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The Southern Farmer.
K hm Hoy.
K cant Investigations threaten to upset
some popular notions. It has long been
Hupposod that early cut hay is more val
uable than that cut later. If the judg
ment of the cows were a test there would
be no question about it. They will leave
the riper hay, and even refuse to eat it at
all, If they can procure that which has
been cut earlier. In the writer’s dairy
the milk falls offmoro than ten per cent,
when the young hay is changed for that
cut two weeks later. This is sufficient to
support the general opinion in spile of
chemical analyses, which go to show that
ripe hay is heavier, more bulky, and
contaiu9 more nutritious substance than
that cut earlier. Perhaps the operations
of the chemist can extract more nutri
ment from ripe hay than can the cow’s
stomach; but as young hay feeds more
profitably it seems best to cut early.
A Krllali for form Mark.
The importance of au occasional relish
of salt and wood ashes for all kinds of
stock, says the New York World, cannot
be too highly appreciated. The most
convenient form in which these mate*
rials are offered, according to feeders of
wide experience, is in a solid mass
which admits of diligent licking on the
part of the animal without gaining more
of the mixture thau is desirable, lu
order to mix these ingredients so that a
solid maas may tie formed, take silt and
..pore wood ashes in the proportion of
pound for pound, with water sufficient
to hold ihe mixture together. To pre
serve the mixture iu a solid state, place
it in troughs or boxes sheltered suffi
ciently to keep rain and snow from reach
ing it and converting it into analk&tine
pickle. These troughs with their tempt
ing contents prove efficient as baits for
alluring animals, turned out on long
runs during the day, home at night.
When cattle chew leather, wood and
old bones, remember that it indie*tes a
lack of phosphate of lime in their food,
which is requirod to supply bone mate
rial. A teaspoonful of bone meal given
daily with their grain will correct the
habit and supply the deficiency which
inducoa it. If the disposition to eat
bonea !b indulged iu when cows are on
grass, the deficiency evidently exists in
the soil, and the pasture will be greatly
bene fit ted ly a top dressing of bjne
dust. Two or three hundred pounds to
the acre, sown broadcast, wi 1 repay
attending expenses iu a better yield and
quality of milk and butter.
The lire* anil fruit Tree*.
So much has been said and written
about bees injuring fruit trees that the
following interesting incident, related
by Mr. Wm. Carr in the British Bee
Journal for May, will be read with in
terest. Speaking of tbo plum, pear,
cherry, apple, almond, peach, and other
fruit trees, Mr. Carr says: “All these
trees yield a great quantity of beautiful
and highly-flavored honey, and when in
bloom, the bees are working from morn
ing to night collecting the honey and
pollen and fertilizing the bloom. We
should have little fruit if it was not for
the agency of bees. All good fruit-grow
ers keep bees to'fertilize their fruit-bloom
This r< minds me of my visit to (our
noble and good president of the British
Bee keepers’ Association) tlm Baronets
Burdett-Coutts’a residence at Highgate,
on April 8, 1870. When J went into the
peach-house the gardener said to me, ‘See
what a quantity of peaches I have got
set!’ I said, ‘You have, indeed; how
do you account for it ?’ ‘Well,’ he said,
‘I have always kept bees to fructify my
fruit-bloom ; but last autumn I bought
a stock of Ligurian bees, and they being
hardier thau the common bees, began
working earlier, and got into the peach**
house just as the trees were coming into
bloom, and the result is I have ueariy
double the quantity of peaches set I evor
had before.’ ”
The wheat grain is a fruit consisting
of a seed and its coverings. All the
middle part of the grain is occupied by
large, thin cellB, full of a powdery sub
stance, which contains nearly all the
Htarch of the wheat. Outside the central
Btarcby mass is a single row ol Hquaiish
cells fil.'el with yellowish material, very
rich in nitrogenous, that is. flesh-forming
matter. Beyond this again there are six
thin coats or coverings, containing much
mineral matter, both of potash and
phosphates. The outermost coat is of
but little value. The mill products of
these coverings of the seed are peculiarly
rich in nutriment, and fine flour is
robbed of a large percentage of valuable
and nutritious food. Middlings not only
contain more fibrin and mineral matter
than fine flour, but also moro fat. The
fibrous matter, or outer coat, which Ib
indigestible, forma one-sixth of the bran,
but not one-hundredth of the fine flour.
Wheat contains the greatest quantity of
gluten aud the smallest of starch ; rye, a
medium proportion of both, while in
barley, oats, and corn, the largest pro*-
portion of starch and tho smallest of
gluten are to be found. In practice 100
pounds of flour will make from 183 to
137 pounds of bread, a good average
being 136 pounds; hence, a barrel of 196
pounds should yield 226 one-pound
loaves.—[American Miller.
I'nllanlng Towla.
Apparently it is an easy matter to fat
ten fowls for either the market or for
table uee, yet it requires both care and
judgment to do so properly, while con-
side<abie experience is called into play
to uidko it a decided success. Tho way
poultry is fattened, dressed and marketed
has much to do iu determining the price,
ruid a few cents per pound extra, for
poultry of ti\c best quality, wilj make a
considerable difference iu the sum total
of the receipts, aud amply repay for the
extra labor required. It invariably paya
to put all marketing in the most present-
table condition before presenting it to
the consumers, and poultry is no excep
tion to this rule. In fattening fowls or
chicks for market, the best and quickest
way to do it is to keep them in a darken
ed room, only admitting the light when
the birds are fed. The food should con*
sist principally of soft, cooked food, while
milk, when it can be readily obtained,
should be liberally supplied, and water
may then be dispensed with. The floor
of tho room should be kept well strewn
with coarse sand and with gravel. Abnit
ten days usually suffices to complete the
fattening, if the fowls were in goed
health and in good growing condition
when first confiued.—[Poultry Monthly.
Man«r» for Orrh*rd«.
Wood ashes are, doubtless, excellent
for orchards, but instead of being put
around the trees, thoy should be spread
over the land. In our limited experi
ence we have learned one thing about
orchards, as well as fruit trees of every
kind that we have cultivated, and, so we
believe, the principle can be applied
pretty much to everything that grows
upon the earth, which is, “that the
application benefits them all.” Ground
occupied by fruit trees should be
manured as liberally as are other por
tions of the laud used for raising wheat
or corn. It is the neglect to do so, in
connection with the negligence with
which the orchards are treated in many
sections, that makes them unprofitable,
and to be worn out permanently. And
as to the kind of manure with which
orchards ought to be treated. While
any kind, almost without exception, will
prove au advantage, there is none in the
world to be omparei with barnyard
manure. A liberal application of this
only every third year, with careful prun
ing and washing the trunks of the trees,
will make a prodigious change in the
orchard.
FAUM MUTES.
Crops which leave the land better
than they found it, make both the farm
and the farmer rich.
Hogs may be kept from measles by
mixing a handful a good wood aahes
with their food twice a week.
Farmers should plan wisely and carry
out the plans to the best of their ability.
Thoy should have a diversity of crops, eo
that if there is a failure in one there m*y
be a hit in another.
Carrots render the skin of horses
glossy and healthy looking. They give
a tinge and richness to butter, and are
more nourishing for c )w* than turnips.
The manure of cows and pigs resists
decomposition for a longer time than
that of the sheep and horse—both the
latter being dryer than the former, and
deeouiposing more readily in tho soil.
Compost for corn: To 750 pounds of
fine stable or yard dong; the same of
dry muck, or rich loam, add 500 pounds
of some good standard superphosphate.
This will make a ton of valuable man
ure, and should be thoroughly and finely
pulverized.
To rejuvenate old orchards, cut out
all the dying wood and threenfourths of
the suckers; scrape the trunks of the
t-ees completely, removing all the old,
hard, broken bark, wash with a prepara
tion of whale oil, soap and water, one
pound of io*p to a bucket of water, and
give the orchard, not merely under the
trees, but every part of it, a heavy top
dressing of good barn-yard or compost
manure.
The reason poultry killed at home,
though young, is not as tender as that
bought in the market is, the former is
generally not killed until wanted, and,
when eaten is still rigid with death,
while that bought at the poulterers has
been killed at least hours—more often
days. Poultry out to be killed several
days bofore bsing eat, dressed
once, and with a few bits of charcoal in
it, hung in a cool place. If poultry are
kept lrom food and drink at least twelve
hours before being killed, the crop aud
intestines will be emptied, and any su
perfluity of secretions exhausted. The
flesh will bo juicy and the fat firm. If
loft three days without food or drink,
though in good condition previously,
the flesh will be dry and tasteless and
the fat Boft. Never buy an undrawn
fowl. The gas from the crop and intes
tines will taint tho flesh, even though
retained but a short timo.—[Fancier
Journal.
No farmer need expect to gather fruit
many seasons without manuring the
orchard well. This point is often over
looked. Every third year a good oat of
barn yard manuro should be applied
Boro dust and ashes arc excellent. Ic
western New York it is tho habit to feed
fruit trees well; here we starvo them,
aud tho result is New York supplies our
great markets with Iruit when we ought
to do it ourselves. .Several times a year
wo unfold to our readers the great secret
of largo fruit crops—manure, manure,
manure ! aud wo shall keep on in that
lino if it takes a life time. Apples at
three dollars a barrol and pears at ai
aro more profitable than milk at
two cents a quart, butter at twenty
cants a pound, or corn at fifty cents a
bushel.
Religious Reading.
HAMB•Ml'S HYMN row WHITSUMBAY.
Spirit unseen, our rpirit’* homo
Whereaoe’r o’er earth we roam,
Lost In depths of traokleu wood,
Toet on ooean’s desert flood.
By the Old World’* sacred haunts,
Or the New World’* soaring wants,
Peopled isle or coral ehoal,
We through Thee are one in eoul.
Soirit of forgiving Love,
Come And shelter from above
Those who chin Thee as their own,
Or who follow thee unknown;
Come and fill with second life
Minds distraught with doubt and strife;
Conquering with Thy bloodless sword
Be the conquer’d’! great reward.
Come and through the languid thought
Of the burden’d soul o’er wrought,
Send, as on a gale of balm,
Whisperings sweet and gentlest calm;
dome, as with a whirlwind’s might,
When our pride is at its height,
Lay its surging billows low,
That the world her God may know.
Love Divine all love excelling,
Quell the passions’ angry swelling;
Lend us thoughts which shall abide
That last day when all is tried;
Nourish wish the grace of Heaven
AU good gifts to mortals given,
As the sunshine seeks to feed
Brightest flowers in dullest seed.
Yea—the flower would fade and perish
Were there no kind warmth to cherish,
Never would its petals rise,
Clothed with their refulgent dyes,
Had no genial light been near,
Turning from its loftier sphere,
With unwearied care to nurse
Highest good ’mid darkest curse.
Led by Thee the poor man’s eye
Looks towards his home on high.
As he thinks with joy of One
Deem’d like him a poor man’s son;
Touch’d by Thee the rich man’s store
From his open hand sbail pour,
Lightened by the loving look
Aud the sUent self-rebuke.
Breathe the speaking speechless grace
Of the infant’s smiling face;
Pass with swift unbidden rase *
Through the maiden’s crimson blush;
Bless the solitary heart
Dwelling with its God apart;
Consecrate to things above
Happy home and wedded love.
When the poise of youth beat* high,
Be Thy still, small warning nigh;
When for great resolves we yearn,
Towards the Cross our manhood turn;
When our locks grow*scant and hoary,
Light them with Thy orown of glory;
When at last we come to die,
Sparky in the vacant eye,
Hope of Immortality.
—Dean Stanley in Macmillan’s Mngaiin .
LeBHon from Samson.
The minister asked the Sunday-school.
“With what rematkable weapon did
Samson at one time slay a number c
Philistines ?” For a while there was n
Hna*c', aud tho minister, to assist th
children a little, commenced tapping hi
jaw with the tip of his flnger, at th
same time saying: “ What’s this—what'
this? Quick as thought, a little folioi.
quite inuocentiy replied; “The jaw
bone of an ass, sir.”
niraele*.
Two men were talking: “ You may
say what you please,” said one, “I
can not believe that God would first
impose laws on nature, and then violate
his own laws; what would be the use of
making them, if they wero so easily set
asido ?”
“ I don’t know, sir, what God may do,
or Vrhat he will not do,” said the other
very reverently; “but I do not regard a
miraclo to be the violation of the laws of
nature. There is no violation of the
laws of nature, or rather of the laws of
God, that l know of, save the wicked
actions of wicked men.”
What then,” said he. “do you regard
a miracle to be 7”
I regard it to be merely such an in
terference with the established course of
things, as infallibly shows ns the presence
and the action of supernatural power.—
What o’clock it it with yon, sir, if you
please ?”
“ It is half past twelve exactly,” re
plied he.
“ Well, air,” said he, pulling out bis
watch, “it is one o’clock with me. I
generally keep my watch a little for-
werd; but I may have a special reason,
now, fqr setting my watch by the rail
way'time, you see I am turning the
hands round—have I violated the Uwb
of the watch T I have done what watch-
dom, with all its laws, could not have
done lor itself—but I have done violence
to none of its laws; my action is only
the interference of superior intelligence
for a suitable end. i have suspended no
law, violated no law. Suppose, instead
of my watch, the universe—instead of
the moving of the hands. God acting
worthily of himself, and you have all
that I contend for in a miracle; in other
words the unquestionable presence of a
mighty hand, working tho divine will,
and if he sees fit to work miracles, who
can hinder him ? what can hinder him ?
He has done it oftener than once or twice
already, and who dare say that he may
not do it again ?”—[Sunday Magazine.
the rose, the form on the wave, the beam
on the cloud, the smoke on the wind,
and the arrow in the air.
If I was to begin my life again, what
would I do ? Live to God or myself J
Do I not see the amiablenees, excellence,
and necessity of such a disposition T
What, then, is my present determina
tion.
Warm your body by healthful ex
ercise, not by cowering over a stove.
Warm your spirit by performing inde
pendent noble deeds, not by ignobly
seeking the sympathy of your fellows
whe are no better than yourself.
We have little conception of tho soul’s
joy, or capacities of joy, till we seo. it
established in God. The Christian soul
la one that has come unto God, and
rested in the peace of God. It dares to
call him father, without any rense of
daring.—[Horace Bushnell.
I know not any pleasure of sente more
exquisite than a draught of cool, clear
water when you are thirsty; but few
things are moro insipid than wAter when
there is no thirst. It is thus that Christ
and his salvation are very sweet to one,
and very tasteless to another.
God led the Israelites to and fro,
forward and backward, as in a mazo or
labyrinth; and yet all the while thoy
were under tho direction of the pillar of
cloud. He led them about, and yet he
led them by a right way. His way in
bringing hiB poopie homo is always tho
best, though it may not be the nearest.
—[Mathew Henry.
“ I havo somo means,” said a young
man to a friend, “and am in doubt
whether to invest it in business or in
securing an education.” “ Empty your
pocket into your brains,” was the an-
wer. He did so, and now his brains not I
only take ore of his pocket, but give
him an influence in the world which
mere money could not have done.
(Teft’orson Davis’s Marriage.
Colonel Richard H. Taylor thus
writes to the Frankfort Yeoman as to
the marriage of Jefferson Davis :
In order to correct the many Billy
stories about the first marriage of Presi
dent Jeff Davis, I will give you the
facts. Mr. Davis married Miss Sarah
Knox Taylor at the residence of her
father’s eldest sister (Mrs. Gibson Tay
lor), near Louisville, and with her
father’s consent. Ceremony performed
by the Rev. Mr. Ash, of the Epis
copal church, a number of near
relations and friends being present—
among the former Hancock Taylor, her
fathor’s eldest brother, and relatives
j living here. Tua Hm. Pollock Bir-
hour, now living at the old homo of
Mrs. Taylor, was also an eye-witness
In the next place, Mr. Davis never wa
at Fort Winnebago, aud General Taylor
was Merer there but once, wheta he went
with troops to the relief of the fort,
which was then threatened by the In
dians. Mr. and Mrs. Davis left for
their homo io Mississippi immediately
after their marriage, and she lived only
about six months.
banishes pimples and blotches from the *kiu ( notbe/r/n pour kinn ( nu Vlnaaenbe-
ind has proved to be eminently successful in
remedying rheumatifm aud soreness of tho
throat and chest. Sold by all druggists.
The reason why medical practitioners do
not hesitato to prescribe Dr. F. Wilhoft’s
Anti-Periodic or Fever and Ague Tonio is as
follows: Messrs. Wheelook, Finlay «fc Co„ of
New Orleans; its proprietors, have published
its composition, and physicians have approv
ed it beoause it contains no dangerous drug,
and because it iuvariebly proves successful.
It is for isle by ail druggists.
fore ejeamininu I» ©. MCmer*on'*
The voice of worship
.WJyiMlSS-WflFalargoMd valuable colloc
Anthony. It IswrCbctlyflUoS for thoSIneliiJt'sSbo'ol
lokery, Augusta, 1
..jsm guaranteed to agents
k Op-, Augusta, Me.
S EN
of
•1.S7II.N7 Pro Ilia !• SO l>i»y*.
What $10 has done in Wall street by legit
imate stock speculations. Pamphlets coni
tain ing two unerring rules for success mail
ed free npon application.
Address A. BIMPSON & CO.,
40 Exchange Place, New York.
A cough, cold, or Bore throat, requires
immediate attention, as neglect oftentimes
results in some incurable lung disease.
“Brown’s Bronchial Troohes” will almost
invariably give relief. 25 cents a box.
EMERSON’S VOCAL METHOD, *«.
KM KK80N, il no. in a valuable n w book for Vile*
Training, containing a'l tho eisontlals of study,
plenty of exorcises, and plain etplanationa, ana
costing much loss than tbo larger works ou tbo
S UB8UKIHK now for th. MIS Id A I, It HOOK D.
and recelvo weekly alt tho nows, and plouty of
' music, for *2.00 per rear.
Proas. WHITE HOMES, a charming new
If yon are satisfied to have a poor organ,
or ran the risk of having a poor one, take
any organ that is oflered you. But if you
desire to be sure of having the very best,
insist ou having a Mason & Hamlin, and do
not be persuaded to take any other.
Chew Jackson’s Best Sweet Navy Tobaooo
C. Gn.gr.nT makes only pure starches.
8S300U
COB * VON UK. f!
PM TEAS “
country; uuallI ’
keener< should
UU Mi* AN 1.201
anted everywhere io
'rite TUB W&’lLVtKA
, N.Y. P.O. UoxtMO.
MILITARY
Firemon’i Caps, Belts, and Shirts.
1
liMden Maxima.
Who has deceived thee so often as
thyself.
Let your anger set with the sun, but
not rise with it.
The sublimity of wisdom is to do
those things living which aro to bs de
sired when dying.
If the way to heaven is narrow, it is
not long; and if the gate be strait, it
opens into endless life.
It is wonderful what .strength and
boldness of purposo and energy of will
come from tho feeling that we are in the
way of duty.
Beloved, let us love one another; for
love is God; and every one that loveth
is born of God, and knoweth God.
A true man never frets about his place
in the world, but just slides into it by
the gravitation ol his nature, and swings
there as easily as a star.
To indulge anger is to admit Satan as
a guest*; but to indulge malice is to olo-ie
the door upon him as an inmate; in the
one he finds a transient lodging; in the
other a permanent home.
Life is a fading tint and fleeting form.
It is the blue on th§ grape, the blush on
A Lingering: Death.
ban Antonio Express.
Our readers will remember the men
tion of the death of the (little daughter
of Henry Haldeman and lady, at their
residence on Acquia street. The caubo
of the death was a very unusual one,
and the incidents relative thereto were
very strange. When abont fourteen
jeara old, little Annie, for that was the
child’s name, while in the kitchen got
hold of a can bf condensed lye and drank
a portion of the [contents. Of course,
the consequence wall that the child suf
fered intensely and came very near dyv.
ing at the time. After recovering from
the first effects of the lye, it was discov
ered that the child’s throat was scalded
and tli^ it was unable to swallow
any folQ of a solid nature. De
spite the efforts of skilled phy
sicians and the constant atten
tion of her loving parents, little Annie’s
throat never did heal up. But the child
lived and grew to be plump and fat,
though bereft of that vivacity which
characteiizjs children. The child’s pain
and suffering seemed to detract the mind
from the frivolous and tho gay, and turn
the thoughts moro to solemn and real
things. As years rolled on, however,
tuch nourishments as Annie was capable
of taking proved not Bufficient to meet
nature’s demands and sustain her gro
ing body, and presently it wab observed
that her condition was rapidly becoming
more serious, aud a physician was sum
moned to take charge of her case. But
no good was ever accomplished, the
injury received was incurable, and it
was settled that the child was gradually
approaching the end of existence. Final
ly death came, though Annie had at
tained the* ago of nine years, during
nearly eight of which Bhe had lived ex'
clusively on soupB, gruel and liquid-like
food, At the time of her death the
child was iu appearance as a skeleton,
but retained her powers of mind and
conversed rationally to the end.
food is productive of serious and speedy mis-
upon digestion, such ns evacuation and the
seeretion of bile, grow irregular, and the
f ans whose business it is to disoharge th
unctions become badly disordered. Ibis dis
astrous s'ate of things is more readily and
thorougjly rectified with Hostetter’s Btom*-
ach Bitters than any known medicinal agenr.
The stomach being invigorated, the hfei
giviug principles ot the blood are increased,
the system properly nourished, leanness and
debility overcome, nnd the bowels and li
thoroughly and promptly regulated.
Gaps
rie in the flesh by abscesses and
ulcers speedily disappear without leaving n
sour, when Henry’s Carbolic .Salve is the
agent employed toheul them. This standard
article cures the worst sores, eradicates cn-
aueous eruptions, relieves the pain of burns,
| , HUNT’S REMEDY
KlDNEV MEOlClP
ror dnintlrt don't have U, he will order It fin you.
SAPONIFIER
Is the Old Reliable Cenoenirated Lye
FOR FAMILY SOAP MAKINB.
SSSS'
The market I* flooded with
trated Iij'o, which adulter.
.king
'RhNQTlI
. .Mod) Unnce
d with salt a
vk MONEY^AND RUT THh
Saponifier
MADE 11Y THE
Pennsylvania Salt Manuf *g Co,
PHILADELPHIA.
DON’T;
ilk about Ha d Tlmot
for tho W. Y. WEhKL
paper (ttt'ibli-hed 1811) la a Jurat, eight-pnso sheet,
10 to any addreaa.wlth all Infoi
WEEKLY M ESSEN(> Kit.
ndue Perspiration.
“f. 11 *. * V) V. (J.
END for clronUro and
(tundard Hinging School
edition of Pinafore, (.
KntuiittxeS3.INI, Borer
• words, and DK.
MM?. frfliiVlirk. T*
IU A CO., Portland.
* sy business la
ntfltfr—.
Illimall-stroet Blocks makeC
■ every mouth. Book sen*
rT«ia.AfaafgT8g
YOUNG MKNttftBjT'JlU*!
imuiKSS! 'SSt
BIG
PAT-Wlth Stencil Outfits. What e
cU-sellsrapidly for
S. M.Hi
II Outfit*. What costa4
W aah'u H t B o« ton!
OLIVER DITS0N A 00.,Boston.
I. H. DjlaosACe. J. *. DUMB A On.
843 11 road way. N.Y.
2 Chestnut at.Phlta.
’AXIS, 1887; .VtSNJtA, ,~
ypiiia, 1A76: Pania. :e78; xui
Mxdal, WW. OnlT Anier c
highest honors
OPIUM
write: Dr.FE.Mandi Qqjiic».mT-*~
Jll/rcc. AddrwaJar Dron-on, Pi,tn.lt,Mir,h.
kippers piwtillSSSSS;
Urn
wisliii
.•« SI, v;|(MAN A CO.. Mar-liMl. Mich.
profits on 80days' investment ot £ Iflfl
Western Union, June 7— ©IUU
■ lock oajions of
p tao. sat, 7 fioo,
.jfflclal Report* and Olrcnlara fr«
T. POTTER WIGHT A CO..Hunk.
MASON & HAMLIN CABINET ORGANS.
belt hr HIGHEST HONORS AT ALL
■iaoo^ l<
The Weekly Sun.
A largo, olght-pngo paper, of 56 b oad column*,
will bo aont postpaid to any addros toatllJiuaa
ary lat. 18M,
FOR HALF A DOLLAR
Addrou THE HUN, N. Y. City.
South-Western Presbyterian
UNIVERSITY.
CJiARKyVILLB, TKNN,
REV. J. M- WADDELL, D.P.LL.D., Chancellor.
TUITION, £50 A YEAR.
HOAHI), |!l .% WKKK.
ScHNion, tHW-HU, Open* kept. I. iHIO
AGENTS Eras E&MBLttS
all to make money. “Liras or
BUFFALO BILL.”
The tamouiHcont, Guide, Huut -raud Actor-writ-
ten by himself—I* the liveliest and ..v-irst hnok to
sell that line upp-nred for your*. Agent* already
at work are malting big aale*. Send at onco and se
cure territory. For circular* and liberal term*.
>>PP 1 I'KANK r. nil"*, narlford. Conn.
THE SMITH ORGIN CO.
LEADING MARKETS
OF THE WORLD!
Everywhere recognized a* the FIN ESI
IN TONS.
OVER 80,000
31 ado nnd In nao. Now Designs conrtantly
Rent work and lowest price*.
Send for n Catalogue.
tail St., opp, Waltham St„ Mon, Hh£
MUSTANG
Survival of the Fittest.
A FAMILY MEDICINE TIIAT 11.13 IIBALED
MILLIONS DC HI Mi &:> YEARS I
MEXICAN fflBSfSG LINIMEJT.
THE0LDEST&3E8T LINIMENT
EVER MADE IN AMERICA.
SALES LARGER THAN EVER.
Tho Mexican Mustang Liniment lias
liuun known for morn than thlrty-flvo
mils ns tho best of all Lluhtionta, for
other* full, ni
everywhere.
to the very bone, Sold
| WARNER
r WARNER RROS.VmI IfOWiWf.K I-
Title rialna-Honac K«t»bllabri1 1*05.
PE1SI0HS.
NrirLnw. Thousand* of Soldier* and heir* an*
titled. Pensions dato bach to discharge or death .
Time limited. Addrosa with stamp.
UEOBUB SC. LRNON, _
P. O. Drawer. 555 Wnablnoion. D. C.
P AGENTS WANTED FOR THE
ICTORIAL
HISTORYo^heWORLD
ealls at sight Bond or specimen page* and extrx
term* to agent*, and *co why It sell* faster thxn
: ny other hook. Address
NATIONAL PUBLISHING 00.. Ht. Louis . M
TEAS lilts
.Td‘W tggrsxi
PAID. New term* FREE.
The Great American Tea Coipy,
81 MHd SS 1
P. 0. Box 4MM.
mj Street, law Yw
CURED F3EE1
iedyfor_W£j
F CUI
Iff
rlnMIiuMIrk ......
to eir. ct a apcedy aud 1*121
NKV* CUKE. . .
“A Free Itottle” cf I
, id apeciflo — . -
I ■ WT Treatise sent to any sufferer satS-
bit Post-office and Express address.
X>R. H. Gr. ROOT,
in mrl »i. >n W®,
COD-LIVEP !hL
st by the ulghr
OtTcnhlirpess
award at 19 World’s Exposition*, and at Paris, hfli
Bold by Druggist*. W.H.Bch|pff«Un Ac <)q..N.Y
THIS NEW
[ELASTIC TRUSS
1 differing from aUoth*r*,ta
i, with Mlf-Adjadlng
taEnltr, adapts IU.lf to all mIUod*
PERPETUAL.
Sorghum Evaporator.
815. $20. $25.
CHEAP AND DURABLE.
'"«■ “ u EBsie>too*Tms Co!.‘ £hicano.‘iii~‘
_Any onojinnbln to rritd_tnuNic or tin-
akillcil iu orgitu - plityliig tuny produce
from tho Organ uot ouly tlupnrt they *lng»
bnt all the other parts, by the use ol the
SELF- ORGANIST.
With tlU* new Invention, coolly attached
to tlu> Uoy-tumvd of liny (Irunii, o llttlo
boy or girl, knowing n tunc, can pixy
s* well ns n music teacher. Adapted
to Fanil IIob, Huu da y-He h no I *, and lio«foe
Meeting*. Addreaw for Cireulnr and Term*
THE SELF-OROANI3T HTO C0„
^ Ilrnttlebnrn, Vt. . -
PUBUSnEBS’ CN
•“*B®5SiS»£:rS
U P H A M ’ S
TAI and, PIMPLE MIMES
A few applications of this preparation will remove freckles,
tan, sunburn, pimples or blotches on the face, and render the
complexion clear and fair. For softening and beautifying the
skin it has no equal. Price 50 cts. Sent by mail, post paid for
75 cents. Address
JOHN F. HENRY, CURRAN & CO.,
S4 College Place, New York.