rinX AND GARDEN. Handy Farm Implement. AH farms where beets or carrots lire frrown for stock, orn large pardon is cul tivated, there should ho a hand g-arden plow. There are many kinds of thcc now and a Tory good one. can be had for four or five dollars, and while not a substi tute for tho hon, they are valuable to itir the soil and kill the young weed, and one will do the work of half a dozen men with hoes. Ladders are usually conspicuous by their absence on most farms, yet they are cheap, and if well painted, durable and Tory coDYcnicnt. I doubt if I ever got so much comfort out of a dollar as by the purchase of a coal shovel, writes AV. P. Drown in the Count llin'ltmnn. I mean tho broad bladed flat shovels such as are used for handling coal in unloading cars. I find them so convenient for scraping up the stables, for handling cha!T or sawdust, or shoveling menl or potatoes that I shall never do again without one of them. They are mado with a blade 14 inches wide, and in handling all light material are very speedy. A narrow longhandlcd spade is a great convenience. I never could use a heavy, short handled spado long at a time without a lame back, and for years I have Kept one of these light spades and used it with great satisfaction. I buy the best steel gravel shovel and have it cut down to six inches wide and ten inches long, and think that I can do one-third more work with the same outlay of strength than with an ordinary spado in all liyht work such as spading along the rows of grapevines, raspberries, etc. Fcedinjr and Watering Horacs. The feeding of a horse should be varied according to the purpose for which the animal is employed, and the size, age, etc. In many stables all the horses are fed the same quantity without regard to constitution or need. Kx p;r ence and pood judgment will soon enable one to decide the quantity needed by eac h horse to keep it in good con dition. If driving on the road is tho pr ncipal work of a horse, more grain should be fed, in proportion to tho hay, than if used tor farming or slow work. For a large road horse, lour to six quarts of oats, and eighteen rounds of bright hay, daily, ore generally sufficient. A i horse that is kept for general purposes, j or family driving, may be fed oats in the I morning and uncut hay. At noon, cut hay mixed with feed made of oats and corn ground together, in the proportion ' of two of oats and one of corn, if at J work; but when not at work, the noon ration may consist of uncut hay. The . evening ration may be of cut hav, and ! feed with a little uncut hny afterwards. ; Timothy, cut just before blossoming, ; if well cured and kept stored in a dry place, makes the best hay for horses. 'When not at work, very little i corn meal or other heavy feed should be i given, but oats, bran, and uncut hny. A -few carrots with the evening meal occa- ! sionally will be very beneficial. Tock 1 salt should be kept where the horse has a j constant access to it. If turned out to t grass, salt often. j The water given a horse should be pure. Do not have the well in the barn- ' yard, for the wash will soak into it, and 1 pollute the water. If a running brook of j clean water be convenient, lead the horse to drink from it. A good cistern can be made of a large hogshead sunk half way ; into the ground, and the water from the barn roofs led into it will be preferable ; for the horse than very cold well water, i A horse needs at least two pails of water ! a day, and if given half a pailful before i meals, or four times a day, it willbesuf- ' ficicnt, unless when hard" at work in sul- j try weather. Do not give warm water at j any time of the year, but the chi'l may j be taken off in winter, so that it will not I be icy. Do not water or feed directlv I after coming in very warm, and do not work hard immediately after eating heartily. Amrkan Agrieulturtit. Farm Experience. I.vft.rtoh Hay fob Cattle, f ast winter I kept a pair of two-year-old j steers that did not have a mouthful of , upland hay for more than half the j winter. nnd the meadow hay that they ; ate was of quite inferior quality. I gave them three pints per day of corn meal j and wheat middlings mixed, and no j other provender. These steers gained jKoiiivlij. M.-K'lvth during the winter an Jwcro worked some, too. There is Tin tmtllllM in L-Ai'tlil,fT .-itfla in a ,l.;n ing condition with inferior hay and a small quantity of provender. Eastern Farmer. How Dkhokned Animals Acted. On the 25th of lust April I dehorned mv bull, two vicious cows the terror of the herd three yearlings and four calves. Thev ahowod s.i,rn. nf va llttln .a..;.. and when let loose went to eating and 1 directly to chewing their cud. The cows were fresh in milk and did not 1 shrink at all in their quantity .that I ! could see, but their spirits wcre'broken, j aud they were quiet and inoffensive. The ' uun iuu conceit an tiiKen out of him ; he was no longer a man-killer, and is drive by the cows not yet dehorned. uui.mutu soon win De. -i I ermunt Farmer. WiXTERiNo Bees ix a Cellar. My bees are in the cellar on a platform raised about three feet from the cellar bottom, with the cutrances wide open, and with a cover and blanket on, the tame as when on the summer stands. They have natural stores, mostly gath ered from fall flowers aud buckwheat. I keep the temperature about thirty-four degrees l-'ahr. us near as I can. I have a ventilator connected with the chimney, and w hen it is too warm I open that, and when it is cool I closo it; if too warm, I put a piece of ice in the cellar. Jly bees are quiet, and there are but few dead ones. They do not seem to ba dis turbed by any one entering the cellar for vegetables unless they are jarred. A. C. Maldron, iliiiutHitii. CoHN FoDI.EB CCHLD IN THE Co K. About fifteen years ago a small quantity of corn fodder was cocked up, unil through neglect four cocks were left in the field until December, and it was then found to be in excellent condition, ex cept a little weather-beaten on the out side. Prom that time we have uuillv provided corn fodder for tho months of September and October, ami sometimes for November and December. Gradually it was cocked neiirtr the time of cutting, and for ten years had been put up green. In that time the com on ubout fifty acres of my own land had been coctd directly after cutting, and not a dollar in value has been lo-t through rot, mould or sourness. If sweet coin is planted thin, and is heavily cured up, perhaps it may not be sute to cure it by this method, but for years I raised sweet corn with a fair show of ears and put it up green, und it cured just as well us that without ears. Cur. Country (J: ntl mttu. Knkii.aok Knit Dairy Cows. I find that when I depend upon hay for dairy rutions the balance is against me. (uii uot raise to exceed au average of one ton to tlie acie on my funn, and as it Ukta the product of two acres ut least to keep a cow through seven months of wiit tor, it mala the cost of feed f 10. Ad ding ten cents per day for grain, It makes tho actual cost M for keeping a cow seven months. The past season my ensilage, to take tho place of hay. has cost mo $1.70, including interest on land. The cost of grain added to that makes the cost of wintering a cow seven months 2-1.70. A dairy of fresh cows fed on thcscrationsshoiild produrc Ihrco-fonrtbs of a pound of butter per day, or KiO pounds for the winter, making the cost of butter, with hav and grain, 2:t. 12 cents and with ensilage HI. (lit cents. The balance in favor of ensilage is 7.06, or a difference of 11.21) per cow. If. II. Uil'ert, Jiuhlamt, JV. Y. Farm and Gradrn Notes. To prevent waste, cut your corn-fodder and feed in with bran. Nothing lessens the flow of milk quicker than chilling the cow. Geese are hardier and easier to rear thnn turkeys, and if fat briug a good price. Bury old boots at tho foot of an Apple tree, which will feed ou the supplied smmonin. It should be the aim of every man who gets his living out of the soil to add to us productiveness. An Australian farmer finds the thistles which infe-t his lands make ensilage that the cattle eat readily. Warming drinking water for cows may be less costly than warming it after it gets in their stomachs. Foot-rot is a bad disease among sheep, but keep the flocks on dry ground, and they cannot contract it. There is no better agency for protect ing an orchard trom insect ravages than a large flock of fowls chickens. Many colored people from tho Gulf States are cultivating cotton with con siderable success in Southern Kansas. Kalamazoo, Mich., has 2,000 acres de voted to tho cultivation of celery with a stated average profit of $400 au acre. If the soil is properly prepared, manure may be applied to advantage at any time cf the year, so that it does not interfere with more pressing work. A writer cautions farmajs from using heavy wheelbarrows. There is no more useful implement, but n light one is easier to work and all-sufficient. Old leached ashes which have absorbed ammonia and formed saltpetre, are said to produce better results on crops than the unbleached. But all wood ashes are valuable. Cows fed on meal mixed with straw cut and moistened, frays Professor Arnold, give more milk and consider ably richer than when fed on the best hay alone. Sunflowers are disinfectants, or servo as a preventive of miasmatic fevers. They alisorli nitrogen more rapidly than other planH. and will evaporate large quantities of water daily. In this country nearly three dollars' worth of milk, cream, butter and ihcese together are sold and consumed to every dollar's worth of beef. The market for dairy products is practically inexhaust ible." The Oerman'oirn Telegraph suggests that while root-pruning may do for dwarf pear trees, grape vines and cherry trees it would "cost more than it would come to" to extend it to largo standard trees. The New Orleans Timet-Democrat says boue-mcal and ashes doubled the crop of grapes in Tangipahoa parish the second year after the appl'cation, and increased the size and quality 100 per cent. Potash should enter into tho composi tion of manures for grape vines, the ele ments in the soil being generally in bad condition for assimilation; potash carries forward with it in some way the other fertilizing principles. There is no use saving the common turnip for late feeding. Soon after Janu ary it becomes pithy, loses its flavor and feeding value. The rutabaga is a better keeper, but it also becomes pithy later in the winter. Beets and ir.anols arc much better feeds for cows late in the season, and ha-e the advantage that they give no bad flavor to the milk. Although analysis shows little ma norial value in c al ashes, they are un doubtedly beneficial as a mulch for trees, keeping the soil open and allowing rain to soak into the soil without pushing the surface. They are also good absorbents of odors, and in the henhouse or privy, mixed with their contents, they make these valuable manures more convenient to handle. What is required by a hen, for a place for her nest in winter, is a snug, warm locution; in summer she wants a cool place, say dry earth for a bottom, with soft hay under it. A broken egg will cause lice quicker anit easier than any thing else. In tho hat hing season see that the hen has no lice, give her sound eggs and she will fetch out a lively brood if she has a comfortable nest. An example of what tome men can do with one acre of land by judicious man agement and the skilful application of chemical manures we learn that a Scotch farmer recently harvested a crop of green top Swedish turnips which weighed over fifty tons per ncre. But this record is outstripped by another Scotch farmer, who has a crop of turnips calculated to average eighty tons per acre, the roots of good shape, and weigh ing from sixteen to seventeen pounds each. A Kansas writer In tho Xew York Witnei tells how to get borers out of peach ami apple trees. So soon as newly pluuted trees start to grow in the spring he puts a pint of soft soap in a two gallon bucket of water, stirs it up well, takes an old broom uud scrubs or washes i the trees se eral times. This, ho nhv is ' a complete preventive of mischief from j borers. But the ground around the trees should be kept clear of weeds, a mulch should be put around the, tiees, i and if it is very dry they should be kept j growing by watering regularly. Mulch ing, by covering with leaves, btruw, j sawdust, or in fact anything that serves i us a cover and protection, should also be ! used us winter protection to strawberries, to prevent them from "freezing out." A Costly Inkstand. Perhaps the most elaborate and costly inkstand iu the country is the one now in pos-essioii of liobcrt T. Lincoln, of Chicago, aud which stood for a time on the private desk of his father when the latter wus the occupant of the White ! House. It seems that one of the delo- gutes from Arizona in Congress in lsii.j had become so fond of President Lin coln that ho wished to L-ive him some Memento of his friendship. (u sent to Arizona for -I0D ounce of silver, which wa-i molded by Tiffany A Co., into a handsome aud uniquely decorated ink stand. The matt rial itself cost $."00, and the bill for tho work upou it wus $si;-. It hud not been a month before the illumination occurred, and for twenty-two years since then it has lain in a vault. NEWS AND NOTES T0B TT0MEN. Chevron stripe reappear. Cream is thespilng color. There are are forty-five female law yers In tho I'nited States. It is estimated that women spend eight millions of dollars on bustle. A long plush wrap with sleeves of cloth heavily braided, is very chic. Wide fichu-like collars of plush give a top-heavy appcaranco to short cloth cloaks. A sealskin mantle of small dimen sions, lined with Human sable, costs 1,000. A Pennsylvania young man recently married a girl who had refused him eighteen times. Water-green with palest pink is a fa vorite Parisian combination for very dressy occasions. Wool and silk plaids in shrimp ser pent and gobelin shades are shown for stylish spring costumes. Dr. Eva Harding has been appointed physician of the new Soldiors' Orphans' Home at Atchison, Kansas. Miss Bertha Piper has been elected journal clerk of the Washington Terri tory House of Kcprcscntatives. A bright golden-haired ten-year-old girl was the other day elected page of the Iowa House of Hep 3 scutatives. New and stylish spring woolens have bvU.e grounds, with broad silk stripes of slightly darker or contrasting hue. At a recent Arkansas ball a young lady, her mother, grandmother ond great grandmother danced in the same set. The Hussian cape, pointed back and front, is more stylish, though less com- tortaule,than those covering the shoulder. Heavily dotted veils are worn by young ladies w ho have no particular in terest in keeping their eyes strong aud young. Bengaline, which has very much the appearance of Irish poplin, is one of the latest and most fashionable impor tations. There are twenty women students in the medical department of the Buffalo (N. Y.I University, a larger number than ever before, Seven engagements were made at a leap year party at Woodland, California, the other night, where only fourteen couples were present. In deep mourning only black fox, beaver, black raccoon and lynx should bo worn, while light mourning admits of teal and sable. Miss Hose Strcater, of Midway, Ala., is said to be the belle of the South. She Is n brunette and at a distance greatly re sembles Mrs. Cleveland. Long clinging pelisses of moire plush, or Genoa velvet, aro preferred even to fur wraps for evening wear nnd for driv ing by many Parisian leaders of fashion. Passementerie upon black gowns has often a lining of cream, scarlet, apple green, copper, blue, or even white silk, but the effect is far too loud to be ele gant. Mrs. Augusta Evans Wilson, of Mo bile, is an enthusiastic lover of ger aniums, and her collection is pronouncd by botanists to be the most complete in the world. Stripes and plaids are again combined with plain material which, however, must now match the figure, not the ground color so there is a pronounced zebra effe.-t. A gown wholly of plain velvet at once proclaims its wearer hopelessly passe, but combiued with moire, brocade, or other lighter material, it is chosen for tho very handsomest gowns for women of anv age. Widows may wear Byron collars and outside cuffs with inch-wide hems of very sheer whito muslin, or else a fold or two of bolting cloth or soft black act, which last is the favorite of elderly women. Miss Mary L. Seymour, who has one of the largest type-writing and steno graphic establishments in New York, snys that women make better type-wi iters than men, and quite as good sten ographers. New printed chailles of pure wool come in shades of old rose, gobelin, blue serpent and cardinal; aud are figured either with detached flowers and leaves, or with broken stripes; which Inst is tho favorite style for the newest Scotch ging hams. In expression of gratitude for her ef forts iu behalf of hussian embroidery, the Slavonic society will present the Czarina with a sewing machine in silver, whose strews have each a jeweltd head, and which is to be enclosed in a case rep resenting the Imperial crown. Miss Wilkinson, of London, is a suc cessful landscape gardener. She prepares plans for the laying out of recreation and play-grounds for the Fublic Gardens Association, which are much udmircd for their beauty and economy, and herself superintends the manual labor. When children gather in delight. To fill the air with bubbles bright, Of this let parents all be sure The soap they use is good and pure, For, common grease in some we find With evil mixtures well combined That soon with burning sores will tell On lips and tongue, and gums as well. A WORD OF WARNING. There are many white soaps, each represented to be "just as pood as the ' Ivory' " they ARC NOT, but like all counterfeits, lack the peculiar and remarkd'jlu qualities of the genuine. Ask for "Ivory" Soap and insist upon getting it. Crrikt lttt, by I SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL A powerful disinfectant, adapted to all fiurposes, has been obtained in Taris rom coal oil. Regarding theeffectsof scorpion poison on tho animal itself, Professor l.loyc Morgan writes to Xit-ire, corroborating Professor Bourne's conclusion that tin poison of the scorpion has no fatal effect on the same individual or another indi vidual of tho same or even of anothe species. Tho possibility of infection from d is easo germs escaping from hospital win dows is attracting some attention, anil : special inquiry is recommended. Ho? pital ventilation might be so arrange that the foul air might be drawn throng a furnace before mingling with theoutc atmosphere. The proportion of water hcldbydil fereui woods varies greatly. Accordin: to Scheubler and Harti'g, freshly -u horn-l ean contains lf.ll per cent, of wa ter; willow, 20 per cent.; nsh, 2H.7 pc cent.; birch, 30. N per cent. ; oak, III. percent. ; pine,;!M,7 per cent. ; red beccl ;t'-).7pcrcent. ; dm, 4 per cent. ; Inn I AS. 6 per cent. ; nnd white poplar, .10. por cent. The interesting fact is stated that so indestructible by wear or decay is th African teak-wood that vessels built o! it have lasted ttlO years, to be then onh broken up because of their poor sailin' qualities from faulty models. The wood in fact, is one of the most lcimitkuMi known, on account of its very grcu weight, hardness ami c'uial'ilit v, it weight varying from ii to .VJ pound per cubic foot ; it works easily, lint oi. account of the large quantity' of silc contained in it the tools employed an quickly worn away. It also contains at oil which prevents spikes nnd other hoi work with which it is in contact from rusting. As illustrating tho durability of gutta percha, there was recently shown a spec imen of it that had lain immersed in wa ter between lllackwell's Island and Nc York for a period of thirty-seven years, and is still in tirst class condition. Tin only indication of wear on the gutta percha is where it rubbed against tin rocks on the bottom of the river, and b very slight. Another specimen is of i. ten-conductor gutta perchu insulated u,i dcgiound cable, which was receuth taken from tho grounds around the Cup itol nt Washington, where it was laid n is;;!. The cable of wh'ch this is n sec tion is still working, aud the specimen gives every indication of being as good us when first put down, fourteen year ago. In some remarkable mathematical ob servations by M. Hermite, concerning tho number of stars, ho shows that tin total number visible to the naked eye o an observt r of averago visual powor'doc not exceed (!,()( 0, and of these the south em hemisphere contains somewhat thi larger number. In order to see this mini her of stars the night must be moouless. tho sky cloudless, nnd the ntmosphen pure, nnd here tho power of the unaided eye stops; an opera glass will bring ou' 2(1.000, while a small telescope will bt ing out nt letist 1.10,000, and the most powerful telescopes yet constructed will Miow more than 100,0(10,000. M. Her mite concludes from his various observa tions that tho light emitted by all the stais upon tho whole surface of the globe is equal to one-teuth of the light of the full moon. Japanese Hotel Keeping. At Japanese inns a charge ranging from forty cents to a dollar is mnde for u day's accommodation. For less than the forty cents a Japanese gets his lodging and all his meals, but foreigners are so clumsy, uut idy and destructive and theit tastes so out of the range of Japanese catering that they are mode to pay the higher price, and it includes for them the lodging aud lwdding aud all the tea, rice and hot water they may want. If fish, fowl or eggs are provided they arc paid for as extras. Foreigners, in travel ing iu tho interior, always take with them a regular guide, who docs nil that u courier does in Europe, and cooks and serves the meals besides, for the sum of la day aud his expenses. Residents take their own cook or boy along with them, and carry with them black tea, coffee, wine, condensed milk, bread aud fresh or preserved meats. Knives, forks and spoons must bu carried as well, un less tho traveler is un adept with chop sticks. If one follows in the beaten tiacks he can always get bread and fresh beef, but off the line or in any of the small remote places he will be unable to find those foreign necessities, which tho rural Japanese have not yet adopted as their luxuries. In nearly all tea houses one now finds chairs and tables, but tho chairs are straight, hard and uncomfort able, and if he wants to rest or sit nt ease he must make an (iiieutul divan of his futons, and find a solid end wall or post for a prop to his back. This keeps one to the Japanese way of living ou the floor, nnd its there are never nails nor hooks on Japanese wulls,he has to hang everything up on the floor. (JUiU Democrat. Let Ivory Soap, that's made with care Of purest oils and essence rare, Be used by those who bubbles blow And greatest pleasure will they know, For brighter bubbles will be seen Where soap is pure and fresh and clean, While not a fear need cross the mind Of bad results of any kind. Procter k- CmUe. A Novel Lawsnlt In the Pnlted Ptates Circuit Court at Springfield, 111 , a judgment has been rendered for the defendant in the eject ment ense of John II. Pecker against Roderick B. Rambour. The defendant has been for twenty years tho occupant of a pice of land of 700 acres known as Cobb Island, in the Mississippi river near East St. Louis. It shifted its post tion in the changes of the stream and lnl 1-rCiA .iT.tn. 1,a I n . .1 ,f i V. n 1nl(V vt.vv. nn.i.nv .HO mini Jimilllll. who claimed it as a natural accretion and brought this suit for possession, with the result stated. Uhtrago Irwunt, A Sensible Mm Wonld use Kemp's t'alsnm for the Throat and I.nnita. It Is curing mors esses of Coughs folds. Asthma, Urnncliltla, Cfonp and all Tlirost and Lung Troubles, than any other medlclnft. The proprietor hiui authorized any dminrlst. to nlv yon a Pamnln Dottle fV to convlni e you of the merit of this groat remedy. large bottles, GO rents and II. Ti Tniltey when a miin in rnueht In a lie an ctli l In eent around to paint the front of his bouse black. "tint nnllc, bnt Blnel" Is the way a Western ntnn put It In eipreslnff to a friend his roinplete sat inflict Ion In tlieUMi of ir. l'ie're's Vleii-innt I'urtfallve IVllett. So sitiftll and yet ancfler-tnnl. they bid fair turnip. Ilnt entirely the old etle pill. An ever-read v remedy for Kirk mid Itiliims llendiiebe. It) I. loudness, i'oiiHtlpnlion sail ell blood iliirders. Mild In net ten. wonderful in effect! Put up In vlHl,ronven ent torarry. 'I heir use attended wit no discomfort! These sterling- lueritiino eoultt for their (treat populitrity. Maine Is not the onlv spruce gum field. A large quan'ltv Is obtained In the Adirondack. liOonntles thounands mourn' lM'OBUse thev have not sent for a free pamphlet nn Tavior's Hoopltal Cure for Catarrh, an H'way,' New York. Hood's Sarsaparilla It ft peculiar motllcln. It I rrfuHy prfptrM from t-ariarl.1ft, Pandtlloa, Mandrake, Dock, llpHftewn, Juniper Herrlc aod othr well known and vnluablo vfftab. rmdlM, b.r a pauliar omblnatlou. pro portion and prootMMa unknown to any other mrdl clna, and giving to Hood'a Barmaparllla cu rutin power not poawaaed by other mrdlduea. It eflecu remarkable enrra where other fail. Hood's Sarsaparilla flaa met peculiar and unparalleled auooeee at home. Such haa become tta popularity In Lowell, Mana,, where It U made, that whole netirhborhoodi are tak ing u at the name time, Lowell drurtiUt aril more of Hood'a Sarnaparllla than or all other aarMparlllai or blood purl ft era. The aame anevees ta extending all over the country, aa the peculiar curative power of Hood'a Sarsaparilla beoorae known. Hood's Sarsaparilla It m vaitty superior to anyoiherSArsaparl la or blood purifier that one has wellS'ld: "It health giving effects upon the blood and human oncanUm are a much more otitlre than the remedies of a quarter nf a century ago aa the stetun power of today In in ad vance of the slow and laborious drudgery etf years ago. Hood's Sarsaparilla old hy all drnjrTt-!. tl : ! for t& Prepared oaljr C. I. HOOD CO., ApathM-arles. Uiwch, Uus. IOO Doses One Dollar I CURE FITS ! Wher. j sy cure 1 dnmt mean mrely to atop them toratimeaiidtlifn hae thorn return m. tititn rsdu-alcure. I hsv- made the tliwrja i KITS, KFIlv V.V&Y or PA I.LI NO Ml'KNK.sS a nfo-Jnim study. I a arrant my rumedv to cure t lie worn c ", lltvaue et berthage failed is no naeon for not now rc.Tinc a cure. M-nd at onoe fur a trraitand a Fre Httl ot my Infilhhl remmly. 4 Iivo Kiprvws and Fit ( Irtioe. 11. G. KOOT. .!. .. I s;i IVarl l. cw York. JV Y ti V-H JOJUES PAYStMFREICHT ft Ton Wnaoa Hcnlra. 1ra l.ttvrM, M-rl htarlnttt, fcift Tar avran arfl Hr-am Hot n 8GO. alar H..lt. for fr. pft. 11,1 nllnn ihl. air ftnd .l.lri lomi tr iitoHMtrii. BIM.IIA.MTO.N. N. T. "iC H CIO SIC to Soldiers n1 Helm. Rendfnrrlr UtnjIUIl j eiilr. No fee unlFM aiHvetsful. II. liKI.STIIM & CO., w-lilnuD,l. v.. nni nirnc " ' pension., it ynn.. tWIII I llr K Lu'1 stltlrer.' tr.vrl car, lJULUILI Iv bmnil culle, ird: )eerir relieved; tCJ veur' prm-lli-e. Siiciim or no fee. !... MLIfrsc. A. W. McCormirk Mnn. VImIiIsbim. D.C. For a case of Catarrh in tkr ' i -ek tm 1 sfN 'ta M B I I K H I r J CATARRH IN THE HEAD. ' BYHIPTOIS OF THE DISEASE-Dull, henry hendache, obetruolion of the naaui mKHiuri-s. dlolinrir- fullinir from the head Into tlia throat, sometime profus.-, wntery, and acrid, nt other, thick, tenacious, mucous, purulent, hloody und putrid; the eye urs weak ; thorn i rlnninir In the enr. di-afneim, hackinir oroouhiii(r to cluar the throat, eipoctoratlon of offounive mat ter, toKKthi-r with w-aiw from ulcer; tho vulco I olianired and haa"nual twangr"; the brent u la offondve; smell and tnnta impaired; there 1 a senuttlon of dizzince, with mental depres sion, a hacking- couvli and general delillity. Only a f w of tho above-named symptoms are likely to Imb present in anv one case. Thousands of cases annually, without, inaniteetintr half of tho aboTO symptoms, result in consumption, and end in the irrnvn. No disease is so common, more deceptive nnd dnnirerous, leas understood, or more unauccuuf ully treated by pbysiciuus. Common Sense Treatment. If you would remove nn evil, etrike at W root. As tho predisposing; or real cause of catarrh la, in the itmjonty of casea, some weukiie, impurity, tr othcrwnei faulty condition of the system, in attempting- to cure the disease our chief aim uiuhl tio directed to (he rfmorui of that rui-r. Tin more we see of this odious di-as-j, nud we tnnt su-ci-Hstully thousands of ca- an nualiy at the Invalids' Hou-1 and ruik'nal Institute, the mom do we realize the importance of combiuiujf with tho mho of a local, soothing; and healing; application, n !hu; nnd persistent Inter nal use ot hlood-cleaiuiius- aud toino uiudiciuui. r JTJJ In curing; catarrh and all LHIEF I which it is so frenuently I Reliance. I tsi i mi iiiui, nii'4 juiira uiotwi, ru tin mttlllttl IJ, i:V tarrlial dt Hfticaa, wt-uk r inllaiiicd eyoa. Impure bl'KMl. Borotuhiufl and aviihilitit) tiiinra. Dim whiuIhi'. I ful uowt ra aiifl virtiifs of lr. Itml Discovery oaiuiot be too atrouKly extolled. It hua a BpeciUo Mi Sold by Druggists. 23 Cents a Via BFINO PI'RELV VrfilCXAHI.E. Pr. Pierce's Pel leu or-riite without disturbance to the system, diet. ,r oc-uiati,,n. Put uu In glass vials, hcimetieally staled. Alwsv ti-sh and n im ble. As a geuiie laxuilve, alterative, or aerlve purgullve, they give the most pei teut satisfaoUon. ftambat, farnnm mid "The. Amerlean People JIV to hnmhiiBired." This may lie true In Ibe line nf entertainment, hut not where life Is at stake. A man with rnnsumntlrm.nr any lingering ilts eaie. looking Peat h In the face and seeking In evade his awful grasp, does nut. like to bo t'iflelwllb. So with eonlldence we p two be fore our renders Nature's great, remedy, Pr. Pierce's Oo.den Medleal Pisenvery, A sure re lie' fortbat. long train of diseases resuliing from IiPnure blood, tou-b as Consumption, Chronlo Nasal Catarrh, l,lvo r Complalnl.Kld ney Pisnrder.Pvniiepsln. Hick Headache, Scrof ula and (leneraf Peblllly. (Time-tried and thoroughly tented, It stands w thout an equal I Any drugging It Is estimated that, there are about $1,000,. 0UU,0"U wort h of diamond now In line. Phe senlds and fret, Hhe's full of ix'ln. She's rarely bright and tender; The thorn of life Is a fretful wife I wonder what will mend hert Try Pr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. Ten to one, your w.fe Is cronn and fretful because she in nick and suffering, and cannot control her nervousness when tbing- go wrong. Make a healt tiy woman of her and the rhaneen are von will make a cheerful nnd pleasant one. 'Kuvoi ite Prescription" Is Ibe only remedy for woman' (leculiar ailments, sold by druugistn, under a posit ve guarantee from the nmnufiu turera, tnst. It wll' give satisfaction in every eune, or money will be refunded. See guaran tee on bottle wrapier. barga bottle, $1. Sis for $.'. China sends to this Oi.untry each ar2J0, (AO dozens of egg Cennnmpllon tsnrely 4'nred To the Kilitur: Pleaeo Inform your reader tbnt I hava a positive remedy for tho above named disease. Hy It timely use thousand of hilH'lon caws hav teen permanently cured. I shall lie glad to aend two bottle of my remedy -hkh to anv of vonr reader who have con sumption If they will nend me Ihetr Kiproa and P. O. add res. HesMCifnlly, ... T. A. SI.OCI'M. M.C.. 1S1 fWl 8U N. Y. If afflicted with sore eye use Pr. InaaeThnmp iiiiiV Kye.watcr. pruggiMssrU a' rsper boll lo. .Vft OWum in Piso'n Cure for Consumption. Cure where other remetiien fall. Hv, Is the teat blood purifier before the public. It eradi cate! evety Impurity and cure Scrofula, Halt Rheum. Dolls PlmpU'S, all Humors, Iypepd. Itlllousneaa, S:ik Headache, IndlxeAtlon, Uni rM lability, Ca tarrh. Hheuniatlm. Kidney a d Liver Complaints, ovcrronj that tired feeling, cratei an appetite, tone the dlieitlve orjan oviT.-oni' nervoutne aud glvoa st enptl. a'id health to the entire system. Hood's Sarsaparilla I peculiar In betnt; the only ntodliii of which can truly be said, lve On Dollar," which I an un answerable artpiment a to Its strength and economy When given a fair trial It becomes a favorite rem y If you make up your mind to buy Hood' t tmpA rllla do uot allow polite persuasion or argument ti. lndiine you to take anything else. Insist upon hav Ing Hood"! S .raparl1la, which Is peculUr to itael. Hood's Sarsaparilla Is pe.Mi.t r in th woaiMrful cures It haa accm p'lil.e I, wholly unpree 1 en led Inih history of med tcuic, and giving to Hood's Hmsparllla a clear rlirht tothetlt'eof "The greateft Moot purifier ever dl covircl." A book, containing state i ent of euros by Ho i V S irtnparlila. will bo teat to all who desire lt( 1 1T .11 ilrmsi-M. ! ! l fur tv Prep.red oal tiyC. I. HOOD ft CO., AKlllK-rle, Ixiwtll, M.sn. tOO Doses One Dollar EXHAUSTED VITALITY A Great Medical Work (or Young and Middle-Aged Men. 1)1 ' It M I IK If hy the I'KAItOltV MKIH. I VA I I V-TITI TI., N,. Hull t u-h !.. Itnnimi. JImm. W.il.ll. I'tlt KMt. . (.'omtiiUiiig t'hvnli'tan. Mort l tie) 11 on intl lm optix sold. It tr. titntn n.t.h- hi t l't. -i.-ni I'eMhir I'reinnturt tft!nnv Kxhuuaird V'r.iitv ltntilrHt (it it end i!upm t e- f ih lilit.iit iirt'l tli untold nil-Tlt' rimit'nii. nt fit tvm. ConhiiM pure suhximiilMl nn (toil dlilu1liiT.fi.lt nilt. Wftrntnt'il Hit-Ih-oI popular nir tical livatl MilMNit-d in the .nilh li.miim.ff. Pi le ouw at l-v mult p"tpAl I and coiuvaitvi In a plain wri(r. IHuaitiuiv iimjirrrf if Vil M'lld now. Adilirsta ebov . .ltr thin fhijifr, fJAfjC HTTP. Ho-ilt hriitna. renininnfllp. AntUwUo, fiUmC hhortiiAii.i. ihtiioiiirlilv tauttliMiy uL Ctr CUlanirtM. tm.AM,.OU('k, i! M., bWu. 1. t, llloifVDilU Great English Gout and avlllISi Hheumalic RemeJy. Uox.ait round, 14 Tille. Oval TT-J TI.SWJ-fir trR0PRIE.TOfl5.0). the Head which they cannot cure. f (orynio HT, IW. KKOW KTrilYSELF.a) effort upon the llmna; mucoui mrmbranoa of the nas&l nnd other alr-pnmtiirt'a, proniotinr the natural at'crvtion of their foliieleaaod Itiiunii, tWn'hy aotfuinff the diaeaaed and thickened niembraue, nnd rtnturniB; It to Ita nitturaU thin, delicate, moiot, licuiHiy con dition. Ab a bloud-purifVr, it la unsuriiaHea. An thoao diarase) whieh comi'llfcte catarrh are diaeaecaor the linlns; mucous num bntnea, or of the blood, it will readily be aecn why tliia medicine) ia to well calculated to cure them. i Local Agent. ful nntiaeptic. and apti-dilv deau-oya all bad euiell which accom- lanteti ao nianr mm of catarrh, thus alTordina Ifreat oomlort to hoetj who utter from thu diteaae Permanent when eflects uon the lining- membrane of the nasal passaKcs, It aids materially ill restoring the dick-ascd. thickened, or ulcerated mem brane to a heulthy condition, and thus eradicatce the disease. When a cure is effected iu this manner tt is ptrmanenU Both Pr. Pierce's Golden Medical Piscovery and Pr. Page's Catarrh Ketnedy ni-e sold by druggists the worla over. Discovery 11. no, six buttles tor J..U0. Dr. b.ge's Cattarh Itcmcdy 6u cents; Lalf-don bottles $-'... A complete Trim io on Catarrh, giving- valuable hints as to clothing, diet, and other matters of importance, will bu mulled, post-paid to sny sddnss, on receipt of a -'-cent postage stamp. Address, World's ltispeusary medical Association. No. 6t!3 Main Street, UurrALO, N. T. the various diseases with couiplli-au-d, as lliroat. l'ifict- h (ii.l.l. n PURELY VEGETABLE! PERFECTLY HARMLESS! As a LIVEU PILL, they are I u equaled ! SMALLEST, OI'ZEJk.PBtSI', BASIBflT 1X5 TAKE. Beware of Imitations, which contain Poisonous Minerals. Always aak for nr. rieroe s reneis,wiiiou axe niu.- rius, or AnU-billous Uranules. ONE PELLET A DOkE. SICK HEADACHE, Unions Headache, Dizziness, Constipation, Indigestion, ttilious Attacks, aud all dcraiigo uieuts of the stomach and bowels, are promptly re lieved and permanently cured by the use of Ir. fierce' PelleU. lu explanation of their remedial I'OWer over tut .rest . v.rielv of diseases, it may truthfully tie said that their aetlun upon the system is universal. Dot a glund or tissue escaping their sanative iuUuence. aaaafactsraa hy WOBL1VS Dl&PlKbiBY MEDICAL ASUCUTION. Y V -.'1 '- K MAhlf Misery. Tt is Instructive to note from the eatnlofrno of disease that nine-tenths of folal rase reach their chronic stage throngli g Stupid Indillerenee to a correct treatment when the system Is mt assailed. It is easily shown that thousands of lives could besarea. KK.IIVOt'M J'AINM. Torture. For Instance: Hoiattca, which so sorely afflicts the human family, and which is drtiiicd to le neuralgia of the sciatlo nerve, rheumatism of tho hip-Joint, or part adjoining it, hip gout, pain in the loins end liijw, even in its mildest form never seises its prey without due warning. BY MI'TOMS. Acute. Sudden and acute rnlns in the hip and loins; redness, swelling, tenderness, soreness, fever, lumencss and mnnetinies ex cruciating i mi 1 1 m. i n,, di.xcitso rapidly devel ops Into chronic or inflammatory stage. TICEATMKNT. Cure. Rub the parts allis-ted thoroughly and vigorously with 8t. Jacou OiLj create a hu ruing sensation hy the friction of nibbing on the Oil; apply warmth; flannel wrung out in hot wuter. fold by )niffjriX and eirn Wrpeaer Ht CHIRLES I. VOflELER CO.. Biltlm.r. Ui. SWAMPROOT EEAD 6YiIPT0M3 and CONDITIONS Tail Semedy will Sellert and Car. If You lire threatened with, or nlreny hve. lli lglit uwcaec, or L ilimiy imuiiin. If You lllall If You If You If You If You If You If You If You rmve eerllment In urine HKe hrlc-k ilnrt, fiviiuent ell or Hcti-nUou, with hnve Ijimo rtnrk, Klienmntlsm, PUnfl Intt, Athliif; 1'uin iu aldo or lil, hnve IilHlx'tn or Dropsy, or canty or blub eiilniiMj urine, hnve Mnlarln, Torpid Liver, Dyspepirta, (lull Sloiif, 'crrrnl Atroe, or (lout, hnve Irrttntlon, rinnsnnKtio btrii-ture, or Catarrh of the lll.dilor, hnve BI.OOD humor, rimple, TJloenl. tkiiUuul Weakness, or typhili, hve Stone In K id ney.or O mvel In Iliads ilvr, btopiWKO of uriuo or llrllilillinr, hnve roor Appetite, Itnd Tte, Koul- OlXUUl, (If INTtUA AL t-IIIUf ICVW, Builds (iiiii-.iy h rim-utiw ii eiiimiHiuuu. Don t nc n loot cur ly ayruptoiu. t int Doi tion Itninr to THiKror I rrepaml .t ltspenrTHeismn,rdfd by rennwnst riali liuia--"llir.lld.' Uutd. U lltwlth" (rve. Advlc ttm l(leniiino hnve lr. Kilmer's likoucea oo HII outKldii nnd inside wrnHr. Cnlrl 'V nil llnriitiiHr, nnd Da. KlLaia A Ck OUIll 1'lnKliuniKiii, Y. $1.00 SU Ilottles $3.00 CUHtS WrtlHE AU US UiLS. In time. I Iwlieve PIro'i Cure for Consumption savod my life. A. II. Dowr.LL, Kdllor Knquiror, Eilen ton, N. C, April 23, 1887. PISO The nEBT CoiiRh Medi cine In Puso'a Curb tor Conmtmption. ChiUlrea take it without objection. liy all druggists. 25c bunca nninc ull iloc lend. Beatiuutih Hriiti. Tftste. irood. Cm '"III I'T IiriUIKISIS. r J it I. It Is wnrlh t'ol per lb. I'ettir Kt Klr U I t wurili i.oii, I. ul Is x.lil .1 JV. a hoi liy dr.l.ra. r'r - Trwbt SCIATICA mm Asa Inoal applimtlon for healfna thediftpesed condU tiou In the bead. Or. Hajre'e Catarrh Keniedy ia beyond Nil comparison the best preparation ever invented. It ft mild and pleaeant to us producing no ntartlna; or pain, and containlno; no trooK, irritutini, or caua tio druir. or other tMiiaon. Thia lie Died v ia a cower- Ths flolden Medical Discovery la the natural "helpmate" of Dr. Pake's Catarrh ltcmeuy. It n,,L ,mlv oleAtme.- niiritl.si. rvii lure, unil lnilhl. Piinre I up the system to a healthy standard, and coo UUIiLd. ouera throat, bronchial, and lung oouinlicMtiona. anv auch exist- but- from its aiH-cilia IZC Of PELLETS. -O O O O O O I