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COD LH EK OIL.
•
HOW IT IS MAVCFACTrRKU AND
Kl l IN El).
Extracted From the Livers of a y a _
riety of Fish, and Afterward.
Refined by Charcoal, Freez¬
ing and Pressure.
A correspondent from the coast of
Maine describes the making of cod liver
ail. He savs besides the livers of the
cod those of’ the haddock, pollock, hake
*Q<i disk, are uswl. that only about
.•ae-third of what is produced in the
U nited States and sold as the oleaginous
substance of the cod is genuine.
mm= satisfactory, and the best portion of the
livers were wasted. The old method was
to expo^ the livers to the action of the
sun until the oil was dried out. nly a
.mail percentage of oil was thus secured,
and the reridue wu thrown away as use
le **j fV "‘T ^1°“, °i th he'li’vm
used. Th^ method to put t t trie livers
into a large tin-lined vat having a coil of i
perforated steam pipes in the bottom.
A pressure of thirty pounds of steam is j
put on the boiler, and the steam in the escap-j
ing through the perforations pipes and
saturates the livers with hot steam ;
thus tries out the oil. In half an hour ;
after steam is turned on all the oil that
can be procured by trying out will have
risen to the surface. The livers, now
termed “blubber, will have sunk to the
bottom of the vat. The oil is bailed off
aud put into barrels to cool and settle,
after which it is refined by letting it
freeze till it is of the consistency of thick
mush. when it is put into drilling hags
aud the pure oil pressed out in a heavy
iron press.
The oil that is pressed through the
drilling is considered refined, and after
being put up in new barrels of forty-five
gallons each is sold to the wholesale
druggists for about thirty-six cents per
gallon. From these it passes to the re
tail druggists, who sell it for four and
five dollars per gallon. Running the oil
through charcoal and sand has been tried
as a refining process, but if was found to
lie vastly inferior to the freezing and
pressing process, Refined cod liver oil,
when subjected to the temperature at
which the crude oil was frozen, will
change its color and assume a milky ap¬
pearance. The refining process leaves in
the bags a substance resembling lard in
color and consistency. It is stearine, or
“tanner's greese,” aud is used as a dress¬
ing for morocco. the
The blubber left in the bottom of
vat, after tbo trying out, is allowed to
work and ferment for forty-eight hours,
and is then pressed. After the pressure
has continued for fourteen hours all the
oil is secured that remains in the blubber.
u is inferior oil, of which there are six
grades; it is worth about twenty-five
cents per gallon, and is used by curriers
in dressing, tanning and coloring leather.
There is left in the bags a substance of
the color and constitency of diy mud
called “scrap,” which is sold to fanners
as a fertilizer at nine dollars per ton.
From September until March the livers
are fat and in the best condition. A
bucketful of livers will then vield about
six quarts of oil. Only four' quarts of
this, however, can be made suitable for
medical purposes; the remaining two
quarts is of an inferior quality and is used
by curriers.
From March to June the livers are thin
and inferior, and will yield only one-half
as much oil. Cod liver oil for medicinal
purposes must be made from livers of fish
that have not been dead over forty-eight
hours. Fishing vessels on their long
trips to the banks save the fish livers in
hogs heads and sell them to the oil man
ttfaeturers for thirty rents per bucketful.
From these livers an inferior quality of
oil is made, that is used for tanners.
The best quality of cod liver oil comes
from Norway. It is much clearer and
whiter than the American oil. It is put
up in tin casks holding thirty gallons
each, inclosed in wooden barrels. The
claim is made that no livers except those
of the codfish are used in its manufacture,
but American manufacturers strongly
suspect that it owes its remarkable clear
ness to its having be: 1 a mixed with seal
oil. Twenty dollars per gallon is con
sidered a low price for this oil, and it
sometimes goes as high as $28. America
is the largest buyer of Norwegian oil.
Newfoundland cod liver oil ranks next
to the Norwegian oil. It is made entire¬
ly of the livers of young cod caught off
the Labrador coast. Portland has a cod
liver oil factory that produces 500 bar¬
rels a year—300 barrels of refined oil for
medicinal purposes and 200 barrels of
“currier's” oil.
Cod liver oil has long been recognized
as a valuable remedial agent, but it is not
generally known that sometimes when
the oil fails to effect a enre the steam
arising from the trying-out vat will suc¬
ceed.
A consumptive, in almost the last
stages of the disease, happening to pass
through a cod liver oil factory, stopped,
inhaled large draughts of the usually of¬
fensive vapors as though they were the
sweets of a flower garden, remarking:
“There is something here that seems to
strike the right spot,” and, although a
wealthy man, obtained permission to
work in the faetorj. At the end of a
month he had gained thirty pounds, had
greatly improved in appearance and feel¬
ing, his appetite had returned, his cough
was gone, and finally he completely re¬
covered. Singers also sometimes resort
to cod liver oil factories to inhale the
fumes arising from the vats. They assert
that their voices are thereby strengthened
and cleared.
Romance of an Egg.
Early last summer young island, girl at
Summerside, Prince Edward
wrote her name and address upon an
egg, which subsequently found its way to
Boston, Mass., among other shipments.
The parents of the young lady visited
Boston recently, and, strangeto say, were
introduced to the young Bostonian who
had received the egg and who asked them
if tbew knew the young lady—their own
daughter. Explanations followed and a
correspondence was opened. The wed¬
ding is to take place shortly.- Chicago
Netcs.
Sea-Gull and Crow in a Fight.
An Eastport picnic party visiting Casco
Island recently were attracted to a sound
Hke that which an old-fashioned wind
mill might send forth in a gale. They
went to the south side of the island,
where they witnessed the astonishing
sight of a pitched battle being savagely
waged between a sea-gull and a crow. It
was a hard fought battle, but the gray
bird won, knocking the crow out so
badly that he was easily captured by one
of the party .—Portland {He.) Press.
Courtship and Wedlock.
When they were standing in the twilight dim
The lover often said
Her voice’s tones were music sweet to him.
Alasthose days have fled.
They are married and the honeymoon is o’er,
And though they have no strife
He speaks about her tuneful voice no more
Because she is his wife.
—Boston Courier.
Vine Very Little Thing*.
In the milt of s codfish, or in water in
which vegetable* have been infused. th«
microscope discovers animaleuli so minute
that 100,000 of them would not exceed
in bulk a single mustard seed. Strange
to say these infinitesimal creatures are
supplied with organs as complete a« those
of the whale or elephant.
A bundle of spider webs, not larger
than a buckshot and weighing less than
one drachm, would, if straightened out
and untangled, reach a distance of 350
miles. or farther than from St. Louis to
Citv.
The smallest circular taw in the world
now iI1 a( tual use is a tiny disc* less than
t j ie f oU rtjj 0 f an inch in diameter used iu
Tiffany jewelry establishment for
slitting gold pens. It is about the thick
ssUss enclose!
8an NIarino, a little republic of
withiu the Kingdom luly, is the
smallest republic m the world. The
are Jls perfectly independent of
jt a ] v as are the people of America. The
territory of San Marino covers but
} w r D ‘y- °“ e ^ ua 7 rail es > a,,, ‘ hn * a P°I ni -
lation of f but 8000 souls. . Besides l>eing
t jj e republic it is the most
ancient, having f survived since the vear
’
460 A „ ov r 1400 v , ars .
_
j ast s „ mrner T u Garrett, of Haiti
mnrCj had constructed for his steam
y aP ht Gleam, tbe smallest piano in the
world. It is but forty-seven inches high,
forty-five inches wide and twenty-six
j nc h e9 (j ee p j t was designed bv Charles
A . steiff. Its tone is equal to'that of a
pj a no of the largest size
The western part of Persia is inhabited
|jy a sfM'cics of camel which is the pigmy
of its species. Thev arc snow white and
#re on tliat account almost worshipped by
th( . p e0 p| e j„ rcturn f or the kind treat
ment accorded the Shah while in Berlin
) lc ] ia s presented the muncipality of that
burg with two „f these little wonders.
j b( . ] ar g es t 0 f the two is twenty-seven
incheg high and weighs sixtv-one pounds.
The othcr jg gtated to be “four inches
] ess ” bu t the weight is not given,
The saying that “we are wonderfully
and cur j ous jy made” comes home with
f orce when we examine the skin of our
bodies w i th a powerful microscope. We
bnd tl la t it is covered with minute scales
like those on a fish. A single grain of
fine sand would cover 100 of these tiny
scales, yet, small as they are, each is the
covering for from 300 to 500 pores.
Potato rot is caused by the working of
a minute insect. Pasteur, the eminent
French chemist, recently examined a
piece of this rot the size of a pin’s head.
In it, living a regular cat-and-dog life,
continually biting and clawing at each
other, he fouud over 200 minute forms
of animal life.
Some Rare Old Bonds.
It was while Judge 1'olgerwasSccrc
tary (said an ohl treasury official). One
morning an old man came in to me who
' vaa Lr° ln 3 ■'' ew England State. He
®hout twenty years ago he found
some stocks or bonds among the
P®P®rs of an UDcle (mentioning his name);
ae bad been a man of national reputa
^" r ability, and had a comfortable
birtuno Lor those days that is, from 1830
to 1840—and he had come to the United
Plains 1 reasury to find out if they were
worth anything as they seemed to be
United States bonds. 1 looked at them,
They were ten of the “old debt” bonds,
llnl * wt ‘ re indeed curiosities. They were
old and yellow from age, but were worth,
principal and interest, in gold, $70,000,
i° r dicrc was ten years’ interest due on
011 ran imagine the old man s
amazement when I told him this. “IV hv,
i woultl gladly have taken $.>000 for
^ lem ’ he, “and I offered them to a
Boston banker for less than that, but he
ra U ,er superciliously and eontemptuous
declined to buy them at any figure.”
^ *°°' < *^e old man iu to see Judge Fol
K*’ 1 • w ^° " -as ver y much interested in the
matter when I explained it to him. He
* la ‘( aevcr seen any of the “old loan” se
curities, and after these were paid and
canceled I believe he directed that one of
'hem be framed and preserved. Well, in
' j' s 'ban half an hour s time the old New
Englander walked out of the building
Wlt Nork l' a Sub-Treasury cheek in his pocket $70,000 on the New
for in gold,
Uow that “smart Boston banker must
have cursed his own ignorance and stu
P'dity when he learned what he had
'brown away. St. Louis Ilf public.
Catching Rattlesnakes for (Ml.
Most people think that rattlesnakes are
entirely useless upon the earth, but the
story told by the Athens j Banner will set
aside such a belief: There are places in
South Georgia where men extract oil from
the rattlesnakes and use it to cure rheu¬
matism. These persons will give a colored
man one dollar to point out a rattlesnake
to them, aud then they kill it in a pecu¬
liar-manner. They place a forked stick
over the snake’s head, then put a cord
around it aud strangle the snake. This
is done to keep the snake from biting it¬
self. The body of the reptile is then
i strung up aud the oil extracted from it.
It sells at two dollars per ounce, and this
industry is a very profitable one. The
snakes in that section are very large,
averaging five feet in length, and one
rattler gives up a great deal of oil. A lit¬
tle colored boy once saw two rattlers ly¬
ing close together, and wanted to get the
money for finding them. It was a mile
to the nearest house. He was afraid the
snakes would crawl off while he was gone,
and so he took off his coat ami placed it
between the two snakes. He went off,
came back, and found them still eyeing
the coat. He had them chirmed. Sc
the snake is cultivated down there as a
profitable industry.
Women at a Pawnbroker's Sale.
In a dimly lighted, narrow store on the
east side of New York city a crowd of
perhaps a hundred people were gathered.
Fully five-sixths of them were women,
and they were squatted down on the floor.
Each oue carried a large basket, and
many of them were half tilled with Worn
and soiled clothing. A man stood up a
platform wildly waving his hands and
calling out for bids on the article which
he held in his hand.
It was a pawnbroker's auction sale.
Articles were being sold for almost
nothing. Wearing apparel that had cost
heavy prices when purchased new were
sold for a mere nothing. It was a com
-
mon thing to hear fancy skirts sold for
15. 20 and 30 cents.
The auctioneer didn’t waste anv time
cither. When he offered an article he
g3t a bid, and unless he received another
bid immediately he knocked it down
« It only shows,” said a policeman,
“how much poor people are able to bor
| row on a thing, when vou see such
articles sold fora few cents .”—New York
World.
Syrians in the Vuited States.
The Syrians in this country. Superin¬
tendent Jackson, of Castle Garden, says,
now number about 2000, including' a
considerable number of women. Nearly
all, the women as well, upon their arrival
here engage in selling prayer beads and
articles that appeal to the religious sense
of Catholics. The Syrians walk about
the country in order to meet their cus
j tomers, instead of riding on cars._ New
| York Sun.
WOMAN'S WOULD.
PLEASANT LITItRATCKl Hill
FEMININE HEAOEHS.
JfT LADY.
Mv lady is not fair, but a dear light
Shines m her eyes from morning until night.
My lady is aot learned, but she know *
The wav to every heart; straight there *b»
goes.
Though To love neither lore, fair nor learned, she is one
and and never to have done
Aot England Magazine.
MITE KICK LACE REVIVAL.
Miss Foster, the adopted daughter of
the late Irish Chief Secretary, has nearlv
I U iceeded in reviving the manufacture of
mmm ^Z^torevi^hfLeTn^ustrT limerick and she
recently t llr n< 1 h*r
which now bids fair to resume its wontM
activit?. Assisted bv a committee she
ha. nnened a trainingseW.i rnoid^rooreua - .t,
nuDils fn of whieh are makino necessary
the art. A » the material has
beeu suDniied to the irirls who ' in ad
dition to their ordinary training iTJ receive
SSI i,„» >}ie local ‘ichnnl Kenatol of -Z, ,, ,
with South “ n '
York Herald.
_
AN FMrKK ' s ■* T,IK KITCHKH.
The r Empress of Austria is the best
royal housekeeper in Europe. She is as
thoroughly acquainted with the details
°f Hie imperial Austrian kitchen as her
husband is with the details of the impe
r **d Austrian Government. She superin
tends the household affairs of the big pal
ace at the Austrian capital with the great
est care - slle receives personally, reads
and acts upon reports from cooks, butlers,
keepers of the plate and keepers of the
linen - Cooking devices which have be
r ' ,me inconvenient or antiquated are
abolished only at her command,
New methods of preparing or
serving food are adopted only at her sug¬
gestion. Changes in the personnel of the
establishment are made for the most part
only in obedience to her orders. Conse¬
quently a person can cat. drink, sleep
and be served better in her house than in
any other in Europe.
The kitchen in which the food for the
bluest blood of Austria is cooked is a
lmge room with all the arrangements at
each end for preparing fish, fowl, and
beast ior the table. Fifty chickens can
be cooked at once on one of the big,
whirling spits. Against the side walls
from floor to ceiling stand scores upon
scores of chafing dishes. In these dishes,
all of which are self-warming, the
meats are carried to the carving-room
whence they are returned to the kitchen
rea H y to lie served. The boiling and
baking, and frying and carrying and cut¬
ting occupy a small regiment of servants.
Twenty-five male cooks, in white clothes,
dress, spit, season and stuff the meats.
As many female cooks prepare the vege¬
tables, the puddin s, and the salads. A
dozen or more boys hurry the birds, fish
and joints from the kitchen to the carv¬
ing-room, where long lines of carvers
slice and joint everything laid before
them.
The kitchen utensils fill a big room
opening into the kitchen. This room is
the ideal of German housewives. The
high walls are covered with pans, kettles,
griddles, and covers, which shine as only
German hands and German muscle could
make them shine. There are soup tureens
in which a big boy might be drowned,
kettles in which twins could play house,
and pans which would hold half a dozen
little Hanses or Gretchens. Iu short,
about every culinary utensil on the walls
is of the heroic size, suggestive rather of
the Missouri barbecue than of the feasts
of crowned heads and diplomats at one of
the first of courts.
For days before the great court festivals
the whole Austrian court kitchen staff,
from the “head court cooking master”
down to the youngest scullion, work like
mad. The chefs hold repeated consulta¬
tions in their council chamber, often de¬
bating hour after hour with all the earnest¬
ness of a Parliament or Congress concern¬
ing the best methods of preparing fowls,
sauces, cakes, and scups. The menu, as
selected by the chefs, is submitted to the
master of tho provision department, so
that he may immediately order from the
city whatever the cellars of the oastle
lack.
The Austrian court dinners are famous
on the Continent. The delicacies which
result from the protracted meetings in the
council chamber of the chefs are often so
fine that favored guests not infrequently
observe the old German fashion of taking a
■choice bit home to their friends in the
name of the Empress and with her best
wishes. All thatremainsof a court feast.or
■dinner, is sent to tho Viennese hospitals.
On the days just after the banquetthe Em¬
press is very busy looking over the re¬
ports aud inventories oi the frail head
keeper of the napkins, and the fraulein
head keeper of the tablecloths, and the
herr head guardian of the imperial china,
and a dozen other like functionaries with;
jointed titles. She reviews all these com¬
munications with conscientious care, and
orders with strict attention to minute de¬
tails the replacement of all that has beetv
lost, broken, or defaced.
FASHION NOTES.
Numbered with novelties are the
plaited skirts.
Velvet muffs will be carried this
to match bonnets.
All fall sleeves are set with the head
i above the shoulder.
Black, with Boulanger red, and tan
with Eiffel rougo, are the latest combina¬
tions from Paris.
Short mantles and talmas arc made with
high shoulder gores that are turned
square at the elbow to form sling
sleeves.
Iu the shops where a specialty is made
of mourning toilets the broooh or buckle
used on the basque is purp ve, white or
black enamel.
The refinement which disti nguishes the
new woolens is also characti tristic of the
fashionable colors, which are mostly half¬
shades of green, gray, blue or
cotta, and exquisite tints ci fawn
brown.
Some of the black silk
jerseys are made, with vests, deep
with revers, and turn-back cuffs,
of openwork silk passementerie
* J
The French quadrille jlaids are
beautiful and softer in tone than
Scotch, which, though tl lev do not
follow the clan colors, still show a
tain crudity of colorings that is not
pleasant to the eye.
A charming little toque oi 'brown
has a black-plumaged bii «1 on
side, aud on a little velvt t muff to
borne with it there is a similar
poised on the outer side, g wing
ingly up at the wearer.
Fashion has decreed tl tat ladies
London's best society nr ist appear
afternoon teas, lunches, kt ttledrums
othcr afternoon enterta inments
arms bare, as well as in the
Will glitter with cosiljyo pi. ,
HOLfttiHOLH MATTERS. i
HOW TO MAKE TEA.
The water to be used should boil and
it should be poured on the tea immedi¬
ately it boils, if allowed to overboil the
peculiar property of boiling water which ,
acts upon tea evaporates and eventually
, disappears. Tea should not be a deeoe
tion, but an infusion. If allowed to stew
i if becomes little better than a decoction j
of tannic acid. Tea that is overdrawn is l
hurtful to the nerves and to the diges
tion. As to the precise number of min- j
utes which should lie devoted to the K. pro- i I
of ... drawing, people will — five
cess some say
minutes, some seven, some will perhaps ;
go as far as ten, hut our experience * is !
v
in . favor _ of six: this suffices mm rt . to . , bring out |
the , flavor „ M uallt I aufl , J« , ?t „ 33
>
much tea as is wanted should be made—
no more. Make fresh tea as often as it is
jectionable. »«■: As the thorough heating of
recepUc.e is of the firsT import^,
the ^P 0 * should ** made thoroughly
hot before the tea is put in it. The earth
enware teapot is preferred to all others
by connoisseurs, and it is superfluous to
»? that what fT er u tensils is u “ d ( or this
P u T>ose should be immaculately . clean.
Tea is an extremely delicate article. Its
susceptibility to the odors of commo
‘«ties near it is a source of danger and
deterioration, as it readily takes up the
smell of cofiee, cocoa, spices, cheese, ba
con or other articles of pronounced odor,
The complaints sometimes made about
tea would probably not arise if always
kept in places free from such contagion,
Tea should be stored in a warm, dry
place; unnecessary exposure to the air
should be avoided. A pound of tea
would make 128 cups .—leondou Tele
graph.
THAKSGIVING hints.
“Many a person who will eat his share
of the Thanksgiving turkey—tender,
juicy, delicately brown and done to a
turn—will look at the .stuffing and pass it
by because it Ls soggy, heavy and un¬
wholesome. The trouble, of course, is
in the making; it is often mixed up too wet.
The steam of the bird as it cooks fur¬
nishes almost enough moisture. Try the
following and see if it is not light and
tempting: Break up into fine crumbs a
sufficient quantity of the soft inside por¬
tion of a loaf of bread (being sure not to
have any hard pieces); season with salt,
pepper, a little chopped parseley, pow¬
dered sage or thyme, as you may prefer;
and melted butter enough to moisten the
whole and mix well together.”
The following is a recipe for pumpkin
pie, the quantities given being for one
pie only: A generous half-pint of rich
milk, one heaping tablespoonful of
stewed pumpkin, one egg, (white and
yoke separately beaten), and half a tea¬
spoonful of flour. Sugar to taste; a lit¬
tle ginger, cinnamon and nutmeg. Beat
well together, all except the whites of
eggs; add these last, stirring them in
quickly hut thoroughly, and bake in a
quick oven.
According to Mrs. Henderson, a turkey
of seven or eight pounds (the best selec¬
tion, it fat) should be roasted or baked
three hours at least, and a large turkey
should not be cooked a minute less than
four hours, an extra hour being prefera¬
ble to a minute less. Long cooking, with
frequent basting, is the secret of good
turkey.
Traditional Thanksgiving fare in
eludes roast turkey, roast chicken, chicken
pie, squash, potatoes, turnips, cauliflower,
cold slaw, celery and other seasonable
vegetables; a rich pudding, a goodly
array of pies—-mince, pumpkin and squash
occupying the places of honor—cake,
fruits, nuts, etc, From these dishes tin*
the housekeeper will select a satisfying
but not too heavy menu.
Serve with the turkey cranberry sauce
or currant, plum or other acid jelly. Be
sure to place the turkey upon a sufficient¬
ly large platter, as this will facilitate the
work of carving.
When soup is served at the Thanks¬
giving dinner, a clear soup is more suita¬
ble to the substantial bill of fare that is
to follow than one with vegetables.—
New York World.
RECIPES.
Baked Custard—Two tablespoonfuls of
flour beaten with two eggs, one pint of
milk, and sugar to sweeten; llavoi* with
nutmeg and bake.
a Steamed . 1 TNU- Pudding—One ^ cup each of
flour, sugar and sour milk, two cups of
raisins, two eggs, one teaspoon of soda
and a pinch of salt; steam one hour.
Fried Pumpkin_Pare anil slice the
pumpkin and boil till tender; idd remove
Horn the water and mash; two
beaten eggs and fry brown, in small
cakes in butter
Crullers One cup of sugar, onetable
spoon of butter, one egg, one cup of
sweetmilk, one and oae-half teaspoons of
baking powder, flour enough to roll, fry
in beef drippings.
Sugar Cookies—Three cups of sugar,
one cup each of butter and sweet milk
j three eggs and two tableapoonfuls of
! soda. Sprinkle with sugar and bake id
a moderately hot oven
Potato Stew-Peel .and slice a dozen
potatoes, put a cupful of water into the
frying pan and a few (dices of salt pork;
let the pork cook slowly one-half hour,
•
then add the potatoes . . seasoned , with salt
and pepper; cook ud til tender and serve.
Lamb t— 1 , I n:., it Cut ,__ a small neck of t 1 lamb ..... 1
mto chops, season lightly with pepper,
salt, savory and r.nc-fourth of a small
onion, minced; ’ pla * ce in a deep v disli with
, few sliced , pots .<>es , add a cup of water,
cover with a ci ust and bake iu a model*
ately heated o ren.
Dried Apj fle Pudding—Boil dried
apples until nearly done; save a teacup
of the juice of the apples for a sauce:
chop them ai id mix with soaked bread
and boil in a I >ag; make a sauce of melted
butter, sugr.r aud flour, with enough
apple juice to give it flavor; spice with
nutmeg.
German puffs—Put half a pound of
butter into a cupful of milk, place on the
stove to he rt. When it begins to boil
pour it on to a cupful of rifted flour and
stir until perfectly smooth; then add
six well b jaten eggs, three tablespoonfuls
of sugar »nd a little cinua mon: drop the
batter inf» small patty pan sand bake the
puffs in a moderate oven.
Minced. Beef—Mince Told beefsteak
and put it to stew for fifteen minutes
with just enough water to cover it; add
a small onion, minced, pepper, salt, vin
e gar and a tablespoor ,ful of flour wet
with cold water; let it boil until a thin
toast and serve -
- Sandwich Dressing—Oae-half pound
of butter, two tableapoonfuls of mixed
mustard, thr ee tablespoonfals of salad oil,
a little red or white pepper, a little wait,
yolk of c.ne egg; rub the Imtter to a
cream, add the other ingredients, and
mix throu ghly, set away to cool, spread
the bread with this mixture and put in
,h,„.
Butterr liik Bread—To two quarts of
flour add four tablespoonfuls each of
cream tar tar and soda, with one teaspoon •
ful of sal t, and sift twice. Add one or
j two mix largi wit'a j spoonfuls of sour cream, and
buttermilk to a soft dough;
knead U ghtly, divide into three loaves,
bt then . rise at the back of the
AGRICILTCRJL.
TOPICS OF INTEREST RELATIVE
TO FARM AND CJNRDEN
, XiV £s as hancre
I
R 3 farmer s time is valuable he ta
D0t spare much of it to gather
merely for their manurial value It
>g is scarce it may be well to g»
as an absorbent in stables, »
merely rot down into leaf mold leaves
w <*rth “ore where they be in the for
.hsn tiian snv aD v where whera else el ~. There * thev
-
as a mulc.i and protecno ‘
they cover .—American tulttrator.
_
i
TICKS OX SHEEP.
The Enffli«h mutton herds of sheep
—■;*«»*»,■»>! liable to be troubled by ti As than
Merinos, says Joseph Harris in the Ameri
Agriculturist. Every English farmer
hU sheep two or three times a year
kill ticks. Scores of preparations arc
for this purpose, and men go round
farm to farm with a convenient ap¬
for dipping the sheep, and do the
at so much a head. .
As to the relative merits of mutton
and Merinos, much may be said.
that is not our purpose at this time;
we wish to say now is, if you ; i r * •
any oper-wooied sheep of any
and have not dipped them this fall,
not let another week pass without
so. It is cruel to the sheep and a
loss to you. We once visited a far
i * r in Maine, who had given up Merinos
was keeping grade Cotswold’s. “I
them well,” he said, “but they do
seem to thrive, It does not pay to
Merinos for wool alone, and then
Cots wolds arc not going to prove
I think I shall have to give
sheep altogether and keep more
This was in winter. We caught
of the sheep and on opening the
found it literally alive and black
ticks. We have found many such
elsewhere. Before winte- sets ■
sheep should be dipped twice, once to
all the ticks, and again, two or three
later,to kill the young ticks hatched
from the eggs laid previous to the
dipping. This will effectually cure
evil. The ticks are easily killed.
favorite dip is made from tobacco stems
cheap tobacco. We have for many
used a dip made carbolic of a pound acid of soap fifty
and a pint of crude to
„allon of water The only point to be
observed i* to keep the mixture well
thinned. Dissolve the soap in a gallon
or more of boiling water and add the
carbolic acid and stir thoroughly. Then
with . , water , and , ,, the proportion named t
mix
above. In dipping let some trusty man
have hold of the head of the sheep and
see that none of the mixture gets into the
mouth, or nostrils, cr eyes. Each sheep
should be held in the dip not less than
half a minute.
A dip that will p obably be more con¬
veniently made is a mixture of soap and
kerosene and a gallon of milk. Put them
in a churn and churn rapidly for boiling ten or
fifteen minutes. If the milk is
hot when put in tbe churn with the kero
sene .cue it will be v all the better. When
thoroughly churned put two gallons Hof >i
the emulsion in the dipping tub or barrel
with twenty gallons of water, stir it up,
J Tho
and , commence dipping v the sheep, l he
reserved gallon of emulsion will be needed
to make more dip to keep the tub or bar
,el full enough to cover the sheep. In
our own trials w T c used soap instead ot
milk. Boil a gallon of water, and put iii
it a pound of soap, and stir till it is ills
solved. Then add two gallons of kero
sene and churn as before, or, if you have
ii with good syringe or force pump, churn it
that foAen minutes, or nil ail the
oil is “cut, and the emulsion is com
plete. It is not improbable that with so
much soap *a as above recommended the dip
may need a to be i a „ 154.4.1 little - stioi _,ei _suv y one
gallon of the emulsion to eight gallons of
water. We like to use plenty of soap to
avoid any possible injury to the wool. A
pound of white hellebore powder to each
two gallons of soap and kerosene emul
sion makes a dip 1 that finishes the ticks in
few ; minutes. . The dip ,]• , without the
a
hellebore will do the work. lou will
find n0 ]j ve t i c i 5 S the next morning, and
there is some reason to believe that it
kill the eggs also. But it is always
safer and better to give a second dipping
•„ tw0 or three ' weeks, and be sure you
dip sheep l ■ tu the ttoch.
every m
It may be thought that we should tell
lmw much dip will be needed for a given
number of sheep. It is not easy to do so.
It requires almost as much dtp ior one
sheep as for a dozen. You will need to
have the tub or barrel full enough to
cover the sheep. Much will aepena on me
size of the sheep and the size of the tub
or barrel You
least twenty gallons to start with.
much more will be required to replenish
the dip will depend on how much care
you bestow on squeezing out the dip from
the fleece when the sheep is taKeu out.
Kerosene is cheap, and it is better to
have too much dip than too HtflMurif
you get short some of the last .heep will
hot be thoroughly dipped.
-
farm and garden notes.
Make a specialty of some one branch
of farming s and vou will succeed.
-
'Pile size of the farm lias little to
with the financial condition of the farmer.
j All root crops .... liable to injury • • from ■ .
! f ro st should be gathered without
"
1
This ,. . the , time to , ditch, ... . drain, . •
is
‘ buildings & and make
, ..
i o cneral1 ^*
' Many years of experience show
with ordinary, good and well
Soil, the best crc-ps of potatoes aic on
tained bv flat culture.
| A well fed calf in autumn having
flesh, is worth two others of the
age poorly fed and of such stunted
from which recovery is next to impos
Chicks raised in brooders really dou
ble their age. "We have chicks now iu
our brooder that are so far advanced at \
three weeks of age as those six weeks
old, in care of the hen. But if you are?
ra i sing stock to keep, don't feed so heavy,
. I{ you find your chicks droopy, look
ou ^ f or Bee. lou may not think you
have them, but you will find, by care
fully looking, the large head louse,
Grease the head sparingly with an oint
m ent composed of two-thirds lard and
one-third coal oil.
There are “bi- profits” in ducks, be
age quicker than a chics, and frequently
you can get more for them. Their Icatti
ers are marketable at a fair price; Httle
is given for the best chicken feathers
They are worthy your attention,
y ou j, n0 w that if cows eat cabbage,
onions, or other strong smelling and pun
,, ont foods, they will make the milk have
I, SS£E.Wb«-. , flavor' Now, it stands to reason that
mum*
manure wash, frog spittle or s ime, 11
have the same effect upon the milk, lvecp
them away from it.
If the fruit trees are split by frost, a
-wsl plan is to boat grafting wax. spread
b t over a piece of muslin, and place over
(he wound tying in place with strips of
the same material wrapped around the
~
SUNDAY SCHOOL.
/O.V I L 11 so v tu i:'
soyBin VI i
J j
f>*»n T**Kt; **«#» Olftlffi . viiottvrr. |
Kirs'* W *-l«»-4a«l-Jeii Tr«i: p, " t
I *
viil, I l-i«Bwe i»rf
iamTS of wvre devoted to
together material- for the Temple
the j^rd. to be built bv SolouK.ii. his em.
, Jerusalem. Because he ha.1 set
upon the house of hi» God be gave aim
in great abundance wood. iron,
silver, gold and precious stones, and
to Solomon a solemn charge cmferning
hous* and kined«KU. Dana also T ,Ui
a site for the house, the very offered place
Abraham had centuries before
Isaac ill Chron. iii.. 1: Gen. xxii., 2. 14h
from H#aren (I chron. vxi , 22-36).
“So David slept with his fathers, and nas
in the city of David: having yog 1 ® 3
1 1 Kings, ii.. 10, 11.) the Throne of the
“Then Solomon sat on
!V>rd prospered, as King instead and all of Israel David, obeyed his father.^ Him.
(I Chron. xxix., 23.)
.*». “In Gibeon by the night/' Lord appeared The ark to of r*o»o- (Jod
mon in a dream
was in a tent which David had pitched and altar for of it
•\ Jerusalem, but the tabernacle
rnrnt offering were at Gibeon (II Chron. i. f
4). and thither Solomon and all the con¬
gregation had gone to offer sacrifice. The
Iaord had aopeared to Samuel at the taber¬
nacle in Shiloh aud to David at the threshing
floor of Araunak (I Sain, iii., 21: II Chron.
i i., 1). but we do not read that He ever ap
'•fared to Saul, for Saul was thoroughly diso
! ->cdient and rebellious, but David and Solo¬
mon, though great sinners and often overc¬
ome, sincerely sought the Lord, The Lord
ripeared to Solomon a second time on
uother occasion, and these great favors
hould have drawn anil kept him very close
to God (I Ki. ix., 2; xi.. 9). The Lord fre¬
quently revealed Himself to His servants in
visions and dreams (Nuni. xii . 6: Job xxxiii.,
• 5), hut Moses was honored above all others
n this respect (Num. xii.. 7, S; Deut. xxxiv ,
10); God how reveals Hims^'f to us by
word and Spirit as really as He did to Moses,
‘‘And God said: Ask what T shall give
*hee.” It is written that Aliasuerus said to
hieen Esther: “What is thy reou nest? It
•iiall be even given thee to the half of the
mgdom. v And that Solomon gave unto
ce Queen of Sheba all her desire, whatso¬
ever she asked (Esther v., 3.(5: I Kings x..
.3); but here is the King of Kings saying give to
'ing Solomon: “Ask what I shall
hse.” This same Lord said once to a poor
hind beggar: “What wilt thou that I shall
do unto thee?*’ (Luke xviii., 4)) aud is saying
u -day: I■ “Ask and ye shall receive:” “All
hat(ww Tw shall ask jn praver , be
xievirig. “And ye shall Solomon receive” (Mat. vii., hastshowed 7: xxi.. 22.)
6-9. said: Thou
unto thy servant David, my father, areat
approaches to God. Our highest place islay
. j; low at our Redeemer's feet, realizinp our
>»™ weakness, but rejoicing in His wisdom
*md strength; glorying not m wisdom, in might,
, riohcs hut in knowing Him who is Him
- flf all wisdom and wealth and power. He
that glorieth. let him glory in the Lord.
“He walked before Thee in truth, and in
‘ ighteousness, and in uprightness of heart
with Thee.” This is his testimony to God
oncerning his father; happy the fathers who
an have such testimony given concerning
them by their sons. how
“I am but a little child; I know not
to go out or come in.” This is his testimony
concerning himself, ami his unfitness in him¬
self. for the high position to which he had
been called.
“Thv people which Thou hast chosen.”
They are the Lord’s people whom He has
<\ hoBe “ tn ,’? lakp Hlm y™'- and 8”'” 111 ™ is
the Lord’s representative among them,
David said in his last words that “He that
ruleth over men must be just, ruling de- in
the fear of God,” and Solomon seems to
sire to be just-such a ruler over God’s chosen
peop j e
“Give therefore Thy servant an under*
standing heart to judge Thy people.” In the
pflge that he may go out and in before the
people and judge them. That Jesus Christ
Himself is the Wisdom of God we ar,
Him to save us. how very few seem willing
to let Him be their Wisdom in the everyday
^
10-14. “And the speech pleased the Lord,
that Solomon had asked this thing.” It was
wisdom for judgment that Solomon asked
to1 ’’ that he mi £ h t discern between good and
bad, as is manifest in the record which fol
lows our lesson and in the last verse of this
chapter,
n0r long life but this one thing—the oower
to discern right and wrong and to <ithe
right, or peculiar in one word, “Righteousness.” This
ls one ' feature of the character of
, TeVlova b that » xhe r j ghteoU s Lord loveth
righteousness” (Ps. xi., 7), and above all places
is this desirable in a ruler.
w ' 1 'hive'’“awlse andan
understanding that Judah heart.” In chapter iv„ 20-29,
we read and Israel were many as
the sand which is by the sea in multitude.
and that God gave Solomon wisdom and un
derstanding exceeding much, and largeness
of heart, even as tho sand which is on the
seashore: which certainly indicates that,
“
caS e that misflit come before him.
“X have also given thee that which thou
“y^ food and
them raiment and have little or no
time left to seek God, while He keeps saving:
^llt
addeduntoyou;”offerinytodoforusex-"?ed
iug abundantly Eph above all we ask or think
iii 20>.
the «^il CgS wldotn i,
gj V eu him for the asking, riches and honor
without being asked for,'but length of days
man( j m< ?nts and walk in His ways;
it would not be haTe a blessing hls either earth to himself len
°P le to ,la >’ s on ? tu -
1A “And Solomon awoke; and behold it,
was a dream.” It was, however, a dream to
some punrose, for the Lord was in it as He
was in the dreams of Jacob, Joseph Ins son.
Nebuchadnezzar, Daniel. Joseph, husband of
Mary, Pilate’s wife, and others. God does
sometimes even to this day reveal His will
jn a dream or vision of the night, concern
ing special guidance on unusual matters;
lint ordinarily He does not reveal Himself
except by His M ord, and never iu conflict
with it. Whatever is not in perfect agreo
ment with the Word of God proceeds not
ff*om God. rtut from the prince of darkness,
(Isa. viii., 20.) “He came to Jerusalem * *
and offered up burnt offerings and peace
“i£us oTri^iS^h^to G°oZ
every thought, word and deed acceptable,
and appreciated only by God. The peace
how when we truly believe in Jesus we have
fellowship with God.— Lesson Helper.
An Eccentric Couple’s Mausoleum,
A Boston dispatch says : When the
wealthy and eccentric Dr. Henry Hillier,
of Wilmington, died a year ago, st Ties
of the surpassing magninceiwe of his
They^‘were,“however, constructed all Hue.
Tho widow had two caskets
one tor eac h 0 f them—and now pro
poses to erect a man so cum to contain
them which wi 1 cost as much as many
pa aces. The material of the and elaborately
carved caskets, b; All inner outer, is
brass and mahogany. The ca-ki ts are
^ with m y tho ; og cal de-igns . r
Ascribed appropriately. Dr. H.bier's
(as -.et has three rated gold his plates, photograph. one oi
which is illus with
There are two go.d plates upon the
other,
The mausoleum is to be a stately
•uare structure of polisl ed gran te,
B 1 ?,' au im posing vestibule, aud crow ned
sfysraK? . , , zx. , VS?£ „ ,
^ be w bole surmounte l by an he c
bLrure 0 f the Angel of Hope. In me
centre, beneath the vaulted ceiling, the
two caskets will be p need si e b side
beneath a covering of gats. Statues
representing most conspicuous ange s of adornment memory vilbe of the
the
Mth goU tho an-! hues o,. ,.ied , ....
represent of the sunset.
Burning st the Stake, •
“Burning wdS at the stake is the most
pamful borrib'fc manner of death
1 ever witnessed’’6aia a traveling “I man i
to a Chicago Herald trnter am
fortr-five years old, and the burning 1 j
"IS a .w’took p'ace at noon one day, install. about i
of j-lr. 18-9 at
yj 0 eightv-fonr miles from Kansas
ritv Tae victim was a eo ored man
named John, who b l *geJ to tides of !
Kiser a farmer. On the evening
Mav i3 John had murdered amboat young wood- Ren- ;
ianiin Hintoi^t tiiaPLaouri h'.s st
vard on River, between ;
Lnvnesvdle and Miama. John murder- i
ed young Rib too for his money, and ob- I
tamed tSri. s m e of which he dlalrd-nbal ]
among other colored men. Judge Hicks,
of Jnde'peuden e, then Judge of the
Sixth District, granted a motion for a
S'e ial “ term of court to try John slid
two her colored criminals. Tnia was
m tbe forenoon. When the court a l
j anted for a nooning die eop e, imoa
tient at the ait's delay, burst upon the j
Sheriff as he was conveying the the ail, prison¬ took
ers from the court room to j
the n from the o icers, and there in the
sight of hundreds hanged the other two
and chained John to a «a nut tree and
burned him to death. He lived about
six or eight m mi e; after the flames
wrung the first cry of agony from his
lips. Then the in! ala ion of the Ida iug
fire suffocated him His face, arms and
breast were scorched frightfully, and the
.ower portion of li s body was a charred,
shape ess mass. Judge Hicks w is so in¬
dignant from tile at bench. tnis outrage No trouble that lie resigned to these j
concerned ever resuited from the case. ■
To Prevent Transparency.
“Wliy are those envelopes blue on the
inside i” the
“For a very simple the reason, t re.su’t* was to be
reply. “One of gro
attained in making envelopes is to pie
velit tnuiB money. Many white pa, ers
are so transparent that by careful scru
t ny he contents of such envelopes may
be determined. For instance, let us put
a sheet of \ aper with writing on it into
this envelope, i et us also insert a. bank
cheek. We will now seal it and ho d it
to the light thus There you can not
only see the bank die k, but you can
also read nianv of the words on the
sheet of paper. This can he prevented and high
either bv getting a very thick
priced envelope which is not transpar¬
ent, nor scarcely translucent, or by tak¬ is
ing a cheaper grade ol paper, w.iiek
blue on one side. .' ow we sel, quite a
number of blue envelopes that is, en¬
velopes which are hue on the outsioe;
but most people do not like them lor
their color. 8o, to get over the ditt o d
ty, and still not make a high l 1I11,ei !ir
tic e, we use aper which is blue on one
side and white vn the other.—[Fitteburj
Dispatch _
Oriental Beggars.
Beggary throughout the East is a
thriving professiem. There are guilds of
beggar-, besides the numerous commu¬
nities of dervishes, whoaie semi religious j
mendicants. Many families have been
beggars for generations, and arc
mendicants from choice. Some of these
profession .1 beggatsure actually wealthy.
Four nud-twenty years ago the writer
well remembers a case. The Chief Beg
gar (the title was not conferred in deri
sion) gave his daughter in marriage to a
substantial farmer. The girl’s dowry
consisted of two freehold lious g, ih'
rooms of which were entirely ti led with
dry pieces of bread, and tbe sa‘e of these
oegged crusts subsequently realized a
considerable sum, being disposed of »s
food for cattle. In ihe east there is no
organized charity, but Mussuimen are
exceedingly charitable, many givin.
away a tith and even a third of their in
come.
The Wife of Columbus.
While at Lisbon, Columbus was accus¬
tomed to attend service,says Washiuglo
Irvintr, at the chapel of the convent o
All Saints. There he became acquainted
with a lady of rank, named Dona Felipa,
who resided at the convert. She wa
the daughter of Bartollommeo Moois do
Pallestiello, or Perestrcllo, an Italian
cavalier, lately deceased, who had been
one of the most distinguished Portugal, navigators and
mi der Prince Henry of
had colonized aud governed the Is and
of Poito Santo. The acquaintance and ended ►oo<> i"
ripen< d into attachment
marriage. It appears, adds Irving, t (i
have been a match of mere affection as
the lady had little «»r no fortune.
The Tiger’s Choice.
The Java Bode Tecords a singular ad
venture which n ceutly befell a govern¬
ment surveyor in the wilds of Sumatra.
After a hard day’s work on a nv uotaii
side he passed the n ght in the open air
n a hut ha-tily run tin by his coolies
As he was falling asleep after long watch
ing,the sight of two fiery eyes glaring paral in
at tbe entrance of the but almost
ized him w'itli terror, An enotmobc
royal t'ger soon glided in, smelled h m
all over, and then si t 10 work devouring
the remains of Ids evening meal to the
last morsel. Afterward bis terrible guest
According to the New York Commer¬
cial Advertiser. since 1860 more than 00,
OuO bodies have been buried in tbe Pot¬
ter’s Field on Hart’s Hand. There aie
no single interments. The bodies nr
placed in trenches, dug in regular wide, ro«s,
forty-five feet long, fourteen feet
and ten feet deep. Each of these (fits
will hold one hundred and fifty bodies
Slight influences exerted on the
youthful mind may affect its course for
ever. A boy may become tainted with
insincerity by the influence of parental
example, though his parents are entirely
unaware of the influence they are exert¬
ing. He sees that they probss with which re¬
gard to some persons an interest
they do not feel.
The builder of the famous Juggins’ r i!t
that went to pieces in the oci an a year or
two ago, is goinc to try the experiment
again with a still larger raft. It will I c
750 feet long and contain 60,000 logs,
and will stait from New Brunswick to
New York in May.
A New Kind of Insurnncc
lias been put. in operation by the manufac¬
turers of I)r. Fierce’s medicines. His “Golden
Med>cal Discovery” and “Favorite Pre-crip
tion” are sold bv druggists under ilie manu¬
facturers’ positive guarantee. Kither benefit
or a complete cure is thus attained,or money The
paid for these medicines is returned.
certificate with of of guarantee .icines given is equivalent in connection to
>ale these me a
p«d cy of insurance. The “Goldc Medical
from Discovery” cures all humors arising, and skin blood and taints, seal
whatever cause The
d senses, scrofulous sores and swellings.
‘‘Favorite Prescription” cures all .those de¬
rangements and weaknescs peculiar to wo¬
men.
Don't hawk, hawk, and blow, blow, dise ’ri
in_r everybody, but use Dr. Sage’s Catarrh
Remedy.
______
What is our life but an endless flight f
winced facts or events ! In p endid variety
these changes come, all putting questions to
thehumam spirit.
A 10c. smoke for 5c. “Tan.iirs Pune
S3 1
LOUISVILLE.
rC- CURE oil
p | s OS
\2 a a?®;
o 4
m taste. W11
C-J
1 B C ON SU M r 1 m
* ;
r<natr .1 OlilaMor. ,. t
< «■»«<» X fr un
»!** >_rv rill sartSy u, rr .‘
W V, '
fa.«. auchan » t, r . u a, ,■ 'ywear
’-s' 'i «
i! d pntS . ’ * Rfij.
« S o too itn ' It.*
ifeU*. CaistrU Cm. tra,-, ,
U.7,7. m» u
u ot be bnmi „n<i D ,,, 0 '
- st m In taring n*ir s <■„ ...
-it I.
. .
lao ’ U "N by f.
, lV , „ j'
Coer So.d by Druggist-, tr . Cf per fe
. rfali _ ^ TuTyo™^ w .. muchmaiT.*
pabltahee each year a, Mu£££, ** It
lour-dojlar monthlies. an.i t, T ^
m e;
companion. It ha« a unique place t„. **">>»
can umily ito it[you do know^*
f„ r tbe small sum of iL75
ary.ugh tent no . will ^ entitle yuo bo the T Bane,?!, h*
1HE lou ™ a \ U, oue “ Pi! ^ ‘ ,0N ««**. j 1mi *
'
**I.uoy llinton.*'
H«rk ! the sound of many to ices,
Jubi an* in ulaidcst g»a;
And lull many a hear rjjoi'Ci
As the chorus float* ai *n<»:
“Hail the Queen of all To'iiceos! ’
IIow the happy voicVrt blend,
* F«iie>-t an t pare4 among h r fellowi—
Mann staunch and true friend.’
(irrscin. Ibc Paindise ot Farmer*.
cquah fruit, e climate,certain and abundant I
cri ps. H» t*t gram, grasv and stock coon,
jy mi he world. Full informal ion free.
» }cm» Oicg. Im’igra’in Fo.i • t. Port ami, ij-. ’
Dangerous Tendencies
Characterize that verj common complaint, «t»nt
The bronchial foul matter tubes dropping; lungs from bring the head lnt .1 toi
or may oa bronchitis «
consumption, whic h reaps an immense harvest ot
deaths annually. Hence the necessity of giving
tarrh Immediate atteutiou. Hood's Sarsaparilla
cures catarrh by purifying aud enriching the bkni,
restoring aud toning tho diseased organs. Try
peculiar medicine.
•■H.xxt'aSarsaiiartHa nirnl meot caurrh, n, w
of thebronehlal tubes aud terrible headache -a.
uuboss, Hamilton, Ohio,
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
i sold by all drugguu. *1; an tor $.v Preparedonij
i by c. I. hood * co., Apothtcarfc*. Loweii, *•»
| OO DOSCS One Dollar
FOUND!
THE PLACE TO BUY ALL YOUR
Furniture, Carets, Im i
SHADES, ETC.,
| cheaper than any house ix thk south.
. ju m.re and ser our slock and prlcti
before placing pour orders,
nr write us for prices.
». J. MILLtH & SOU,
A- 44 t’caditrcc H.. Atlanta, Co,
jevt H jitiattia
mm
w
BILE BEANS
on t he liver nod bile; clear tho complexion;
biliousness, sick headache, cosuunesg,
and nil liver and stomach disorder!.
We are now milking small size Bile Beans,
adapted for children and womeD
small ami easy to tukc. Price of either
25c per bottle. of the
A panel size PHOTO-GRAVURE 7-17-70, mailed
picture, “Kissing at makersoftne on
oceipt of 2c stamp. Address the
Anti Bile Remedy—"Bile Beans.”
4. F. SMITH & CO.. St. Louis. Wo.
AGENTS Wanted!
LIKING LEADERS A >1 %STLULY WORK
OF
OF nalrhlfwi Intrmf,
THE W O R L D Comprising graphic biofrs
tho Men an I Women of Greatest Inns Eminmei,
and Power, who ate leading the mil r -naa
hind tt^ d shaping the dfhti y o< Nations ^
Hi. d i TVoX.* U M\^FRARK I iESUt 1
k The vjM*
CHANDLER HARRIS, and uth*>r*. must
and p tpular Rook published in twenty year* A tm
chance for Ag*ntt> to make big money Libern
and exclusive t rr.tory. Write at once for aa 8 c ?- Gt
dress Ill IM i I NS \ • O. AI LAST A,
ff^^C0M B lNING5ARTICLE5v- (\Mx
OF FURNI TURE. ",
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and ship goods to bo I ''J | whekL • H aIBs
paid for on delivery. for Cata- VTj \yvL\\/l 1 /©SFKCULr to iilKfc
b«jn i stamp desired.
logne. yamc goods pFLiriKl. hliaaa..^
LI U LUG MFG. CO., 145 N. »th St, l
Ely’s Cream BalmBSis? 0LDiKfl'>°
wii.i. ct iti; B P«|| c
P A T A R R (|
I'rliM ao < m
Applv Balm int‘» • acli nostril.
ELY BROS.. M Warr-sf SI..N.Y.
|pTEB ALL OTHERS FAIL COhSblT u ,.,i
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329 Noril* Flftrrnth Sk»n W
the treatment of Blood Poison*. Sine
Nervous Complaints, Bright’s Disease,
Impotency and kindred diseases, no matter o
fcgr-Ten long standing davg med!c!ues or from furnished what cause by mail oriRinatiy poet
Send for Book on SPECI AL l>i«cn»e*.
FOB A m Double Breech-Loader
ass ps* ibidSi
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S^nd 2c. stamp for RD-par« Catalogue an i ba™ ’ P „
GRIFFITH & SEMPLE, 612 W. Main, LouisvtM
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Cost
Send for ilhiatrated Catalogue, Fro- A.J : 1 w
ret 4 w S ,%«.
Importer, end MERCHANDISE, Whole,-c!e Teniers'* -
\ MUSICAL on*'
monicao, io.tn-,, I-Iiitnrn, All 011)1 oa. Areol')'* s»tr | ng». “
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Cincinnati .S3
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Tr.de •89.
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