{ title: 'Milford tidings. (Milford, Otsego County, N.Y.) 1889-1897, November 15, 1889, Page 4, Image 4', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn90066008/1889-11-15/ed-1/seq-4/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn90066008/1889-11-15/ed-1/seq-4.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn90066008/1889-11-15/ed-1/seq-4/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn90066008/1889-11-15/ed-1/seq-4/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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Ronny A aoe mmenemmews Ck so , n> - 2s a 1 ta ”u w 1 © . RELIGIOUS READING R The Subbath morn was sweet to see , 0 Upon the shores of Gullloe. - Betwixt white clouds, like lakes of blue, The sapphire-of the sky shone through: , Where Magdala onee flourished fair, - ~- sA falcon poised in languid air; Mist fashioned intostrange design, Farfnotptains loomigd in purple line; ® Awéob stzains that swelled to choral close Froth olyandgt.copsexrobe. © © - calm heat boomed 'the bee . q 0&3 the shores of Galilee, . > Coa - u., Galla - ; R Pencil leayes.along the maige *. ThaswellineOggrewsipe and large; Perpetual summer spemed to rest ss Upon the water's tranquil breast - No white sail swept the lake along, Tpere rang worship song ; Bothsida'x razed wells were dumb, And si'ence sealed Usperoaum ; Gray old Tiberias nlone Uyireared its parapets of stone; . Andvet what joy it was to be C pon the shores of Galilée !~ ~ ' ' Here trod His ever-patient feet ' bi tw t.eold and noontide heat : Perchan'ce beside yon fountain's brink He panseit awhile to rest and drink, Ani blessed the children at their play Before He took His onward way. ‘l‘heie are the waves He bade be still That even now obey His will; The sumetky throws its arch above 1 As when Ie taught Hiscreed of love, The same winds blow their blessings free Tpon the shorevof Galilee. ° find (homlxh vim desolation now ests on the shore's and mountain's l The living words that here had “1415113155. Have zoned with glory all the earth. They dwell io prayerful hearts afar Beneath the New World's zenith star, ., And spread where blue Pacific smiles y Upon her peaceful isles. And when, in years to come, w th men The lonely Innd shall teem again, Revered of all His nume shall be Upon Unyshures of Galilee. . «-| Congregationalist - L- _- \1. Abrxaspen.\ , This is what emperor of Rus- Sla wrote in unswer to the question, \Who is to pry all,ibese?\ One of his majesty's aides-de camp, who ower! n great deal more thin betould pay, having dashed off the above question ut the foot of the paper, had fallfh asleep in his chair. The emperor, happening to puss through the reoni\and seeing the document, generonsly tonk up\a per and wrote, \L Alexander.\ and left the room . without diturbing the When the latter awoke, he: found himself nll at once released from his obligations freely. releases There is uo. condem- nation to thase o accept x pardon in: the name of is Christ, who, lis death on the cross, phid the debt we ower to justice, and naw we are released debioms. .** ') them gummy. Unconverted reader, this is the way God: FOR FARM AND GARDEN, .porAapoEs PRESERYED' IN A sito. An English farmer writes to a Lon- d‘glrpapan' Last year, when the price of potatoes was so exceediogly low that mahy farmers used thom 'for feeding purposes, a farmer+in Beotland resoived to make an qxperiment with a 'view of mscortaining. whother potatocs - cany be ‘prcvaut‘ngn silo. - He out a . quantity of potatoss, nid placed them amorget .chaff At the bottom -of a silo, which was fbpeuafl the 'other day, when it was -found that the potatoes were as frosh as the day on which they w ro cut. - The potatoes ato now being used for feeding purposes, | and .the cattle are eating wari waren For sTOCK. It has not yet been fully determined that it.pags to warm watér for stock. The preponderance of avidence is: in favor of the tank heater, but there is must command. respect. | But there is no doubt of the loss arising from dom-\ polling animals to drink ffeezing cold watir, whem their shelters are anything less than the best. | The man who chops through the ice on the pond or creek thit his form aaimals may drink is inflicting upon his purse a severe loss - It would ' certainly be cheaper for him to provide well water for the unimals, for it would be an agreeable temperature. . This is another matter that should be considered by i Thime, for wells must be made or at- tended to before winter comes to stay.. \ -Western Plowman, > ;. FALL PLANTING OF FRUIT mrBEs. . This, whether successful or not, de- perds upon the soil and climate. . As i\ ru'e, in all severe-climates it~is | seldom advisable and less 50 in heavy soils than in light ones. - The open exposure: fo the cold of Fall-set trees is apt to -dry rand shrival them, and if they are not killed outright, their vitality is so much weakened that it is long before they re- cover. - When trees are received _ in the coxvemroy. No period in life is so momentous in view nféls results as .that in which the sinner. mifakes from his. indifference, is brought k from his wiundetiogs, and accepting the terms of salvation, is enabled to rejoice in God his Savior, « Then this views of the world of life, of the object of being, of all things, in fact, are essentially modified and chauged.. Then does be commence to rice, that snccessively. followed, \\'lllkcqnductj”lio iglur y. lignor, and i311- moka hen is be waithed with the annslé? golivitude byt thge Boly beings; who nre sent forth \tg minister for them who shall be heirs of salvation.\ And if ~- thore is foy nmong the angels -of Gad; over one sinner that' repenteth,\ who can tell how much that joy may be enhanced, should the highly;favored\ object cf it, by the grace of Ged become a bright and shin- \ Ing light in the world, amt bring forth much fruit to the glory and: praise of his Saviour. , - . As the\opening of te Christian life is thi important in its results, and ns so muc depends on a right coftmiencement, special care sh: uld be bad that the great oustines of that life should be well under-tood.~ There are multitudes who experience renewing grace, whem nature has endowed with an firdent temperament. and who in the joy of their first love, often -nverloole the fact, that \bonds and afflictions\ are appointed (o all who would overtome the world. aud become heirs of immortal life. In the fancied strength of their attachment to their Saviour they set at nought tho olifacies that woul oppose their progress, nud often are disposed » to wonder. nt the trials of more experienced .disciples. Instances are not unfrequent, where !n the reaction of feehing that some trmes succeed this state of mind, theso very individuals are, namely unfified real- difficulties of the way, and fail to retain, in trme of trial, the spigit and tem of their Master. Buch have yet to learn the solemn import of the cross. Blest indeed are they who have known its import by experience, 'and hnvg learned, nt the, feet of Carist, to make a right improvement of afflictions, ried arttzo. carp to it. One of the saddest things about thé saddest disaster that América has ever known, the Conemaigh Valley flood, is the fact that a large part of 'the loss of buman life was needicss. Even after the waters: were let loose hundreds and thonsands might have gqved their lives, it is said, had thevgbtlleved * tho messemger' who came riding wildly <+ through the streets. telling them of the Lee awful peril that threatened them. But \they had heard these rumors before;\ \they were not going to be frightened into 1A from their homes,\ “the; were used * to su warnings.\ Alas' «las' the warn- i d tag was di ed once ton often, ind the whelming flnod slew its But . how exactly like the unrepentant man did these victims of the rising: waters reason! There is not s man in America within guild offtiechnrch-bel! whehas not received w § s earnest fs 'the; Pednéylvania vier to Bes from the wrath to come. The tragit elément is wanting, perbaps; no figing horéémbh ¥ides throu </, gur strtgurtelgng us to flee to the mountains - 'for sélvation from sin, but, Sunday -a ter Sunday, from ten thousand pulpits comes « substantially the same mmsz' ® ye, gm y4, for why will ye di nd men - listen very bomfortably to 'the # warning, [fig-ha with a smile or if sneer, . ; tHought if their hearts \that thef hévegof used that old story, - and they cannot be any Jouger scared info the Kingdom of heaven as though they were Jrightened. Or, perhaps, they listen @ half formed determination to escape «the _ anrepéentan another thange. Yet the peril is nok abated. God's ~ omnl ca mot avert the destzncti a a A0,. Overtake? «the; hs tiie foul as lightly -bantered about, hictory repedts itself, tut it is as . fall of , oe of Neals: ~'\Forumidthe days that were before the = food fhey were enting and drinkis Wig; man-tau? «nif It?“ \ oye 7 enter nto ark, \ resort rana 330 e comin memdfié of Need). in the to meet the , # .. thd» danger®is more: peee mey ast peatsp and“ S“; . moraf the bs e - - fiamfigmms Full, the proper plan Isto heel lflem in, packing them together in a tronch | as close as possible, slanting toward - the south, that sun will have loss effect on them, and covered with at loast a foot of dirt over the roots, - and siauted | fo turn off all water that falls. ou them, or the roots will be rotted. _Whero soil and-climate porinit; Full flunting bas, much to recommend it, - The soil by the freezing and thawing packs very -elogely-aromtl_the-roots, and as soon as thel&itE warm days cceur, they | at once tuke root long before Spring planting could be done. - It has also some | dis- } advantages ; unless the surface soil in Spring is loosened around Fall-planted | trees, they will suffer more than Spring- | set from dry-yeeather. .- The reader g milsulfludy tances that surround ; him, and be guided by the judgment as I to whether Fall or Bpring planting is best for him. -American Cultivator, roce. Bome recommend smenting the ogg: ' with grease or buiter; s ms brush them over walla-L splution of some sticky *mubstance like gum-arabic; othors dip theme lime water, as methods for closing the pores of the shells. . All of these ways . ato troublesome, and | I have found, says a writer in tho New York World, that I can keep oggs a rea- ' sonable time by storing thom in & *cool place, and puttiog them, small ond down in powdered charconl; or, if . this is thought | too muéh.trouble, . in straw, or anything of gfié kind that will hold | them position, 'Be: loog as the yolk diés-not-sctiti¢ dbwd and stick to the lhflrg‘fithn egg will remain good, and by chaiging ends occuiqglllly. this may be pfeyented for (guile a long * time. It is quifiiégnbbxuqt that ergs | which are put away to serve in & time of scarcity should be fresh and good whan laid down, and the totb \onfform tho temperature of \the place they will keep. - A cool collar, neither wet, nor dust dry, seems to be the best play. Notwithstanding anything that may be done to them, time wil tell on eggs as well as on anything else, and they will show it 1oo, not only on the ; outside, but in the eating. . Still, it is | a very nice thing to have eggs in the house you Een ise fbr cooking, wher gm heas do not furnish a supply, but there is no such thing as keeping ~eggs as good as when they wera fresh laid. ~ co 56 care or swEEt Potitozs. \The prifcipalt requaité in ' keeping \iti potaices;.saysh farmer, is 40 store them away absolutely free from bruises \* 8 goon ~a $ a ~ | or cuts. - To accomplish this, plowest | oue side- of the row and throw out the bunch of tubers by plunging the spading fotk in at the opposite side. - As. soon as they are dried, sort carefully, rob. Aring ther as free from dirt as possible, aad put such ss ara to be stored | away at cace.into the boxes or barrels where 3 =m in by aot pour then ~bekkets s df en'fth the paekagerinté, the wagon, and When arffted at Gestation lift i. fporflont withous tomblsng or yolling Tht ber them down is as if A they were bore's of egga This is less erperse then to pack them thaviign or cctton seed meal, , f sxte mi6% sf B fm. ty ae emacs irp. as opposing evidence from bources that |. thctorger emmubimah ® emmm sugar, in place of & similar amount of starch, and whenever the cuticle is |. broken the omnipresent spores of fungi take root and fapidly produce discolora- tion and .dry or 'wot rot. The best place for storing is a cool, dry, Woll ventilated room, whore the tomporature may be kept between forty and fifty degrees Falienheit. ~ Last year, imvlng one sweet potato ridge, about six hundred fost long, left after sotting tho'last plants, I opened' a drill along the top and sowed carrot seeds in it. - When harvest time came I plowed down one.side~ of the ridgo and. threw out tho carrots cusily with the fork, instead of ~searching for thetn deep in the bowels of the earth. - The long,, smooth, | well-shaped rootg,.6b- inined determined .me to try the same method for the' outire«. crop this year, and 'prosent indications aro that I shall not bd'disappointed at the result. FEEDISG FoR MARKET. + The following from Professor Henty, of Wisconsin Exporiment Station, has come to out hands. | Itis in roply to an' Tequirer who wants to know the .of, fegding young hogs for 'market, evidently written in reply to a news paper querist: 2 To hogs of the ago nanied I would feed a ation of one-third shorts, mid- dliogs or shipstuff, it is often styled; and twis-thirdsseorn, - One can well af- ford to pay $18 or even $20 a ton for this food, when corn is 50 cents a bushel - The ration can be fed dry, | but for? imfictyit can bé 'made into m 1 wlop economically. | If shorts are hard to get, mix bran with the feed instead, as helonging to the .cows. To fedd corn '- alone is a wasteful process, and now it is too cosl‘l} to feed care lessly. May be, if Iam foo late with my advice to \D\ for fattening hogs, Iam still in plenty of time to urge upon him not ta give his breeding sows too much corn this winter. Care is needel in this particular, for it is so casy to throw out a basket of corn into the pen and think the hogs are satisfic., Corn is no more a proper food for ahog because be likes it thin candy is proper food for a child because it likes candy better, than bread and butter, The com- parison is not quite a fnir one, Tor as a port ration for a hog, cor is all right, and for ftening hogs it may form the greater part of the ration, The brood sow that next_spring must give birth to ten of a dozen pigs, must bave the ma- terial hich to make their. car- | casses and corn: will not supply it unless ; fed in excess. That is, the. sow wiil got more carbhydrates in the corn than i sho needs. if sho gets the protein re- quired. & To the brood sows give variety, plac- ing in the list shorts, bran, n little: ofl meal, barley, do, dairyhouse waste and ) a little corn. beets, if cooked, will be a grent nid. ) Give plenty of protein is the point I wish to make, nnd keep the bowels O course roof, sugh as; fat and constipated. _ The young pigs, ton, peed the protein for growth. . It is the sows and pigs that we must look after rather than the fattening hogs. When Iseohow werk the bones of corn-fed hogs nro under the testing ma- chine, I wonder how corn-fed breeding | sows can bring forth a litter of pigs that are alive at birth. - To have good hogs noxt year we must begin now to properly feed and care for brood. sows. -Western Plowman. rAnx AXD GARDEN KotEs. In a good season the market {s often overstocked with po¥t fruit, while at the same time that of n better quality will bo selling at profitable prices. Early maturity is essential to profit in | hogs. - Feed oats to develop bone and . muscle and corh for fattening, and if it ! is in the breed the hogs will mature L carly. | |-How__abouk_that barn,you nt , 6x up Before winter? | Have you done | it? | Winter will be heré before you are ready unless you Burry up. Botter Flaka one or two fine days to do it in. i It is a poor sigh to see weeds grow- g fields, especially so if the fields them- | selves are clear of - weeds. . Besides weeds grown by the roadside are ll\; menace to the property of others. , Wa believe in letting the boys have! all.tbe milk they wish to drink, but| they should not run to the milk room | been' set for creaming. - Let them take i out their supply before the milk is | t4et\* l Commodore Yastsrbilt { Commodore Vaoderbilt made $100, - | 000,000, beginning with fo money and | very education. - He could write his name, snd that was «bout 117g 'egtent 1 of his scholastic acquiremen. . His name which was good for any amount | on a check, was\ not much to look st. I He cou'd not pronounce the letter V, and himself Wanderbilt A new clerk o af - the - postofice | greatly ssnoped him by looking for| letters ander the Wk - \Don't lock! among the W's; look among the Wee's.\ said fhe milflosaire. CAt the age of 80 the Commodore was & match for the whole street. - He opened all his own; fetters, dictated his answers on the rar , | gin, spent an hour fn tressecting | bask ; nase Involving Heo reflifens, and thes went fo bis stables Hy was very prowd bf He tresss and Hiked to lead fhe rad 424 to C «-OH HfsA c a though bran may generally considered | j the power of words to tell, ing by the rosdside beside a farmer's |- and help themselves to milk that mi'models @camit axn-currous. 'The EmpcrawhiJn runs 426 ser- vants, . . - ' . Cents m ntokets ate legal tender to the amount of 25 conts. Mrs. McCutchcon killed a'4large lynx with hor rife recontly at Califorain, + . The clectric light on the Eifel Towor can bo scen at Orleans, sqventy miles distant. ~ In Hingham, Mass., the fire depart- ment is called out to assist in searching for lost children. * - Partridges ara so numerous in the vicinity of Esstport, | Mo., that they frequently invade the business streets of that town. - - At Ukiah, Cal., ja man of twonly- 4wo has married a widow with several children. - One of her sons is older than hey husband. Z. So sek + It costs nbout.$6 per head more to carry cattle from Boston to liverpool than it does to buy a stearago ticket for an adult person. .' The discipline at West Point is stricter than in the army. The penal- ties are not as severe, perhaps, but their enforcement is inflikible. \ Five years ago dghn Sill, of West Chester Poun., parebassd a five-cent peach and buried .t kornol, _ This season he pickod eight baskets from the tree which grow therofrom Somebody figures out that 3,009,00 people | walk about Lonlon's daiy, and thatin so doing the away a ton of leather particles from their boots and slots. bepdon for $300, which is quite unique in its way. | It is nearly two hundred years old, and represents the principal reenes and personages in the reign | of Q meen Anna. while sitting ry of the White House the Prnsi'dcfifi' was surprised at the intrusian of a . big gray rat, who deiiberately crawled upon a side table and dragged off a pieco . of fruit which had tempted him from his hidfog pluce ~- = The othot day a Chinese cook at Liv ingstone, Cul., male a pio for the guests of a hotel. | It looke. ail right, but ho added. two ounces of pu'verized | glass for seasoning. The first bite caused a slnlwart teamstor's mouth t> blee1 and he beat the cook to n jéliy. , Degenerate Ascetics. Henty Norman de ¢ ibing the people of Anniin the Washington Star, says: compared with the Caineso, the Anas» mites strike you ns n nation of pigmics. « A cards was récently sold-2- hawk; blow, splt and disgust this dogk, in the librag» Fireproof Wood.) _._ f The recent discovery by & New Eng< land chemist of a cheap rothod of dis- solving zinc by combining it with hy« drogen is-regarded as a most valuable mo. 'The product is 4 solution called zinc water, and has the property of mak» ing wood to which it has been app absolutely tinged, wha at a very lo cost. This discovery is likelyto revolu« tionize fire insurance, as well a8 to fm« mensely décrease the loss by fire. A Grent Surprise Is in store for all who use Kemp's Balsam for the Thront and Lunge, the great guaranteed remedy, Would you bellovo that it is sold on its merits and that any druggist is authorized 'by the proprictor of this' wonderful remedy to give you a sample bottle free? It never fails to cure acute or chronio coughs, All dragglste sell Komp's Balsam. Largs bottles 50c. and 31. Witte in Russia the Shah ordered 11,000re- peting rities for his troops. - years ought to know salt from sugat; WI“?! homayat , - Tounodo‘ Jan. 10, 1887. - practice and exporience, have never seen a if ‘gauon thet L could gamut! th as much confidence of success as I can 's Ca- (ureeCTrc. tumult unreal lgyo Havapré- many tim gfggdélrfltlfi mwouldiay in conclusion that I hnve yet to find a case of Catarzh that it would not ours, if they would take it accord- Ing to direcéjous‘ j *\ L2 £: gonsvem M. D.., Office, Bguém‘l; Stfi We will give $100 for any caso of Catart that cansot bor cured _ with Hall's Catarch Cure, Taken Internally. \¥. J. Cang & Co., Props, Toledo, 0. (27° Bold by 750. Tie solo panaces for every-atiment tn China * Is a plastor, Jn It Don't Pay a experiment with uncertain remedies, when mirth with any of the numenusdiur watch Dr. Plerpo's Golden Mediont Discover reo ommendod, as It Is so. positively gortiin in its curative effects as to warrant iis manufacture ers In guarantceing it to benefit or cure, of money pald for it is returned, . It is warranted to cure all blood, skin, and scalp diseases, salte rheam, totter, and serofulous sores an swellings, as 'well ms consumption (which is serofule of the lungs) if taken in time an given a fair trial, rory body with your offensive breath, but ugo S: we“! t‘zgpjhxggxgidy‘nnd end it. Tix Texis colton crop is estimated 'to be worth $84,000 000 this year. a . \ You wear out clothes on a wash board. fen times os much as on the body, How foolish, Buy Dobbina's Electric Somp of your grocer mi eave this usel-s wear. | Mado over sinco FM. Doit take Iniltation. There: are lots of pthom. ._ 20% Att the ico imported into England coms from Norway. © A Wonderful Food and cines Known an 1 used by Physicians all over the world. ~Boort's Entreto® not only gives flesh and strongth by virtue of its own nulfluw roporties, but creates an appetite for f thmmllds up the wasted bodyfmfl have bee using Scatt's Emulsfon for several yenrs, and wm Weascd wih ite action. \ My patfonte Sayit Is pleasant.ond palatable, and al {row strong- er and gain flesh from the uss of it. | 1 use it in wl cases of Wasting Diseases, and it is special- ly usoful for children when nutriont, metica~ thon is peedcd, as in Marasmus.\-T. W. Pignce, M.D., Knoxville, Als. Qreon; tho Paradise of Farmers, MHA, equable climate, cortain and abundant crops. | Best ”mug?!\ grass and stock coun- try In the worl 11 information free, - Ady | dress Oregon Lm'lgrat's Board, Portinnd, Oral Their average he grit must be under ; five feet, they are: nurrow-chested and thin-legged, their mouths nre always stained a slobberiog. filthy red with the areca nut anl lime they chew un- | and they are stupid, beyond 6 Whether Itis the fault of their French contquerers or not I cannot say, but the; nppeir to be a people destitute of self-respect. than WWW the French treat them as if they had none. The first time I wont into dejeuner at the hotel at Huphong one of the \boys\ hnd left a d rty plate on the little table to which the host showed mo, ''What did you leave that thore for!\ Ademanded the Intter pointing to the plate, and smack | a box on the cars followed that you could have heard filty yards off. Aod thisin the uridd'o of a crow .do. dining room. You would no more thick of striking:a Chineso servant like that than of twonk» ing a pol ceman's noso on Brohkdway. Before a Frenchman na Anoamite ap- pears to have no rights. / Both men nad women jo Toogking wear their hair long aod twisted up into a, kind | of chignon on the top of the head, It is, of course, always lanky and jot- black. plo. short trousers, an 1 the womer a long straight shift reaching from nock to poor crcalumid it is only among the upper classes that one sess occasionally a well-formed or handsome face with some clevation or dignity of expression. The women ard much better heels. _The Aonamite man is a very _13 a looking, the stained mouth aod teeth, which render them horrible to a Earopesi eye. But fo figare thay ars much i most favored of may I bave yet seen in the east, and in th3 course of a walk in Hanoi youwap meet a dozen who ars ; straight enough, and strong enough, and sbapely enough to setva as sculptor's Thei+ native dance is a bur- lesque of the Japanese, to the accore- paniment of s fiddle six feet long. --- --- We recommend \Tansil's Punch\ Cigae. Danger trom vatarmh Cstarth is as erceedingly disagrecable disetma, as the nose, bad breath, pat between the eyes, coughing, choktag semmation, ringing notece in the ears, eto -betag not onty troabitsome T5 the exfferer, bot ofeasive | to othert. CoformA {s also danperous, becaste {t may lead to or ecnsumption. Being a Hood dinease, tha true raethod of core is to pertty the blood by taking Hood's Serssparfca. \For severai years 1 had bees troubled with a ted of asthms or estamth in my My wite prose na was wee rimde'ETWf-zlfl . Dee rink Omaka, Seh _ Hood's Sagaparil’la | CJ ELS F Cr abre arine Ham - 100 Coses One Dollar $1} . qaty Certats urd OPIUM #73 =o Erysure College, 487 Kare m, Prouin, \.Y RAZER /H Flam . O54 Their dress is of the most sim- : .. The men wear a loose jackst and ' and often would be pretty, except for | CUREL te wolt Pr TT STEPHENS Latesn 6 | | | Jpumbagy Druggist and Dealers. THE CHARLES A. NOGELER CO., Daftimare, Md. xx n v-46 \ .LDIN . EX BROTHERS, 66 Warren Bt., New Tork, <e - A-man-who bas practiced medicine for & |__ its: effect is | . 'RABWAY'S » FROM SAVAGE TO SWIFT S BPEOIFIC is a simplu vege- table compound prepared from roots fresh- Py gathered from the forests. The formula was obtained from the Creek Indians by i115 whites who hnd witnessed the won- flerful cures of blood discases made by t tribo. - It has been used since 1829, hnd has bebn the greatest blessing to man- kindin curing diseases of the blood, in innuy instances aftor all other remedics had failed. \* £ Treatise on Blood und icin Diseases malled free. READY RELIEF. atas; Bruised; Backache, Pain io Line Pheri oF Hides, Headache, . Poothache, or any other extern tena rubbed on by band, mot like magle, using the palo to Instant sil p Congestions, Colds, Bronchitlm, Pueit: monta, TuGhmmations, theumatiam, New: paigio, Lombago, Beintion, mare thorough matte entod npplfcatlona re necessiry. Wi Internal\ Patna, Dinrricn,, Colle, Spasme, Navsen, Fainting Norvorp: Lnens, Slecplensndss are relieved Instouil q And yufckly cured by taking inwardly % 2 06 'drapa in half a tumbler_of witter Oc. a bottle. All Drogglste. ...-- - RADWAY’S PILLS, 6s ereefton ont aie Corprites march ble, st Medichte in bte World Cato of all Dlsorders LIVER, STOMACH OR BOWELS. Taken accordin rscllan: they will restore bealth Price -08 ote a Bos. Sold by all Druggint B or the TI logue, Name goods R EEUURG MFG. 00, _ LEupRG MYC. 0D. 145 T1. SIR S TMAC CR ND LOAN AGENCY. ASEAN balém, Maro Co. TL Jt Atwrampe Entom, tu _\ Le . Bhadowed by Three, Ti: fimo, 670 pages, 55, full-page A fascinating, exclkln‘ Detective story. A reat novel. Largest and t Hooks ever d for price, enly 20 cents, roamnm. Address Auex T. Loro & Co., Lakeside bldg., Chicago Ensions mus\ L dla uy, ries pesertare trwerad, Laws free, As thy ”mm i it)?!“ Gatianat, Oy A nun-net“ ©. Mea sls paows + - _L I80'S REMEDY FOR C ~ certain. - For Cold in the Head It is an Ointment, o which to the nostrils. Price, 50¢. * BAB by mail. Address, used. T \Tobpe * nnv‘fivan \ paiu, a few applicns | ., SENT FREE go. stamp, br mfg-m3 HEODORE HOLLAND, F. 0. Box 120, Puta. MPs, $25 AFTER ALL OTHERS FAIL CONSULT DR. LOBB s treatment of Bood Impotency and kindred dl long: standing to use. Cheapest, Relief E. T. Hazeor®®, omnigamIO®; © + oc. Bwift's Specific cured mo of terrible Teter, from which I had suffered for twonty tdng years. Ihave now becn entirely woll for five years, and no sign of . any return of the disease. Rogers, Ark., May 1» 1889, wd. | ___ Ons bottle. of 8. 8. §. cured ry son of bolls and ¥ Tron, and. risings. which resulted from malarial poleon, affpeted him all the He had treatment frgm five doctors, who 19!le to benefit him. , Cavanal, Indian Ter. 3. B. Wiss. | ___ T havo taken Swift's Specific for secondary bloo ° polio-1, and derived.reat benefit. It acts much bet ter than-potaeh, or any other remedy that I have ever B. F. Wioriztn, M. D., Hichmond, Va hase one of the cels lrigid SMITH & i atine. The fnestsmall arms an; (11:5!!!ande “4,11: _ first, cliotea : exper . minulwlured in callpres M2 :0 and 4-100, Sin: (Wat glo or doute action, Hafety Hammerless and \~ iy of bestquale lad for work» I m te THE GREAT CONQUEROR .OF-PAlly . mouship and a i Bo nat be deceived b \\l\u\§'.,','hll,%g' \2p a and nccurnay. heap m ten Whew frig Arins cater so w name, d ore attatmitteed perféct in every fl “pa: having the genuine article, t deal belo Descriptive catalogue an .. g NFT JJ & p'xlenugn‘xhl- paper. cannot supply you ait will receive prompt os This Trade |. Mark ts on . The Bost Waterproof < | in the world. Sind for Miuetrated A3 Tox Boten) I and WHISKEY ITB cured at homo with« out pain. | Book of pere Ofice eos Whitehall BC B8, \0 22° __2__G BASE—BA! l Chadwick's Manual 7 in. x 5 In. 70 pagee: 9° Dluminated Covers onapplication en AN Hour nt by MEDICAL (O., Iichmond. Va. Nocth Fiiteenth St., Philadelphia, Pa., for Polions Skin Eription® ona Complaints, Dright's | Bisease, Strictures, ases, no matter of how or: from what cause originating. n days' medicines furnished by mall pog or Book on HJRUIAL Dinense a nine lore as U 5mm a cur I T ROTH ar, o, \*** 'amaterdam, N. ¥. 4 is immediate, A cure is it has no equal _ i a stoall pagticle is applied Sold byvlu‘lmfie'lsts m? I{amt atren, Pa. ulent tor a stipate, rather a tn morethan closo 50 centa for sample Address D?!- Mirture\ along with Tym, oR. RoEALEE® FAVORITECOLIO MIXTURE for all 46mésto antmals, will care $2 out of every 190 cases of colle, whether flat- odic. Rarely more than 1 or-2 doies necessary, an a laxative and to entire cases, cur guarantee 14 worth right the best colle medicine 1 have reer sett 18440 MOOG, Horse Brook! It Goes not eon ly harmless. After 2) yearsof tal a. & CO., Bethlokem, Pa, Tre recommend Br. KoeMer's | \Ravorite Colle Mixture.\ \Would not be tion H as tec have harseas - x Colte Itta t 1 Poa - i f fire. it is useless to tire isibout half 0 avoided by the use of Sa THE nliDYMM) HARRISON something. 1 Atandard Horr trented promptly. Rxpond a few centaand you have a bass ready fl:\'3:'=d\' and when needed, and magi“ ntvlhubla borse. 1f notat your druggist's,en- varieties, /\ sen \ ' a KOBHL mossing rreat * Heidi. use Dr, Kochier's «Favorite 4 recs Dealer, I8Aa0 MOSES & NRO., lewse and montion ii m wee Fain. Sate and Exchange Stabler, Ension, Pa The Mu How Haven: Gonn. ~ Mennfacturetiat lits of all «izes and seral Ste esponai ble ea. sow Prices. Write for ew Wilustrated Cata- , Xr ee ay;'When The wind blows your can be alie. - ~8 It doesn't make us tired to tell about the-.merits of SAPOLIO. Thousands of- women in the United States thank us every hour of their lives for having told them of SAPOLIO. Its use saves many wea hours of toil in house-cleaning. | . BEWARE OF IMITATIONS. _ 1 Grocers often substitute cheaper goods- for 'SAPOLIO to make a better profit + Send back-such articles, and insist upon having just what you-ordered. 1 ENOcH Morcan's sons co., NEW york. \ | I a 1 i nm I | 4 erster ***\ Thr *, _s fee the large advertisement in a previons fescue of this paper. my“ TORETES wot uf the TLETCTEATED i TH! 20 FREE TO JAN. 1, 1890. i H | hm.flm?gzmgmumfiip with name and Port jal i g}? 1830, and for a foll year from Chat {gaggwm‘rfxfnmala ¥ | & p Send for Colored Avmgzemiment and Sreeimes Copies, free. WEEKEYT SOPPT WITH - S176 REF - Cot ourself - fyourl'oily a ge 9