FOR FAE2I AND GARDEX. Core for XI reeding- Coirii Most authorities say, and truly, that jrrain, and especially com meal, should not be fed to cows with calf. It h too fattening, and increases the danger from milk fever or other diseases at farrowing time. But an old farmer tells us that ho has always practised giving a few ears of corn daily to cows for a week or two before calving. His cows always do well, drop their calves without difficulty, and he regards this feed as one of the causes of their easy parturition. The corn is not enough in amount, or continued long enough, to fatten, and probably its beneficial effect Ss duo to its influence in keeping the bowels open. Corn i3 a laxative food, especially if fed in the ear, and where roots cannot be had, it may in euch cases bo substituted for them. Cultivator. ' The Culture of Artichokes. Artichokes are of two kinds; one is the tender, succulent, globular head of qualities of asparagus, and the other is the tuberous root of a species of sun flower, and is called Jerusalem or Bra zilian artichoke. The former i3 grown from seed planted in rich soil in hills three by two feet apart, and a3 it is per ennial, like asparagus, it yields a crop every year after the first, when only a small quantity is produced. A packet of seed costs 10 cents. The other kind is not really an artichoke, although it is o called. It is planted and cultivated '. as potatoe3 are, the tubers being cut into pieces, and the plants should be four feet apart each way. It is exceed ingly productive; ' 1500 bushels per acre are a common yield; but as it roots Tery deeply all the tubers cannot be ' gathered, and the plants once cultivated will occupy tliQ ground as troubles- Weeds for years attSrward. The tubers are sold at the seed stores for $1.50 the peck. There is no necessity for any further directions, as the culture i3 a3 simple as that of potatoes. New York Timc3. IlaUln; ier auil Ducki Geese aro not profitable unless one Las a suitable place for keeping them. A strip of low, moist land affording green grass all summer and adjacent to a pond, or with a small brook running through it, will just suit them. When raised on the bank of a river or a smaller stream subject to sudden freshets they need watching, else they may take a ride and go so far as never to comeback. Many persons are quite fond of fat young geese, and when marketed in that condition they usually bring a good price, but tough, old gecjo are hard to cell at any price. They may commonly be picked twice a year, and the feathers this is a smoking carnal ell ia it. too I U3UU1 ui' ----- , manure applied in the spring and im mediately ploughed tinder was practK cally lost. This accords with my ex perience and observation, and I believe there are good, and well-defined reasons for it. . I never knew an, experiment of the kind to fail .to show first of all in the better and more friable condition of the surface soil of the winter-manured sec-, tion at ploughing time. This is due to the distribution of the fertilizing ele ments of tlTe) manure by the action of the frost and water and their retention as prepared plant food in the surface soil. Ploughmen have often asserted that they could feel the difference in the two portions of the field as soon as the plough crossed the dividing line. I be lieve that millions of cords are every year as effectually lost by ploughing down as if dumped into a running stream. Of course much depends upon character and condition of soil into which the manure is ploughed, and the loss may be all the way from total to very little or none. I am convinced that much better results follow the exposure of the manure upon the surface for a considerable time than the immediate burying of it. There may be loss from surface application in dry, warm weather but it i3 very small at other times. WOlw "Why, "With tho eaouable lteminders. All meat should b3 cooked before be ing fed to fowls. They need it every day, if egg3 are expected. Water, green fool and meat fowls must have to prosper during the win ter. There is one part of the farm that is not benefited by the drainage; the ma nure heap. Politeness pays in tha cow-stable. A gentle man gets more milk than a harsh man. - Straw and corn-fodder are best worked into manure by putting them through good animals. The best preventive of trouble at lambing time is daily exercise for the ewes during winter. . . Take the bridles with you when you go to breakfast, and put them near tho stove while you eat. Separate the weaker animals; they need extra feed, whereas "with tho stronger they get scant feed. Profit in farming come3 from the maximum crops, the products, of winter thought and summer work. IIarnes3 hung in th3 stable is dam aged as much by the gasc3 and damp ness there a3 it is worn by me. When green wood is u?ed for fuel part of the heat is absorbed to convert the water in tho fuel into vapor. v If you do not wish cloddy and lifeless ground in the spring keep the catUo off ; ihe fields when the soil is soft, J . ' -i,:V. T had' r.r in W I 11 1 a. CHARITABLE RICH MEN. THE GENEROSITY OF PEAEODY, COSCOSA2T AND OTHERS. The Beggings letters They Receive Queer Charities or Editor CJiilds Bequests to Churches, Etc i No nation of the. world has so many charitable rich men as the United States. George Peabody died worth $4,000,000. He gave away while living $8,500,000 to educational and charitable institu tions, to say nothing of the hundreds of thousands that he dispensed in other wftys. W. W. Corcoran is still the richest man in Washington, but he has given away between $3,000,000 and 4, 000,000, and his purse is always open. Abram Hewitt says that Peter Cooper's charities, were twice as large as the estate he left, and during the panic of 1873-'74 his library table was piled high with money, and from 3 o'clock in the after noon till half past six he distributed half dollars and dollar bills to all the poor who came to him far it. During this same panic James Gordon Bennet, Jr. donated $30,000 to establish soup kitchens for the poor. Paul Tulane, a millionaire, who died in New Jersey a year or so ago, gave $2,000,000 to the University at New Orleans before his death. Tulane began life as a farmer's boy and was born near Princeton, N. J, He made his money at the start as a merchant tailor in New Orleans, and he spent his last days in his native State. He often gave away hun dreds of turkeys upon a single Chris t mas, and many a poor family relied upon him for its winter clothing. P. T. I3ar num gave a few years ago winter house plants to more than 600 working people of Bridgeport, Conn. Armour is a man who is very charitable to his employes, and delights in helping them. If he sees a man trying to get along he promotes him, and he induces his men wherever possible to buy homes and " to strike for as high a !I!ark in life as possible. George W. Chiids, of Philadelphia, insures the life of every editor, reporter, clerk, and head of department'in his employ. He provides them with doctors when they are sick, aud when dead they are given a burial plot in Woodlawn Cemetery, which is now known as the Printers' Cemetery. He and his friend Drexel lalelj gave $20,000 to the Interna tional Typographical Union. Every Christmas he i gives every in dividual member of tha Ledger staff a present in money ranging from $10 to $500, and he tries to make money for his men. When they become old and broken down he retires them on full pay, and a number of his employes have grown rich in his service. Like most rich men noted for benevolence he is overrun with beg gars, and he generally gives even to the tramps. Mr. Chiids gets about 200 beg ging letters every day. Senator Stanford's gift of $20,000,000 to establish the University in California is one of the largest of the kind known to history, and this gift is three time3 the size of the fortune which Stephen Girard left. Girard's fortune amounted to about seven millions and a half, and of this he left six millions to hi3 university. He gave nearly all his property to the public, and out of his whole fortune his relatives received only $140,000. George I. Seney gave $500,000 to the .Wesleyan University of Middletovvn, Conn., and his charities which have been chiefly educational Orleans, donated $500,000 to the State of Louisiana for charitable distribution, giving the State the discretion as to how. the money should be placed. Rocka-. feller, the President of the Standard Oil Company, who is worth $70,000,000, lately said that his "income was so large that he prayed God to give him the wis dom to dispose of it, and Flagler, another Standard Oil man, handed his pastor, not long ago, his check for $100,000, and told him to distribute it as he thought best. Flagler has given, away about $1,000,000 in charity in the last five years, and it is said that he never says anything to others about his gifts. Chicago Timet. A New Variety or Sea-Food. A new edible delicacy of marine origin,- and surpassing, in the opinion of many Southern gourmands, the finest oysters, is about to be introduced into this country. A supply of the true Med iterranean sea-urchins, in .good condi tion, is to be consigned to. our market, and English epicures will be asked to try the eggs of the echinidean after the fashion of Marseilles that is, by eating them off the shells, raw and uncooked. The sea-urchin, which scientific men, with the playful simplicity characteristic of the kind, have agreed to designate the "strongylocentrotus" is an article of food in many parts of the world, as most people are probably aware. Hence one of the common names it bears among fisherfolk who have no reputation foi learning to keep up, and who call it th "sea egg." But all along the shores oi the Mediterranean the five-celled rosette forming the inside of the prickly crea ture is csteeemed one of the tastiest mor sels yielded by the sea. Strangers visit ing the Marseilles fish market will see basket after basket there filled with these browny-grcen and violet colored "hedgehogs ot the deep." They are deftly opened by the fisiiwives, the left hand being protected against the sharp prickles by a stout cloth wrapped aroiuid it, the stomach-sack is cut out, and the fine orange-colored eggs in the centre exposed and handed upon the shell to the customers ever ready for the dainty. These cgg3 are only to be found in the ''urchin" between the months of October and May, that is, about the same time as the oyster is in season. At other times the eggs are missing, and many worthy people have pronounced the creature good for nothing because they happened to cap ture and open it at the wrong season of the year. The urchin fishery, owing to the great demand for the crustacean in Southern Europe, is one of the most im portant in th'eMediterranean. The creat ures frequent rocky ground, and in the form of round, prickly balls, they are found, hundreds together, a few feet below high-water mark in the shoals of the Spanish, French and Italian coast. They are captured by means of a cleft stick, with which the fisher pokes about in their haunts, and often, too, by divers. In the Bay of Naples nothing is more amusing than to watch the urchin-fishers at work in search of their prey. Rowing to the spot where they are carrying on operations, one may see some scores of heads bobbing about in the water, and probably an equal number of pairs of legs, all belonging to bodie3 that are invisible. . Suddenly a . head will go down and a pair of legs come up ; then, as unexpectedly, one of the pairs of legs will go down and a head bob up. "A puzzling spectacle," says Mr. R. Jones, wflfi.ha3 wejl described tne nsnery, "ana The Iron Egg. ' Of an iron egg in the Berlin Museum the following story is told: Many years ago a prince became affianced to a lovely princess, to whom he promised to send a magnificent gift as a testimonial of his affection. In due time the messenger arrived, bringing the promised gift, which proved to bo an iron egg. The princess was so angry to think that the prince should send her so valueless s present that she threw it upon the flow, when the iron egg opened, disclosing a silver lining. Surprised at such a dis covery she took the egg in her kand, and, while examining it closely discov ered a secret spring, which she touched, and the silver lining opened, disclosing a golden yolk. Exarnining it closely, ahe found another spring, which, when opened, disclosed within the golden yolk a rnbyxn-own. Subjecting that to an examination she touched a spring and forth came the diamond ring with which he affianced her to himself. A New Evangelist scenes iu - Q -s i -i nor iv i 1 1 vv umj IV OfTfTiP HI U U KJU- J -, , nrtnin V I ()U1C ., rf brr face was . ,j TfTXT . always thought that you rather liked I will about pay for their keeping. DUs are more profitable than geese, as they mature earlier, lay more eggs ana sen tetter in market. They are the greatest scavengers of the feathered triDe, ana of all others have the best faculty of making their own living. Neither geese nor ducks should be allowed on the grass plot around tho house. Pekin, Houcn and Aylesbury ducks and Embden and Toulouso geese are largo and favorite varieties. New York World. and from head to heels. London Pod, rvn Drive your horses a little tu ujs sidc when you stop with a load on tne siecu This makes it easier to start the load. ; A fire burns better in a hot than in a cold furnace, it is equally truo that an animal well wintered is half summered. If you place the ax near the stove for fifteen minutes it will cut better anu to break along xne New Cos- Anal.Ti of HolU. Some twenty-five or thirty years ago n few of tho more prominent contnb j. ofrinnHural rress were urging the great importance of an analy sis0 of tho soil of every farm, in ordeT that tho owner might determine for -what kind of crops it was best adapted, also if it contained too much of any , substance or too little of another to v-. - 'ine not be so apt edge. The flavor of the fuel used for smok ing meat is ' somewhat imparted to tne meat; hence the fuel should be selected carefully. . ' ; cnw lnnfi 13 -a Toor fcsd, but mixed with cotton or linseed cake, wheat bran and oats and clover hay, it makes ex cellent food. A ood fence cannot be made of rails that are of different lengths. Mark two feet on your ax-handle, and measure each rail cut.A Sorting fruits and vegetables accom- C3 s.,.. y,n (rmatest fertility. (-, - I o , J., n?imonh of Agriculture," I i:i,a Wo things: it protects tuo . i. Thn fnrmfir cannot j a ?f riiln the cellar ot tno 1004, UCClUluu; . 4-1tt nflviQpd to nrocurc an DO lOO ail u"o'J ' " 4 have amounted to over $1,500,000. Asa t-aPKfir rave mudul b.u j. i mki i"1 i j , . -,. n 7 ' i - i. i rk I ni fsi. uuimm high University, and J<er Toourper- m a j f'tv miie3 from si t.i j. rr-'L ; i' " 1 ' in """" irrriiiiat r , n 4twith dilfiktruW a JStall . t.fi..i a-.A .1. v..i to the Ije- tracK luteuTee ieei iiuuvv . : r-r j i,.ipv-isacolleere at Z Kcdvcd $00,000 from LfRaT - late OX Araasa piwuv;. yo is called Adelbert College ana com memorates Mr. Stone's son, Adelbert who was at Yale College at the time of his on,l who was drowned while on a botanical excursion in Connecticut "N as sar College was founded by Matthew Vassar, who gave $400,000 toward it and Yassar's son auue iu iu Peabody's Chanty extended to ale and Harvard, each of which got $lo0,000 from him. He gave "f 3 000,000 to the Southern Educational fund, $1,500,000 to the Peabody Institute at Baltimore, and $140,000 to tne j-eauuujr v Massachusetts. Senator Joe Brown, of Georgia, has given oy,vuu i ' , . j. there WaSamaker,. of Philadelphia, Cave "$50,000 to the Bethany Sunday fchool of that city, and Robert L Stuart the millionaire sugar refiner who died -u.,. tmt9 a-rn. had criven before his death $ 200,000 to Princeton College, ! jv.u i no 000 more. One of the curious chanties of trie United States is the Lows Home at Washington.' This is a Tome forre duced gentlewomen. It is supported by W WT Corcoran, and is named after deceasea aaugmer wTiirh it stanas is The religious scisition in Kentucky just now, is the impassioned preaching of the Rev. Pascal Porter, of Madison, Ind., who is only eleven years old. The youth ful evangelist has been drawing immense crowds at Wiiliamston, Ky. As described he is a handsome boy, with bright brown eyes and well-shaped head. Out of the pulpit there is nothing in his manner or speech to indicate his wonderful gift, but in the pulpit, says an account, he is a ver itable giant. He possesses a most won derful memory and great gift of language, and his sermons are logical, doctrinal and deep. One account says of him : While all proclaim that his preaching is won derful and interesting, the community are about equally divided as to whether his sermons are original or whether he has committed to memory the sermons of another but all admit, whether they are original or not, that the boy preacher is a wonder and a prodigy. ' , The Mexican secretary of the treasury has given his countrymen a surprise. He reports that the receipts last year were the largest ever known, while Gevern ment expenses fell $400,000 below the amount appropriated. To dream of a ponderous whale. Erect on the tip of his tail. Is the sign of a storm (If the weather is warm,) Unless it should happen to fail. Dreams don't amount to much, anyhow. Some signs, however, are infallible. If you are constipate', with no appetite, tortured with sick headache and bilious- symptoms, the? e signs indicate that you need Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Purgative Pellets. They will cure you. All drugcists. md Will rrn. There is no question about it blood will tell especially if it be an impure blood. Blotches, eruptions, pimples and bolls, are all symptoms of an impure blood, due to the improper action of the liver. When this important organ f aus to properly perform its function of purifying and cleansing the blood.impurities are carried to all parts of the system, and the symptoms above referred to are merely evidences of tbe struggle of Nature to throw off the poisonous germs. Unless her warning be heeded in time.' serious results are certain to follow, culminat ing in liver or kidney diaorders,or vea in con sumption. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Dis covery will prevent and cure these diseases,by restoring the liver to a healthy condiUoBu Mormons have' gobbled up the most fertile districts in Arizona. Bly Little Girl j Had a dreadful and a very alarming cough, that at one time after trying every prescrip tion we feared from her not rjecefvinj; anv benefit that serious results would follow. I was advised to try Taylor's Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum and Mullein. A permanent cure was the result. T. B. Cox, Big Island, Va. Many People refuse to W.ke Cad Liver Oil on account of its unpleasant taste. This difficulty has been overcome in Scott's WORT1TS1,000 ! j TESTIMONIAL OF HON. TH0IIAS PATJLK, OF BEEIEN COUNTY. .. Wenld aot Take 81.000 far It-Believed f 15 Years' Saflerlag from Dyspepsia. Emttiiojt of Cod Liver Oil with Hypophos phites. It being as palatable as milk, ana the most valuable remedy known for the treatment of Consumption. Scrofula and Bronehitis.Gen. eral Debility, Wasting Diseases of Children, Chronic Coughs and Colds, has caused physi cians in all parts of the world to use it. Physi cians report our little patients take it with pleasure. Try Scott's Emulsion and be convinced. Mrs. W. H. Vanderbilt's expenses are said to aggregate $100,000 a year. When all so-called remedies fall. Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy cures. The French have invented a steam tricycle that easily runs 20 miles an hour. Consumption Snrcly Cured. To the Editor: Please inform jour readers that I have a positive remedy for the above named disease. By its timely use thousands of hopeless cases have been permanently cured. I shall be glad to send two bottles of my remedy free to any of your readers who have con sumption if they will send me their Express and P. O. address. Respectfully, T. A. SLOCUM, M. C, 181 Pearl St., N. Y. Never ask a crust of a crusty man. Ask him for meat, for he'll give you a cold shoulder. Some swindlers took a lot of Confederate money to Mexico and disposed of it at par. . Bronchitis is cured by frequent small doses of Piso's Cure for Consumption. Tj&COBS Alapaha, GaJune 22,1887. B. B. Company, Atlanta, Ga. Gentlemen : I had suffered from that terrible disease, dyspepsia, for over fifteen years, and during that time tried every- thing I could hear of, and spent over three hundred dollars in doctors' bills, without re ceiving the slightest benefit. Indeed, I con tinued to grow worse. Finally, after I de spaired of obtaining relief, a friend recom-; mended B. B. B. (Botanic Blood Balm), and I : began using it ; not, however, expecting to be' benefited. After using half a bottle I was--satisfied that I was being benefited, and when the sixth bottle was taken I felt like a new man. I would not take $1,000 for the good it' has done me ; in fact, the relief I derived from it is pricelessf I firmly believe that I would' have died had I not taken it. Respectfully, etc, THOMAS PAULK, "I Gave Up to Die." Kxoxvrtije, Tekx., July 2, 18S7. ,' I have had catarrh of the head for six years. I went to a noted doctor and he treated me for it, but could not cure me, he said. I was over fifty years old and I gave up to die. I had a distressing cough ; my eyes were swo'.len and . I am confident I could not have lived without a change. I sent and got one bottle of your medicine, used it, and felt better. Then I got four more, and thank God I it cured me. Use this any way you may wish for the good' of sufferers. Mas. Matilda Nichols, 23 Florida Street, FOR CUBES Cats, Swellings, Bruises, Sprains, Galls, Strains, Lameness, Stiffness, Cracked Heels, Scratches, Contractions, Flesh Wounds, Stringhalt, Sore Throat, Distemper, Colic, Whitlow, Poll Evil, Fistula, Tumors, Splints, Ring bones and Spavin in its early stages. Apply St. Jacobs Oil in accordance with the directions -vith each bottle Invaluable for the Use of Horsemen, Cattlemen, Stablemen, Turfmen, Ranchmen, biockmen, Dro vers, Farmers. FOR FINE HERDS, CHOICE STOCK, Common Herds. ' Sold by Druggists and Dealers Evenjicha-c THE CHARLES A. V0GELER CO.. Baltimnra. BSJ a V-tr "v-v iy 1116. A. 11. JJOWELL, Editor Enquirer, Eden ton, N. C, April 23, 1887. For The Nervous The Debilitated The Aged. Meflioal and Bcientiflc skill has at last solved the I .... i a; J . Tirpblem or tue longjjwaea mgaieiiwi.J"- - y . II only haul CURES WHERE ALL ELSE r AILS. Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Use in time. Sold by druggists. tiaiHiiairiMJi For the blood, use B. B. B. For scrofula, use B. B. B. For catarrh, use B. B. B.. For rheumatism, use B. B. B. For kidney troubles, use B. B. B. For skin diseases, use B. B B. For eruptions, use B B. B. For all blood poison, use B. B. B. Ask vour neighbor wh i has used B. B. B. of its merits. Get our book free filled with certificates of wonderful cures. I for m believe - Piso's Cure Consumption saved MJ 'i y f . W. L. DOUGLAS $3 SHOE. FOR GENTLEMEN. The onlv fine calf $3 Senmlem Shoe In t'ue world made without tacks or nails. Ai BiylUh nd durtble a) those coming $5 or 8. And hivlnj J tacks or nalU to wear thes BtoclcnK or h irt ttie feet, makes them as comfortable and well flttlng as a hand aewed ahos. buy the Iwtit. None gf-nuuie un less stamped on butiom "W. L. Douglas $3 Shoe, warranted." W. Ii. I)OUI.A 84 SHOE, the original and only nan I sewct welt S4 bnce, wiuca equa.a cunom- Rowing irom o io j. TOatt for obvious " how- r,0Waia cf hi3 soil, and auaij -'-' v ' reasons." The "obvious reasons, ever, consisted mainly ia paying a cer tain clique of self-assumed chemists $5 for a halt-way analysis v of soil. llun- to soil taken farm was of $10 lor a tL few ounces areas of farmers believed thero was something in the new theoret ical agriculture, and paid their hard carned'eash only to find out that tho nWcU nf ft few ounces of 4iu lJ f.A.m nni rvlllCO On their really no practical usa in determining tlic fertility or barrenness of that which i. nnalvzcd. If the soil of JIUU UVb wv" . the entire farm to tho depth of one or two feet could he thoroughly inter mingled and then a ton or moro or tms analyzed, wc mipht mako a very close guess as to the amount of valuable con stituents an aero contained, or was needed to make the soil fertile, or adapted to the growth of certain kinds of plants. But as the chsmist only pro posed to arwlvzj a few ounces of soil, his work-would" be of little value to the practical farmer. New York Sun. onH it nds tne ccuur sources of unwholesome exhalations. Boots and shoes oiled as often as tho leather loses its pliancy are more com fortable, afford better protection against cold or wet, and usually will last twice as long as those not oiiea.- American Agriculturist. Corcoran's The worth i . v.conrl lrnars. Theladie tis home live there as though a hotel. Thev have their rooms to wrR treated as though ., un n(.r5 of lhe house, ana t MP V WC1C inc. j " ' they entertain their lriends Mr Cor coran always visits, them New car s, and he pays all the expenses of the insti tution. Another of Corcoran chanties ff the Art Gallery, which has already cost 1 wtn and to which he will leave .thi rlpath. - He crave the money this country, ana in res c w w- of civing George W. Child, of Ihila- delphia, is like unto mm. Remarkable Ignorance. Speaking of the Italian colony in SVii The remarkable ignorance Xmeea that they are enabled to main tain nnder such circumstances is illus Sated by a fact that I have from Mr trateu e uj . . fh indifference of hVcoiryen "to the privileges of naturalizalion arises chiefly from an idea they have that if they become citizens they are liable to be drafted into the mty v: v.p bote noir of tne I"- ,,J-mpe1inds fof which he the oilier and moro experienced Italmns le'Sution,, particular,, hjyfl-t for chudren, ana ineit wuu. ?.? . -rtman baviner several instance, w than sue cau i,i1. livin?. will be tola of her acquaintance that for J o, o nllar and a hall a a weeT sh can pJlace one of the children L a?' institution wheie itlbeell provided for. She grasps eagerly at the i . ir. nu tn tne csiau""- 11B lUCUgwv---- l at,: rirt-7?nora "news assenreis i -- s the kianeya. um-" au, medicine i strengxn ana reucw on restore at care For children, more while earning bv some man Fames eiecv gmpound new era in tne -v av tte f oundation of OverworK, hulj. v - d experience ---ral SS?S nnd tbe plralyBiacf the nervous ostein. -6 menadby professional and buainesa num. SSi-oo.- WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO., Propr.etors , BURLINGTON. VT. no vou keen many harps in stock';" feet and throw upL Do youepm i , madcikiij Phvsician-4'! am afraid you v. I', douolas 4..ch cake ana celled tor heavy wear. v . AU the abovegod. are mad. n. - hlVl Th. BrVckUa. Mm.. The best Cough Medi cine is Piso's Cure tor Consumption. Children take it without objection. By all druggists. 25c WW E If 11 J prikTINO MACHINERY. INKS. fllVTTlTl fi1! :t:;!m, MntPrial of every T FKnaFndryiu fZXMZa States, for Bale by DODSON'3 PRINTEES' SUPPLY DEPOT, 83 Broad Street, Everything sold strictly at inADumciuicio Satisfaction guarauiccu. Estimates on application. Atlanta, ua. PRESSES EXHAUSTED VITALITY A Great Medical Work for toung and Middl-gei Men. KIIOW THYSELF. HAIR BALSAM restore Or 7 Hair to origi nal color, ia eleantdrew lnf, often! andbeauUflea NoKreaeenor oil. A Tonio Itettoratlte. Prerentihair coming out; Btrengthena. cieanaes and n&ais acalp. B0c.Drugftita E. t. WILLS, MSS .AT&F JraeyCtty..J. LOOK YOUNG It is printed that a western orchardist has constructed a fruit-house which affords projection alike from summer's heat ana wmicrs cim. aeiPm " "ri, ihp Ecl-'ar A. Foe . . j-j or.fi nut lorro subscriber to tne x.u0ar xv. are set, ooarueu .--v. . ll!lU:niftr He tmt a me- V UAAA"." L r poor and himself as acting in ner u, Ud gets the child tJ after he, oi course, t-;- , dollar and a halt a wee. 1 So much of this ta.been done that most of the institutions now " " applicants to Mr. Arrigni, who pen ally investigates the cases. A Japanese Curiosity. A literary event of national importance iiar-P in Jaoan. One of the r lf. i::v ' .nw xpith the new ( hi Ids was a is filled in posts and the intervening space with straw packed in as closely as pos sible Two sets of rafters are then put on the upper three feet above the lower, which is covered with boards, and this space is filled in with straw, alter wmcn i board roof covers the building. Pro vided with proper ventilation, fruit is ffirto Germany recently discovered : xv. Av-arro Co lecTe ( . Tsuh-U 11 ion) in ill w. r .nil - r-j ill .,n,nt in Haltimore. He put SbriaTwindowin an English church to nE "memory of the poet Tom Moore He subscribed largely to the monument to Alexander II. Stephens, and he gave, ave.ir or so ago, mStsto thetwo Southern poets, Hame and Richard Henry Wilde 0 T nwroncp. one of the noted AIUUO i'-"'v - , t. mUlinnaires 01 tUC UUSIUU St OO.UUU IU a copy of Hwang K'an's Confucian Anal- pirpWred years old, with fhft ancient cpnuucuw. - kept ia perfect critic, many m.ntta. -,1. Strt ji.X Q00 notes. all the ancient, twui-- ( - This work has disappears m u u.. gince the Southern bung J f or some seven hundred or eight hundred years; and as the whole history of the Lesent copyis known, the Chme-e Gov ?r!!!l IL directed the Minister in . U11J1-XJ.V - , t trt r,nrrnw it. in oraer tnat a wip- VA-Z -gind fully corrected copy may be xa!f I ItnFraacisco Chronicle. S50 Gold Watch Given to the first person naming w "- book in the Bible before JgneU; To 2rid a 35 Silver Watcn. 10 iw P.?!-- "-a. fr choice of one ! ., Atlanta. ;erK.tt. AlleiuMacon. Ua.. gew goiu tBrS1eewggraoove. , YOU Wllxlx u x."" Tim-. Pan, Trouble nnd wl l t UUE CATARRH BY USING ELTS CREAM BALM, Applv Balm into eacb nostril. Ely Eros..235GreenvricbSt..N.Y. BoMton, IIB-iftV 'More than one mllilon copiea miKeriea .consequent treon. "a warranted iamplefree if you aena now. M. E. : J g o WHITE fj ;J i iimff P" Mlooff aaro"' ' klea or acngof U. LEAURfcLUt uiu KemOTtt and prjrepllj WrtnklMi and roam ,lir- a 7iuii.h MaowjdiUoa of tha f-Lia"i r- th eomplxion, tbm only nn"7 -"""T J lital will mrrmi ff $X Uiurfrtt or t a. a. wn i a. m OSGOOD'1' mSS'iml W.KuUyWarranil. 3 TON 50. Other ' proportn- 44 vawu"," 7mm taken. Hl Don't buy until you ! I tho rlW sTnu 7 1 TZ. Do jou -1 r, JOHN T. LEWIS & BEOS, WAKBANTEI PLttE 5;Sj55!e Inspirator 2 n . 7 "i wrll Mid. liluitrate free. Mention this Pap. i YWT . - - . thl T MiinW. . tm nnwm. wt - --,-. M VIM . 4 HIot nonry From Winter ManurJngr. Asonol a neighbor who ii oitoa spoken' of as the best farmer in town, BaysO. S. B.is in tno xcw Tiibune, began an experiment in win ter m inuring several years ago. A piece of laud intended for corn was selected and one half manured in winter, tho bef oro ploughing time in other just spring, ma i;iun uj aliko'throughout and the culture the ft,n 'pTftrv particular. Tho result was siven mo ia detail about a year ago and I do not remember tho order of cropping, but it was stated by the young man, and confirmed by another who had assisted at harvesting some of the crop that every crop since the applica tion of the manure had been better upon 4hc portion on which tho manure was mnnlied in winter. It wi. moreover, Better Walt. It is always advisable to hoar the end of a sentence. A literary man, for in-, stance, once said to one of -hi? lady friends: "Will you accept my hand" ..,i,im,i:lM- ' Whv. er so sudden so unexpected." Literary man, (pro ceeding, unmoved) "book on political economy?'' . Somewhat similar is a story toi-i oi another couple. He: "How bri-ht tho stars arc tonight! They arc almost as bright as' She (expecting "your eyes -") "Oh, you flatter me!" He (proceeding) ;thcy were last night." -Chamber's Journal. ' 1 IT oses an ml mm l! CSS PfM i! m I t 1 ; . '- 5 11 mm 25 GholcQ 10c. Gisaro, C til AN IIASO HA& FR ! P Three Eyebrows. . T:ir. n;rl Mamma, who UDserving u'"'1- is that young man on the other tide of the train? Mamma I don't know, dear. W hy! Observing Little uin xie queer, ne h"as three eyebrows! . Mamma How do you make that out? os-nrvinrr Little Giri--lle has one- over each eye and one over his mouth. line only bat is original with and true only of Hood's Sar- aparria, which is the very uc ni-nus , .: j v., -i r,fir. Now. reader, prore it. Cine auu u.v i - - Vr.ii laHiw""""" . .. v-, ,rl the dictions and you wiU flna w -. . for persona oi - " "... .froIlath and tul. Thus the evidence oi u.3 v"" eSnozny of Hood'. Sarsaparllla la conclusive aad BnansweraDie. - . arvnetite teelm8 u " i,, Tm Hood'. Sarsaparflla, tt,lnOM1D""rth mvlgoratorand with tne oei roux - .OMrfor to medicine tor general dettuity anythlnSel.--A.A. ..y 7 in. l,mnTM ra out of that down. HooaisuP- " r.; . Save the Middleman Profits. tzz-Send for Catalogue J. P. STEVENS-&BR0T, xi Txr,ilall St.. Atlanta ffc ft S 5 TllE WisVSl AIVKaTlgEtt. r D T " a r L- - . Mf a m ii mm mm iw Ga. o eon! FITS! feel like young people Hood's Sarsaparilla K..iiH.i..ta. ftl : eix for 3. Prepared only py C. L HOOD CO, Apotaaeariea, Ixwell. Maa. IOO Doses uno uonur .. a -Ia n ' teed reeling " rmedl- xJAH moral T . ir 1131 LUaVS again, una. - HtrB- AmltyvUe, -i.m tncrether." j3a la and. N. x- ,., unnd's SarsaDarllia . an; aix xoraa. . Dyv..w- n.lla. IOO Doses.vno ww"4" - a. iTlama ryr..77 I do not mean iZn a foTaumeai'dthen hat aem JSaVtoi FITS, EPU' .frxnt my remedy to enw .the TC,TIE, . I . . . j , Kara a Salary nNTl.l-j T i ,,w l a n I h ! We want a from SlOO ! 200 rf work, in lire, en. etio raan, Kqco a man can SCU ATO.AXTA. t.A.. ..jvla a ' V! A p'k( Hixea 1 - wavlnff. aMUM wifcM aaw : -.-t . a Ta,M k ) t milium ?iftui UmrT T.M a W'rV-t5aa. i. I Mil H II B ll BsT Tor aun . .11 OS j, liyfHIH 2Si ara ahSPpmg o7 - . HUM &aay paru ox .to. I T-- vim Araaa artn "F-!V.' IxOOl'F- Great English Gout and Kmeo Bin mm UfIMDEH?HIA-SEitD stamp for Cualdsul TviVT ENTS tW"; Blair's Pills. rV.K V a,. act a. day. Sample worth WSK T&ZZ Q R L n"'r the aoWa f at. Write al trT.T Safety Bein Holder Co- Holly, Mien. - .aall . I 4 HEBBHAH0 FIFTH WHtw-nMSW a bf. ar b bvb.b - - r.'Vra aaTaKa-aVaaalay.. A. N. U. .Eleven. MS SEEDS - - -a- &anr1 a- aAfaMafCaa. 80 mam lama. etHe"riaL"5 OJvatsnircQtCoal ".V F.TET1M3. ' a a- rrmbereoj. tbii; ,uruil TonHira5te7rY; .5dVil keep ya Vr.it oe4 (P. A: j .-Omaha World. tted that to all appearances , k t