FABN NOT. Tna students at the Iowa College Farm last year made al1 the sugak the; used, from orange cane. Iowa peopVe are going large!y into the making of sugar from sorghum. IT is found in my own experience that urine collected into tanks from fifty cows tied up during the winter months is sufficient to keep in a high condition seven or eight acres of meadow land. London Agricultural Gazette. INSETor as they relate to man are nox ious, beneflial or neutral. Those ranked as beneficial may be directly beneficial, like the siltworm or honey bee, or are indirectly beneficial as de stroyers of noxious msects. SPEAKING of the pioneers of oattle breeding, the Live Stock Record re marks: " The obstructions now in the way of breeders are by no means those which met Bakewell, Collings, Bates, and Booth. They had to lay the foun dation and build from the ground up, while at this time these are found ready to hand, and it only remair-s with the present breeder to keep them up to the standard of excellence of judicious aross ing and trui breeding." COUNT TH E CoST.--No man is fit to manage a farm who does not think be forehand what is best to do, and which is the best way to do it. Work withe out thought, without plan, has been the blunder of many who pretend to be farmers. Raising crops without knowl edge as to their cost, or thought as to whether they will sell or not, has sapped many a fortune. More forethought in the management of a farm is required than in most any other pursuit followed by man, and the forehanded farmer is always the one who counts the cost, and closely calculates all matters that apper tain to the farm, not that a farmer is necessarily obliged to make shifts and turns in order to succeed, but simply to count the cost. BALMY HonsEs.-It is rarely well to whip or kick or 8cold a balky horse, as is the common practice. One of the best methods is to feed where he stands with any accessible food, such as oats, ears of corn, or even grass by the way side, or hay from the wagon, which can be provided for the emergency. For getting his whim he will generaly start without trouble. Another good way is to do something not harmful, but new which will direct his thoughts, and be' fore he knows it he will be jogging un consciously along. Sometimes, if one can spare the day, it is best to wait till, from uneasiness and hunger, the animal submits to the will of his driver, and the triumph in this instance is generally complete. In any event, it is poor pol icy to whip and abuse the animal, be cause it does no good. INDICATIONs OF THE WEATHEn.--The color of the sky at particular times affords wonderful good guidance. Not only a rosy sunset pressages good weather, but there are other tints which speak with equal clearness and accuracy. A bright yellow sky in the evening indi cates wind ; a pale yellow, wet ; a neutral gray color constitutes a favorable one in the morning. The clouds are again full of meaning in themselves. If their forms are soft, undefined, full and feathery, the weather will be fine ; if their edges are hard, shr and definite, it will be foul. Generally speaking, any deep, unusual lines betoken wmnd and rain; while the more quiet and delicate tints bespeak fair weather. It is very true, however, that all signs in regard to the weather some times are deceptive and fail. SELLING nY WEIGHT.-It cannot be denied but what the fairest way in dis posing of articles from the farm is by weight. It is the only proper way ; and why ? Let us take eggs, for instance ! A dozen of large eggs, under the p~ros ent system of traffic, brings no more than a dozen of small ones. No one will pretend to say there is any justice in this. Then take potatoes or turnips, or apples or onions, or fruit of any kind. A person who understands "dark ways" can make, by measuring by the bushel or quart, a good deal more or less, ac cording to th interests that suits him. In all the berries sold in this muarket b~y the guart there is a leakage in the mieas ure in most instances. Honest scales won't cheat. It is just as right to sell wool by the fleece as it is eggs by the dozen or hay by the load--as to sell po tatoes, tomatoes, wheat, rye, barley, oats, corn, apples, berries by the quart or bushel, There is no justice in it, neither is there any representation in it. The only fair way in either buying or selling farm products is by the wveight. THEnE is a good deal said about sheep breeding in this country, and the advanD. tages respectively presented b~y the grassy mountain or Western prari'e land for sheep culture are commented ou by exchanges and correspondents. Bt Australia, it is probable, exceeds8 aniy other part of the world for sheep. Th'e Gover nment Gazet/c for Cainterbury and Otago, New Zealand, gives a list of a few owners and flocks, as follow, in theo colonies of the antipodes New Zoalanid and Australian Land CJo.. 386,00 Mr. Robert Camipbell.............. 300,0004 Mr. Gecorge Henr Mooro.. ... ... ...0,40 Mesiirs. D~algety & C~o.. ..... ........20,000 Messrs. Clifford & Weold............. 0.000 8ir Dillon Bol......................j,00 Hon. Wilfiam Robinson............ 8,00O Air (Cracott Wilson....... ......... 4,000 Mr. Kitchen.......................,00 Mr. Allen McLean...................50,000 There are a number of millionaires among the Australasian sheperds. Mn. J. C. WOOD, a farmer of Switzer land County, Indiana, says the best way of killing the common sheep sorrel i'n meadows is to treat it liberally with old brine. He says the rusty brine from old pork barrels is certain death to the sorrel-a fact worth knowing. Fresh salt brine is not so destructive to the sorrel. HIon FAnumG.--High farming is a system of tillage and farm management that is self-s ustpining, a system that takes nothing but the bare land, the do mestic animals, the farm implements and machinery, and cultivates the soil, sustains the family and the animals, Pays the annual taxes, defrays the ex penses incident to the improvements that mu d be made on the farm, cancels the annual Interest on the money in vested In the land, eventually pays for the land, all from the products of the soil cultivated; and after one, two or three decades of years, leaves every acre in a far better state of fertility than the soil was at the ,eh~g This is high trming. There ar n numbers of ~ -. quiet, unobtrusive tilas of the sOl in many of our States, who have com menced precisely as we have indicated without one dollar of cash capital, wh> ; t have had no revenue whatever besides the natural resources of their cultivated i fields, and who have by hard work and 6 ( judicious management sustained thei families, paid for their lands, erected all of their buildings, paid for all their valu- C able improvements, and at the same time a have bxrught their land to that state of productiveness by their judicious man agement, that every acre yields as much, if not more, than it did originally in a state of nature. This is high farming. Yet such a system is often sneered at simply because the proprietor knew how I to save his money to defray expense of I improvements. 't'here is no need of fg land becoming impoverished, eveir w10n it bears a crop every yeaf. Proper cul tivation with plenty of manure is the key to high farming.- Minneapolis j Tribune. a Wanting a Divorce from Ills Son. I Ben Mullet, a colore2 man who culti- s vates cotton and drinks whisky, came to s Little Rock, and, finding the United v States Judge, said: t "I se got a piece ob businesa for yer f ter transack." 1 "Well," replied the Judge, " pro- i coed." "I'se arter a divorce." "I have very little to do with such t cases, but why do you wish to sever the I ties which bind you to a compania* I who, in all probability, is much too good for you?" "Case I can't got along wid him, Jedge. " Him ?" "Yas, sali, him." " You didn't marry a man, did you ?" " No, sah; I married ez likely a culld 'oman ez yer obber seed, an' I don't want no divorce frum her. I wants a divorce fru-m nay son." "From your son ?" "Yas; case dat boy is a monstrous sight of trouble, an' spen's ebery nickel he can git his han's on." " There is no such thing as a divorce from a son." " Dar may not be in de law, but dar is wid me. What's do law fur of it ain't ter perteck a man? Any man can git a divorce from his wife, but gittin' one frum his son is one oh do fine pints. Say, now. Jedge, do law on do pint ob technicality ken do enything. Can't yer make dis a technicality, jes ter oblege de ole man what driv a team dur in' d wah ?" " You haven't enough sense to drive a team. Go on away." "I'se tried do law, an' now I'll try de gospel, an' of dat preacher down in (de bottoms can't fix up de papers fur me I'll take de nature ob do case inter my own han's an' break dat boy's'naik." Litftle Rock Gazette. l\ORE than 4,000 cakes of toilet soap were stolen from the Fifth Avenue Hotel last year by lady guests, and 2,890 towels went after the soap. 'Who's a thief ? Pree Press. What kind of guests did you say ? Persons who "lave not wisely, but towel," are not ladies. If the Fifth Avenue people were wider awake, we should not hea1 of such soap horrific proceedings. None but guests of the lowest caste-steal soap. The Windsor ought to be the favorite for soap thieves. WIYEN oneoOf the older children of my friend was saying her evening prayer, and said, " Give us this day our daily bread," her little four-year-old sister wlhspered in her car, ''Say butter, too, Taty." ________ We learn that Ellis & Co , prop.iietors of Bailey Springs, are making prpara tions to entertain an unusually large numnber of visitors this summier. TIhey are receiving communications from all over the south iimluirilg rates and makimir con tracts for board. This is ouly their due, for not only are they most successful hotel keepers, but their pl1ace is in every way worthy of patronage. It is one of the coolest, shadiest, breeziest lace.; in the South ; the locality and surroundl ines are delightful ; the buildings are roomy, airy, and convenient y arranged; the accommodations, fare andl attention are first ciass, and shoal Creek is the most romantic stream and the best fish ing water you ever sawv. Add to this the unrivalled power of the 01(d Rock Spring in the cure of dropsy, scrofula, dyspipsiaL andl diseases of the'blood, skiti' and kidneys, and the sum of attractions is irresistible. If you have ever beeni there y'ou know this is all- true. If you have not, try it just on1ce. You will never regret it. Address Ellis & Co., Bailey Springs, Al:;. AT Cervia, on the Adriatic sea, the festival of " marrying the sea " was cele b~rated with great solemnity last month. The Bishop, at the head of a brilliant procession, marchmed to the edlge of the water and cast the weddling ring into the surf, according to the old1 Venoetianm style when the Dogo "'married " the re pulic to its annual bride, the Adriatic. No good Preach; Iing. No ma:n enn; don~ good job of wvork, preach] aL 'good sernnont, try a la~w suit welli, doc tor a patient, or u' hO Ie a goodl arl et whent he feels mriserable and ' i , w i th iluggish in and~l 1( ulnstead~y nerves, ati( rouen should make the attempjt in such a con'ld itioni wheun it enn be so easily anid cheaply1 removeud by a little Hop Bitte rs. See o'ther column. -Albany THlE GREATE5T Ker., The Persian author Saadi tells a story of three sages-a Greek, an Indian andl a Persian--who, in the presence of the Persian monarch, debated this question: Of the evils incident to humanity, which is the greatest? The Grecian declared, " Old age oppressed with poverty;" thme Indian answered, " Pain with impa tience;" while the Persian, bowing low, made answer, " The greatest evil, 0 King, that I can conceive is the couch of death without one good deed of life to light the darksome way I" Tr-avelling N. And it hard to keep in good health, owinq to the constant change of water diet, and the arring of the oars. All these thlings injuire ekd neys, while Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver ()nro Ip eatain to moteamttm.m The Fashion In GaIt for GOl.e The fashionable gait 4 the utter oung girl at this season is an import. ion, like most of her articles of cloth ag. It is supposed to be an offspring i the utterly utter manners of the Lou [on mothetic, who have set the fashion Dr languid, willowy, weary wabbles, Low the rage at many fashionable gath rings among young women, who in a pirit of intense utterableness gaze into lie depths of a new-blown lily or rose or ilently study the heart of a field daisy. Ipon the avenues, however, the great Iublic see the esthetic walk undimmed y the mellow light of a drawing room, ud ameliorated by the rich colors of 'ersian portieres and Daghestan rugs. Vhen the mathetic appear; upon the :ont doorstep with her Langtry hat she liakes out the bangles on lieriacelets, ushes into better position the Jacque iinot roses at her belt or the field daisies i 4er fourth buttonhole, then shakes ut the puffings of her 1)01 e, raises balloon with its ivory ha carve d ke a calla lily, and prepare et into [tape for the fashionable gai or the pace of a minute her body a to (ork upon eccentrics. Her a al col in shoots forward at an angle of about orty-eight degrees and remains rigid, Ler neck lifts, her chin goes about an uch. and five-eights above its normal mue, her nose naturally follows and )erhaps improves upon the4nc3W, her 6rms to the elbow points hu her ses ike the wings of a duck. an fte fore Lrms hang like willow branc s, Vhi1e he hand that does not engage itself vith the parasol hangs limp and languid. [t requiires two teeters to give the shape .nertih> and off the msthetic goes. Hdr r).grcss defies accurate description. t i s been compared to the amble of 'Wo kangarob,41ut the naturalists insist that the kangaroo's movements have some eAement of grace. Others say it is very like a duc, which flaps its wings, but the duck does not have French heels. A man of science says that there is noth ing like it in the animal kingdom, al though the sea gulls on the Pacific Islands have a similar motion in their walk. "I can only take a medical view of it," said a physician. "I look upon it as inuch more dangerous than tight lieing."-Pitt8burg elegraph. Native Dances. The most graceful mcke of all Fijian dances wZ's one which represents the breaking of the waves on a coral-reef, a poetic idea, admirably rendered. Years ago I remember the delight with which we hailed an exquisite statuette in Sir Noel Paton's studio, reprcInting tho gurling of a wave by a beautiful female bigure, supposed to be floating thereon; b)ut I never dreamed that we should find bhe same idea so p~erfectly carried out by a race we have been wont to think of only as ruthless savages. The idea to be eonveyed is that of the tide gradually rising on the reef, till at length ther'e remamns only a little coral isle, round which the angry breakers rage, flinging their white foam on every side. At first the dancers form in long lines and ap proach silently, to represent the quiet adlvance of the waves. After a while the lines break up into smaller companies, which advance with outspread hands and bodies b)ent for ward, to represent the rip pling wavelets, the tiniest waves being rep~resented b~y children. Quicker and quicker they come on, now advancing, now 'retreating, yet, like true waves, steadily progressing, and gradually closing on every side of the imaginary islet, round which they play or battle, after .the .manner of brekers, springing high in mid-air, and flinging their arms high above their heads, to represent the action of spray. As they leap and toss their heads, the soft white mnasi, or* nativ~e cloth (which for greater effect they wear as a turb~an, with long streamers, and1( also wind~ round the waist, whene it floats in long scarf-like ends), tremblles arul( flutters in the b~reeze. The whole efl'ect is most artistic, an11( the orches'tria (10 their part ii imitating the roar of the surf on thme reef -a sound1( which to themn. has a never ensing lullahby from the hour of their irth. --At lfonme in Fii--Gordon (Cunuming. " WATr will you do when I am dead ?" aisked a mother fondly of her little girl. " Eat up all the sugar,'' was the reply. lie Wise and Happy. It' you will stop a'l your extravagat : a .1 wron( nlotionls in dlocto:-inLg vourse t' and14 fa milie s withi expensive doctor's or h umbu),ii 'ulre a''s, t Im1t doe harmn 2 a-wys and11 use only natutre's simtple reimed ies or a i v our ali mnits--yvou wvil be wise, wvell amnil haippy,~ atml save gre~at. expense. The giea~te4 t re edy for tis, the gre-at, wi'4e and1 good wi I tell you, is flop flitters--rely onl it See anfothei r e hunn1 I. -lress. .A. C. L A wnENcE lost $100,000 in bonds &n ew York tihe other dalLy, b~y their slipping through a hole in his5 pocket. The1( hole in the pocket wouIld inidiente that Mr. Lawrence wvas a newsplapetr nmali ; but the $100,000 in bonds(1 is against such a theory.--Pcct4's ~Sun. Wit-:N yon are all playerd out bc careful what you1 eat, but tako Kidney-Wort. A BANOR jury, returning a Verdict of 6150.621, is said( to have been divided for t wo ho'urs onJ the halif cent. "~ THEFY can not all lie," was tho obsoryatitn of 0110 while reading the endless testimonals4 to " Dr. Lindsey's Blood Searcher." It is in fallible. ______________ INDIGES'TION, dyspopsia, ne' vons prostration 1imd all forms of generm11 deo lity relieved by takinig MENIIMAN's l'EP'rrNIZEl) ]JEx TONIC, I lhe Dilly preparation of beef containing its entire nutritious proporties. It contains blood-miak i, orce-generating and life-suistaiiijng~ prop orties: is mIvfhleI bii all Ouifeebled cond41itions, whether t ae resulit of' exhaustion, nervousprs trat ion, o 'erwork, or acute dlisease, particularly if resultin g from pulmonary Compl)1ainita, Can well, Hazard & Co., proprietors, Now York. "Remsta eu Rata.** Ask Dinuggista for it. It clears out rat., mice, roaches, bed-bugs,f dios, vermin, insects. M5c' SRFMCUED) FROil DEA&Tgg, wViliami J. Cughlin, of tiouserville, Mass., says; ''In .he (02 of lISM I weij taken witha 5KIsOxanr ora7in kerse, r--iiwtol- by a severe coughl. I lost mny app itite and fledh, an-I wa. conmtied to nay bed. Ina k77 I waa ad natled to the hos pita. The doctors said I had a hole in niy Ilung a- big a a half dollar. At one time a report Ivant arounid that I was dead. I gave up hiope, but a riend told me of DR. wILLIAM HALL'd BALSAM FOR T iIJE LUNOs. I got a bottle, when, to my sur pr ise, comme~i-nced to fel better, and to-day I feel better than or three yeari p'ait. I write this hoping every one at. heted] with Diseaed Lunge wi lake DR. WIILLIAM lAl.L'S BALsAM, :and be convinced that CONeIUMP i WN CAN iiiE ;U R I'.. I can paositively say it has done 'sdag.o t*l'.."al,'t* *ther mnedicizes [ hare lehen A PERRY DAVIS' m 101 A SAFE AND SURE U! REMEDY FOR gas" Cramps, Cholera, Blarrhou, Iyentsry. & Sprains AND Bruisas, Burns AND Eg EgScalds, ( Toothache Headache: FOR 6ALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS. AMERICAN AND FOREICN PAT EN TS. GEORGE E. LEMON, Att'y at Law, WASIImi ro ,. . -. Referenefe, given to act1 cl ienitiA In nearly every Cuon. ty in tile L7. - S CorrexpWm1 l.1ie luivit e'. 61-114l Rk .*ZCh or0 model for o111161) $I to tie pu..iittlii Ii 7. So Charge for services un less successful. E.tablishetI i . - " -. I 7P CNSUMjlON CAN dE CURED! MA LL' B ALfAM t I l I .)i it i t , l Ila :Il. -sillo ,!i - In hIe t tl1e 1 n 1an A Pht Wiern i.hr rt Mi h.. w tan :1 r~ 11- . 11 s. f) its I - ;I J i t Il.,II . 1 1 COT TONi IN ""* Eb1G t4 2 0"KING OF0T TOU for C. ton G>i use nn-1l general plantaition purp n, .:ct fe t :iin anDy other Eng'ine in the w~ior/ld. ', P rndsts and l'rice List apply by mail to T AIUI.T.\AN & TAYLOR COMPANY, Manrsr'u, l~''a weekd ein yIu ow own Tem C n Siou aU ree.do l [.verLkidn Cy , enl rged s l , rhA plaiin ts eutred. No charge utitl euired, iitde.I\ sired. Correspondii'ec sii ited withI stam iip. A ddrecis I)It. J. STLOATE, Oxt'ord, Miss. YOUNG MEN Ler T*grp A an 4o$fi offices. Address VALENTINE BROS., Janeayjv. Wi $ to $20 P daYa hme amlsoh ~ treeo If you are Interested In the inquiry-Which Is the best Liniment for Man and Beast?-this is the answer, at-. tested by two generations: the MEXICAN M USTANU LINI MENT. The reason Is sim-. pie. It penetrates every sore, wound, or' Iameness, to the very bone, and drives out all fnflammnatory and morbid mat ter. it " goes to the root " of the trouble, and never fails to cure in double quick tineo. tit ist et* lr Ith sh densome to m e. A vaatioo aont did noibty tov i incese prostration ad sinking chls t this time It bor that erndid in thetsamn tim nduoing yrnes s aun wor know ot what. I giv erito thoug j The Iron, 'ont doEu a viass rk, esed Pho-. Arosedatic. It sere s", r.ry,........ 3U1FACTiREI ST THE DR. HARTER MEDICIN uma Booki Effootive, Cornpact, St Uuaranteed to u 2 - Who runs C Steam power is 8 Hors, Po 64 " 84 AdgaMa ILL and'FACTORY SUPPLIES *ALL .KINDS. BE T IO HOSE d - PACKING, OILS, PUMS. ALL N9S, IRON PIPE, FITTINGS, BRASS PODS, STEAM GAUG.SS, ENGINE IVERNORS, &. Send for 1rrice. it. W. H. DiLLINGHAM & CO. 3 Main Street, LOUISVILLE, KY. 'mr ChiLlm and 2Pe mre AND ALL DISKASES afet by Malarlal Polsoinig of the Bso.O A WARRANT.ED CURE. V1004o 1O00. For sale by all Drustaj" TH0 Lt Us N E- N,- E R S TY' $END TO R 0 A -A. t 0 GUt/F' The Purest ai lest edcine ever ado. A C mbination of Hops, guchu, Man drak e and Dandelion,wlthall theubes an moste ura tive properties of all other Bktters. makes thegreatest Blood Purifier, Livcr Fleg u I a tor, and Life'and HCalth 1 Agent on - earth. No disemase c an possibly long oxiet where Hop Bittersare us od,so viuied and perfect are their operations. They givo new l to andv!girtotho agod and nfrm. To all whose o ploy ncuts cauao irreiulari ty ,.' the lowelsor urinary organs, or who re qtire an Appetizer Tonio and mild Stimulant, Ulop Bitters are inval iable, without intOX" lopkting. No nater whatyour f,, lings or symptoms aro what tho diseas' or all m-ntl is use Hop Bito ters Dhon't walit utilyoua re sick but iL you only feel bad or tuiseratale, use them at once. It ay 4avo your*life.Ithas; saved hundreds. $500 will be paid for a ca Se they will not cure or help. D)o not sufTer or let yeti r friends eufter,but iso and ure then to usC Hop B Ietmembor, flop Pitters Is no vile, drugged drunken notArutn. but the Pureit a n d liIest Medlirino ever moule: the "INVALIDS FRED and HOPP" and in p-rson or fituutly Should be without thr-nm. D.I.C.iq an aheilatte and irresistible etiro forl)rinkenness. it-e of opiun, taebacco and ianrcot l4. All sil.1 b1y .1uirvist't. Send for Circutlr. HopD Ditters Mfg. Co., . Ito w p: ..hr Yn y ilt i rnto. (),,.p y 'ea R 1O A.NOK EI COTTON PITESS Two hands press a Mo-i6 balein 90secondA. Followe rtised ready for another bil in IQ seconde. Convenient Powerful Durable. Require! very litte room. Cheape than a wdiden screw pres" Changed to a Ilsi Pr--s in I fe w minutes. Circilars free WMI. H. BUROF.88, Manu fatecturer, Rich Square, N. C. }EG *AY ellig Iubbe-r H aiad ittamps. Circualai ano's Atomatic Engines --I -.~ -~ 1&ot di u . it h ana it o t h-x (U;- -a11 a 'or iht. .at h. i t o aa ".i . o luii -r t inail ~ ~\ A ecrinia, entt a actia voawhala. - ith. wh.th a p.-- a can rid.' thre .fr~/~'ii~P 't s'Carn fur 24-page eata a THRPP M'F'O Ca)* UVNSE REVOLVERS. 14END) 3 Ct. STA fl'TO BALD EAG~LE GUN WORKS, For Illustrated Price-List. mCu.TrafreoDrgitInstantly relieved by German Asto, Dr. Rt. 8chifthnann, St. Paul, Minn. 5AMONTH--A DNTS WANT ED--l90 be aelling,.trhaa a the warbai. sainaipl. f.' (A liia .iny *J -ion'son, i)L'aajt Mid $25 Every Day Can be easily made with our Well Augers & Drilb are ,bman and one horsorequire.W Boring anof t-DrilingfacinWell Warranted the Bes onarhne any of our oustomer makerfrom $80 to $40 ada.r .00MIS & NdYMAN, TIFFIN, OHIO. IEDERICK'S HAY PRESSES aire sent anywhere on trial to operate * against al I other ~aj~ rfPresseos, the -- - keeping the No one has -~ ever dared owupany~ as Dederick's Press is knowvn to ion, and will bale with twice the rapiit ycofny icTe only way inferior mnachines can be sold to lelvo the inexperienced by ridiculously false temnts and thu sel w1ithou ih rse tser a DCeorick Press, and all know it too wel to DE iP Adress, for circular or Presses, P. K. urEmerchat & CO, Aggny, N. Y., or order through nere'd assd recom ecnsde by the' ,weeL - 3pm'ofsadosa, for apvda, Euesseraa , Pg~Fessaae Dia thas t y eatal-rc d , Nsevo CoVales-; -O- tefrosmE'evero,*e. oc ne ethat my labor was ezceedingly bnr. nueh rells , ut on the contrary, was followed by egan the use of yen IRON TorNI, from which I re energ returneda on htm aua oc the Tonic. S ince using it I have done twice the Ia d wFtb double the ease. With the tranquil nerve ever before enjoyed. If the Tonio has not done the .P. Wa-rSOw. Paste: Christian Church, Troy, 0. E CO.,s N1,212 NORTH MAIN STREEY, ST. LOUIS. VALTER ENGINE. Simple, Durable and Cheap. stantl Economnical and Ea~hily famage., ork udand giv* full power clnasend. V EIR Y -PLAN IcaW )tOni (Gin or Corn Mill should have one. 'nnrch b'etter and cheaper thtan haorse power. 'OUR? ,0W 'I(1'& er En .i. . *g4O - - - - 28 ' - -m - 855 -e - . 440 meterers for descriptivrs pamphlet. A ..WWRFF E * CO. Nesmns . *.an The World'a Standard. FAIRBANKS' Q - For Weighing Cotton at the Gin. SOUTHERKN COTTON BKAM Frame, Hooks and all other required Attachments.4 BUT ONLY THE GENUINE airbanhas Stan~dard OF' EVERY DESCRIPTION. IrB-SEND F-ORl CIRCULAR.g FAIRBANES & CO., 53 CAMP STREET, NEW ORLEANS, La. THE ONLY MEDICINE IN EITJIEil LIQUID O11 DitY FORM Th at A cta nt h ?Iantae tinto on 2THZ LIVE, T5HI BOWZZI, AND TE ZhDZYL. WHY ARE WE SICK? 1Recause we alloto these great orgauns to become clogged or torpid, and poisonous r humorsare therefore forc~ed into the blood thsat shoudbe expelled naturally. 53 8 - WILL.SURELY CURE KIDNEY DISEASES, LIVER COMPLAINTS, PILES, CONSTIPATION, UJIINAIIY DISEASES, FEMALl W EAIN ESSES, AND) NEltVOUS DISOlkIDEIIS, by causingfree aictiJon of these organs and restoring their power to throw of disease. WYiay suffe~r 1llions paIns and aces Why tormented wvith Pies, Contlpatloni Why frighateed over diksrdreal Klineysi Why endlure nervous4 or siek healachost b'seKID lNEY--WORiiatrejo'ice in health. It is put up in~ 3ry Vegetable For-m, in tin ca:t one packcago of whieh b aia~. ix auarts of medicino. Also iii Liquid Form, very (Coneen. trated, for' thaoso that cannot, reradily preoparo it. ?.11t nets with egnaal efficie''y in eitherr form. GET IT OF~ YOUR DRiUGGIST. l'RICE, *1.00 W E LLS, I1ICiIlLIDSON A Co.. I'rop's, (Will sendl~ the dry post-paIid.) I'lLINGT0oN, TT. AOEN T W ANTUS far tim est ad Fsesstt.. a lagPi ril Bek n Fri... raduoedl33 ent Naiona i ag 0o., ?hiladelphia, P BIBLE REVIS1O~f CONTRASTED EDITIONS. 'IIarnngth a id .uew 'ersion,., int patS.igJI gyg a11ss . 1'a. iTebat ant'i ehrg.e a it iuarratedt edi1tion of the iRevi r.m . T Ia .'int. .\l iion ofttt , p(.er i,,p l atugfto ii U" ""' iti"~ do r., hr 'h unse. tien~ iraoma pubbha bers of lnge rior ediations. i-ee t hat he cropv y..u buy conatains. 100 Ane0 enhoA~mnte ot ',-*! i.rd woord T !A ithe only targae type C4'Ste'ns(te- i is., na,-i A:l.ehts aI t cInng lauoney ad itra t-Is..8 Ald-rrus NA TIOxaL Pvtn:,ruxe~ Co., Atlanta, Gaf. Cyclopedia War. The great Lfaua of Unstvrsau Kssowled. now comrpleted, large 1y7e iti aar n4000 topic ev'ryde artmepntof-hungmakowth-d~ 4bu0dper cent. largern tlan Chamber.'s.ne rin ato , 10 .per centt. b targe'r then A rleton'se, 20) pet d-et (arger' than Johnsn'. at a mnere frao on of their coat. F-ifteen larga Octavo Vol urnsi1, netarly 13,000 p es, completa in cloth binding *i5; ina halfI Russ.Ia, 92; m~ full library sheep, marbl~a edge., 8211. Spooai tea a to cluibi Si10.000 R EWA RD Ein dur"i''ng" 91et. Send quick for, .pe'in nl ae and (ill utienajare .Jess S. Arouaw, Mf n uaa. 7434 Broast way. Ne w Vork. taof Ela d. En Litor of e E cloti ; only gs~co bound, for only 60 e-as. M u. MANHIATTAN B _O00 ,10W.14t 8 0 Y . . nor 4sga Publishers' Union, Atlanta, Ga....Thirtyfour,-81.4 IOHiNI. GOUGIlSilran' ne b.:. I rt 1 I, stat e SUNLIGH T AN AD3OW ,ud rtrae U a u mtly . a-n. yueso e Jo/ku B. ('oughq1 can portray them. F'or Pathm.', irinr. 'd ' *e ' i nto :re'i, it is wihu a cr It lat thei "ha no P r . .uaria'dt . IpP n rd out' a nd w nmn. No It tisatian". A 'I, r , E,A -ita pcisai Termasgivena.aj-.'./ mr rU rs di t . T. . EU& . iaa, teorg31s 0