. without pn*m- i ium— ‘the Cheapest and Beit Weekly in the World.'* , Ipuethcotumoi ltyeanod. >or 'ne Dollar you na.e onechmee f.-otn over ISU diftrvntCioih- Hotad Dollar Volnmemdino )Opp.. »nd paper one year, i oitpaid Boos postage. IV. Extra. 3» bodksg venarai. Amonjctneuiare: Law Without Lawyers; Family Cyclopedia; Farm Cyclop*dis: Farmers* an l Stockbreeder*’ Oui.le: Oom non Sens* in Poultry Yard: World Cy lop*din. Danielson's (Medical) Counselor; Boys' Useful Pastimes; Five Years Before the Mail. People’s H stor of Unit d State*; ntversa) li sto yof |1 Nations ; Popular History Civil War (both side A Aay on book and paper om year. all pwtpnid, for ftlSoniy. Paper at -ne 63c. if subsrrU'ea before the Ist of March, harfefaetkm guaranteed oa b -oas and Week.y.orm«iiey refund*». Krferenre. Hon. G B. Famous, Mayer Rochester. Sam pie papers, fc. RURAL HOME CO, LTD.. Withoit Premium,63c. a year l Kochs>tsb.N.Y. DROPSY FREE. ■ DR II H. GREE!f Ac SONS. Specialists for Thirtcan V.nr. Pout, Hs*. treated Dew *nd it. comp icMion, tic mess wonderful raeeem: n» seu.-Mbto tirely harmless. Remore all symptoms of Dropsy in . 6- Cure° pTtuj ot ou need hopeless by the bed ol physicians. From tbe first dose the symptom* rspjdly disappear and in t#n days at least tto-thirds of all symptom? u msyery hambo* withurt knowinc anythin; abontit. Remember, it doe, not cost you hafthma t realise the sent* of our tre-.tment sue yoarmlf. In t« j day* tbe difficulty of bteuninx is rshev-d. tbs pn>* j regular, tbs urinary orgaus made to dHcham* fnTl dnty. sleep i* re-totei. the swedtn* all or nsari' rone, the strength iacrsamd and appetite m\ le r>*u i We are constant y enrin* cases of loot «and:n«. case- . tint have been tapped a number of tun •*. sod toe p*» j rient declared unable to five a week. . Otvs fol* nntor) j of case. Nam** *«I. H>» lon* afflicted, how badij i swollen and where, are buretsswtin, h*v* lm* buret ed and dripped water? S *nd for free pamphlet, cou taininc testimonials, quev»w»-. etc. Ten day*' treatment furni*h-d (reeby mad. If you order trial send lOctsm stamps to pay PMtajl j Eplb'Psv (Fit-' Positively < nred. H. n. CSREEN 6c HONS. M. Da., 2oOX Marietta Street, Atlasto, Ga. . BEFORE YOU BUY A —WRITE TO HOTCHKIN CARRIAGE WORKS, SYBACtJSE, N. Y. ITLOR PRICES TO DEAUKID^MI 400,000 Copies ready Nov. 10th of the Double Thanksgiving Number cf the Youth’s Companion Elegantly Illustrated. 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