The Butler herald. (Butler, Ga.) 1875-1962, September 16, 1879, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

•w .. The Southern Fanner. THE SECRETS OF ECONOMICAL MANAGEMENT. Bays Alexander HyJe, in the New York Times: “ We see »o many farmers working hard from the beginning of the year to its end, with jucb small results, that we do wish to impress upon the community the true principle oi econo my a farmer’s wife once expressed to us in one word—calculation. We found her a slender looking woman, surrounded by a flock of children, and haying the care of a dairy of a dozen cows, with no Bridget to assist her, and still every thing moved on like clock work. The children were tidy, the house neat, the cooking nice and the butter of gilt edge quality. We watched her to study the seoret uf her economical management. Bhe never seemed to be in a hurry, cer tainly never ia a fret, but went from one thing to another as calmly and as pleas antly as the butterfly goes from one flower to another. We noticed that she had every convenience for her work. Water fl wed constantly in her kitchen and dairy room, and her churning was done by dog power. We were satisfied, however, that the secret of her efficiency was not in churns, dogs, water, nor any other convenience for labor, and we finally asked, “ How do you accomplish all your work with such apparent ease?” With a toBB of her head and a pleasant smile she replied: 1 By calculation. Before I go to bed I set my table and make all arrangements for breakfast Be/ore I get up in the morning I think over the labors of the day and plan everything out, assigning its duty its time, and when the time comes I attend to the duty—and now the time has come tor me to skim the milk; so please excuse me.' Upon this she bowed her- Belf out with the grace of a queen. We could not help thinking—happy is the farmer that has such a help-mat*.” SUMMER FALLOW. Which ia the wise tarmer and which the fool L the one who adopts the summer fallow By stem or the one who aiecards it ? In traveling through the State last week we saw many a plow turning the summer fallow. The word fallow is an old one. It is allied to the Latin palliaus, meaning a pale rod or a pale yellow, as a fallow deer or a fallow greyhound. So we call a piecd of land which has been plowed without being sowed fallow, from the yellow color of the naked ground. Then a fallow has come to mean land that has lain a year, more or less, untUled or un* seeded, or the plowing or tilling of land without sowing it for a season; aa 11 Bummer fallow properly conducted has ever been a Bure method of destroy ing weeds.” Thus Sinclair says: By a complete fallow land is rendered tender and mellow. Mortimer says: The plowing of fallows is a benefit to land. WVbeter Bays: Fallow ground is left milled and unaowed after having been plowed ready for culture. The English eay that a fallow gives land a better tilth than by a fallow crop. A green fallow is one in England, where land is rendered mellow and clean from weeds by cultivating some green crop, aa tur> nips, potatoes and is more common than a naked fallow. In Michigan the custom is to plow the fallow along in May or June, allow it to lie idle until Septem ber, when it is sowed to wheat and seedt d to clover or timothy. Thus it takei two years with this system ol sum mer fallow to get one crop of wheat. Can the farmer afford it ? la this the best way to fertilize land ? v/ill it pay internet on land worth $50 per acre, which would be $6 for the two years at *dx per cent. BEES AND HONEY. Tne precise distance that bees will fly in search ol foliage, I am unable to state Borne consider three miles tc be the ex treme limit, while others place it as high a3 twelve miles. The most satisfactory results may be expected if abundant stores can be found within two miles. It is evident that they will work more freely upon blossoms at some little dis tance than when tbeee are very near the apiary. If I should sow anything with a view to a supply of honey, I should prefer that it should not be in the imme diate vicinity to the hives. Their fl ghts are evidently modified by local condi tions. During the large yield from bass wood in 1874, as the blossoms failed in the valley, the bees continued bringing in the same quality of honey, following the bass-wood day by day, as it opened on the hills, until the first week in Au* gust, when they still came heavily load' ed, but very tired from a long flight. ] drove to the heights, six miles distant, and found that bass-wood was then just coming into bloom. I immediately moved/orty-eight swarms to this loca tion, and in the following week these forty-eight colonies gave me one ton o( surplus honey, while the seventy-one swarms left at home did not secure one half that amount, yet they continued working upon the same ground during the entire period. This is a fine illustra tion of the advantage of obtaining forage within a reasonably short distance, have never had direct proof of the effect, yet thero is ground for the belief, that, if honey could not be found nearer, bees would not fly the distance named with out being gradually led along by newly opening bloss -ms, as in tbe case men- tioneil.—[Qu'nby’s New Bee Keeping. pound of sugar to a pound of fruit. Mix well and cook for one hour, stirring all the time. CORN AND TOMATOES. If corn is boiled on the cob, and then cut off and canned with tomatoes, in the usual manner ot canning tomatoes, it will keep well and be an excellent dish. Have twica as much tomatoes as corn. SWEET PICKLE. For seven pounds of fruit take three pounds of sugar, one pint of vinegar, half an ounce each of unground cloves and cinnamon. Boil the fruit till soft, then put it in a syrup made up ot the other ingredient*; boll all together five min< utee, and pour into jars. PEACH PIE. Pare and halve ripe and luscious peaches. Never use infeiior fruit for a pie. Line your diah with a good crust and lay in your peaches, the hollow parts up. Sprinkle on these half a cup of white sugar. Add some bits of but ter and a little brandy; cover and bake. SPANISH PICKLED ONION. Out onions into slices, put a layer of them into a jar, sprinkle with salt and cayenne pepper. Then add a layer of onions and season aa before. Proceed in this way until the jar is full,and pour cold vinegar over all till covered. Will be fit to use in a month. PICKLED CABBAGE. Take two gallons of cider vinegar; of ground cinnamon, cloves and allspice, each a teaspoonlul; put them in a thin cloth, tie them in with the cabbage, and just let it come to a boiling heat in a porcelain pot. Then put it in a jar cover tightly, and set it away in a cool place. CUCUMBER CATSUP. Orate large cucumbers be'ore they be gin to turn yellow; drain out the juice and put the pulp through a sieve to re move the seeds; fill a bottle half full of the pulp, discarding the juice, and add the same quantity of good vinegar ; cork tightly ; when used add salt and pepper, but salt kills the vinegar if put in when making. This is almost like fresh sliced cucumber when opened. CLEANLINE8S AND HEALTH. We are desired to remind housekeep ers that when they commence the peri odical renovation of their domiciles, es pecial attention should be given to cel- lars. They should not only have the benefit of thorough ventilation, but they should be whitewashed, and aoy particle of decaying vegetable matter or other objectionable substance removed. Scrupulous care in these particulars may prevent sickness. Religious Reading. Oh I why should tho spirit of mortal bs proud T like a twlft-fleetlLg mataor, Ukaafaat-flylng cloud, A flash ol ths lightning, a break of tha wave, He pastei from life to rest in his grave. Tha leavea of tha oak and the willow aball fade, Be ecatterel around and together b« laid; And the young and the eld, the low and tha high, £hall moul ler to dust and togeth r ahsll lie. The Infant a mother attended and 1 md, Tbe mother that Infsnt’a affections who proved, The lather that mother and Infant who bleat, Each, all are away to that dwelling to reat. The maid on whoae brow, on whose ohtek, In whoas eye, Shone beauty and pleasure — her triumphs are by; And sl.ke from the minds of tbe 1 sing erased Are the mem'ries of those who 1 >vod her and praiaad The h\nd of tha king that the sceptre hath horns The b ow of the priest that tha miter hath worn, The eye of the sage, and the heart of the brave, Are hidden and lost in tha depths of the grave. The peasant whose lot was to sow and to rear. The herdsman, who climbed with his goats up tha The beggar, who wandered in search ol hie breed Have faded away like the grass that we tread. So the multitude cornea, even those we behol L, To repeat every tale that has often b*r n told. For we are tha same that our fathers hare been, ft e see the same lights that out father* have seer We drink the same stream, we see the ssme sun, And run the same ooona our lathers have run. The thoughts we From the death shrink, To ths life we are clinging our fathers did cling, But it ip eds fiom ns all, like the blid on the wing. They laved- but tbe story they cannot unfold ; They scorned—but the heart of the haughty la cold They grieved-bnt no wall from their slumber* will They joyed-but the voice of their gladness is dumb They died—ah! they died—and we moruli who now are treading the turf that lies over their brow. And make in their dwellings onr transient abode, Meet the thing* they have met on their pilgrimage road. Tea, hope and despondency, plcasare and pain, Are mingled together in sunshine and rain, And the smile and tha tsar, and the song and tbe dirge, Still follow eaeh other like surge upon surge. ’Th tbe wink of au eye, 'tie the draught of a breath From the bloMom ot health to the pellor of death, From the gilded it loon to the bier and the shroud Oh 1 why should the spirit of mortal be proud ? •olid rock, mastering himself ? Or one bearing a hopeless daily trial remain silent, and never tell the world what it was that cankered his home peace? That is strength. He who, with strong passions, remains chaste—he who, keenly sensitive, with manly power of indigna tion in him, can be provoked, yet can restrain himself and forgive—these are strong men, spiritual heroes.—[Observer. Ball at Newport f 1781. ‘Probabilities” From Josh Bil lings. About the hardest thing a fellow kan do iz to Bpark 2 gals at one time and pre serve a good average. Try it. Don’t dispize your i.poor relaahuns- Tbey may be taken suddenly ritch sum day, and then it will be awkward to ex plain things to them ; undoubtedly so. Next to a klear konschience for solid cum fori cums an easy boot. Try both If a young man hain’t got a well bal anced head, I like to see him part his hair in tbe middle. Don't yru ? I don't take any fooliah chinces. If I war called upon to mourn ox er a dead mule, I should stand in front cv him and do my weeping. There is no man bo poor but what he can afford to keep one dog, and I have se^n them so po tr that they could afford to keep three. • I say to 2 thirds oi the rich people in this world, make tbe most of your money, for it makes the most of you. Happy thought. I never argy agin a success when a rat- tlesnaix’s head’s sticking out of a hole. I bear off to the left and say to myself that hole belongs to that snalk. The infidel argys just as a bull duz chained to a post. He bellows and eaw h but he don’t get loose from the post, I notiss. Not much. I thank the Lord that there ia one thing in this worid that money kant buy, and that is the wag ov a dog’s tail* Yure unkle. I have seen men so fond of argument that they would dispute with a guide- board at the forks by a kuntry road about the distance to the next town. What fools. There are but fu si.hts in this life more sublime and pathetick than tu see a poor but virtuous young man strug gling with a mustach. It iz thus. I notice one thing, tbe man who rides on the kara every day is satisfied with one seat; but he who rides once a year wants 4. That’s so. Flattery is like colone water, to be smelled of, not swallowed. Tbe man whom you kant git to write poetry or tell tho truth until you git him half drunk aint worth ‘he invest’ ment. Whenever I see a real hansum woman engaged in the wimmin’s rights bizzaess I am a going to take off mi hat and jine the proceaahun. Bee if I don’t. Cheaper Than Machines. ..In Breklug to invent a troche to take away tho odor [of onions, a Quebec druggist invented something that re moved his breath altogether. The man who gets ahead of an onion has got to peel his coat. WHEN JESUS COMES. Southwestern Presbyterian There ia one very sweet sense in which "Jesus comes” to his own 'ollowers in these days. He doefl not come in fleshly form, as he did eigbteen centuries ago; nor does he come amid cloud and celes tial splendor, as he will at the final judg ment; but in spirit, seen by the eye of faith, Jesus draws delightfully near to those who seek for his presence. He comes to tbe awakened penitent, who cries out to him, "Come, and take away my stony heart, and make it a heart of flesh.” Already you may hear his knock at your heart, and his loving voice, "If thou wilt open tbe door, I will come in unto thee and sup with thee, and thou with me.” Hasten to let him in 1 He will not be satisfied with a closet or a corner of your heart, or with a paltry share ot your thoaghts, grudgingly given. He wants every room—your faculties, affections, and will, must all be surrendered to him. The key of your purse must be his, too. Don’t plead that you are not worthy that he should come under your roof. He loves to stoop to the lowly in spirit. He will bring his own entertainment with him when he “sups” with you. You will be fed with more than angels’ food when the King sitteth at the table. This is the very essence of conversion—to turn out at tbe door and convert your heart into a dwelling-place for the sin ner’s friend. admit him, for tbe human brca«t Ne'er entertained ao kind a guest; Admit him, sod >ou won't expel, For where he cornea, he cornea to dwell. The richest and most joyous hours in a believer’s experience are those in which he tasted of Christ's presence in close spiritual communion. The believer feels the warmth and the light of his counte nance. His left hand is unaer our head, and his right hand doth embrace We can roll off our cares and wor- rie i and doubts upon his everlasting arm. Such times of close companionship with Jesus are our holiest and happiest hours this side of heaven. Into sick rooms where his children lie, Jesus olteD comes. No physician visits so faithfully. Noble old Harlyburton, of Scotland, said one morning to his fam ily, "Jesas came to me in the third watch of last night, walking upon the waters. He said to me, T am Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end, and I have the keys of hell and death.’ He stilled the storm in my soul, and lo I there was a sweet calm 1” When Jesus comes in the house of sor row, he spesks the same wondrous words which he spake to the mourners at Beth< any. He allowed death to come there first to make ready for his own coming. Is not this one reason why death is al lowed to take our loved ones ? Then w« are ready to send for Jesus I ^ Harper’s Mfg.r.lns. Probably no society ’tournament since held in any of the elegant aatin-hung ball-rooms of Newport has attained the lame ot that given in the spring ot 1781 at the simple hall known as Mrs. Cow ley’s Assembly-room. The decorations were entrusted to Dezoteux, one of the aides oi the Baron de Viomenil. Wash ington, who had come to confer with Ho- chambeau, opened the ball with Miss Chaplin, at that time the reigning belle of Newport society. Rcchambeau and his suite took the instruments from the musicians and played the air, "A Sue cessful Campaign.” Other popular dances of tbe day, some of which were footed on this occasion were "Stony Point,” (named for General Wayne.) "Merrick’s Graces,” ‘Xord Eath’s Gate,” "Jnnooent Maid,” “Flowers of Edin burgh,” "Hay-making,” "College Horn pipe,” "Faithful Shepherd,” "Love and Opportunity,” "Lady Hancock,” "Miss McDonald’s Reel,” "A Trip to Carlisle/, Freemason’s Jig,” and "I’ll be Mar ried in my Old Clothes.” Dancing was an art in those dayj. A celebrated ex< pert of the time was Master John Trot ter, who is described aa having acquired "great fame as a man of knowledge and experience. He is about 60 years of age, a small, genteel, well-proportioned man, every limb and joint proclaiming that he is formed for his profession, and the ease and grace with which he moves on the floor evince ,tnat he has lost nope of his agility by age.' Under the tuition of such a master,” the writer goes to hope, "we flatter ourselves that in due time we shall be able to figure in a ball room.” That many of the ladies who "figured” at the ball just referred to wereoble to converse with their foreign partners is to bo inferred from the adver tisement ot a M. Bonnemot. (Query: Trotter and Bonnemot! —had the mas ters of that day a tendency to punning, and a desire of making their noms de plume walking advartisementi of their profession ?) This gentleman announces that he has been a teacher of the French language two years and a half in the town and college of Providence. H< presents his compliments to the inhabi tants of Newport, and offers himself to teach French. Of the coiflures worn on this occasion we can gain some idea from the advertisement of Benoni Peckham, who "informs his customers that he has furnished himself 4dth a new supply of hair, and is now ready to furnish ladies with braids, commodes, cushions, and curls in the newest fashion. Also, cuet and coverings for the head for those gen llemen who have lost their hair.” nlllOMST Probably no one. Donbtleia we have all snf* 'ered to sone extent the disagreeable sensa tion! which a disordered or languid liver oan inflict. Sallowness of the skin, constipation, nausea, vertigo, soreness in the vicinity of the organ affected, a sensation as of conges tion in the head, positive headache, a loss of appetite, extreme thirst, a high oolor of the urine, are among tbe symptoms whioh an nounce a perversion or vitiation of the bile The remedy of remedies for the above is llostetter’s Stouiaoh Bitters, administered by medical men; pronounced pnre and whole- Do not Begin your Binging Glasses Before Examining £< 0. Zmsrson’* Hew Book, THE VOICE OF WORSHIP XiritILK containing n vY lion of Church Mi ami Anthems. It is perfect.j “chool and Convention hr by them, and popular as a oomprehen- eivo lamilv medicine, and as a speoino pre ventive and remedy for ohills and fever and standard Binging fl T UB new 90 cti. od tlon of Plnn'oro (complex sella tinelr and ratnnitza S2.no. Worcoror 01.00, trial by Jury 90cti , are in constant demand. EMERSON’S VOOAL METHOD, hr0 . CMKBBON, tt.90. I* a valuable new book for Voice Training, containing all the essentia a of stndy, plenty or exerclio,, and pi In explanations, and c sting much leu than iha larger works on the same aubject. r tbo MUSICAL BIUORD, countries. D1b- ue otuiuBuu nuu bowels. 09 Well OS ipeedily remediable with this pop ular and time-honored medicine. to a wide extent orders in the stomach liver, Children do not die of the cronp to whontc Dr. Wm. Hall’s Balsam for the Lungs is ad ministered. Parents will do well to remember this faot and keep a mediolno, which saved so many lives, in the houte ready for an eu ergency. The Balsam overcomes a tendenc to consumption, strengthens weak and heal sore lungs, remedies painful and asthmatlo breathing, banishes hoarseness and cores all bronchial and tracheal inflimmation. If you have a cough, use it "early and often.” *" druggists sell it. The reason why medical practitioners do not hesitate to prescribe Dr. F. Wilhoft’a Anti-Periodic or Fever and Ague Tonic ii a* follows: Messrs. Wheelock, Finlay A Co. of New Orleans, its proprietors, have pub lished its composition, and physicians have approved it because it contains no danger ous diug. and because it invariably proves sucoeitfal. It is for sale by all druggists. A college professor onoe said that "he who expects to rate high in his olass mast not expeotorate on the floor.” Much of the hawking and spitting was, no donbt, caused by catarrh, which the professor knew could be readily cured by the use of a few bottles of Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy. Coughs and Colds.—Those who are suf- fering from Conghs, Colds, Hoarseness. Sore Throat, &o., should try "Brown’s Bronohial Troches.” 25 cents a box. About organs, this fact is conclusive: Ma in & Hamlin Organs have taken the highest honors at every World’s Exhibition for 12 and hardware dealers. South-Western Presbyterian UNIVERSITY, CLARKSVILLE, TENN. REV- J. M. WADDELL, D.DLL.D, Chancellor TUITION. 8511 A YKAB. HOARD, 88 A YEAR. Session, 1870-80. Open » Sept. 1, 1879. Hoop Snakes Rolling Up Hill. DOMESTIC RECIPES. TO RAKE POTATOES. To bake potatoes quickly, pour boil ing water over them and let stand a min ute or se before putting into tbe oven. MARMALADE. One peck of quinces and two pecks of •jfrles; pare And stew separately; take a New York Herald Letter from Chios. The skilled Chinaman could build a shallow boat, drawing a few inches ol water, with a propelling wheel in the stern, and skurry up and down the river nnder steam. But when you think of the labor that would thus be ex tinguished, the thousands who live on the river, whore homes are on the boats, who labor on the water from infancy to old age, who have tracked and splashed and waded through the shallow Peibo, as their fathers did be'ore them, we see what a serious economical problem is involved in steam navigation. As I remarked in Canton, there can be no successful labor-saving machine in a country where man is so cheap. Dr. Alvord, County Clerk Masterson and Mr. Leahy have just returned from a hunt on Saline Fork, Arkansas. The party had stationed themselves in tbe tree platforms about Yokum Blue Lick, and were waiting for deer, which came there at dawn. The lick is at the bot tom of a steep hill. Dr. Alvord sud< denly noticed something like a hoop come rolling down the hil^ and across the wet lick. It was followed by three others, which rolled to where it had stopped. Mr. Leahy called out: "Hoop snakes, by 1 Watch them, boys.” The snakes played around for a few minutes, and then, resuming their for< positions, standing on edge with their tails in their mouths, deliberately began to roll up the hill. The gentle men rubbed their eyes and looked again —there they were rolling up kill just as quickly find easily as they had rolled down. At first the party ag eed not to say anything about the matter, as they feared their story would not be believed. But Colonel Stark, at whose plantation they passed the next night, explained to them that the hoop snake is able to thicken itself a little in front of its point of contact with the ground, and to keep this part of itself heavier than the balance; hence, as the centre of gravity falls in front of the bare, the snake can’t help revolving in any direc tion in which he keeps his "wad.” WHO ARE THE STRONG MENt We m stake strong feelings for strong character. A man who bears all before him — belore whore frown domestics tremble, and whose bursts of fury make the children of tbe house quake—because he has his will obeyed and his own way in all things, we call him the stroni man. The truth is, that is the weal man; it is his passions that are strong he, mastered by them, is weak. You must measure tbe strength ot a man by the power of the feelings he subdues, not by the power of those which subdue him. And, hence, composure is often the highest result of strength. Did we ever see a man receive a flagrant insult, and only grow a little pale, and then reply quietly ? That was a man of apir- itually [strong. Or did we ever see a mAB Id Anguish stand aa if carved out of The Hardest Mode to Die. To be shot dead is one of the easiest modes of terminating life; yet, rapid as it is, the body has leisure to :eel and reflect. Ou the first attempt, by one of the frantic adherents of Spain to; sinate William, Prince of Orange, who took the lead in the revolt of the Nether lands, the ball passed through ihe bones of the face and brought him to the ground. In tbe instant preceding stupe** faction he was able to frame the notion that the ceiling of the room had fallen and crushed him, The cannon-shot which plunged into the biain of Charles XII. did not prevost him from seizing his sword by the hilt. The idea of an attack, and the necessity of defense, was pressed on him by a blow which we should have supposed too tremendous to leave an interval of thought But it by no means follows that inflicting of fatal violence is accompanied by a pang, though from what is known of the first effect of gun shot wounds, it is probable that the impression is rather stunning than acute. Plate glass is formed of silicia rev enty-eight parts, potash two, soda thir. teen, lime five, And AlluminA two patU. 'hrw Jackson’s Bast hw«et Navy Tobaooo Cnoloeat In the world Importers’ prices large and v (triable collect A777ft4’\^TO’r l . | g.:r;!r;n.y, , vi S77t n ?».w^ , rh'ir..gA , ::, l ffi!.. 1 : CWiftarteeti8ttafW? ta ’ Oil AH. MITZKNIUB. P. O. R. 9M. N.T.O. its well made Kle per dozen. Specimen copies mailed gKN p for.olreglara and eat stay t I N Press. WHITE ROBCfl. i (Sunday School tong Bsok. OLIVER DITSON & CO., Boston. C. H.DItaondfcU*. J. E. Dltaoa A €*• Broadway. N.Y. «2 Chestnut it..Phil. <hly regnlar In the swel ls nan as name to dlseaio* at he tt"* *- regular. He mav be at:*- ked by contagion iso', and so may the trrogular, but he Is not c i subjoct to outside lnfluenc-i. Tbe use of Tarrant's Seltzer Aperient •cures regularity, and consequent Immunity from CkneM ' BOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. MURRAY HILL PUB. UO.. IBS g.Mlk at.. jtTf, cm in ®i nnn *» 4>IU lU H>i,UUU makee fortunes every month. Book MAt fra# explaining everything. Add raja BAXTER * CO.. Bankers. 17 ft sit at.. S.f, YOUNG MIN situation. Addi lanttaa.Man.Janawlli' young ladles, mmii .’■field, Msss. ation onrly.Tled. Colleg ate andcpllegaprepara- r conrsev Bevs.U.V.HpearA B. E. Avery. Prtn. flffl FAX-With Btenoll Outfits. What cosU flfllllll Habit* HUln IHseasw». 011IIM ?s*, 1 7?** j’Srv? $350 ss," : selling articles tn the world! «»•, ■VMll* free. Address lay Bronson. Detroit. Mlnh_ Tncrn in MionTTt Ck (, AGENTS; REAIKTHIS profits on 80 day*' Invest entof Cl(]f| In Weatern Union. June 7 wlUU r §*i., «SO. - two, T^OTTX^WIO‘iT A* (JO»i ,n ^ t0 « s. Address The Weekly Sun. I bread columns, :.v’sus:‘* a “ FOR HALF A DOLLAR THE BUN, N. Y. City UPHAM’S FRECKLE, TAN -AND- PIMPLE BANISHER. A few applications of this preparation will remove freckles, tan, sunburn, pim ples or blotches ou the face, and render the complexion clear and fair. For softening and beautifying th skin it has no equal. Price, SO cts. Sent by mail, post paid, for 75 ots. Address JOHN F. HENRY, CURRAN i CO. 24 College Place, N. Y. SAPONIFIER Ia the Old Reliable Conoentrated Lye FOR FAMILY SOAP MAKING. Directions accompanying each oan for making Hard, Hofb, and Toilet Boap qnlckly. ' IT IS FULL WEIGHT AND STRENGTH. market la flooded with (so-called) Concern TSted with salt aud — Lye, which I reslb, and won’t make toap. SAVE MONEY, AN1) PUT THE SaponiTTeR TNE SMITH 0RG1H CD. First Established 1 Moat 0ftrav.iVlT*lt TnEIR INSTRUMENTS Dwss* » rtw *rd value In all tho LEADING UABSKV OF THE WOULD! Everywhere recognized as tbo FfMEtST IN TONB. OVER 80,000 Made and In use. Now Designs constantly. Rest work and lowest prices. gr Send for a Catalogue. Trnit 51, opp. Waltham Si, Beaten, lass “huW," ■eh'Hdt has been before the public tbl led by all classes, tout the advice oi physicians. with and withou ! HUNT’N REMEDY .ed from IIl„ and death hundreds of well- HIINT'S HBMIKnV cores nd all diseases or tbe Kldnoys. iry Organs. Send for pamphlet to MUSTANG Survival of the Fittest. THE0LDE8TAEE8T LINIMENT EVER MADE. lS AMERICA. &LES LARGER THAN EVER. WARNER IRQ'S CORSETS “pabIS'^poSItjoSI’J^ p^VibS^uWcob^kt WARNER RR0B..1M Rrnadwav. N. V. TkUt'lalai-Hease Islablfilieg M3. Pensions New Law. Thoman'ls of Soldier* and hetrs sn titled. Pensions date b ick to dUchargo or death Time limited. Address with stamp, tIROBSR F- LEMON. P. 0. Drawer. SB3,Wss*lt«i>«f m. P. C. P AGLNTS WAN (ED FOR I HE ICTORIAL HISTORY omiEWnPi" Itconla’n* fine historical engraving* IMO large double column page*, and i* the mo** complete History of the World ever published. U Umrtoa^nt.^nd^^Ty^TeU.^ireAha^ other book. Addrees NATIONAL PUBLISHING 00.,B>. Lnnls. Mo. CASON & HAMLIN CABINET ORPINS. viz: at I’ahis. 186?| Vizniia. :o78j Bantiaoo. 1*79, ’ fffSfirahtf cStatoir^ wfd Olrcffl... ii Gold Mr.iw ranted highe TEAS! The very beet good* direct from the im porters at Half tbs ALL J tzPBI8S 'UHA Ju*5 81 and SS Vesey Btrset, Hew I*»». lag ms his P*at-o^^i a *«Dr*M dk. a. Q-. ROOT, wfmrilLBwYwm. rmM$ ss will positively cure Female Weakness,sue tng of tho Womb, Whites, Ohroi Ulceration of tho Womb, Inclde •oodtng, Painful, Supprcw-* uatlon. Ac. An old and ro •th A BalUrd, Utica, N.Y. Uuohiiri Utorlno CATHQLICON DR. JUDGE’S M | The great Fattening Remedy and Blq teosfcsasi eyes bright aud sparkling: tl\* cbeeL- '•lump and rosy; the breath puio rmd sweet. Price, _ larger kIv. Bend sj&rioi cure# and to How- Sold Dy all Druggist*— OIL r pure. Pronounced tho best by tho high I authorities in the world. Given highe*. d at 19 World'u Ex^osritlons^unl at Parla, M^jf. A /3.T?'V r Pa WssmlwM tor a live Book ik.lX.EjJN i M that sells fast. Chance for all to make money. m aa» IS or BUFFALO BILL.” The famons Scout, Guido. Hunter and Actor -writ* ten by himself—Is the IIveliesc and easiest book to sell th«t ht* appeared tor yevrs. Agents already ira are making big sales, bend at once and -e territory. Tor circular* aid liberal term*. FRANK E. BUM. Wssrtforsl. €«»■■». PUBLISHERS UNION, ATLANTA—So. 87 yjrie ■':/ ESTEY <*sv©RGAN *ilr. n p i BEST! Trra'&sKr.'ismi. ILLtO.hyii.sll. (Howell A Go. (Charlestown, Mas*. Manufactory gRATTlEBORCyi THE COST 3 ADVERTISING For any Responsible Advertiser. Making Application in Good Faith, We PltFMIlANDTURM A WRITTEN ESTIMATE Showing the Cost *f any Proposed Advertising (■ (be Leading NEWSPAPERS OF THE UNITED STATES A DOMINION OF CANADA. WE* PREPARE AND EXHIBIT PRINTED PROOFS OF AgY PROPOSED ADVERTISEMENT.