The people. (Barnwell C.H., S.C.) 1877-1884, April 07, 1881, Image 4

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sre- ^ • “ *•* * FARM Aim at lima am gna kadi b*> ommm Umj oUim ttukl th« waada an no* duly killad but tha gnm growl battar. Qtrmcm—Tha qninoe ia oonaidarad •dUq)tod to moist nook and day land, yet m ban aeon axoallent eropa on Ugbt, sandy soil Would transplant in ■peine and at present plant only the Orange variety. A few more yean’ ex iMiitebw may prove that some of the newer varieties—Rea’s Mammoth, Champion, or some Other—are more pro* dilative and ooneeqnently more profit able.—American Rural Home. • Can or Bamnr.—It k necessary, where sheep take much dry food in win ter, that they should have water to keep them healthy, and there are farmers who believe that the aheap are not the beet judges for themselves when they do not take kindly to water, and that the mere dry food breeds disease. Farmers who wish to compel their sheep to drink are need in manyoaeaa to giving them salt and then offering them water. Fan Aim Gbowth.—In oar various experiments on fattening oxen, Bays an iBngHah farmer, we estimated that about twelve or thirteen pounds of dry food wee consumed to produce one pound of increase. In the experiments earned on many yean ago at Woburn, the follow ing quantities of food were consumed to produce 600 pounds increase in a fat tening ox: One and three-fourths tons of clover hay, sixteen hundred weight of corn or oake, and five tons of swedes— the sum of these would be about equal in weight to three and a half tons of hay. —2Vm* York Harold. BssraxaT Outrun Madi East.— It is a source of constant regret with farmers that small fruits require so much oar* and attention, and that, too, in the eeason when they are hardeet at Work at something else. Field work must be done at all events, and so the "berry patch” straggles ou single- handed with weeds and graee till it sub mits to the merits'^ sward. Home years ago, coming into possession of a patch of black-cap raspberries that had received the usual shiftless culture, I treated them in the following way : Af ter carefully plowing and hoeing them, I covered the (round with a heavy layer of etrawy manure, and the work wsa done, not only for that year, but for the two yean following, only renewing the mulch each spring. Only a few etng- giing Panada t hist lea will ever grow through anoh a mulch; tha aofl k al ways neb and motet, aad the berries can sak no better treatment. Since tha* time I have tried the earns plan without removing the sod, and find that the reeuM k quite as satisfactory. Lute ee It k In the isacoc now, any raspberry plot can be reclaimed by a liberal ap plication from the horse manure pile. Farmers, try it, and you will not need to complain that berrim enst more than they are worth.a, in Now York THduna Oou IfiAi. in> Beau.—Mr. J. H. So perm ten dc tit of the College Hanover, N. H., reports expert In feeding oowe, giving full de tads of weights of each kind of feed, of milk and batter yield, and the weights of the animals at the beginning and end of each period. In summing up be says : " Meal will make more milk than I no longer hesitate to say. The in the butter product ia remark- in changing from meal to bran there was a loat of 17.7 per cent, in the hatter-producing aapemty of milk ; hi changing from bran to meal there was a gain in the butter-producing capacity of milk of 21.8 per cent. There is a sub stantial agreement in the two changes, for It k a matter of experimental ob serration that a good cow will make a greater change in change of food than a poor cow." Mr. Sanborn found the taste with the cream gauge under change of food at variance with the actual product of butter. "The results in weighing tha cow form an ex cep bon to previous experiments, bran and middlings keep ing weight better than meal in this ex periment. Is it a chance result, or k it due to well-defined oanaee T I will not dkouse it, bat observe that it was not at the mason of the year when a cow needs oarbonaoeoas food to maintain an imal heat; also, the gram of oar pasture was browned, and in different condition from Jane gram or properly cut hay.” Oooxraa.—Two cups and a half of sugar, two oops of butter, four tggs, half a teaspoonful of saleratus, caraway seed if you please, flour to roll thin. Out round. Oo&n Buoxwhxat Cakes.—If any cakes are left from breakfast, soak them in warn water or milk, rub them fine and put with toe fresh batter. It is as vouch an improvement as it is a saving. Bxbad rsoM Grown Whxat.—Add tsvaral potatoes to the bread—three to sack loaf, boiled and mashed fine. It reetoree the starch and makm axoallent bread. , Soda CmAOXxaa. —Fourteen teacups of sifted door, half soup each of batter and lard, two cups of milk or water, two teeapoonfh of cream of tartar and ooa of soda. Mix, do not pound, roll tftfcL out into stputiTN, pnojc witn * tort mi Gbo* Doocunrurs.—Sevan ooffee-cup- fnk of light bread dough (it should be ■pimgert with milk). Into it mix on* and one-half capfuls of malted aborkn i of soger and a teaepooufui of roll out an inch thkk and out into rounds. Let rim again and bake in a moderate oven—a heat that - will not form a hard crust at top or Them are very aide with coffee of When stale, split them, toaet them slightly, butter and eat at onoe. Potato Salad.—Thin sliom of cold boiled potatoes, thin aliom of hard- boiled eggs, minced pickled onion. Into a salad dish put a layer of potatoes, cover with the eggs and strew over a few bits of the onion. This alternate until •U'/arq tu. Make a dressing in tha pro portion of one table-spoonful of vinegar to three of salad oil, one teaspoonful of salt to one-third teaspoonful of pep per and the same quantity of made mus tard. Mix thoroughly and pour over, Let stand half an hour before eating. Pottxd Mxats.—It sometimes hap pens from unforeseen circumstances that large quantities of cooked meats remain on hand. How to preserve them k the question many ladies are unable to an swer. Pot them. Out tbs meat from the bones, chop fins, in fact, it should be rubbed to a paste, season highly With cayenne, salt, cloves or any spice you like, moisten with melted butter, wine, vinegar, cider, or Worcestershire mace, according to the kind of meat, and pack into small stone jars. Cover the top with half an inch of melted butter and keep in a cool place. It will keep Weeks and k wry nice for lunch or ts* EXIT KXLICX. Tbs low prices which such articles bring nowadays, compared with what was cheerfully paid tor them forty or fifty years ago, is, we think, a sign that public taste is improving. For in stance, a tooth of Hir Isaac Newton was sold in 1818 for the sum of £730. Doubt less tlus is small compared with the £.10,000 which the King of Pegu offered tho Puritignuso as the ransom of Bud dha’s tooth, now in the Temple of Adam’s Peak in Ceylon. But the one hit of dentine ia of much the same value us the other, for, though an Owen can reproduce a mastodon or a megatherium from a tingle tooth, U>e most learned amateur would fail to discover anything to distinguish a molar of the author of the " Principia ’* from that extracted from the jaw of the veriest clodhopper (hat ever ate tiacou. The hat worn by N»]«4eon L at the l>attleof Eytau was •old in 1835 for 1,920 franca, although at <i recent a-vle numerou* relics of the Emperor brought mere trifiea., The ivory arm-chair pn'sented to Gostevas Atlnlphtu by the otxirqnioua city of I.itlwck ass sold m 1325 tot 58,000 Hi mis, while the eoat wnrr by Charles XII at the >>attle of Pu.ti wa fetched, •t a ■sic the *amc year, the enormous •mu of 501,UN) franca. The two )>eua employed in signing the Treaty of Amiens were •>«> dis|swed of in that y<ar of unwisdom for £.*i00. A a tg Is longing to Sterne brought 200 giAiucaa, though one which formerly covensl the head of Kant not aasuward by his countrymen at ihan the same on rater <4 franca Vol taire's cane realised at an auction 000 franca, and his ptnchlwwk watch nearly half as much. The Parisian cancatunst, it la true, still n-|>reaeuta the English man chipping the Parthenon or whittling the hark of the tree under which some famous (x rwon eat or npon which aome infamous one was hanged. But such an Englishman la now a relic-hunter of a very humble order. Even tha little cabinets of locks of hair, which were at one time so fashionable, seem to have disappeared, and, with the exception of the Aaliuiolcan and a few other Old World colIcctitMis, public museums are rapidly getting rid of much of the rub bish which once incumbered them.— London .Standard. THr COyTICfTTKD H FHD BOT. Iii n flowery dell a herd boy kept his sheep ; and liecanse his heart was joy ous he Kang so loudly that the surround- tug hills echoed liack his song. One morning the King, who was out on a hunting expedition, spoke to him and •aid : " Why are you so happy, d/ear lit tle one ? ” " Why ahall I not be 7” he answered; “ our King is not happier than L” " Indeed,” said the King, " tall me of your great iwesessions. ” The lad answered, " The sun in the bright blue sky shines as brightly upon uie os upon the King. The flowers on the mountain and the grass in the valley grow and bloom to gladden my sight as well as his. I would not take 100,000 thalers for my 1 ands; my eyee are of more value than all the precious stones in the world ; I have food and clothing, too. Am I not, therefore, as rich as the King?” “ You are right," said the King, with i laugh, " but your greatest pleasure k a contented heart; keep it so, and you will always be happy."—Prom the Ger man. — SATAN. If the personality of Satan be not a vital principla of yoar religian, I do not know what is. There k only one dogma higher. You think it k safe, and I dare say it u fashionable, to fall into this lax and really thoughtless discrimination I >etween what k and what k no* tdtie believed. It is notgood taste tolwIievN in the devil Give me a single argu ment against his personality which k not applicable to the personality of the Dqity. Will you give that up; and, M to, where are you? Now, mark me^ you and I ara young men—yea are a vary young man. This k tha year of graoa 188a It thasa looaa thoughts, which you have heedlessly taken ap, prevail in this oountiy (or a generation or so—flvw-end-twenty or thirty years- we may mast together aprii, and I shall have to eanetnae yon tha* then k a <M*- M »«*■**,” Jhrf V rourcMMAN Arm ommutm. An inabriatad policeman mistook ttw obalkk, a faw nights ago, for a disordar- player in a red ulster, and, go- up to tha monolith, arrested ifc Tha ibe a* the hew of the stone added uoer- tainty to tha polioea&an's footing, and, as ha swayed around, it seemed to him that while he was aa firm aa a rook his pris oner was not only drunk and disorderly, but was trying to escape. Than, with a presence of mind always present, drank or sober, he drew oat his olab and be gan to make his mark alongside of the aacteirf Egyptian hieroglyphics. Sav ing'worked himself into a secure posi tion where ha no longer slipped,-he in cluded that ha had brought his prisoner. terms. Then he determined lo get the necessary pedigree for the polio# records: V. , " Whnt is yer name?” "Thothmea Obeliakis.” " Where were you bom ?" - "On.” _ "On what?” ^ " On Egyptian soil.** " Whar, ye imperent devil F* “ H<*)ifipf»lix ** " &wie of yer fnrrin jabber to me. 1 hate furriners. Mind yez, yer in New Yawk now, the capitule of the Irish re public. Now, how old are yon ?’* “Throe thousand five hundred and aighty years." "Now I know yer drunk. Married or •ingle?” “Fve got a sister." " Wall, I don’t oare if you have fifty. Have you a woife and family?” " There were forty in the family.** " An’ d’ye mane to say yer the dad dy of ’em all ? Be jabbers, if you don’t answer me question I'll break yer skull” " You refer to my pyramidion, I sup. pose K " None of yer fnrrin talk, I tould ye. Now tell me ii you are married ?’’ " I am wedded to solitnde.” " Ye belong to a quare family. Yer name is Tommies O’Bliakss, aud yer woifn’s name is Hally Tude. Be gorra, I bclaiva you’re a crooked man. Now, what's yer occupation?" “ A policeman. I'va been out on poet for 3,000 yean." . " Are ye ■ Tammany man K ** I don't understand. ** “ Whose yer backer ? Who got yeou the force F* ** Pharaoh.” " The <*>e in> Ana street ? Be gorra, many of us have the same influence. Do you get a sternly stake? You do? This you must be a Captain. No wonder you re tough," aad, divuuag that he had made s mistake, tha policeman ran away as fast as his legs would take him, while the obelisk took another nap of 1,000 years."—JVmt Fork AW A window mamoair. If you have not an abundance ef sun •hilie you cannot hop# far many bloa- wTaa A few plants will bloom what baafc from the window ; but tropes, geraniums, boavardiaa, require abundanoe of sunshine. If you hava aa abundance at begs, you will know that your pleat k ailing. Doctor your plants, and lioa will generally van Red spiders appear only where the s too dry. Dust aad dirt on the leaves, cloaiag the pores, also ia- ducas disease aad sails ia the scavenger*. Mildew, and consequent dropping off of the leavaa, radicates a fake system of wstrnag, ia connection with a low state of atmosphere. Great mis takes ara made in watering. It see ms nearly impossi ble to induce boom plant-lovers trom try ing to grow all their plants m- a marsh. Few pleats can endure atar illag in a setl constantly drenched, or ia sanoera of water. Lima damage k dona by drought than by ovarwateriag. A good rule k to thoroughly drench the sell onoe in two days, using water but little warmer than tha temperature of tha room. Geraniums especially revolt from super fluous water. Agendums and helio tropes jttet aa decidedly protest against being in tha least dried. The diffionlty in damping-off and mildew ara also fos tered by tha sxoeedingly-rioh soil some times used. It should be remembered that a plant or tree can be made dya- poptio. " That’s played out," said a tramp to a HI Louis lady. " Don’t give me none of your games. You can raise a couple of dollars anywhere. It's not much to you, but I’m bound to have it, for I’m out of meat.” " Poor fellow,” aaid the lady, "I’m sorry for you; stay here while I see if I can get you the money.” She turned away and .went through a middle room into tho kitchen, with the stranger following her. In a oomer of the kitchen sat her sewing-machine, and sha fumbled around in tha drawer after the money with the man watching her closely. . She did not find the money, but in tha back of the drawer she found her husband’s derringer, which carried a forty-two caliber cartridge. She cocked il “Wbat’a thatF’ he said. "Oh, nothing,” said tha lady, aa she thrust tbs derringer under his nose, “Only my pistol k loaded, and your* is not This might go off. Hadn’t you better go instead?" “ I balieve—that is to say I know—yon are about right Hold it down and take your finger off the trigger. I’m a leaving. ” He backed out at the house, stumbled down the steps and ran into a neighboring alley— the last that has aver been seen of him. A Michhuh man has invented a pro- by which Governors’ messages may be ip*Aa from sawdust It won’t da What k wanted k an invention for mak ing sawdust or something else of som- pnrstive vahM ant at —Bottom PotL mow ro In vary cold weather most people have aenae enough < to build good Area and wear their thickest cloth ing ; few, however, seem to know tha* physical warmth k created ia the body itself, and all the fires or clothing can do k to prevent the warmth being seised too rapidly by the surrounding air. The beet preparation for a comfortable day in very cold weather k to eat a generous breakfast, in which there shall ba plenty of meat There k far more warmth in an ounce of cold meat than fliere is in a to thousands of people the principal feat Tit* of the morning meal. A good appe- ite is necessary to a full breakfast, and it generally can be had by a five-minute walk but of doors or a few minutes of light exercise in a fresh-aired room—ex ercise such ae the most delicate woman or child can inaulge in without injury. Physical cleanliness, making free per spiration passible, k absolutely ueces-' sary to comfort in cold weather, aid it can be attained, in spite of freezing cold bath rooms, by people who care enough (or it to take extra trouble with a small quantity of water in a small room. A glam of ardent liquor is a wretched pre ventive of oold. It will quicken the cir culation for a few momenta and dimin ish it for an hoar after. The balk in bread of a glam of beer is more warming than tha liqoar, and only costs a quarter as much; the same comparison may ba ( made between spirits and meat It is almost impossible for » person who sits indoors all day to remain warm, but a faw minutes out of doors, just long enough to have the system affected enough by the oold to rouse its powen of resistance, will insure a oomfortabU day thereafter if the house is fairly tight It will be noticed that the lady who does her own marketing and the man who walks from his house to his place of buiunces are the list ib com plain of the oold. If the above sugges tions are acted upon and supplemented by an ample midday meal, no matter bow plain, tha weather’s terrors will soon be forgotten.—iVsis York Herald. TrUM l.tH CA HEKTM. Oath at, a large village of arfiaana, aliont six days’ journey due east from Smyrna, is the headquarters of tha man ufacture <£ the carpets known fur gener ations as "Turkey carpets.” The l«tteroe are Turkish, or, rather, Arabeaqur. A carps* between seven and eight yards long will em ploy sight women at coos, working side Ly aide. Their wages are about eight pmotree a weak, whieh, it k ealca- tated. comes to about 48 cents for each yard at carpet woven. Tho wool used comos trom tha villages round about, and k fought for about a half-penny a pound in its uncleansd state. When washed and htearhad it loam at least one-third of its weight. The foundation at tha carpet is ma<U at an inferior wont, and the whole material of the fabne may coal about 87 cento a yard. This ADAMt MMLOW. One at the moat successful of the oommanders of tha Amarkan navy dur- aud bruises, can he bought ta sample bot- rneai d<«a not include the dyeing, which is manage.) by tbs men, and hwrna tbs I (** ■?*•> but it is chief item of coat The colors are pro duced for tbs must part with madder, cochineal aa d indteo. A Tvvnaa conscience k an estimable blessing ; that is, a conscience not only quick to discern what is evil, but in stantly to shun it, as tbs eyelid closes it self against tbs mute. inf tha Revolution was Commodore Samuel Tucker, of Marblehead. Hk biographer, with pardonable pride in hk hero, claims that ha ** took more prises, fought more sea-fights, and gain#4 more victories than, with few exceptions, any naval hero of tha age.” tA The simple manners that then pre vailed in Marblehead are illustrated by an anecdote of the way Mr. Tucker’s commission as Oaptain was presented to 1.2 —> . TX-* .n ■ a%,-i i ~ -'■.iT w - - ' mm. jiff wise mjfjpjnrr^ wwtt tmt* clay io his yard, with his sleeves rolled up, and a tarpaulin hat slouching over lus 'Tace. Suddenly an officer rode up to the gate and halted, looking as if he had made a mistake. "I aay, fellow,” he shouted, some what roughly, to tha woodohopper, "I wish you would tell me if the Hon. Samuel Tucker lives about here.” “ "Honorable 1 Honorable 1” answered Tucker; " there is not a man of that name in Marblehead. He must be one of the family of Tuckers in Salem. I am the only Samuel Tucker there is here.” Something about the young mMi sug gested to the officer that the commission which he bore, appointing Samuel Tucker a Captain in the American navy, belonged to the wood-chopper. He handed it to him, and returned- to Cambridge. — ■ - i ' Ini i Capti Tucker always obeyed orders to the letter. He was ordered to the Bos ton, which ship was assigned to carry John Adams ss envoy to France. One day, the Boeton, falling in with an armed merchantman, engaged her. Mr. Adams, seizing a musket, took his place among the marines, and, when Oapt Tucker ordered him to go below, continued at hk post . " Mr. Adams,” said the resolute Cap tain, laying hold of the Minister and forcing him away, “ I am commanded by the Coptinental Congress to deliver you safe in France, and you, must go down below, sir I ” Mr. Adams obeyed, and left the deck. Werklngmen. Before you begin your heavy aping work after a winter of relaxation, youi system needs cleansing and strengthening to prevent an attack of Ague, Bilious or Spring Fever, or some other Spring sick ness that will unfit you fur a season’s work. You will save time, much sick ness and great expense if you will use one bottle of Hop Bitters in your fsmily this month. Don’t wait.—Burlington Hawkeye. Tub young milkman and hk girl stood Iwfore the Justice of the Peace. " You take *)»» milk—ahem I—ibis man fur butter of for worse ? " the mighty man of the law inquired. The girl said it never a curd to her before, but she siq. she would if that was the only whev. Wk see among oar exchangee a notice of a very important matu-r to the public, and give it to our ruetlere, believing they • ill appreciate tin- item. Hnuasens’ Lightning Liniment, the world-renowned cure for rbenaistism, lan lame Imek, ■prams jro per Lmght in .W. hottlee, as they contain nearly three times aa mnch as 25c. use Lightning Liniment deserves a tnal. Fur sale by all druggists. " Mrmc hath charms to soothe the ■arage breast,” as the man said when be put a brass bend around the neck of his bull-dug. [Aultboro Chronicle.] Carry the Xewa. , Mr. John Klrensperger, manufactur ing Jeweler of North Attleboro, Masa, lately communicated to us the follow ing: I suffered so much with pain« in mv arm, that At Ttmea 1 was complatalj helpless. I used that incomparable rem edy, St Jacob* Oil, and was completely cu red as if by magic. ijMosrnoa, i ami all forms of' la kins Mananas sl only preperetioo of DumUoas propartMa. Hi was hogging tha corner lamp-poet with an ardor that only ram ootild hare produced. In vain were the efforts of hk devoted wife to make him relax that grip. Finally hk feet slid out from un der liim, he rolled over the curlietone and disappeared behind the broken bore of the sewer-trap. She whom he -hod swam to love and cherish saw him sink out at sight, and sadly murmured, as ahe passed on : " Another landmark gone."—Brooklyn Eagle. [Detroit Post and Tribune.] I have a little girl, raid Mr. Henry Dole, of this city, in a conversation, who was troubled with a severe lameness in her legs, pronounced by some Erysipelas, by outers Rheumatism. I had tried several remedies without effect, when I was induced to apply St. Jacobs Oil, and I am happy to say that the use of but one bottle cured her, and sue know able to go to school again. Suocxas seems to be that which forms the distinction between confidence and ecmoril Nelson, when young, was piqued a* not being noticed in a certain paragraph of the newspapers which de tailed an action wherein he had assisted. " Bat never mind,” said he, " I will one day have a gazette of my own." A Good Housewife. t The good boaaewife, when the is giving her house its spring renovating, should bear in mind that the dear inmatee of her house are more precious than many houses, aad that their systems need cleanring by purifying the blood, regu lating tha stomach and bowels to prevent and care-die diseases arising from wring malaria and mi*"**, and ahe mast know that there k nothing that will do it so perfectly and sorely at Hop Bitten, the iorest and best of medicines.—Concord H. Patriot. Baa frauds meoeed from (ha ap parent candor, the open confidence, and the fall blaze of ingenuousness that an thrown around them. The slightest mystery would excite suspicion and ruin all Booh strata gems may be compared to tha stare—they an dweoverad by and hidden oolv bw Ught prestrsUDo (totality rWisvwl by oiuau User Tome, tbs at conUinms its euDr* It ooateiM bluod-msk- ad llf»«n«l>iniii| jirup- IS UlTslusbtolB all snf—btod eoaditioas, •hettisr U» rasall of sthMsDoo, nervous uruo- Intioo. overwork, or scuts dmsM. porticuWly If rwultina from pulmonary ocmplauiU, Cat- wall, Bsrnsff A On, propriston. Now lark. " Win,’’ said a wag to hk better half, one day, who was holding a squall ing, kickiiig yonngator, " that child k bound to moke a noise in the world.” " Yes, and hk mark, too,” said the wife, who hod just received a deep scratch upon tho face from the juvenile's digita. DF BULLS COUGH SYRUP asm® Bitters Invalids who have loot but ara recovering vital stamina, declare ia grateful terms their appreciation of the merits ns s teak of lion- tetter's Stomach Bitten. Not only does it import strength to tho weak, it corrects aa irregular acid state of tho stomach, mokes the bowels act at proper intermk, gives nans to thane who safer from rhoamntie sad kidney troubles, and conquers as well ns •▼rata ferai aad ague. Par ante by all Drugrisu aad Dealer* ■—raaPy - lioStmttmfassftiSR a am amt emocMM. •" A Detroit groom- took a new clerk, and among other things he oeatiooed him to keep a bright look-out and aea that none of the goods at tha front door were stolen. One evening when the grocer returned from supper he thought he would give the clerk a fright, and he-|s crept softly up and took twelve dressed chickens from a backet and earned them around to the back door and hung them ou a hook. When the chickens were mused the clerk was given a bad soare by being informed that he must nay for them After-ft while the giot^er decided that the joke had Ikiph earned far enough, and he went out to hring in the chick ens. They had flowu away. While he was soaring the clerk same one had come through the alley and provided himself with fowl to last all the week. IX TKE BANKS OF THE PRESS. a ' ’ Prof. Swing says, in tho Chicago Alli ance: “As the newspaper press has prospered, so in proportion have the poet, the novelist and the dramatist dia«J amai im fault mm A- ■LvV'* J A G ' appeared. In the commencement of thk century the Ikt of authors, headed by Byron, Shelley, Moore, Bcott, Sheri dan, Column, Bnlwo^-and Knowles, formed but a few of the phalanx. Where are their compeers of thk pe riod ? They are private soldiers in the ranks of the press. Fellow-wielders of th^gksor^p^HJmpen^H^hi^te^^ (Vfel* MfravlBf r«fr<M*totfc* Lux* toil Wh»t The Doctor, Stjl ■•• Oraaajuaat mM*.’’ . A.p. joxmos, •nci.Vi SB. J. S-riTAMB, SloaatovUU, AUj. • ■rMNsns ■hyiM*a *f Iwmty-lH raua, wrttwt "U it la* mm pvpareUoa fw CauMfUM a Ik* vmU." Fr epr later a, 4. N HARRIS A CO., CDfCXSHATX, a. FOR SALE BY ALL ORUOfilSTS. jtaync** Automatic Kn Isblc. Durable *nd E>'ot:omir*l. wiU/araUk a pomr with U !«./«,(and itxilrr than ana othrt S’fS’F **;*«. »o« »ttod with *a Automatic Oul-off. Eeud for lllnetralnd ( •talcn.-ur "J." for Inlnnuetioo S •ytev". B. W. r*rx* k Stoni. Doi MD, Comm*. N.X, $9i>y; Tver to Agriite, end fimaM-*. es Oiildt ~ Addrae* K. Swam s U*., A•!***, Me. Trace S Clawiva, RAW FURS.!*-..a ke- York, |>ftj hif brat cah j fi-t i)vav**r, Oti*»r, Raccood, Uocr rkm» and other f urs. SbtptnwnU oolto-ilrd. KHipfnrnU >olwitrd. raraad. ea*tow ear PUATVeSM FAJ1ILT SCSUL WaskeasMSSl*. k.i-k eeie. • 1 -A* TtnacevroeeA UewavK kc*AS Ca, ClKlBBAI . k«T—A^^a ^ o O Ftx: ^ RHEUMATISM, Bturalgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backacha, Soranatt of tho Chart, Gout, Quint/, Sort Throat, Stroll- ingt and Sgraint, Burnt and , Scalds, Gtntral Bodily Faint, Tooth, Car anJ Haadacha, Frastmd Foot and Cart, and all othar Faint and Achat. He toaeasra*. a. wrth •.c*!* % J*Kr*e Or* e* • MV/V, awrr, aimmlr *ad rkfap Cxtrvnal raiaila V-rt Ibe I I —la. ead »t«t aa. ealarta. w|i* pa,a ra. bev. rK-a, .ad ,-atu < • pr—f ^usiness (Jniversity $cno ron catalqguls V ucera waa .. rmaml Saab mA •ad rw*M* Sell- •aradU pel Oa . Alleata. (la $ 7 7 7.- A trial ef tl* iHrecWw* la Ue-M laapaa.«a •OLD IT ALL Dtooeirrs AID DCALC18 II MEDICI IL A. VOGELER A CO., a»lrta*ar*. MA . V. S. A, RAZORINE ! I A matter •( real itspor’sarc io •very man •bo ahavea k mvrlf. Hafaty, romfort and •ooaomy ooeib ■••1. Aar food Rai >r kapl is ptrfrct onlsr for a lilatimr at s Mil cl 3 r*rtv a year »d I so accemily for Ijosiag or arttiag. Prios *1.00 por box. «rnl frac t-e rrreipl. Send fort'ircolar—rxrlnei*. ttals in Agasis. DK A. HYKON Cl.AltKK bate Importer, Ailaute, Ua. TBIITLJ ■* • , *«rv tv. .,*. I RU I VI .i, rw. a.ari.n <%.•— i treaeeewl tare a# mmm ag wait • t! raravrafa. farawt *••»**•# rt oA oat raife# toeaa fwT Hera-ran. I* »—* y FI besara fSara HOP BITTERS. (A Moatrloc. no* a Uriah.) *ri'TAIV« itons Brnu', wtADHtak, UAADKI.ION, A vo vne T-rvvvr UW Srev Me-e . Lyr .U liaeuraAb otaia Miti»ae. XlIKA' eUMK All rHera^aef ib-KIHowie P'»a4, Livrr. hidortvapd I rn..-, ( fTi.ri.. brr- v.eeaeM. KQT,.ke«„rio Aa 1 repatiaul rrvoale Lompaiat*. #iOOO IN COLD. WUv be raid for • eae* they win aot rere er” blip. «r for eaitblaa ia,,-or* or ikjartuve I uad la u, a. ,lr«»i!*l for lloa mt-rrv eed t'f tb<m brfur. ) * al. p Toire ao oibrr. t> I I l« aa aKeolal* aad Ifveaetlwl. rave far Uniaaer-ma, aer of oHant. and espeetMa kaao pen CinrrLAn. A.I n-r »"•" • .n»-..oo. n. i .a rooo.Tiev Citai Bicycle. A R«rmkii#t»l i raroiml ttmti xwhtcltt. With whirh a prr»*.r» ran train threw ttiilwtt aa »•«« •• !•# roti d Wttlk on#. a*#m«|* f r 2* p#«# caU "*"* Tn* itips u-re co. t . ft#4 N., iWmtfMi, Mam Lay the Axe to the Root If yoo would destroy the can kering worm. For any exter nal pain, sore, wound or lame ness of man or beast, use only MEXICAN MU8TANU LINI MENT. It penetrates all mas- ele and flesh to the rery bone, expelling all Inflammation,~ soreness and pain, and healing the diseased part as no other liniment ever did or can. 80 BaJth the experience of two generations of safferers, and so will yon say when yon have tried the “ Mustang.” ibe a a ran L ■mm (eemme- >. pretaeiM l*e mm- ibeSai *f klee* a* I .aaeekUTPTAlkthe , an* »eeen,vpT ed. [RISTADORW .ppMBUd MUM tev Im*v M .eolleMe Said Pv iMae- ■mm mA »»»lie* kr Uei, Im DepM N WU- Itaa •»., k T c. > ckirnurron. Agv CELLULOID EYE-CLASaia. Ml sad Im' TU P VmiNR MUSI I^er» Teietrephyl Sara Sw to tioa A I UUliU men Biooth. (iredueMe goAr*nte«d p*vi*l •Ac-*. Addreee VALXKTUiS BkO*„ JbbmvUIv, Wi*. sssam M l'NICIANKt Pav, from 131* • pr oral. bv aein| IDHujr’, Fronrli meolStflnp*. 'tnlin, per Ml of 4, Ific., fpulor Mt (A', Vk-. ; hanjd-mi (P), Vir. bond vilve, roto or t And ,t-e«nt oumpt-lfr F, X. .THUT, Importor, inWall a . Cloverport, Ky., ud Sara nalurg, Kj. a Ngktatt, hraira—A rad atroogaat known. Bold by Opttatona *n4 Jawalan. M*d* by SPIN CEB OPTICAL M ra 00,, It Mttdra Ls—, Wra Tot. nso-j CPE E5I2—s— AGENTS WANTED TOR THE ICTORIAL HISTORY OF THE WAR Thl« Is the?rheat«#st and only e<*mpiele and reliable his tory ofthw Great netl War pnKhnh«-d; it abi>nnd.v in uara- tires nf p* rsonal ai.'venture, thrilling ii.ctdents, daring explv ite, heroic tieedw, wond*-rfijl r«cape», etc.; and eoo- Ltina life-like fw'tirait-a of 1*>^ leadrn^ tteneral*. Hendfor speeiunMi pages nud extra fo rfus (o Ag* nts. Addrewa National Pt ■i.ibiiixo Co., AtlanU, PONDS EXTRACT. SMu* InfiammaSlm. (Wroli oU BrmorrKf*, Amdn md Ckrmi*. Vmmrn and Mnmm. IXVALUABLE FOE — Pond’s Extract t» tb* Polorrh Vdlctl I || a iBtb*H**d,*e.ovCatarrh Otiro morau). m,ci,iip.BTo- pered to mMt ooriou* ceaot, oontalaa *11 Ibo mrallvo propeniM of Pond’a Extract! *oi Naaal ^ - ta “ U -' rk “ Sora Throat -o Lungs. Chapoad da *i«i Paoo MocrwtiyboBoiudbTi'hogx- iDhllblpTno Por-*’- - ft io nnaaib to n*o othar artMm vrMb aat diraetiono. ImU oa havioc FOND’S XXTSAOT. kefOM all hnita- Handa M>d PaOO afoxraMlyt tract. Frosted Limba i ara promptly rollovad, aadoUiiaalaljcurodbjPond'a •ad 4 TAflTUAPUC Surocuro, Mnt poolpeld fur ^5 IUUI nAbnC.MDt*. D. BOToTwirt, Ind. Fablnbora’ Unloa, Atlaota, Oa..„ FoorUvn.-*1. fS A CTT rBBHIUWB.-SampU aad Ui V, V O J 1 Dm. Moitblt Natioi, Warroa, Pa. tana* X