Newspapers / The North Carolina Prohibitionist … / July 29, 1887, edition 1 / Page 4
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TELEGRAPHIC SUMMARY; . ; : x -r , - ' Eastern and Middle States. . . : Stlvanus Cobb, Jr., the well-known story writer, died a few days since at Boston, aged sixty-four years. . . : . - ,'. - - S 9 1 AZ.. Xrv.JrY.K4-o rv Labor was recently held in the East, and an addres3 was issued which-appeals to the mem bers of the Order all over the country to send delegates to the GeneraTAssembly at Minne apolis in October who will favor the adoption of a now constitution. . ' r ""William H. Ladex, two weeks married, shot his bride and her mother and then killed himself : at his home in New York. - He was crazed by-drink. His mother-in-law was probably fatally injured;; his wife will re-' cover. .tt.- i' Iv";--'- . - : - , ; " : A fire in Buffalo, JN. X,, destroyed the. Ziegel Brewery the largest of its kind in the city. - A fireman was killed and anotber ln- - - rr .i 4. i -l(it jvwb - v. - Two New Yorkers Michael J. Dixon and' John P. Ryan were instantly killed by light ning while fishing from a small boat off . Staten Island. ,-5 . ZZ':- ' : Great damage has been done to crops by . the recent heavy rains, particularly in Penn sylvania and New Jersey.-' Z'vZZ' Three small boys, inmates of -the Chil li ren's Nursery at We?t Brighton, Stat3n Island, were drowned while bathing. r " . Owing to a heavy falling off inthe strength of tho Knights of Labor in Massachusetts,' steps have been taken to combine Districts Si . inJ77., ; frii v't- :t V'ttri- , - r A Dispatch from Great Barririgton, Massif reports that eighte3a:-lives were lost by the Hoods which 4 folio we i the heavy rains. Bridges and JuiElin?s wen swept awayand. lain Aging wasaouts aid much Iamage- - ZZ South and West. - . -!. A fierce storm has swept over a large see-: tioit of West Virginia, doing great damage to. buildings and cropa At iiocfeport a circus tent was blown away, and a dozen spectators were injured. .. . , .. Three or" four persons " were shot, one fatally, during a sham battle between cow boys and Indians at a circus exhibition in Clinton, Iowa. .i It is suppose! a loaded revol ver was used accidentally by . one of the per- lormers. "'...J."- ".:- - " : - -; --, -. - .. ;; Oambhintjs Assembly; Knights of Labor, -1,000 strong, of Milwaukee, has withdrawn from the Order " because of Gran 1 Master "Workman Powderly's sentiments on the tem perance question. ; ; r ;;-'- ' " . The Ohio Democrats, at their State Con mention in Cleveland, nominated General Thomas -E. - Powell for Governor on the ' second- ballot, over Congressmen Camp bell and . . Foran. The : ticket was com pleted by the - nomination of - candi dates .for Lieutenant Governor and .other ' offices. The platform proclaimed " its hearty and unquauhod endorsement of. tha honest. patriotic, and economical Administration of . President . Cleveland;" demanded a judi , cious" xeduction of -- the .-present burdea- some tariff ; endorsed Mr. Cleveland's views ; regarding Z "the public . domain;- favored protection to honest labor, home rule in the management and control of municipal at fairs, and an amendment to the Constitution providing for the license" of the liauor traffic: Nothing was. said in the platform about the tivu oer vice laws. . . ; . A powder house at Streaton, JUL, -was . struck by lightning, and between eight and ten thousand pounds of, powder exploded, . leaving in place of the building a hole sixty feet long, forty feet wide and twenty feet decp;- One person was kilted, six badly in- - jured aud forty-live buildings were wrecked, A fire in St. Paul, Minn., destroyed a number of large business houses. The dam age is heavy. :Z-: :-Z- ZZ"r Francis M. Kf.t.t.ar, of Shelby ville, III., killed his wife because sb.3 bore him thra children 'who all had twelve fingers and twelve toes, the same as their mother. , Kel-. ar's neighbors tried .to lynch him before he was taken to jaiL - , "W. J. McGarigle, one of tho convicted Chicago ''Boodlers," has . made hit? escape from tho Sherifi-s custody and .-left for parts unknown. McGarigle, -as -. Warden of the County Hospital, had been convicted of cor rupt practices and sentenced to three years' imprisonment. :" Washington. Oscar J. Harvey, the Treasury Depart ment forger, has been sentenced to twelve years imprisonment at hard, labor in the Albany penitentiary, y v : r T The President and Mrs. v Cleveland re turned to the White House from their New was twenty-three years old on Thursday, JuiysL " . -vV-rvr :;: zh-'- s Sostb of the railroads are charged with . evading the provisions of - the InterrEtate . Commerce law regarding freight: rates by improper classification. . : - - Twd Indian delegations one from Oregon . and the other front Idaho have been -in Washington within a few day3. The former - presented claims for horses stolen and house3 burned by the Nez Perces ten years ago, and the latter want : to obtain permission to ne- - gotiate with railroad compani-seeking a right of way through their reservation. " ; -- A project is on foot to ask Congress for a Tnodpratfi prant. in tho Annual Armv - A nnrft- priation bill,' to: enable the President to assemble each autumu a competent . mixed ; force 'of regulars and militia, and engage them in the practical exercises of the march, the encampment and the battle field. . - The Treasury Department has decided that - animals of high grade and value imported from distant countries for breeding purposes are entitled to free entry, notwithstanding the fact that they may be lor sale. : ; : BniGADIEB-OEirERAL v "WrxxiAM - DtJNX, ' United States Army, retired, late J udge-Ad-' vocate-General, died at his country residence in Fairfax County, Va., a few days since, in , the 72d year of bis agA . - i- ; i : .Foreign, r - Two accounts of the explorer Stanley's ' . death in Africa have been received, one stit ing that he had been killed by natives, and the other that he had been drowned. -There-port is discredited in London. A tribe friendly' to Egypt attacked the Mahdists under Osmair Digna, near Kassala recently,'and heavy fighting ensued, during which 1,200 men were killed. . " More than 350 houses have been destroyed and 4,000 people have been rendered -home--less by a fire in Svenzjany Russia. -l :; i . ' The iElmperdr. of Germany has become so feeble that-he is unable to wear his" uniform on account of its weight. Zsz z'XZ-Z Z ;i ' Canadian Knights of Labor desire separa tion of jurisdiction from the United States.- - - ' .The corporation of Dublin has conferred the freedom of the- city ; on Mr.' "William O'Brien, editor of United. Ireland, and Mr. Patrick A. Collins, Of. Boston, Mass, who ia - now visiting Ireland. A CALCUTTA'dndia) dispatch reports that - the steamer Mahratta haa foundered. Six lives were lost. - - Ait international chess tournament is' in progress at Frankfort, Germany. ; - : " .' APOISONOUS DRAUGHT. '':lZ-:'- Zy '.-Z.:?- ".jZ IK "-':"' - :;:""-"'-': j--'V -.fiz-rZZz'K. -::zy::''Z.-'sZ' "z '' - A; "Woman Almost Ixses lier Life ;3Vliile' Scattering Insect Powder. .":"A despatch from-Pittsburgh, J a , sa s. Mrs. Jenkins, living on Second avenue, was the victim of a strange affliction. She start led at an early hour in the morning to free . her home from the pestiferous insects which , nfest ife.. To a-53i:n Hs'a .tha parpsw stated she used one of the patentbcllows observ ble . in most any of the drus . stores -in the citv. could crawl and breed. v y She did not take the precaution before be- o-mninT ffcia wir 7.1 ha Vi., windows of her house, i Instead she left them wide open and allowed the wind to play freely within them.- -It was not until five o'elockin the evening that she discovered that her inadvertence had caused her to in- as she haor-thrown jelsewhere, . At any rate at the hour mentioned she became deathly sick and sank, a helpless mass, upon the floor of the room in which she was working. :Z , . A doctor was called and found the woman " In convulsions. He at Ones disearned the cause of her-ill nes?, and applied powerful emetics. At one time it was feared she would die. - TVhen he left her he was confl ; dent of her ultimate recovery. The only thing that saved Mrs. Jenkins from certain - death was that she had inhale i too much of .the poison. 1 his she filled with Rouzh on Rats an 1 freel v i squirted it, not only mto the many cracks 1 c3 ; Uats fJoutheru and en syivama and creyices of her domicile, but into every f'0')8- S RyMary&nd and Pennsylvania, ; 1. t. . u -..v. 1 i. KSaSDcts. : Ha v M a r viand and Pennsylvania DAVID HOFFMAN HANGED A TEAEf-WIlECKER'S TATE FOR A COTVABDLY CEIME IS NEBEASKAi A Successful Attempt to Throw a Train I From the Track.1 : fcavid Hoffman has been hanged ".at Ne braska City, Nob., - for wrecking a Missouri Pacific passenger train near Dunbar, on the iught of the 11th of January last.- He nearly fainted when the death warrant was read. On partiag. with his brothers he broke down en tirely;; and stoutly protastecf .his innocenqe He was so weakthat he could not "walk to the gallows alone, and was assisted by "the ministers."- ' He cried, during prayers"on the scaffold and was crying when the-trap fell. "When asked if he had any tbing to say he replied. . "Nothing; : I cant say anything." : r ."The trap was then sprung, and in eight and one-half minutes he "was dead.. "The neck was Lrokon. f - : ":" '- ' 1 - ;.5v The train wrecked by Hoffman and James ; Bell, his aiColplice, was the Missouri Pacific passenger train from Omaha to Kansas City. It was thrown from the track about one and one-half miles northwest of Dunbar, a small station tea miles est of Nebraska City: : It consisted; of a locomotive, a baggage-car, ; palace car and a sleeper. The night was bright with' moonlight, and it - was 1 11:15 o'clock when the" train was thrown from the. track. . The-train , had gust rounded a curve when it struck a misplaced rail, -leaving the track and going into the creek, some thirty or forty feet below. ' The engine broke loose from the strain, and running about a hun dred yards along . the . side of the track turned, half-way over, catching , tna en gineer, James Dewitt, under , it, push ing the throttle-valve through his body near the hert and " burying - it' some six inches ia the frozen ground The fire man escaped with a few- slight bruises. The - brave engineeir musfe " have " seen the danger, for the lever was thrown back over the centre some three notches. The train . in leaving the track did not follow the engine, but went down a draw into the creek.- Every car, save the chair car, turned ,over- on its side, and none of the passengers was "fatally hurt, although about forty were bruised and injured. The express messenger, Frank Cheno wirth, had his skull fractured by the iron safe turning over on, him. On' examination of the track where the train had run off it was found that the fish-plates had been removed from the south rail, the spikes drawn and tb rail shoved toward -the centre, making an open switch. - tT: -- " The house of John Hoffman, a brother of David. Hoifman, was about a quarter of a mile from the scene of the wreck.' He said that he had seen two men run away after the train wasderailed. The tracks of the men were found, and they were such as would, have been made by the foot coverings worn by David Hoffman and James Bell. - Those two men were-arrested and taken to Nebras ka City to prevent their being lynched. James Ball turned State' evidence and was sentenced to ten years "imprisonment Hoff man was put on trial on April 6 for murder in the first degree. . The jury f oand him guilty after half an hour's deliberation. '-"-- - -" - Hoffman was twenty-four years of age, and1 was born in Indiana. In his -confession he. said thit" his accomplice, Bell, broke open the railroad tool house, got the clawbar and wrench and drew the spikes from the rail and removed the bolts from the fish-plates. - Hoff man said he was ten or twenty, feet from Bell while he was doing", this. - Bell testified, when be gave evidence for tho Statethat he (Bell) was partly, drunk and that HofEmai prepared the trtck for the wreck. He said that Hoffman told him he was going to wreck the train so that he could have plenty of money, j - CONVICT LABOR. The Relation That ft Bears to Free Iiabor Official Statistics. " " A dispatch from "Washington says: Car roll D. Wright,- Commissioner of Labor, has received from the Public Printer advance copies of his second annual report, which re lates entirely to the subject of convict labor. From ; the report in hand it ' appears that the total number of prisoners of all grades, employed in the inst tutions comprehended in the report is 64,34'.), the males numbering 55,454, and tha females 5,825.' - . The state having the largest nu 1 bir of convicts in the institutions considered is New York, its total being 9,073 ; a v The total value of goods made and work done by productive labor in th penal insti tutions of the whole country is $28,753,095. It took 45,277 convicts one year to produce this total value. : It would-have taken 35,534 free laborers to have produced the same quantity of goods in the same time. ' - The state producing the largest amount of convict-made goods is New York, the Value there being $6,236,320, Dakota coming at the bottom of the list, with a nrodnct of 11.577. Boot and shoes 1 ao, the product being $10,100,271) , . ' v- : - ; -: r - As stated above the total product of all the penaljnstitutions of the country for the year 1886 was $28,753,999, which is 54-100 of 1 per cent of he value of the total products of the industries of the country. As show ing the amount of competition in some of tue leading industries , between convict and free labor, the statement is made, regarding: 1 the boo'j and shoo trade, that the ner caoita .J product of free labor for the year is $1,492 in ! ail the states in wmcn boots and shoes are. manufactured rsn r prisons, wnne the per capita for convict labor is $1,327.-- So far as boots and shoes are concerned, the convict Eroduees as much per annum as the free iborer, lacking $169 per capita. ; In boots and shoes, alone, in all the. states wherein they are'made in prison, $1 of prison pro duct s represented by $18.23. of free labor' product - . - ;-," : ,- . i COLORED. KU-KLUX. A South Carolina Band Brought to I - Trial and Acquitted. - - ' - - c A dispatch from Charleston, B. C. says: A sensational case of ku-klux conspiracy was developed in ;ythe . United States - Court Twelve negroes were indicted for intimidat ing government witnesses in revenue eases, and the trial brought out the fact that a reg ular organization ex sts on Wadmalaw, one of the sfti Islands adjacent to the place. The island is inhab ted principally by negroes. All the members of t ,e Ku-klux ara negroes except the presidenc; who isa white man, and the trial Justice of the island. - The ob ject as set forth : in r the ' constitution, are those of mutual protection against certa n lazy, turbulent- characters going around arresting peaceful, law abiding citizens, and extorting money from them on trumped up charges of, violating the liquor laws and for the purpose of appealing to the Legislature and Q n areas for such action as would in- iira Protection' from such Dersicutions, Testimony showed that several government -witnesses had been waylaid and shot, ana that several were arrested on warra-ts issued by the president of the Ku-klux." Nbtwitht standing this the jury acquitted ell the de fendants. ' . . . MARKETS. ) - ; CAi,TiMOBE-T-Flour City Mills, extfa,S3.25 . e$3. 75-, Wheat -Sout'iern Fultz, 82aS3uts; Corn-fSouthern White, 02a53cts, Yellow, 47a t 14a1450; Straw Wheat, 7.50af 8.00; Butter, creamery, lac near-oyreceip : IbalSct&iCheese--Easternlfancy Cream, IOV4 allcta, ; Western, anct3. ; y Eggs 12al3; 1 ttle . .75af4.2o--bwind bfc6cts. fheep . and j. Lamb-pjla, cts; lobacco Cj Infe10'Aa 1 J3 Common .a4 't i11"56'0004 ffiie red, 7aSl, ancy, fair extra, 3.30a$3. DO; Wheat No.l Whit ,87 a88 eta. : Rye State, 64a5G; Corn Southern Yellow. 47a48cts.; Oats Wbite State, 38am cts. ; Butter Stato, 13al9 cts. Cheese State, Hal4cU ;' Eggs cts." -" Z Z i - Z-. K: Philadelphia. Flour ---Pennsylvania: fancy, . 3.50af 4; Wheat Pennsylvania and Sonthern Red.i3a84cts: Rve Pennsylvania 57a58 cts. ? Corn Southern Yellow, 45a47'Cts ; j uats 3oa3 cts. ; uutter otaro, ioai cts, Cheese JN. Y. factory, ll$,V4 cts.: jag: State, 12al3 cts. -, - AGRICULTURAL; TOPICS OF INTEREST RELATIVE TO FARM AND GARDEN. .. - . Growing "Wheat After Corn. : By planting early of an early -ripening corn, he crop may be got off in time to &ow with wheat, thus getting land seeded again in the shortest time after the sod has been broken "up, and providing a covering for, it im-the whiter,, wheat the following winter.! - The corn ; field so managed should be near some grass landL tor which the ripened corn may be drawn lis soon as cut and - left until dry enough to husk This, though involving more labor, is a better plan than the old-time practice of plowing . or , cultivating be tween the rows of stalks and leaving the latter to be seeded" just at the beginning of winter. In these times this late-sown wheat will not amount to much; butby clearing off early the wheat may be suc cessfully grown - after; the corn. .. The practice of sowing wneat i among . the corn-scalks or corn-shocks is a slovenly one. ;?-.: r ' - - t v ' '--; Dougb. for Poultry. : , I; Every one, of course, feeds to his flock more or less corn hr oat Yneal tnadeinto a doucrh. ; But some make the great mis-., take of mixing with it so much water as 'At ' J I i 1 to give .it the consistency of S thin, slushy paste, at once difficult to pick: up with their delicate pointed bills, and im peding; digestion by weakening the. di gestive fluids with too -much c moisture. Corn meal, especially; should have just enough hot-water-poured over it to mois ten - and partially swell the minute parti cles and cause them to fall apart rafher than .adhere to each other, - The. rich yellow mass is then readyto be taken up, and not only aids in digesting the ther contents of the crop - and gizzard, but keeps the bowels in good order, and should not be omitted as .a portion of each day's mess, except in case oi acute internal disease. ; It should not consti tute the entire grain food of fowls, as our maize yields so -much oil as tojncline growing f 6wls and laying hens to put on too much fat. -Ppultry IVbrld. ; f4': ; Swine as Weed-Eradicators. v ; ? Colonel F. D. Curtis, Charlton, N. Y tells " the Elmira Hushandman he has known an acre of -liveforever to be ex terminated j by one season's efforts of hogs ; and T they- are equally- effective against other persistent plants that cumber the ground: - - - " - . - ' "The bes way i3 to fence off all spots infested with noxious weeds hard to kill, and turn in hogs. Shelled corn should be scattered about to, induce them , to root, and they, should notbe fed so much but that they will; have keen v appetites. The little puggy breeds are good" for nothing as reformed. - r Mr. IloStntan has a breed that is genuine , Tliey take naturally to nature's food and will thrive on grass and roots. " Wild morning glory can be eradicated in the same way, and I have no doubt quack also, "fit has a very sweet root aud if the hogs are pinched a littje on the start, until they got a tastev they would also destroy the quack. If the- ground : be too? hard it should be ploughed, and- 'corn scattered about. Hogs will also cat the roots of Canada thistles, as they are mite sugary. - The good things hogs will do, when they have a chance, have never all been toteu. They are really a very important part of the farm and its outfit. I make my Dnrco- Jersey's useful in ridding the farm of weed and in enriching the fiejds in turn. They alsc aid ia making up the balance sheet.?' ; ; - ': j ' c - 1 How to Kill the Carcnlio. Z The best method to save the plum crop from the ravages of the curculios is by jarring the trees, and killing them when they fall. .To do this we take: a large sheet ! enough - to : spread as far as the branches reach, then give the tree a sharp sudden jar, when the curculios. will fall and can be seen on the white "sheet. and at once crushed between the thumb and finger: - The best time to do this is early in the morning, -when they are be numbed by the cool air, and are very sluggish and can scarcely ny or get away. The trees must have a quick; sudden jar to.- bring- the curculios down.1 ; This is best accomplished by cutting ona small limb a few. inches from-the jtree;- leaving a stub on ""which ' to strike with arair sized ihimmer. 1 By' this means they can be speedily disk dged.f A piece of iron a few inches long may be inserted near the branches in the body of the tree. A three-eighth inch' iron bolt -can be used for this purpose." A-hole should be bored in the tree" an inch pr two, deep enough to hold the bolt in place, which will an swer! abetterC purpose -than any other plan., ; JThe bolt is left' in thc-tree from year to year. The jarring should com mence as soon as the plums appear, and should be ; continued every morning as long as there airy curculios to be found. Usually; two weeks will be enough to ac complish thei r-destruction and to save the crop. . "When accustomed to the work 100 trees can be gone over pretty rapidly Two or three minutes each l morning, it the movements ;are quick,-will answer to rid each tree from the curculios on them, It takes less time than would be pected. -Planter and Stockman. exr Preventing Bees, From Swarming. Producers of -extracted honey,; by giving as many, combs as can be used and extracting often, entirely prevent swarm ing, and keep an enormous lot of bees in a hive.; " By this means great yields are obtained from one colony. If, this can be accomplished when working for ex tracted honey, why cannot the same thin j dc secureu oy giving similar conuuions when working for comb ' honey? , So thought a prominent English bee keeper ,; and the result is. we are offered a. new non-swarming STstem by which plenty of " j room, both for egg-laying and storage in t ooxes is given as required,- anO swarming ? prevented and its benefits secured f part of .-. . 1 1 them) by having i. a new set . of brood sombs built from starters ' It is claimed that this 'plan. Is sure and will no doubt be tested in , many apiaries ; this season. The management is asiollows":". Early in the season, before the bees get the desire to' -swarm, a hive . containing:-:- empty frames (not combsT or those with starters I only, is placed tinder the brood-nest. . : As me- nar vest comes, . uoes are given, ana as fast, as occupied the:; boxes "are raised and others placed underneath. ' As the top opes are finished they are removed, and.. more boxes are placed under: the second set; which are then at" the top. Boxes r should contain drawn-out comb, and . be . given as often ' as required to occu py all the bees and prevent much wofk below, i.lf. comb is built in the lower frames it is removed when but two-: thirds finished." and is never allowed to be completed.- i .The principle, is to always have unfinished combs in - the brood chamber nearest to" the entrance.- If the space is farthest from the entrance. or at the back of the hive, there is a possibility of swarming. , , "C " - Deep Plowing. . ' " 'r. -in'nj as well as -in dairying or lr. grazing, everything .depends upon ' the condition of the 6oil. Here is the foun dation, and unless this is in proper con dition the substructure is bound to fall. A great deal has been said and written as .to the proper depth to plow, and there is such a , difference of opinion among farmers in regard to it the question is still as far from being settled as evert "We think, however, that -the leading cause for such difference' of ppinion . may be found in the land itself. . That good crops are and can be grown .on shallow plowed land that is good no one will deny? provided the season be neither too wet- nor too dry--i.' e., with moderate rains the whole season. In such a season any one can raise good crops. - But such seasons are rare, and, in fact, every sea son is likely to be attended with either a long drought or" a loner wet spelLi-l Now what the farmer wants is to guard'against 1 V. .1 1 a .1 .' i . . j. A uuui, iuc yuiy way ; 1.0 uu 11 is. to break up his land . as deeply as possi blesay' not less, than seven to ; ten inches. ; Bet how is this , to mend the matter? "We answer,' very easily. Incase of a heavy rain a large portion of the water; instead of running off, will be. ab sorbed by the deeply1 disintegrated - land, where it is held as if by a sponge for the use of the plants, and if a drought should intervene, there is a supply of water just wnere tne plants want irr anor: when ex hausted, its place is at once supplied by fl T1 I I TilTr off VOrtflAn fiStrv VtilAm' Tf will capillary attraction from below. It : will thus be seen that by'deep .. plowing the farmer provides against draught by hav ing a supply of water in reserve, or .a place ready to receive and hold it when ever it come3. The better to .insure, this. howeyer, as well as to facilitate i the : es cape bf,too much water,: it is better to use a subsoil plow and - an additional team, funning the same immediately j after the breaking plow, and ripping an the sub soil the desired depth. i;Thk -need . not be done for every crop raised on 'the and, but only once in every -thraer or four years.' ." . : - Z:. ::'Z: It.has been well said that it is .better to have two acres of good land,- one on top of , the other, than as ' many acres alongside of each other, as it costs only half as much to tend them. The way to do this is by deep plowing, and ' thus! double the depth of the soiL, - as well as the crops grown thereon. - : r ; "::.- Blight in Fruit Orchards. One of the most formidable diseases to which ,fruit trees are liable is the ' "fine blight."- It attacks the trees at.different periods of thy growing season, from June to September, and generally the young parts . hrst. , 1 he leaves nag,: the sap oozes out in globules through the bark and has a disagreeable odor, and the dis eased branch turns black, - as if it had been burned by fire. - "When the pear- ree is attacked it is a difficult matter to save it, the -disease spreads so rapidly. In apple and quince trees it is less fatal," rarely killing more than a portion of the tree. - -'. " " , - - . Scientists and farmers alike differ in their , opinions as to what causes fire blight,-whether it be the sun, the at mosphere or an insect, r Nor do authori- xties in the matter agree in their treatment of fire blight.: In the opinion of . the writer the only effective and trustworthy treatment is to cut away, the very day the disease is discovered, the blighted parts into the healthy "wood ; where, there is no trace of the disease, and burn up imme diately all 'the diseased ; portions cut off. Charles -- Downing said : - "When fire blight has- actually appeared ' the only remedy seems to be the knife and the saw- most vigorously applied,:; to eradicate every symptom of diseased and discolored bark or wood". - If you would save your tree, cut at r once on the - first apparent symptom of ;the disease, and be sure you cut it clean oiit." P. Barry says: "The only remedy for fire blight is to cut in stantly ' the blighted : parts into the healthy wood and : burn them up imme diately. " - - , - - Twig blight attacks the young shoots of the current season's growth and causes these to wither and become brown and curly in mid-summer. - -The cause is'un certain and the injury' is not materially great. The remedy is cutting away at the first appearance of the trouble. i i: Apple blight, like the dreaded fire blight,; is a serieus disease. It attacks a whole branch or limb, - and sometimes half of the top of a tree is destroyed be fore it becomes apparent to an ordinary; observer. Again there is. no remedy ex- cept to cut away the diseased portions and burn these up. The pear-leaf blight ; is a soit of blight that appears on the leaves during July and "August, first in small brown spots. These spots spread rapidly over tho leaves until their growth is stopped. To avoid the evil effect of leaf blight the great point S is to get. a rapid, -vigorous growth before - midsnm mer. '-Z ' fz ZzZr ' Readers, especially those having small experience, will doubtless be disappointed because a long list of , so-called remedies has hot been given : for blight--remedies such as are advised from year to year by manyjwriters These have been avoided because there is in reality but one course to pursue the heroic' one of cutting away the .diseased ; parts, and destroying them by fire. Kfvf, Yofk ;World.y- '"--x 'Z Diiiieixstons of Great Cathedrals. .Now; that the project of the. erection in JNew lorkdty ot an imposing ISpis copal Cathedral structure seems to be no longer involved in doubt; the table . giv ing the correct dimensions of the Avorld's great cathedrals will be consulted .'with interest," and by many i carefully pre served for future" reference.- The figures are herewith giverft -'w -- ' v V ''. ". - i Z : length. 'Breadtti. . Height. Feet, rf- Feet. - ; , Feet. St. Peter's ...... 613. .z4 , 450 Z 438 . . ... 500-Zfr ; 243 1;- 404 550 . 240 -Z 375 St. Paul 8. . Duomo . . Notre Dame..i.v, J;. Cologne 416 , 153 " . 29S 444- ' 283.' 395 ' 178 ' 480 163 117 409 , 246 455 Toledo... Rheims..i Rouen, i.. Chartres : Antwerp.... ... .... 430 -C n -150- ; S73 ...... 384 " -- 17i ; ' 403 . . ... 525 .' Ct 195 : . 465 ........ 477. 186 , W ....... 530 ? 154 V 235 Strasburg .-, Milan ....:'"; Canterbury York ...... Winchester Durham.. 1 524- 261 55i : "Tv208.:'i - i 411 170 . ' 214 516 178 -,?-: - Ely. Saiisbupy .... 473 229 - - - 379 ; Our: First;- Mail Service.- '-4 The first record - contained in Tour ko Ionial history of any kind of mail ...service dates from 1677, wherr. the court at Bos-" ton appointed Mr.- John "Hay ward "to take in and convey i letters according to "their direction. In 1710 Parliament, passed an act to establish a general post office for all her majesty's dominions, in cluding I Norths America, . ; New York being made the chief letter office - oi the colonies The rates of postage for , all letters and packages from New York tc i any plaoe within sixty miles were as fol- lows: - Single letters, jour pence; uuuuic, eight dence;" treble, ' one shilling; an ounce, one shilling and' four-, pence. Mngazine of American JRetory. 1; The largest dose of quinine ever given, ; according to Dr. E. C. Knight, of Dub hnJ vas administered to himself in 1883.' Und was J31.25; grains in ; twenty-four hours. ' - - T ' . TEMPERANCE. .AZ7Z - Only.- ".' - "- Only a glass in the . barroom." 'ZZZr - Only a single glass; ZZ'Z? -. ' - . Only a lack of courage, : Z ' ; .' " . Only the answer "yes;" " -: -. -- . Only an evil comjanion, - .. -Klyly luring him on; - '. V ; Z Only a "free'hearted Charlie,? 'Ks" r;V;iV:S And the fatal work is dona. :, V " - A Only a little bitipsy," , -'' " ; - Only blood-shot eyes, ZC":ZZ "Only a pleading mother 3 j Z : Only-a wifes surprise fVj;; ,;;" a - , . Only an aching forehead, ' ' . v'. .:- --- -. ' Only a bruised face, ;-,- ZZ ' Pnly a broken promise, ' ': J : ; V Only a deep disgrace... . . . :-Only a cheerless shanty," . - 'ZZZ. "Without fire or wood; ;: : : . - , And litt'e half -clad children T SF:-1- "Waiting and crying for food; ftH ZX :Z t Onlv curses for kisses. : -ZJ'. : ZZ-ZZ.Z.;& Only-sorrow and woe, Z ZZ'r-. -' .' L ... Only a drunken father, ... . - -" Only an angry blow. . ;v ' Z " . Only weeping children, ;'.V-- - . - . Only a dying wife, ''l'-Only another promise-" ; - ;r' , - ' r ;r Cnly a drunkard's life! ; 1 - :'.-:- ;' Ol The woe and anguish, ' . -vr : r ; .' -"- "What mortal tongua can telll -: - - ; Only a glass in the barroom, . z'Z '.' -----Only a drunkord's helll i ','- ' " : ' Schuyler Sears, in Ohio Farmer. - Disgraciiiflr the Flag, : 'Z J '. Among the sights ; which greeted our eyes on the:. Fourth, our - great national holiday, was one that ought to make every true Amer ican blush. ',.' 'Z"-"Z. '' Z:- ' " ;' :-: -' "We were enjoying a Fourth in a delight fully quiet way, 61 it ing : and : laughing among our family, wen su ldenly we heard ar great uproar somewhere near. We looked, down the roal, and what a sight we beheld) A large wagon, drawn by a pair -of horses both horses and: wagoaf profusely decomted with the 'Stars and Stripes.''. Our enthusi- a?m was instantly aroused, we felt like start ing k rousing cheer; when suddenly ouf feel ings received a shock I r-. It would be impossi ble to describe our: sensations when we dis covered, that the wagon contained a large keg, which must have been a kegof beerl Alongside of the keg lay yonugman, dead -drunk! Another youag man was sitting beside the keg and seemed to be trying to stea iy it,; although he looked as though some one ought to "steady" him. ( The driver did not seem in any better condition, and alongside the wag on walked three or four men. all of them looking the worse from drink. Their con versation was not very euuyiug, u. wo iiijguii judge by the few " words .which reached our ears. V I presume v they had been out m the country enjoying (1) the Fourth; but, alas I what a sorry job they made of it. ' -: I could not help thinking what a disgrao -to the Stars and Stripes! What a shame that our ? beloved '" and . beautiful flag ; should actually cover such things! . Oh, the pity of it! that waannot save it from such humilia tion!, the pity of it, th&tr every rum hole 'HiKh" and low, can decorate tneir fronts with our flag, which ought to be held sacred too sacred f or any such -purpose. How cnn"any man who loves his country allow it? II -any other people should offer our flag one tenth of the indignity which we heap upon it ourselves, we would resent it at the point ol the -sword. Whv. then, will v Americans hesitate about upholding the dignity of their flag at home i : V hy will they allow the very ones who are protected by its starry folds to trail it in the dust? Oh, -men! Americans! Do not permit it Rally around our dear flasr. and save it from the polluting touch of intempjrance! -.; Let it be an emblem of pro tection from the curse of drunkenness, as it is an mblem of refuse to thousands yes. -millions who claim its shelter from evils which do.uot destroy near so surely. - Let it be the crowning glory of our flag that it shall float" over a nation of free men and ; women free in every sense of the word; but of all the evils. Ave beg to bo relieved of, free us from the curse of rum! Airs. J. ' A Eian in Safe Ballot. . - ' - - ; - ; : Did They Inherit It ? -- In a letter- from Erieville, . N. Y.," to the Pioneer, C. I. Hitchcock says: Some years ago there was a distillery on the farm joining my father's. There were a numberof - men who used to . patronize it and carry away in jugs, and, very often, in. their stomachs, the -article distilled. Among the" number were two that . I remember , very well, as they fre-, quently came and worked for father on the farm. ; Last April I was reminded . of those men, as the great grandson of one and the grandson of the other , came to me to get work. They were poorly clad, and their boots but little better than none. , I could not think of sending them out in the snow with such boots and furnished them with some, expecting they would be -hosest enough to work and pay for them. " But I was disappointed. They both aeemed devoid of any moral principle, and neither of t3iem could read or write. : " -- - Is it not probable that the influence exerted on those men by the use of the liquor made at that old distilleryris still shown in the i ves and conduct of these young men f r v " ; I have pondered over it, and tiought much : about the man who owned and ran th old stilL 'c The "last time I remember seeing him he stood on the ?outh side of his barnv with head, droop xl and seemed "very thoughtful. A friend of his had shot himse'f a short time before, and I have often thought that he was in a deep study about his future prospects, and perhaps bad forebodings of the iailuence he had exerted on those wLo liad patronized his distillery. '-: - -'- ; -: -.: . Is there not too limited a view ..taken of intemperance? -"Can it be otherwise than that the d.stiller,-' brewer, wholesale aud retail dealer in intoxicating liquors, after they pass away from this state of existence,, will know and realize the influence that their 'business has exerted and is still exerting on those who t-have dealt with them - r . : IT The suffering and privation endured by Eersous intimately connected with those who abitually use intoxicating liquor is enough to cause the least thoughtful to wish the whole business annihilated, and when we carefully investigate the subject and see the effects of it,"not-oniy on those who use it, out on gener ations yet to tot low, are we not, most ot -us, too indifferent and too slack in our efforts to endeavor to convince those who- are engaged m the manufacture and : sale of it, that their own best interests in this; life and the life to come require the entire abandonment of the business, . - . - v C. L Hitchcock. Ebikvullje, N. Y. - - - , ; By What Rfsrlit Does the,. Saloon Kxist ? - ThA saloon systom can plead no constitu tional guaranty. Even the absurd and oft- reneated claim of "personal liberty,1' pu forth bv the liquor drinker, ioe3 not apply to the seller, . J". If we admit the right to eom-r nut suicide, it does not prove the right to commit murder. - If I have the right to.de strov mv usefulness and mv 'life, by strong drink or poisonous drugs, it does not- follow that you have the right to sell them to me, knowing the use I will make of them. . f- JNor can the saloon system base its right to exist on any claim of usefulness. It is not a legitimate branch Of ' trade, , supplying a natural and healthful demand, but, -as we have already seen, an active, tireless agency in the creation of an unnatural; demand for that which is only pernicious in its effects. If its dreary pathway of vice be illumined .by' one good - deed - dona for country or for humanity, . it " has - not - vet '' been report 3d. ' If it . has one "y redeeming virtus to elrset agamst an unbroken monotony of wickedness, it has been most successfully concealed. , Its character,purpose and history declare it to be a proper subject for political outlawry? without title, to sympathy, or -tue - right to bo. " : , :- - - ' 'Z - - -.-.: - Zi - H If society has the right of self-protection against unjust taxation it most assuredly may protect itself against the unequaled burden imposed by liquor traffic. If the right exists to guard the community - agamst crime, corruption or the spread of contagious disease, for a much stronger reason it exists against the saloon, which is the known "causa of more crime, corruption, disease and death than any other agency. - - . -y The only honest ground on which the saloon system can claim the right to be, is the right of the individual to get money regardless of the consequences to society. . And for the same reason that wo punish criminals who put that principle into practice, we have the right to abolish the saloon. Hon. Wnu-Windonw f lEven in the bandit businesa sobriety is Jn- aispensaoie to success, r rann James tens rerjorter: . "I never - touch uauor. 1 his is one reason why I was never caught; nothing could induce me to drink a drop, so I always carried a cool head. - Some men need two -or three drinks to eive them courage enough to make a fight, but as for myself I always want to eo into fight with a clear head. " I can sse , better shoot quicker, fight harder and pro tect myself better.? - - - - - - " - The Old Folks nt nomek. - Or elsewhere, need a ionic raw and then t 1 sustain them under gTOvring inflrmiLies. No safer or more thorongh iavisorant for aje and the delicate can te foiuad than Hostetter's Stomach Bitter?, a seasonable medicine in those ailments of commonest oscnrrence liver complaint, indigestion and. bowel disor ders; a pur botan;o safeguard against mala ra,and a reliable n-.eans of coanterait'.n" lneamatism. To the convalescent Is a r&U I?b!f 5w. m rco fSTf-of strength, and to Qfcoiiita ed, nervr invalid it yields tran oud slumber and renewed -ppatite two prime factors m the restiraiioi ot vigor; . Belne of parely b tanic origin, it is free from those Tob ject ens ur,-ed aganst mineral remediei diffi cult or irarofsib! of a sirailaUon by the sys tem, and wh'u h impair the tone of the stom ach, : which - tie Bitters,on the. contrary Et eitheiis and i exulatrs. ltiae dored and rreecr;bed by the molkal fraternity. 'AJfast man is usually., very. t!ow comes to paying his debts. - - " : '. en It ; 'Throw Physic to the Does" -"" - ' "Wheii lt is the old-fashion- d blue mass, Vui V n uru, wuti its si, or! UMag lir. l-;orce'9 .Pleasant mu-fsative Pellets.'" a moilem mflt- Ciiluxurv, bingFmvll,u -ar-coated eritntt'ei, enntaininsr ths active rrincinles of c-eriAin' ro is and herbs, and which will be. found to contain as mucli cathar ic power as ny o't'-ie' o d-r snionert, lar-rir pi.lt, AvitLo tttl e tatttr'3 vl dent, drastic 'effects. The 1 eile-B ODnatn thoroughly but hw niesly, etttab ihinva per manently hea':t(iy af'tioii of.tha st imao 1 ami bo.vels. and as an anti-bilious remedy ate iin- oq.niled. A mnchine has been invented that will sew en 3,000 buttons in a day.' - Children Starvlnir to Denti.' " ':' On account of their jnibUity todi.-est foo-1, will find a most marvelous food and remedy in Scott's Emui-ston of Pnre Cod Liver O 1 nth JTypophosphites. Very pa'ataMe-and easily d gested. Dr. S. W. COHkw, of Waco, TexaSr says: "I have nsod yonr Emulsion in Infantile., wastinsr w n . good results. . It not only restores waited 1 issues, but gives strength and increasesTthe appetite. f I am glad to use ant h a r.l a' )le article." ; '--.'" A .bachelor discoverinsr his clothes full of holes, exclaimed: "Mend I can't, v A little fire is qnic'ly trodden out Widen; being suffered, r. vers cannot quench." - Pice -ast'nation may rob yonof tim , but by. increasel dilig ;nce you can make up (he lo; but if It -ob y.m o life the ossis irreine liable. If vour health is delicat favour aunetite fickle. -yo.tr seep broken, year mind depre-tsed, you . . i 1. r . . . j tt. BTiously diseased. In all such cates Dr. len e's "(ioMen Medical . Di ;c Vfry" will 1 specd'ly effect a oTU'na, radic.d care make a new man of you and save you from the lor tu es of lingering disease. -r ..;. " ' '. Sabbath breakers the waves at Newport. - - - Piles Cared for 25 Cents. - Dr. Walton's Cube fob Piles is euaran teed to euro tho worst-case of piles. Price 2 cent?. -. At druggists, or mailed L-stamps takenl by the - Walton Remedy Co., Cleveland, O. . Who ever saw a stuttering woman? r - Piles, fistulas, ruptnre and strict ure radically cured. ! Boot f particulars 10 csitin stamps. Wor d's Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y, -- t " Gunpowder is warlare. ' a prime necessity in modern DaiiRhtera, Wives and .llathan. - : Fond for Pamphlet on Female Diseases, fres tecurely sealed. Dr.J. B. Marchisi,(JticA,N.Y. BovAL-GLtTK mends everything! Broken China.Giass. Wood. Free Viais at Dross & Gro If aifl'ct-'d with eore eyes use Dr Isaac Thomp son's Eye-water.Druggists sell at 25c. per bottle 3 months' treatment for 50c. Plso's Ramedy for Catarrh. - Sold by druggists. A receiving teller a possipin-r woman. . : Boils and Pimples And other affections arising from impur j bl d may appear at th s seas n, when the llooi Is heated. Hood's Bareaparllla removes the cause of these troal les by ' i-arlfyln?. vitalizing an I cnrich'nj the olro '.-and at the sam? tine it gives tone and strength to tho whole svs tern, and males one feel 'lke anew man. - . ' "I know H od'j Sarsipa lllai to" be good by the trial"! g-ave it for eruptions on my face. I had " a hard time to p rlfvmy blood, but succee led at last w th Hood's Sai sapar l.'J Habsy O. Va cb, Cham pjljn, 1 1." " t. Be sure to get the peculiar me Heine, Hood's Sarsaparilla 'Bold by an draspjistii.. $1; six for . Prepare t only I j C. 1. HOOD ft CO.. Apothecaries, Lowell. Mass. IOO Doses One Dollar Ho van want tm learn an tioit aUsrsftf Haw 10 ritK uii a (iood One t How to Knawlmper- lectUst asa so (imril RgrBtnnl Fraad f II aw ta Detect Disease andeflect a care when same ia aneible f How ta Tell the Are by the - Teeth t WkM ta call the DiO'cr'en t Part ot the Animal t IIitHkoe a nnnRl'HTlv( All this. aud ether Valuable Information relating to the Eanlne baeciea ran be obtained by readinsr enr lOd-PAOK IllUrtTRATEW HOUSE BOOK, which we will forward, DORtnnid. en re- AC flTP ll CTHOf . erlt of OX1T 3 UIOi IH dIHMrai UUUSS SOOK.COM 134LeonardSt.N. x fVCJIV ffCH WCr rVniICU roucAUBB kibttix utkiit lima "VMiWit CUltKDI l)r. UAIRU'S ULOOI) ti ItA N U 1 .tS are marvelous, the sersatios of the hour. Thousands have used them and not one but is enthusiastic over their wonderful properties. 25 cents ; 5 boxes, $1. Of Drufntists or I y mail, postage prepaid. All in valids i-hould fend ccount of rase, symptoms, etc.. with order and we wil' DO YOU GOOD Address Dr. Wfll. M. liAlltB, Washington, N. J. FOR ONE DOLLAR. ' A first clas Dictionary gotten out at smal price to encourage the study or the uerman 1 Kanirnairei- It irives Knirlish words -with thA ugoaee. It gives Knglish words with oulvalents. and German words with Km mian-equlvaients, and German words with English definitions. A -very cheap bnok. Send 91.00 to BOOK- I'UB. HOUSE, 134 Leonard St., N. Y. titr, and get one of tht-so books by return mall. n Piso'a Eenietty for Catarrh Is the Best, Easiest to Use, and Cheapest. ( r aj "sssspoj""'a3 j sp i- ' iSnMifeii f i ' Sold by druggists or sent by maiL i i I j 50o. E.T. Hazeltine, Warren, Pa. : I mzi rr Urease rCfTWTJ TV TUTS WOTtT-D vie. iue treniimi-. . cwa avui y wnere. Bcwm tbr amy tw of Kidney Trosiblea. Hr to Debility. Menial or Hnyslcal Weakness that Bo tan I e Merre Bitters fail toenr. SO Cts. Uerb Medicine Co. J5 If. lit U mt- rbillnhi. Pa. Sold by all Druggists. fl fS nirsrCD v To latrodnce them, we will UlU Urrcn. Ul-rr- Away 1.000 Self Operatlngr Washing Machines. If 'you want one send us your name.F.O.and express ofiV at once. The National Co., 27 ley St., N.Y. HIUKS ; Improved Paofcaaes. 5o. Makes 5 - IIOOT DEER sals, of aelioioos, spa.ru- nn&rlc. a a t u wa linr. wholesome hev verara. - Sold by drnnrists: mailed for 25a. "G. . HIRES. 48 N. Dela. At.. Phila.. Pa. PAYS for a Life Scholarship, m tna (ILEMA1N Business ijVL.L'X'Xxr.' Newark, New Jersbt. Positions, lor aradnates. National atronare. W rite f or Circulars to H. COI.MAN. t "F te S aavi Samples worth $1.50, FREE. 09 Lines not under the horse's feet, write -Brewster Safety Rein Holder Co., Holly; Mich. D "' tosoldiere A Heirs, senasct-n t Tl r 1 ffor oiroa.ar. tJO U. U n IS.O- I VjUJIUlIIUaa,AU'r. Waamustoa. 1. U. Dlair'c Pill: fti-Aaf Fit n TTeli Onifl anit I , vs siiy sm eailttv lla Rheumatic Remedy. '; Oval Box, 34; round, 14 Pills. "-T ANTED a good responsible party, Salary or com: 1 1 mission,, to represent. The Marnare EnJowment Ass'nof Altoooa, Pa." (pays iMI at marriage. Apply Secretary Mntnal Endowment Ass'n, Altoona, renn. P sea pau uy return man. Moody' Mew Talla I, iULW CatUa. M0ODT & Fall Descriatlon CO., Cueianati, O- . aaai wmm n Obtain t. Sen! stamp Or I J A I LL I a I O Inventors' Gnidj, I HAM. P Patent Lawyer. Waaaiarca. i. O. Giu:.jS bine Habit Cured In lO ay. . lio Div ill enred. biepheDH, Lebanon, Ohio. aiia tn Rolitlnrs and Heirs. Send for cir i successfuL UC tad I Uii a ealara. No fee unless successful. i. B. II. GBLHTON fe CO.t Washlnirton. D. O. ( UPlfl'l Habit Tared satisfactory before any pay. UHU t.l Prof. J.M.Bifton, 2ath Ward, Cinoinnati.O SHOT r sw A d'JU no' i ? Do you feel dull, languid, low-spirited, life less, and indescribably miserable, both physi cally and mentally; experience a sense of fullness or bloating after eating, or of "gone .ness," or emptiness of stomach in the morn ing, tongue coated., bitter or bad taste in mouth, irregular appetite, dizziness, frequent headaches, blurred eyesight, " Coating specks " before the -eyes nervous prostration or ex-" haustion. irritability of tenmer. hot flushes. ' alternating with chilly sensations, sharp, hi til fltr tranoiMnf lie (na hnra nnd tloia Mlrl v'vuO 1 Ilt.'UU .'44aJW UV- - MAV4t filial . feet, drowsiness after meals, wakefulness, or disturbed and unref resiling 6leep, constant, indescribable feeling of dread, or of impend- inir calamity? If you have all, or any considerable number of these symptoms, you are suffering from that moat common of American maladies Bilious Dyspepsia, or Torpid Liver, associated with Dyspepsia, or Indigestion. The more complicated your disease has become, the greater the number and diversity of symp toms. No matter what stage it tins reached, Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Bijcovery . will subdue it, if taken according to direc tions for a reasonable length of time. If not cured, complications multiply and Consump tion of the Lungs, Skin Diseases, Heart Disease, Rheumatiain, Kidney Disease, or other grave maladies are quito liable to set in and, sooner or later, induce a fatal termination. - r. Pierce's Golden Medical Dis covery acts powerfully upon the Liver, and through that great blood - purifying organ, cleanses the system of all blood-taints nnd im purities, from whatever cause arising. It is -equally efficacious- in acting upon the Kid neys, and other excretory organs, cleansing, strengthening, and healing their diseases. As -an appetizing, restorative tonicy it promotes digestion and nutrition, thereby building up both flesh and strength. In malarial districts, . this wonderful medicine has gained great celebrity in curing Fever and Ague, Chills and Fever, Dumb Ague, and kindred diseases. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Dis covery . :-L - cures all Hur.iono, from a common Blotch, or Eruption, to the worst Scrofula. , Salt-rheum, " Fever-Bores," Scaly or ltough Skin, in short, all diseases -caused by bad blood aro conquered by this powerful, purifying, and invigorating medi cine. Great Eating Ulcers rapidly heal under -its benign influence. Especially has it mani fested its potency in "curing Tetter, Eczema, Erysipelas, Boils, Carbuncles, Sore Eyes, Scrof ulous Sores and Swellings, Hip-joint Disease, "White Swellings," Goitre, or Thick "Neck, and - Enlarged Glands. Send ten cents in stamps for -a. large- Treatise, with colored plates, on Skin Diseases, or the same amount Eor a Treatise on Scrofulous Affections. - ' "FOR THE BLOOD IS THE LIFE." Thoroughlyeleanse it r using Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, and good digestion, a fair skin, buoyant spirits, vital sinrength and bodily health will bo established. CONSUMPTION, . which is Scrofula of the Ijunfrs, is arrested and cured by this remedy, if taken in the earlier stages of the disease. From its mar velous power over this terribly fatal disease, when first offering this now world-famed rem edy to tho public, Dr. Pierce thought seriously of calling it his "Consumption Cure," but abandoned that name as too restrictive for a medicine which, from its wonderful com bination of tonic, or strengthening, alterative, or blood-cleansing, anti-bilious, pectoral, and nutritive properties, is unequalfid. not only as a remedy for Consumption, but for all Chronic Diseases of tho Liver, Blood, and Lungs. For "Weak Lungs, Spitting of Blood, Short ness of Breath, Chronic Nasal Catarrh, Bron chitis, Asthma, Severe Coughs, and kindred affections, it is an efficient remedy. - - Sold bv Druggists, at $1.00, or Six Bottles for $5.00. - ,. fW Send ten cents in stam ps for Dr. Pierce book on Consumption. Address, ; World's Dispensary Medical Association, 663 main St., 3PFFA LO W. -,--v.-; . -UN u-30 - , - : ' This la what killed vourDoor father. Shun it. Avoid anything containing it thi-ouRhout your future useful (t) careers. We older heads Ob " ject to its special Bough'nees, DQIl'TFOQL hx futile efforts with insect pow.. J Tf. IMOA V wtwv. . . s random all over the house to Ret xi, . nd of Koac he, w ater- bugs, ueet- vm v les. For or 8 niehts 8"riikle i "Bocqh ox Rats' drypowder,l , 9 v ; ahotit and down the sink, drain V .pipe. First thing in the morning wash it all r away down the tank, drain pipe, when all the insects from garret to cellar will disappear. The secret is ia the fact that wherever insects . are inthe bouse, they must Rfl A fiMCO drink during the night. EiyAlsilCd : Clears out Bars, Slice, Bed-bugs, Flies, Beetles. - "BotroH oh Bats," is sold all around the . 1 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 BUGS ; For Potato Bugs,Insects on Vines, etc. , a table spoonful of tho powder, well shaken, in a keg of water, and applied with sprinkling pot. spray syringe, or whisk broom. Keep it well stirred up. 16c., 25c. and $1 Boxes. Agr. sue. Dnrrruap Ttv" crrEAJxfS OUT- uw w I , ''T ft i. E B " - B I U m . - FLIES- Boaches. ants.water-bugs, moths, rats, mfee, aTJarrows, jack rabbits, squirrels, pophers. 15a. EXS3AIISTED VITALITY A Great Madica! Work for Young ( - and Middla-Aged Man. KHOV THYSELF. PUBLISHED by the PEABODY HEDI. CAL INSTITIJTE, No. 4 Bullfinch Sit, Boston, Mass. WM. 11. PARKER, M.l., Doiisul ting Physician. More than one miliiun '-opies loid. It treats upon Nervous and Physical Debili ty. Premature Decline. Exhausted Vitality, Impaired Vigor, and Impurities of the Blood, and the untold nlseries consequent therson. Contains J0 paxes, substantial emboss d binding, full gilt. Warranted ihe best popular medical treatise published in the en?lish language. Price only it l y mail, postpaid, ind concealed in a plain wrapper. Illustrative tample free If you sond now. . Address ai above. Name this oaver. . -t7.-L. DOUCLA0: $3 SHOE. The only S3 SEAMLESS -. Shoe In the world. Finest Calf, perfect fit. and warranteu. tjonfrress, uuiun and Lace, all styles toe. As stylish and durable a those costing $5 or t6.S mZ.HO SHOE excen the 3 Shoes adver WW. . ' . r .1 : tised by other arms. . rXtnt a&4 me taoiMa a totum ot .ttch gboo.l Vnri oil wear the W DOUGLAS S3 SHOE. If your dealer doe y;t keep then postal to W. L. DOUGLAS, them, senrt your nnnieon Brockton, Mass. vae Afnt (Jaorchant only) wanted in every town tot -I have retiiled e'enrs for sixteen ypnrs nnd 1 -consider your "Tansill's Punch" chc -c?tfc. rl?ar 1 ever saw. Jons W. Aitkkm, Drug ;ift C r jondale, Pa. V br ransiTs Punch" rc. e'gar is b comins m re p pular ever day. Cisrardruuinn rsdon t bof. r us a ymore. - ,' Huao aKdries.sex, Ikaver, Pa. Address. R.; ly.lTANSILL, vV .CO.? Chicago. - " nm mr EyTliSral. r or tret He ha aieottoa thl pwt ia4 xHreja BINUIIAMTON. N. L. f) D I !! ? 1 Hab,t Cu rd' Treatment sent on trial. UriUi.l HCJiAjrRKMiDTCo..Lai-yeue,Ijidl - Lsctur on j 11 - - - 1 v I "ROUGH ON RATSi" AA F j I jJjU v Z. u TV : j Ok ros r I . .- -- 1 it' (
The North Carolina Prohibitionist (Bush Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 29, 1887, edition 1
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