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'.HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS.
Sea-Weed Decorations.
Various decorative uses for the »<•&-
•weeds which the coming months afford
An opportunity to visitors to the seaside
to collect are suggested by Decorator and
Furnisher. They may be used on the
lids and sides of glass caskets, borders
and even foregrounds to water and color
painting, and on picture and even mir- j
ror frames, meanwhile, until visitors re
turn home, being kept in a scrap-book. |
When collected they are dried between ’
blotting paper and then washed with
mastic gum dissol ed in turpentine,
which gives them a fresh appearance.
They are affixed to the leaves of a scrap
book. which should have a flexible back, ;
by means of gum, and may easily be de- i
tached by dampening the reverse side of
the leaves. Very charming monograms
and various fanciful designs may be
formed with sea-weeds. They make ex
cellent borders for the outside surface of
the glass aquariums.
To Clean White or Very Light Silks.
Take a quqrt of lukewarm water and
mix with it four oun es of soft soap,
four ounces of honey, and a good-sized
wineglass of gin. linpick the silk and
lay in widths on the kitchen table. Then
take a perfectly new common scrubbing
brush, dip it in the mixture, and rub the
Bilk firmly up and down on both sides,
so as to firmly saturate it. llinse it in
cold water twice, until free from soap, ■
and hang it on a clothes-horse to drain
until half dry; then iron it with a piece
of thin muslin between it and the iron,
or it will be marked on the ironed side.
Keep the silk quite smooth when on the
table, so that every part may come
under the brush. White silk requires a
little blue in the water. Silk stockings
should be carefully washed in water that
is neither hot nor cold. Any pure white
soap will do, and the stockings should
be dried on wooden frames made for the
purpose. White silk handkerchiefs
must be quickly washed in a lather of
Eure white soap, to which a squeeze of
hie, with a spoonful of salt, has been
added, to prevent the color from run
ning.—Family Herald.
Canning Fruits-
The process of canning the'cfffferß'nt
kinds of fruit covers but little, except in
the time required for cooking them and
the quantity of sugar used.
None but perfectly sound, well ripened
fresh fruits should be put up. They may
be canned with or without sugar, but we
think the use of a little sugar adds
greatly to the flavor.
For canning fresh fruits, they should
never be cooked sufficiently long to de
stroy the natural flavor,thoroughly heat
ing being all that is necessary. Air-tight
glass jars should be filled with the fruit
while they are hot, and then quickly :
sealed. The jars should be well heated
before filling. After filling the jars and
screwing on the tops, they should be set
in a warm place, where the air will not
strike them, until morning, when the
tops may be screwed tighter. The jars
may then be wiped and put in a cool,
dark closet. They should be examined
from time to time, and if any signs of
fermentation are visible, the fruit should
be opened and recorked.
Large fruits, as soon as pared, should
be thrown in cold water to prevent dis
coloring, and then boiled in clear water,
to which may be added a little alum.
When tender take up and boil five min
utes in syrup. It is best to cook only
enough to fill two or three jars at a time. I
The jars should be heated and every
thing in readiness as soon as the fruit
has boiled. The work should be done as
quickly as possible. Small fruits are
improved by being sugared an hour or
two before cooking. If a little alum is
added to the syrup, they will be clear and
keep their shape.
If too much juice is in the kettle for
the quantity of fruit to be canned, it
may be used for jelly. If these directions
are followed, success in canning will be
sure. Courier-Journo,'.
Recipes.
Potato Scallops.—Boil and mash the
Sotatoes soft with a little milk or cream.
eat up light with melted butter—a des
sertspoonful for every pint of the potato
—salt and pepper to taste. Fill some
patty-pans or buttered scallop shells with
the mixture and brown in the oven when
you have stamped a pattern upon the top
of each. Glaze while hot with butter
and serve in the shells.
r Newmarket Pudding.—One pint of
grated bread, one quart of milk, one cup
j. of sugar, one tablespoonful of butter,
And the yolks of four eggs. Soak the
bread crumbs one hour in the m Ik, then
add the other ingredients and bake.
When it is done spread a layer of jelly
, over the top, then cover with a meringue
made with the whites of the eggs and
half a cup of sugar. Brown slightly.
Lemon IT ifs.—Powder and sift a
pound and a quarter of loaf sugar and
mix with it the grated rind of two fresh
lemons. Whisk the whites of three
eggs to a stiff froth, and add to it grad
ually the sugar and grated lemon. Make
* thick paste, whisking thoroughly. Cut
into pieces of the desired shape, hand
ling the paste as little as possible. Place
on oiled white paper, and bake on tins
in a moderate oven for eight or ten min
utes.
Cherry Cake. —Beat up one quarter
of a pound of castor sugar with the yolks
of ten eggs for quite twenty minutes,
add one quarter pound of blanched ami
cut-up almonds, then one and a half
ounces bread crumbs and well whisked
whites of five eggs; when well beaten to
gether put in a shallow cake tin; take
about half a pint of cherries, fresh or
bottled (if the latter lay them first on a
liere till quite dryi drop them into the
cake and put the tin at once into the
oven and bake for three quarters of an*
hour.
Cultivate forbearance till your heart
yields a fine crop of it.
A Sailor Spins a Yarn.
A man attired in the picturesque blue
uniform and jaunty cap of the sailor of
the United States Navy, was among the
passengers who strolled along the plat-
I form. He was to meet his mother in
I Washington. Each had thought that
! the other had been dead for over a quart
i er of a century. Ho gave his name as
1 Benjamin Cooper, and said : “Yes, I
j was but 15 years of age I was living
with mother on a little farm in Mich
j igan. Father had died, and had left us
I the farm. When the war fever was in
i tense I became enthusiastic, and in
1862 left home to become a sailor and
| have been one ever since. I went to sea
j on the Cumberland, the vessel that was
I afterward sunk by the Merrimac. 1 was
transferred to the Mississippi River fleet
i and went to Vicksburg and New-Orleans.
I I was on Admiral Farragut's flagship
on the memorable occasion when he was
; lashed to the masthead and gave his or
! ders. I shall never forget that exciting
time, and how Farragut’s bravery made
I his men more enthusiastic than they
had ever been before. After the war I
started for my homo in Michigan. While
in Chicago I learned that my mother
j was dead, t-nd under the impulse of the
moment I re-enlisted in the navy, where
I have been ever since. I have been
around the world three times. A short
time ago, when I was in San Francisco,
my time expired. While there, unde
cided what to do or where to go, I heard
that mother was still alive and well, and
that she was living in Washington. I
learned, too, that she thought I had
', been dead for years. I have saved a
good portion of my earnings and nearly
all of the prize money that I received
war, and have now a snug
j little estate that will keep mother and
myself comfortable for the rest of our
lives. I left San Francisco as soon as I
heard that she was still living. To-night
I expect to see her for the first time
since 1862.”
The Last of Her Race.
Many of the Registers' readers are fa
miliar with Wall’s extraordinary feat in
driving, according to his statement, a
swarm of bees across the plains. A day
or two since, as one of our business men
was coming down town, he happened to
discover a large bee quietly resting on
Wall’s shoulder as preparations were be.-
ing made for sprinkling the Court-House
lawn. “Say, Wall, what are you doing
with that bee on your shoulder?” Wall
was startled for a moment, but recover
ing his usual composure, spoke with
gravity, carrying conviction of untarn
ishable truth. “I’ll tell you, and its the
solemn truth, if ever I spoke it in my
I life. That bee is'the queen of the swarm
that I drove across the plains, she has
i been hunting me for years, and knew me
the moment I called her name. You see
she is getting a little gray, but I knew
her on sight. She piloted the swarm
and I used to feed her from my own mo
lasses can. That bee is the last of her
race, and I shall take care of her in her
old age. 1 tell you, John, that bee
brings up many reminiscences of that
memorable trip. Several times the
swarm stood by me in an hour of peril.
They could scent an Indian several miles
away, and they got to really enjoy an
Indian attack. The fact is they under
stood tactics as well as the best trained
soldiers. When the queen sounded an
alarm every bee was under arms ready
for fight. First a skirmish line was
j thrown out, and you could see more or
less uneasiness among the red skins, as
one or another would claw at his ears,
eyes or nose, but when the order to
‘charge’ was sounded and the bee bat
tallions began to move in ‘double quick,’
a rout and stampede always followed.
It is a fact, John, if ever I told the truth
I in my life. What lam saying is true.
Those bees fought all my battles across
the plains, and this is my old ‘queen.”
Aapa (Cal.) Register.
“Who is your favorite composer?” she
■ asked as she turned over the leaves of
i the music preparatory to giving him a
specimen of her vocal attainments.
“Mendelsshon,” he answered, “Mendels
sohn?” “Yes; he’s the author of songs
without words, you know.”
Duty is the power which rises with us
j in the morning, and goes to rest with us
■ at night. It is co-extensive with the ac-
I tion of our intelligence. It is the shadow
which cleaves to us, go where we will,
and which only leaves us when we leave
the light of life.
■ > "■ . —»
A Reliable Remedy.
Allcock s Porous I’lastehs never fail to
give speedy p oof of their efficacy as the best
external lemedy for Weak Back, Rheutna
i tisni, Lumbago, Sciatica, Colds, Coughs, Sore
Throat, Pulmonary and Kidney Difficulties,
Malaria, Dy-pepsia, Heart, Spleen, Liver and
Stomach Affections. Stains, and all Local
! Pains.
They have 1 een in use for over thirty years,
and their value lias been attested by the high
est medical authorities as well as by voluntary
and unimpeachable testimonials from thou
sands who have used them.
Ask for Allcock’s,and let no explanation or
solicitation induce you to accept a substitute.
American Royalty—King Corn and Queen
, Cow. Long may they reign !
The Little Seed.
A little seed lay in the carter’s path;
A little shoot bowed iu the strong wind’s
wrath: •
A little shrub grew, by its roots held fast-
Then a stout tree braved all the winter's'blast.
A little cough started— twas only light-
A little chill shivered the hours of night;
A little pain came ami began to grow
! Then consumption laid all his brave strength
| low.
wise in time. Cheek the little cough cure
little chill, dispell the little pain, ere the
little ailment becomes the strong unconquer
able giant of disease. Dr. Pierce’s Golden
Medical Discovery, taken in time, is a remedy
for these ills. ___
Sarah Bernhardt, the celebrated actress, has
taken to drinking brandy to excess.
The Mother’s Friend, used a few weeks be
fore confinement, Hie pain and makes
labor quick and eoffifcar.itively easy.
Good Disinfectant.
Dissolve half a drahm of nitrate of
lead in a pint of boi ing water, then dis
solve two drahms of common salt in
eight quarts of water. Pour the two
i mixtures together. After the sediment
j has settled, the liquid is a saturated so-
I lution of chloride of lead. A cloth dip
| ped in it and hung up in a room will
: purify a fetid atmosphere. It may alsc
i be used to pour down a rink, drain or
i water closet. This is very cheap, as a
! pound of nitrate of lead will make sev
-1 eral barrelsful of the disinfectant.
Four great necessities of mankind, the
! air, the blood, money and the newspaper,
need a good circulation in order to do j
their best work. Help the newspaper j
and the others will take care of them- ■
I selves.
“ Jnnt Hear That Child Scream!”
I Said Mrs. Smith to her sister, Mrs. Davis, as |
Hie sound of a child’s shrieks came across tbs
garden from a neighbor’s house. "What kind '
of a woman have you for a neighbor? Does she '
abuse her children?” “No, indeed,” replied I
Mrs. Davis. ‘ She is one of the most tender
mothers nr existence. But you see, she believes
I in the old-fashioned styles of doctoring. When
a child needs physic, she fills a spoon with
some nauseous dose. Jays the little victim flat
on her Jap, holds his nose till he is forced to
open his mouth for breath, when down goes
the dreadful mess. Then come the yells.” “No
wonder” said Mrs Smith, “Why doesn’t she
use Dr. Pierce s Pleasant Purgative Pellets? !
1 hey are effective without being harsh, and i
are as easy to take as sugar plums. I always i
give them to my children.” “And so do L"
said Mrs. Davis. |
The cowboy is like a dramatic star—he is i
supported by a stock company.
Conventional Monon” Resolutions.
Whereas, The M non Route (L. N. A. & <’.
Ry Co.) des-res to make it known to the world I
at large that it forms the double connecting
i link of Pullin in tourist travel between tiie
j winter cities of Florida a-d lhe summer re
' sorts of the Northwest; and
BTiereae, Its "rapid transit” system is un
surpa-sed, its elegant Pullman Buffet Sleeper
and Chair car service between Chicago and
Louisville, Indianapolis and Cincinnati un
equalled; and
Whereas, Its rates are as low as the lowest
then be it
Re.solucd, That in the event of starting on a I
trip it is (/noil policy to con-ult witli K. 0. Me- I
Cornuck, (ien‘l Pass. Agent Monon Route, 185 j
Dearborn St.. Chicago, for full particulars (In I
any event send for a Tourist Guide, enclose 4c.
postage. l
A Great Discovery.
The fact that castor-oil, as vile a medicine as
was ever discovered, has so long held its own as
a laxative, is because,until Hamburg Figs were
discovered, no medicine could take its place.
Now, however, ladies and children take Ham
burg Figs, and like them. 25 cents. Dose one
Fig. Mack Drug Co., N. Y.
Now that the rush of the summer work is
somewhat, over, we desire to call attention tc
some matters looking forward to profitable
work for the fall months, and through the
winter. Write to B. F. Johnson & Co., 1009
Main St., Richmond, Va., and they will show
you how to do a grand work, which can be i
made a permanent thing.
Forty years ago railroad trains were started
by a bugler playing, “I’d Be a Butterfly.”
| The cleansing, antiseptic and healing quali
, tiesol' Dr. Sages Catarrh Remedy are un-
I equaled.
i
The centre of population of the United I
i States is near Louisville, Kv.
®Log Cabins are neithei '
fashionable nor in de
mand, but they were more I
comfortable and mor, :
healthy than are many j
modern dwellings. War- ,
net’s Log Cabin Hops <S j
Buchu is a reproduction of one of the
best of the simple remedies with which
Log Cabin dwellers of old days kepi
themselves well. Did you ever try
“Tippecanoe?” I
-S 7 I
=- / z PURE °oi*l cr
2 5 O WHITE I 2 ~
2a" 1 ' ®
7 2 J
JOHN T. LEWIS & BROS.,
WARR VNTED PURE
White Lead, Red Lead, Litharge, Orange
Mineral, Painters’ Colors and Linseed Oil.
cor KESl>,s ndence solk ited.
AT A R R U
Ely’s Cream Balm.
fe gllcOLO IN HEAD j
ELY BROS.. 56 Warren St., N. Y. ;
A ROANOKE
’lrrW’ Cotton and Hay
I J 'Hllel / rnEss.
V i / The best and cneapest made,
v KiTTr’S? 7 Hundreds in actual use.
\ Eg* 1 Bales cotton/a-s/er than any
L-i t ti prc J[ Rin can pick. Address
iuyil ,/ ROANOKE IRON AND
i WOOD WORKS for our Cot- I
~ Ww? ' ton an d Hay Press circulars.
“ 1 Chattanooga, Tenn. BoiUtiU j
QIILD tlkki EASY
slivllk6s LABCPj used a few
before confinement. Writepr look
5 Revolvers,
LJL > Liat. tcaWarks.Pilta
Seines, Teats, Breech loading double ShoUnin at
I ngle b.%rr“l Breech 1 -wim at $4 t«> ; Breech-loading ,
Ki ties 50 to $1 > Double barrel Miiude loaders at J 5.50 !
to $-*u . liapeatm’’ Ift shooter, sll to S3O RevohAr.*, .
to S*JO . rloU*» t Huies, $-■ •OlogX. Gunssent C. O. D to
examine Revolbv mail t • anr P. O. Address JOMB>
ViOVStiRKAT WK.STMUN GI.Y nOilgS, PitukuiS. Peas*.
TEXAS
and Soldier*, or their Heirs No charges for in rest i«
gation. HABh'HT A TAYLOR, Aisun. Tkxah
ODllllA UADIT Psinlessly cured tn 10 to *JO
rlUm nMOII Days. Sanitarium cr Home |
Treatment. Trial Free No Cure. No Pay. Th©
RRf 1R H** bom* and make more money worfcla* for na fban
VwHMvi at anything eh<* in ths world Either Hl Coalh out At
tana- Term* rsas. Addiaaa, iavs a Co., Auguaia, Maiua.
I A. N. U Thirty-veveu, 'SK
A PERFECT
COMBINATION
Os harmless vegetable remedies, that will
restore the whole system to healthy action,
is absolutely needed to cure any disease
i “for the disease that affects one organ
weakens all.” Paine’s Celery Compound is
THIS PERFECT COMBINATION. Read
the proofs!
I havn suffered terribly from nervousness
and kiduey trouble. I bought two.bottles of
Paine’s Celery Compound, and oh, how it did
help me ! I have so much faith in youx medi
cine, for I know what it did for me.”
Ontario Ceutre, N. Y. Mbs. J. J. WatsoS.
PAINE’S
| GELERY COMPOUND
For five years I suffered with malaria and
nervousness. I tried Paine’s Celery Com
eound, and I can truthfully say that hve bot
es completely cured me. I cheerfully recom
mend it, for I know it to be a good medicine.”
Chas. L. Stearns,
Letter Carrier, Station B, Brooklyn, N. Y.
CURES ALL
NERVOUS DISEASES
Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Paralysis, Bilious
: ness. Dyspepsia, Costiveness, Piles, Liver
Complaint, Kidney Trouble, Female Com
plaints, and all diseases arising from Im
pure Blood.
81. six for $5. See that each bottle bears the Celery
Trade Mark.
Wells, Richardson & Co., Props., Burlington, Vt
For the Nervous,
The Debilitated,
The Afiied.
DR. SCHENCK’S
SEAWEED TONIC
has no equal in nature as a toning and puri
fying agent,
1,, /it helps the work of the Mandrake Pills,
j Sustains systems weakened by disease,
\ Preserves the tone of stomach, liver and
) bowels,
f ' Purifies and enriches the blood,
Sj / Encourages appetite and helps nutrition
JJf I Braces the organs till they act naturally,
™ and strengthens the whole man.
Do not fail to send for Dr. Schenck’s new
and admirable treatise on the Lungs, the
Liver, and the Stomach, with their diseases
and cure. It abounds in excellent informa
tion, and will give you ideas about these
vital organs and the laws of health you never
had before. Sent free.
DR.SCHENCK’S MEDICINES
Pulmonic Syrup,
Seaweed Tonic,
Mandrake Pills,
PURELY VEGETABLE,
| are for sale by all Druggists. Full printed
directions with each package. Address all
communications to Dr. J. H. Schenck & Son,
Philadelphia, Pa.
B COMMON SENSt
cuhe
FOICATAIRH, HAY FEVER,
Colds. Asthma., Bronchitis, and
all diseases of the Head, Throat ;
and Lungs. Ingenious combina
tion of medical science and com
mon sense. Continuous current
of ozonised air penetrating, nuri
fying and healing. It cures where j
all other remedies fail. Bsd Hesd>
aehe Caved la Fire Hinutes.
You can be cured while sleep- SENT ON
ing; you ean be cured while _ _ •
reading or performing any 30 DAYS’ TRIAL
kind of labor. Illustrated
book showing origin of and 'K. I
how to euro all diseases of the Mnofltlb
Head. Throat aud Lungs sent
FREE upon receipt of 2 cent
■ stamp.
Common Sense Cure Co., I
AjaMmKoiilsAßoM » o
The cheapest, first-
horizontal Eu- BM
riae iu the market.
Engines of all kinds,
fef Sawing. Thresh
ing, and Ginning, a
Send f«r illiMttatad
A.B.i-AKQcaAit, -AjO
K.rk,reA>». -
PenniylTsnis Agricultural Works, York, Pa.
Farquhar’s Standard Engines and Saw Mills,
Bend for Catalogue. Portable, Sta-
All w tionary. Traetion and Automatic Ka-
fines a special ty. Warranted eqaalor ’
, ..‘-H . a anperierta
Zddr.ii A. B. FARQUHAR * SON, York, Pa.
“OSGOOD”
, V. 8. 3Uad*rd Scalai.
g ent on trij. Freight
paid. Fully Warranted.
3 TON $35.
Other sizes proportion
ately low. Agents well paid. Illustrated Catalogue
free. Mention this Paper.
OSGOOD 3s THOMPSON, Binghamton, IT. T.
Blair’s Pills a Rheumiti C Remsiy.
Ovnl Box. 3I; round. 14 I’ills.
Rt to SS a day. Samples worts 81.50, FRB3
I Nt. X* Lines not uuder the horse s feet. ” r |.e .
I -s',.r s ,fetv Rein -iol.t-r <••>.. ’ oRv. • i-”a
I M.MAH.UiiTiIFIMUUidUJ
J■ _
10,000 *6EHTS m WANTE0 o W supply OHY MILLION jeopte with
BEN HARRISON ! ben HUR.
rk..i bi*»>i ilii r and win! Ben II arrieon by imhb author, belli n« oo „...
Suw“laklssi bXky.s Ontrtt. 50CU. HUBBARD BROS., 723 € bewtxnt 81.. Fhll*.
IIMf FD«K&
. f
■ None feneiM Rntw Dnn*twa«ta vonrrnoneyon ajnimornitbercotL Th*< FISH
BiUmi'-l wisb th.au»tt ; . y. vu; , r(U „i uini r«our.»nil will keep you»u>nn
*♦ « ’
CAUTION
Beware of Fraud as my name and the price art
stamped on the bottom of all my advertised shoe*
before leaving the factory, which pi\ et rhe wearere
high prices and inferior goods. If a dealer
Ur. "; '; • V,- >’ouir!nn shoesat a redu -.-d price, or
says he has .hem without my name and price stamped
on the bottom, put him down as a fraud.
W?L .DOUGLAS
S 3 SHOE. oenSen.
The only fine calf $3 .Seamless Shoe in the world
made without tacku or nails. As stylish and
durable as those cosrtug $5 or gH. and having no
tacks or nails to wear the stocking or h i t the feet,
. makes them as comfortable and well fitting as a
ban t sewed shoe. Buy the best. None genuine un
j less stamped on bottom “W. U Douglas S 3 Shoe,
' warranted.”
W. L. DOUGI.A S 84 SHOE, the original ar.*
only hand sewed welt $4 shoe, which equa.s custom
made shoes costing from $6 to $9.
W. L. DOUGDAS $2.50 SHOE Is unex
celled for heavy wear.
W. I>. DOUGLAS $2 SHOE Is worn by aU
Boys, and Is the best school shoe in the world.
All the above goods are made in Congress, Button
and Lace, and if not soil by your dealer, write
W. 1,. DOUGIiAS, Brockton. Mass.
WEBER
PIANO-FORTES.
ENDORSED BY THE LEADING ARTISTS. SEMI
NARIANS. AND THE PRESS, AS THE
BEST PIANOS MADE.
Prices as reasonable and terms as easy as oousisteafc
with thorough workmaubhip.
CATALOGUES MAILED FREE.
Correspondence Solicited.
WAREROOMS,
Fifth Avenue, cor. i 6th St., N.Y.
MARVELOUS
MEMORY
DISCOVERY.
Any book learned in one reading.
Mind wandering cured.
Speaking without notes
Wholly unlike artificial *v-tems.
Piracy condemned by Supreme Court.
Great inducements to correspond • nee cla-ses
Prospectus, with opinions of Dr. V’. nr. A Ham
mond, the world-famed Specialist in M nd d-se isoa
1 Daniel Greenleaf Thompson, the gr-at Psychol-
I ovist, J. M. Buckley. D. D., Editor of the Chria
i tian Advocate, Rrcharl Pi-nctor the Scientist,
i and others, sent post free by
J PROF. A. LOISETTE, 237 Fifth Ave., New York.
j
1 Works easier, is simpler, «Ju«tOwt.
: stronger, lighter, than any other.
don’t buy till YOU SEE IT.
BALLARD
■ BALLEBY, HUNTING AND TARGET RIFLES.
fiend for Illustrated Catalogue.
MARUN FIRE ARMS CO., Bex to D, NEW HAVEN, CT. N
a WE SELL ALL AMERICAN
BICYCLES.
And guarantee LOWEST PRICES.
A. \V. GUMP & CO., Dayton, O«
Largest retail stock in America.
52 tn OTTO, factory price *60.00, our price *40.00,
60 in. " “ “ 55.00, " “
48 iu. “ “ “ 50 00, “ " 33 00
46 in. “ “ •• 45.00, “ " 80 00
44 in. " “ " 40.00, " “ 27.00
Order quick. A150250 second-hand Wheels. Repair
ing&. Nickeling. Bicycles & Guns taken in trad®
SIOO to S3OO made working tot
us. Agents preferred who can furnish their own
horses and give their whole time to the business.
Spare moments may ne profitably employed alsoi.
A few vacancies in towns and cities. B. F. JOHN
SON * CO.. 1013 Main st,. Rlchmund. Ya.
S»a a H esn rs Catch them alive with
Sb F ’ Styner’s Sticky Fly
a HtaSflaiw’ B PAPEK Sold by all drug
gists or grocers, or mailed, postage paid, on receipt
Sf 5 cents. T. K. DAWLEY. Manufac
Hirer, 57 Beekman St: eel, .New k oik.
WEAK Men and Women made STRONG.
Our Remedy cures Brain and Nerve Troubles and
all Blood Diseases, contains no poison, purely vegeta
ble, but a powerful remedy. Permanent cure of Con
stipation and Dimases of the Urinary Or-ans. Sent
free on trial on receipt of postage, which is uj cents.
Address The,Hart Medicine Co., Unionvil e, Conn.
RSnMC STUDY. Book-keeping, Business Form®,
usx U til C Penmanship, Arithmetic, Short-hand, etc.,
Is thoroughly taught by MAIL. Circulars free.
Bryant's College, 457 Main St, Buffalo, N. Y.
HERBmO FIFTH WHEEL. LWSS!
Improvement. UEItBIt AND CO.. Q
TCYAC I A Bin 5.000.000 acres best atricul-
IlAhO LHHU -.ural and grazing land forsale. a
Address.CODLE Y *. PORTEIt. Dallas. Tex,
K gents wanted. 81 an Hour. 60 new article!. Cat’ign.
[ J K and humpies free. C. E. Marshall, Lockport, N. Y.
A. N. Thirty-seven, ’HB.