The people. (Barnwell C.H., S.C.) 1877-1884, April 21, 1881, Image 4
FARM AJfD HOMM
Fmrm MmMmjt.
Ohch aim.—Plow aroh*rdsonlj when
in a dormant atato. The boat time la
fall, or, if it must be done in apring, let
it be Tory early before the buda begin to
expand.
Gabdbn Soil.—Thia ia freqnently not
made rich enough. Long Island mar
ket gardeners apply fifty tone and up
ward of stable manure to each acre.
Unless well rooted it fill give a rank
and unpleasant taste to the vegetables
raised. Commercial fertilisers are valu
able because they contain no seeds. A
ton is not too much to be applied to an
acre.
Excess its Forciwo.—The forcingsys-
tenr practiced by some stock-growers is
exceedingly injurious to the beef thus
produced. Depriving an animal of ex
ercise and feeding it solely on fat-mak
ing food will give os a result a desirable
quantity of beef, but it will be of an in
ferior quality. Meat thus obtained is
of a dark color, showing a deficiency of
oxygen in the system.
Best Aoe or Fowls.—Fowls that are
kept on full feed, with frequent changes
of diet, will pass over the annual molt
with little difficulty and remain in flesh
and health. Nature never intended this
qieriod to l>e other than a gradual
change, and it is not, in a natural state.
Our domestic birds have changed their
very nature. They are so completely
under our control that it is necessary to
care for and supply their needs in every
case. Iheir strength is used in egg
production, and it is no idle occupation
for the system. Fine birds can only be
obtained at the expense of healthful,
nutritious food, and daily oversight.
Leghorns will remain in profit from
three to four years, Spanish from four to
five, Hondans from five to six, and
Dorkings about the same, if well oared
lot.—Cultivator.
Stobaoi or Hokbt.—This is a point,
writes a correspondent, that few con
sumers of the article seem to know any
thing about I was met on the street
once by a man who began to run down
a neighboring bee-keeper, said he was
a cheat, sold poor honey, etc. The
honey bought of him foamed and burst
the cups or the cells and was not fit to
eat One question revealed the cause
of all this ill feeling : " Where did you
keep the hooey F* •* Down cellar,^ was
the answer. Thus an honest man's rep-
utatum was hkely to be seriously injured
by the thoughtlessness of another.
Hooey should never be kept down cel
lar or where it is at all damp; or it will
sour it every tuna Don’t think be-
Mane your caller seems dry that it would
ant hurt your hooey, tor it will do it
Keep your hooey where it is dry and
warm, not too warm, but anough so you
ars sure there in no moieture there, nor
where it will traene, for severe frost will
break oomb hooey and cause it to leak,
«nd look bad. Extracted hooey
thin, watery nod finally ton
posed to most are Keep it dry.
^ Toe an Bear. -The MutiotuA IA*
Stock Journal has been diemaing the
influence cl age upon beet The coo-
duainos arrived at are that in the Bht-
iah mark r U cattle are killed too young
for the beet flavor—eay when from 13
to 90 mouths old. Moreover, they are
fed on turnips and^oiloake, which, sa re
gards the flavor of the meat, are far in
fer** to corn, hay and grass. But
farmen cannot afford to keep their stork
until it matures on hay and grass; to
make a profit they must force it with the
iet*e nutritious foods. Immature beef,
though {whaps more tender than the
fleah of well-matured beasts, is inferior
in juicinem and flavor. Hiia ia an argu
ment in favor of come breeds that ma
ture early, for the earlier they mature
the sootier will they give a superior qual
ify of Utah. A well-bred abort-horn
steer is often se mature st90 months old
ss some other sorts st 48 or 60 mouths.
There is a limit, however, both to earli-
nesa of maturity as well as to the extent
to which we can force feeding without
im{lairing the quality of the fleah. The
Wcet Highland beef, so much prized in
England, ia produced from grazing alone
until the beasts are 4 or 5 years old.
Wheat Experimehts. —Mr. 0. E-
Thorne, of the Ohio State University,
m »kea a very interesting report in the
Fanner of wheats which were sent out
to a number of persona in various parts
of the State. The following is a sum
mary :
COMPABATITC YIELDS.
*4 report.; armge, iiy bn. par wm.
the beet method of sradioating them we
give it entire: “ As soou ee they appear
in the spring strike > lhem off with a
sharp hoe below the lower leafi er even
with the solid*earth ; repeat every time
B sprout atarta (whieh will be feeble),
and they will be almost totally eradicat
ed the first season. Now, I don’t mean
half do it, and then My the prescription
is a humbug. OultlvatUm increases
their growth, as it does your corn, with
all stalks not interfered with. They
cannot live without a top. I have de
stroyed many patches by the” roadside
and several on my farm, and have never
failed. There is no use in digging up
the roots,, for they reach nearly to Chi
na, and I do not know but what they
come out on the other side of the globe.
My father dug a cellar in the State of
New York when I was a boy (when Can^ ^haU J^se n^ hope that she doesn’t
Foils....
<Taw*on 10
Sttvw chaff.. .15 «
Velvet chaff.. .11 “
Oold iu«Ul.. .13 *»
handntnlrka. . T »*
W*
3*q
30
31H
MX
Of Clawson, Mr. Thomas speaks as fol
lows : 44 A further inference which
seems fairly deducible from our tables is
that the Clawson is not our most pro
ductive wheat! We have noticed on this
farm that its straw appeared to be los
ing its stiffness, while the grain seemed
to be improving in quality. This im
provement in the grain lias not been
maintainod this season, however, while
the buyers of the vicinity have finally
executed their threat of lowering the
price of Clawson from 5 to 10 cents per
bushel below that paid for rdd wheats.
The importance of a very small increase
hi the productive power or in the market
value of , a variety of wheat will be real
ized when it is remembered that the
wheat crop of Ohio for 1878 wee needy
86,280,000 bushels, from 2,126,000 aerce
of lend, an average of sixteen and one-
half bushels per acre. An increase in
productiveness of one-half bushel per
acpw would add more then 1,000,000
buehali to the total crop, while an ad-
offteento per bwhaliB the market
of the whole would amount to a
total of H.TBO^OOa
ada thistles covered the whole country),
and at the bottom of that cellar, in the
hard-pan, we found plenty of Canada
thistle roots. Mowing closely when hi
full bloom will check them very much,
but the only sure death is ss above
stated, and if a few appear the second
year repeat the <MUne; but if thoroughly
done the first year, as often as one makes
its appearance, you will seldom see any
the second year. Anyway, to keep the
top entirely oil is sure death in a short
time."
DomtmtU reonomy.
Cookies and ginger snaps are much
more easily rolled and stamped the day
after they are mixed. J
Evert housekeeper should be sup
plied with a large wooden spoon, with
which to stir cakes and sauces.
Boast Gbousb.—To roast grouse,
joen them carefully, put a large piece
of butter inside each bird and roast in
the oven half an hour or more, basting
with butter.
Fried Frittebs.—Four eggs, one
pint of milk, the rind of one grated
lemon, a little salt, flour to mike a light
batter. Beat the eggs into milk ; add
lemon, salt, and flour. Fry in hot lard,
and servo with wine.
Jelly of Ibish Moms.—Irish mom,
half an ounce ; fresh milk, a pint and a
half; boil down to a pint; remove any
sediment by straining, and add the
l>ro]M»r quantity of sugar and lemon
juioe or water to give it an agreeable
flavor. — Komomicrtl Cook /look.
Jt mblrs.—One cup butter, two cups
sugar, one cup milk, four eggs, one tee*
spoonful soda, six cups flour, a little
nutmeg. Roll them out, cut them with
a tumbler ami a wineglass to form a
ring; dost over with the white of an
egg. and sift on e little sugar before
linking.
Pn-nwo Up CrETAum. — When pot
ting Up curtains which are to be draped,
in a low rones, put the cornice, to which
the curtain is to be fastened, cioee to
the ceiling, even if the window ia pet in
lower down, ee It gives the effect of
height to the rooea. The
eetmg st the top will
the well
HBrassl* Hreocre. —Trim them
ly and wash them. Pat them to boil in
plenty at salted water, and when almost
done strain them and dry them in a
cloth. Put them in a sauce-pan with a
large piece of hotter, pepper, salt amt
grated nutmeg to taste. Toss them
gently on the fire util they are quite
cooked.
Peof, Kjsnsxa, of the Michigan Agri
cultural Collage, in a late address said
that cane sugar is two and one-half times
as sweet as grape sugar, oloaaly allied to
it, and differs so little from it that eome
persons cannot diatinguiah ii By cook
ing, the cans auger may be changed to
grape auger, and thus loaa its sweeten
ing power. Borne women put the sugar
in with a mam of acid fruit tobeoooked,
and keep cooking, and adding soger
while it keepe on growing sourer, until
st last they use two and ana-half timee
as much sugar aa they need to secure
the desired result. The cane sugar ha
been changed to grape auger. Now if
the sugar had been added after the fruit
waa cooked, much leas would have been
required, and the result would have
been far more satisfactory.
UAMD-rmiifTnto.
It appears that the Alissoff machine
for band-printing is being rapidly adopt
ed in Russia, the native laud of ita in
ventor. • It ia larger than the type
writer, with which we are familiar in this
country, and it does not do its work so
faat. Both hands and feet are employed
in o|ierating it. The hands turn a handle
round a dial on which the letters are
a paced, and the feet move a treadle.
When the handle is stopped opposite a
letter on the dial, the letter is ready to
make its impression on the paper, which
is pressed upon the type by the action of
When a plumber plumbs a new hones
he wakes provision for the freezing of
the water-pipe at some point under the
bouse. It ia always at soma point that
can be got at by openings trap-door and
drawling lew than half a mile through
the darkness. Yen liogin the winter
with the feeling that you wijl neither
borrow nor lend a pail of water! but will
stand ready at all times to sympathize
with a neighbor who gets tip in the
morning to* find his pipe as dry ^s/ a
bone. ^Justasthis feeling licgins to put.
fat on yoWr riba you go hoqie to dinner
to be mot by the oook with the remark :
4< I guess the water has all run out of
the river, for I can't get a drop to opok
with.”
You turn the faucets this way and
this Russian device are thus stunmed up
by the Engineer: It can be made to
print in six complete alphabets,
or in four alphabets and the neoea-
eery sign# and figures,
the impression is made in printer’s ink,
and if i^ie^dnsted with bronze powder
from twenty to twerriy-five proofs can be
obtained from it in an ordinary oopying-
preaa.
Attobkst Usebbal Dbveto, in
•war to questions proposed by the
Treasury Department, gives it w Ur
opinion that compensation due for trans
portation aarvioe rendered to the Qurter-
master’a Department by the Union Pa
cific, Kstims Pacific, and other Pacifia
Oom panics, indebted to the
Untied States for tU Money need in the
of any part of these roads,
know how to draw water,, although she
has been in the house for three years.
There is' a sighing in the pipes, as if
they had met with some great sorrow jn
their depths, \but no water appears.
. Under the ciroumstances, it takes only
ten minutes to cokne to the conclusion
that the pipe is frozen somewhere. Ten
minutes more spent in deep reflection
will convihce you that the guilty point
is under tlie addition, where the pipes
leave the ground to enter the kitchen.
All you need to do is to get a candle,
a hammer, a nail, a pins stick, and a
hot fiat-iron. After you have crawled
under and bumped your head on the
brick columns and yaked your back ou
the joist and barked your knees on
the old iron hoops which always take np
lodgings under a house, you put the
flatiron lo the odd water pipe. It ia no
use to try to iron the wrinkles out of a
water pipe. The moat you can do la to
heat the pipe, and no man waa ever
known to persist ia that idea over tea
minutes before adopting the other.
Take ttut hsnrmcr wnd drive the nail
iuto the pipe. Byr driving next to the
floor and ciose to the ground you can
tell if the pipe is frosen between. The
nail holes are easily plugged up with
pine. When you have come as near as
may tie to the frozen spot, hold the flat
iron on the pipe and settle down for ten
minutes of meditation. You won’t have
traveled down memory’s lane over half 4
mile before something will happen.
The pipe will buret exactly on a line
with your eyes, and yon will have ostia*
to wonder all the rest of yonr life how a
gallon of water could have eolleoted at
that one point for your benefit
H<>me men can close a buret in a lead
pips by na\pf a hammer. Yon can't,
and so you must crawl out for rags,
crawl in to wind them over the spot, yell
for string, whoop for the water to be
all ut off, apd crawl out with icicles
hanging to yonr ears and a raging de
sire in yonr heart to shed blood. And
yet, when yon boms to shake yonr fist
under the plumber's noaa and offer
lo lick him for 2 cents, ha kindly ra
ni
ft
roM rum
ttrottTKOPM wmirmdB
rmasM.
C. F. Clarkson, the veteran agricult
ural editor of the Dee Moines KepUter,
gives his views sa to fictitious signatures
to newspaper articles : Having been in-
stdeof the curtains for a considerable
portion of a long life, it has given an
opportunity to judge of the character
and animus of those who writh for news
papers over fictitious signatures. I have
no confidence in them, and seldom read
their productions. They are Cither
ashamed of what they are writing or
they are sneaking slanderers. This
kind of stabbing is dodo in fancied se
curity. To be defended by such an one
casts a suspicion upon the man or the
cause. 8nch communication^ are al
ways suspected and shunned by reflect
ing men. And when I have ever known
a mail writing an article and signing
some name to-it who has been dead
thousands til years, or who never exist
ed, I ever after hold tliat man at a re-
lie laid down as a safe rule that any ma'%
who writes and signs some other name
than his own, or some arbitrary initial
letters, is ashamed of what ho writes, or
is not willing to be responsible for the
statement, or he wishes to stab' some
fnRn’s character iji the dark, or knows
his own character for veracity is so bad
that hi# name attached would be an im-
jieacbment of the article. I have made
this matter a study for many years, and
ftetitioirt writers have always been'
suspicious men. Poets and novel
ists have so concealed their
productions, but it was only until their
writing* had established the fact that
they would be a disgrace to their real
ones. “Junius,” the ablest critic who
ever hid behind a fictitious name, did
not dare at the time, nor during his life,
to openly acknowledge the authorship of
his letters. And all of his successors
have been a pack of snarling, disreputa
ble puppies, whose characters would
condemn their statements, or who arc
mean enough to stab a man or bis opin
ions, like the midnight assasitin, in the
dark. Any one may, therefore, look
with grave and wi-ll-foundeA suspicion
upon any communication in a newspaper
without the writer's name to it This
{■oaition is sustained by the thousands of
articles offered to me aa an editor in the
ast fifty yean. They were generally
by sneaking slanderers, or to
pliah an unworthy and dastardly
purpose. Editors should not tolerate
such things. Anything a man writes, if
it is not good enough to pat his name to,
ii not good enough for publication.
The communication itself should not
“Burst ia the pipe, eh? Wall,
have a man there the first thing
'—Detroit Free Frett.
only be held aa suspicions, but the man
hiaoelf should ever after be watched,
having once attempted to say a thing or
make a statement without daring to hr
himself rmpoosible. v it I have looked
over ia my memory the long hat of
those who years ago attempted to effect
a purpose or belabor aa opponent tie-
utioualy; they have eventually oome to
some bad aod.
, DOMESTIC ECONOMY.
Tea Biscuit. —One pint thick, sour
cream, 6ne teaepoonfol soda, one tes-
spoonful cream tartar. Flour sufficient
to roll out, and bake in a quick oven.
Soda Biscuit.—Otoe quart' of flour,
one iable-spoonfnl of lard, one tea-
spoonful of soda, two teaspoon^ils of
cream tartar. Put both in the flour,
and wet with sweet milk.
Jellt of Irish Moss.—Irish moss,
half an ounce ; fresh'milk, a pint and a
half; boil down to a pint; remove any-
sediment by straining, and add the
proper quantity of sugar and Ipmon
juice or peach water to give it tin. agree
able flavor.
Flax-seed Lemonade.—Four tablc-
^spoonfuls flax-seed, whole ; -one quart
boiliug water poured upon, the flax-seed;
juioe of two lemons, leaving out *the
|>eel; sweeten to taste*; steep throe
hours iu a covered pitcher ; if too thlckT'
put. iq cold water with the lemon-juice
' Snow Pudding.—»Soak ono-half a
paper of gelatine in just enough water
to'cover it; add one pint of boiling
water, two cups of sugar, and juice of a
lemon ; strain it alter it i* thouMtghly
cooled, so it commences to thicken;
add- the beaten whites- of three eggs;
lieat all together until creamy, then
turn into a mold. Tito same is made
with a pint of milk and the yolks of the
egge, -sugar to taste, and flavor; this
makes a thick enstard.
• e ' -
Po (tf.d Chickbw.—This is an agree
able relish, wnd makes a pleasant
Inncheon when traveling. Take a roast
fowl and carve off all the..-meat. Take
W o slices of cold ham, and chop it with
chicken ; add to this one-qnarter pound
of the best butter ; add salt and pepper
to taste; now-pound this all together to
a paste ; put the mixture in a jam-pot;
cover closely. It will keep in a cool
place ten'days, pr long enough for any
moderate journey.
Baked Hour for Invalids.—I find
this receipt of use for invalida. It is
easy to make and cooks cannot well
blunder. Take a |>ouud of juicy sto&k,
from which all the fat lias been re
moved ; cut it up in pieoca of about an
inch square, salt and l>epper it slightly;
take a atone jar to bold two pinta; pour
into it a pint and a half of cold water, a
teaspoonful of whole rice ; cover the jar
with • aaucer, and tot it bake slowly
for four hours ; remove any fat preacut.
Angel PimiiNn. —Two ounce* of flour,
two euncea of powdered sugar, two
ounce* of butter melted in half a pint
of new milk, two egg* ; mix well. Bake
the above in small patty pans until nice-
The habit at Thiere, ao far m aleep
rmoerned, waa of the most singu
lar character. Every day at 7 pc m. he
would undivea and go to bed for an
hour. He would awake promptly at 8
to dine, at 10 take a little doee in hie
chair, go to bed at midnight, and rioa at
4 J0l This was hie invariable routine,
and any departure from it eunoyed bun.
(LoeisviUe Home and Farm ]
Frank O. Herring, Eeq., of the Cham
pion Hafe Works, 261 and 252 Broad
way, New York, reports the uae^of Ht.
Jacobs Oil for a alifliiem and aorenraa of
the shoulder, with moat pleasant and
efficacious effects .
A ca* used to go from Wicklow to
Dublin, aod, aa the mare was found to
travel much more briskly under the in
fluent* of a glass of whisky, the habit
ual travelers subscribed to supply her
with this stimulant Traveler— 44 Pat,
the mare won’t go at all to-day. You
rogue, you did not give her the drop.”
Driver— 44 Well, your Honor, I’ll tell no
lie. It was an awful oowld mornin’, and
I wanted a dhrop meself m bed as her,
•o we tossed for it, and sore I won the
’ Journal as vs :
I 44 The breed per excellence, according
: to the iMjonty at medical men, is
aerated bleed.” A patent for the mak-
1 ing at this was taken out about fifteen
years ago, but since then it has not en
joyed, saya the writer, nearly the popo-
; lanty and oensumptiou that it really de
serves. It has many decided advantages,
a great one being that the dough de
mands no handling from perspiring and,
too often, unclean bakers. Dr. Corfe,
of the Middlesex Hospital, insists strong
ly on its value 44 in those cases dys
pepsia which ao o»ton affect the brain
workers of the great metropolis. ” It
keepe better, too, than other breed.”
[Freepoit (I1L) Bulletin.]
There is now a substance which is
both profemionally and popularly in
dorsed, and ooncening which, Mr. J. B.
Ferechweiller, of Butteville, Oregon,
writes: I have often read of the many
cures effected by St. Jacobs Oil, and was
persuaded to try the remedy myself. I
was s sufferer from rheumatism and ex
perienced great pains, my leg being so
swollen that I could not move it. I pro
cured St Jacobs Oil, used it freely and
was cured.
Uratefiil Women.
None receive so much benefit, and none
are so profoundly grateful and show such
an interest in recommending Hot Bitters
as women. It is the only remedy, pecu
liarly adapted to the many ills the sex is
almost universally subject to. Chills
and fever, indigestion or deranged liver,
constant or periodical sick headaches,
weakness in tne back or kidneys, pain in
the shoulders and different parts of the
body, a feeling of lassitude and despond •
ency, are all readily removed by these
Bitters.—Courant.
“ Tih, I want to borry yonr black
Sunday pants to attend a funeral,” said
one Galveston Irishman to another.
44 And whose funeral is it ye are so anx
ious to attind to me black Sunday
pants?” “Your own, bed ad, «f you
don’t lind ’em to me.”
For 25c. you can buy a sample bottle
of Fortaltoe, or Tabler’s Vegetable Lricv
A SEA Oaptain was brought before s
Justice In Marseilles and mercilessly
the treadle. The peculiar advantages oL{^ttankcd by hie opponent’s lawyer.
When at last he waa suffered to speak,
he said: 44 Your Honor, I aak a delay of
(me week in the proceedings ao that I
may find a big enough liar to answer
Moreover, [ that man.”
Profit, $1,200.
“To sum it up, six long years of bed-
rid<toff sickness, coating $200 per year,
total $1,200—all of this expense was
■topped by three bottles of Hop Bitters,
taken by py wife. She has done her
own housework for a vear since, without
, and I wi
the loss of a day, and I want everybody
to knew it, for their benefit.”—N. E.
Farmer.’
. ; . .1 V
The German navy now includes seven
hlpl*clad Irigates, five iron-dad cor-
mtea, eleven covered corvette*, five so-
called flat-deck oorvettea, and four more
in course of construction, niiwt gunboat*,
with a variety of vessels for ommH de
fense, -dispatch boats, transporta, train-
“« ehipa, togs, pflot boata, etc, r
Men will never know aa by ev faith,
for that is within at; bat they know at
by oar works, which are viable to
Powder, or if you need more you can
buy a package for 50c. Portaliue cures
biliousness, dyspepsia, sour stomach
and all disorders of an inactive liver.
Try it and be convinced. For sale by
all druggists.
A Boston man shook a handkerchief
full of peanut-shucks out of the win
dow, acd a girl across the way took
it for a-r handkerchief flirtation pro
of
nromise.
iNDiosanoN, oyspspsla, narvooa prostration
and all form* of renaral debility rstieved by
taking Mebsman’s Pettosizep Beef Toaio, the
only preparation of besf containing tie entire
nattiuooi properties. It contains blood-mak
ing; foroe-geoerating and life-nuttining prop-
•nua; h invalnaMeln all enfeebled condition*,
whether the result of exhaustion, nervous proe-
tietion, overwork, or aoute disease, particularly
if resulting from pulmonary complaints, Oae-
wato Haaard A On, proprieton, Kewlork.
D! BULL'S
COUGH
SYRUP
a goo:
; ttTMIOTLY PURI
, -t
I . TEE SSBAT VMKTABLX
PAIN DESTROYER AND SPECIFIC
FOB INFLAMMATION AND
HEMORRHAGES.
v
{IM Msrwaata Um Lsa* ta a hMMr aWaJ
• What The Doctor* Beyl
ax A.o.roEaso^VSTTya^ SVffiltrB
m. UmuXm.*
EX. J. E. TURFBB, SUutarnU, Ala,, a wartMu
•kytlSaa »f iw.nlj-ll* jMn, VrUw! “■ I* SaWl
)r*pa>»Ura hi C.uaMptua 2 U« vm!4. m
Rheumatism, Neuralgia.
No oth.r preparation hu our*J to m»nr cut. of th»»»
’> HairMalng complaint, u th. Extrsei. Our Plae-
ter to loTaluabl. la thM. cIlmuh, Lamtago, Pain*
ta B.<-k or Sid., Ac. Oar OlsUaeal (Me.aU) for
BM when r«a>oe.Lof clot kin, le tneoarutent, 1* *
pert help Id r.llerrn, iufluamelorj cue*.
Hemorrhages. frSf sr m «k‘
None, or from enj ceu.e, la •p.edilj controlled aod
■topped. Oar Msesl eyrtsces (29 o*aU) end In-
luuora (SI .M) or. greet rtdela arresting In Ur q.1
bleeding.
Diphtheria l Sore Throat ^
HUm tk. (Extract promptly. It U . nr. .or». De
le; I* dangerotu. .
Catarrh.
»o*
exeelv
AS AN IXFI01ONANT IT RM NO fOUAL
IT MNTAININO OflIUM IN UT
4. N. HARRI* *100., Prwprletera,
CENCINHATI. •.
row SALi BY ALL DRUGflIITS.
r • ",
If yon are
Interested
In the Inquiry—Which I* the
best Liniment for Han and
Beast i—this is the answer, at*
tested by two generations: the
MEXICAN MUSTANG UNI*
MENT. rhe reason is sim
ple. It penetrates erery sore,
wound, or lameness, to the
rery bone, and drives oat all
Inflammatory and morbid mat*
ter. It “goes to the root” of
the trouble, and never fhUs to
core in double quick time.
P
AGENTS WANTED TON THE
HISTORY*”” WAR
tksw rbw«p**fwv | creilf ro.re
iw #♦» m owtl War | ulitieT»
lv browned end send to Uhl* on s dish | *'*** * p*«.i awn., mi
* /e l #t W*#** teerwe4—wfia, M*w4*rf(vt«
•vrecred with s serviette. A Utile now- I i-«-t <* .«• ^.i.w •
Tf^wfo 4 r#l
; tl
<lered anger should be sifted over each
pudding, sod a lie** of lemon served with '
tin in. The eggs must 1m well U-aW-n l
Iffnre they ore added to the other in- |
i;rvd>*nt*.
W
..4 -*,-W
ra. 4 tut
W • asms a* P—ws re -
iytrjy «tw • a rv*t
• nsaiy. RMFtwcTMRtlkR mm
•.•fatal tluffee cf W-ae* a*
,4o«aM<«T*TAlMtfca
[Ri8TW0«ri:rSi5H3
*r,—ud mrtrt ut Iwtfrt
■ kUMMB. *4l4k,lxug-
»»plw4 ►. HJ,
os w*
Oar “Catarrh Care,” •moU.IIj prepared to m«
mtion. cum, contain, all lh. onreUT. prop*rtlM of
(b. Extracts our Nasal rings, lafrtnabl. ter
bm ia utarrhal aftecUont, U •impl.aad anupeoST.,
Sores, Ulcers, Wounds.
Sprains and Brulses^i
Ing, ooollgg aod elMoeteg- Dm ear O' a tna.a l ia
•“ 10 k - UM ’
Burns and Scalds. &£d£;s *
It to anrtnlod, end ikoald b. kept la •r«r; fuel I;
read; for om la mm of kcoKUate. A drawing of oar
Olatan.Bt will aid la kwllng tad pr.T.ot war..
Inflamed or Sore Eyes.
It Mn bo OMd alt boat tbo •llghMrt tew of harm,
Click 1; till,.ng ail mfiusmrtlon aod MTOaort wiih-
Earache, Toothache &
Faceache.
tlMU, tu ■Shot . •Impl; wood.rfnl.
Piles.
lag when other mMInnw ka*« tell•4. PaaS’. Kx*
trart ■rSIral^l Paper for tlrt«l >m, u . mn-
MotiT. Mrtut Cbedng nud FUm. Ou WtatB^at
la of grwt Mr Tim »h.r, tbo r.morrt rttlrtht., . la-
For Broken Breast and
Sore Nipples,
rtMalthrt mother, who he*, mo. awd « will mtm
h. without *. Ow OlataMati. th.hMt,Mrtli..t
thrt Mn h. kppUM.
Female Complalnte.S.*^
b. MllW to ter tk. artaitT rt temal. dteMM. S the
Extract h. omA Fall htMtto.. iwpiq, Mch
WuAr.
OA-UTIODf.
Pond’s Extract SZjZZJTZXt A
wuw **Whae*s ■sstmer* W»wa h.th.gtoM, m* ^
nr fitctur, u«d» awh m MrmBMasawwijg^w.
I .. m he nog
l
’ ptaMr. I
Baa. other I. goaato.. Alwaj.
r..e*q Ratrart. Take M «he>
Price of Pontf’a Extract, Toilet Aiil-
clss and Spaolaltlaai
LVS
V!
rxrmAcr.
S
mn
Tat let
ai.itthtts
Liptealo.
T.llwt towel
Miatar.
■aT
B
°repared only by POND S EXTRACT CO,
nkw vena aae
Fm Ml. hr rtl Drogp*. m4 Fm, SmSo DmMm.
JVdera tet U .rfih, MrrtoM Em, m r^gS* N
*4 Wm4
JUDGE
rM.t. Mai • rtwrMl fum u »»«>
SHai.hulaad « wih, w*k
4*.. of ae«fn*r* A44r—
ss. rws. to • sa. p.uo..
ii#. a. v.
XIOOER P PA8T11LE8. I™ 1 ;
hai i .omn. Moo a
, _LOCEL ON To.».t*e.
MM. ».to. , • . -Tirt.
AH tXFCl,Sia*
, „ , iptf pel* SIOAIS
a la. »*S w.srsa ‘.a. I lariew.il. t>.
A i trrwvw sveirrss er ■rmcvnr w,n
o Mr tm .4 rs.«Rti a.o amir.
g*,«Mt'o o« mw''* <m4. Be-reetoS M mmot M'wrf
>Wen4.4. Med Oee Ie4lw to. r«w.r4 to
C. S. B> Saika. tons***. SeWe. Iwwa
9 ,
r .vX^v- : *
^ * ' .toSSC*
T»* v '
Scko rc* c*tajjqgo£s
S OeweM.
nee M . Sow
RHEUMATISM.
Meuratgia, Sciatica,lumbago,
Backache, Soreness of the Chest,
Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, See//’
ings and Sprains, Bums and
Scalds, Beneral Bodily
Pains,
Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted
Feet and Ears, and all other
Pains and Aches.
Ho Frapentflon on rerth oqn.U Sr. Ja™m On.
04 a *«/>, turf, timplf and rhrtip Eitorn.l
K*medy A trial ontefl. but tH* comporatlroly ‘
trifling on tie; of ,40 Oats, end t»#r; one outT.iing
with pein ton bar. cheep and porttlvo proof of It.
claim*.
DlrwtloM Id Doron Laognagr..
BOLD BT ALL DEUOQI8T8 AID DEALEE8
IN MEDI0INE.
A.VOGELER& CO.,
Baltimort, Sid., V. 8. A.
,. « > re to 4 a I K. l> f' l toe Seat eo4 Voauiot Men
L n.g I'.et. le. Hook end BiMm. friM. redseodll pe*
l- Xetionto Pnhllehlng 0*., Alteete, Oa.
M
r
Heioo
$ “T "J ^ A TBAB aod upon MO.
iff *C»"o. OatAl frw Addrow
I I I O. VICKSST, Angnote, Men
SEND TO
H. L. B. SHEETS,
ZVaslivillle, Tenn,,
Fof brtt Tiitftff"*, Organs and Mtuical In-
ktrumenta. Sheet music. Best good#
—lowest price..
of
Parties contemplating the purchase
PIANOS, 1 ; ORGANS
of other Musical ilerchandi.e will consult
their own interest by corre.ponding with
the houae of R. DORMAN A CD., 126
Church street, Nashviu.k, Tens.
MILL & KACTORY SUPPLIES
DF Att KINDS. BELTING, HOSE
•nd PACKING, OILS, PUMPS ALL
KINDS, IRON PIPE, FITTINGS,
BRASS GOODS, STEAM GAUGES,
ENGINE GOVERNORS, &o. Send for
Price-list. W. H. DILLINGHAM & CO
WS Main Street, LOUISVILLE, KY.
St'TG* kom# omIIj mado. Cootl;
• AJOntlt frM. IddroM Tana A Co., dug tut*, Mo.
$350^5?S5ss
BUGGIES
f R tfl $90 por d»; rt bom. SMaplM worth SS ftoo
*5 10 Addrooo »tiuo> A C., Portland. Mein.
A**wte Weatort
wtntho world ;eMia
BROKBOW, Potion, Utah
for Drnlor*' Morttnm Work : I^iw
I'rlrin Union CARKIASI UTQCS,,
Cinanneti. O. Celelterno KHKE.
RAW FURS.!
fw., Mt h ,' o-tcM» r-wo. a. «**,
(toe. ea eOMd otfeorr.ro CtHrMori
aut.ATa SV A*r* O in
CENTENNIAL c t!i5,*;» PAN.
im4 a** I $.» 4#
wuhewnt Ml ft lew TM cto. r! •««*•*
Domtiuc CIOIMC, SprwklRf.
uttipfai, rMuFlnwIlittfl
Mttrto. Frvs* 3# rk». A t%r» ot-
|>»‘fitt’ HT to hrtlw •<#*•• *4 • ■«*«•$•
I If» RtA4M*S .Mrtttl Aw t*»«« Mine*
trattif.rFvEgyi »»* I • 'ir t - ust'klif
liWtttl i#ruie. I«ott»nn P«Aii
Cr. ( m W.MM •$., I H.4 ***•«■
Payne’s Automatic Engines
lelifeblr. Dural>to and ■roi^.mlral, /ferwirt 4
ion, power with M lr*o r.,1 nml water lAm eea oiiff
S UM »»/«. not flttod with an Antomati. Cut-off.
■1 for IliM>tr»ir.| Caleloan* tor Inlonnetiiiu 4
m ll. Vt Ptra. A »^j«a_B«aS>0, C«5lnS.JLl,
A •wrnianFDl t radical rood .ohiolo,
with* whirh a priMa can rid. thro*
niilo* to om; m ho eould walk ooo.
Hand S-e*nt (temp tor M-ptg* toto-
logno.
. THB POPS HTO 00.,
M4 Wuhiagto. St
TOOTH ACHE. ^r eur Vtourc.n r d:
Of if I » rrer to Ag.nU, and oxnonoM. S* 0 “1*‘
Addrrtoi f, 8w*im A Co.,Augnrte.M*.
3 / » » WMk to ;o«r nwa town. Ton
»!PXjO fro*. Addrou II. \|»Li.aTT A Co.
TRUTH
g r a# nth g*rr sj»4 Wttnrd wii Af W wttti M*»
bwwbi. rein* ef eyre. —Ateekef hab. mmA e eaeesor
m
VmiBir MEM 1 * , “ r * T,, »S r *P h f 1 toarn $40 to$10"•
TUUnU In CIS month. UreduntM guerentood paring
odloM. Addroa* VXUiNTIN- BBOfe H (toiognil., W*.
P I S 0’S
C n n r for Conaumplioa it all*
UAL the hoot MOgh modiei.to
PATENTS
OBTAIN6D
rui
INVENTORS.
bo HEYLMtTK* RANK, Attornor* rt P«t*nt Low, SUt
V. Buret, Wuumgton, [>.<:. «rt»* Ketereaee. fur-
ulthert wid circuUrs seni on request.
rutilisbers' Uaieo. AtliDU, G> S'Kledn —Al
CELLULOID
SYE-CLAS8K8. ”
k.pr treating tka gfcoloaat relretod TorUlre
IhaU and Am tor. Tka Lightret, haadaomeat
and rtrongMt kaawx Bold by Optieiana and
NC*
■treagsst
Jreralare. Mad* by SPINCJEB OPTICAL
ti ro 00.. U Mattre Una Mow York.
Shooting Chills Down the Book,
Dull pain In the liaba, nnurea, hilioutnem,
at! tymptonuof approaching f*ver and ague.
Ure without delay HretoitcK* Stomach Bit
ten, which .nboutatea for the chilly renaa-
tion a gonial warmth, regal ate. the stomach,
and impart* toae to the liver. The how eh.
tka stomach aod the biliary gland haiag ra-
■tarot to s healthy coadittoe, tha ai.eare ia
■angaswd at tha osmet. Far ml* by all
fhw*iaU .ad Daal.w taaerallv.
PETROLEUM JELLY
Used nod Approved by thn lendixf FHT8I*
CIAJ8 of 1UR0PE and AMERICA.
Thn moot
Family