The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, December 22, 1892, Image 4
THE HORRY HERALD
O
Published very Thursday.
K. NORTON, Editor
J. T. MAYERS, Gknkrai. Manager.
The Len? Distance Telephone. ^
'Strange," remarked a gentlomau who
was present at the Now York eud of tho
telophouc wire between New York ami
Chicago, ut tho opcuing ceremonies,
"that a sonlenco can l>e dropped in Chi*
Cago and bo heard in New York."
"Oh, that's nothing," replied a wit,
"by aud by you will no able to hear a
London cockney drop bis b'.s in Tralal
gar Square."
Prolossor Hell says it is only the question
of a very short time when all tiio
civilized world will be in telephonic communication.
The wires in use between New York
and Pittsburg aie about an eighth of au
iuch in diametor. They weigh IS)
pounds to the mile. It was concluded
to put up a wire between Now York nui
unicagn twice m mrjfv im> tuu whc iu h-?o
on the 500 mile circuit. Tno new circuit
is therefore tua?iu of wires one fourth
of au inch in diameter, and the who
weighs 4.35 pounds to the mile. The
circuit is what is known as a dou > o
metalic circuit, containing two wires for
the entire distance. To make the wire
826,500 pounds of wire were used. The
circuit runs west through Eastnu, liarrisburg
and Pittsburg, Bonn., Vo lugstowu
and Toledo, Ohio, and Bouth
Bend, Ind.
There is no difference in the appearancc
of tlie transmitter. It is the sanro
littic instrument, undoubtedly one of the
greatest inventions of modern times.
Like all long distance 'phones, it is arranged
ou an oak table. The working
apparatus is enclosed in glass to promote
the sound, and the arm of the speaking
tube is longer and arranged so as to bo
011 a level with the face. If the lino to
Chicago is profitable it will be extended
to Bait FrHucisco. ? Detroit Free Picas.
Kit Carbon's Family.
Christopher Carson, tho famous pioneer,
guide, and Indiau tighter, was
married at Taos, N. M., on the 21 of
February, 1843. His tirst child, Charley,
was born May 1, 185J, and died
April 1, 1851. His second child, Julian
(Billy), was born October 1, 1852. lie
was four years Sheriff of Costilla County,
and died there several years ago. His
lliii-.l rOiil.l T i rw. 91
1855, anil is now liviug at Koinervillc,
near Las Vogas, N. M. Ilis fourth child,
Cnristoval, was born June 12, 1858, and
is now living at Las Animas, Col., and
is commonly known as Kit Carson, Jr.
His fifth child, Oharlus, was born
August 2, 1801, and is now residing at
La Junta, Col., and poscsses more nearly
all the noble characteristics of his famous
father than any of the rest of Kit
Carson's children, f 1 Is sixth child, Hobccca,
was born April 13, 1804, and
died at Springer, N. M., April 13, 1885.
His seventh child, Estefanlta, was born
December 23, 1800, ami is now the wife
of Thomas Wood, residing at La Junta,
Col. His eighth child, Josellta, was
bsrn April 14, 1808, and is now the wife
of William Squires, residing at Gladstone,
N. M. All of Kit Carson's children
were raised till of age by Thomas
O. Hoggs, who rosidos near Clayton, N.
M. Mrs. Hoggs is a neicc of Mrs. Kit
Carson, Sr. Mrs. Jesse Nelson, residing
in Otero Couuty, is a- sister of the
pioneer. There are no b. others or sisters
of Mrs. Kit Carson now living. ? Trinidad,
(N. M.) Advertiser.
Christmas in ScnndiiinvLt,
Tn the cold northern lands ot X ?rwaj
and Sweden, name days, birth days and
Christmas, are the principal festival of
tho year which are celebrate.J by rich
and poor. Tho last, especially, is a time
of great rejoicing, and all keep holiday
from Christmas Eve until Twelfth Day,
the 6th of January. At this season every
cottage, as well as every mansion, is
cleaned from top to bottom, white curtains
are hung at the windows, ami the
tables covered with snowy cloth*. Peasants
aud nobles don their best Sunday
clothing, and the gilts, which few are
too poor to prepare for each other, are
sometimes thrown into the rooms, so
that the donors may be guesse 1 at, but
not positively known. In country
churches, service is held at four o'clock
on Christmas morning, when, for tho
only time in the year, the sanctuary is
illuminated with candles; but there are
110 evergreen decorations as with us. In
tho wintry dawn then sledges packod
with good people may be seen gliding
over tho frozen lakes, and beneath tho
pine and birch trees, glittering with time
in fbe starlight; and peasants trudge
many miles through tho snow to attend
this early cclcbratiou of tho Fast of
Lights. In the farming districts, too,
KKBDINO TItK BIKD3.
they have a very charming custom, for,
on Christmas morning, tho farmer's wife
distributes loaves of bread among all the
very poor in her ueighborhoacl, while
1 e r
laoiwua tl HUOitt OI WIlCll Or
coi n on a tall pole, as a Christmas banqnot
for the birds, an attention which the littlo
feathered pensioners of the air fully
appreciate. So, the happy, holy season
is made a time of "good will to all," in
cold, frost hound Scandinavia, as well as
iu less frigid lands.
A resident of Lawrence, Kansas, received
a letter the other week which was
mailed in Chicago twelve years ago. It
was "accidentally discovered" in a vcn?
tilator shaft, with a wad of other mail.
< Knightly lances were from twelve to
twenty feet long, the heads from four to
eight inches broad and from twelve to
twenty inches long.
FOOD OF THE RUSSIANS
_
QUEER DISHES AND DRINKS IN
THE LAND OF THE CZAR
Soup* Served With Ico an(t Soui
* * Creaiu?Ittoli KussIuuh Iiivo Kx
tra vacantly?How tl?o l?oor KxUt
"Y ~Y"<TTrUITING from Moscow aboul
\ /\ j Russian uicdcs of life,Frank
Y V 8. Curpeuter suys iu tin
Washington Sturv^
A Russiau dinner is rather a curious
affair and a swell dinner lusts for hours;
The tirst thing you take is ati appetizer,
mul ttiis consists of vodka, a Russian
brandy, together with such relishes as
caviare, raw herring, smoked salmon,
raw smoked goose, radishes, buttor and
cheese. This lay out is on a counter at
one end of a restaurant and you usually
stand up to cat it before taking your seat
at the table for the regular dinner. The
tirst part of the dinner is soup, and a
dish of Russian soup is a dinner itself.
The most popular, perhaps, is known as
stchee, which is made of cabbago and
beef, and in tho midst of each plato of
which a big chunk of beef floats. Hour |
cream is often added to the soup and you |
got u gravy dish of ereatu for a kind of a
sauce at the first of every dinner. The
cold soups are much liked by tho Russians
and I ordered one to-day without
knowing what it was. It had a creamy
color, hut there was in tho center of it a
piece of iee as big as my fist and there
were pieces of cucumber, herring and
meat floating around in it. I tasted it
and it made me think of boiled boor
served with ice, and tho tasto was
enough. 801110 of tho soups wore very
good and one older for soup is always
enough for two. Tho fish that 1 find
here are excellent and thero is a dish
called solianka, made of fish and cabbage,
which is not at all bad. Another
is a sucking pig, boiled, and served cold,
and another fnvorito disli is roast mutton,
stulTed with buckwheat. The Russians
have excellent meats, and you will
got as good beef and mutton hero as
anywhere 111 the world. The butter is
invariably good, and some of that which
I have had is so sweet that I can eat it
tike cheese. It is never salted ami it is
eervod in great loaves, tho guest cutting
oft as much as I10 wishes. I do not like
tho Russian licei kuowti as kvas, but the
tea is good everywhere, and the Russian
takes a glass every hour or so, and
merchants do all their business over
tea. Tho peasants who bring things
hero from Moscow to sell never make a
bargain except at tho Truktirs, and you
find the su.uovar and the tea glass everywhere.
The hotter class of Russians live very
extravagantly. They spare nothing on
their tables and they are fond of giving
oig dinners. 11 is noi uncommon lor a
whole sheep to ho brought on the table
at such dinners, and imported wines
How like water. They aro very fond of
flowers, nnd there was a dinner given at
8t. Petersburg not long ago at wn.oh
rare orchids adorned the board an I at
which the flowers cost more than $10,000.
At sotno dinners given by young
men the host expects to pay for all the
damage that may bo done by the young
fellows when they are drunk after the
feast, and there have licou dinners hero
in Moscow which have cost a small fortune.
Still, at the better class restaurants
you can get a very good meal at
reasonable ratoi, ami L got nil excellent
dinner last night at the Qnnitago restaurant
at a dollar and a half, or for two
and a half, including a bottle of wine.
It was served by a boy in a white apron
and white clothes, ami while I ate it an
immense organ played automatically.
This orgau was as large as that of a good
sized church aud the cylinders which
were put into it in the changing of the
music were as big around as a stove
pipe. It played all sorts of tunes, and
it was, I think, run by steam. 1 went
into tho kitchen of this rostauraut and
1 found them cleaner than any kitchens
I hnvo ever seen in America. Tho
meats and vegetables were kept on ice,
aud tho soups wore cooked in great
caldrons, each big enough to boil n
sheep.
Tho lower classos of Russia live, on
what would kill tho American laborer.
Their diet is made up of sour bread aud
cabbago soup, and they aro always eat
iuu green cucumbers. l see cucumbers
sold from the corners of many of tho
streets, ami they are usod in all sorts of
ways. The favorite way of serving them
at tiro hotel tables is just as they come
from the vine, without being paro l or
cut, and you are expected to dross them
to suit yourself. The peasants oat but
few vegetables. They know nothing
ahout raising vegetables, and the only
articles of this kind that they use to any
extent are potatoes and turnips. 1 have
seen a good many peasant families at
dinner. They use neither plates nor
knives nor forks, and a fair sot of table
furniture for a Russian family is a
wooden table bowl for soup ami a dozen
largo woodou tablo spoons, which the
different mombors of tho family stick
into tho common bowl of soup and,
helping themsolvos, thus carry tho icccold
or etoaming-hot liquid to their
mouths. They have milk and eggs, but
little meat, and they do not seem to carc
for much more than bread aud cab'
bago.
Huts Mado Useful.
Of all living things rats soon to b<
Among tho most repulsive, and whoi
dead what can bo their use? asks Sii
John Lubbock. But even tnoy are thi
subjects of production in the ind.istria
arts. In Paris there is a pound sur
rounded by walls into which detl car
casaea are thrown. A large c ilouy o
lata has been introduced from tho cats
combs. Tho rats uto mo3t useful it
clearing tho flosh from tho bones, leavins
a clean polished skeleton litto 1 for the
makers of phosphorus. At the base o
tho wall numerous shallow holes ari
scooped out just sufficient to contain tin
hnd? of (l>n K..? ?L -
j ~. v?v ium) i'ul urn niyir rails.
Kvory three monthc a gr..at hattuo takei
place, during which thotorrified rats rue
into the hole9. Persons go round, and,
catching the extending tails, pitch th?
rats into bags, and thoy arc killed ai
leisure. Then begins the manufacture.
The fur is vnluablo and finds a rcadj
sale. The skins make a superior glovi
?the gant do lat?and are especially '
used for the thumbs of fcid gloves, be- 1
cause the skin of the rat is strong nnc (
clastic. The thigh-b ?nos were formcri) f.
valued as toothpick* for clubs, but ar<
now out of fashion; while the tendoni
and bones are bjiled up to make the !
atine wrappers lor bon-bons. 8 irely I
liave established my thesis that dirt ii, (
only matter in a wrong place.?NottJ '
American Review.
d
%
Mr. Herman Hicks
"Three years ugo, as a result of CATAKKII,
I entirely lost my hearing and was
Doaf for Wloro Than a Year.
To ray surprise and ureal Joy when 1 had
taken three bottles of Hood's HnrsupurHlu I
f< und ray hearing was returning. 1 kept on
till 1 had taken three more and I can hear
perfectly well. I am troubled but very littlo
with catarrh. I consider this a reraarhnblo
cnee." IIkpm.vn Hicks. 30 Carter Street,
w.ir lw.f v v
llnod'H PlTIa arc purely Vegetable
The Derby IIa*.
If the derby hat is to be crowded out
by the easier and softer styles of head
pear theie won't be much regret over its
poing. In spite of its advantages as a
cross between the silk liat and the
slouch, it has neve, had the merits of
either of those styles. It has at ways had
the discointorts of the silk hat without
having its dash or beauty, and it has not
been much dressier than a neat soft hat,
although it tins always been more uncomfoitable.
It is a bad thing for a hot
day, and it isn't much for a cold spell,
anil fate help the man who wears it in
tlio morning after a banquet. The
tendency now is to easy hats, and it
ought to be encouraged. Men have
laughed a great deal at women's slavery
to fashion, but they have never been
able to point to a more foieiblc illustra
tiou of that slavery than their own adherence
to the derby bat supplied.?
Philadelphia Inquirer.
A hunter from Klickitat County,
"Washington, who went into the wiidsof
British Columbia lust spring alter bear,
lias returned borne with the bides of
sixty.seven, the pelts of a number of
grizzles beiug among them.
R0\
is t
Best Bakii
The Official Gov<
The United States Go
tests, reports the Royal 1
greater leavening strengtl
Id in 13, Ag. Dep., p. 599.
The Canadian Official 1
the Royal Baking Powde
ing strength. (Bulletin 1
In practical use, there
Powder goes further, niak
food, than any other.
Government Ch
"The Royal Baking Pov
wholesome ingredients. It does
phatcs, or other injurious substam
"The Royal Baking Pov\
and most reliable baking powder
"Hi
"The Royal Baking Powd
est in strength of any baking pow
Th e (ro ver n men t R epo > - /
powders tested to c
or snlp/iu
Mysterious Brazilian Cniml.
Tho huanaco, which is a suiaII camel
which' is widely distribute 1 ia South
AmoricA, has a peculiar instinct of repairing
to some lonely, deserted spot
when seized with tho pangs of death,
and, roinovod from all its healthy companions,
succumbing to its last sickness
in a sort of dismal yet poetic isolation.
Darwin and fitzroy have noted this
strange custom, and Mr. Hudson dwells
at somo length upon its umquo suggestions.
"It looks, in fact," he says, "Itss
like an instinct of one of tho inferior
creatures than the superstitious observance
of human beings, who have knowl
edge of denth, and believe in a continued
existonce after dissolution."
Air. Hudson is inclined to cxplnin this
almost mysterious practico with the hunnaco
by the assumption of an immense
antiquity for tho spccios, and that tho
inherited habit of a far distant period,
when its representatives resorted to soma
secluded place protccto I from tho assaults
of their enemies, has been impressed
upon tho stock, so that by an
automatic movent mt, when s'ekonod with
disease or old age, it turns to tho hidden
rofuge which generations of its kind have
sought in tho samo blin 1 luuiuer.?
Scientific American.
Fo iir Lnr e Famine*. ^
Media, l'eun., is the homo of four of
ilie largest families in the Unite IS'.ito*.
iat of Simucl Field, who has twenty,
ight children; Joseph Chin ller, who |
s the proud father of tventy-tivo chil.
Iron; James Harrott, with a record of
lixtecn, and Wiiiia n Wright, who has
iftcon little Wrights to feed. Of course
hcic are many i-olated families that
vi 11 go Irom two to a dozen more than
he*e I'ennsylvaniuns, hut it is extreme y
1 oni>tfill if there >s another villi re in
he country that can furnish four w.nnnn
hat are tiie nio'hers of eighty-four 9.11IIren.?St.
Louis Republic.
V ' ^ M* jZ'SJ." J. '3.
| The Nortl Sea Bailie Canal.
During the winter several large tiniertakings
in connection with the North
Bea Baltic canal will be commenced at
the Kiel Firth. They will comprise the
building of two harbors, au iuner and
an outer. Three Kiel contractors hnvo
taken over tho matter for $250,000.
The inner harbor will bo surrounded by
a wall of granite and coucrete, 203
meters long, which has to be completed
July 1st, 1893. The outer harbor has
to be ready by August 1st, 1893.?Oliuueapolis
Tribune.
I
There is more catarrh in this section of the
country thnn all other diseases put together,
and until the last few years was supposed to
bo incurable. For a great many years doctors
pronounced it a local disease, and prescribed
local remedies, mid by constantly failing to
cure with local treatment, pronounced it fn|
curable. Science has proven <->?tnrri, ??.?
I constitutional diaeoso, und therefore requires
constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure,
manufactured by F. .J. CUonoy A- Co., Toledo,
Ohio, is the only constitutional c-uro on the
market. Itistakcu internally in doses from
lOdrops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly upon
the bloodOUd mucous surfaces of the system.
They olTcv^lbO for any ense it fails to cure.
Sena for oiixulars and testimonials. Address
F. J. Ciiknbv & Co., Toledo, O.
tw Hold by DruKKiste, "&0. .
The Turks, in the final siege of Constautinople,
employe! catapults and
bnlistas side l?y side with canuou.
Go twice as far as liver pills and cure oftener
--Small Hilt' Ib-uns.
The shortest cut to happiness is to try
j to give it.
Restore the Complexion by cleansing the entire
system, Small Bile Means.
Whenever u sin eun liulo its head it
feels safe.
Small Mile Beans will cure U.
The shark is worshiped by eomo of
the dwellers ulonir the Alriean coasts.
Since gold was discovered in Califor
nia the gold product of the United
States has been $1,900,00 ),000.
Nantaliala. Jintlper-hare. Every 28hsresf?. j
cures a town lot. I? ortunes in the South. Send
V:. for prospectus. A.J. McMride, Atlanta, Ga.
ITew Zealand now has ninety-tww
l&r^o creameries that eo3t over $350,000.
Eon liitdM in at., Asthmatic a vn IVi-monahy
Comi'i.a ints, "Hroim's Hronchlnl Troch"
have remarkable cuiatlvo proper!les. Soldonbj
in bojett.
A Hungarian has come to New York
who cuu speak 500 words a minute.
fAL
HE
ng Powder
eminent Reports:
vernmetit, after elaborate
Baking Powder to be of
1 than any other. (Bui)
Tests, recently made, show
r highest of all in leaveno,/.
16, Inland Rev. Dep.)
fore, the Royal Baking
es purer and more perfect
emists Certify:
/der is composed of pure and
not contain either alum or phos:es.
"Edward G. Love, Ph.D."
fder is undoubtedly the purest
offered to the public.
inry A. Mott, M. D., Ph.D."
ter is purest in quality and liighder
of which I lutve knowledge.
"Wm, McMurtrik, 1'h. D."
shows all other baking
on fa in alum, lime
'ric acid.
Yoasng Mothers!
H'fl Ojj'er You r. Remedy
tOiich Insurea Safety to
Jjifo of Mother and Child
"MOTHER'S FRIEND"
Hoba Confinement of itt
l'ain, Horror and Jl lab,
Aftcrtiidngonobattleof "Mothcr'n Friend" I
luffered l?ut lUtlo |>altt,and U1<1 uot oxperlonco thai
tvcftkui'iii afterword u?unl lit auclt cttaoa.?Mrs.
Aamii GUOBj Lamar, Mo., Jan. 15th, 1W1.
bent by express. chnrpoa prepaid, on recetptof
price, gl.i-Opor bottlo. liook to Mothers mailed free,
tfttAVtiULU lti:G!JI.ATOIt CO.,
ATLANTA, CJA,
SOLD DV ALL DIlUUaiSTt.
"German
Syrup"
My niece, Kmcline Ilawley, was,
taken with spitting blood, and she
became very much alarmed, fearing
that dreaded disease, Consumption.
She tried nearly all kinds of medicine
but nothing did her any good.
Finally she look German Syrup and
she told me it did her more good
than anything she ever tried. It
stopped the blood, gave her strength
and case, and a good appetite. I
had it from her own lips. Mrs.
Mary A. Stacey, Trumbull, Conn.
Honor to German Syrup. @
AGENTS WANTED ON 8ALARY
or c<.inmlH*l"H l?> litunllc ilic Now Patent Chemical
Ink KraMnjr Pencil. Audit* inaklnu * >0 por work.
MONKOK KRA.SKH MKCJ. CO.. X V>0, I .a CrnaM, Wl?.
S ,\ U~ ftl
PATENTS WMSbrt
W 40.ragek??li,Jrno,
ONIiJ KNJOYS
Both the method ami results when
Syrup of I'igs is taken; it is pleasant
and refreshing to the taste, and acts
gently yet promptly on the Kidneys,
Livnr nml llinnolu ,1- -
....v. vicausco IIIC ?J'8lem
effectually, dispels colds, headaches
and fevers and cores habitual
constipation. Bviup of l'igs is the
only remedy of its kind ever produced,
pleasing to the taste and acceptable
to the stomach, prompt in
its action and truly beneficial in its
eflccts, prepared only from the most
healthy and agreeable substances, its
nuyiy excellent qualities commend it
to all and have made it the most
popular remedy known.
oyrup of Figs is for sale in 50c
and SI bottles by all leading druggists.
Any reliable druggist who
may not have it on hand will procure
it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it. J)o not accept any
substitute.
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
SAN IHANCISCO. CAL.
LOUISVILLC, KY NEW YORK, N.V.
with Pastes, F. name Is ami Paints which stain the
hands, Injure tholron and hurn red.
The Rising Sun Stove l'ollsh Is IlrltHnnt, Odorless.
Durable, and the consumer nays for no tin
or glass package with every purchase.
ACCENTS \\ \ NTKO l.argcSntlnEtchings; Matted
21 In sample, 5*1; sells <>n sight at $1: can l>o returned;
water colors. Werner & Co , 1 ;"J0tI lbcrt,Phlla.
Qr I | so low > e?n t Inn a |>age adv. Ladles'
I 9CLL Elgin Watch. Oohi Filled Case, engraved,
I *1.' Solid O..1.1 - I I M, I 1,1. y. HulTalo, N. V.
finilHfcA Mornhlrto Ilnlilt t'ured In 10
IfafllRI >1) tin v s, No inly till cured.
VI I VI?K DR. J. STfel'HENS, Lebanon,Ohioi
AfiFNT^WANTED ,:v ,*.r r";
Hubl * I W.ne alri'utly I'ravcllug Salesmen,
to cart \ our lubricant a sl?b line. >1 \ N I l '\CTl
u felts' oil, i Oil 11'A NY, i in pluad, o.
Nervous & Chronic Diseases
Treated by mall by the l.atlmcr Medicine Company's
I consulting physician. Ifd'i North Tenth St., l'hllada., |
Pa. All letters confidential. Atlriee tYee. g"B"~Send |
UH-. in Hininps roi sample or IMC. hATIMKIl'S 1
II EA D A( II V. tV N Kl H A I.(M A TA It I.KT8. I
LUXURIES?LE8KSVILLE BLANKETS?
Housekeepers "''4 D>., >> ">. Cnrollnn'it Prlili'. 'IJtj II) ,
ti per pair. I.cnkavlllc Ho i -st .Jeans?Orny Hrmvu I
I and Ulftck JUi}., I lie, nnil 00c. per yard. Korsev
I Orny, !* J l?Vc. Ilrnivn, |0r. i> >iti?l; irrjr uoml,
Wool Yum, nil colors, .lc. ii hank. If your dealer
docs not keep these goods order of .1. \> . Ml'tl'I'T
Ac Ovm Bpoolil Selling Agts., Grceutboroi N> Ct
Cures- Coimiiuiptlon, CourIva, Croup, Nora
Throat. Sold hy a]l Druggist* on a Guarantee*
|
I Consumptive* nnd people
who hnvo weak lungs ol- Attnma,
should use I'lso's Cure for
Consumption. It hus eared I ;
thousands. It hits not Injur- Ij
eil one. It Is not had to take. H
It Is thh bfc8t cough on up. K
8oJd evorrwhero. SSe. I
.Tr" r
Unlike the Dutch Process
Qfo No Alknlios
Other ciioiniCiils
Vini(l ,,SCl' 'n ",0
preparation of
ffi&K W. OAK Kit & CO.'S
i a tBreakfastCocoa
i | I Vl which in absolutely
i l /mrc ami soluble.
h\vj | (: ], it lists inorcthnn Ihrcotimct
jjl S 1 I f1 the strength of Cocoa mixed
fiC aL.. 'I / m wiili St.in li, Arrowroot or
Sugar, and la far inoro ecoIomlcal,
costlny lest than ono rent a cup.
t Is delicious, nourishing, ami easily
blGKSTKD.
Sold bjr (1 Hirers ei cry it hers.
w. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Ma?a,
IF YOU
OWN
CHICKENS
YOU WANTT3 A AT" T HEIR
THEM T O * JL WAY
even If you merely keen them ns a diversion. In order
to haudlo Fowls judiciously, you must know
something about them. To meet this want we are
selling n book giving the experience / Hrtlw OK#t
of a practical poultry raiser fori Will J 49Gi
twenty-flvo years. It was written by amnn who put
all his mind, and time, and money to making a sucressof
Chicken raising?not as a pastime, liut as a
business?and If you will profit by his twenty-flve
years' work, you can save many Clicks annually,
ISy
" Raising Chlcktn.i."
and make your Fowl* earn dollar* for you. The
point la, that you mu.-t l>?ob1e (o dtlrct trouble In
tho Poultry Yard as noon a* It ni')>c?r*, and know
bow to remedy It. This look will lunch you.
It tell* how to <1 jtect nnd cure dlrcattCi to foe<l for
gge and abo for fattening! which fowl* to rave for
tire ci 11 ok puriiotk"- and everything. Indeed, yon
ahould know on thin *u Jcct to make It profitable.
Bent postpaid for twenty-five cents In le. or 9c,
Itampt.
Book Publishing House,
J 33 Lkonarp St., N. Y. clty^
_ % Oujrx Ouarrio#.
The onyx quarries of tho State of
Pueblo, Mexico, are likely iu the ueal
future to be a source of great profit to
those engaged iu them.? These quarries,
for tho most part, are situated withiu a
radius of from tweuty-tive to forty miles
of the City of Pueblo, and the fiuor sorts
of the onyx are iu that city worked up
iutc ornaments of various kiuds uud of
exceeding beauty. Some eleveu or twelve
establishments in Pueblo are now solely
cuguged iu manufacturing these ornamuuts.
Since the Mexican Southern Hail
road from Pueblo to Tecom ivaca wai
opened uo less than one thousand tone
of onyx have passed over it.?New York
Advertiser.
For Paralysis nss Dr. Miles' Nsrvina.
Throe thou?ann marriages ?r? performeo
nrir im nu ever tlie wot I
Iinsanity curod by Dr. Milou' Nervine.
At Back's Harbor, Me., a liberty polo
of Oregon piuo eighty feet long was
1'ivr.tcJ the other dav*
WORK FOR US 1
(i few duyt, and you will be startled at the unexpected
success that will reward your eflbtts. Wc
Ivoly have the best business to oiler an agent
tlur can be found on the face of this earth.
S tft.OO profit on 8I7A.OO worth of liiialiiess is
being easily and honorably made by Add paid to
hundreds of men, women, boys, and girls in oitr
employ. You cnu make money faster at work for
us than you have any idea of. The business is so
easy to fearu, and instruction* so simple and plain,
ttint all succeed from the start. Those who take
hold of the business reap tlie advantage that
arises troni the sound reputation of one of the
oldest, most successful, and largest publishing
houses lit America, Hocure tor yourself the prnlits
that the business so readily And handsomely yields.
All beginners succeed grandly, and more' than
realize their greatest expectations. Those who
try it tlud exactly as we tell them. There is plenty
of room for a few more workers, and we urge
them to begin at once. If you are already employed,
hut have a few spare moments, ana wish
to use them to advantage, then write us at dtiee
(for tills i< your grand opportunity), and receive
full particulars hy return mall. Address,
TRt'K ?V ('() , ISox No. IOO, AugiiHta, Me.
^HGUS^
Male Bitters
Cures all Female Complaints and Monthly
irregularity, Lcucorrlioeaor Whites, Pain in
Back or Sides, :>trongthoiir. the 1'eoblo, builds
up tho wholopyfltein. Itliuscurcd thousands
and will euro you. Druggist:; have it. Scud
tlainp for book.
1)K. J. V. DKOMdOOLK ft CO., Louisville, Ky.
For Information and free Handbook write to
MUNN fi CO.. Stil BKOADW..V, NKW Yoiltf.
Oldest bureau for Bccurina patents In America.
Every patent taken out by us Is brought beforo
the public by a notice given free of charge In tho
Scientific ginccican
largest <Ircnlatlon Of nbt scientific paper In tho
yrorld. Splendidly illustrated. No U clllgent
man should bo without It. veoKly. 43.00 a
l"ar: H.'jO six months. Add res/ MtJNN &. CO..
OnusuBRiiSCI Broadtror, New York.
4 <s> D U \r i ? 'o'-'
XlGHT T^USHIM^
THE BEST IS THE CHEAPEST.
Send TEN cents to 28 Union 8q? N. Y.,
tor our |>rlie gnmo, " Blind Luck," nntl
win n New Home Sewing Machine.
The New Home Sewing Machine Co,
ORANGE, MA38.
-<^28 UNION
ILL. 'Mtout**0'FOR
SALE BY
triiliorous it Coi.l/Ins, Conway, S. C.
AMSTRESS
iioiisEHOLD Necessity
AND A HOUSEHOLD NECESSITY 18
ONE OK OUR NEW
SEAMSTRESS
S EI WI N C MM CHINES. |
Fon Fun Particular* Aodrcs*
NationalSewingMachineCo.
uoetaaoa* to
JUNK MANUFACTURING CO.
BELVIDF.RE, ILL.
M*nuf*ot?r*r* of fin# family Sewl*o Mtehlo**.
m
JAMES n. WAITE,
Manager of Waite's OolebrAted Comedy Oo*
Premium Band and Orchestra.
Dr. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind.
You will remember tho condition I was in flvtl ,
fears ago, when 1 wait aillietcd with a combina*
tkm of diseases, and thought there wan n(? help
row me 1 tried all kinds of medicine*, and score?
of eminent physkiAue. My nerves were prostrated,
producing aizrinesa, heart troublo and All tho ill*
that make lifts injectable. 1 commenced, to tako
dr. miles' fifcbvine
and in throe months i was ptnrecti.
In my travels each year, when 1 see the thousands
of phyblcal wrecks, suftering from nervous proa
> a. r-u (ration, taking prescriptions from
t-fl t\ Vi local phyi-ieiuns who have no knowl*
1 edge of their case, and whose death
1* certain, I feel like going to them and 6aying,
"octDr. Miles- Nervine and ok cored. In
my profession, mmm where thero
MieaomanyBU C~l|| M fT (J fferera front
overwork,men *" " tal prostrftE
tion and nervous exhaustion, brought on by tho
character of the business engaged in, 1 would
thousands
Nervine'1 * " , , .
W a Euro euro for all euQcring from these cauaed.
james h. wait*.
SOLD ON A POSITIVE GUARANTEE.
?RY DR. MILES' PILLS, 50 DOSES 25 CTS.
ill
y4^il
ONLY PERFECT
5EY/IHC1 (AECHANIS^
_ MMlIaY USfL
FAVORITE
we mi t?e(V y uf ft TpTlf
olluiM;
Warranted for Five Years.
HIGH ARM
OWLT ^BpK\
HmAM T AAT - ? W...E
jui up juuu.i,? uiiuy uover, nargu drawers
Nickel Rings, Tucker, Rufflor, Binder
Four Widths of Ilommers.
HIGH ARM MACHINE HAS A SELF-SETTING NELDll,
AND SELF-THREADING SHUTTLE. *
Pent on trial Delivered in your home free of
freight charges, liny only of Manufacturers.
Save Canvassers* Commissions. OKT NEW
MACHINES. Send for a Machine with
name of a luisint s man as reference, and wo
will ship a trial Machine at once, Address for
Circulars and Testimonials. i
Co-OpepatiVe pel/vin.q Machine Co.!
ana N. lllli fit., riii!ml?*l|)hln, Pa. \J
> ."'r ' ; .' ' 1. : :t P <u
?:.t tats inc. 3 conducted for ficdora'.o (Tg3.
O.'rico i* OppccKo U 8.Pf.tcnt Cl/iee.
; nil \ e can tocnro patent in lees tljnc than those
mn.it froi i Washington.
$<v. ! raode!. drnwlug or photo., with c't rcrlp('.
in. Wc advise, if patentable or no: T.-ee of
chnrao. Our fee not duo til) patent i? an:red. ,
A Pnmpklct. "How to Obtain Patent. .vith names
ofactiint clients in your Utate. county,or
J >wn, sent ficc. Addvese,
C.A.SNIOWdbCO.
Opposite Patent Cffico. Wachlnctoo. D- P '
TYLER DEM
8T.LOUI8,MO
Our Mammoth Catalogue of Bank Coontbkb,
Dusk#, and other Ofpicr Furniturb for
1 AOS now ready. Now Goods. New Stylos
in Peaks, Tables. Chairs, Book Cases, Cabl1
nets, Ac., Ac., and at matcblsss prices,
as above indicated. Our goods are wellknown
and sold freely in every couatry tbat