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1..I yar \-2Si / % FARM AJrb mOMB. PoroniT Mawb^.—An •zohufft mj* th* beat w»j to apply hen dropping* to a garden ia to aow it on broadoMt and vaka it in, mixed with a few barraU of aahea. But moat of oar people are aomo* what diaappoiated in the nae of thia fer tiliser when need alone. It haa bean a good deal overrated aa a apeoial manure, and jet ia certainly better than any other made upon the farm. PoTiTona. —The Beauty of Hebron did very well with oa last season, and so did the Snowflake. The State Bose, however, is about aa good a potato as can be raised. Unless yon want a few early potatoes fot ryoacJlitchaa garden, we would not advise yen to plant the so- oalled “early” sorts. In fact, except for 1 early summer purposes, yon had better avoid them. Do\not taka to the fancy “early ” varieties rer your general crop.—iVew York Herald. Oowa,—In-coming cows should be well eared for. Some linseed-cake, meal or b,an in their feed will do no harm, but more exciting food should be avoided. A roomy stall or loose box should ba provided, in which the cow may remain at night without being tied. Milking cows will be benefited by a pailful of milk-warm water, with two quarts of bran or middlings stirred in it twice a day. Cold water for drink will greatly reduce the quantity of milk. Waebt.ss,—The great majority of cat tle are infested with grubs of the ox-bot fly. They are known as ‘ 1 warbles, ” and may be found hidden beneath the skin in lumps or swellings along the back on each side of the backbone. If these lamps ere examined a hole will bo seen, and, if the lump is squeezed from the bottom, a fat, white grub may be farced out This is the lame of the bot-fly, which troubles cattle so much in the summe: time. If the grubs were squeezed out of their neeU at this sea son and destroyed, the pest would soon become extinct Ash as roa Faun Tama.—When ap ple or pear trees become diseased from being planted in unfavorable or ill-pro- pared soil, or from lack of food, they are very apt to be attacked by insects, which, if in healthy condition, would probably ba unknown. Certain wssliea, such ' * ' “ “ * ' ah), have been lestroying the ii « tree to healtJ artiee we have, applied a much clean bealtl ram, throw of rwt the st rrmei object walls part e town Bfl tha V thus *®ths tha fc thia « t>ark, the iserU, to s smooth, ly, after a et wet, to the power mi follows mod into , and the i on the ehrw will good ef- when the •owing imi ckly per- condition nsocts are Ithy bark will never hea. Two taration— o tree m ud im Uertrum- writer in xl screws, i hoof to- work or He gives erf arming tor screw an inoh tha split tiths of an t. Some- lie. Now ok with a i opposite a you can ew show, draw the it to split m’t get it from about inoh. times bora good, wall c and i put i walls or inj out. _ _ r enough down to admit of it, ent in a similar manner another seat for screw head im mediately below, and put in a somewhat larger screw, aa tha wall ia thicker be low. Don’t use a bit, for the horse is liable to stamp and break it Uae a gimlet, and when the horse moves let go the gimlet and no harm is done. If tha horse ia too native have his opposite foot held up. After screws have been in a day or two yon can give them one or two mota turns and then they will re- j main tight A neighbor of mine nearly > thirty years ago bought ahorse that had bean foundered, and the walls of his lomou-peal and autmag, and awaa^an Fib PcDDiiro. —Six figs choppad fina after boiling them, three cups of bread crumbs, one-feurth pound of mat ana egg, one-fourth pound of sugar, one lemon, grate the rind; one nutmeg grated; boil three hour* ini tin mold or bag. - Potato Gaum fob Bkbaxfast.— 8a vo from dinuer a soup plate of mashed potatoes, add to it half a saltspoonful of pepper, the aamo of nutmeg, a little salt, and the yelk of an egg; form into small cak^s, put in a buttered baking- pan, brush the top with the white of an egg, and brown in a quick oven. Lyonnais* Trtpb.—About one pound bf- oooked tnpe, out' into small pieces, two table-spoonfuls of butter, one of chopped onion, ons of vinegar, salt and pepper; put the onion and butter in a frytffgflfton, and when the onion tarns yellow put in the tripe ; fcook five min utes ; season with salt, pepper and vine- ff ar - „ • - Chocolate Manob.—Boil one box of gelatine in as little water aa possible till entirely dissolved; let boil qnequart of milk and one quart of cream; sweeten to taste ; flavor with vanimyalso oha cupful of chocolate; lastly pour in the warm gelatine through a strainer. Let all lioil about five minutes, then pbiir in molds. Eat with cream. Oatmeal and Beef Tea.—I find this quite useful to give strength to weak pa tients : Take two table-spoonfuls of flue oatmeal and make it perfectly smooth in two spooufuls of cold water ; pour into this a pint of strong beef tea; boil it eight minutes; keep stirring it all the time; it should be very smooth; if lumpy pass through a sieve. Hnow Puddino.—Pour one-half pint of cold water on a half box of gelatine; after standing ten minutes, pour one- half pint of boiling water, add one cup of sugar, and the whites of four or six eggs; beat three-fourths of an hour; place in the dish used on the table and put on toe to harden. Flavor tha mixt ure with wine or, if preferred, tha juice of two lemons, in which ease add cup of sugar. To be sates with or a rich boiled custard. OmcLirm Roctlee.—Six eggs, six table-spoonfuls powdered auger, juice of one lemon, one-half tha peel grated ; lieat yelks and whites separately ; add to the yolka by degrees the sugar, beat to a froth until thick and smooth, and tha whites until thick enough to out with a knife ; stir together lightly with tit# seaeomng ; pour in a buttered dish, and hake in aqoiok ovan five or six min utes ; tbs dish should ba warmed when it is bnttaredr Htvttud Potatoes.—Take large, fair potatoes ; bake until soft, and out a round piece off the top of each ; scrape out the inside carefully, so aa not to break the akin, and set aside the empty Hors k a true story, which contain* m Paris. Ha i with tha covers , tha inside very smoothly, working into it while hot aome butter and cream, about half a teeapnooful (4 each for every potato; s-aaon with salt and pepper, with a good pinch of grated cheese for each; w»rk it very soft with milk, and put into a i>aiice|ian to beat, stirring to burning , when scalding bet, stir ia well l>eaten egg for six large potatoes; boil np once; fill the ekina with tha mixture, replacing the caps ; return them to the oven fur three minutes ; ar range u|sin a napkin ia a deep dish, the cape u|>]>ernuiat; cover with a fold of the napkin, and eat hot; or you may omit the eggs and use a doc Sis quantity of hoofs were thick and one waa cracked from top to bottom. They kept a clasp on it, but whan tha clasp got loose it would work and bleed, when screws i putin, as I have endeavored to des- twodneh large size wood the hoof grew off all mained ao. I have wished a long time to give this remedy to the pufalk. Hava tried it suooeaafnl- ^yeakxoreigktaf my ewahorteE, sad on my aeighbon’ hones, and oarer failed. Bemember that tha wall of the hool k thkk Mengh to admitaf a mi* the hoof does not work it won’t TAxmiro nr cmiMA. Tha process of tanning in China ia tints described : The skins are put into tubs containing, water, saltpeter and salt. After thirty days they are taken oat, the hair is shaved off, and tha skins are well washed in spring water. Each hide is then cut into three pieces and well steamed, which ia done by paving them several times backward and for ward over a steaming oven. Further, each piece is stretched out separately over a flat board and secured with nails, in order that it may dry gradually and thoroughly in the sun. The smoke of the oven makes the leather black, and, if it ia required to give it a yellow ap pearance, it is rubbed over with water iu which the fruit of the so-called wong- chee has been soaked. Of the offal glue ia made by heating it in pans for twelve hours over a alow fire. The glue ao obtained is poured into rough earthen veeacla, whore it remains three days in order to coagulate. The solid mass is then cut in pieces with sharp knives and carefully laid upon grating-like trays, to dry, wlaoh are placed in open spaces reHombling the Dutch threshing-floors. The time taken in drying varies accord ing to the season of the year; with a northwest wind it will be about five diy* only, but with a southwest wind as much as thirty or forty days will be re quired. The dregs from the offal left in the pans, as well as the hair from the skins, are sold to the farmers for manure. At Oaksha, a village near Canton, there is an extensive eatablishment for the manufacture of leather, which ia wall worth a visit Tha Mongols in wild parts ef tha country make clothes from goat skins, which are excellent and dura ble protectum against cold and wet When the hair k taken from the skins, carpets and mate are made from the latter." a| A well-in own euoher-player named Down married a Mks Trump, which, according to the rules ef the matrimo nial game, turned tha Tramp Down. 8he then mada it ohibe and store pokera, ■ome Interesting features: A train on its way from Salem to Boston at fall (peed. A man occupied a left-hand ■eat near the center of the oar, next to the window. He waa, of course, on that aide of tha car that would ba nearoat to any train that might pass on th£ other track. As he eat there, this speculation, without any particular cause, entered his heed: “Suppose e freight-train should pass, and a piece of lumbar should break away fiom its moorings, and so Ter project at to come tearing along the side of the passenger train. How many passengers between the center and rear end of the car would have presence of mind sufficient to jump out of the way orf reoeiving the warning of the first ool- »iision at the front end of the car ?” It was not'a thought inspired by fear or nervousness, bnt simply one of those speculations that will enter a man’s mind in a moment of idleness, when , he is gliding along in oomfort on a railroad kekr , ’' ' The thought passed away, and tha man took up his newspaper and began to read with a mind at ease. Not mors than five minutes elapsed, and possibly not three, when a thump and a crash were heard which challenged the atten tion of every person in the car, and justi fied the stopping of the train for a mo meat to see what had happened. It ws* found that something from a p*»«r*rg freight train had struck the passenger oar at exactly the point where the man was sitting who had been indulging in this spoculation about that kind of accident I The window where he was sitting was wn ashed in, a hole was stove in the aide of thc car ao that outside daylight eould come in, the iron-work which supports 1110. 8001 at the aide of the oar was wTcnebed irom its place and broken, and apiece of wood perhaps two feet in length, five in chee in breadth, and half an inch thick or more, from the p—ring train, wan hurled into the car either through the window or otherwise, and fell at the man's feel In fact, there waa a wreck right at the point where the was sitting, and hie coat waa covered with splinters and broken glass. But notwithstanding all this, ho did not ex- jieru-nce even a scratch, and ao quickly was the whole thing done that bo was not even conscious of experiencing^ any mors of a shock than any . iher paaaan- ger in the train, or, in fact, of any shock whatever beyond tha noise of the crash. It was really a very strange in view of the thought that entered tha parson's mind e few moments previously. Tha man alluded to waa tha writer of thia paragraph, who waa at first inclined to laugh and joke about the aflkir with the other peesangsra, hot who, on more deliberate thought, was iaelmed to think the circumstanoae wars sulletantiy re markable to justify this little narabve, not by way of fostering superstitious ten denotes, which need no special cultivation in the ho man mind but to furnish one more of those striking coincidences of thought and event that are often ao curi ous, and to show how wonderful may he from death. TWM MJKTMIMCTIOM OF A MOMB. Mr. Dutton Cook tails an amusing story of e men who biased the repre- ^ntetioosof Weber’s “DerFroiachuets” Three or four yean ego when there wee e grip into the potato market there . a- • ----- Ur * d ■iJatakfc* Tfllege in thia . ,T^ : •]-State a lamer named Petare, He raked good crops, paid hie debts, and waa down on rings of all sort Tha price of potatoes kept going np end up, and tha old farmer grow uneasy. He into the village every evening to see how the market stood, and although he never said much it was evidentlhat ha would burst his hoops pretty soon if things continued, on that way. At length the and be was promptly ejected by some medical students, one of whom after ward discovered the grocer's man in hospital. The'man whd hissed Weber died, end his body was given out for dissection. Hector Berlioz, fifteen years later, revived the opera, and, in order to produce greater effect, proposed to have a Teal skeleton in the Wolf e-glen scene. By chance h& met the studefit who had McrmmsTittOMB of ttmku* WOMMM. He Turkish woman k a fanatical conservative. The world in which aha lives k unmoved by tha practical facta of tha nineteenth century which make life a burden to her husband. No Ohi- im pervious to fiercely ideaa of improvement She k The teachings of the Koran have reached her by word of month, and surrounded by a perfect Talmud of tradition, and them teachings shape her view of the outside world. In obedience to them, •be commonly hates foreigners with passion. As she passes you on the street she will pray with audible fervor that your eyea may become blind, or that God may curse you. She is superstitious in the extreme. In sickneee she will use the saliva of an old woman who haa never been divorced, or will inhale tha fetid breath of an odoriferous and saintly dervish, in pref erence to the choicest prescriptions of an educated physician. Bhe is assured that Satan in person teaches Americans their skill in mechanical arts. She be. lieves in charms. She will not live an hour bereft <4 her three-cornered bit of leather which incloses the mystic phrase which is potent to ward off the evil eye. She distrusts Tuesday aa the mother of ill lock, and will not celebrate the birth day anniversaries of her children, nor even record the date, lest some magician use it to oast a spell against the child.— H. O. Dwight, in Harper'* Maamine. turned out the grocer’s shopman f8r hiss ing “ Der Preischuetz.’^ After that un fortunate man had been dissected his skeleton eaa preserved. "V “He’s all right,” said the student “ He fills a case in my consulting-room, Lang on wires and beautifaUy put tot gether. There’s not a bone missing-^ not even one of his phalanges. Only the skull is a little damaged. ” i “I want you to lend him to me. There is a part he can play to perfection at the opera." “I don’t understand.” —“Xou will shortly.* “ Un teoret de comedie t -Well, 111 send yon the skeleton.” In a box, corded and locked, the poor shopman’s bones reached the opera- honae. “ You see this young man ?” said Ber lioz to the pyoperty-maater. * “ He is about to make his first appearance upon the stage. His costume will be very simple. You will provide him with an iron rod, to be secured to his back, so that he may bear himself as stiffly aa M. Pepite when he is about to pirouette. Afterward you will place e torch in his right hand.” *“ I understand, sir." “ Yon will make a hole in the grocer’s skull Don’t be afraid; nothing will come oat; it is as empty now as ever it was. This is the skull Caspar’s sword will pierce in the incantation scene. He will hold it aloft, and the blue fire will fizz all around it” — “I understand, znv’’ - Thus at every representation of “ Der Freiscbnetz” upon the stage at tha Grand Opera, at tha moment of Zamiel’a terrible cry, “ Me voile I’’ the tempest raged, the lightning flashed, a tree was riven by a thunderbolt all in strict ac cordance with tha direction of the com poser, and there appeared the skeleton of the man who had hissed Weber's music in that very scene, and waving wkrdly in the air a flaming torch. Tee hero of the gre^t march from Ca bal to Candehnr k Sir Frederick Sleigh Roberta. If that feat had bean par formed in America the hero would have been called Bob Sled before he could runner way. FniBEiMunp supplies tha place at ev erything to those who know how to make the right uae of tt; it makes your pres pet i ty mors happy, yowr adversity TMM TXMM SAD COMM dimax came. . Qua evening the old man and his son had a warm corner in a .grocery when a citizen entered with a newspaper in his hand and said; k “ His New York daily says, that tha price of potatoes is certain to Advance again before the week is out.” “ What!” exclaimed Peters, “another advance in ’taters?” “Yes, the Lord only knows what is to become of the poor if this potato ring isn’t bursted.” .’"17 The farmer arose, buttoned his old white overcoat clear to his chin, brought his fist down hard on tha cheese-box, and sternly said: “The time has come! Fve stood it —and stood it long aa I can, and .now I’m.going to act! George we’ll go home aiuyget ready to throw fifty-six bushels of peachblows on the market to-morrow, and bust that wicked ring all to thunder I” — Wall Street Newt. • OCCUPATION! OONK. Italy is losing ground. A great por tion of the Italian macaroni used in this country is mads in St. Louis. Little negro boys in thia city almost monopo lize the hand organ. Tha greater num ber of Italian opera singers are Ameri cans, who are educated abroad and given queer name* to satisfy the cultured hear ers. Louisiana cotton seed oil comes back very sweet in bottles from sunny Italy. American sculptors chisel moat in Rome.—AVtr Orleans Picayune. Workingmen. Before you begin your heavy spring work after a winter of relaxation,-your system needs cleansing and strenffthening to prevent an attack of Ague, Bilious or Spring Fever, or some other Spring sick new* that will unfit you for a season's work. You will save time, much sick new* and great expense if you will un one bottle of Hop Bitters in your family this month. Don’t wait.—Burlington Hawkeye. “ Noteino,” remarhs tha Philadel phia AVm'a, “ ao takee tha conceit out of the average man aa to order his paper discontinued, and then aee the editor going along and getting rich without him.” [Moedovt rWi*. i Baflsle Ce. Herald.] leMeae ef the First Settlers. Mr. W. H. H. Amidon.one of the first settlers in the town of Gilman town, Wm and <ny of the most industrious and hard working men in the countv, has been very severely troubled with rheumatic pains during the peel few years, ao much at times, that he was disabled from per forming manual labor. Learniag of b« wonderful cures effected by the use of 8c. Jacobs Oil he procured a few bottles and experienced immediate relief. Many others of our acquaintances have used it and express themselves as highly grati fied with the relief U haa affbrdeu them. This king of medicines can be bought everywbere : BINQCLAB HAMIT. .. The Portland Prt*s furnishes this remarkable incident illustrative ot a pa- collar habit of the gentler sex : “ When Dr. Twitchell, of Fairfield, waa about to extract a tooth from a lady’s jaw, ha saw what ha thought waa a silver tube, and ha asked what its uae waa. Bhe re plied, ’That k not a tube; it kpina. Wnen I pick up a pin I pat it into my mouth.’ The doctor asked what she did when aho ate and slept. ' I never re move one except to use it, ’ she answered. To the doctor’s astonishment, he found seventeen pins by the side of her undei jaw.” cough ar, the Thu most obstinate sold or •Ids to ('ouaaen a Hotey *4 Tar, remedy in the world fur coughs, colds and all diseases of the throat and lungs. Moreover it is only 50c. a bottle, and k therefore within reach of all. For sate by all dramrista. Tommy waa right ia the middle of tha bed, and Harry didn’t have hall room enough. Tom’s mother anal: “Why don’t you move over T You’ve taken up ell the room. Tummy f* And lorn plied i “ Wall, if I’ve got the Tt Harry got both aides F* SUmtMHTXn mbwmm. Mias Goodman talk how the Finglkh of Mercy observed a Bomiah chaplain, for soma mouths, to pass Ita* in tending a pot lamb, which ha led-about by a scarlet string; and how in tha early morning ha might be seen gathering the rose-haves with the dew yet upon them, as a breakfast for the gentle ooreature. They were quite concerned, one morning, at per ceiving the priest about to take his walk unaccompanied by his favorite, and pa—ed, in haste, aoroaa the hill to in quire for it; to their great grief he in formed them that the laqib was killed. They waited for the particulars of his untimely 'fate, concluding the savage dogs to be guilty; but the most un ro man tie father went on to say, “I found it in excellent condition; feeding an animal on rose leaves certainly improves the meat.” “ Think,” says Dr. Boyd, of St Andrews, “of the great author, walking in the summer fields, and say ing to his wife, as he looked at the frisky lambs, that they seemed to be^so innocent and happy, he did not wonder that in all ages the lamb had been taken as an emblem of happiness and inno cence. Think of, the revulsion in his mind when the thoughtful lady replied, ’-after soma reflection, ’Yes, lamb k very nice, especially with mint sauce I’ ” - A GENTLEMAN who WES about to ry a beautiful widow of 80 almost quar reled with her about tha church in wh’ch they should have the ceremony performed. Tha lady became some what indignant, and said: “ I have al ways been married in the Presbyterian church, and I tell you I always shall be.” k GOOD FAMILY RE1DT! ■TRIOTLY FURS What The Doctors Bayl . rLSTCEES, M I I—gjil. ril SB A.e JOBESOS — - ■ -A — - -AIAm'oM to M gvtcreosav it mas ee imal n eeaTAiss so eeiue A m seea 4. R. HARRIS A CO . cvMci -eart. e. FOR SALE BY ALL MUMIBTl Wai , A»rr,'W. V ’O ean toy tamOM and JlKmem at wholwal* rnewa of tha Flaiiabt ('*aa:*>ia tap Haessss ti'w* <.'**.. Kfkhart, bid. MuppaS with pfivUag• of axantirfiMc before paung. Kaiiii-w-aed Oak iMotlter laaai llaruvM, IZ&. fiiugle Harnaaa.S8 to r»i. Piaifunu Hfrtig IfcafvW*. #7i.aW. Crta- lugoe au*J pntc-;»«t arut ' IsDMBsnos, CyapafMM, %aA all frw«M of pnaral SeMUty raiiavad by lating MKsaMAa'iPxrronuD baa* Tuaic, Iba only preparauoa of baaf oonUlning ite anUra nutntioos prupartiaa. It uae, 'oroa-gaorraUng and lifi arUaa; ia kavalEabla in ail ■ Itetbar tba raaolt of irauon. ovarwurk, m I if reaulhng from pnluwiary wall. Haaard A Oa. prognatora. Na» York. oraupiainU, Oka- Df BULL’S COUGH SYRUP HMJOHT>B DIMHMAH AND ICM WATHJL The idea has recently been advanced that Bright’s disease k attributable to the immoderate uae of ice water and oold drinks, the fact being cited that the people of thia country use 90 per cent, more ice in their drinks than the people of any other country, the inhabitants of Greenland not excepted, and that we have 75 per cent more of Bright’s dis ease* The wine-drinking countries of Europe ere said to be comparatively free from the malady, while in America the progress of the disease, it k asserted, has kept pace with the increased tam sumption of ice. - •' A little girl, who applied to Queen Victoria for her autograph, received the billowing; “For of such k the kingdom el [Cincinnati Irish Citizen.] Mr. John Miller, of 64 West Fifth street, tells us that he was cured by the use of Bt Jacobs Oil of a complicated cose of rheumatism of ten years standing. Said a very good old man: “ Borne folk are always complaining about the weather, but I am vary thankful when I wake up in the morning and find any weather at alL” We may smile at the simplicity of the old mao, bat still his language indicates a spirit that con tributes much to a calm and peaceful life. Ilk wiser and better to cultivate that than to be continually complain of things as they ar* A Good Housewife. The good hoilaewife, when sheis her house its spring renovsting, shout bear in mind tnfit the dear inmates of her house are more precious than many houses, and that their systems need cleansing by purifying the blood, regu lating the stomach ana bowels to prevent and cure the diseases arising from spring malaria and miasma, and she mnst Know that there is nothing that will do it so perfectly and surely as Hop Bitters, the purest and best of medicines.—Concord N. H. Patriot. Thebe is s great difference between what an ambitions man is and what he aspires to be—as there is also between what a vain man R»inW # himself and what he k. l> Mi ml Straw*. U UkaWanisr’s Invalids who hsve lost but are recovering vital stamina, declare in grateful terms their ppreciation of the merits as a tonic of Hoe- tetter’s Stomach Fitters. Not only doee it impart strength to the weak, it correct* an irregular acid state of the stomach, make* the bowels aet at proper intervals, gives esse to those who suffer from rhenmatie and kid ney trouble*, and conquer* as well a* pre vent* fever and ague. For sale by all Drnggisk and Dealer* ••a 1 Cl Y wRh vam votirv W. ic-T; W ■ • n**a* m *» eTtitti*- rWRti aw4 ■mRlfl.IS mo tis ft am ew*. •-.«*« a ».**>. ! •*'*“ MOJU THAN 100 STtLtS Of TWM MASON & OR3-A.NS «a U iMa* w«**7 *wro Mi . HBCL 122. kmla* tea *a*lK* M um ms H*W. MM WStoWS MM*M* <IA«W •** • T»« r *«- •M*Mr ew lb* foil parti tt by« >■*», ■mmw, Maw mi iiiaMi men* u l Mcaiar ■am (■Mrail* ran •ML SMimai rubiaau* c* . au*.**. An Open Secret. The fact Is well understood that the MEXICAN MUS TANG LINIMENT h by far the best external known for man or beast The reason why becomes an “open secret” when wo explain that “ Mustang ” penetrates skin, flesh and muscle to the very bone, removing all disease and soreness. No other lini ment does this, hence none other is so largely used- or does such world I WHAT REMAN REMEDY RHEUMATISM, I NEURAL6IA, SCIATICA, LUMBAGO, BACKACHE, , ed ■BHHk 80RENE8B OF TU CHEST, [SORE THROAT, QUINSY, SWELLINGS SPRAINS, ,. FROSTED FEET AM9 EARS, ^ ^5 HEADACHE, ▲Jr» 111 OTIS PUIS ORANGF H. W. Howatrs, Wwb- VnHliqC ll i f to n(D . C .,fo r mi«p£ d-tcriptiT, pamphUi. RAW FURS.: fcrk,^*f h {h»t ruli pric-t f"i E. *»i r •am 0 i and other Kara. • M Spring , Otter, fthtpmrnU aoltciMd. Clawm*, St., K*w Wo rr«p*ra*t»» *■ mrth«*a*l« St. JbOpmOam.mra ick>. tiaru wd caair ExUreni Bn—dr- A trial mull* hat thn *—prnmtralr liUttag m«*7 * ■Pwnamdmmg nan daSnrtng with palnnaa h*»» nhmp *■* *•**•*’• *—**• Mn nUt— Mucnoit I* 1UTE* LAMCteiS. «U n All MMtiSTS M ItALIX IS titaiML A. VOQEUER A CO. KfA, V.B.A. FAMILY cash AGENT* WANTED FOB THE P HISTORYwiu WORLD «# —mi^md lailaeag «TTi—jm3 thn rtnnmd ail nf thn Snni nad Samna Im—on, tha Rond’s Kxtreot ■ »*• Catarrh.— Ourewm ALL DSUOOVn. $ 77 TftBhMttg HOPJOTTERS? hop*, arrur. wandbame, UANDEIJON. A«» tm rramv **• Eorr Mb»i> .LtganAI via* aFaiA «ra*a airraas. THEY CUKE aa nm—•••( th*s«*■•«*. a*—t*. at—4. irt^pmai««y« Mftld' “^ •ioooTn cold. Will ha paid far a cam lh^ triu aot mw. ar f a, “/ttla^impaia ar tajmmm Ank rear draeeM far WNma c»4 try them hdan r— ntor* Yak* — atker. Di-l t. aa ahmta .am af < i roa Ciacrua • M-tA.I i^m.*OT*T.[*iha [ RISTAOORO’Sli/arHSSS I MM m Ladr m m. amdh,Dr—. 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