The weekly Union times. [volume] (Union C.H., South Carolina) 1871-1894, August 23, 1889, Image 4
JPIOB OP INTEREST RELATIVE
r TO FARM AND GARDEN.
CABBAGES THAT DO NOT HKAD.
The defective cabbages in the fall are
those that have been checked in growth
during summer. To head properly a
cabbage should grow without ceasing
after it has recovered from the shock of
transplanting. The shock is perhaps
useful, as it supplies the plant with a new
set of roots. If a dry time comes on,
water liberally with water in which com
umrHaK-fevtftnmrTHTtr been dissolved.
No crop grown will prove better for this
labor than cabbage. It may make the
difference between a cabbage head and a
mess of unsalable leaves.?Ihtton Cultivator.
DniTTLENKo8 OK TI1E HOOK.
A hard hoof is desirable rather than
otherwise, as the foot will not wear so
much when the horse goes unshod in the
summer; but it tends to become brittle
and break away under the strain of the
shoe uails. If the hoof is brittle in this
way it is an advantage rather thau otherwise,
as the injury by breaking cun easily
be prevented by keeping the hoofs
dressed with a mixture of vnseline nnd
glycerine. If the hoof, however, crumbles
at the sole nnd around the walls into soft
powder, this indicates disease of the horn
induced by an inflamed condition of the
foot, and often follows an attack of
founder (laminitis or fever of the feet).
This should be treated by the use of a
cooling Inxativo, as a pound of epsoin
salts and bran mashes for food for a time;
the feet should be poulticed with linseed
meal until all heat nlwutthcm is removed,
and then dressed daily with the vnseline
and glycerine mixture. This condition
of the feet is frequently produced by the
horse standing in soft manure, which rots
the horu and causes the brittleucss complained
of.?Xcu> York Timet.
CHICKS ON THE FAR ST. ,
Poultry reared with free range of orchard
aud meadow arc the largest and also
finest in plumage and symmetry. They
have a prouder carriage nnd a look of
thrift and hpalth not. nftnn noon ~ v.; -1?
vw?. PVVU 111 V111VA9
reared within the limits of town lots. If
the breeder must, of necessity, limit the
range, he must provide artificially the
advantages which the country supplies.
Insects he must replace with chopped
meat, and lacking grass range, he must
cut grass and clover daily. Shade must
be provided during the summer, otherwise
failure is sure. Poultry raising and
fruit culture go hand in hand, and may be
combined on the same ground. An orchard
is much benefited by allowing
fowls free range, as the crop of harmful
insects is kept down. In the heat of
summer the young chicks will grow and
thrive in the shady orchards, and pick up
much of their living in it. If the breeder
lacks these advantages, and is compelled
to raise his fowls in confinement, he may,
by extra can;, raise fair birds; but even
with tho best attention they will never
equal in beauty of plumage and vigor of
constitution and size tho couutry-reared
chicks that have developed their muscles
in many a foraging expedition.?Ncio Y^rk
Witneu.
IMPROVE THE PASTURES.
One of the crreatest neglects in Amnri.
can agriculture, is that of not properly
cultivating pasture lauds. In England
farmers pay almost ns much attention to
these ns they do to their meadows; and
there i9 very little dillerence between
them in the annual yield of grigs. There
are lands so stony or rough of surface
that they cannot be prepared for improved
pasturage except at too great expense.
These must be left to their natural
state and to yield such grass ns they
can without cultivation. But when the
aoil is moderately good, and not too
hilly Or rocky, it should be put in.jine
condition, and the grass thus made to
come forth early in the spring, endure
through the summer heat and last till late
autumn?in fnot. t.Ho cum., no 1
...V ?..>uv IU tuc J1ICUIC
ows?so that large instead of scaut profits
may be annually obtained. Greater attention
should be paid when stocking the
land by using a variety of seeds, and sowing
twice or thrice the quantity generally
nllowcd. There is gain instead of loss
made by this, as a good, thick stand is
secured the first season, instead of being
obliged to wait the second or third year
for the grass to spread fully, and fully
cover the surface. By sowing a variety
of seed, the sort best suited to the soil
will gradually take precedence and become
permanent. It cannot always be
told, even by the most experienced farmers,
which sort will triumph; it must be
left for time to determine.?iVc'w York
Tribune.
TTIE POTATO HOT.
Every year the farmers dread the no
tttto rot, which has clone great damage in
seasons past. The rot first appeared in
Ireland in 1847 and was imported into
this country but recently. It is a fungus
which grows within the plant, filling the
cells with white threads, which bear small
balls or capsules containing black spores.
It. is these black spores which discolor the
potatoes and from which the new plants
spring. If diseased potatoes are left in
the ground they infect the land and propagate
a pest for the next season's crop of
potatoes. When the potatoes die and rot
in the ground the small spores turn into
dust and rise in the nir to be carried away
to some oilier field. The disease spreads
rapidly in this way. The best way to
destroy the genu is to gather up all of
the potatoes, small and large, and boil
them for the fowl and swine. This will
till fKo Otvoroe * 1.1-- -
..... ?uu jirevcuu iuu spread ot
the disease. Never feed them to the animals
before l>oiling them.
The damaged jmtators should be kept
from the sound ones after they are dug.
It is well, then, to dust the sound ones
with fresh, air-slaked lime, which will
destroy any adhering spores. Keep the
potatoes dry, too, as this will tend to
keep the spores dormaut. In selecting
seed potatoes never take one that shows
any black places; then roll the cuttings
in air-slaked lime. The potato rot is
strictly contagious and it should be killed
wherever it manifests itself. If every
1 '9~ *
iniiuci wwulll lie IU> UireiUI III (ICAIlUg
with his crop of potatoes the rot wouhl
soon be exterminated and never heard
from again in this country.? Washington
Star.
niRRCTIONS FOR C1TKE8E MANUFACTURE.
The materials employed in making
cheese are milk and rennet. The inilk
may be of any kind from the very poorest
to that which is rich in cream. The
former will make very mean cheese, the
latter will make the richest sort. Put
two-thirds of the milk into a large tub,
ami raise the temperature of the last
third to that of Dew milk. The whole
quantity is then whisked together, the
rennet added, and the tub covered over;
in this state it is allowed to stand until it
is completely turned, when the curd is
struck down several times with the skimming
dish, after which it Is allowed
to subside. The vat covered with cheese
cloth is next placed over the tub and
filled with curd by means of a skimmer;
the curd is pressed down with the hands
and more added as it sinks, until the
curd rises above the edge of tho vat to
bout two inches. Now ndd the proper
quantity of salt, after which place a
board over it and under it and apply
pressure for "two or three hours. The
cheese is next turned out and surrounded
by a fresh chccse-cloth, and pressure
again applied for eight or ten hours,when
it is commonly removed from tho press,
salted over again, and pressed again
for twelve to twenty hours. Tho quality
of the cheese depends on this part of
the process to a great extent, ns if any of
the whey is left in it, it will not keep.
Further, the cheese must be washed in
warm water, wiped dry, and placed in n
cool place to ripen. This is a bare outline
of tho process of making cheese.
Experience will quickly teach more than
wo could tell in a column. It is impor
tant to havo a good rennet, which should
never be taken from a calf that has not
sucked, or that is not at least two days _j
old.?Courier-Journal.
FARM AND GARDEN NOTES.
It is a mistake to stop feeding young hk
turkeys when grown. S
A noted English agriculturist advises Y<
farmers to try ensilaging instead of hay- ,,a
making in securing the hay crop.
The best and strongest chicks are
hatched ?some will be raised two months
hence, but they are not considered as good sin
as the early birds. chl
If too late to set out cabbage or celery
where the early vegetables were grown, ha
clear off the land and sow rye, it will be
line to turn under this fall.
llipo timothy hay is worth very little *
more than straw for milk and butter, c
while timothy cut when the grass is in J
| early blossom is much more productive. t
John Gould snys iu the Western llural, R
that he sold $114 worth of inilk from one '
acre of ensilage, and $22 worth of bran ^
and clover. The milk brought $1.50 per jOI
cwt. no'
There is no more dismal sight than a
sparsely painted farm liouso without the Ai
sheltering shade of a small tree and with yo
bare earth where luxuriant grass should
abound. rw
Have the fair in mind while at work tin
about the garden, any fine specimens of jjjjj
vegetables, crowd?exhibit at the fair We
and then save the seed for next year's n?
planting. jjjj
According to Professor E. Morrow it is th<
better, in draining wide, nearly level
tracts, to have two, three or more lines
parallel by each other than to have one
main drain with short ditches at right t
angles. P1*1
bii
Where nuimnls?horses and sheep, to im
wit?have their teeth sound and com- Dr
. .!??? -I-:?-i 'i ? * ?
|nvre, ib la uiuiiiiuu uiitl' is no advantage Jj
to be gained by crushing their grain ra- t|K
tions. It is otherwise in the ease of old wii
horses, cattle aud pigs.
If you have a few choice cut plants ,
that are endangered by cut worms you str
can save them by winding a strip of jj|
folded paper round the stem. Cabbage, u,,
sweet potato and tomato plants can be inj
fully protected in iike manner. ?f.
Iu old garden land which has been: nv!
for years heavily manured and cropped, clii
the most troublesome weeds arc apt to he! ^
purslane, barn-yard grass and chick weed,! '0(
these are all annuals and if they are fos
kept from going to seed they may be Infl
soon got rid of.
The habits of the crow form an inter- for
esting subject for the study of the or- ^e
nithologist. The crow has a larger
brain than most birds, and all his encr- j
gies are directed toward procuring food. f)r
Crows will destroy the nests of quail in iin:
the absence of the old birds. i'l5
lui
The cost of harvesting timothy hay is *as
li?QS npr fnn wlintt flin ororv io lionn*. ? Ifn
|'V. VW.. ? ??! VMV VI V/p AO livavj1 I'liilli
when it is light. J. N. Mutiny, in the ^
Rural New Yorker, gives the following tra
estimates when loaded by n loader and In
pitched off by hand: When the crop is F?'
light, $1.08 per ton, nt 1000 to 1500 |l0?
pounds per acre; a crop three times as No
large, sixty-five cents per ton. Ur
E. R. Root tells in Ike, Qleaninqt that j
the imported Italian bees arc not only era
the gentlest bees he handles, but just as
good and a little bettor honey gatherers,
He says there is something in the cli- ho
matic conditions of Italy that produces a, if
hardy, gentle and industrious race of l}rt
bees. Mr. Hoot's impressions of the
Carniolaus thus far appear not very favor- an
able.
A correspondent of Garden and Forest nn
thinks it a question whether it pays to soi
stake tomatoes. In the home garden it
is well to stop the growth of the viue by j
pinching to encourage early fruit; but for $5;
late fruit he lets them run at will. Thin- E
ning out the laterals to give free circula- ***.
tion of the air is good practice and helps j
to prevent rot, but the fruit often scalds ^
if exposed to full sunshine. tai
?????? A
del
Highspeed on Railroads. for
There are many things connected with 'J
high speeds on railways which tax the ^
ingenuity of locomotive engineers to the j
utmost. The lines have to be made fng
strong enough to withstand the heavy
blows of the locomotive, for the other C
portions of the running plant arc light
in comparison. A railway tiain nt sixty wa
miles an hour may be compared to a huge tor
projectile and subject to the same laws. A
The momentum ia thn nrndurt nf tlm tho
? - r "
weight of the train, niultiplied by tho jn (
square of the velocity of feet per second; nui
and if we allow a train of 120 tons, trav- /
cling at the rate of sixty miles an hour, hor
then the work required to bring it to a ^
standstill would be 14,400 foot tons exertcd
through one minute, or nearly a der
thousand horse power, which gives somo 1
idea of its destructive force if,unhappily, ^
it should come into action; and yet this
terrific power is so entirely under com- toi
iniiiid that the strength of a child turning mo
the small handle of the vacuum brake cau <m'
bring the train to a stand in a few seeonds.?Chamber*'$
Journal. j *
I Ml I toll
A Big Tront Farm. g?
Pennsylvania has a big trout farm near of '
Kmnns station, on the East Pennsylvania I
Railroad. There are eight ponds at the
farm, 'which numbor by actual count
24,700 Ixrook trout and 2500 California plo
trout frotn one to four years of age." veI
ke)
TEMPERANCE. |
Iifl
Tn? littles. p,^t
A lit Uo flame a Bl
Will scent a rooin? n?m,
A little cad die
Light the gloom? K . ?
OuoTiUlo gleam ho"
Of sunshine, stream Tb?
Through bars, and gild press
The prison-tomb! tTm
A littlo hand ??"n
Will comfort bring? .
A littlo tonguo ?
Annoy a king? Wn
A little wiuo hid HI
Kill thoughts divino? Em
A 1? honor
Allay a stuigt . Crc
A littlo staff huoJl
Will caao tho way? Tur
A littlo joy Crate
Change night to day? Mai
A little song in Uw
a Ihoughto of wrong? Siofc
A littlo forethought
Snvo tho hay I the C
A Utile pledge 0rw*
Will blocs a life? Eig
A littlo reason of a
Banish strife? liven
A little pen stroko Tb?
Tirana a name? Nouifc
A litile lore uu Mi
Savo name and faiuol
A little smile
Is like a myA
little kind word Tbt
Makes it May? from
A little choor many
W ill dry a tear? Mr
A Uttle prayor l'r*. in
Give peace alwayt wulel
Vrs.il.A.Kidacr, in Temperance Banner. j
cut*-*
nonnons or tiib uquon placjub. 'timfl
I believe that there is scarcely one family count
England which lias not sulTerod from this ?? .
leous plague; scarce a houso in England
lore there is not ono dead. And, ohl
s it nothing to you, all yo tliat pass by!" vr," ?
>u have heard what drink ooets to this K
tion in monoy; what does it cost in dis- ^
mi and accident! Ask the dreary pages a ren
statistics, and you will read that in so- IreUi
Hod accident, but accident perfectly pro- euabl
ntable, it cost us broken limbs, and shiji- Th
ocked vessels and burned houses, and legal
lttorod railway trains, and tho deaths of oomn
ihlron overlaid by drunkon mothers or thein,
itcn savagely by drunkon fatliors^ and to fm.d
. jvu nuut 111 COhlfl 111 disease, 1 Should .
vo to toko you, not In fancy, but in hard .
:t, to what tho poet saw as the result of in*
nporanco in moats and drinks:
A laxar-bouse It seemed, wherein wero laid i|
Unnlwrs of all disc ones?all in al oil lee, ranl
if ghastly spasm ami racking torture: qualms Till
if heartsick agony; all feverous kinds? taknii
mixtion, anil asthmas, and lieart-racklng rheum.
*lro was the tossing, deep tho groans; despair toil p
ended the sick busiest from couch Co oouch. The I
ml over them, triumphant, Death bis dart
hook?but delaycil to strike."
rhis is what those who claim to speak with oreat
thority tell us it coats in sheer disease; and * ..
deli or yon is so ignorant of English his- _
y, of English literature, of English life, as 2a
t to know further of noblest reputations * Hn
ined, of glorious intellects reined, of great mou
lis embittered, of invaluable lives cut short? wntcl
id what docs it. cost in crtmo? I will toll terRT
u, not as a surmise of ray own, but on tho
xmled testimony, on tho omphatlcevidenco eight
almost every Judge and magistrate and Th<
erder on tho English bench, llemombor tho p
it thoso arrested for drunkenness do not oflloii
-nish one tithe of tho drunknr>ls, and thon l'r?wl<
iddor to hear that, in n singleyoar, 208,069 Dubli
to arrested for crimes in which drunken- Johns
53 was entered as a part of the charge; and that
it last year Mill wumou?only think of gays I
it, and of all tho hideous degradation, nil ter-g'
j unspoAkablo horror which it Imp' - office
re arrested for drunkenness in MiddiooOX unwe
?no.?Canon Faivar.
A MOST DANOBIIOUS IIXUSIOiT. I
3no of tho most dangorous illusions of the
Liscnt era, industriously fostered by the
awei's and their allies, is that leer is a Pitts
cm less, wholesome lieverngo. Professor
ajior, iu the Medical News, referring to
lit, says: "As tho most pronounced poou- Th(
rity of the victims of tho gouty diathesis is tura|
? prompt reaction which they prcsont to
110 aud boor, it follows that the nvcliitinn bnr=.
those leverages us articles of diet must l?o two i
insisted upon." He adds: "Thin Is often m0ro
lifllcult in junction to onforce. There is so . '
ong a popular and professional prejudice r
favor of fermented liquors as articles of ncl? i
it that ono can hardly prohibit the nso of for tt
>m under any circumstances without bo- Tludr
I regarded as a crank. In spire, however,
the generally rGoeiverl opiuiou tliat ardent | turnl
rits aro ros|tonsihlo for nil tho physical cornp
ils of intemperance, I hnvo long lieon in- tone*
nod to believe that the fermented prepara- .
us of alcohol aro equally if not more pro- l"e
rtive of fuuetioual dernngements and even debri
structural lesions." Wo commend Prosor
Draper's testimony concerning for- jro? ,
mted liquors, the result of oxteudod pro- A? j
sional experience ami observation, to tho track
mghtfnl consideration of the apologist* struo
or advocates of l>cor-drinking.? Nutional thou;
mperance Advocate. I rnc?
hurle
w11isky causkd iiis fall. Till
Ienry D. Gregg, son of tho famous Rot. down
. Gregg, of Duoliu, Ireland, whoso discus- of th
lis with bishop Maguiro about tho Catho- hou?
Church during tlio past ton years gave ?tam|
II worlil-wido fame, was arrested at Kan- of wl
i City, Mo., for stoalinga horso anil baggy. the I
i claims to bo innocent. IIo was privato squat
rotary to General Philip II. Hhorklan of- men I
ho came to this country and was then teen <
nsferrod to tho Adjutont-Oenoral's offloe Th.
Washington nsn clerk of the first-class, and
ing there with Secretary of War Lincoln, tuken
rnmninnd in t.lio i?1iu?.i tht-rv, v.mi-u ?i,a" 1
was removed liy Socrotary Kndioott. John
xt he held nn important placo on tho Th<
iltod States rovenue steamer Chester A. Job
t luir. injur
10 camo Wost and was a roportor on soy- mi lr
11 |>ai>er8 in Omaha. Having workod him- sorioi
f out iu tlint lino ho drifted to Kansas bruin
,y. whore ho foil in with a notorious homo- injur!
icf, who nskod him to tako ono Quintan's L nil
rse and buggy through to Hiawatha, and So*
ho got a good chance to sell it. Qregc till O
ovo tho horso to Atchison, and triodto sell Frunl
or $>10, but fulled. fie thon resumed his June*
irnoy toward Hiawatha, but was caught and b
d jailed. Whisky is responsible for nts hurt,
wnfall. Gregg made soveral efforts while
Kansas City to soeuro work as an account- J
t in tho railroad ofllco, but failed. He had
no first-class rccommondatlons.
- I'isU
TEMPERANCE NEWS AND NOTES.
n Para, Brazil, a lioenso to sell liquor costs
a 1 icon so to kooj) a school costs f 10. The
lir John Gorst states that Micro are nine- as th
n broworios in India, browing 4,800,382 Cotri
,ons- the'bt
n 1888 thoro were 158,587 retail liquor ,
Jem, of all kinds, paying tho special liquor ?,,,no
: in the United States. at the
i prominent firm of gloss makers in Phila- comp*
phta, not long ago, refused a largo order force<
bottles from n liquor house. ^
There twelve men made lieor in the Wal- .
T browery, Lawrence, Kan., one hundred " H11*
sons aro now busy makiug shoos. Messe
no chwuipions of tho saicon are now turn- ?
to Kansas to try and socsro a rosubmie- { j,mi
i of the constitutional amondinont. JW*
Cardinal Manning, at eighty-two, at a rev- jyM
it meeting in London of tho depositors of . ..
i Southeastern and Motr?i>olitan Hail- |u.(ut?
ys Savings Bank, mode an impress!vo plea ? .k
temperance 011 tho part of railway inon. other
i National Temporanco Congress, under four i
auspices of tho Notional Tomporanco volve
igue, will Iw held in Birmingham, Kng. twrnt
Octolior noxt, commonoing with a largo o,M
uber of sermons on Sunday, October W. d0w t
disolute prohibition still prevails in Okla- bera s
na. Tho bonoflconce of tho law is unqnos- the p
nod. A man at Out brio voiced the general fully,
tlmant when ho said: "Prohibition is our to bid
nation; without it thoro would ba a rour- v
every day." I
'ho Boston Record quietly remarks that
ullivun, lying beastly drunk iu the book . .
m of a Chicago whisky saloon on Sunday, " "
I ovorybody who bought a drink taken In tn
hjo tho exhUiition, is a suggostivo com- *
ntnry on liiu claim that prize lighting is n
tuly art,'"
v leading worker makes the following ^ *
ciblo coni|>arison: "Can you imagiue a 12-yet
mtifnl church with an elegant wino and McNo
>occo room attached? And yet I know a
.. ...i... ?.i.I >.i. I.?a. tt.~ * # it? went
41 n in; nant inn uuuj rran i.iiu U'liiuiu VI UlU ? """
ly Uhost, who makes a toltacoo store-room demo]
Ilia cheek." - ml.
t appears that tho liquor bills of the negro
tcogo Insane Asylum amount to botwoen head i
100 and $40JX) a year, much of tho liquor Hta M
ng conanmpd by tho altcndanta and an- hod ti
yes of *>o institution. That must be a four |
y good asylum for insano patbnts to be The
>t away from. l? rem
M4iu*32PARKS,
a b*t *^)|iwbec>. tto African ox- u
Thsi*HKh&T*11 'oqim1*(1 between
r ??maff^Ke of Kingston, Canada, ?.
(J?r oolMjk lg?w prov Iaoa.
i Bultlili oC wkrv ia determined tosuptbo
Ituaira^Ntt la Crete.
"^rtaw&afF<s Des?tiatirK *
Jn Ian Pai&oafote, Um British minister ,
i United Bi&lea; Is In London. .
a. O'Bri fnhaa applied for a new trial of N
Ml WltBlW|pW?l Salisbury, ^ii
neror William bajTBwn appointed an l?
ary admiral in ibis British navy. eu
inn MontlnMO hare burned over one *
reil buus.'s in a vUljge near Caula. J?
hay will send a new commission to
to endeavor to sottle the troubles there. j,a
a j persons were killed by an ear&bquako Lc
i western portion of tlio Island of Kiou ha
of
ijioe is disposed to support a solution of ]
letun troubles ou a oasis favorable to ??l
v. .
lit persons were killed by the ox plosion j*
gun on a Kronch traiuiug frigate at
Wt
i British b irk Mallisgate, from New m
i Wei .*s ior oau Francisco, was wrecked th
ddielou reef. i,a
> riiilaiiolpbia orioket team defeated the lor
nntii of Houtbainptou (England) in a w?
i by a score of IftU lo Ulh. 6i
? Egyptian army drove the dervishes
the village of Toski, after the loss of
IIVvB UI ?IIO IBIWT lOl Cl'tt.
. Button paid 6*).(?30 francs to M. IT
it tor Millet's pointing, "Tbo Angelus," H?
i was lou^bt ut the becrutary sale. ho
dou angist paper published in Paris ao- be
the F.eiicp.jgovermuent of falsifying of
ff.i u." W*hij^pgg0hrB*trb-^h? eleotious for ct
>as been decided la a oonfe . Mice between 9
ing SiUsu-and tbe IjAr V of Bcrviu au
ex-Queen Nathalie ah yStst bor son,
Alexander, outside of fc*.rTia. ha
d Randolph Churchill recommends at
:?cd> for the prevailing discontent in
nd an imiieriei loan of ?1U0,0JU,00U, to ro
e tenants to buy ibsir holdings.
;l'arnc)l.tea h ive used only ?9Q^)00 for sir
expense in Connection witn the special let
ihsioii investigating charges against mi
. Th - sui plua of tbe Purnelt indemnity W
exceeds JbRi.OOd. In
lbingist* I toil that General lioutanger I*1
d have become a candidate for <x>unoils ,
al only in such cantons of Krauoe where ?*
ilitioai streugib was sulHoiont to war- w<
hope of succoda. "j(
> miners of Durham, England, bavo pr
i n vote on the question of accepting the
er cent, advance c tfei od by the owners,
esult was iu favor of acceptiug tbe ad- jj,
j by a majority of one. 'i his decision ^
s a strike wbicU would have proved lU to
eat ou record. py
Brunei, tbo liquidator of tha Panama Ei
1 lllivtuio BUOIOUVMUOII KUUV I v*?
auoUdwyudioate baa taken the Whole wl
tit of the new lottery bonds on tonus | on
i he dors not reveal, ami that if tt.e en- gi
iae perisoc* the law of bankruptcy will ra
le him to distribute uiuong ibo creeitors
per oont, th
> lord mayor of Dublin refuses tosond to th
ustmistor-goiior.il of Oreat Kritain the Sc
il onvolopo containing the letter of nc
dent liirrlson th inking the citisous of h
In for t&eir sympathy ani aid to tho re
down sufferer* The lord mayor insists L<
the envelope wjs tampered with, mid th
lie is wiiliug to show it to tho posttnns- nc
moral, but will not give it to ibo post- bi
depa< tinei.t because it bns proved us. If hi
irlbv of the trust.
- be
)EADLY NATURAL GAS. ?
St
iburg SuflVra Another Terrific ^
Kxplosion. 0f
>re was a terriflj explosion of a nagas
main ?b tho South Side, in Pitts- th
Pa., which resulted la tho kdliug of tli
men insttlhtly, fatally injuring two
, and seriously injuring some fifteen Q,
s. 1 tooth & Flynn weA testing a thirty- y f
intural gas m tin, wbioh they ha l laid
te Monoagnbela Natural U:ts Company.
workmen were testing the main before pit
ng on the natural g is, by inuain of ^
reused air. Tbey ran tho pre em re up
ronty-flve pounds per srpi'tre inch .when J?
j L
ivid cap on the pip* bluw out, scattering "<
s in overf direction.
rural hundred workmen employed in the M
mill* near by were just returning home, js
a' number of them Htopped along the ^
to watch tlie experiment. They were t|
k by the debris an<l Hying missiles as fi]
;h n bomb had explode I. The pi|? was ei
>d with h.utvy timbers, and tbesj were w
d into the crowd with terrilllo force. c]
i work moil and spectators were thrown ^
i by the forco of the explosion, and one n
ie k ille-1 was hurled agalust a brick
i nnd hnd his neck broken. A general fc
pede followed the explosion, and a scene i\
Idost excitement ensued. The cries of q
injured could be heard for several t*
vs An investigation showed that two w
ha l been killed outfight, nnd about fit- nl
ithers injured, two of tli.un fatally, w
i dead were oonvoyed to their homes,
the injured who were unable to walk ^
i to a hospital. The killed are: H
in Miller, single, aged twenty-throe; ^
O'Connor, aged twenty-five. w
me seriously injured were: a
in Qreinor, marriod, terribly cut and t<
ed internally; will die. John Iirntiey, |c
ight, internally Injured ami head cut; m
is. William Oroun, badly cut and a
is!, thought to havo n wift*! internal c]
ies; sor.ous. James Hendrick, of tit. a
i, Mo., both legs broken. *
craiioo Munsiob, Thomas Welsh, Mar- ?
urvey. John 8ohwaiter, Patrick Kyuu, f]
< Doyle,- James Duffy and William i.
i wfr? struck by dying debris, and cut m
ruisod, but none of the in were seriously p
rHIEVES STOP A TRAIN. jj
>la Pointed at tho a^iuocr and ^
iggage-ckr it Tbompeoo Bpriugs. They B
ed over tha engine, pointed revolvers
i boada of the engineer and flreman and T
died them to stop tho train. They
I the flreman to attemptto chop through ?y
oor of tho express oar, and made the
eer bring a bag to bold the plunder,
nger Willis was roady with a magazine
;us snd two s-df-cocU'og revolvers. Tho
in was unable to chop through tba
>iron door, so the robbers fired a dozon bi
through the cars. M
isenger Willis lay on the floor, and was .
urt. The robbers dared not show their
at the broken windows lest t hey should
10k They gave it up, and joiiud two
robbers back In the other car. The
vent through the train witli their rers
ilratrn, and gathered in #MJ and
,y watches. &
> passenger put his head out of tho winosm)
what was going on, and the rol>attt
a bullet through ids hnt Mod of &JJ
assengers hid their yaluab ns success- Ji'
those losing them being too frightoned ^
la ikniit
OUNG FIENDS AT WORK, jjj
kwfal 8t|?rjr of Murder And Outiro
Fro# aii Alabama Town.
hooking story (somas from Covington Y
y, A la./by way of Ourland. ?*
ridow sad two grown daughters and a e
ir-old son )irn near a little plaoe culled f?
ill. The other night three young men H<
to the boose, outraged the women and
llshed everything about the promises. q
y then went to the house of an old HI
near ty, found him sick, shared his
ind beat him so that he died next dar.
>n saw thont and asked them why they aJ
rested his father so. Their answer was
>istol-sbotr< which killed him. el
dispatcher give noAiames. The placs
tote from telegraph. *
m I
SABBATH SCHOOL
ITRRNATIONAIj LK8SON FOR
AUGUST HO.
MBOn Text: "Tho Anointing of
I)?vl?lt" I Sam. xvll., 1-13 ?
Golden Text: 1 Sam. xvl.,
7?Commentary.
I. "And the Lord said unto Samuel: How
ig wilt thou mourn for Saul, seeing I hav?
iected him from reigning over Israel." Bo
Ilcult is it for us to side with God, regard's
of our own thought*or feelingsorpreferees,
that eveu the great and good Samuel
hero seen clinging in his heart (for he went
t near hiin, Cnap. xv., 8ft) to Saul after tho
>rd hod rejected nim. We must remember
at the Lord did not reject Saul until Saul
d persistently rejected and disobeyed the
>rd (Chape, xiii., 18.14; xv., 2K), so that Saul
d no one to blame but himself for the loss
his position.
8. "How can I go? If Saul hear it ho will
11 mo." This does not aonnrt Hire the litter.
co of a faithful, fearless follower of tlio
? a Got! of iio?i^. It might bo auid to SuniI:
"Who art thou that thou shouldst bo
raid of a man that shall die, * * * and
rgettest tho Lord thy Maker?" (Iso., 11., 12,
,) Had Samuel boon in full sympathy with
e Lord, in tho caso of Saul he might not
,ve talked thus; I ufc whenever we are in the
ist degreo out of tho fellowship with God
? are apt to say and do tuany foolish and
iful things. The fear of tho Lord and conflnoein
tho perfect love of God. is on elTect1
cure for all other fear. "And tho Lord
id take an heifer with thee and sav, I am
rue to sacrifice to the Lord." Sinful man
n do nothing in the way of serving God
art from socriflco and atonement; our
liest actions, our very best service, cannot
acceptable to God apart from tho merits
our Lord Jesus Christ, but the weakest
y or the feeblest service lis made acceptable
rough Him.
Sk "I will show thoo what thou shalt do;
td thou shalt anoint unto Me hiin whom 1
me unto thee." Tho servant of the Lord
a only to move forward calmly and in per
ct confidence in his captain and he is ally*
promised sure guidance.
4^ 'VAnd^ Samuel did that which tho Lord
nko." This is now as it should bo, tho
>rd of the Ijord prevails, and the servant is
nply obedient aud comes to Bethlehem
iving God to carry out His own plans and
snage His own affairs in His own wise way.
hen wo aro thus passive and also obedient
His hands, all will bo well and His pureo
unhiudcred. "The ciders of tho town
ambled." Hero is another indication of lack
fellowship with God, for if their hearts
re right and their conduct right there
mid have been rejoicing instead of tromIng
at a visit from tho Lord's servant: but
ol?ably they, too, were dinging to tho disodient
king.
5. "I am come to sacrifice unto tho Lord."
a uses the very words which ho wa? told to
o (v. 2), and that is always tho right thing
do. Jesus Himself said only what the
ither told Him (John xii., 4!l); Jeremiah and
sekiel were to speak only tho lord's words
er. i., 7-0; Ksek. iil., 4,10, 11, 17); and
hen wo as messengers of the Lord confine
irsolves to tho Lom's message, rather than
vo our thoughts about it, surely wo shall be
ost pleasing to Hirfk.
6, 7. "The Lord lookcth on tho heart." As
e first of Jesse's sous stood before Samuel,
ere was something about him which caused
unucl to think that he was tho Lord's an>
in tod- but how solemn the word of tho
>rd: "I have refused him." Lotus again
peat tnat in tno matter or salvation the
>rd refuses nono who come to Hiin; but
is is a matter of special service, and it is
it stature nor a fair oouut-onance He seeks,
it ft heart right with Himself, "a man after
b own heart (chap., xiii, 14).
8-10. "Jesse made seven of his sons to pass
if ore Samuel; and Samuel said unto Jesse,
10 Lord hath not chosen theso." Hero, then,
an apparent failure; the Lord hail said to
unuol that Ho had provided a king from
nong Jesse's sons, and yet here are all the
ns whom Jesse had thi eght it necessary to
'ing; and for this special service, this place
honor, all aro set aside, the right man has
>t appeared. God's thoughts and ways aro
i much higher than ours as heavon is higher
an earth; and how few seem to know His
oughts or understand His countenance.
m. lv., 8, 9; Mic. lv., lift; but let men bo
ind as they may, there is no failure with
Dd. He has choeen His servant-, and will
>t sot the man of His choice on the throne
Israel and of tho whole world. Wait upon
im and be patient.
11. "Send and fotch hiui, for we will not
t down till he comes hither." So everyliag
has to stand still till the slighted son
brought. In reply to Samuel's question as
i whether these seven were nil hL sons
**n replied Mint the youngest was at home i
*>ping the sheep, and it was for him tliat
icy were now sending and waiting.
19. "And he sent, and brought him in, * *
id the Lord said: Arise, anoint him- for this
he." As we are thus for the first tinio j?erinally
introduced to David, the son of Jesse,
le history of whoso kindom, past and future,
lis so much of Scripture, anil with whom we
cpect to bo somewhat intimately associated
hen Jesus, the son of David, who is also the
lurch's Bridegroom, shall sit on David's
irone, wo can only stand and gnze upon this
iddy, good-looking young man and wonder
i the grace of God in choosing a mortal man
>r such a glorious immortal future; and
ten turning to our own souls we would say:
, my soul, see that thou dost never cease
> adore, and cry aloud the praises of Him,
hose grace has called yon, passing by so
lany others, to be a king-priest unto God,
ashing you in His own precious blood.
18. "Then Samuel took the horn of oil and
nointed him in the midst of his brethren."
ie was afterward, ?t Hebron, anointed
ing over the house of Judah, and somohat
later, at the same place, anointed king
ver all Israel. (II 8am. ii.. 4: v.. 1-5.) Af
sr Samuel anointed him that day there were
>ng years of waiting and rejection and perKution
ere he camo to the throne, so now
Ithough Jesus, the Son of David, is God's
tiosen and anointed King of Israel and of
II nations, we are still living in the timo
'hen He is rejected and persecuted. "The
uirit of the Lord came mightily upon David
-om that day forward." (See R. V.) Hero
i tho power by which alone we con suffer or
jtvo or wait or in anv way glorify God.
'roin beginning to end of Scripture the power
f tho Spirit of God is the only power reealed
for effectual service, and whethor it is
laying upon the harp or writing psalms, aubuing
enemies or reigning over Israel, whntrer
David did that was acceptable to God
ros by the Holy Spirit.
"So Samuel rose up and went to Ru in ah."
or the second time he has anointed a Capdn
over the Lord's inheritance, and now ho
!tires to his own home, no doubt to connue
in prayer for the Lord's pooplo and for
toemittted.?Leaeon Helper.
HlRTY~PERSONS HAVE DIED.
ho Mysterious Disease Raving; Warssw.
111.
The State board of health has ascertained
iat thirty'persons have died from flux and
r'seotery at Warsaw, III., and tliut 232 cases
ive been under treatment. Reliable citb
ins says the disease is still prevalent, but is
lelding to treatment.
MARKETS.
Bai.timouk?Flour?City Mills. oxtra,f4./X)
IV10. Wheat?Southern Kultx, OftJlaWl;
>rn?Southern White, 45n4CWota, Yollnw
aCV^cts. Oafs-Southern and Pennsylvania
s35 eta ; Rye?Maryland Pennsylvania
nVk-ts.; Hay?Maryland and Pennsylvania
00a# 15 50.Straw Whoat,.S.00k#s.:,j Butter,
istern Creamery, 10 il3cts., near-by receipts
al7cts; Cheese tiastern Fancy Cream. Oltf
IV eta., ?Western, 8aN>tf cts; JCggs?14
4Jtf; Tobacco Leaf?Inferior, Inf 2.00, Good
minion, 3 00a#4 00, Middling, 5a#tf.00 Good
i fine red,7a#0; Fancy, lOttfFj.
?>n ?ui???r io?r?rviutnorn uommon to
,tr extra,ri.55*0a. 15; Wheat-No 1 White 87
18: Hjre?State, MtV4; Com?Southern
e!low,43%?44. Oata White,State XiV,r\X\^i
*.; Butter-State. Haiti eta.; Cbeoee-Stato,
tnfCfe; Kj5>p??lOAliihj eta.
Pint, ad* i. i*n i a ? tflour ? Pennsylvania
ney, 4.<6*4.75; Wheat?Pennsylvania and
>utheri? Bert, K?a84J^; Hye?Pennsylvania
la58cta:Corn?Southern Yellow, 48%h44 eta
at*?SlaXidt; Butter?Stote,ItSy^u 17 eta.:
heeae?N. Y. Kaotory, Egg*?
tote, 15a 10 eta.
CATTLE. ?baltimore?Beef,
4 (XMI 45; Sheen? $2 00
160, Ho** $0 WHO 2?.
Mew York?Beef?f4 60a5 50;8hoop- $4 00
136; Uofta-04 ?VV.5 15.
East Liberty?Beef- J4 50*5 00; Sheep?
150*4 75; Uoge-f4 (ft.4 50
^ aiT> \f,yV.ffiF
K#l the Growler.
Klerk?It cent be possible thet yon
go iuto e eeloon with a vessel to parchose
beer, White?
White?Who said I did?
B.?Brown said so. He told me ho
Lad scon you going into a saloon with
a pitcher.
W.?Oh, he saw me going in with a
base-ball pitcher.?Boston Courier.
A firm of greet genius hni offered
the British government en immense
?? ! Ll 1 a
DUU1 iur tut) UOU UI VIlC7 UHUUUUl pUolU^O
stamp for advertising purposes. The
advertisement is to be printed on the
back of thn stamp before t-lio gnm i i
put on, bo that the purchaser of ovory
stamp must see the announcement boforo
ho moistens the gux?- This is an
Australian idea.
There is a man In onr town
And ho In vorjf wise, sir,
When o'or ho doesn't feel Just right
Ono rr mody lie trios, sir.
It's Just tbo thing to tako In spring
Tho b'ood lo purify,
lie tells his trismus aua nothing else
Is ho induced to trr
iteeaus?, having liken Dr. Plorce'a Golden
Modlcai Alscovery to oloanso his system, tone
It up and onrich tho blood, and finding that It
always piodncos tho desired result, he oonalders
that bo would bo foo toll to ox port men t
with anything e sc. His motto hi: "Prove all
things and hold fast to that which Is good."
That's why ho pins his faith to the "Golden
Medical Discovery."
Walking advertisements tor Dr. Page's Catarrh
Itemedy arc tho thousands it has oared.
The court reporter?Her small brother.
Unnecessary Misery.
Probably as much misery comes from hablttual
constipation as from any derangement of
tho functions of tho body, and it is difficult to
cure, for tho reason that no one likes to tako
the medicines usually prescribed. Hamburg
Figs were prepared to obviate this difficulty,
and they will bo found nlecsant to the tanto ol
women and children. 2& cents. Dose one Fur.
Mack Drug Co., N. Y.
The great American kicker?The mule.
If Dobbins'* Electric Soap is what so many
Insist that It Is, y.'U cannot (ifonl to tro without
it. Your grocer has It, or can get It, and you
can dccfcie fur j/ovmlf very soon. Don't let another
Monday p-?8S without try leg It.
"I beer your pardon," said tho convict to
the Governor,
Brartflold's F? mn'o Regulator will cur? nil
Irregularities or derangements peculiar to
wotnan. Those suffering should uso It. Sold
by all Druggists.
Eternal y'gilanca enables ? men to carry
tho sninn umbrella for years,
Jfsfll'eted with eoreeyes use Drlsaar Thomiw
fon'sEyoWater.DruKBlstasell atUVj. per bottle
It Is no s'gn that a lien meditates harm to
lier owner hecnti** she la\s lor lilin.
A pocket match-safe f roo to smokers of
"Tanslli'a I'uiicli" 5c. CiRnr.
When murk el Ing for chickens, always reinem'er
that Ihrgool ?lio yonn?r.
AN Run Down
From the weakening effects of warpi wcolher, by
hard work, or from a long Illness, yon need a good
tonic and blood purifier. Hood's Barsaparilla glees
a good appetite, strengthens the whole system, purines
tho blood, regulates tho digestion.
"It affords ino much pleasure to reoonunond
Hood's Karsnparllla. My health two years ago was
cry poor. My friends thought I was going with
consumption. I commenced using Hood's Hnrsaparllla,
took Ovo bottles of It, and to-day I can do as
hard a day's work as I ever could. It saved me
from tbe grnyq. aud put mo oo my feet a sound,
healthy niau."-?>llll r. d. Tiudobt, 141 East Main
0k, Wlggousvllle, Ohio.
Hood's Sarsaparilla
Bold by all druggists. 91; >li (or $3. rtqwrtd only
by O. I. HOOD * CO., Apoth-.cArlos, Lowell, Moan.
IOO Poses One Dollar
Here It Is!
Want to learn all about a At
Horse? now to Pick Out a A
Good On* 1 Knowlmperfoe-^''^^ ,"?*
tloa* and ao Guard against \
Fraud 1 Deteit Disease and ).n "l\
rtfsct a Cure when tame U / \ / \
possible T Tell the age by J \. / \
hcTseth? What to cnll^ti Different Parts of tile
Animal? How to Shoe a llorso Properly/ All thli
and other Va nabla Inforinntlon can L? obtained bl
reading our 1N.|>AUK 1 I.UJSTK ATKI1
lltlltHK BOOK, whluh we w 11 forwarl, ie t
paid, on receipt of only 45 cents In stamp**
BOOK PUB. HOUSE.
134 Leonard St.. New York Olty.
STfi A MONTH can lie uiatlo working
ivr us. akcuu prcicrreu wno can rarnlsn
a horse nud give Uiclr whole lime to tbe boalueMi.
Bparn moments may be profitably employed also.
A few vacancies In towns and cities. U. r. JOHNSON
* CO., 100* Mnln St.. Richmond, Va. N- II.Pfsoss
stats ope and r-Mstiwss eJtperiene*. N?ver
mtmfeSoal tending ?lamy/or reply. It. T. J. it Os*.
adiiih
SmSJSS B. M.WOOMJir. M.IX
jvvxassssttbtaam om whtuteii b*.
o|ien to protfreadro students. All Interested
Will rerelve valuable Informal Ion Frss,
by addressing K. TOUBJEK, Boston. Mass.
s2b * hoc* ?mf svimrrsfe
WfcW !>IK111<)AI, CO., Ultkasti. Vm.
inrnqinmq due all soldiers
;r. ^rim?,kkpaw
P CUfiuuli, O., M WMklftfUij I). C. McuUou LUia papn.
X>Al.-liM mm CO II.F.I IK. Philadelphia. Pa.
A BcBoianiUtp and position. B-10. Writs forcipcnlar. ,
A gents wanted. 91 an hour .00 new articles.OatTgus !
A. and sample fres. C. K. MtransiA. Unffalo. N. Y.
mam ptei 55 i
BRYANT & STMT
?*ote Kr?pltia. Short JfnnU. Tmloarogt
riiofor fatalouuti anil jitll inforn
Make Your
Earn II
They will, if you handle then
we are now pi
1GQ-PME BOOK
It ombodios tho oxporlenr? of a
among Poultry as a business?not as
making dollars and conts. He made a
you should not If you will profit by hit
will give you this Intelligence. Eve
hens you should know how to MAKE
you. Among hundreds of other point
Ta Indues Kens to I ny,
To 8eloct a Good Cook. J
To Select a Good Hen,
Which Eggs I# Hatch, V}
When to Set lor Early * \
Broilers, *
What to Foe! Young /04
Chicks,
How to Arrange Coops, a C^K
Handling el Eggs. ' gy)
About Watering Chicks, .
Arrangement ol Perthes * y
To Present and Care yw/vV
Roep, Ahortloi, Choi* V/J
.?, o^, ?,, ? ^
C ABE OF THREE'S
The best Chicken Bonk dor the i
Fowls oan afford to be without It. 8e
liver, postal note or stamps (1 or 2oJ
BOOK PU*. HOUiff, 13A
giilfffflHW
Mails
29 Oil
PAIU. *
At OivtMnn akd Duum.
Hit CHARLES A. V06ELKR CP.. WwewJM.
DfflPEsfimesT
GERMAN DICTIONARY ggw
OF ?24 PAQE8 TTnTywV
for only one dollar
i restcuss bosh:
ATVKRV S31A Lli Pit I OK.
II |<*N RbkII h Wnr.ln wlili Itia Q*rmn Kqatvm
Inlisnd Pronutelilloa and (Jrrtnan M'onla wttk
mtllBfc DeOulUoUA. Scut IKMtpB^d NIKlld ?t $1
KKA0 WHAT TIIlS HAS SATS:
Sai.km. Mam., May at 1<J*
tMl Ait TTov**, m I?onard St.:
Tb? normal) Dictionary la rwaWrt sad I am BMk
alMM'd with It. I <114 not oxpoct to had auch claw
Hint In ao chaap a hook. Plaaac arnd a loay to ?%
tail tacloaod Bad 41 for aama, M. M. Haaaai.u
"'book pur. co.,
134 Leonard 8tr?>?. Nsw York City.
mwjbiwinwfcl
|rt FEMALE/
REGULATOR!
4
AA C" MCTD I I ATIAU
Vxu- w^stlwnB
A^N&j s
> JiooK TO'WOH AN''M6M?/?art
iMDOOB MBlMTmjCJ^TIMTA MJ
Dr. Lobb.'i *
Twenty years* watkaow prsutlao ta tba Intk
ment and n at th? aw rut cflkci* of early,
Tke, dootrojrKg botb Blind and My. Medietas
and treatment for one maotli. l'tre Dallare, Mrt
ecnreljr scaled from o beer ration to aiiy address. r
Beak ee Bycotal Dlacaaca free. jj
# DUTCH ER'8 *
FLY KILLER4
Makes a clean sweep. H~?y
beet will kill a quart of Ales.
Slops Imiulos arvand sat*,
dlrlug uteres, tickling yeas
noao, skips bard wortla anil as*
cures peace nt t rtfliae exponas.
Send cenlnforo sheets ta
r. HUTCOTtH. B*. Albans, Vt)
a nan's Remedy tor Catarrh la the M
Best, Raslcat to Has, and Cheapest.
Also good tor OnM la the Head, B
HacdacLa, liar Fsrar, Ac. M casta. Jg
I t prowrlb# and fa'ly ait*
dorse Hlg 13 at lh> only
Ornate speeltl'i tortheosrtat .cura
TO t b*TS.^B of tills disease.
JMWwaawjjBM w* U. H. Xftl; It A It AM. X. D.,
|H eases awiIstssa 1 Amsterdam, N. Y.
E9 Mri aalr Hw lla Tl'd tin V at Bfllfl Til or 13 fl?
OUetmaatlJPBMi faction.
OWa. >fl n. K. i)YcnK ft oo.,
V Chicago, 111.
Bold by DruggleU.
CHICHESTFR'S KNOLIS^.
PENNYROYAL PILLS.,
*K ?Hmd CrtM liituuaad Braid.1
W ru tktHlinUMI rlH h'Mk Mafia*.
I / fZT "W- (WrM, uk r?rlk?|l!^
I ?, rt mead Braad.m red mttellU. Iwia*. Mala.
\w* tf alit MMtlkbH. Taliaaa rtban dalla
' - A (xaaaa) |*rtloalar? a?4 "Kvitcf far
f lailM." I* lid.', a* mall. ?'m< <w.
Chlcheatcr Chemical t'a, JiaaltM *>*., I'iilMhPli
Tve Cot It!
CHEAPEST-:-FAMILY-: "ATLAS
KNOWN.
ONliY SO, OXZSCTTSKt J
191 Pages, 91 Full-Page Map*.
Colored Mara of raoh Kta*a and Terrltor- In tho
1'nlicd HlaV* Mao Main of every Country lu the
World. Tho letter orraa rive* tlm eouara mile* of
< A> h Slate; tiro* of antt'ament; |H>)>nlnt:an: chief
rIIIra: average trni|>rraluie; uaUrY of otQciala and
the principal noalin*?l*ra in the P.t.itc; niuubar of
farina, with their produ .thinaaiici the value thereof}
dtftemut manufactures tn.l number uf ?nu loyaa,
etc., etc. Alan Ih* are? of ea-ii Core',u Country;
form of Kovarnm nt: i?)iiiil<t!?n: nriti nnal Dro.in.-ha
end th?lr iiKinoy value; uiitount f lrxtr>; r?Uc<oo;
plr.i ?f army; inlJm of railroad and IrVoarr ph: nwnlu-r
of Iioiwp. rattle, aUt-p, ?n<l a *>?? manntof J laformation
valuable to*11 Paatpnld far Uir.
HOOK PUB. HOUHK. Ut l>ooi.?rd HI.. K. ?. City.
TON Business College
utf'fait.' LOUISVILLE. KYJ
r Chickens
ffloney*
a properly, and to toach yon
it ting for tli a
FOR 25 GENTS.
iiraumuai man mooring tor 26 years jM
a diversion, but for the purpose of
uooot*. Ard th ^re Is no reason why
9 labors-nnd this prloe of a few tggs
?n If you have room for only a fear
: THIMI PAY. This book will ahow
s about the Poul.ry Yard It teaohesi
To rrspar# Rrtlt,
JiilcLut Po'r'ng,
WlutH.ttlllA i
Cvi of B coling H-ss*
Kn,w Un,ruK1ul Eff*?
V, , *"> ? to Sst tor Clio
v'
VaVk ??/ Whit Is Foe J for F?;%
V Who! Is FssO Is Fattoe,
U M of VonalSf
^ To Prwrtot id Cwro
I \ Wf, Uso.tsaly Lego,
X> laflfl ?!(?, Is., la, Wffl&k
. . . '
8. SUCKS. GEESE.
monty ovor of forma. No ono with
nt postpaid on rocolpt of 2d eonta In
*
i Lponard $t? N. Y. City,
'A:, ...