Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 16, Number 42, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 10 April 1886 — Page 7

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Grtpe Tines,

Too much wood is ordinarily left on a grape Tine in trimming. For small vineyards and garden grapes the pruning shown in the illustrations is very available. The canes are trained to wire or wooden trellises, and -every part of the vine thus reaches the SOIL It will be easy to extend the same system by croespieces and a frame overhead, thus making a green and grateful arbor of shelter from the son in hot weather.

To begin such a grape garden, drive a •strong stake in the ground where each plant is to be set. Strong growing varieties of grape, like the Concord, should have the plants set nine feet apart Dip the lower end •of the stakes into coal tar to protect them.

Bet one vine having roots about twelve inches long at each stake. It should have three or four buds. Rub away all these except the •strongest ones.

Fio. Fio. 2.

Yon will then have a single cane to grow. At the end of the first season it will look like Fig. 1. The next spring cut this cane down to three or four buds. If it has grown as tnuch ns three feet this timo leave two buds. At the end of the second season there will be two canes, as in Fig. 2.

The beginning of tho third season the vine will bo ready to train upon the trellis. Fig. 8 Bhows a vine six ycani old. Let just, two canes grow every year, ono upon each side. This is called the arm system of grape pruning.

FIO. a

Mr. E. Williams, a well-known grape grower, says the objection to this system of training is that the arms are liable to bo broken off after they have stretched out to great length. He suggests that a wire run along tho trellis six inches above the bottom one will remedy this. Tie the shoots to it.

Pruning she Jd be done in the falL Tho method is tli is"?1 Everj* year cut away all the ami made that season except tho branch nearest tho ain trunk. Bend this around, tie it,to the wire and shorten it back to five or six buds. It in turn becomes the main arm. In Fig. 8 tho cross marks upon each upright branch show whpre to prune. Cut the branches away to thik rianting may be done either In the fall or cpring.

Channel fan Creamer.

Here is another creamer which has been highly spoken of. Its peculiar feature is that the milk cans have a slit running up the canter. The ice water fills this and thus cools the milk more rapidly.

CRKAMKR nr T7SK.

The front Is taken away in the picture, so that the inside works appear. The .creamer is a double-walled refrigerator box, with a )nmp of ice in the middle. The are plarvd around this.

We have here the mOk can hi which the tuilk is set for the cream to rise. It is laid opco Ha side, in order that the bottom and make of it may be men. The owners of small dairies, or even of two or three family cows, will find much saving of labor in the use of some of the cabinet creameries such as

TTTB KTLK CJUt.

We hare shown from time to time in this dejmrunent. With ice, they are as good for raising mam as an old fashioned ice-cold epriag house. The labor saved is in the lifting and handling of milk crocks.

Onlous.

A very successful onion grower anys the •secret of his lurk is good seed, good soil and good culture. Onioas are very healthy, too. especially in winter, for all who can digest them. It is true there is a tradition that a wealthy fiuwnjrrr on a street car who once handed a conductor a 15 bill for fore, fanned the air away in front of him and hurriedly remarked: "Never mind the change go •long." The conductor had been eating onione, and ever sine* then conductors eat the odorous vegetable daily, so this old chestnut of a Joke my* But for ali that, when one is at home, and can eat what be likes, toothing i» better than obkxts, raw or cooked.

The successful grower mentioned saye of tike soil in hich be plant* the onion: "The ground ahoald be lewljeooagh to prevent washing, and if not naturally dry it should be thoroughly underdrsined and manure, the key that unlock* the hidden tneiuris of the sod. most be liberally ajp-

toted tocall

or sucoros will not be complete

litto* where stable manure Is plenty, ee

it wroally Is in the vicinity of small towns, ft will pay to nee thirty or trw forty tern of

mmm P® WSMi&Xiasm^

well rotted manrire to the acre. This amount ef manure, thoroughly mixed with the soil, and a liberal top dressing of wood ashes, will pot any ordinary soil in fine condition for onions. To facilitate early planting, which is very important, I manure and plow in the fall, and when the ground is free from frcet and dry on top it is ready for the harrow The soil should be thoroughly pulverised, leaving the manure near the surface. A good harrow followed by a drag will be fcprcd effective tools to pulverize and level the ground, but the hand rako must be used to complete the work."

Sow the seed at the rate of four to six pounds to the acre, to a less amount of ground in proportion. Use a seed drill for planting. The Planet, Jr., and Matthews are approved drills to use. The rows should be fifteen inches apart Run roller over the field after sowing to cover the seed. If you have no drill mark out the rows and sow as evenly as possible by hand. Cultivate with the rake and scuffle hoe, and keep the weeds down very carefully, or you will have no onions.

Plant Just as soon as you can get the ground ready after the frost is out of it Cold weather will not hurt the onion. The Weth* ersfield Red,' Yellow Danvere and White Globe are good varieties.

We have thus far spoken of onions planted for a field crop by drilling in the seed. After the little plants have come up they should stand one to two inches apart. If closer than this they should be thinned out The seed should not be sown later than May 1 under any circumstances, and as much earlier than this as it can be got in the better. A profit of flOO to the acre is made in onions if the farmer is convenient to market or shipping.

BtiU more money is made from planting onion sets, from which the crops of small green onions are raised. Theee must be by hand, two to three inches apart, inrops nine inches apart, Leave an alleyway for a walk after every eighth row. The young green onions are marketed tied up in clean, tasteful bundles. The crop from the sets will be off early, in time for a fall crop of something else to be sown in the same ground. The culture of the onion sets requires more labor than the seed does as sown in the field in the manner mentioned, but it also pays better.

The Bees In Spring.

In order to take full advantage of the benefits to be derived from the use of the modern hives, we must commence work in the spring with the bees, and keep up with them until such time as we have them in the best condition to do the work as we want it done. Our first aim should be to get as many bees as possible ready for the harvest when it comes. Then to have tho frames so well filled with brood that there will be but little space left in which honey can be stored below.

There will always be plenty for the immediate want of the bees, and as the season slackens brood rearing will gradually cease and the combs bo filled with honey, leaving plenty for winter stores. Just as soon as the weather will permit, overhaul the hives and remove a part of the brood frames, just how many will depend on the style of hive used and the strength of the colony. We use ten frames. Wo usually leave five frames at the start, but if the colony be a littlo weak we reduce to four. This calls into uso the division board, without which no work of this kind enn be done. In preparing tho brood chamber in this manner we endeavor to leave frames that contain as much honey as possible, but at times the brood already combs may interfere with this arrangement to some extent If such be the case several frames which contain honey should be left in the chamber just outside the division board and the bees will carry the honey around into the brood chamber. Our object in confining the bees to the limited number of combs is to force the queen to fill theso frames quite full of brood before giving more, and so long as she has room, empty combs, in which to deposit eggs, they will need no additional combe even though the bees become a bit crowded, in fact they are better so.

Tho frames removed from the hives should be assorted and stored, those containing the most honey where they can be reached first, as in building up the oolonies wo wish to put them back first Colonies build up very slowly at the beginning and no spreading of brood can bo saifely done until all danger of cold weather is over. If appearances would indicate the need of more room before this, an additional comb should be added at the side. —Indiana Farmer.

The True Hotter Cross.

Professor Thomas Taylor has at length mado a minute report of his experiments testing butter and oleomargarine. He has analysed specimens of both, treated them with acids, and produced crystals of true butter, of lard and of tallow.

Theee he examined under the microscope. Ho subjects them to polarized light Under this test the lard and tallow invariably shew prismatic colore, while the lnitter shows none. This he considers his surest tost Examined under the microscope, also, the butter crystals be

declares

invariably show upon the

surface a black St Andrew's cross, which the crystals of lard and tallow do not show. He repeats them statements emphatically and decidedly, giving them as the summing up of months1 careful investigation.

Thus it seems that any chemist who has a microscope with polariscope attachment will be aide to distinguish butter from oleomargarine. This may be considered an important discovery.

Kinds of Trees for Peach Orchard. A good variety of peaches for a northern orchard, with the proportion of trees to each kind, is given in this list: Hale, averaging trees Jacques, 160 Hill's Chili, 200 Rmock Free, 06 Gold Drop, 1S5 Barnard, 100 Old Mison Fr»»e, 80 Early Crawford, 60 Mountain Rose, 75 Bnew's Orange, 80 Richmond, 45 Late Crawford, TO.

Thing* to Do and to Know. Cows pay better than wheat, Moldy corn will kill cattle. Horses always do better on cut food. The Welcome oats raises very heavy crops. The English walnut is fruiting near Rochester, N. Y.

Plowing too deep hurts bind which has a hard, wet clay bottom. Tbe Savoy Drumhead cabbage is cue of the best late varieties ever cultivated.

Leave plenty of potato to yoor potato eye if you want strong plants. The desideratum of this country is the merino sheep bred to a mutton standard.

The free use of clover seed and keeping of farm stock enables farmers to maintain land in good condition for ordinary cropping without purchasing commercial manures.

Glover is now recognised by all live farmer as one of the important crops to be grown on tho farm, aad without its use tbe farm must ran down and finally land its owner into bankruptcy or the poor Wane,—Transcript.

For all purpose cattle, for the tenner, the shorthorns probably take the lead. They make large, fine beeves and mature early, and they give eocofh mflk and butter for any purpose except pars dairy and

The Mersey Tunnel.

For 800 years there has been a ferry across the river Mersey, between the two cities of Liverpool and Birkenhead, England. In 1832 the first steam ferryboat was put upon the river here. It was left for the year 1885 to see the river itself annihilated by means of a gigantic railway tunnel under its very bed.

The traffic between tbe two cities is very great Twenty-six millions of passengers crossed the river from one to the other last year. The trouble has been that they could not be conveyed fast enough. None of the means devised was equal to the task. The ferryboats were as choked and crowded as those between New York and Brooklyn.

ITIHHIli VXSXB TBI KKMJT. At length a genius suggested the tunnel under the river. It was suggested twentyone years before it was completed. A bill permitting its construction passed parliament in 187L Work began in 1879 with 8,000 men. Four years afterward laborers from the Liverpool side shook hands with those from the Birkenhead side, under the bed of the river. Bo accurately had the meeting place been calculated that the centers of the borings were not more than an inch apart when they met '1

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Sn5!!n«wWl-«' Kirtr..M,fcg

CROSS SECTION.

Under the river was a bed of continuous red sandstone. Through this the tunnel was bored and built The stone is very porous, and the water kept dripping through, and had to be removed by huge pumps at each end of the tunnel. They pumped 800 gallons at a stroke, and were kept going all the time.

The tunneling is considered to have been done very rapidly by means of the Beaumont boring machine, driven by compressed air. It cut» out a round hole seven feet across. Blasting was used plentifully also.

The tunnel' is large enough for a double railway track. It is thoroughly drained. Besides the main tunnel, another for ventilation is laid parallel with it its whole length. This is over seven feet in diameter, and is about twenty feet away from tho main tunnel, which it opens into by means of pipes.

The diagram of the cross section shows the different parts of the work to good advantage. Air is driven through the shaft by means of fans. Two of these are very large, being forty feet in diameter. They pump air into tho section of tbe tunnel under the water, while two smaller ones ventilate the land sections. The four fans are able to pump out of the tunnel 600,000 feet of air per minute. In seven minutes they can change all the air in it

The Mersey tunnel adds another to the triumphs of Nineteenth century engineering. The depth of the river is very great here, it being in fact an efituaiy of the sea. It is also narrow. This added to tho difficulty of Ae undertaking. Hie grades upward at each end of the viaduct are very steep. Powerful engines must be used to draw tho trains. Tho timo they occupy between the two cities is four mimitos. At the ends, elevators holding a hundred people have been rigged, to convey passengers from the streets to the trains. The tunnel will connect directly wi. the leading lines of railway passing through the two cities.

Railway to Central Asia.

Tliis magnificent Russian military work Ls progressing rapidly. It involves a plan for reclaiming tho whole desert in the vicinity of the Wvrv oasis. It has been found that irrigation will transform the so-called desert plains into a fertile agricultural region. The greatest difficulty in building the railway has been the want of water, but this is obviated by the digging of deep artesian wells.

By midsummer the read is expected to be finished to the river Amu Daria. It is a shallow, rapid stream. Steamboats are being specially built to navigate it, at the (astern end of the railway line. The difficult}' presented by drifting sands in the desert is to be met by introducing plants, already tested for such purposes in the arid regions of Algeria and at the principal stations large quantities of them are already being set out in propagating bouses.

The town of Merv is growing rapidly, and the spirit of western progress is giving thorough shaking up to the dry bones of the orient

Ancient Arabic Inscription In tfie Sahara. Le Chatelicr furnishes' an account of what may prove to be an important inscription in an artificial cavern at Timinsaa, near the wells and on tbe right bank of the wady, or river, of tbe same name, in the Sahara. The wady, coming from the south, turns here toward the west Its bonks are of conglomerate, in two horizontal beds, separated by a bed of gray schist in vertical layers. These schists have been dug out for a distance of over 900 fert forming a tort of gallery fifteen feet wide and six or seven feet high. The inner wall of the gallery is occupied, by an inscription in Tifinakh lettering, the characters incised and painted with red Ochre. A more modern inscription in Arabic is simply painted on tbe root At tbe further end are some archaic incised figures on the wall, including those of five horses. The accounts seem to be truthful, though derived from the natives and, it so, the deciphering of the inscriptions would be of great interest

Invisible Dock Boat.

Lew Gssady, of Booth Bjnd, In&, has in* vented an Invisible dnefc boat, which is said to be a success. He took an ordinary flat-b^V tcm boat, rat the sides, from the bow back one-third of the length, down to the water line, covered this part over and made it airtight, and then placed at the rear end of this compartment a mirror t%enty-eight inches high and as wide as the boat Behind this mirror be had the two-thirds ef the best in which to paddle and shoot. He proved by a trial that be could paddle this boat straight up to a flock of docks, watching them throogh a peep bole in the mirfor. Whim they looked toward the boat all they saw was their own refections in the glass. Whan within easy shot the hunter dropped the mirror by loosening a catch, and got twostxrta, sua at the

TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL.

Digestibility of Cheese.

Of the eighteen varieties experimented with, Cheddar was digested in the shortest tune (four hours), while unripe skim Swiss cheese required ten hours for solution. There is no difference in the digestibility of all sorts of hard cheese, or all soft cheese, but all fat cheeses are dissolved the most rapidly, because, being open by reason of the fat, they are the more readily attacked by the solvent There is no connection between the digestibility and the percentage of water present in the cheese, but there is some connection with the percentage of fat and the degree of ripeness. From examination of tbe quantity of nitrogen dissolved, the author concludes that cheese is the most nourishing of all food, meat and eggs excepted. —Jouraal of the Chemical (Society. mi

Saltpetre Beds to Nevada.

Accounts 6how that the saltpetre beds of Nevada are far better situated for their development than the nitre region of South America, which is an arid desert Water for all purposes is condensed from the ocean water and carried to the nitre fields, fuel being procured from the mountains in South Chili In Nevada, the saltpetre deposits are in the vicinity of a rich farming country, with an abundant supply of water and wood at hand. 4

Facts of Interest.

Petroleum and natural gas wells have been discovered in Kansas. Professor A. J. Cook declares absolutely that there is no such thing as poisonous hotfey.

American fast trotting stock Is in great demand in Austria. An attempt has been made to get Maud & away from the United States.

Professor Kiessling, the meteorologist, of Hamburg, Germany, reoeived the Warner prise pf $200 for the best 3,000-word essay on tbe red sunsets of 1884.

Statistics show that about 60 per cent of deaths in cities last year were those of child dren under 5 years of age and, also, that the glass manufacturers turned out 10,000,000 nursing bottles in the same time.,

1

Dr. Carl Zeiss, director of the botanical garden at Antwerp, has invented a new glass which will make telescopes and eye glasses far superior to the beet now known. Wonderful discoveries in astonomy and microscopy are expected to follow this invention.

It is computed that a twelve-inch wall of hard burned bricks and good lime and sand mortar could be built 1,600 feet high before the bottom layers would be crashed. If Portland cement were added to the mortar, the height might reach 5,700 feet—over a mile high.

From the innermost recesses of Lookout mountain, where the battle was fought, a tremendous stream of water has been discovered to flow. A great cataract descends into a cavern, and is lost in inky depths. Shafts have been sunk in the mountain side, and Chattanooga will be supplied with water bom this source.

Redforn Spring Gowns.

Messrs. Redfern send us the following original designs for spring tailor gowns. This firm of ladies'. tailors is becoming as renowned in America as Worth is in Paris.

Fio.

Fig. 1 shows a style of trimming originated by tho Redfern house. The drees itself of roya 1 Llue Venetian cloth. The over draping open at the side, showing the panel decorated down the side and around part of the front with the new trimming. This is an ex quisite applique work, consisting of a design :n dark blue cloth outlined or worked upon foundation of fawn color by a twisted thread of mingled blue and gold.- The bodice is ornamented in front with a vest of the appliqut trimming, which is also put upon the colLs and cuffs. The hat is of fawn color, trimmed with .wings, and dark blue velvet

at

KsliMS mmsm VtQ. I &<* 9%. tfaa krrely cocnbfaatkxi of wood ash gray Vienna doth and heliotrope velvet Tbe skirt is arranged in long draperies openon a panel of the velvet, braided in a graceful design in fine copper-colored cord. Tbe bodice Is made with a yoke and graduated vest of the velvet, braidad to correspond. Bat gray, color to correepood to the gown. The hat fkcd with dark heliotrope veivsc, with beBotrope tetfasr tips.

Vests.

fhe home dressmaker who wishes to furbish up the front of a partly worn corsage is advised that soft vests or plastrons are easily put on, and are more stylish than smooth vests. A single breadth of surah silk is all that is needed, and may be used alike for silk or woolen dresses, and may be of the same color or in bright contrast Red or white soft vests are seen on dresses of almost any color, and it may be added here that the crinkled silk Japanese crape is chosen for very handsome Vests instead of surah. Tbe breadth is shirred across the top, which is curved to fit the neck of the dress in front, and is sewed on three inches of the right side of the dress neck, making the middle reach the buttons, and is then lapped the same distance on the left side, where it disappears under a revers df the dress goods or of velvet This vest may be long enough to extend to the waist line, or even to drop below it in a puff, or it may be a short square or else pointed to stop at the top of the darts, where a stomacher may meet it, or the fronts of the dress may be laced below or simply buttoned.

A high velvet dog collar also fresnens up a dress, and when made with the ve6t just described, should lap to the leftside, and be cut in a point there, or else held by a small bow of ribbon.

A bright yellow or poppy red Japanese crape vest is liked for black or grenadine dreses, and with this may be spaces cut between the vest and sleeves, and filled with a puff of the crape. The sleeves are then completed with a puff of the same, coming out like an nndersleeve, which is gathered on a wristband of ribbon.

A yard of beaded passementerie can be made to trim a plain waist and deevee prettily by putting a row down each front from neck to darts, beginning an inch beyond the button holes. The lower end is finished with a point or a tasseL A row of the trimming is placed on the upper side of the sleeve, at the wrist, and below this is a gathered scarf of the dress goods. If a dog collar is to be covered with the beaded trimming a yard and a half will be needed, and galloon with straight edges should be chosen in preference to tbe vine patterns of passementerie. Beaded fringe two inches wide may be cut in short strips and placed crosswise each side of the buttons of a corsage. If the lower edge of one row laps over the top of that below it, this makes a very effective trimming.

A black surah or pros grain basque can be tastefully trimmed with three-eighths of a yard of jetted net, which is gathered up as a full plastrcn, square or in shape, and there will be enough left for a gathered scarf on each sleeve as a cuff.—Harper's Bazar.

Girls' Graduating Gowns.

For young girls' graduating dresses sheer French nainsook is chosen, and trimmed with some oriental lace, or with the'woven Valenciennes laces that are in such exquisite de signs that they are used by the most fastidious women. Purplice-belted corsages and the necked basques without lining are preferred for young girls' dressy toilets. The sleeves extend to the elbow, and they have a of inserted lace wide at the annhole and tapered to a point just above the frill at the elbow. If the neck is thin and needs to lie covered close to tho throat, a dog collar of white ribbon covered with lace is used, and piece lace is gathered in the V-shaped opening to form a pointed plastron. White satin or watered silk ribbon bows are on the left side of the neck, on the elbows and in front at the waist line, with a ladder of ^smaller bows down the left side or else the latter ftre omitted and a wider fash ribbon isu-od, falling in a large bow on the left side quite far back. The skirt of such a dress is made just long enough to touch behind (not in demi train that lies ten inches on the floor), and is formed of long wide side plaits that may be laid quite plain, or may have a row of the insertion down each plait: to make the skirt light and soft there should be a plain gathered nainsook skirt underneath it, above the foundation skirt, making a triple skirt in the back. The front may have diagonal rows of insertion and muslin in its draped apron, or else there may be a Can-ptaited apron of the plain nainsook edged with lace. When a lace dress is not thought tco elaborate for a graduating toilet tbe Valenciennes net is chosen, and is made np in a gathered cordage. Full gathered frills of narrow lace with a scalloped edge and plaited tucked ruffles of muslin are found to be necessary for the foot of lower tskirts of white muslin dresses, no matter how low the draperies may fall. There are also panels of gathered laoe ruffles placed on one •side of the skirt, or between the fan draperies of the front

Sashes are very largely imported, and are found in some guise on most of the cotton tresses. They are used in contrasts of color rim*, seem exaggerated to plain tastes, such as bright scarlet satin ribbon on dark blue sateens, or sombre brown watered ribbon on plain pink mull dresses.

A heap Outfit.

Demorestfs Monthly gives a summer outfit for a lady with a slim pockctbook, which is good that we copy it here. It is within obe reach of almost every woman, city or ountry, and she wbo has the wardrobe menioned will look neatly and tastefully dressed, though a millionaire's daughter be contracted with her. Tbe gowns should be carefully -node and fit to perfection. Tbe advice here,n following is given to a teacher, but it will tit any other woman as well:

You do not require a very large number of di esses, but tbey should be carefully selected with regard to usefulness. Kebeige, a most serviceable material, is revived this season, and this, or summer serge, would make you an excellent traveling rait, and be good for school wear on cool days. You should have an old dm* for rain tbat will not be injured by weather. A checked gingham or striped M*rsucker, and a good washing cotton, not a cheap one, in two shades of blue, will suffice for school wear during the summer, with a black lace fichu for the neck, and feU black) straw bat A black surah with black laoe lor.net. and fichu, or large, fine jetted collar, will prove the best church dress, and you can lighten it ly a group of pale pink or yellow flowers, daisies or cowslips, and some loops of ribbon to match at tbe left side of the waist You had better not buy kid gloves for summer wear. One pair of black laoe mitts, one of ecru thread, would rerve for church wear or calling, while good Lisle thread will be most convenient for school wear. A neat ulster, and also a water-proof, will be indispensable, and you should have in addition to a pretty cotton wrapper for room wear, a cheap white drees of narrow striped cr tucked muslin, for evenings it need not cost yoa more than $2 or $3 if you make it yourself.

FASHIONLETS.

Senator Stanford, of California, uses a service of solid gold and silver at his dinner parties hi Washington. It has attracted much attention.

A novelty in Parisian Cam is a large letter In tbe center of a gauss field. Hie letter Is covered with diaiasod dvst, and the effect fe made still more briQiant by the groaadcf the fan being black.

Pretty ruchings aad bands of cotared srapeare worn at the neck and wrists ef Tbey arsrof a briUfasat red and ysOsw eslor, freqnently, and ars ^striking aad DsrsUflf, especially with black

"THE "BEST

boon ever bestowed upon man is perfect health, aijd the true way to insure health is to purify your blood with Ayer's Snrsaparilla. Mrs. Eliza A. Clough, J»4 Arlington St., Lowell, Mass., writes: "Every winter and spring my family, including myself, use several bottles of Ayer'a Sarsaparilla. Experience has convinced mo that, as a powerful

purifier, it is very much superior to any other preparation of Sarsaparilla. All persons of scrofulous or consumptive tendencies, and especially delicate children, are sure to be greatly benefited by its use." J. W. Starr, Laconia, Iowa, writes:

For years I was troubled with Scrofulous complaints. I tried several different preparations, which did mo little, if any, good. Two bottles of Ayer's Sarsaparilla effected a complete cure. It is my opiniou tliri this medicine ls the best blood

Purifier

of the day." C. E. Upton, Nashua, N. H., writes: "For a number of years I was troubled with a humor in my eyes, and unable to obtain relief until I commenced using Ayer's Sarsaparilla. I have taken several bottles, am greatly benefited, and believe it to be the best of blood purifiers." R. Harris, Creel City, Ramsey Co., Dakota, writes: "I have been an intense sufferer, with Dyspepsia, for tho past thtfec years. Six months ago I began to use -.

AYERS

Sarsaparilla

It has effected an entire cure, and I am now as well as ever."

Sold by all Druggists. Price $1 Six bottles, $5.

Prepared by Dr. J. C. Aver & Co., Lowell, Mass., U. S. A.

Best Cough Syrtin.

Manhood Restored

REMXDT FUSE.—Avictim of youthful I mpradnno* causing Premature Decay, Nervous Debility, Lo't Manhood, Ac., baring tried in vain every Known remedy,baa discovered a simple meansof nolf-onr which he will send FREE to his follow-sufferem. Address,

J.IL&EEVE8,43ChathamSt..New

Moore's Pilulus

SH

TOHIPSKOIKIilruBRtstR.

in time. Sold by O N S I O N

FOUTZ'S

HORSE AND CATTLE POWDERS

F0UT2

0UT2

No HORSE will riio of Coi.tr. nor» or I.FNG F» VSR. If Kont/.'H Powder* nrc lwed in time. Fontx*s Powder* will pure nml prevent Iloo Crtot.xnx.

Font*'» I'owilrrs W III prevent (SAPKK IN Fowl*. Fount's Powder* wUl lnrreft«e the qnnntlty of mliK and cream twenty per ccnt., and make tho butter nns und sweet.

Kontx'e Powders will en re or prevent nlmoet DISKASK to which Moines nnd f"Attic nrc suhjoot. FOTJTZ'S PoWUF.TTB WIN. OIVE BATIBFACTIOK.

Sold everywhere. DAVID E. FOtTTB, Proprietor, BALTIMOEE.MD.

York.

Area positive cure lor all diseases that arise from

Malaria:

Moore's Pilules area certain and speedy malarial antidote don't mlmnilcrntind almost, (If not quite), everybody millers from It daily. XhiHim the remedy.

Chills and Fever:

Is one of the common forms of Malaria, Moore's 1'iltiles will

Positively Cure

Every cane of Chills and Fever. Dumb Ague, &c.. in which they are taken. Never f»lled.for 11 years.

Moore's Pilules

Are entirely vegetable and harmless.' They have no quinine or amenlc,or other injurious subntance In tliem.

They are nugar coated, lenH-nhaped, easy to take, always give nntlsfiictloa, low in price 60 cent* for 60 1'llulesj Hold by drugglftt* aud proprietor.

I)R. C. C. MOORE,

78 Corth»nd{street, Mew York City.

LIST OF

rnmns

ALWAYB CCTRAJBLB BY USXJTO,

MEXICAN

MUSTANG

LIinMENT.

OF vnui FUSE. Rkeiaatlssi, Barn* aad Hcald* Stings and Bites, Cat* aad Braises, Byralas 6c Btiubes, Contracted Hascles, Stiff Joists* Backache. ErapUoas* Frast Bites,

OF AIOUU.

Scratches* Sores aad 2aIIa» Spavin, Crack*, Serew Warn, Oral* Foot Rot, Hoof ASt Lsneoess, rtwianr, Foandera, Sfralas, Stralas, Sore Feet, StUTaeaa,

aad all external 4JMMMS, aad ever/ban or aoeldealL Tor general aee la tamOy, stable and slocfc-yafd. tt ia

TBI BWT OF ALL

LINIMENTS

Vs--