Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 15, Number 39, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 21 March 1885 — Page 7

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'41

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The Chlck«Di.

There is certainly one branch of profit to the fanner which has not yet been forked to Us full extent That is poultry raising. Neither for home nor for market are his resources what they might be. Eggs are one -of the beet articles of food known to man: yet in the cold weather if the good fannwife gets eggs enough to make her Christmas cake '•he considers herself fortunate. During tha late winter and spring oountry people ought to hare trash eggs at least every other day far breakfast, yet some families do not see •ham twice a month. A little care—that ia to say, considerable care and industry—would give the farmer a delicious roast of poultry far Us Sunday dinner all his life, yet with this at their command many agriculturists •ctt down to salt pork and dyspepsia three tooes a day tbe year around. They ought to be ashamed of themselves. 11M farmer who is a slouch in other reapects will be a slouch in the chicken busiaesa He wfB be an old hunks through and throngh,

Kh* hw»

t)

with whom a contemporary

.agricultural writer conversed not long since. Tha talk was a real one. Read it. There may «r may not tie occasion then to Bay "Put that hi year pipe and smoke it." "CMekeas dpntpay nohow," said the old innta. "Bvery doten eggs I eighteen «en* costs a quarter." "Wlwt breed do you keepf* asked the -Writer. He, tha writer, was a person who mm sxiking information^ llpm a practical fanner. ffi*.

The O. H. answered: "Oh, I don't pay any attention to breeds «ome of them were on the place when I bought H, and we get a *ew rooster every year or two." "Kind of a mixed lot," said "What do you feed themf1 "Lord f" he replied. "I dont go to the trouble of feeding them when they have toe ran of the farm." "Got a good hen house, I supposed was my next venture. "Ain't got any part of them roosts in the old log stable and part of 'em are so derned contrary they roost out in the orchard."

"I suppose you sell off your old hens erary jearf He gave a little laugh.

MNo,

-I

I dont fact

to, I never have any to sell the owls and hawks and skunks and other varmints have to have their share, and it's nip and tuck to Iceep the old ptock good. Chickens are a frUatori nuisance whichever way you take them."

Somebody else than the chickens was "contrary" in this case. But if you are not one of the "old hunks" kind you cap certainly make poultry 'raising a source of profit, health and pleasure, all three.

It is an occupation that requires far more brains than physical strength. Is that the reason so many people fail in it! But add the ibrains, and it is aside branch of income that fc by no means to be despised. Except building the hen houses, women, children and cripples can attend to it

Begin now to look after this source of income if you have not done so before. Treat your fowls decently, and they will pay you.

We give herewith some approved designs tor what a Gentian friend of ours calls a -"hen stable."

WOW VIEW 0» FOT7WBT HOUSE, j, Bufld the chicken house facing tn the south •or sovthedtt Have long windows, as in the pictam Cover than with wire grating, so jhat they can be slid along a groove and! thrown wide open in summer. Fowls suffer much for want of light and ventilation. The roof of tin house is 7 feet high in front, and olopes to within a foot and a half of the grand at the reai\ Ptama tnd other fruit trees an planted in the chicken yard. Tha, fowls destroy the worms, Aboard or two id mailed on the outside of the door-posts each! side, aal in these boards holes are cut to enable the fowls to pass in and (Nit.

ntum vnrw

As wOl be Seen, thin house has~a hall tn it. with door in the middle. The hall is off completely from the room each side w] the fowls live. Slat doors lead from it into the fowls' apartment*. In this hall the feed tar them is keot The hall is marked & The nest boxes are shown at R. These nests can be readied by the hand from the middle passage, so that the eggs can be got without going among the fowls. In front of the nest boxes is a slatting marked H. 7 each side is a slanting frame, with strips nailed acrost for roosts. The front note are higher than those in the bade.

&

rOCt-TUT WHIM AHD YARD*.

We have here a rather more pretentious dwelling for the chicks. It is arranged In apartments for different breed*. Each apartment is 8x12 feet, and opens in the rear into, its own slatted yard planted with plum trees. A pointed paling fence jAouki completely indole the chicken yard. One eight feet high will be sufficient to keep the wildest Leghorns, Hamburgs and game breeds in. A tingle length of lath is encwighfbr Plymouth Rock*

If you want eggs in wtobtr, the hen bouse must be wanned by artificial heat Dig a pit four feet deep! to hold a small sfcof*. It will be three slaps down. Oover the hota, Make the pipe of common stand tiftng, and let it run along tbetop lost below the top of the ground through the »c«m tiB ft rant up and psam oat Cover it

along the ground with afoot of dry sand. An arched-over brick stove above ground, with pieces of sheet iron built inside to increase the draft and add to the heating surface, will be still better. It is made with a hole for the stovepipe, which passes straight up and out

EAKLT CHICKXSB*

Experienced persons have already set their hens weeks ago—in February. Broiled spring bring 75 cents apiece in the restaurants. But they cannot be produced without warmth and care to hen and eggs. It is not too late now to set hen*. Where you have aot a good hen house, with stove or furnace for winter, build the nests in this way: Put horse manure in the bottom. Over that throw some clean, dry earth. Then upon that make a nest of cut hay, not using more than enough to keep the nest in shape and the eggs clean. Do not let a setting hen go prospecting off legdeep in the snow for food and drink.- Have both handy near her, and see that the water does not freeas cr get ice cold. Do not set so many eggs ineold weather as in warm. Nixie eggs in February and 11 in March are said to be as many as a ben can properly warm. Hay Je^s the cold through to the eggs therefore, make the bottom of the nest as directed.

Early chickens are by far the best for breeding purposes, too. The first pullets and cockerels will be vigbrous, seasoned and thoroughly developed fowls for next fall and winter. foOJ#""'"

Dont forget that yfasr chicks must have some green fooc^by the time they are two greeks old. If they come beforo the grass grows, then have some oats planted in a box in the kitchen window, or in a corner of your hotbed ready for them.

As far as the hens and alder fowls are concerned, one of the best foods for them is wheat Corn diet is too heating. Save the screenings and poor quality of wheat for your poultry. Do next year if yen have net done so this. (Jive the chickens a good feed in the morning of this: Middlings, wheat bran, meal'or barley, not always the same, but mixed differently Iran time to time to give variety. The small, imperfect vegetables should be cooked and given to them from time to time. "Ihrtw them a cabbage cbee in a while, and stand and watch the fun," says Mr. |EL Feleh. Be sure they have plenty of pure water, winter and summer. Warm it for them in aero weather. It will pay. Give them fresh meat scraps once or twice a week. They are fond of milk and it is excellent for them. Season their food occasionally with cayenne pepper, not too much. Give thi hay chopped fine, too. Don't forget that living creatures need variety of food, Chileans among them. Keep ground ovster shelUi or old plaster and lime for them to help themselves tO.

O CLSAWLimCSS. I

It is very nasty to let your hen houses go .*rom year to year without cleaning. It makes lice, gapes and heaven' knows what not among your poultry. Clean the ten house floor every little while, and put the scrapings and droppings around your fr trees. Whitewash everything that can whitewashed, and keep it so. Have a lat box of sand or ashes for the fowls to wkllow in.

With warmth, cleanliness, proper a^d abundant food, and judicious breeding and care, the farmwife can get enough profit from her poultry-yard in winter to. pay her grocery bills, if they are not too large. This is.Qertain. Try it and Bee another year.

Southern Fruits at New Orleans. The great competition for first premiums on tropical fniiits at "the Exposition will be between Florida and 'California. Florida is well inline. Three carloads of fruits have recently arrived. It will be a surprise [to many northern visitors to the Exposition (to know that there are oveap 60 kinds of oranges. There are flat little Mandarins and ".deep yellow Tangerines that look like the Early Smooth Red tomato. From these* the display runs up to mammoths that are as large a» a htu»11 baby's head. The real Florida orange, in its prime, is about the best of itB kind thkt grows. Florida exhibits many varieties sp6 also shows a beautiful array of citrons and limes and enormous lemons. The grape fruit, or shaddock, in this exhibit is quite new to many people in the north. It is a beautiful sight, hanging in great clusters from thelarfee glossy tree. The fruit itself looks like a huge, pale orange. So large does the grape fruit grow that it measures sometimes 18 inches around. The pulp insid* grows also like the orange. The taste is like that of a sour orange with a slight grapey flavor. As a tart breakfast appetiser a quarter or half of one is unexcelled

The southern states are waking to the importance of fruit culture as they never did before. There isavast and rich field hep for the future. Florida shows still other fruits unfamiliar to the north, such as the sweet and sour sop and the alligator pear.

Next after Florida comes Mississippi hi the display of fruits from southern states. She also displays handsome oranges. It will be new to many that this fruit grows in MiariagippL From the samd state there were ripe strawberries in December and again fn January. This state also exhibits fine pecahs and pomegranates, and the ne# and popular Japanese persimmon. It promisee to be A valuable acquisition to our fruits. Theothbr southern states have hot come u} to the mark in respect to fruit We have in the exposition from Mexico the varieties already mentioned, and ooooanuts, pineappldB, h«n»«Mw and nuts besides. Jamaica has eighty HiuUi of sugar cane, also nutmegs, coffee berries, vanilla beans and a fine display of other tropical fruits and nuts. Honduras sends bananas, pineapples and oranges. Altogether the magnificent collection of southern fruits here brought together forms one of the handsomest and most instructive departments of the great Exposition.

Cabbages. ,v|t:

Per the earliest kinds, Early Wakefield and Early York aro undoubtedly the best The best way to get them in perfection is to sow the seed the middle of September and winter the plants over. If you did not do that however, sow the seed now at onoe, in a temperate hotbed. When the plants are six inches high transplant them to a cold frame, or the open ground if the frost is out When setoutin the earth for final growing put the plants for early varieties about eighteen inche«s apart in the row, the rows three feet apart

For late cahbag*,eow the seed in a bed of rich soQ, in the open air, as soon as fmst has disappeared. In about two months they *iB be ready to act out Plant the large, stronggrowing late cabbages three feet apart The cabbage needs, more than almost any other vegetable, a rich, loamy sofl. Well-rotted stable manure is the best fertiliser for it Both it and the soil in which the plant is lobe set must be finely pulverized. Mix the manure and the soil well together in the hill with the boa. For late cabbage sow the Late Flat I Dutch or the Curled Savoy. Since raw eabS bage is becoming fashionable as a remedy for dyspepsia, doubtless thisunctbereai vegetable wOl be more popular than ever. The largest head of all—the boas cabbage, so to apeak—is the Winter Marbksbead Mammoth The heads occasionally weigh 40 pounds, is said.

Main grafting wax c* follows: Three pounds nana, ens pound beeswax and Jadf a, pint of raw Unwed oft Matt and attr well together, then pour it into a large pail or tab part^r Ml of eoid watar, and work eoon at cold enough to hnmfla.

TERRE HAUTE SAITJKDAY EVENING MAUL

Tbe Thlinklets.

An Alaska letter to the San Francisco Chronicle says: A

Southern

Alaska Indian looks lika

his Arizona cousin and has his vices, bat in other respects he is usually an inferior article. Cunning workman though he is, fashioning curious and well-carved household utensils out of native woods and bone, making nets and baskets and silver bracelets and. rings for nose and fingers, still the pueblo dweller distances nim in manufacturing blankets, dying woods, carving stones and making silver ornaments, and is generally a handsomer, cleaner, braver and altogether more attractive man. An Apacne. meanest of Southern Indians—will fight and show spirit, but an Alaskan never. The far South native is a low-souled tramp an oily, fisheating, superstitious, licentious creation treacherous and wilful. He is as stoical as though carved from wood he is without pride a bigamist a sordid creature, afraid even of his wife, whom he always asks to trade for him and alwaya leaves penniless and helpless. That is, the Thlinklets were generally a mean class before they began to see tha benefits of the white man's civilization. A* a general thing it does not improve the moral standing of Indians to have white men come to live near them. They copy but few of the virtues of the newcomers, but are pretty sure to indulge in most of their vices. When Alaska was more forsaken than it is at present, the Indians did not get drunk whenever they could, which they do now no* did they sell their wives and daughters to the highest bidder. But they nad other faults, such as putting innocent people to death, because they thought they had an evil spirit burning a wife with her dead husband, that both might go to the happy hunting grounds together, and other such pleasantries ana while civilization has rendered them more depraved in some things, it has, on the other hand, brought work to them, and offered a glimpse, at least, of better modes of living, of which some have taken advantage.

There have been converts to Christianity made here and there, and a few have moved into comfortable quarters, and very many have learned to work hard and save a little money. One notices the few advancements made with

Eas

leasure, and only regrets that there not been more progress. If Montesquieu was right in cSling that people nappy whose annals are tiresome, Alaska Indians must have been supremely contented. During the years of their occupancy of Alaska they have done actually nothing toward developing the natural resources of their possessions. Not only have they never built anv towns, but they have neglected the timber, overlooked the ores, and refused to cultivate the garden districts. Whatever has been done up to the present time is due to the white man. Be* fore his advent a native was content to paddle about the waters in his canoe, and to live upon the fish and game which hunger compelled him to catch. As an actuality, an Indian here is a bad-ly-housed, oily, depraved and lazy feeing. As a possibility, he may be made useful in developing, under proper tutelage, the vast resources of the little understood, but undeniably rich, territoty which we own.

•tj,k -Tbe Trials efa Minister. TTie Rev. J. P. Arnold, (Baptist,)Camden, Tenn., in 1873 was taken with

Bright'a Disease, which produced two large abeceeeee. In 1878 another abeoese formed which discharged for 18 months. In 1881 two abscesses formed. He then began Warner's SAPS Cure, "which restored me to perfect health," and June, 1883, he wrote, "my health is as good as ever." Try it!

Bnrdette in a Michigan Cemetery.

I like to get away from the live men and seek the companionship of the dead ones. I believe I love the aep4 people!. It is good to stroll about among this tombstones, and look down upon the graves of them that sleep. .Ton seem to catch some of the sweet quiet of their dreamless repose, and as you read their names and think of them all this grim, nameless fear of death passes away. One day, away out in Blissfield, Mich., I left the little (and the town is usually about all I do leave after collecting my fee)—I left the little town, dozing away the early March afternodn, and strolled out to the acre where the sleepers await the resurrection dawn. I glance at the stones as I pass along the little mounds and wonder that people should live so quiel ilked through the dead grass and rustling leaves, I wondered?—most of them seemed to have dropped asleep in good old age, far down the quiet afternoon of life, like an old man falling asleep in his armchair watching the fading sunlight die away, and the creeping shadows falling over the meadows and brown stubble fields. How tenderly you feel toward the dead you have never known as you stand among them.—Brooklyn Eagie.

long. Most of the quiet onee—could they hear me as I walked througl ,!

Wever.

MRS. HELEN LEIKEM, West MeHonrv, III., two years ago used Warner's

8ArK

Nervine for complete ner­

vous prostration. August, 1884, she wrote, "I have never enjoyed such good health, have had no return of my old trouble." Try it.

Oscar Wilde has been saving some very sensible things in hw lecture on "Dress, which he is now delivering in England. He strongly censures the fashion-makers who arbitrarily decide that a certain color shall be "the onljr wear" at a future time. He says it would be quite as ridiculous for musicians to announce that flat should be the fashionable color next winter. Wilde's common sense very frequently forces its way through his masking affectations.—The Current

There are +52 women editors in England and 1,309 female Dhotosraohers.

fifteen Years!

JNO. L. CLARK, M. D., Waterloo, 9. Y^in 1881, was prostrated with Bright* Disease, crick in the back, rheumatism and malaria. From the latter be bad suffered

In cured If you doubt, *ak jtmx neighbor!

Value of Ranch Lands.

Hon. L.Bradford Prince says: "Ranch property improves in price as the choice pieces of land grow scarce. Nearly all the cattle men are either English or Scotch. The largest company in the country is the Prairie Cattle Company, which is entirely composed of Scotchmen. I know of no German, Irish or French that own any cattle lands. Of course there are some Americans in the business. Good prairie land in New Mexico is now worth from $1 to $2 per acre. This is higher than ever before. The business is very profitable, the usual return being 40 per cent This year has been prosperous, and the loss of stock has been trifling. In the northeastern part of New Mexico the land is nearly taken up. A great deal, however, remains, and can be secured in other parts of the Territory. In Texas a person can secure as much land as he desires, as Texas owns its own land, and is not divided into plats of 160 acres by the Government. The value, of course* depends upon water facilities. If ens owns a spring, or a water front, he virtually oontrols all of the surrounding country. In Idaho, Montana and Wyoming, the ranches are smaller, because the land is owned by the Government. It is leased, but can not be bought The land laws of this country are entirely inadequate, for the reason that 160 acres in the Territories are often of no use at all, because of the lack of water supplies. The Government should lease more th'an 160 acres, or, at least, should lease in such away as to insure to each settler a sufficient supply of water. About five years ago a commission was appointed to revise these laws. It presented a Bcheme, but nothing else pas been done. Two months ago a meeting of cattle men was held in St. Louis, ana a revision asked for. Strong influences are now at work, and I IOOK for some' change before long."—N. T. Commercial Advertiser.

If Yen Doubt, Try It and See. D. DEWEY, of Rochester, N. Y., Jan. 25,1882, wrote, "One of tbe most prominent pbysioians here found 22 grains of sugar to the fluid ounce of my urine was unable to benefit me.

I then began using Warner's SAFB Diabetes Cure, ana Warner's Sxrs PiUs. Having used five bottles of each I found myself cured.'^ N. B.—-Mr. Dewey remsin well. :,t Distribution of tlie Sense of Taste.

Taste, however, is not equally distributed over the whole surface of the tongue alike. There are three distinct regions or tracts, each of which has to perform its own special office and function. The tip of the tongue is concerted mainly with pungent and acrid tastes the middle portion is sensitive chiefly to sweets and bitters while the back or lower portion confines itself almost entirely to the flavors of roast meats, butter, oils, and other rich or fatty substances. There are very good reasons for this subdivision of faculties in the tongue, the object being, as it were, to make each piece of food underfit)' three separate examinations Hike ••smalls," "roods," and "greats" at Oxford), which must be successively passed before it is admitted into full participation in the human economy. The first examination, as we shall shortly see, gets rid at once of substances which would be actively and immediately destructive to the very tissues of the mouth and body the second discriminates between poisonous and chemically harmless food-stufft and the third merely decides the minor question whether the particular food Is likely to prove then and there wholesome er indigestible to the particular person. The sense of taste proceeds, in fact, upon the principle ef gradual selection and elimination it refuses first what is positively destructive, next whpt is more remotely deleterious, and finally what is only undesirable er ever luscious.—Grant Allen, Potntittr Science Monthly for February.

A ^Campaigner's Experience. LAWRBlfCM MIX, Esq.. Warsaw, If. Y., a well known campaign orator, in 1882 took 15 bottles of Warner's SAFS

Cure for kidney trcnble, (after many physicians of excellent standing had given him up), and was cured December 9th, 1884, he says, "I huve had no serious return of my trouble, and so concluded thai my care is permanent."

A Bine-Eyed Girl^s Grandpa.

Among the passengers on the steamship State of Georgia, which arrived yesterday, was D. S. Patterson, an aged and grey-haired carpet weaver, totally blind. He carefully felt his way with a knotted cane down the gangplank of one of the immigrant barges at Castle Garden, and just as he reached the wharf alittle brown-haired, blue* eyed girl threw her arms about his neck, and said: "Oh. grandpa!" The old man kissed and hugged her until he was tired. Then she took hold of the big fore-finger of his toil-stained right hand, and led him away. He stopped every now and then, and rather crushed her matronly demeanor by picking her up and kissing her. She was the old man's grandchild, Sarah Ferguson, and she had come alone all the way from North Platte, Neb., to take him to her father and mother there. They got on a train of the Erie Road at Jersey City.—New York Sun. ..

The value of chewing gum as a factor in education has been settled at last. A Macon, Ga., schoolmarm had six bright scholars come to school provided with gum and six without. Then she threw twenty-nine problems at them with astonishing results. The chewers of gum correctly answer twenty-one, while the gumless six had mastered onlv eight. Thus is another vital educational problem solved.

A IVetable Arreat.

a H. OBERBECK, Deputy Shwiff, St. Louis, Mo., in 1882 took Warner's Sin Cure for a very severe kidney and liver complaint be bad lost pounds in weight uc ~1ve bottles of

under the doctor's

cars. Five bottles of Warner's Sara Cure arrested and cared the disease, and December, 1884, he wrote, "I now weigh 900 pounds and never felt better my Ufa, I raoommend Warner's Stfi Que."

t,, Vaaderbilt's Honey Couldn't Buy It Th« Acworth News and Farmer of this week says: Mrs. Elisabeth Baker, living within three miles of Acworth, remarked that Vanderbilt's fortune c-uui not buy from her what six bottles of Swift's Specific has done for her. Her statement is as foliows: For thirty one y«tr» I have suffered^ almost death from that horrible disease, scrofula. For years was unable to do anything in keeping up my domestic aflbirs. Last •)c«o^er I was induced to try Swift's Specific, and ueed t«ro bottles and was

AO much benefi ed by it that I purchased four more bottles from Messrs. Northcut «fc Johnson, which has almost entirely relieved me. I (eel like a new person, and can do all mv own housework. Before I took the 8. S. S. my life was a burden, as my entire person was covered with Mres, and in this miserable condition I did not care to live, had tried 1 every known remedy, and my ease was generally regarded as incurable. I had been treated by the best physicians to no avail. I most heartily recommend

Swift's Specific to the afflicted. Meesrs. Nortbcut A Johnson, merchants at Acworth, says: We know Mr«. Elisabeth Baker personally, we are familiar with her ease. She is highly esteemed in this community.

Rbtamttlui Twenty YeariT I have been a safiferer from rheumatism for twenty years, at times with almost intolerable pain. I had the best medicnl treataMut, and took all sorts of remedies, but without relief. Being reduced almost to a skeleton, and not being able to walk even with erntohes,I was induced to tiy Swift's Specific, and it acted like a charm, and I am to-day entirely relieved. Have thrown away my crocthes, and am in excellent health. I believe Swift's Specific will eure tbe worst oases of rheumatism.

Mrs. Esra Mershon,

Macon, Ga., Aug. 4, 84.

Bheomktlim Farty Tears. Thomson, G«., Aug 16. 1884.—I used three bottles of your Swift's Speciflfc for a forty years' standing ca*e of rheumatism. After taking three bottles I was able to plow. I consider it a God-send to the afflicted. J. B. WALMUI.

Treatise on Blood and Skin Disease mailed free. THB SWIFT' 8rBcmno Co., Atlanta, Ga. -,

[fi'X The Longest Pole ,t Knocks the persimmons, and Dr. Blgelow's Positive Cure knocks all throat lung diseases, such as coughs, colds, croup hoarseness, bronchitis, asthma, influenza and consumption. Pleasant for children to take and eures safely, speedily and permantly. Large bottle fi.00 atGulick A Co. 4

.• 'X ®3rr Human.

drlffi' Glyeeriae Salve.

The great wonder healer has no equal for cuts, braises, ssalds, burns, wounds and all other sores will positively eure piles, frost bites, tetter and all skin erup-! tlons. Satisfaction or money refucded.1 25 cents. Get tbe best of Gulick & Co. it.

..

miw&m

atttoa. is a •», •nre sad eyseSr ears an(i" bun* dMSi k«T*

rr AT.T, opsan CXHWJMSls, as tt aots D1KBCTX.T and AT OVC* ea (teXlSHSTS, IXVXn and BOW. XLS, restoring ttaa a a IwslfHy

it is botnT safe cure and a 8PECIFIC. It CUBES all lMseaaee of Che KMaef*»

F.

Jaatxtlee,

llflltomaeM,

aebe,

Hm4-

Hour

flUBwwfc. Pmmialut"

CanetffMUion, Pflfn, Pain* la the Back, Lain, wr Hide, Retanttoa Baii, __ Nea-2letent'laa"

Urine.

1

FUN JT nroom

*rfAICE NO OTHER. Brad teEOwtntod raatfilet mt Solid T«* Saooliliaf AlaotettCnm,

HUNT'S KSXEDV CO*

8 l»rv*1Jenee» K.I.

TUTT'S PILLS

25 YEARS 111 USE. The Greets* lSScdTrtajBil1 of the Af»! SYMPTOM8 OP A

TORPID LIVER.

LMSef appetite* Bewele caetlve. Pal a la the head, with a dall eeaaatlea la the back part. Fala aader the shealder* Made* Fallsesc after eatlac, with adtatadlaatlea ta eacertlee ef bady ar ailad. Irritability ef teatper« Lew artrlta, with afeellacaf havlac aegleetal eoaie duty, Wearlaeee, Dlszlaeae, Flatter!a« at the Beare* Dete before the eyee« Headache aver the rlsfct eye. Beet!sees ces. with ftftal dreaats. Highly celered Urlaei aad

CON STIP ATION.

TUTT'S PUX» are especially adapted to such cases, one dose effects such a change offeeltnga* to astonishtbe sufferer.

ijwrra^j

TUTT8 HAIR DYE.

GKAT BUS or WmsKaas chaaeed to a Guwsr BtAOK hr single appUeasion of fids Dt*. It Imparts a natuaf oator, sMa orik

NawYMk.

No. 415) OHIO STREET,.

TERRE HAUTE, INDIES

UMMM MM.) M'

ArsRlNwaw*/tt«J^lap,Aod AS Thriat, Iwiyi tmd mil Otrmfa CEMW10 maeises «f We

OiMm WSiU,Bla, IiMa,Owuiii,(

HaMt, ShraaMttMB. Kaarajjfe. lusas srOitAcx, LrrnTiVLi (HIIMH trUw IMMTI Bladder, ladaBtu. ft* CMH» TlUar ALL KMTOI KASSS: Chora* «r M. TMa DkH MPT, CStaltf&r, SCBOrSLA ta all Ma fcrw, a tkaaa Snmw a at •mewatallv ltwii IjttM PfcyaMaa" aad BafOnatttaa af all Mad*, aac faralakad. KZJSCTMICITTand MLMCTMXCMAi

aad har, IMali, niaa, utoan aa

af Ik* »•••, Ltpw, MS OaMara. a« lain, raah Milan •aaaiaUr, Oraa VIMI at tka Owaaa, Waak aad Sara I af tba Bfa, Bar, Jtaaa, Tkraat ar SMa

Sara Up, Old Sam fnprkw* ijaa

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Ifaaitoba R. R.» Sr. PAOL, Mm*.

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Brl«lt*a MMCS* aad BUecs OeBe, Ma. OaasiMaMta fcse aad fcvlM AMraaa vltkak FOUTZ'S HORSE AND CATTLE POWDERS

Ho Roma win Hie or COLIC, ROT* or Lvxa vn, If route's Powder* are naed tn time. Ptonatl Powder* will rnre and prevent Hoe

Fonts'* Powder* 111 prevent 6*r«* nr ri fonts'* Powder* will tnerewe the qnaMlty at aad eretun twenty per eent., and make the tmtwr and (week 'i.M

Fcntf* Powder* enre or prevent almost wntK ftiacABx to which Done* and rattle are subject.

CMsvarrwh^rs.win

u,

But you make no mistake if you use Dr. Jones' Red Clover Tonic for dyspepsia, costiveness, bad breath, piles, pimples, tttue and malaria diseases, poor appetite, low spirits, headache, or diseases of the kidneys, stomach and liver. Price 60 cente, of Gulick Co." 4

UTS'*

Pownsas *iu err* B^TiwrAcmoir. DAVID B. T057TB, rrop?ietoa, BALTIMOHB, KB.

ROSES.

160,000

BrwrMooadaf,

bMnbaal. WlUji*# to aav kddrm, pnrtpaM. ar

1

*1 fa Micet riim at |a HI R«««: for CS. MM fbr Sty, Row*, eta. I\9t» trated l'lmt and Saed 0»«» lOftM af SO pa( malM trm to «ll. NANZ & NEUNCT.1 1

Loiitevlfle, Ky.

IprilTP WANTED •hr III ACoreetC. Sample free to time he NUL111II oomlnc afrents. No risk, quick Ifcnttory flren, satltfaoiloa gnarantMd. Atkl.. DR.8COTT,842 Broadway St.,W.

LAST CHANCE To obtain Governwient Lands free—that we sintaMk for general farming and stock raising ptupuacj latMS change of laws as per bills now pending tn Congreqk

cnangeof

320

IN THE DEVILS LAK^ TURTLE MOUNTAIN, And Mouse River Country*

NORTH APDCO DAKOTA AunLV Over 3,000,000 Acres af R. R. Lands in MiaaSsota at Ae low price of 18.00

per acre and upwanfc.

earad. Indeed,

Sita»ln*r.»a«twi awdT^j taadhar wttn aV A MT A

ST.B T*S A

"TSTi.

PrmosiTTum

riRON TONIC

Or,

Kit

an

STOAB TMS

•SO..., aad Tirr enred. nerres

[van«wfoN%| he ailae aali

Call vena the ml ngfrom ooi

lies Brain Pi

LADIESpecnllar

81^

I to thexr s«x

.BB. WiitTKH'sniOir TUNZO a aaCat

to the popularity of the ertgitMn.jpe not expetJn^ aiont—get the OMOWALAXD Irtsr. I*

—Arietta of roothfnl im erroosl)*

*1 Pre matora Dm I. Ao.,baring triad in rata araiy

•aia tnri

IM diaoorsrad a abaplf maaasof salfwill aand FB88 to bla felfow-aaff J.B.REKVKS, 43

which it

Chatham Btjfiw

FERRY'S

R'VALCABLE TO ALL! Will be mailed to oil applicants tnd to customers of Is ordering it. It contain d^crlfttlons and Ve3?t.iMe and flower HEEDS, Bt/LBg, t,,

W cuiomcrs ori&strear wltEput ting it. It contains Illustrations, prlees, ripttons and directions for planting a

D. M. FERRY

& CO.

Itrunkeness & Opium Habit Tb«ee blighting diseases absolutely eon* and the sratem restored to a healthy oondrftion tar C. BEERS, M. D., well knowa here, send' stamp for evidence, or call at residence, 41 Appteton Street, Boston, Mass.

I TEACHER^ 1 Books and Blblfla. Meadv work for Mpring and Rummer. ACdress#. C. XeCarajr A C©^ Cincinnati,