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RAM'S HORN BLASTS. W ????? Warning Notes Calling the Wicked te Repentance. 10 HAVE a bad i habit Is to have a hard master. Trust in God Is the truest prayer that can be mad?. God judges no man either by his worst or his best j The man whose ; cause Is wrong is j sere to be the los- : er if he gains it God prepares us ' for great things by drilling us well in little ones. Every true Christian is a magnet j - J- a CK.ict r drawing someiwuj ivwuiu Putting little thoughts in big'words don't make them weigh any more. ' ; There is a flaw in the piety that looks dismal at a prayer meeting and happy at a circus. ! One point in the devil's favor is, that khCaters aro generally better ventilated &an churches. j What a strain it would be on both for - the spirit of a lion to have to live in the frame of a donkey. ; For every false pleasure the devil promises. God is trying to give us a thousand real ones. Elijah had to learn how to get his . bread from heaven before he was trusted to call down fire. One difference between a fool and a wise man is. that the fool talks most P when he has least to say. ; To remember that Jesus 6aid, "Lo. I tm with you always," should make the Weakest Christian strong. ; The Christian's idea of prosperity is hot something that can be measured by the state of the flour barrel. I When heating a furnace for your foe, do not forget that there Is some danger Of your being thrown Into It i The Christian whose life Is full of conflicts for which he Is not to blame Is a man whom God can trust J Many a church member Is content : v ' iwlth being a nlckel-ln-the-slot machine, Jwho might be an electric motor. I You can tell a child that flre will burn, but It cannot understand what Syou mean until It finds out for Itself, j Trying to use grand language often jturna out about as it did with the man -who sat on a limb and sawed it off. ! There is too much talking to the hungry about the Bread of Life, without telling them where and how to get It. ? J When the Christian lives as close to the Lord as he should, the mere worldSing will have uo use for his company. ; There is a vast difference between be*' ^ag able to say prayers that sound fine, c ? hnd having a broken and contrite heart I When you ask the Lord to bless every? body who has anything to do with the meeting, don't lfeave out the janitor. ' While we weep In the desert of misfortune, like Hagar, how often is God's f kngel on the way to point out the well Awofl aonnnt coo VUl ICOl-OUWUCU CJ V4**aaaw P. J. Cheney <fc Co., Toledo, 0., Props, or Hall's Catarrh Cnre, offer $100 reward for anr ig case of caiarrli that cannot b? cured by taking Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for testimonials, ft free. Sold by Druggists, 73c. a Just try a 10c. box of Cascarets, the finest liver and bowel regulator ever made. Kv' ... 8pnrloua sliver dollars are being extenstvet It circulated in Maine and New Hampshire. w Ko-To-Bac for Fifty Cents. Over 400,000 cured. Why not let No-To-Bao regulate or remove your desire for tobacco? Saves money, makes health and manhood, w Cure guaranteed. SO oenta and $1.00 at all druggists. j There are a great many cases where woman gives her dignity credit for protecting her, when It la really her age. | Impure ^ r * Wan rich and hearty food, sweets and fat3 la winter, dose confinement and breathing vitiated air in office, store, shop, house, factory or school- I. _ room, neoessarfly makes the I U KC blood Impure, and eruptions, bolls, pimples, humors are the result. Dizziness, indigestion and many other troubles are also caused by Impure blood. Hood's ^ ^ w yra 11lid Is the beet?:in fact the One True Blood Purifier. m Dill* cure nausea, indigestion, y Mwl r 1119 biliousness. Scouts. fnXT It It'll ucickly: Man 1W-?0 Invention* VaW?nt*d.~ Kdoaj? Tati & Co.. Hi B'w?y, K.Y. 8. N. U.?18.?'97. "I am J only too glad to tes- \ I tlfy to the great value \ I of Ayer's Sarsaparflla I / which has been a house-1 J bold companion in ourl / family for years. I takel 4 I from 3 to 5 bottles of tt every! I Spring, generally beginning! / about the first of April. After! / that I feel like a two year old,\ i I for it tones up my system, gives! / V ?... omuvtltn nn<l t\ I I U1U UU CAl/OUVMI 0^/^VMi.v ? - | I sleep like a top. As a blood inedi-\ r f I clae it lias no superior, at least that\ V f Is my opinion of it?H. R. Wildey.i j / Plilladelpbla, Pa., March 20,1896. \ | WEIGHTY W0R0S y FOR W ? Ayer's Sarsapt y i ML... ; y . - x a peculTar "church steeple. One of the Most Remarkable Freaks j In the Way of Crookedness. The decision to restore the fabric of 1 "The Ohurch with the Crooked Steeple" at Chesterfield, England, has reJ Vlred interest in this most curious ex-; ample of architecture. Its tall, twisted spire has no rival either in shape or pose. It is more whimsical in Its inclination than the leaning tower of Pisa. Parts of the church are about 1,000 years old. The 6teeple rears, or rather twists Itself 230 feet skyward. It has prompted the shrewd comment,: the admiration, and the ridicule of English people and from travelers of many ! kno nnwlflrt th<? ! U ALIUS. LUU aua?7 .? v .? ^ , jperts, and in some quarters it is seri-iousiy contended that the steeple haa [been crooked ever since its erection.1 'Practical men somewhat unkindly ffyj TB* -.^Trp rrsErLi. ^ ^ brush aside all this legend and sophis-; try, and bluntly say that the cause i of the steeple's lean and twiat U a1 very simple one?that the woodwork: | has shrunk with age and been warp- j ed by the sun'a heat and the wind's bluster. Live to a Good Old Ago. Last year an old peasant named Iran ! Kouzmin was reported to have traveled from Moscow to Kief at the age of 140. He was said to be in good health. He had formerly been coachman to Count Sheremetlef, but in 1S40 was sent to Siberia, where he spent llfty-four years, returning In 1894. His is not the only instance in which a Siberian exile has survived to extremeold age. Two years ago there was said to have died In Samara one Lavarentil Efimoff, who had attained the age of 150. According to the newspaper reports of him he took part as a boy in the famous Pogatchef rebellion In the reign of Catherine the Great and for his share in that brief but sanguinary outbreak spent thirty years of his life In Siberia. Recently there was said to be living In the village of Vank (Saratof government) ac Armenian aged 110, the proud ancestoi of ninety-one descendants, of whom 6eventy-one were still living. His name was David Kazarian. Another Armenian, a priest named Ter-Mikaeliantz, was reported not long ago to be living at Gori in the Caucasus at the age oi 10S. He was still able to walk to church, and once a year performed t'^e liturgy. If recent history In the Turkish . empire continues to repeat itself such instances of longevity among Armenians seem likely to become rare.?London Lancet A Pen on the Finger. The pen holder here shown Is th? subject of a recent patent This penholder consists of an open-ended hoi A FEB OB TBI FIBOER. low thimble, provided with an ouU wardly-projectlng stud for receiving the pen. and the whole aapposed to b* . fitted on the forefinger. "Oh." she moaned, "to think that I should have come to this!" But there was no help for it Her companion, J who had brought her there, had a ( friend in the oratorlal contest, and he was near the last of the list.?IrdiauapolisJournal. - - < . \U < vy; - , AGRICULTURAL TOPICS, OATS AJTD PEAS FOR FEED. As the earliest erop to be nsed for soiling, there is nothing better than oats and peas mixed and sown at the rate of 2} to three bushels per acre. Thej will not yield so mnch weight as fodder corn, but that cannot be grown large enough to cut before well into August. As for peas and oats, by that tim9 they will have been entirely used up. From the earliest cutting, about Rn loot nt a ooonnd liohfc nrnn will sprout, which may be cat a month later. DRAGGING CORN STUBBLE LAND. So soon as frost is well oat of the groand in spring, two horses with heavy drag shoald bo run over the corn stubble of last year. It is an excellent preparation for plowing, lightening and drying the surface soil, so that when it is tamed ander the farrow it at once begins to ferment Land thas treated makes an excellent seed bed lor grain. The work also is just what horses need to break them in for the heavier work of plowing which mast follow. FUCHSIAS. There are few flowers which give more pleasure than the fuchsia; but they are sc subject, in our country, to the attack of the red spider that the cultivator soon gets oat of heart with them; but since these little insects can be so readily mastered, and the method of their destruction is now 60 widely known, they are again getting into popular use. They do not like the open sud, and for this reason they aro particularly well adapted to city yards, where buildings and fences aro a protection during the warm parts of the day from the sun's rays. They do not care for absolute shade, as, for instance, under trees or arbors; they seem to want an abundance of light and air, simply claiming protection from dry heat. Springraised plants bloom freely in August. ?Meehau's Monthly. GROWING TOP ONION SETS. In most farming districts a little addition may be made to the income of the farm by growing top onion sets in a small way, writes L. O'Fallow, of j?.;jDnegota. These are produced on top of the Ciion stalks, in a cluster, instead of seed, ?t?d consist of a number of small balbs or omou?? about the size of acorns. If plauted, tavjse produce onions which mature earlier" than those raised from seed. For several years I have made it a rule to plant a small paten in tne garden to onions from which I grow top sets. I sell the onions earlj in the spring to local village dealers for ten to seven* teen cents a pound. In one instance I seoured thirty-five pounds of top sets from one-fourth bushel of onions planted. 1 sold these the next spring for fifteen cents a pound. If I had given them proper care I would havs obtained at least one-third larger yield. As soon as the frost is out of the ground in spring, plant in rows about two feet apart, and from eight to ten inches apart in the row. Only good sound onions of uniform size and good quality should be used. They must have been raised the year before from seeds, or onion sets. Plant very shallow, so the top of the onions will show above ground. Keep perfectly free from weeds while growing. After the top sets have matured fully, guthsr and store in a dry cool place. Do not allow them to freeze in winter. It is beet to go slow about raising top onion sets for market, nntil ih trade has been established. Sometimes I have found it neoessary to leuve the onion sets with the grocery dealer, and let him sell as muoh of them as he could, with the privilege to return any that he could not dispose 01!. By taking goods at his store in exchange for them, he made no charges for selling the sets.?New England Homestead. A Plan to Preserre Eggs. A New York eleotrioian has devised a scheme for the indefinite preservation of eggs. For years the only sue/toooFnl matkrwl nt ?AAnmn1uhino thin result has been to submerge the hen frnit in lime water long enongh to olosa np the pores in the shell, and kill any germs whioh might be larking aboat. With this treatment it has been possible to preserve eggs in snoh a state as to permit their use three or fonr months after the submersion. Bat at the expiration of this time, while the eggs are in a condition to be nsed by confectioners and bakers, they have lost the delicacy and freshness which make them appetizing. However, if the eleotrioian's scheme proves to be a suooess, eggs can be preserved for an indefinite period in as eatable a oondition as when first laid. The treatment proposed involves the plaoing of the egg in a vacuum chamber. It is a well known faot that the shell is not absolutely airtight, and there is always more or less air inside the outer covering, which hastens its decay. Patting them in the vacuum ohamber will have the efiect of drawing the air from tha interior. They will then be painted with a composition which will render the shells airtight. After this they will oe packed in barrels of water and an electric current will be introduced sufficient in strength to destroy any germ life that may be present. If the scheme is successful it will mean a revolution in the price of eggs in the winter.?Boston Journal. Penny Books. The cheapening of literature in England has resulted in the production of books creditably printed and sold for two cents. Dickens, Scott, Goldsmith, Lytton and other stand* ard authors, bound in stiff covers, are nov procurable in this series. ^ FELL TO THE FLOOR. HIS LEGS BIDDEJTLY GAVE OUT. rhoma. P. Biffs, of Clereland, Stricken as lie Was Preparing for i? Visit to Friends. From the Leader. Cleveland. Ohio. Of the list of the many so-called incurable disorders none has proved to be more of an enigma to the most learned and accomplished physicians than locomotor ataxia, or as it is more commonly known, creeping paralysis. This dread disease has baffled their "skill, and they have been forced to admit that they cannot success Tully cope with it. ah iney nave Deon aoie to do is to mitigate the accompanying pain and suffering; beyond this the science of medicine has been of little or no avail to the many unfortunates who have contracted the dreadful mt.lady, which, many people, especially those who are thus afflicted, believe is a forerunner of the grim messenger of death. Thomas P. Bigg, who lives at No. 1073 !;t. Clair Street, corner of Lawrence Street, Cleveland, 0., has been suffering from locomotor ataxia for nearly Ave years, and nothing but his wonderful vitality has prevented his dissolution long before this. The malady is directly attributable to his exposure during army life. He enlisted in the Third Regiment Ohio Cavalry in T> ledo, and served nineteen months in the .volunteer service, and after the close of the rebellion, eighteen months in the regular army. "At first,he said in narrating his experience, "my stomach went back on me and for six weeks I was laid up in a hospital in Texas. Ever since that time that organ has caused me trouble, and aoout seven years ago the doctor told me I was suffering from aeut^ indigestion. That was bad enough, but four years ago last July paralysis camo on, and I have been using these crutches ever since. The paralysis was in my legs, and it came rather suddenly. I noticed at first that my knees wero a llttlo stiff, a sort of rheumatic pain, you know. This quickly developed into paralysis." I tried all kinds of remedies, and I tried physicians, but I did not improve. All this timo, though, I was holding my own? wasn't getting any worse. A short time ago I was induced to try 7>r. Williams' Pink Pills. I did not expect this last venture would prove any mora beneficial than the others which proceeded it; but I am pleased to say that I was most agreeably disap pointed, vr. mutants xixut. x xus an: simply wonderful. I began to uso them two months ago. My legs then were perfectly numb and cold?nothing could warm them. After suffering with paralysis for more than four years, I now experience a comfortable feeling of warmth in my lower limbs. I tell you I feel like shouting when I think of escaping from my bondage, and my mind is on the subject pretty much of the time. I intend to continue the use of the pills until my legs are as good and useful as they were in their best days, and I feel that will be soon. "What effect haTe the pills had upon your stomach?" Mr. Bigg was asked. "As regards that," said he, "you can readily believe that a stomach which has been seriously out of order for thirty-flve years is in bad shape. Nothing used to stay on my stomach, and I was subject to violent fits of hiccoughing. Then I would have to take an opiate to get to sleep. But now I find that food stays on my stomach, though I do not suppose that organ will ever be is ,. first-class shape again. Still I am satisfied to ti'JLnk t,int improved to such a degree, an.l tha?TE\can eat a feeling of oasc." For six vear? a month ago, October, isv, Mr Biirff foJJt a stationery and confectionery frtoreatf* No. 347 East Madfaos Ave., directly opposf&Lv^6 Madison Ave. School. He sold out his ih wines* udcu now be found at any tluio'hv ft0- lv'? ot* Clair St. . . Dr. Williams' Pink Pills contmT' 10 * condensed form, all the elements necMMG|(| to give new life and richness to the Dm|i( and restore shattered nerves. They are on unfailing specific for suoh diseases as locomotor ataxia, partial paralysis, St. Titus' dance, sciatica, neuralgia, rheumatism, nervous headache, the after effect of la grippe, palpitation of the heart, pale and Ballow complexions, all forms of weakness either in male or female. Pink Pills are sold by all dealers, or will be sent postpaid on receipt of prioe, 50 cents a box, or six boxes for $2.50 (they ore never sold in bulk or by the hundred), by addressing Dr. Williams' Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. T. I use Piso's Cure for Consumption both in my family and practice.?Dr. G. W. Pattihsox, Inksser, Mich.. Nov. 5,1S9L Cabcarxts stimulate liver, kidneys and bowels. Never sickep, weaken or gripe; 10c. Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervousness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2trial bo .tlo and treatise free Da. R. H. Kniwx. Ltd.. ?H Arch Sti.Phlla.J'a "They say you kaTI & sympathy foi the struggling poor." "Me?' said tin accused gentleman. "I have nethinj but ajmpathy."?Cincinnati Enquirer. "German lawyers are prepared to undertake the performance of professional duties at a rate of remuneration which would be deemed ridiculous in England," the Law Jou-nal says. So we gather from the interesting report wuica jar. onckuaie uat ivnuui ua a result of tbe Investigation be made, with the authority of the treasury, into tbe working of the system of registration of title to land In Germany and Austria-Hungary, The fee of a German lawyer who is employed in connection with the transfer of registered land is on the same scale as the fee of the registry. Hence, if the yalne of the land is ?100, the lawyer is entitled to| the magnificent sum of 7 shilling 3 pence, while In a thousand-pound! transaction he gets 30 shillings. It ia to be hoped that no reider of Mr. Brickdale's report will be led to believe that because such arrangements arc "made in Germany" tbey are possible in En-< gland. -.< When bilious or costive, eat a Cascartt, candy cathartic; core guaranteed; 10c., 25c. Mrs. Window's Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums,reducing inflammation, allays pain, cures wiud colic. S3c.a bottle. For Gold. A new amalgam has been discovered which Is a wonderful substitute for gold. It consists of ninety-four parts of copper to six parts of antimony. Tbe j copper Is melted, and the antimony is I then added. Once tbe two metals are sufficiently fused together a little magnesium ami carbonate of lime are added inr-rpnup the density of the material. ! The product can be dra wn, wrought, ; and soldered Just like gold, which It almost exactly resembles on being polished. Even when exposed to the action of ammoniacal salts or nitrous vapors It preserves Its color. The cost of making It Is about 25 cents a pound avoirdupois. Swearing Won't Help It. Swearing mny make a flre burn, or It may make a deck hand bustle, but it won't help Tetter, or Ringworm. If you use Tetterlne, It will make you comfortable and save swear words. 60 cents at drug stores, or by mall for 60 cents In stamps from J. T. Shuptrlne. Savannah, Ga. .;.f.:. IL day Hires .*** /S~ ^ v Rootbeer ^ ^ J) stands **"' H ^ # ; I S?jj tressing ef- ' I i 4f fects of the heat. ' 5 HIRES | J IRootbees 8 I ft cools the bloc J, w 7 w tones the stoni- *5 I ach> "wig0**'28 H the body- fully fl\ /# satisfies the thirst. S \W A delicious,spark- ffl vyft I ling, temperance Ji A~Jr?n drink of the high- m ' 'I | est medicinal value. IP I Made only by \ I The Cbarlea E. Blrta Co., Phtla. \ J A package make* J (allooi. n i I ' Sold everywhere. W? liLcarn the I firv Business Not over: Crowded < > ' ' A practical knowledge of advertising and J * printing Is necaasanr to business success. The ' ? wcrld spends two thousand millions of dollars a ' [ y mr in advertising. The demand for competent ' ' ailvertising managers and writers of advertise' I irents far exceeds the supply. The Fowler ' ' College of Advertising teaches (by mail) bright J ' it en and women, in business or intending to go ' ' irto business, how to write successful advertise' ' rrents, circulars, catalogues, and all printed ' 1 natter. The cost is nominal. Drop a postal * ' fcr full particulars. i i Bwler Correspondence College f of Advertising L Tribute Balldlnr, Hew York City i Reliable Oharlofle Merchant! Call on | i?mVhen you go to Charlotte, X.C. Writ tbem IT y< xi Co cot go, end hart your order* fill* ! _? n 4u. iB answering adrertUecnent* kicully men ? n r * # lift Mantles, TIJee. Saah. Door *.i i MWHiMiW 0HVI etc. College and Third. ittJl'-fVP BEST WORK. Rea.*onaM? Price Write New* d- TUnee I't'* Hoilm m?nmEH5S"^rse^ Dr.WH.WAKEFIELD ?Can be consulted is his office In? CHARLOTTE, N. C., No. 509 North Tryon Street On any week day except Wednesday. Hi/ practice is limited to diseases o! the Eye, Eir? Nose sThroii M | Igll ggf ymimqiyv. -p - ... LLI Shipped to nnybodr. Seed no A I III money, tat enclose map to V W % CMMM Wk?ii?al*R-C?,XUS.Ci;sUa SUN|L MCkla? IflCNTQ We want one aeent in this County CHIOuto sell to fairilhe*. Beet pepni P* article on etrth. We pav all expense. Adores GI.YZA CHJSJf. CO., Vt ashlodea, U. C : 1/?)andy ! vjoka i t^CURECC 25 * 50 ' : ABSOLUTELY 6UAB1ITKEDJ4^ ! ! boot let free. Ad. 8TEETAK6 MIM1 iFlptf 1 IBItfl IT I wail rape: I f TEXL'ORAB! ! | mSr alabas i 1 i J| Far Sail W Docto a?"One layer of pnPP A Tin* ( FREE tSS? f tt Ifc Improvements painted le9u FTRE PROOF?Proof against spark*, cindei STRONG?A bMTT canvaa foundation. LIGHT?Weighs bat 85 lbs. per 100 sq. ft. wh FLEXIBLE -Contains no coal tar. and retail BAMIIiY APPLIED?Requires no kettle or i 11 gent workman. SEND FOR SAMPLES AND H. W. JOHNS MFC. CO., M j CHICAGO: 210 A 348 Randolph 3t. PHILADELPI OPEN SUMMER AND WINTER. Advantage* not excelled In America. Cool foav men and grand mountAlancenerv. Tuition $10 pel i montii or dcbolanhlp $40. Board $10 per month. *' Cheap Railroad rate*. H. M. LEMVOND, Pan. Asheville, N. C. '} MACHINERY J and SUPPLIES. | ENGINES, BOILERS, SAW MILLS, CORN MILLS, i WHEAT MILLS, PLANERS, BRICK MACHINES, MOULDERS, GANG EDGERS. | And all kinds of Wood Working Machinery. ' No one In the South can offer you higher grade goods, or at lower prlcea. Talbott, Liddell and Watertown Engines. We are only a few h< urs ride from you. Write toz prices. Light, Variable Feed Plantation Saw Hilis a Specialty. V. C. BADHAM, GENERAL AGENT, Columbia, - S. C. ^ NOT IBUUMM. 1 No Danger, In Curing; One Habit ol v, Forming Another. flSffjy (Morphine. Laudanum), Cored r| Va111 hi ft om four to six ? eelcs. Will:? KEY HABIT Cured in Four Weeks. jJl 1 he cure endorsed by Nat. Gov't. In Soldiers Heme#, in the Regnl&r Army, by Mis* Wil? , I?* tod, the W. C. T. U., by Neal Dow, Francis " JMnrpi y, by I. 0. G. T. and by 300,000 cored .%} patient#, 20,000 of these being Physicians, For Terms etc., Address TIIK KKF.LEY INSTITUTE, Or Drawer 27. Columbia, 8. Q, . ll PURCHASE 8???8s invk factories. Manufacturer to wearer. Ilinatrated catalogue free. ' g Underwear department. Addreee CONSOMEIU' SfPPUiW CO* Trey, X. Y. . GROVES ; "tasteless pHILL TDNtei 18 JUST A8 COOD FOR ADULTS. <? WARRANTED. PRICE OOctS. - _ Galatxa, Ilijl, HOT. K, 18*. Inn M60icm? uhi n.upuwijiu., Gentlemen:?We sold last year, 000 bOtflM at ^ r.ROVE'9 TASTELESS CHILL TOIOC end km bought three gross already this year. liiUoari* 1 , peiience of 14 yean. In the drag knatnaaa. be>ve :'J never eold an article that gave mo antral?I ? - taction as your Toole. Tom* truly, r A*rcr,CA>B*O0? :1 8. N. U.-ia-'?7. " CATHARTIC 31lX&by tiSTIPATIOH | iy ea?ef eowtipatio*. Caseant* are ths Meal Laxar axly or gripe. bat cease eeay natural ra?Its. 8am- I H iBASTiNtn I WONT RUB OFF. ) 1 r Is Insanitary. KALSOIIVB ? \ kT, B?TS,BIBS OFF ABD SO AIM. f. Tllip k a pure, permanent and artfctlo j E IN P - wall-coating. ready for the brash V I I Ilia* by mixing in cold wattf. 'Ml ' & b by Paint Dealers Everywhere. \ Jard showing 12 desirable tints, also AlnbastlSe Fj \v' Roekeentfreetoanyonementionicgthispaper. A RAHTIVF. CO., 6rui Jtaplda, JQelLf i w.* i In the IT. 8., Canada and Europe. rs, burning brands, etc. ? /;3S en laid complete. is indefluitelv Its leather-like pliability and tongbnsM other expensive apparatns. Can be laid by any Intel* DESCRIPTIVE PAMPHLET. >0 WILLIAM ST., NEW YORK. IIA: 170 k 172 North 4th St. BOSTON: 77 A 7t Peart 8L ^ 1 FINE FOOLTRY 3F ALL VARIETIES. I 1i BRONZE AND WHITE TURKEYS. T iJH PEKIN DUCKS. 1 ?>J BUCK ESSEX AND RED JERSEY PIGS. T &f SHROPSHIRE SHEEP. A jfl Jersey Boll Calves of the finest pedigree* T S ? Mudmedd^e/^m Aacuita. Go. Actual bin if. No text v boof*. Short time, Cheap board Send lor catalog*; f ?s?Si* Li: 5