Washington County hatchet and Forest Grove times. (Forest Grove, Or.) 1896-1897, June 10, 1897, Image 3

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    ISIKLY F A R M TOPICS. “*'» pnce, u muck w, , - Mt a dlfr
euce.
m anagem ent
g a r d e n
Ike F a r m e r
o f
a n d
S hou ld
t h e
f a r m
stab le
Uae
,
.
Brain «
a«
W hen th o .
*
>>v. - i u X
*
many days m
S c . i î morp . “ T
c h «h * a L n
Mt a «lin e r.
I
~
i
doe* not
0f a w »o»e
" ould make
....
] * e ll as M u s c le — U e v lc e f o r T a m i n g
the G r i n d s t o n e — l l o w t o S t o p a K i c k -
la g
1 0
« -s a v in g G ra s s «e e d .
f o r T urning the G rind stone.
A contrivance fo r turuin« a grind-
Lone. by means o f which one can turn
u<l ¿riml at the same time with eoui-
urative ease, has been devised by a
‘orres|H>ndent o f the Rural N ew York-
„
To construct the device, take the
i^ .n sprocket wheels and chain from
L old worn binder or other farm mu-
fhlnery. and gear It tw o to one; that
the lower or crank shaft wheel
uust have twice ns many cogs as the
,ne on the stone shaft. Use n stone
went v or more Inches lu diameter, ami
suri. to get a good one. An Amherst
[g better than a Berea, fo r all purposes.
k(reared higher than tw o to one, it will
Ituru hard, and if much low er it will
wt turn fast enough. It is the fast mo-
O H IN D S TO N K H E V IC E .
It Is U|<0,,1" " ; Pot»««* Peed.
A Schilling ft Company
S a i Kmocltco
T UHW,,rk tom
S i t i r *1''f,,r if ,he ““*<>
t
u
with most kiPs " tlU8 U r w tteWs- Yet
need U »
U< “ ° f IMJlMto,'s the cut
-
4M
A N e w Fnel.
Many attempts have been made to
use turf or peat as fuel, but this mate­
rial lias never obtained great impor­
tance, because in comparison to its
small heating value, its volume was
too large, and consequently the trans-
portation was found too expensive;
moreover, the considerable amount of
ashes it produced made it impractica­
ble to use in any quantity.
Suddenly
it seems the time lias arrived for peat
to enter into competition with, and in
some cases to substitute all other fuels.
An invention, the economical impor­
tance of which is inestimable at the
present moment, was recently patented
by Mr. Rosendahl, of Christinstad,
Norway, which country probably pos­
sesses the largest deposits of peat in
the world. His method ,>f making a
practical fuel o f jieat sim ply consists
in heating the peat in iron ovens to
250 degrees centigrade, and when this
temperature is reached to close ail the
valves of the oven, the temperature of
250 degrees being kept up tor seven
hours. This proepss changes the mate­
rial considerably, and the tar andjgas-
eous products of the coal-like remainder
represent 80 per cent of the whole. A
chemical analysis o f the product, made
at the Christiania U niversity, showed
the prepared peat to contain 65 jier
cent o f pure carbon, 16 per cent of
oxygen, 6 per cent o f hydrogen, 4 per
cent water and, what is most surpris­
ing, only 5 p eroen tof substances which
w ill remain as residue in the shni>e of
ashes. The new peat-coal has a the-
oretijal heating value of 6,500 caloric
units, which is equal to that of medium-
grade anthracite coal.
The cost of
peat-coal, however, is so small that it
can be sold at a profit for $ 1.75 per ton,
while an /qnal quantity of anthracite
coal costs from $4 to $5.
By the pro­
cess of Ifosendhal, even in its present
crude state, the production of peat-coal
costs hut 75 cents per ton,and it is very
likely that even this cost w ill be con­
siderably reducetl before long.
Tests
have been made with the new material
at the Krupp works at Essen, Germany,
and it was found that the new fuel
gave better results than either anthra­
cite or coke in the iron foundries and
for the production of Bessemer steel.
'n.all no
"'S™ wlH b<‘ »«> many
many « 7
!'°U1 crowdln* of so
Um evel on D! ! h111- 11 1» «m e not all
t lto will 8 Wh0le ° r eveu of “ out po-
whoi,
“ r0W' but lf «*<> ls Planted
profit
I,1? " ;iM *** fur to° mnuy for
toes no,
S ‘ lr,y WOrk rutting pota-
imr't,
S° UIU’-11 from the soil adher-
whi,!h e ,U "* from « » * potato juice.
, dl*c° l ° r8 and rusts the knife
U » ains the hands. This discoloring
a .asily removed by wetting the bands
liol.ti. 1
wlthout aoap, and then
. . 18 tbein over one or two burning
P ut matches. The fumes of sul
Plitir are excelleut to bleach anything.
Makin g C o r n r o » , ‘ truight .
Much labor In cultivation may be
saved by making corn rows straight.
It Is very hard to bold tbe cultivator
«> us to miss bills that are alternately
“ fpw iDthes “ Ut of plumb Hue one side
or tbe other. The result is that in try­
ing to save the hills it is impossible to
cultivate the soli as it should be or to
take all the weeds, with the corn lu
a straight line earth may be drawn
front tbe stalk and thrown back again
so as to destroy all the weeds while
• bey are small. It requires not only
a true eye in the driver, but an active,
strong horse to draw the murker
straight across the field. It is not ev­
ery man or horse tlint can ever be
taught to do it. Those who can should
lie paid extra for the job. for their work
is really skilled labor.
Breeding Gro u nd H og a fo r Food.
Mr. Ileury Singer, a well-known and
Ition that cuts. One may find an excel­ thrifty farmer of near Duvall Station,
lent pair o f cranks from some old bi- Scott County, Ky., has for tbe past two
|cycle.
years been domesticating the ground
hog with much success. Mr. Singer
S y s t em on the F a r m .
On many farm s the most ap)>areut found a burrow in which be captured
I causes of failure ure a want o f system, seventeen ground bogs. and. taking
wastefulness, and misdirected labor. them into a small lot on his place, be
It doubtless Is fa r more difficult for the built a close wire fence through which
none could escape. Last year tbe bogs
farmer to reduce his business to a
increased to 205, and this year there
detimte system than It is fo r the aver­
were 1.073. Of this number Mr. Singer
age merchant, but that is no reason
killed 1,000, which he salted away and
why he should aoandou all attempts
will smoke dry, as Kentucky fanners
to do so, and w ork blindly. There are
do with ordinary pork. The ground
many farmers who are carefu l men,
hog when so cured is a great delicacy,
who are striving to reduce their ope­
and Mr. Singer has more than enough
rations to systematic rules, and who
to furnish his meat for the coming
are doing a good deal in this line in the
year.—Southwestern Stockman.
way of keeping duily records o f the
milking o f each cow, in keeping ledger
Save the G r a s s Seed.
accounts with each imi>ortant crop,
It Is an easy matter to save hay seed
and in carefully recording the average
by a slatted manger bottom (a), as
work done by faith fu l men In the sev­
shown in the cut. If the seed is fanned,
eral occupations o f the farm. These
it may lie used for spring seeding. Or
are the kind o f fnrmers w ho are. as a
if weedy, as poultry never void undi­
rule, successful. Th ey quickly detect
gested food, such seeds may tie profit­
a teak when one occurs, and can usual­
ably fed to the poultry by placing in
ly tell, a fter a year or tw o o f expe­
rience. which operations o f tlie farm
are profitable and deserve extension,
auil which should lie abandoned ns un­
likely to prove profitable. The farm ­
er's business as usually carried on is
largely a mixed Industry. There are
usually a fe w staples produced for sale
whicli the farm is adapted fo r by na­
ture to produce; and, besides, there is a
considerable variety o f produce raised
for home consumption by tbe family
or by hired help. I f the farm er would
carefully count the cost o f each of
these products, he would doubtless find
that he could profitably extend some
of the small products, and sell the sur­
plus at a profit, and not infrequently
he would discover that some o f the
staples supposed to yield a sure profit
are produced at a very small profit, or
evpn at a loss. In short, the farmer
who uses his brains, and does not sole­
pox F o r SE- e - d .
ly rely upon the strength o f his muscle.
Is most likely to be successful. The
absolute failures are those who at­
tempt to get along with a minimum ex­
A GRASS SEED CATCHER.
penditure o f both qualities.
the scratch room each week.—Farm
and House.
' t i p the T o w Klckfit?.
The kicking cow, w hile milking, is an
Profit fro m G arilea H e r b s .
abomination, says a correspondent of
\ few papers of herb seeds, such as
the American Agriculturist. T o pre­
sage parsley and the like, should be
vent the kicking a small rope or large
found in every fanner's garden. They
*ord should be passed around the body
are easily grown, and a home supply
Jnst in front o f the udder and over the
will not only save paying out n good
•op of the hips. It need not be drnwn
deal of money In the course of a year,
tight—Just snug w in do—and no cow but the surplus may be sold at rates
to which it is applied w ill even try to
which leave a good profit. The demand
is not large in any neighborhood, but
for the amount of land and labor re­
quired few garden products pay as
Drop us a line if you car.’!
£et Schilling's B est of your
grocer, or if you don’t like
it and can’t get your money
back.
In some of the cantons of Sw itzer­
land all the dead, rich as well as i>oor,
are buried at the public expense. C of­
fins and all other necessary articles are
furnished on application to certain un­
dertakers designated by the government.
Everything connected with the inter­
ment is absolutely gratuitous.
In the city of Dnrango, Mexico, is an
iron mountain 640 feet high, and the
iron is from 60 to 70 per cent pure.
The m etallic mass spreads in all direc­
tions for a radius of three or four miles.
The building inspector o f W ashing­
ton, D. C., has declared for day labor
on public works, and has made such
recommendation to the commissioners
o f the district.
During the last 50 years Germany,
Austria anil England have each re­
tained their birth rates undiminished,
w hile that o f Ita ly has slightly in ­
creased.
An effort is under way
electricity for steam at
Creek (C ol.) mines. The
coal at the mines is from
ton.
to substitne
the Cripple
cost of the
«6 to ( i per
A pair of gloves passes through about
200 hands from the moment the skin
leaves the dressers until the gloves are
purchased by the intending wearer.
Baltimore has fixed by an ordinance
the pay of laborers at #10 per week,
nine hours a day. Philadephia fixes
the rate at #1.75 for nine hours.
The Alabama legislature has passed
a b ill exempting cotton factories, here­
after to be built in Alabama, from tax­
ation for ten years.
Boston employs 2,750 laborers, who
receive from #2.02 to #2.25 a day, and
a councilman wants 15 cents added to
the pay of each employe.
Unemployed married members o f the
Minneapolis Typographical Union re­
ceive #7 fier week and single men #5.
Modern progress has indicate«] the
______
Japanese as the most intelligent of the
Work In Poultry Keenin'*.
Fvery year many people begin poul­ dark-skinned races of mankind.
try keeping with a vague notion that
CAN B E
tV a u easy way to get a living, all the
SAVED
work being done mainly by the*hens.
The craving tor drink \n m (II v m p . a marveion*
But^such persona inevitably fall, as enre for which has been discovered called **Antl-
they ought. There is no easy way to Jag.” which makes Hie inebriate lose all taste for
strong drink without knowing why. an it can be
I f - e s s in anything. To keep fowls free given secretly in tea, coffee, soup and the like.
I f “ Anti-Jag” in not kept by your druggtnt send
from vermin and disease needs com cne
dollar to the Re nova Chemical Co., fW Broad­
s ant attention and a great deal of way. N ew York, and it w ill be nent postpaid, in
plain wranper, with full directionn how to give
fiirty and very disagreeable manual secretly. Information m a il« < l fiee.
well.
DRUNKARDS
•tMri.R ri.Alt THAT PREVENTS KICKINO.
kick. Sometimes a cow tlius tetherd
*ill lift a foot as if to kick, but some­
how she seems to change her mind and
Puts it down again.
K n n P la n t».
The egg plant is not difficult to grow,
it is one o f those vegetables not
often seen on farm ers’ tables, but
*hlch. if provided, would help make an
t r i a b l e variety.
T h e purple egg
* * , l s most productive and best. The
PjMt belongs to tbe same botanical
■hjoily as the potato, and must lie pro-
jkftod from attacks o f the potato larva.
best w ay is to w atch the plants
*®*oly so long as the potato beetles are
**inK. and kill the beetles before Ibey
**** laid their eggs.
I f any larvae
Wtrh a weak dilution o f parts green
*10 kill them.
labor.
_____ __
THE TRIUKPH OF LOVE«,
W heat Talk.
The rent of wheat land In South Car-
oUna is estimated at » 4 6 an acre.
The average yield «»f wheat In New
South Wales is fifteen bushels to the
J The name wheat occurs more than
times in the OKI and New Testft-
' Gmham flour, when properly made,
consists of the wholewheat g r o u n d s
Every M A N who would know the G R A N D
TRUTH S,
the
flam
^
Farts, the Old Secret» an«I
the N ew Dincoverien of
Medical Science as applied
to M a r r i e d L i f e , who
would atone f< r pant fol­
lies and avoid future pit-
falln, ehculd write f»«r our
wonderful little b o o k ,
<g 1*4 “ Complete Man-
_
,
Rood and How to Attain
T o anv earnest .nan we will mail one copy
E n tire ly F ree, in plain sealed cover.
It.
.
tbe ereat wheat farm of
Manlto .
_ .
7 bushels to
British America, raises
the #< T
«...
a very objectionable
.* * . ' ■ « « -
-
P r i c e s o f Ch eese.
Considering the small risks run. mid-
make fa r too large a profit on
Four, five and even six cents
0#Wl(l between the wholesale and re-
Happy and Fruitful Marriage.
"X Z
I.
product!«* > » ■ « 1
ERIE MEDICAL CO.,
Young Playw righ t—“ And what did
you think o f my clluutxY” Critic—“ It
wus very welcome.” — Brooklyn Life.
She Snored.—“ H ow does your w ife
sleep?” asked the doctor o f the man
whose better half was under his care.
“ O ra lly ,' .aid the man.—Truth.
“ Good canvnsback ducks,” said R iv ­
ers. “ are quoted. I see, at $3 apiece.
How true It Is that riches have wings.”
—Chicago Tribune.
"M argaret alw ays reads the end o f a
novel first.” “ W hy?” “ So she can lie
aw ake at night wondering how it be­
gan.” —Chicago Record.
“ Pa. what Is a pessimist?” “ A pessi­
mist. my son. is a person who never
goes out on his wheel without expecting
to puncture his tire.” —Puck.
Mrs. Painter—"M y husband 1s de­
lighted with tny pictures.” Mrs. Point­
er—"You don't say? Don't they look
like you?” —Yonkers Statesman.
“ Not every man is made a fool of,”
remarked the observer o f men and
things, “ but every man lias the raw
material In him.” —D etroit Journal.
“ The decree,” announced the messen­
ger o f Jupiter, “ is that you shall be
bound forever to the wheel!” “ W-which
make?" asked Ixlou, anxiously.—Puck.
Police Magistrate—“ H ave you ever
seen the prisoner at the liar?” W it­
ness—“ Never, your honor; but I’ ve seen
him when I strongly suspected he'd
been at it.” —Tit-Bits.
Yabs’.e.v—“ Did you ever make a mis­
take in the dark and kiss tbe wrong
girl?” Mudgc—“ No. I have got mixed
in the dark nnd kissed some other girl.”
—Indianapolis Journal.
"Som e men,” said Uncle Eben, “ kin
train er dog ter do anyt'ing dey tells
’lm. an’ at de same time raise de nios’
disobejir.rnst cliiliun in de neighbor­
hood."—Washington Star.
"I*ali aln’ muon use o’ sufferin' in si­
lence.” said Uncle Eben; “ seems like If
dis worl' picks out anybody fob 'er vic­
tim, It ain’ gw lnter to be saterfled till
he hollers."—Washington Star.
“ And the divorce laws are so very
liberal lu your section?" "Lib eral?
Say! They are so liberal that nobody
ever heard o f a woman crying at a wed­
ding out tliere.” —Detroit Journal.
“ M y dear, if you took that face
abroad you might have trouble in get­
ting It home ngain.” "W h at do you
mean?” “ 1 mean the tariff on art, my
love.” —Cleveland Plain Dealer.
Apprehension: The Professor—“ A s a
matter o f fact, there are different dln-
leets in. different parts o f Scotland.”
Friend—“ Great Scott! Are there more
counties to hear from?” —Truth.
Mrs. Spatt—"Y o u r husband is an in­
ventor, I believe?” Mrs. Spotter—“ Yes.
Some o f his excuses for coming home
late at night are in use all over the
country.” —Philadelphia North Am eri­
can.
First Burglar—Lord. B ill! dis adver­
tisement wouldut fool nobody. Second
Burglar—W ot is It First Burglar—F if­
ty dollars reward an’ no questions ast
—signed by a woman.—I^eslle's W eek­
ly-
“ Frlsble is the laziest man I ever
knew.” “ W hat makes you think so?”
" H e actually seems to be glad that
lie's getting baldheaded, so that he
won't have to comb bis liair any more.”
—Cleveland Leader.
“ Might I ask what school o f poetry
you prefer?” Inquired the young man
who writes. And the old gentleman
replied: "T h e
homeopathic school.
The smaller the dose, the better It suits
me.” —Washington Star.
P en s«. —1 suppose you've learned
a
great deal about gardening since you've
lived In tbe country? Hubbard—Yes;
I ’ m picking up something all the time.
This year I'v e given up trying to raise
my own vegetables.—Puck.
“ H ow did they stop the elopement?”
asked Maud. "B y a detestable piece of
trickery,” replied Mamie; “ her father
put his head out of the window and
shouted that her hat was on crooked,
and when she grabbed for it she upset
tbe tatniem.” —Washington Star.
“ W h y do you do up your hair in those
papers, dear?" remarked General Wey-
ler o f his wife, as she eatne down to
breakfast in the Cuban boarding-house.
"W h y , that’s the way you do the ene­
my up. Is it not, dear?" replied the gen­
eral's spouse.—Yonkers Statesman.
Once upon a time two Cows reclined
peacefully beneath a tree. "Oh, by
the w ay," one of the Cows remarked
casually, “ why was it. If I may ask,
that you didn’ t chase those golfers yes­
terday?” “ Oh, I don't care to be tha
cause o f little calves being made to suf­
fer.” —Detroit Free Press.
"H o w long Is it going to take to get
through with tills case?” asked the cli­
ent. who was under suspicion o f house­
breaking. “ W ell,” replied the young
lawyer, thoughtfully, “ It'll take me
about tw o weeks to get through with
it. but I ’ m afraid It's going to take yon
about four years.” —Washington Star.
Browner—So you haven't a bicycle.
Miss Neere? Miss Neere—No, I look­
ed ai one tbe other day, but there was
something about it I didn't like and
the man wouldn't alter It. so 1 didn't
get It. Browner—They generally make
any alterations required. W hat was It
you wanted altered? Miss Neere—The
prhte.—Judy.
W »* %W* * * » * » * « * » » * » < S » M
Vene zue la’» Clift to Ne w Yo rk.
,.r
A t bis studio st Garretson, Staten
Island, G iovaui Turini, the sculptor,
has liegun work on an equestrian statue
of Generul Simon Bolivar, tlie George
Washington o f Central America. The
statue has been ordered by the govern- {
meat of Venezuela, and is to l>e a g ift '
from that repuldio to the city of New
York, it is to be placed in Central
Park in place of the present statue o f ;
General Bolivar.
[ — T H O U G H
T
— :-n r
TH AT
A
dow n in health, felt tired and
w orn out, com plained of dizxl-
ness, biliousness, backaches
and headaches. His liver and
kidneys w e re out of order.
He th ou gh t to get well b y
dosing him self w ith cheap
rem edies.
And then came
the ending. He fe ll a victim
to B r i g h t ’ s d isea se 1 The
m oney he ought to have In­
v e s t e d In a a a f e , reliable
rem edy w e n t for a tombstone.
The large archaeological and ethno­
graphic collection brought together by
the government of Costa Rica lias now
commodiously installed in a building
erected for the purpose at San Jose de
Costa Rica.
'
\
Is th e on ly standard remedy
In th e w o rld fo r kidn ey and
liv e r com plaints.
It Is the
on ly rem edy which physicians
u n iversally prescribe.
It la
th e o n lv rem edy that is back­
ed by th e testim o n y of thou­
sands whom it has relieved
and cured.
|
1
One of Etlison’s latest patents is a ]
two-pointed receiver for the phono- j
graph which w ill give two records at
once from the same cylinder.
The Jupanese government, instead o f
presenting medals to the soldiers who
took part in the war against China, is
to give them excellent Swiss watches.
Taking it year in and year out, the
coldest hour of each 24 is 6 o ’clock in
the morning.
DISH O NO R ED
DRAFTS.
When the stomach dishonors the drafts made
upon it by the rest of the system, it is neces­
sarily because its fund of strength is very low.
Toned with Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, it soon
begins to payout vigor in the shape of pure,
rich blood, containing the elements of muscle,
bone and brain. As a sequence of the new
vigor afforded the stomach, the bowels per­
form their functions regularly, and the liver
works like clock work. Malaria has no effect
upon a system thus reinforced.
A captive bee striving to escape has
been ma«le to record as many as 15,540
wing strokes per minute in a late test.
H O M E P R O D U C T S AN’ I> P U K E F O O D .
A ll Eastern Syrup, so-called, usually very
light colored and of heavv hotly, is made from
glucose. "Tea Garden Drip*” is made from
Sugar t ane ami is strictly pure. It is for sale
by first-class grocers, in cans only. Manufac­
tured bv the P acific C oast S yru p <’ o . All gen­
uine m T m Garden Prtp*** h:ive the manufac­
turer’s name lithographed on every can.
The sea has no herbivorous animal.
It »s a great slaughter house where a ll
the inhabitants prey on each other.
B e w a r e o f Ointment* for Catarrh T h a t
Contain Mercury,
As mercury w ill surely destroy the sense of
smell and completely
‘
* df
ileranze “ the whole
m ‘ ays-
tem w hen entering
tiff It ' through
. _ the mucous sur-
faces. Such articles should never bo used ex-
cept on prescriptions from reputable nhvsl-
cians, as the ilamugu they w ill do Is tenfold to
the good you can ptwsibly derive from them.
Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J.
Cheney ft Co., Toledo., O., contains m> mer­
cury and is taken Internally, acting directly
upon the blood and mucous surface* of the sys­
tem. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure he sure
you get the genuine. It is taken Internally,
and made in Toledo, O., by K. J. Cheney ft Co.
Testimonials free.
Sold by Druggists, price 7.1c per bottle.
H a ll’s Family Pills arc the best.
New York is not only A m erica’s
financial ami commercial metropolis,
but also its greatest manufacturing city.
T w o bottles of Plso'a Cure for Consump­
tion cured me of a bud lung trouble.—Mrs.
J. Nicbols, Princeton, Ind., Mur. 2ti, 181)5.
The hagfish or niyxine, has a custom
of getting insdu the cod and sim ilar
fishes and entirely consuming the in ­
terior, leaving oniy the skin ami the
skeleton.
M AN I
ght that he could trifle
H E w thou
ith disease. H e was rua
An automatic tension device for wire J
fences consists of a number o f springs :
fastened to the ends of the wires, the j
ends o f the springs being attached to a
well-braced [Hist at the end o f the fence.
A statistician says that o f every 10,-
000 chimneys, three are struck by light-
ning, w hile of tbe same ¿number of
chnroh steeples and w indm ills, sixty
and ami eighty respectively are struck.
K IL L I
THERE IS NOTHING E L S «
"7
T H A T CAW T A K E I T » PLAOK
F
Mia
Is a deep-seated blood disease which
all the mineral mixtures in the world
cannot cure. S.S.S. (gua>ani.’ed p u rely
vegetable ) is a real blood remedy for
blood diseases and has no equal.
Mrs. Y . T. Ruck, o f Delaney, Ark., had
Scrofula .’or twenty-five years and moat
of the time was under the care of the
doctors who could not relieve her. A
specialist s a i d ho
could cure her, bnt
he filled her with
arscuic and potash
which almost rained
her constitution. She
then
took
nearly
every so-called blood
medicine and drank
them by the wholesale,
•but they did not reach
/ ,her trouble.
Soma
one advised her to try
.
S.S.S. aud she very
soon found that she had a real blood
reme«ly at last. She says: “ After tak­
ing one dozen bottles of S.S.S. I am
perfectly
well, my
skiu is clear
and healthy and I would not be in
my former condition for tNvo thousand
dollars. Instead of drying up the poison
in my system, like the potash and
arsenic, S.S.S. drove the disease ont
through the skin aud I was perma­
nently rid of It.”
A Reai Blood Remedy*
S.S.S. never fails to cure Scrofula,
Eczema, Rheumatism Contagious Blood
Poison, or any disonler of the blood.
Do not rely upon a simple tonic to cura
a deep-sealed blood disease, but take ft
real blood remedy.
Our b o o k s
free upon appli­
cation. S w i f t
Specific
Co.,
Atlanta, Ga.
sss
BE MANLY!
In a recently patente«! attachment
for automatically opening a pair of
shears the shank of one blade is made
wide and bus a coiled spring extending
from it to the opposite handle.
A t Charleston, 8. C., an importing
ami ex|>orting company is being organ­
ized
to import coffee from South
Am erica, and return the vessels with
cargoes o f cotton cloth.
You cannot afford to let physical weak­
ness stiile a in bit ion and mar your future.
I f you are not tbe man you should be at
yoiiraK«1, if von have wasted yourstrength.
if voti feel I be need of a remedy thst will
bring hack the vigor of youth, that will re­
store your energy and strength, do not hes­
itate. Get that grandest o f all remedies,
Dr. Sanden's Electric Belt.
Gladness Comes
ith a better underntanding o f the
transient natu'-e o f the many phys­
ical ills, which vanish before proper e f­
fort*—gentle efforts—pleasant e ffo r t»—
right'.y directed. T h ere is comt«»rt in
the knowledge, that so many forma o f
sickness are not due to any actual dis­
ease, but simply to a constipate«!condi­
tion o f the system, which the pleasant
fam ily laxative. Syrup o f Figs, prompt­
ly removes. T h a t is w hy it is the on ly
remedy with m illioiiRof families, andia
everyw here esteemed so highly by all
who value good health. Its lx n«‘ ficial
e ffect» are due to tlie fact, that it is the
one remedy which prom ote* internal
cleanliness without debilitatin g the
organs on which it acts. I t i» therefore
all important, in order to get It» bene­
ficial effect», to note when you pur­
chase, that you have the genuine a rti­
cle, which i» manufactured by the Cali­
fornia F ig Syrup Co. on ly and »old by
all reputable druggist».
I f in the enjoym ent o f good health,
and the »ystem 1» regular, laxative» or
other remedies are then not needed. I f
afflicted with any actual disease, one
may Vie commended to the most skillful
physicians, hut if in need o f a laxative,
bne should have the best, and with the
well-inform ed everyw here, Syrup o f
Eigs stands highest and is most largely
tM ana gives most general satisfaction.
W
“ It seems to me that you can be de-
per«lrd on to say the wrong thing more
than any other man that I know ."
“ W hat have I done?”
“ insulted the
BUggings fam ily.” "W h y. I tried to
compliment them." “ You said that their
v «b y , who hasn't any balr. looked ex-
scr.y L ie its father.” “ Yea.” “ Well,
i r r T C R E a n * P I L E S «•nr«*.: , no pay an-
Bllgglne Is Insulted on bis own account,
!> til <nr*1: wn<t for >»M>k. Pm M is s v ik l o
f'-*TZ*n..T
i>, tM M srktt Ml.. San Franclseo.
and hts w ife Is Insulted on behalf s f
the baby.” —Indianapolis Journal
N .P .N . U. No. 705.-
N a 783
P
per acre.
i'.íávJri
The modern life-giver. It is nature'srem­
edy for weak men. Thousands o f young,
middle-aged and old men have been re­
newed invigoruted and strengthened by its
life-giving current. It cures when medi- ,
cine fulls. Improved electric suspensory
free with each belt. A pocket e<lition o f
the celebrated electro-medical work,
••Three Classes o f Aten”
Illu*tratf»<l, ¡» .«ent
»cnleri, by limit to
1 all who write, or it ran b#* had at tbe nifle#
j u | m » h application. Kvrrv voting. tniiMh
aged or old man nufforinic from tht* «light"
\vr*knr»H »hnuUI rfad it. It will t*tiow
a »afr and *pee«ly way to regain manly
; strength when everything elae hue fulled,
Call or iuhire».«
SANDEN ELECTRIC B ELT CO.
3S3 West \%'a»tilngton ML, FortlaiiU, On
Please m ention th is Paper.
BASE BILL fiOOOS « S
W# carry the mo«t nomptete line of fiymuaaiani
and Athletic Good» on the f'ou.tt.
SUIT» A * I# UNIFORMS MADE TO OIIOCI.
rend for Our Athletta Catalogue.
W I L L a F IN C K C O ..
Alft-ft’l O M a r k * ! Mi.. Han F rn n riv ro , Cal.
WHEAT
Make money by «»i
f*p*».iil
»peculation i
< hicaao. He buy an
sell wheat there on ma
Fortune» have u-en made on a sma
l. F
inni
ioni by trading In future«. Write for
pan
partieulan*. Beat of reference siren- Ser*
eral yearn* experience on the Chirayo hoard o f
Trade, and a thorough knowledge of the bu»i-
ne»«. Dow u I ng, HopalneA Co., Chira*’» Board
of Trade Broker». Ulheee in Portlaud. Oregon,
Rpokane and Seattle, Wash.
1
j
J