Newspapers / The North Carolina Prohibitionist … / July 1, 1887, edition 1 / Page 4
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AGRICULTURAL TOPICS OF TTER1 ST RKr, 4 TTVU rrti tODir nn "r m n v-.-v i" - : . Rales for the Orchard. t . . Threq rules in regard to the operation T 01 pruning -an prcnara, and they will be short ,one3 : V -'- f :-A,;S : : if -t - Prune annually. " If judiciously done none but small branches will be required to be cut, and the wounds of those will soon heal.-. . '. . .. " : V; Make a clean cut and pare smooth with a sharp knife the edges of the . wound. Tbis will erreatlv facilitate the healing p?cccss aQd preserve the tree from decay." - W Hen the habit of the tree will aiiow take out the leading shoot at the height , where you design to have the branches spread. A horizontal branch will ; pro duce more fruit than an upright one. . : Butter-Making, Then and Now. ; No branch of rural 'industry has met with greater change in its processes dur- . ing the last twenty years- than batter making. ; Then the milk. was set in shal low pans ' upon pantry shelves, ' in . the cellar, or in rare cases in a properly . con structed .milk-house. . - The dash-churn was almost universally; in use," even when dog-power was employed. The process of churning was continued until the but ter was "garnered" in a mass, which was' then lifted from the churn to a huge wooden bowl, and the subsequent work- ; ing and salting were laborious' and damaging to the texture of the product. The introduction of . improved creamers and improved churns has " changed all that. By means of the former, the milk is set in deep cans,- cut oft from all con tact with the outside atmosphere and any possible odors or impurities. 'In s the - modern churns the . butter is separated from the other constituents of the cream v without breaking the -globules, and the process is arrested while it is in the granu lar stage. The buttermilk .is easily drawn off,- and most of the subsequent : Working and salting" are done in "-..thc - churn. ;t It is easier and cheaper to make uniformly good butter' by the modern processes than it was to make tolerable "butter by the old and unscientific meth.-odsT- American Agrictdturlst. f : ' Effect -of Root Pruning. , 'f': On a certain farm one year ago a road way- had been cul through an ; apple .orcara,-ana to obviate a steep grade the soil was dug away between two rows in. some places to the depth of 2 feet. ine earth removed was not piled up against the trees, where the double cov ering, of some roots and exposure of otners mignt have Killed them. It was taken away and spread for a road bed on . the lower part of the orchard in line with the road. Now this spring, where the deepest cuts were . made through the bank, the trees" n either side are full of bloom, while the balance of the orchard filinwq inTv Trirulrrfifn nmnimf rvf ldnc soms. Probably the trees were consid erably injured byi.this severe treatment, but if properly manured now they will recover and be more valuable tor it ever after. .' The trees on the bank had prevl ously been unproductive," so it was not merely the reduction of excessive growth which caused them to b.ossom. Severe root pruning," even to the extent of en dangering the tree, is therefore admis sible in cases of continued barrenness. but such cases should be liberally treated afterward. Perhaps it was root pruning and manuring-that was intended in the scriptural parable of the owner of aiT un productive tree, who resolved to give it . a" further trial . by digging about and - dunging it. -. At least the best science of modern fruit growing could give no bet ter formula than this for changing the character of a tree that had long been barren. Cultivator. - Best Fowls for. Early Market. . Good crosses are perhaps better than the pure stock when raised: for market , purposes alone, as they seem to grow - faster and generally make larger birds, v ble to obtain. ' The breeder should, how ever, be very careful to dispose of all the Jia1f-rrfi3 Kforlr at marlcpt. timp fnr if thpv -.- i i a n . . , are Kent ana aiioweci io ptow nn on trie j. o I . place there is a considerable liability of r tneir , uecoming mixea , wxta tne pure i stockr as : they ; are oftentimes hard to - f?lcf:iTTmicT " n -- lrrvlr a -i4- " fVi frroin - -. . ; j o ?l blood "will most surely show itself sooner . -rf 1 a for q n rron ota 1 1 tt " wriAn if ? a looof expected by the breeder. - 'r ' : ft fin u n7 1 1 a n i u ii ir arisrun iiiu . iti i i uv '; note the difference, in the errowti of .the VliflFftrpntlirppfla rfurinor t.hp parlipr rmTfc nf their life. ; For instance such fowls as the - lloudans or any ot the laying breeds will ; etow verv fast for the first month or two.- T. 1 . jI'T. - 1 M il ill l" larger ureeus uo, wniie on me omer nana the larger breeds of the Asiatic classes " : - s T. r - il. e at i axe l ti j b un xii cxicxt giuniuiui liio ill ol month at least, but after that time they - seem to tase a iumr and then continue to J'- crnwl VpmarkabTv - f;iaf. until s thpv r am . n r -f fully matured. ' These, larcre breeds are ,undoubtediy the best for market pur- poses when Ihey- are Kept an the season : auu Duiu uuuu - iiic lau auu . wiulci, uui . my experience has been that they re not the most profitable to raise for the earliest - markets. ' . A cross between the two breeds will be much better for arly market, and will partake some of the nature of both breeds. Cincinnati Commercial. -.:. ' " J '""-" Healthy Hogs. ' -' It has been pretty ' definitely-: proved that filth,- impure water, and general a : - ,n j i t i - : m : - i x i .1 S blood diseasesgoing under that name - TvhAn Tnrtro than TiQiiallir ratal In -viAixr . of the fact that vater-couf ses and .Dond3 " are especially low this season." owing to ! hom should be esneciallv. 'careful .that ; Bwine do not get water from these BUU1VC3. outu ndbu yuv ire iuuic man liKeiv to carrv tne eemu or mausnant nn iv i up. wnijrr ill w .rt.viii hi. i.iii f.K pense of considerable extra" labor. In nHriifiAn ff thld froQT.- rQra . C t All irt hn : r used that all. the ; surround ings be kept " perfectly clean. JNo less important is a old una youns:, is ffenerraiy tne nrst to -niiiiri mini iiitiiiiyuauu uuicaaui ucuuiuc - '"9 r - j i an their, habits, - but ftney are aepenaent Cpon a variety of food, and cannot be ;t &ept on one smgie anicie even as weii- as other farm animals. "'The sagacious man . will easily understand the ; necessity of !t changing the gram food of swine, as well as supplying a daily quantity of vegetable food. & This may consist of any plants the linM nriH inif lnpliiinop plnvpr ' Rn "fnr "tfttoes will be indicated, and if swine can S be allowed to gather these for themselves . cn mnr-'h fhfl hpffpr ' . At, t lift first Kvmn- toms of disease the feeder should look to - the surrbundsne-s and remove all the ani- - 1 . - A, I m. -w. a n r n - nr rxn n i f. ."maia IU ViCau Uiuiuica, ' rcuamuug tick from the welL When we find droop- - low-hanging head,' diarrhoea, vomiting,7 rapid breath, and an aversion to light, .the hog is far. oh - the road to 7l . I Farm and Garden Notes, r ' ' A good dressing of. well-rotted stable manure and wood ashes, worked thorough ly into the soil, is the best agency for re viving old fruit trees. . Beans, on poor ground,- : rarely f pay ; upon clean, rich soil, they are profitable. Sow in drills thirty inches apart, drop ping four beans every foot. : , ; Allow, "enough new raspberry roots that come up" from the base to grow to produce canes for next year's fruit. Train up these and icut away all others. . Lay straw, marsh hay or other mulch along' the strawberry rows,- to . keep the fruit clean. If berries are to" be marketed have baskets, crates, etc.i all ready, I : . - Swedish turnips may be sown on rich, well hned soil : sow m drills, thirty inches apart, two pounds rbf seed to the acre. ; '; Later thin to two - inches in . tho rOWs4iJ:;-pr;" 'Vrv t : Use ho stable "manure on your" peach trees.; '-j. A mixture of some : kind of min eral fertilizers is - better.. Experiments have shown marl to be excellent for peach trecs.3 : i -T:"".: 'yriz ":7t - -1 . The true mode of cultivation is by a judicious system of ; rotation. ;The soil may fail to produce certain crops and yet be rich and well adapted to some other kind: The best way for getting? rid of wil lows,' i to cut the bark,' about three feet highJ and peel it to the ground. ? Do it about the time of the full - moon, in June; '-3 v? -s ' V -r :Ji. : ? V -i i -z i Gooseberries are not grown extensively for sale, but, every farm and garden should have some space devoted" to them. When well trimmed they make Very rank growth. ; ! V i I v; V.:' S ;-.f ; :3 ' Oats on poor land are greatly benefited by' top dressing. Even after the plant has bloomed, it is best to apply nitrate Of soda; though, it . is - better . to put it on earlier.: L- ' : . : There are over fifty poultry associations in the United States that annually give exhibitions. : . They have ' been - instru mental in greatly; advancing the poultry interests, - '- . : : ' . " - . . Chickens will eat wheat when they are two weeks old, and they should be given" plenty of it. -When rapidly fattening, they should be given daily a j small por tion of meal. . v . - j " ' . ": : In pruning trees it is ; better to have one stronsr branch or limb than two or three weak ones. Some think a very : good time to prune trees is right after they have leaved out. . --- ' The soil . should be so ..thoroughly pulverized that the fine rootlets can pene trate it. .Ground, put in this condition will produce a much larger crop" than where the soil is left full of lumps. ; i The artichoke crop" does well the first year, but a satisfactory return is seldom had 1 for eight' or ten years afterward. Thus, after the first crop of artichokes, the succeeding pnes become a nuisance. In estimating the worth of a fertilizer,4 commercial values are set only upon the nitropen, phosphoric acid and potash: sometimes the lime is considered. The wheat crop ordinarily removes forty-five pounds of nitrogen per acre annually. .. It "is a creat mistake to draw soil around the stems of plants with a view of forcing roots from - parts where nature "never intended .there should be any. Even when transplanted, the stems of no kind of plants should be set -deeper in the soil than they originally grew. Gardening for pleasure, health, and a knowledge of the vegetable world are the highest inducements - that can be set be fore one to lead to the study and practice of horticulture. On farms more or less garden .work should be engaged in every day, and by every member of the family, whenever it is possible. : . ; . j v More castor beans are grown in South ern' Illinois than' in . any other; of the States. The acreage reaches 20,000, and large factories are maintained for ex tracting the oil.' . In California, also, the bean is extensively cultivated and does well. ; A soil that will answer for wheat or eorn will suffice for the castor bean. . Tomatoes raised in. light, rather poor soil in a sheltered or warm situation, are always sweet in favorable seasons,' while those raised in rich soil or in partial shade are always sour. ;. A rank growth of foliage shades the fruit densely, and interferes with the development of the saccharine principle. ! Again, tomatoes raised .1 in poorish; light soil ripetf ten days earlier than those raised in rich soil. V For green manuring red clover,rye and buckwheat are especially recommended Most soils will improve best under a con tinued treatment of green manuring and fallowing, f Another says, however, when fertilizers are at hand either as barnyard manure and compost, or commercial fer tilizers it becomes a question in many instances whether it i3 profitable to ex pend green ' crops for enriching the ground, or time in restoring it, with naked fallows. : " " ' : " There are many advantages in divers ified crops. " It is better for the land ;.uot to continue one kind of crop on it for an indefinite time, tit is easier handling hundred acres in different, crops than if all is in one kind. A few acres in one crop will demand attention at one time, and is soon taken care of, and, then an other one is ready. - . W hen a tanner is growing different crops he runs less risk, for 11 one is not successful others may be. 1 or the foregoing and other reasons, we would urge our readers.not to plant the whole farm, or as much of it as possible, to corn. Whatis planted get in as nicely -"possible, and plant the rest of the land to some other crop. - ' - Feather eating, says the E. N. Farmer, is caused by idleness and a lack of suit able "food. - Strew the poultry house floor withdry leaves laid up in the ; fal for the pur pose, or use cut straw and scatter the grain food so the fowls wil have to scratch' for it. ; Give a variety of food m which wheat or bran or both form a' considerable part. - A litle cooked meat occasionally will be useful, ; also finery pounded fresh bones. : A little salt may do no harm;-some feeders consider it m disnensable to success. Much would be injurious.;" Clear' orn and corn meal dough are imperfect foods for either poultry or other animals. . Corn does not furnish a suitable .proportion, of - flesh formlnff material to make eggs and" sus-: tain the health of fowls. . - - Cold City Facts. 7 : ;The. Uurlmgton Jrree r'ress . man says "Please send us a few cold facts," He; ocs;-' , Tho ice man now comes ;- r ' Bringing this season's rates,'. And he sings the same tune, - - - ' I "Price never abates.' . And the man with the screens ; Presents his larere bill, - - - . - . Ani the gardener soon follows T With terms for his skill ; : An 1 the boy with the hose . ; -, ' ? v . Wets you down to your toes -J And a clinging mosquito - v ': Enlarges your nose; - ' . :' ' " -'." fi These ai-e facts, cold and hard, ' -A every one knows. A - - -f : : . ' , . " , Boston Qlob G01IFLAGRATI0H. A MILLION HALF OP IiOSSES. Great Destruction of Property in tho City , by the Lakes Thousands of- . Barrels of Mess Pork Consum- t ; :-'" ed Serious Accidents to the '- Firemen Scenes and In- 1 -1 - :- cidents. ' ' '- A dispatch' from Chicago, says: Early Sunday morning one of the employes of the Chicago Packing and ; Provision Company discovered a fire in the tank-room. In; a fw TTiinntes nn nf thft tan Ira mrnlnded. sa,t- ;,burning, lardrover buildings,, and a dozen seperate fires were burning.:- .The destruction of the im mense establishment was. nearly eomplete. Though the fire f waa ? under control this fourteen and natr hours after it started, the embers . are still ; smoldering. Loss $1250,000. . - . - The ; Chicago ' Packmff . and Provision Company's works occupy about six acres of ground, but the fire warJteptf wiihin the district bounded by Fortieth street. Centre avenue, Forty-second street and the rail-- road tracks, a bloqk west of Centre avenue.' - xms territory contamea tour , large Duua- mgs. The mam building was 300 by 47 feet, i In it a portion of the killing was done and 1 he hanging, cutting,-packing, curing and other work incidental to a slaughtering establishment. --v -.l-. '"; Except the .curing room, "in which were 19,000.000 pounds of . short-ribs, the main building- and . its . contents' are a total loss, t The curing room; 100 by 150 f. et, and four sfcories higg. loit its 1 oof, but stone nre-walls saved its . contents, apportion of them io a roasted condition. I t t e ast . side of the main building ? was! tha warehouse, 120 by 400 feet, with f our-steries and a basement. The two upper floors at the south end were used for killing purposes. , In the warehouse were 17,000 barrels of mess pork belonging to Armour & Co. . i ; ; i: : ; - '- ?T: The building and much of the pork was wholly destroyed. : About 3,000. live hogs were m the budding when the hre started, but - the ' company's employes succeeded, in getting most of them ont. -Between 600 and 700 hogs were burned alive in the building. Back of the. main building was the fertiliz ing ; factory ; one hundred feet square, and the t engine-house, fifty by . sixty-live feet. Both structures were burned - complately. The fact that no wind was blowing when the fire started was probably the o ly cir cumstance that saved the entire stock yards from destruction. ISO person seems to known sha ongi n 01 tns nre. ; - . . . v vv hue one little squsta 01 uremen were standing in a freight car playing on the burning tank-room, the ; tanks exploded, heavy beams slashed through the roof ' of thev ear, J; smashing pipeman's ankle and knocking Lieut. Elliott unconscious. Soon after the walls of the warehouse tumbled to the ground, d sclosing great heips of mess pork. , P. D. Armour immediately set 100 men to work removing. the meat. Mr. Armour ruefully watched the mass of pork and cinders being-cleared away, while his 1 manager stoodt on en elevati n of mess pork and - superintended the work. ' In the debris were carcasses of hogs roasted whole. After the flames had consumed most of the wood work of the buddings" the fire still held sway in the great mounds of b lim ine meat. Smoke thicK with tne lames or tons of roasting pork, rolled over the stock pens and drove into the eyes 01 tne , nremen. The firemen were at times compelled to leave their hose and plunge their heads into buckets of water." Teen they: sat in "turns with handkerchiefs dipped in water on their swollen eyelids or bathed ? their , blistered cheeks in dirty water. ; The men who were attempting to drive through the covered runways the live-hogs in :the npper; stones were 101-ceu oy me flames to desist. Dozens of affrighted ani mals jumped from the windows or sprang; through the open hatchways. 'The men who had braved the flames fled from the falling hogs. - During the afternoon, while a num ber of the men were inside the main building oe of the division walls fell, seriously injur ing J. A. Schaffer, Michael MurphyyW. W. White, Capt. Nichols, and Thomas Elliott Murphy died to-night. Mr. Armour valned his 17,000 barrels Of pork at $360,000. He said that with the' salvage and insurance he would come out even. He- was unable to give the amount of insurance. The plant of the Chicago Packing and Provision Con piny was valued at $300,000, and the stock at $700,000. A large p rtion of the stock in store belonged to other parties, nd the loss will be sustained by them. About hilf of the Chic go Packing and Provis on Com pany's 2,000 employes will be thrown out of work. ; BRAVE JMARY WAKEFIELD. The Heroine of the Cliainplain Disa j ter Deserving of Reward. lA dispatch from Chicago - says: : - The Schooner Bacine, the crew of which rescued the survivors of the Cham plain disaster, ar rived here , last evening At the time the Champlain caught fire the Racine was lying alo gsidea pier six miles from" Charlevoix. Captain Hanson woke up, saw the burning steamer, and sent a part of his crew in a yawl to ; rescue the perishing passengers. With the remainder of his crew he ran down the beach to a 1 old fish-boat, launched it, and started for the wreck. The boat had not been used for; a. Eng-time and le ked. When about half-way out to the Champlain, Captain Hanson came across a young woman who-was swimming toward shore with a child; This was Miss Mary Wakefield, of Charlevoix., I She had jumped overboard with the six-year-old child of Captain Kehos clasped in her arms. Grasping a broken fender, she clung to it, and seizing the cloth ing: of- the child in her teeth, she bravely struck out for -the shore. Captain Hanson says she is the pluckiest woman he ever saw in his life. . When he started to take her and the child into the boat, she told him to hurry . away to the others, as she could take care of herselii She reached the shore in safety, and when another of the shipwrecked pas sengers was taken from the boat in ah almost frozen condition, she took off her flannel un derskirt and w rapped it around him. - When Captain Hanson reached th i wreck the yawl f- of the Racine had picked up fifteen persons.- lie saved six more, ana seventeen others floated ashore by the aid of planks and life preservers VI - EXPELLED FOR BLASPHEMY. Story of a Strange Sect Which Wor- . - ' shipped in Ohio. - J " " -, A dispatch from Cincinnati, ; says: For several years there has been a curious little body of enthusiasts in Religion on Walnut Hills in this city, formerly connected 'with the Methodist Church.v ;-Their : leaders were Mrs. John B. Martin and her sister, Mrs. J. C- Brcr ke. They were both devoted Chris tians and estimable women. They gave themselves up to prayer jand study of the scriptures, ; a .d finally evolved r-some thing new in theology, which has not been quite clearly expressed. 1 They formed a body -of religions zealots, arid were given the name of.Perfeetkmsts.:. They held exclusive meet ingsyand strajge stories were told ofrt eir proceeding. - - : ' - ",::- "'-i't'.: It was sa.d that they actually worshipped Mrs. -Martin as God jmd Jars. Brooke as Jesus Christ. For a time they separated from the church, and subsequently resumed their membership therein.- - As they contin? ued their private meetings and peculiar rites, the Walnut Hills Church last week" t.ied them on formal - charges of oissensioa and blasphemy and, finding..thera guilty, recoup mended their dismissal. .The band numbers about . thirty and ; among the "number are several who have heretofore been among tbs most earnest members of . the Methodist Church. ; : . yji.b;-'. -. ' . . ; s 'i Daniel Pratt, !'th9 Amencan iTaveier," who recently died at the BostonCity Hospital, was of unsound mind, and for years wandered about the country making speeches : and dis courses wlierever he could find: an" audience. He has traveled from Maine to California many times. . Jle was very fond of lecturing nnnrH cfnHflnts nnrl t.hv trn ve him all sorts of couiiterfeit diplomas and decorations. ;He.Tra$ a rr:s.ter by .trade. q3 LOUISVILLE'S BIG SMOKE,. Great "Warehouses, billed . "With To baoco, Burned to the Grourid - . ;A dispatch from Louisville, Ky., says: The most destructive fire that h s occurred here in years broke 'out in ' t-e tobacco quarter early Saturday morning. The entire square "bet ween Main and Market and Ninth and Tenth streets was the scene of the fire, and. two acres of buildings, with 5 their contents J" were lost.. The loss is estimate! at fully a half million of dollars, and the, insurance cannot be obtainei for weeks yet. The pa" pers of the various firms are in the safefr which are mixed up with tha debris. These, will- have . to be recovered, and the 5,000 hogsheads o tobacco destroyed jchecked up before the accurate figures are known. The ; 4 box from which the alarm was turned wai iief ective. and as a result, tne names we T l-ii-.-kkft rait in the middle of the blocs, at the rear, end of the market street L of the Boone warehouse. There was no light or fire of any kind from which the flames could have started.' The Banner; tobacco ware-;: house and the Sawyer, Wallace & . Co. ware-i house, both fronting o. JViam street,- soon caught fire. They occupy nearly the wnoie square, aua Dotn.were-cioseiy paunsu hogsheads of tobacco The Sawyer, Wallace & Co. house is a branch 01 tne Dig rew pr firm. -All that could be done was to save tne adjacent residences and business blocks.1- A vast crowa or peopie. quicitij i BMcmuiui Vn the scene. " The families living in the square on Market street were greatly frightened. They excitedlyihrew their iurniture anu household effects on the pavement and in the. Streets, fearing a total wrecK oy nre. aio lives were lost, tnouga.- several -m-i- capes were had. Sawyer, vv auaee oc au. a warehouse, jno. o main sireei, was uwucu. uj Henry Glover. It was a solidly . built. brick building, -with metal roof, the several de partments comprising an immense structure, and was valued at $20,000. It is partially insured. In it were 2,400 hogsheads of to bacco, worth from $120,000 to $125,000: AH of the tobacco was entirely destroyed. The stock was well insured, i. The Boone ware house was owned by Thomas H. Glover, and valued at about $15,000, - It contained about 1,500 hogsheads of tobacco, all of which was consumed. This tobacco was -worth from 6120,000 to $125,000: -partially insured, bota building and tobacco Tho - Banner ware house was owned by B. M. Parrish & Co. It was valued at about $7,000, and belonged to an undevided estate, k It contained about 500 hogsheads of tobacco, valued at $40,000 - to $45 000. -:-' - ' . It is thought that the litigation that will be brought about by the fire will be some thing astounding.; Lorillard & Co. and Lig gott & Meyer, the large tobacce firms of New Ycr and St. Louis, aa well as others, bought a large lot of tobacco in this market Friday, and, it is said, they will claim th t the sale was not consummated, basing their claim upon some technicality. . - . .-. SUIT OR AN OPTION. A Novel Case of Stock: - Speculation Decided In Richmond. : - - A dispatch from 'Richmond, .Vs., says:. The Circuit Court of Richmond decided an important "suit, that of Thos. " A. Seddoa against S..M. Rosenbaum for forty thousand dollars for illegal breach of contract in ref erence to the purchase by the former of the latter of two hundred share of Richmond and Danville Railroad stock o l March llta, 1886. Seddon, while on the train with sev eral gentleman, stated that he thought Dan ville stock, vi hich as then selling at 80, would g up to 250. : Rosenbaum remarked: t-You talk . pretty strong about Danville, but you won't Det any money on itP. - - - Mr. Seddon .made-a proposition, which was accep ed by Mr. RosenbaumLwhieh was afterwards eclared , off, as Mr. Rosenbaum said that it was not - legal Subsequently they verbally a ;reed that Mr. Rosenbaum was to sell Seddon two hundred shares of the capital stock of the Richmond and Danville Railroad. Company - at $SHJ per share, the stock to be eal.ed for. at his option, at any time within three years from d te of con tract ; whenever the call was made, Seddon to pay $90 per share. Mr. Seddon in July, 1S86, tendered to Mr, Rosenbaum $24,000, that being the agreed price of $06 per share, for the two hundred shxres, and demanded, of him the shires of stock. Mr. Rosenbaum refused to deliver : the same or any part thereof, saying that he considered the mat ter alt a joke. At the time i-r. Seddon made the tender, Danville had gone up to one hun dred and fifty. One of the gentlemen in the party made a memorandum of the agree ment - Under the instructions of the court, the jury found for the defendant - - LOWER WAGES OR NO WORK A Reduction Refused and Two Thou sand Men Will toe Idle. A dispatch from Readi: c.Pa.. says: Pres ident Coit, of the Reading Iron Works, in formed the employes that in consequence of their refusal, to accept the proposed ten per cent reduction, a'l of the company's fur naces, tube works, rolling : and sheet mills Will be closed on" July 2 for. an indefinite period." The company,, he said,- could not afford to operate the works at the present rate of wages and price of goods. - This sus pension will throw two thousand hands out of employment the largest closing-down in Readi-g for years. V The Brooks Iron Company, of Birdsbofo, to-day posted a notice in its puddle and Bheet "mills and nail factory that, owing to the de pression in the. iron market and in order to keep the mills going, a reduction in wages of its five hundred employes would have to be made, commencing July 1, of about - ten per cent, in the wages of pudlers and heaters, fifteen per cent, in nailers' wages, and all "others ia proportion.-' - ; .-. "' : - : HARD ON THE WORKERS. Canadians Can not v Come Across the - f ; Line to Work and.'. Return . :;l;Uat Nighty!-Jjfe i A dispatch f com Lockpor t, T. Y., says : A recent order of the Dominion -government to Canadian custom officials 'at Windsor, Ont , to make a record of all Americans re siding at Detroit ;and vicinity,' who da'ly cross the line to engage in work in Canada , has led to a counter move by Collector Cut- ler at Niagara Falls and Suspension Bridge.; . Friday morning as Canadian laborers, numbering about 200, who are engaged in employment on this side, reached the fron tier they were surprised to find at this end" of Suspension Bridge deputies -s'ationed by Collector Cutler, who demanded their names, age, residence, occupation, and where and by whom were employed. t-During the day - notices were served upon employers of these foreigners that if thy: should continue to employ.such foreign labor after July 1st the United r States district attorney would; be recommended, to proceed against--them ac cording to law. , T-f : .- r--'-J MARKETS. - - Bttmore Flout City Mills, extra,$3.&5 a$3.75; Wheat - Southern -Pultz, 78a8(tets: CtornT-Southern White, 53a53cts, Yellow, 48a 49 ctsl Oats Southern and Pen sylvania, 33a36cts. ; Rye Maryland and Peionsylvania, 58a60cts. ; Hay Maryland and Pennsylvania 14a$1450: Straw Wheat, 7.50a$8.00; Butter, Eastern Creameryv48a20cts., near-by-receipts 16al8cts. Cheese-r-Eastern Fancy Cream,10J allcts.,r Western, 9al0cts.; ;Eggs 14al5i Cattle 3.75af4.75; Swine 6a6ets, ; Sheep and - Iunb 2)a4 J. cts.; Tobacco Leaf-Inferiorv la f 1.5a, Good Common, 3a$4, Middling, 5af 6, Good to fine red, 7af 9, Fancy, New York Flour -Southern Common to fair extra, 3.50a$4v Wheat-r-No. rl Whit , 88 a89 cts. ; Rye State, 54a56; Corn Southern YeDow, 47a48cts. Oats White State,; 38a39 cts.'; Butter State,13al9 cts. .eheese State, llal4cts. ; Eg!s 14al4J cts. :-; '--- Philadelp Flour Pennsylvania, fancy, 3.5)af4; Wheat-Pennsylvania . ana Southern Fled,84a85 cts; Rye Pennsylvania 57a58cts. ; Corn Southern Yellow, 45a47 cts; Oats 36a37 cts. ; Butter State, 18al9 cts.: J1686: N. Y. Factory, 1U12 ct. : Eggs State,12al3 cts; s'iS TEMPERANCE. SWfay' Bhe " Ilefusedj; : ': : You say you went to the party last night and you saw Mrs. Smith, an old friend, whom you had not seen -since she and your sister were; at school together. You had a very pleasant talk until supper, when you gave her your -arm and took her to supper. When some one came- along with a few glasses of wine on a waiter and offered her a glass, you saw her shudder as she said "Nor and you : wonder why Mrs. - Smith, who didn't used to be so particular about .such things, hot only refused, but shuddered when she said "Nor, You cannot tell whyl I can. tell why, .: YOu WentOTl with your talk, and a Utile flirtation7 did you? I won't Say you didn't- She was !very gay,and seamed very glad to forget her-" self, did she? Very well, I am very glad that you gave her that hour of the evening. lean tell you where she went after : the party was over.- - che-r Went home xne laiesc -person from the party. She was glad it was late,for her husband had not come home. She sat and read for an hour and, her husband did not come.. She wrote for an hour and her hus band did not come. She sat at -the piano for? an houp but he did riot come.;, -At length, be tween 8 and 4 o'clock,there was a rioiSe at the door, and two policemen held him in their -arms.; She knows them both well by this time. It happens so often that she knows every po liceman on the beat. - They bade her good night. She had locked her child's room that he might not abuse him. She took the abuse as he flung himself on the bed. r She dragged off his neci-cloth and coat, and sat there un- t til he should fall into a stupid sleep. She is J the woman who refused the glass of wine with 1 a uuuuer. iuu. iuuukuii uuo ttcus Ear ouu bright. " I know her story because; I am her minister. They have a sort of skeleton in the closet, which we are permitted to see and you are not. : And when we see that skeleton, do yOu" wonder that we sometimes say pretty sharp things about moderate - drinking;" and the temptations offered at parties?--iie. JE. E. Hale. - - . , - .' Powderl y's Advice ' " Terence V. Powderly, Grand Master Work man of the Knights of Labor, in a recent speech at Lynn, Mass., said:" , , :: "Had 1 10,000,000 tongues and a throat for each tongue, I would say to every man, woman and chid here to night: Throw strong drink aside as you-would -'an-ounce of liquid helL It sears the ' consc ience, it de stroys everything'it touches. : Jt reaches into the family circle and takeS the wife" you had sworn ' to .'protect-, and : - dras her down from her purity - to that j . house from : which no decent - woman ever goes, alive. It - induces the- father . to take the furnitum from his house, exchange it for money at the pawnshop ani spend the proceeds m "rum.;- It damns everything . it touches. .1 have seen it in every , city east of the Mississippi riyer; and I know thai ; the most damning curse to the laborer is that which gurgles from the heck of the bottle.; I had rather be at the head of an organization having" 100,003 temperate,, honest, earnest men than at the head of an organization of 12,000,000 drinkers, whether moderate or any other kind. Every dime ent' in the rum shop furnishes-a -paving stone for helL In one Pennsylvania county" in asinpleyear f 17,000,000 was spent for liquor, and ii was estimatad that 11,000,003 of . the amount came fronr workingmen. : In tins county a Knight jof Labor assembly, the members of which addei much to the rum traffic, seceded from the order when asked . for a certain assessment.'1. - fvSix; What Killed Artemus "Ward. . ' James Parton, . in writing of "Artemus ' Ward," gi vea the cause of his early "death in these words: Wherever he lectured, whether in New England, California or London, there was sure to be a knot of young fellows to gather around him, and go home with him to his hotel, order supper, and spend half the night in telling stories and singing songs. - -To any man this will be fatal in time; but when the nightly carousa follows an evening's performance before an audience, and is suc ceeded by a journey the next day,, the waste of vitality is fearfully rapid. " Five years of such a life finish 3d poor Charles Browne. "He was not a deap drinker. He was not a man of strong appetites. It was the nights waste! in conviviality which his . system neaded for sleep that sent him to his grave forty years before his time. . ' . -:-. - "For men of his profession, for all editors, literary men, and artists; there is only - one safety- Teelotalism. " He should have taken the advice of a stage-driver on the plains, to whom he once offered some whisky, and I commend it strongly to every young man: I don't drink, I won't drink! and I dont like to see anybody else drink. I'm of the opinion of those mountains keep your top cool. They've got snow and Pve got brains; that's all tho difference. " - Alarm of the Liquor-Dealers. The St Louis -Xxlobe-Damoarat, comment ing upon the plans of the liquor men to defeat prohibition, says: : "The alarm" which has been manifested by the leading liquor dealers throughout the country the past few weeks is one of - the most significant and encouraging signs of t he-times.. Representa 'tives of the whiskey interest ' realize at last that their industry is in peril, and are t iking measures to protect themselves. ; During nearly all r the years which have intervened between the time of the organization of the first temperance society in the United States and the early portion of the present year, the liquor men considered themselves masters of ; the situation. It is probable, to be sure.that they felt some fear when -the early crusades against the rum evil were inaugurated about half a century ago, but that emotion was success fully transformei into contempt, amusement and indifference as they realized their - own powers and the weakness of their foes. But all this has been change! sines the b3ginning of the present year.. The old arrogance and swagger; has departed, and in its place has appeared a decided manifestation ot dread at the perils by which they have suddenly found themselves confronted'' . - ' Playing Pool. ..: , ; An industrious young shoemaker ;ell into the habit of spending much time in a saloon .near by. One by one his customers began to desert him. . When his wife remonstrated :With him for so neglecting his work for tha saloon he would carelessly replyt "Oh! I've just been down a little while playing pool." His little two-year-old caught the refrain, and would often aski "Is you goin' down to play fool, papa?" - This made a deep" impression on the shoemaker,' as he realized that the ques tion was being answered in the falling orf of his customers and the growing wants of the household. . . He resolved again and again to quit the pool tatl3f but weakly allowed the passion of play to hold him a long time. Finally he found himself out of work, out of money, and out of flour."- Sitting on his bench one afternoon, idle ani despondent, he was heard to exclaim r "To work again- to day"; what I'm to do I don't know." "Why, papa," prattled the baby, - "can't you run down and play fool some more? ? 'Dh! hush, you" poor ; boy," groaned his father, . shame-stricken.- - fiat's , just the trouble. . Papa has played fool too much already." But he never played it agaiu, and to-day his home is comfortable and happy once more. Temper ance Banner. ' - - !Mo8t Drunken Country in Europe. r According to statistics, Belgium is the most drunken country in Europe Where in 1880 thei-3 were &J,000 public houses, there are now 195,000 that is to say, one for every fourty-four of the population. . The Govern ment has recently prepared a bill for the re pression, and another Dili for the prevention of drunkenness. Publicans who supply drink to persons obviously drunk, or" to any one under sixteen years of age, are to b liable to a fine not exceeding 1 for the first offense; while if they cause a minor .to drink to intoxication they may be fined 4. Who ever is responsible for serious illness resulting from intoxication may be -fined, from 2 to 80r wth from a wee to two years' impris -onmentj-according to the gravity of the case. Should death ensue, a fine varying from 10 fry 200, and from five to ten years' imprison ment, may be imposed. - Puolic house debt are no longer to be recoverable, . Temperance News and Notes. - - There are sixteen liquor bills before the Er iglish Parliament. . . : The ostrich which" hides its head in the sand to escape a pursuer is not more foolish "than the man who takes to drink,. to drown trouble. ;;-'- - Isaac J. Oliver, one of the original sixteen who founded the )rder' of Sons of Temper ance, died recently in the city of New York.; His brother, J ohn .W. is the only one of the sixteen now living.- Neither have belonged to the Order, of late years. -.""....' - - Experiments seemed to have proved that alcohol if taken in small quantities exercises a favorable influence on digestion in individ uals in good health. All the same, such in dividuals are much better off - without itv Boston IXeralct,- : . '1,-ife '.::- .' .. v 4 f Aiirantl' - ' l7? allnienu which' afflict the kldnys and b.adder &ro so niiineTottvthat merely to name them would fill a siJace far oairtmning the limits of this article Suffice It to eajithat they are hoth obstiilaiB and daii serous. To t" e r' I rarention Hostettefs Stbma' h Bit ft' s is we 1 adapted. The stimulus whiih it lends to t e action of the kidneys when they are legarth'fc erre to counteract a teade icy in then to lapse, firs', into a sta eof pernicicnj -nwtiv-ltr,ania:t.Twa dsintoone o " ros tive onranlc oil se, wnich soon d stroys ihs.r del cat s in t .-(uments, oisons the b ood an 1 causes death A doable purpose ii terved b,r th s depnre- t. It promotes aeiiriiy cf the kidneys, andinels imparities from tho blood wh ch 1 ave t o iia' . vral c- annel of ow lor. except tioe. organs. Constipation, bii.ousaesa, fover and a?ae, i hen matlsm aud dysnepa a, are also remedied by this medicine of tborough action and tn l ie 1 6 pe. - - A trim creaturo tho milliner. '' .; . - - - .It AstonUked the Public To hear of the resignation jof Dr. P erce as a Congressman to devote himself olely to -his . labors as a physician. It b cause h a true constituents were s clc and aftiicted ecry- - whre.v Tliey will fin I Ur. - Pierce's Golue i Wedic.tl Discovery" a beneficent use of his Bcien'lflc knowledge in their behalf. Oon fiump ion. Lroach.ifs, Crtaelu heart d'seaseV fever and acne,, intermittent fevet, drop v neuraleia. eoitre. or tn c'.nlt. ai d all SiV ease3 of the b:ood, are curel b this world-re nowneti medicine. - r.y drugi sts. - Not farnrp, 1 ut low aim, Is crime. V Blnny I'oopl Refnse to Take Cod Liver Oil on arcornt of its unpleasant taste, This difficnlty h-vs bean overeome In ScOrr'S EmstOsof Ccd Liver O'l with Hyp-pho3- phites. It being as palatible as milk, ani the most valnahl r medy known for the treatment of. Co sumption. Scrofula and - liroftchiti.J, General Deb lity, Wasting Diseasjs of Chi! drt n". Chron'c Cough and Colds, ha cansed physicians in all parts of the world to nce it Thys'cians report our l'ttle patients take it with pleasure. Try Soft's Emulsion and be convinced. ' Cose" quarters tho laundry. '- :- "Rny, why is everything '-: Eitli Tat sixes or at severs?' Probably, my dew. nervous sist r. because you an suffering from some O' the d senses r cnliar to jour ei.- oa have a "drapging down" feelin, the backache, you are deb li tled, yon Vave p u'ns of various kind-.-, Tal e Dr. It. V". Pierre s "Fav r te Presci jp!- o i" and be chp Pi ice reduced to., .one dollar. By dru?g.st. - To make a Roman punch, call him a liar.-.- . - .Pierce's 'iPle-s-nt Purgative Pel'eU" are perfect l revent'.ve o'eon fixation. Inclosed in gla-s battles, a'.wa. s fnstu By all drug gists. Out of season an emp y repper box. - "i Piles Cared for 25 Cents. DiC Walton's Curb vott Pii.es jsenaran teedtocure the woist case of piles. Price 25 cents. At druggists, or mailed .stamps taken by the - Watton Remedy Co., Ceveakd, O. " -, l?nne-trrs, AVives and .llotlter. "' Send lot Pamphlet on Female Diseases, frei securely seaieti.'Dr. J. Id. Marchisi,lTtic,N. . -If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr Isaac Thompi st n's Eye-water.Druggists seilat 25c, pa Lottie. -- KoyaGuk' mends everythin?! Broken China.Glass, Wood. Free Vials at Druss & Gro Rel'ef Is immediate, and a cure sure. Piso's Remedy for Catarrh. 0 cents. Coneeience is the heart's safety-valve. . Salt Rheum ' Is the most common of aU sn dlse tses, aid U oftea exeed'n;Iy disagreeable. The skin beccm-a dr and hoi, glows rtd and rorgh, a id often breaks Into ; painful cracks, while small -watery pimpU appear In gr at numb ra, discharging; a thin, sticky flu d, causing inttne l:c:iing Hood's Sarsaparffla has f wonderful power OTcr till j else :e. It purines the "blood and expels the humor, and the ikinhta s Whhont a scar. - . - - . - - "I had salt rheum o?er nent'.j my eaL're b)dy. It Is lopo s ble to dt rllie my suffi riig. When I be gan to tiMte Hood's tarsaparil a tne disease began to .-ubside, the watr plo pies, with tbelr rgjnlz: at tch and pain, disappeared, and now X am cured-' Lyman AutK, No. Ch cago, J1L Hood's Sarsaparilla Sold by all druggists. $1; six for 9S. Prepared lijdl HOOD & Co.. A potbecartes, Lowell, Mmi , - tOO Doses One Dollar EXHAUSTED VITALITY .A Great Madical Work for Young and Middle-Aged Men. KI10W THYSELF.--"- ? PUBLIMIIED by the PEA BODY MEDI CAL IN8TITI7TE, No. 4 Bullfinch 8t., BMton,Ma8. WH. H. PARKER, M.D., jonsul tt ug Physician. More than one mUilon -opies old. It treats upon Nervous and Phrslcal Deblutv, Premature Decline. Exhausted Vitality, Impaired trlgor, and Imparities of tha Blood, and the untold niserles consequent thereon. Contains 300 pages, ntbstantial emtoss d bin tin?, fall gilt. Warranted die best popular me llcal treatise published In the English language. Price only 1 by mail, postpaid, tnd eoncealed In a plain wrapper. -Illustrative tampUfree U you send now. Address a) above. Nam thin patter. . ' JONES PAYSBie FREICHT S To Wacon Hen lea. Iron Sbl Bwlogi. Srajf Tmlwiut Brmm Bos br . Ertrj tin Scale, r or ftw ftif B colics thi paper s4 MAAnm . ItHtS V IINBH AMTfiJI, - : BIN CfH AM T ON. N. ST. one Asent (Mercnant only) wanted In e-rrrj town fat - Tour "Tansill's PuneU" 5c. cigars are fretting lots --offrlenrts. Trjvellnj men say to us every dy : "Why. they are better than most 10a cigars." Our trade has mor. than doubled sine we commenced to sell ihem. P. & A. L. Miixiad, Ellisburgh, N. Y. Address R. W TANSTIiL, & CO., Chicago. rEAX KEM, WEAK WOMEN, YcE rjbib l)r. BAlItD' ULOOD GRANULES are marvelous, the sensation of the hour. Thousands have used them and not one hut Is enthusiastic ovtSr their wonderful proDertles. 125 ents; -5 boxes. fU Of Druggists or 1 y mail, pc ?ige prepaid. All In-, allds rhould send xccount of rose, symptoms, etc, with order and we will Do YOU GOOD. Address Dr. ATM. M. BAIKD, Washington, N. J. I""! -Piso's Remedy for Catarrh is the i I I (est, asiest to Use, and (Jneapeet. USold by drnggiste or sent by maU. i j SOc . T. Hazeltine, Warren, Pa. Alfl I GREASE BST UT" THE WORLD r- Oct tlie Oennino. Sold Ererywhera. SI00SS3Q0 A MOSTH can be made working for us. Agents preferrei who can lur- ni h tnelr own bones ani give their whole time to the Dusiness.- spa: e momenn may i' prolltably em- loyed also, A few vai m-les In towns and eltles. . F. JOHNSON - CO.. 1013 Main 8t..Klchmond, Va, Bcwsnt tbr aay j or UtdBCT , TronblM, Ser in -IIIf.T. MentBl or Pteyslesl W that Rtio MerreBlttci-tail toenra. SeCia. Herb Mdieia Co. U H. llth t.lhil Mphi ra. .Said by all DrasgiMJ . Ill H S Improved ibo. - Makes 5 F100T BEEft Paakaces. otLlH nf dnliflionn nura. Ting, wholesome beverage. Sold by druggists; mailed for 25c. C. E. HIRES. 48N- ela. At.. Phila. ,. a.- v "V RIS nCrt?!) To introduce them, we wilt I a' Urrtlf. Ciiv Away 1,000 Self- J Operating Washing Ma-hines. It you want one send us your name.f.O.and expr .-ssofa e at once. Tfco National Co., 87 ey St.,K.Y. PAYS for a Lire Scholarship in the L.E3IAK Business I'Ul.liKtifc. wj II grsAxiZ for CI r Nkwark, New Jerset. Positions for nates, national pa'ronage. vr.te Ulan to U. CO-E3IAN. - niAi'j DHTa Greal EnglisfiGou! and yiOIl S rlJiSfl Rheumatic Remedy. . :. utu doii roina, 14 villa. n A TI?PIT Obtains L Ssnl Bti f r . LJ A I CllT 3 In viators' Gai ii. . -la J. . I HAM; Patent lawyer. WaaiiiajtaA, 1. O. - . mm Morphine Hattit Cure In 10 to ziy aays. ia pay tiit cured. Ur. J. icpheH, LebiLa, Ohio. By return mall.': Fall Description Moady's New Tmllr tyUn f ilrrit CatUae. MOODY & CO., Cincumati. O r A T IT r J T obtained by Ei II. OET.- l lnltoni D. C Send for onr book of instructions n t.ic. t im. n - - n n La I ii La 00 VX: VC GtS : P I L LO . StVJMS Of XM1TATIOXS. AZWAT3 ASK FOR Ptt. PiEllCE'S JPEZZEIS, OB Z1TTZ.E StrGABOAtJEJ PILLS. Eteltig entirely vegetable, they op erate witnous oigturoancu io otoici, uict, or occupation. Put tip in glass vials, hermeti cally BealeO A 1 Way a irtsu uu ramure- .no a laxative. alteratie.or pnrgativc, these little Pellets give t most periect satisfaction. - : SMIiMii gitions Headache, Izziiies . c:outlpa tioiij ludicroMt f ou4 Billon- Attacks, and nil derangements of the stom ach and boweig, are prompt ly relieved and permanently CHT-wd T v tho nan of li. Pierce's Pleasant Purgrailvc Pellet. , In explanation of the remedial power of these Pellets over so grent a varietv of diseases, it ' iay truthfully be said that their action upon the system Is universal, not a gland or tissue escaping their sanative influence. Sold by druggists, 25 cents a vial. Jf anu f actured at the Ohemifini I jihorntorv of WrvRT.ti' Htppsrt : I Medic Ah Association, Buffalo, N. Y. BEVflRD Is offered by the manuf actur ersof Br. Sage's Catarrlt IteiKcdy for a case of Chronic Nasal Catarrh winch they cannot cure. - SYfltl TOMS v OF CATARnil-Dull, heavy headache, Obstruction of tho nasal passages, discharges falling- from tho head mtxr the throat, sometimes profuse, watery, and acrid, at others, thick, tenacious, mucous, purulent, bloody and putrid ; the eyes are Weak, watery, and inflamed ; there is ringing in the ears, deafness, hacking: or coughing W clear the throat, expectoration of offensive matter, together vrith scabs from ulcers; the Voice Is vhanged and has a nasal twang ; the breath Is offensive; smeli and taste are im paired! there is a Sebsatlon of dizziness, with mental depression, a backing cough and gen eral debility. Only a few of the aborc-named symptoms are" likely to be present in any one case. Thousands of cases annually, without manifesting- half of the above symptoms, re Bult in consumption, and end fn the gTave. No disease is so common, more deceptive and dangerous, or less understood by physicians. By its rntld, soothing', and healing properties, Dr Sage's Catarrh Remedy cures the worst cases of Catarrh, "cold in tlie liead," Coryza and Catarrhal Headache. Sold by druggists everywhere ; 00 cents. "Untold Agony from Catarrli ' Prof. wV Hausser, tho famous mesmerist, of Ithaca, N. writes i ''Sometcn years ago I Buffered untold agony from chronic nasal catarrh. My family physician gave me up as incurable, and said I must die. . My case was such a bad one, that every day, towards sun set; my voice would become so hoarse I could barely speak above a whisper.. In the morning my coughing and cleariug of my throat would almost strangle me. By the use of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy, in three months, I was a well man, and the cure has been permanent." Constantly Hawking and" Spitting." Thomas J. Hushing, Esq., 2903 Pine Street, St. Louis, Mo., writes : " I was a great sufferer from catarrh for three rears. At times I could hardly breathe, and was constantly hawking and spitting, and for the last eight months could not breathe through the nostrils. I thought nothing could bo done for me. Luck ily, 1 was advised to try Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy, and 1 am now a well man. I believe It to be the only sure remedy for catarrh now manufactured, and one has only to give it a fair trial to experience astounding results and a permanent cure." ' ; . - : Tluree Bottles Cure Catarrh. . - Eli Robbiws, Runyan P. 0-, Columbia Co., Pa, says: "My daughter had catarrh when she was five years old, very badly. I saw Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy advertised, and pro cured a bottle for her, and soon saw that it helped ker ; a third bottle effected a perma nent cure. She is now eighteen years old and sound and hearty," ON D 26 Lecture on ROUGH ON RATS." This ia what killed your poor father. Shan it. Avoid anything containing it throughout your future useful (?) careers. Wo older heads ob ject to its special itougn ness,- - DGMTFOOL in futile efforts with 1 away tame , 1 ana money . insect now- der, borax or what not, used at random all over the house to get rid of Roaches, Water-bugs, Beet- les. or 8 or a mgnts sn-uaa "Rough o BT3 dry powder, t , . hnnt and down tha Dink, drain pipe. First thing in the morning wash it all away down tho Bint, drain pipe, when all tho " Insects from garret to cellar will disappear. he secret is la the fact that wherever msects are in the house, they must Dfi A PUEft drink during the night. SlUAUllEO Clears out Bars, Mice, Bed-bugs, Flies, Beetles. "Rough on Rats," ia sold all around tha world, in every clime, is the most extensively advertised and has the largest sale of any article of its kind on the face of the globe. DESTROYS POTATO DOGS For Potato Bugs, Insects on Vines, etc., a t&biew . spoonful of the powder, well shaken, in a keg 01 water, anu appiwu -wu. nj eorav svrizure. or whJsk fcroom. 01 water, anu appiwu i-iiiujK jwv. . . , T J .-. ; n 1. U r re, or wtusa croom. .eep is weu 15c., 25c. and Zl Boies. Agr. sa. Burrea up. im. 'much-ratsT CXEAI13 OTJTT- BED OUOSf FLIES, Roaches, ftnte,vater-lugfi, rno&s, rata, mice. 0) ill TREATED FREE. DR.. H. GREEN Sc SONS, Specialists for Thirteen Years Past, Ban treated Dropsy and its complications with tho most wonderful success; use vegetable remsdies, en tirely harmless. Remove all symptoms oi Dropsy In tight totwenty days. - - . . - Cure patients pronounced hopeless by tne best 01 physicians. ... .. From the first dose the symptom rapidly disappear, and in ten days at least two-thirds of all symptoms ars removed. . . . , . ' Some may cry humoag without Knowing alout it. , Remember, it does not cost you anything to .. . 1 . , . . r ...,,iwa 1 In t f.l realise tne merits 01 our ireaimuut iw -uitou, ... - days the difficulty of broathins is relievad. tho pulse rejrlar the urinary organs mads to discharge tneir full dnty, ele p is restored, the swelling ail or nearly rone, the strength increased and appetite mala gooa. We are ronstant y miring cases of long sUnding, cases . .... . 1 . . .:.nA . .1 H t ha nn. tDt nave wen uppaa numuerm ntii, lixntdednrr i nnabletolive a week. Give full history of ciu- - Name sex. How long afflicted, how wollen and were, art t jwels costive, have legs Vl nnd drip sd water? Send for free pamphlet;. on- 1 ing te-liirnoDiiis. qiinaiiuii, Ten days treatment furnished free by mail. If you order trial send lOci s in stamps to pay postage. Epilepsy (Fit) Positively Cured. xv it . - t? r? 1? M snvs. ill. Da.. aiariettq Street, Atlanta, G. mm ! yea want 10 earn an about tlinrml Hew Vs- iv net ifut a Good One Haw to hnair Imper- rections and no . Uiard nrainoi 1 Sra-df ITowte etect Disease f j . . iicsici care V "; 5 when satne is t-;--f ikU f .... to Tell the Atre -Sfi by the Teeth 5r What to call the uiurrcDi 1 aria f the Animal ? How to Shoe a Home l-roorr.y f Ail tit a ana other Valaabln Inreria-tinn rel.itina to the EdHine SneciFH run be-obfainrd by reneing onr 10-PAiK iliLI'STlUTEu HOUSE BOOfv, which we will fori-rnrd, catp-ld, on rc- O iZ. OTQ Ii! OTSf- teipt of ONI.Y tiO J. l.i . lit,V4 K t HOK.SK BOOK CO.. 1 34 Leonard sf ., N. V. fblAHVELOUS -' Wholly null te rtirii-i.l nystcms. Auy bsaU li-nr ioJ in wi ri'tnlinx. Rco amendi d by M rc T- a ;t, M 'har I 1',-octor theS-i-n'is:.Hon-. Y.V A.or. Jud i P.-Bpniam n, lr. Mm w, etc. C ass of nu (Z-.l im.na law t ulents, I t clasi iX)pach at .le.Siii l"nWer y o' P.-nn , $X) at -.VeUfulpy Co les eso. F-x-.n.uas p-nt rre?. , 1 . -, f . . n . - ..... . . .. - , P - to-iold er Jfc Ueirt. SmSi'ini Ullaiy li iuit. Auy. Wmujwi, iK U. pf H abl't C u red. Treatment sent a trial, J ! I l all II UM A ssRtS'-inv CO l.Fc y e t te, led. filllftQ-C' eal snd'v qn;?lT Stined. Fee alilUa.C reasonable. G.R. SI ilS.Chicaco, IU - ' " V ' '2 y"' Ml i l l 7VY. VT W 1 1 J I 1 it J J
The North Carolina Prohibitionist (Bush Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 1, 1887, edition 1
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