The Forest Republican. (Tionesta, Pa.) 1869-1952, July 12, 1893, Image 5

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    .r a
Jfr. Jomrph Godfrey
" IO,0CONoedles
FUymo1 to 1m si irk imr In my .u. whon T wrs.
nn(T'riin( with terriMe hnmnr, my Ires 1mm tier
n win o" vMMr7 moitm from Vnnn
flown. I was nrjrrMl ininko tiOOirt SA If
SA VA H t i t. A ami in a nlinrt litno 1 was
Hood
Cures
perfectly rnril. I nm nn n'd seller. s.tc1 74
In the let of henltli. tlirinkH tn HtMnlV .to.
Oopkh r:v, SuilitrM .-miik Hnrlior, Stiiten Itl-
II end's Pills nn
SlM (tlL'''Miuii, prt-vi'
th.
Iw-st rifter-dlnner l'lll, a-
IMS. lkl..li:K'S
i-t3.ii.
, CURED ME.
La Grippo I Gripp ! Gripp 1
After Effect Cured.
Mr. BiJpvr writes:-"! had n ld attack of the
Cripp after n time cnupht
. f&t&, coin ana nna ft hvihi
K fa nttacK, it wttlod in my
kidneys and liver, find
Oh! such pnln and mtprry
in my back nnd Ion:.
Tlit physic in nV medicine
nnd other thiny that 1 uter-d
inndc- no bupropion, and I
continually prcw worse un
til I was a physical wreck,
and given up to die, l ather bought tuo a
bottle of Ur. Kilmer's MY A TIP BOOT, nnd
before I had uwd nil of the neennd bottle 1 felt
better, and to-dny 1 am Just ns well an ever, A
year has pned nnd tint a trace of the Gripp
IB left. SWATII'-KOOT saved my life."
. D. 11. HiUinii, Huhnevillo, ra. Jan. 10th, 18W.
DROPSY ! DROPSTl DROPSY!
Buffered Tlirre Yrnri.
"Rospectod rr. Kilmer & Co., Iliiighamton.N. Y
My wife had niOcml
for three years with
Dropsy, diirinfr thnt
time she was ot tender)
by tlva different
physicians, none
of whom helped Iht
for lonptT then a few
days. We also used
besides, more than
twenty different rein
rdtes, but nothing
would help.
' Then we used your
IViiip. nmir.
and after Khehndued HERMAN BROERIN0.
three bottltw relief was apparent, benee she
continued to take It until she hod used twenty,
five One dollar bottles. Now she is healthy
and atronst as she never was before.
Bhe will be f orty-one years old on the 9th of
Bert Mnrrb and next to God slio owes her life
to 8TV AHI.ilOOT. I sond you this tostl.
mony and cncloso hcrewllh a Photograph of
my wife. Your true friend, IIkiiman nnoKRiso
Feb. 22, IrtO. Lorainios, Shelby Co., Ohio.
VVVAM U "Invalid.- Onlde to llcaltk" u
Si i Couuill.ll.ri Kree.
Ck " Or. Kilmer ritmvh.mtnn w
:i. . " '
Anointment
Cures Piles
H-Si-ii- Trial Free. At Druggists 50c.
ltrrelT TprTMe, mni snd reliable. Cauw pcrfer
plKWIon. ronipltte absorption and beallhfnl reip.
larlty. ror the cur of all dlaorden of the Stomx'l
Uvex, Bowel, KiUutsya, Dlailder, Nervoui DIku.
LOSS OF APPETITE,
SIQX HEADACHE,
INDIGESTION,
DIZZY FEELINGS,
BILIOUSNESS,
TORPID LIVER,
DYSPEPSIA.
rERKKCT DIOKRTION lll be womplthd bt
UkiiiK Kudway's Ptiln. to? thfir ANTI-IiII.luL'8 prop
ertleti ttitty Hiinulat til liver In Che woretioo of l)
ttla aul IU dl'Iiaro through ttie biliary ducU,
Thtve plLln in d ut frum two to four will quick)
rttgmliit the aotlon of the Hvt aud fre the pAtteui
from tliew d Isurdrn, One or two of Kadway Pllla,
tbcD daily b those nuhjvot to bilious patus and tor
pidity ot the liivr, will kwp the system regular a
cure bi-althy dVPSlin.
fric, ic per box. bold by all drugfdsc.
BADWAT Si CO., N K W TOR &.
piTHE K I N D B
H THAT CURESl
Jull.N KIKKFV, 2mi,
Mm-i, N Y.
n
Kjui(jcpid iui u i ears !ta
TRIED EVKKVIIIIX;, y
yYet 2 bottles wroughtL;
A CURE.
NO FICTION, BUT TRTJTH
Q DANA Sakhai ARIU A Co , Q
LJ ""VA"-1 h"V' B !''" MlrtlTOr f t?
MIUv. I, ..i u, , vti 1 t ..n'.l .. ,r ... H.,, u.,,r
DANA'S
tl SARSAPAIULLAci
. nd tt m i ri -in: N) m i h
S:;:, v.v,' .".Vl, 4,V i't',",a
Hi? I !v!;V' ' ''.',f.,i'.,'',,,k: abs
Li U.M1. JnllN Kii.l .1 Y, Ji..l.
J 1t u..ni it n,.y ,.!.,vn. -V v. II u. M
. M. .' rk..,. .. k..,V .
B"""1'! lr i.n .1.1. :,.. ., 11,41.
ti.HH 1 1 H'v. ."..vli'l Ki
: , .. . ... . V. .-. ,'ti
w ttf
DANA'S LlVFH AND klDNFf PILLS rc..
Rv.orth llieir peijjht In tio'tl. fl.ey art-
..D. D. D.'i.-PAhA S u;; e.'.i!-: w
M.IK01EHS. Try a bo:tl a! i-.. r rial:. "
aa Cm !jit..ri!n c., U:lxt, Wain,
UtVi
PILLS.
N lfe:r M ft
woBKnto noniKs wmtorT on aw.
,T. B. Tftrr, of Olilo, who in nn rx
'llt'iit foriuer, linn niBiln his boast lhat
i cstl, nnd tloos, food his working
i. niu on olovor hnv without grain. The
iiny in cut nt the riK'lit lime and is as
,cooJ food ns can he mnde of hay alone.
After nil, the more jirnotionl qnestion
it not whrthor horses cannot do a fair
uht's work aud keep in pood condition
without Rrnin, hut whothor ft little
prain nnd loss olovor would hot enable
the horses to do enough more to make
the prnin nn economical food. We
have, when farminp, ilwed with horses
without grain, but it was slow Work,
nnd wo thought then that if a high
priced mnn worked thnt team, its
owner, who was our father, could hot
n!Tord not to grain them. Boston Cul
tivator. MANAGEMENT OF TfUPS.
Tulips may remain in the ground
Bovernl years without taking up, but it
is a far better plan to cut the flowers
Us soon as they begin to fade, which
hastens the ripening of the bulbs, nnd
as soon as the leaves begin to turn yel
low, take tho bulbs up, Hnd put thein
in some shaded place, whore they may
remnin for a few days. Then take
them up nnd store in a cool, dry place,
until the time comes for replnuting,
which should be early in October. One
of the objections to leaving tulips in
the ground over summer is, thnt the
old skiu of the bulbs forms a harbor
for insects thnt sometimes trouble the
new bull). Tulips grown from seed
are selfs thnt is, of one color in the
cup, crimson, scarlet, purple, white,
or yellow, the base being generally
white, or purplo. These, after a few
years, break or become variegated.
American Agriculturist.
ITvlVrn.lZ'EltS FOB. POOR LANDS.
The improvement of poor land ?'s
best secured by any means by which
clover may be grown. With a crop of
clover to bo turned under the question
of tho recovery of worn land is settled
affirmatively. Hut this is the difficul
ty. The clover must have something
to feed upon, and this is provided by
ft liberal dressing of lime, by which the
nnnvnilable fertility of the land is de
veloped nnd made useful for the crop.
Unless the laud is exceedingly impov
ished by wasteful culture, an applica
tion of twenty-five bushels of air
slacked lime will be sufficient to bring
a fair yield of clover, and this plowed
under will odd a large quantity of ni
trogen nnd orguuio matter to tho soil.
Then by giving about 300 pounds to
the acre of mixed superphosphate and
potnsh salts, a good yield of wheat
may be made, and a better crop of
clover grown with it than at first.
This mowed for hay and then planted
With Borne early kind of potatoes will
yield a profitable crop. The best ro.
tntion under these circumstances is
wheat, clover and potatoes; the next
wheat being sowed on the potato
ground. Xew York Times.
GATHERING THE HAT CHOP.
Tho gathering of the hay crop
rapidly approaches, and farmers will
do well to see to it that it is cared for
in every respect as one of the most
economical and valuable of crops pro
duced on the farm. In. time gone by
too little attention has been given to
it. It is important that more interest
be taken in this branch of farming, for
the reason that it governs the price of
milk, meat and stock. Not only does
it raise the price of these, but it indi
rectly has an influence over the wheat
and corn prices. The history of agri
culture has shown that the original
productiveness of farm lands in all civ
ilized countries has suffered, iu course
of time, a gradual decline. It has been
ascribed to the reduction in the area
occupied by our natural pastures and
meadows. This cutting off of the cul
tivation of grasses means a gradual re
duction of live stock, which iu turn
causes a falling off in the principal
home resources of manurial matter.
By experiments it has been shown that
the chief cause of less remunerative
orops was due to a serious falling off
of the fodder crops grasses. It sim
ply shows that we neod more liberal
productions of nutritious fodder crops.
Chicago Times.
Fattening op swixe.
Fattening of swine is the subject
treated of in the second annual report
of Professor J. W. Robertson, Cana
dian Dairy Commissioner. In view of
the great profit secured by swine
breeders for their product last season
the Professor's experiments are timely.
The experiments wer carried on at
the experiment farm located at Ottawa,
Ontario. Tho experiments covered
the following points: First, the dif
ferent amounts of grain required to
produce a pound of increase in live
weight when fed steamed nnd warm in
one euwj and raw aud cold iu another.
Second, a record of tho comparative
quantities of grain required to pro
duce u pound of iiicreauo in liveweight
during tho different stages of the feed
ing period. The grain was fed wet iu
both instances. There were twenty
four pigs in tho experiment, sixteen
being Berkshire grades and eight be
ing Chester White grades. Cold water
v as given to tho pigu to drink in ad
dition to the wet feed already men
tioned, und a mixture of wood ashes
and suit wns provided for them, to
which they hud free nccess. The Pro
fessor's conclusions ure thut there is
no appreciable. di'Jereuco in tho num
ber of pounds of grain required to
produce n pound of increase of live
weight when fed steuuicd and wurm us
against that ft d raw und cold. Ho also
ascertained that there is a gradual av
erage increase to the quantity of feed
consumed for each pound of increase
of livo weight after the second month
of tho feeding period and utter the av
erage live weight exceeds 100 pounds.
He ulso states that the largest con
sumption of feed occurred when the iu
rrcase in livo weight was smallest.
From this ho concludes that it is
fctonowicul tu uiuiket buiue vLeu tiiuAr
weight is ISO to 100 pounds alive pef
head. In those experiments the in
crease of live Weight per pound re
quired 4.14 pounds of a mixture of
ground peas, barley nnd rye to pro
duce it. American Dairyman.
HOW IjONG to vtt.k cows,
Ono of tho gtentest mistake which
was ever mndo in the management of
milch cows, was tn milk them a little
over half the year, nnd allow them to
run dry the other half, writes Alliert
Tringle, of Canada. There is little
profit in this. A good nnimnl should
be fed well nnd kept producing all, or
nearly all, the time. It is probable
that, in a stateof nature, the cow would
cense to give milk when the time came
for the calf to cense to suck. Bnfonr
doraestio nnimnTs nre not in a state of
nature, and they nre influenced by sur
roundings. The object in view would
have something to do in this matter of
protracted milking. If the aim- is the
greatest amount of butter and cheese,
then keep the cow milking nearly all
the time. If the aim is to raise An ex
tra calf, it would, of course, be well to
free the cow from the milk pail sooner.
The farmer's common sense and ob
servation nnd the stockman's sagacity
must be used here, as everywhere else.
Many farmers make a great mistake,
not only in drying up the milch cows
too soon, but in the time of calving.
Tho cows are usually timed to calve
ubont the time the cheese factories
open. The cows nre allowed to dry up
roon nfter the cheese factories close in
the fall, except, perhaps, one or twoof
the best, which are milked once a day.
This certainly is not the way to make
much profit out of the cows.
The vitality of tho cow will cortninly
afford greater results expended in
lactation. Dairyniqp will scarcely
have failed to notice thnt even the new
milch cow begins to fail in her milk
soon nfter service. Of course, one in
variable rulo will not do for all cows
and all breeds. Home may not be
milked to advantage more than six
months nfter coming in before service.
Others may bo milked with advantage
for a year, others longer. I knew a
cow to be milked for six consecutive
years, continuously, with profit.
Instead of having all the cows calve
in the spring, they ought to be timed
to come in at different seasons of the
year, so that there may be a continu
ous supply of milk. The cheese fac
tories will take the milk six months,
and the creameries the other six. Get
the right kind of cows and feed them
well, and they will milk eleven months
in the year, and sometimes longer, if
tho cow is well bred. American Agriculturist.
FARM AND GARDEN NOTES.
The light Brahmas are excellent lay
ers. Green corn ensilage will injure any
animal.
Sunflower seed is excellent for chick
en feed.
Cooked rice is said to be good for
tho chicks.
A good dust-box is a valuable aid in
destroying lice.
The profit on hens should average $1
per head a year.
In breeding the evidence is strongly
in favor of your sires.
The soft -shelled eggs are laid by the
hen which is too fat.
The best natured foal can be easily
mined by careless and incompetent
handling.
Tho best milk cows will become poor
milkers if thoy are not properly fed
and cared for.
Ticking, packing and marketing are
points to be attended to in growing
berries for profit.
Charcoal is a good purifier, and
should be given to the fowls or kept
where they can get at it.
The Indian game fowl has come to
the front ns a remarkable layer and an
excellent fowl for the table.
The egg of the black Spanish fowl is
generally credited with being much
richer than most other kinds.
Don't catch a shocp by the wool. It
is not the kindest way to handle them.
It hurts the sheep and it hurts the
wool also.
Keep the premises up and things
looking neat and tidy. The extra
amount of labor to do this will never
bo felt in a year.
If the mature fowls, the sitting hens
especially, are entirely freed from ver
min, there will be only half the trouble
in raising the young chickens.
Work horses yant bone, muscle and
strength, and not too much fat ; better
feed oats, bran, good hay and other
foragu, and not so much corn.
It is time to quit growing weeds and
paying out ca,h for labor to cut them
after they have gone to seed. Let the
flock at them early and no weed seed
will mature.
Tomatoes grown from Australian
6eed are reported to be more uniform
and regular in shape and the plants
rather more productive than the same
vurieties grown from American seed.
A general-purpose sheep has both
ered the sheep world quite long enough.
The inquiry now is for a special-purpose
sheep, and this is in the right di
rection. What next?
The "nameless bee disease." or bee
paralysis, is a diseuse that may become
more troublesome. When bees are so
affected they die faster in the night
thun in tho daytime. It is suid that
combs may be taken from a sick colony,
the honey extracted, and the combs be
then placed in a healthy colony with
out creutiug the disease.
Improvement, are constantly going
on in the line of garden tools. Where
one has sutlieieut space, cultivation
uud weeding may be done almost en
tirely by horse power. By planting in
long rows so that a horse may walk
between them, and investing in good
tools, one may have a garden by no
means secondary to other rciiouroes of
Ute fax 14,
TEMFEMNCE.
TltS mOHT SHALL BUTAII.
lo ! a cloud's slout to vanish
From the dny
And a hmren wrong to crumble
Into elay.
1,0 1 the right's about to oonquef
Clortf lie way.
With the right shall many more
J-'.nter smiling at the door
With this giant wrong shall fall
Many others, great and small,
Tlmt for nge long hare held us fof
Their prey.
M'n of thought! and mer. of not Ion
Clenr the way.
Robert Mackny.
sauobs asp onon.
A Tloston pnper notes that of all ths ships
assembled at the lute navnl paradethe Ameri
cans were the onlv ones on whieh liquor was
not regularly served to the sailors. On the
Hrltlsh, KiHwinn and tlernmn ships a ration
of some distilled liquor if served out to WK-h
man daily. On the J reiifh and Italian ves
sel, it is said, a cask ot light wins stands
where every man enn help himself whenever
he wants it. The foreign ofneers believe that
liquor helps the men withstand cold and
fatigue. The Americans do not think so i
and their position siwms to be maintained by
reernt experiments on whaling vessels tn the
Arotlo Oeean. A writer, who has just re
turned from a long whaling voyage, says
"One ot the ourws ot lile at sea has been the
use of grog. Formerly liquor was thought
to lie nnoessary for men lu the Arottc, but ex
perieneo has proved it to be harmful instead
ot lienedeinl. and only In eases ot great dis
tress is it now used. Strong eofTee has taken
its plaee, and on every whaler, during times
of great exposure or unusual fatigue, strong
hot eolTeo is always nt hand, grog never,"
Picayune,
Tt-nxs ovKn Aitrnr i.kkt.
V. Drox llankston. editor of the Ringgold
(Oa.) New South, published the following as
his lending editorial in a recent issue
"Another milepost has been reached In my
and with its passage I have, entered upon
n new one. The tulure I hope will be ns hill
of pleasures as the past, but they must be of
a different kind. It must l a llle into which
the falling sunlight from heaven will awnken
a responsive feeling of conscientious satis
faction. What my past lite nmv have been I
ask my friends to throw over It' a mantle ol
charity. What my future may reveal and be
likened unto, I leave in tho hands of an nil
wiso providence. My retormntion Is not
fleeting shadow, neither is it the result ot the
Keeley cure, but a calm determination on my
part to live and lead a different life. My re
formation may bo tho result of a woman's
bright promise, or meditating over the
words ot a minister: bo that us it may, it is
decisive. I have withdrawn from all clul
ot which I have been a nietnlier for years,
and the money I formerly spent In that way
will lo spent for sweet eharitv. Notwith
standing my patronage In advertising has
been largo from tho saloons in ntvirhv eitltw,
with this issue they cease. All contracts
with those, byways are void from this date.
If they want patronage they must seek It by
other sources than through the columns ot
tho New South. I have no iilword to sav ot
the barkeepers, hut to tho foolish patrons I
would repeat this.: 'At last it hitcth liken
serpent and stingeth like nn adder.' I do
not oxpe-t to enter the lecture Held, neilhei
do I expect to bo-cmc a minister, but simply
a humble worker iu tho cause of what I lio
lieve Is right I shall continue to edit the
New South nud make llluggold my perma
nent home."
A PATITKB H l AniKriC litter.
Rey. W. n. Mllburn, tho blind chaplain of
the Houso of Represer titivee, is deeply pros
trated over the sad suicide of his sou it Chi
cago and has furnishea-tho following state
ment for the public :
"It Is hard that tho silence which befit tha
presence of death should te broken nnd that
the veil should he lilted whioh belongs tothe
saerednesa of the family and Its relations.
But In this awtul extremity no other course
seems open that the only earthly possession
left me, a good name, should lie preserved.
My son, Fletcher Harper Milburn.who would
have been forty years of age in September,
was for a long time tho victim of the alcohol
disease. But last summer spent some time
nt a retreat in Denver and was pronounced
by its authorities perfectly cured and himself
assured that he had lost all taste for liquor
and gave me tho pledge of his honor that he
would never use it again.
"These assurances gave me immeasurable
happiness. His frequent draughts upon my
narrow income of later years had always
been promptly and kindly met ; not seldom
was tho last cent I then possessed remitted
to him or for his use, but now that he was re
stored to a sound mind and liody hepromisod
to support himself. From that day, believ
lug iu his thorough cure and the steadfast
ness of his will, I have used every means in
my power, confident thnt I was Justified In
doing so by truth and honor, to enable him
to regain tho position in the world he had
last and to which his onergv, business talents
and aoeoraplishmonts entitled him. And my
heart glowed wit h the hope of seeing my solo
surviving son filling an honorable place
among men.
"My efforts have been unsparing to seeuro
him a position under the Government with
the hope of success, and meanwhile I tried to
find a situation in Chicago to tide over tho
period of waiting for a hotter plaee, at the
same time urging him to remain in Denver
until my friends and myself could secure for
him such a position. Against my earnest
and repeated advice he started, was two
weeks on Uie way nnd seems to have fallen
Into temptation und yielded. I had given
him a letter of strong recommendation, ad
dressed to a uumlier of friends in Chicago,
and when there at theoiieniugof the World's
Fair I had interested others iu his behalf.
"When his telegram came on Friday even
ing last, asking to come here my heart failed
me, having no money of my own with which
to care for him. and I saw what must have
happened. I wired and also wrote Immedi
ately, stating the condition of the house and
family here my only brother's widow and
Shildren and telling him of my own circum
stancesnarrow and hard, Informing him at
the same time that a uuuibor ot my letters
awaited him in oara of my friend. W.
Quinccy.
"Ho said nothing about being penniless,
but on the contrary wrote just before leaving
Denver thut ho saved a considerable sum ot
money, whleh I supposed was still in his
bauds.
"Then came the terrible news on hour or
two ufter midnight. I have bowed with
reverent submission to the will of Him whose
ways are past finding out, and from tho four
told darkness in which I stand age, pover
ty, blindness aud sorrow with lifted hand
declare before (iod and the world that I have
used my beet intelligence to rescue and re
deem my son, and in the unmistakable
anguish of this affliction I appeal to the
kind judgmout aud sympathy of all sorts
and conditions of men throughout tha land
ISignedl j'W. U. Milbubs.
TEHPERAMCK JiKWS AND NOTES.
Belgium has 150,000 "schuuiips" bouses,
aud only 6000 schools.
Lord Randolph Churchill, it is announced,
has become a strict total abstainer.
In Lockhart's Cocoa Rooms, London, S675
pei-S'sm signed the pledge during the year
The Old Colony Railroad refuses transpor
tation to passengers under the influence of
liquor.
Chinese wine, mndo from a liquor distilled
from rice, has been found by analysis to con
tain 38.32 per cent, of alcohol,
Iu 18M1. the arrests for drunkenness in Iro
luud amounted to 1O0.52N, uu increase of over
lit; per cent, sinco 187, when tho number
stood ut 711,000.
The total quantity of wine exported from
the champagne districts ot Europe tha ilrst
three months of this your, ainouuted to 21
0N,!il3 bottles.
Senutor Ktuuford, ot California, has aade
arrangements for the oroctlon of a reut
wiuo-cellur und bruudy bouded warehouse at
I'ort Coslu, iu that Htate.
Tho Bavarian Government levies '.1.000,000
a year ou tho breweries, while the income ol
all the North German Status from the same
source is only tti, 00U,0OO.
Ensign Frye wis recently tried by court
martial in N'.-w V'erk City ou u charge of
druiiki-iiiixss, and sentenced with the ap
proval of the Hecretury of the Navy, to be
hiispu frou, r.mk uuj jllty ur u ,,rigj
ot three years ou furlough pay.
Dr. B. V. llicliur.lsou, uuw its senior phys
ician, ut the rec-nt uuuuul public meeting uf
tlie London Temperance Hospital, stated tiut
during ull the time of his ceuiioctiuu wit li tha
place ho hud never occasion to pn s rils) al
cohol u u patiunt iu any Iwiu, iw uuiUer
how suriuu th cause.
The rroeesn ol (ostlnt: Mirror.
The process of coating mirror" with
mercury does not materially differ now
from thnt of three hundred yrr:rs ago.
A large stone talrie ground perfectly
smooth is so arranged as to bo easily
canted A little on one sido by means of
a screw set beneath it. Around tho
tdgos of tho Inble is a groove, in which
mercury may flow atid drop from one
corner into bowls. Tho tnbltt is first
made perfectly horizontal, and thou t
tin foil is carefully laid over it, Cover
ing a greater space than the glass to bo
routed. A strip of glass is placed nlottg
each of tho three sides of tho foil to
prevent tho mercury from flowing off.
Tho metal is then poured from lodles
upon tho foil till it is nearly a quarter
of an inch deep, and its tendency to
How is checked by its affinity for the
tin foil, nnd tho hiechnnicai obstruc
tion of the slips of glass. The pinto of
irliiHv, denned with especial care. Is
dexterously slid tin from the open side,
and its advancing edgo is kept in tho
mercury, so thnt no air or floating ox
ide of the metal or othef impurities
can get between tho glass and tho clean
surface of the mercury. When exactly
in its place it is held till ono edgo of
the table has been elevated ten or
twelve degrees, nnd the superfluous
inerenry has run off. Heavy weights
nre placed on tho glass, and it is left
for several hours. It is then turned
over and placed on a frame, tho side
covered with tho amalgam which ad
heres to it being uppermost. In this
position tho nmnlgnm becomes hard
and tho pinto can then bo set ou edge J
but for several weeks it is necessary to
guard n gainst turning it over, as Until
the nninlgam is thoroughly dried tho
coating is easily injured. The process
is attended with many serious, difficul
ties. Tho health of Workmen is affected
by the fumes of mercury tho glass
plates are frequently broken by tho
weijiht placed upon them, and tho
coating of amalgam is frequently
upoiled by drops of mercury removing
portions of it as they triokle down, or
by its crystallizing, or by mechanical
abrasion. Courier-Journal.
Interesting Scones In Tangier.
Tangier's beauty lies in so many
different things iu tho monklike gnrb
of tho men nnd in tho white ninlHed
figures of the women ; in the brilliancy
of its sky, nnd of the sea dashing upon
tho rocks and tossing tho feluccas with
their three-cornered sails from sido to
side ; nnd in tho green towers of tho
mosques, nnd the listless leaves of tho
pnlms rising from the centre of a mnss
of white roofs ; and, abovo all, in the
color and movement of tho bazars and
streets. The streets represent alisolute
equality. They are at tho widest but
three yards across, and every one
pushes, and apparently every one has
something to sell, or at least something
to say, for they nil talk nnd shout at
oiieo and cry at their donkeys or
abuse whoever touches them. A water
carrier, with his goat-skin bag on his
back and his finger on tho tube through
which the water comes, jostles you on
ono side, nud a slave as black and
idnny as a patent-leather boot shoves
yon on tho other as he makes way for
his master on n fine white Arabian
horse with brilliant trappings and n
1'iiifo contempt for tho donkeys in his
way. It is worth going to Tangier if
for no other reason than to seo a slave,
nnd to grasp tho fact that ho costs any
where from a hundred to five hundred
dollars. To the older generation this
may not seem worth while, but to tho
present generation those of it who
were boru nfter ltielimond was taken
it is a new aud momentous sensation
to look nt a man as fine and stalwart
nnd human as one of your own people,
ami feel that ho cannot strike ior
higher wages, or even serve as a parlor
cir porter or own a barber shop, but
must work out for lifo tho $200 his
owner paid for him nt Fez. Harper's
Weekly.
Novel Way to Banish Flies.
The Boston Transcript tells of a sum
mer resort landlord who will get rid of
tho flies in his house iu a novel way.
He will offer prizes to tho boarders
who shall catch tho most flies. There
will bo a first prize, consisting, say, of
some such rare object as a lithogriioh
of Bishop Brooks ; a second prize, n
beautifully illustrated souvenir circu
lar advertising the hotel, and so on.
I'ho effect of these prizes will bo to set
all the boarders to catching flies, and
tho dining-room will be regularly
cleared of them by tho same persons
who have been accustomed to com
plain of tho insects.
Inventor-aol any-hing made of wood tuiaiated
HnanoiAlly or otl.erw.He in patent or plac oo
nmrket. Win. Mattiaoii. Jjil'ULNew York.
If affiirtod with sort) eyes use Dr. Itytao Thorn t
ton's Eye-water. DniKKitftH sella! 'bc per bottle.
Buy atock in the BaasJok Oold Mine. Re adv.
NO DETTEIl PROOF.
.A pLl I . .. ... MlIROV, Mipfuh Co.. Pekka.
t-522E5iNV "Mrs.
"German
99
Judgr J. B. Hill, of the Superior
Court, Walker county, Georgia,
thinks enough of German Syrup to
send us voluntarily a strong letter
endorsing it. When men of lank
and education thus use and recom
mend an article, what they aay Is
worth, the attention of the public.
It is above suspicion. " I have used
your German Syrup," he says, "for
my Coughs and Colds ou the Throat
and Tungs. I can recommend it for
them as a first-class medicine,"
Take no substitute. t
SJ HIUII E, I i ucir.ly now pMoulna
iill.-l. N.i L't,iiiM,tlllou. txt'lulT Territory. I
nl,a Sj,I,. .No 4'h,MiiI Itrqiiirt-d. Palmer 1
I " I'TU-il. Kef.-retu-,. K !.. nteO. Adilrt-M !
TIIK l A I. II I. KTTF.lt t il.,
II and Itamiuuud IM., 1 iutiuuati, Okie, '
f-irrfai i in rw tin
Syrup
The forests of Germany cover abon t
34,850,000 acres, or one-fourth of the
whole area of tho empire, of which
about 12,000,000 acres are crown prop
erty, 5,350,000 acres belong to com
munities and corporations nnd 17,000,
000 acres are ownod by private persons.
When foot and mouth disease made
its appcarnnco in Barrxdona, Spain, nt
tho end of last year, mieh a thorough
system of inspection was put into
operation that tho disonso wns soon
brought under control.
Do You Wish
the Finest Bread
and Cake?
It i$ conceded that the Royal Baking; Powder is
the purest and strongest of all the baking; powders.
The purest baking powder makes the finest, sweet
est, most delicious food. The strongest baking pow
der makes the lightest food.
That baking powder which is both purest and
strongest makes the most dip-ftiblo and wholesome
food.
Why should not every housekeeper avail herself
of the baking powder which will give her the best
food with the least trouble ?
Avoid all baking powders sold with a gift
or prize, or at a lower price than the Royal,
as they invariably contain alum, lime or sul
phuric acid, and render the food unwholesome.
Certain protection from alum baking powders can
be had by declining to accept any substitute for the
Royal, which is absolutely pure.
Cleanliness is Nae Pride, Girl's Ha a Honesty."
mon Sence Dictates the Use of
APOL
Florida shipped her first phosphate
in 1889 nnd in 1801 mined 181,548
tons. Algiers and Tunis havo newly
found phosphate deirrfSlts away from
rail or water communication estimated
at 15,000,000 tons, and Nelson County,
Virginia, has a small area of high grade
phosphate ten miles from rail.
SCRATCHED TEN MONTHS
A troublesome skin disease caused
me to scratch for ten months, and was
cured by a few days' use of gJJx1
M. H. Wolff, ImKB
L pper Mariboro, Md.
SWIFT'PECIFIO
I was cured some years sgo of White Swelling
In my leg by using VVJKJl and havo had no
symptoms of re jyfy turn of the. dis
ease. Many prominent phvslrians attended
me and faired, but 8. 8. 8. did the work.
PAUL W. KIKK PATRICK, jokuoa CIIJ. Tcnn
TrcatiM on Blood and Sh
ln ui-Mf maltrd fm,
rKciKioCoMi'AKr, ta)
AtUnu. L -
Swift Spkc
An agreeable Laxative an", Vtn Tome,
"old by Druggists or sent by msll. SfwMu.
and $1.00 per package. Bamplot tree.
ITO TIf Tne Fsvorite TOOT! P0WIX1
itU liJor the T'eeth and Breath, lo.
THE BASSICK COLO MINE, COLORADO"
H.tlW Uny of ore W ft. wtU; aviTa vat up, ';
per Km; nliafl li fi. (Its, other Hi) ft. U vv;
t eiiKtltf irivtuK 121R) ho 1-14? power; ai e Un'trJc lllit
plniit; intu'ltliiery on tlif ntirfm-e Nt ILttD.iaiH; Uie
mint- pajtl ..'. mU Iu three yMr; 1 bav for .
ltUW tfhttrt'H if thin Moi'k al $'... V) jh-t ahArc, full tttl
ll'W value $5 per nil arc t; have personally ti.iMHt
fnl this mine, nn1 think ttm atovic will br iik r
within t mouths be "hie dlitleiiU; nnler at nnif if
vim wiMi Rt'Ttc or nend for i.roiHatii.. V. K.
WATT. It AN, 410 Kirk IWk, Hyrwuae, N. Y.
10 tt ItltM't'n..
' PATENTS!
11. m to OUI.In M 1'Mtrnl .1 fciM.II t'o.1.
S4 '.r Hook M.I!,-. Mtt.E.
1- U nKAR. CO. ,-.
John Geminlll, of this plac
nre. wraa ttSrmrn mm a
wajcon, a until) in f a moat serious injury to her tpine, and was
P A HELPLESS CRIPPLE FOR 19 YEARS.
unacie to walk. Her daughter piovidentially procured twt
ST. JACOBS OIL.
which Mrs. C.rmmill used. Before the serond bottle wai
eahau.ted, she was able to walk about, and has beta
COMIXa"ElXiiI.Y CURED."
Very truly
M. THOMPSON, Po.TMASTiii.
Da You Bleep Peacefully I
"Slrep' to the homeless thoo art hnrnot
' Tbe frlendlcM nnd In Uiee a friend;
, And well li he, where'er be roama,
, Who meets thee at bla Journey 'a end."
THE
PILGRim
SPRING
REUlfeTKKElJ
BKAHH
TAi
TBAUE
iUAKhj
ON i
A LI, t
t EN I' IN K, l
BED
i Charms sleep. H Is made of Highly Teiu-!
pered Steel Wire, fa the I'KRfc Kl'TION of i
e-AMi, ami win ai a uriii iMt, He-J
ware of i hep made common wlrti .mi to-
lion, for ' they are not what they seem."
Kxhtbtted at Nn. 81 Warren Street, Mew York; 4
Ho. If H&inllW-o rUuw, Boatou.
Fur aale by all reliable lMalara. j
Kee braaa Tag- iu-gubered Trademark on all 4
0 bit ul ue flUrtiita. 4
beud fur Muiiey Savin- Primer, Free. j
4 auai iich taruiraimiii uoaton
WAUHOi'fut--Hot'ton, New York, PbllaUnlpala, J
J I'hkatfo, i'altliuora, ban Kraui.UxHj, l.yoti.
J rATor4ifci ImuuU'U, Hum.; ralrbavuii, Mass.; J
$ Whit mail, hi am.; ituibury, alaaa.; l'lyinuuib, J
Uaaa. ,
Te Clrsn.e Ike Hy.iem
KffeetnsUr yt gently, when costive or htltoaa,
or when the blood Is Impure or slngglsh.to per
manently curs habitual constipation, to awak
en the kidneys and liver to a healthy activity,
without Irritating or weakening them, to dis
pel headaches, colds or fevers, use Syrup of
Figs.
A. M. Trlest, Druggist, Phelbyvllle, Inrl
says : " Hall's Catarrh t'ute gives the best of
satisfaction, fan get plenty of testimonials,
as it rures every one who lakes It." Druggi.ta
sell It, 7rc.
Impaired digestion rm-ed bv Beerhsm's
IMlls. Beeebstn's nooUicr. cents a lioi.
Why so bosre? I'se Hatch's I'nlvemal
Cough Syrup, i.T rents nt druggists.
Com
I Not
with Pastoa, Knamel and Paints which .tain tha
bands, Injure the iron anil barn red.
The Rlln Sun Stove 1-oh.h la Brilliant, Odor
less, Ourable. and the onnHumrr para for ao la
or (laa. packaxa with avery putvhaiw.
C7Scnd Ac in stamps lor lOOpagt
U I tut rated caulu-ue of bicycles, fun,
snd port (ilk gond nf every description.
Jhrt Lvii Arms Cs. atn. Mass.
'D the old rei
V aearTiaTHi
"JAR TWICE A ,r
S3 Any OTHfP-i
RY IT
- ,,e . illfl'- IT " .1
itlttl
MEND YOUR OWN HARNESS
WITH
THOMSON'S
SLOTTED
CLINCH RIVETS.
tin trmla rfnu.nil lint a Kaoonar nUl a
ana clinch thru easily anil o,uiok.y, leaving- ins clinoh
ato;uily muoiUl K. ulrli.g m ho o 10 be iiimla In
ihu leather nor turr (r the Hi 'eta. Ttiev axe slrvnar,
IoukIi and diirbl. Million now In uao Au
leiiutlis), am fur in r MNk,,rtotl, ut up In Uixen,
Ask your dernier fur iliciu, ur irnd 40a la
Ulul for a Utx ut luu, aorie4 -ixcs. Ainu id by
L. IHOMS0N MFQ. CO., '
wai.tiiam, nm
Ian
IDEAL FAMILV MEDICINE!
ror i4ifut ,(. j.iiiouMi.-MA.
f liRtaducAr, Cunailpatlun, Jlud
al'oinpU'ilsn, OBVulve Kreaih.
f and all dtaordtti vt labe fiiwiuacik,
eLtvurand bow Hi,
I RIP ANS f ABULFS
a d'vvailon ffllowa U.fir uo. Moid
f by druiflta ur aeiit by mall. H.-s
j( vlla,(6o. l'at'katftvi buica).
I For free aAhiolua a-Mit'-ia
LmV 'illr,,, l,'LM'lL r0- Vw York. J
WORN NIGHT AND DAY,
ItoM the worst rap
luiu with rase un-
ler all cirouniKiAnoea.
i a IUI sTlllf
Perfect-
i 1 1 Rk-
New !at. lniiiroremenl
IHuKt. t'ui.and rules tot
eir-nteuureiuiit securely
mI.h1. Ki. V. Houaa Mfir.
( rATurrtt.)
o.,T4-l Hri'actway.N.Y.CUy.
1,000,000 t2S
' l w... ...... r
OF LAND
SaimtPaul
A Dtinii Bailkoad
Com r ant In Wiuiieaota. Beud hit Maps snd Clrou
lars. They will be sent to you
Add
HOPEWELL CLARKE.
aUaud ComuiiMiuuer, Ht. Paul. Mina
ft
4Juiaifttipil v And iouj)1h j
who uave weak mu or Aatn- I
I ait. should use fiao'eCur for 1
OoDtiuuiptiou It baa cured
' ttottuaakntfa. Unas not injur I
i it. ia irbs beat ooujh avruo. '
ia nut i,M,t1 n.i iuku !
Hnia et'fvbfm M&e. I
V- 1 ah. fan
L5IIE3ZJ
.laiii'i -
3
3 jr ws.