Newspaper Page Text
but
The Southern Firmer.
HA Y MAKING.
Experience ha9 demonstrated that, as
a rule, the best time to cut the grata
crop in w’leu it has passed the full bloom,
ami the flower is beginning to fade—not,
a» in usually done, wait till the bloom is
entirely dead. It requires loss labor and
time to cure hay that is half dry on
the stalks, but tbs product is a full half
loss in value for the purpose intended.
We feel safe in saying that the largest
portion of the hay crop put up each year
suffers a Joes by being left standing too
long before cutting.
The custom now generally followed in
making hay is to start the mowers in the
morning when the grass is loaded with
water from a dew, and keep them going
«lurlng the entire day. Tire grass cut
down in the morning is left as it fell from
the machine all day bleaching in the hot
sun, and the dew that falls in the night
puts it in fine bleaching condition for
the next day. The following afternoon
the rake is started, and the crisp and
ounburnt grass is piled into heaps or
stowed away in the barn or stack bo dry
that it handlos like straw. The owner
congratulates himself on getting up his
bay in the most excellent condition. But
in the winter when uet-d be finds that
be raisos a cloud of dust ns he handles it.
Often we have heard farmers say: '• I
don’t know why my hay is so dusty, for
I cut it and put it up without n drop of
rain. I must have put it up a little too
green. Next year I will dry it better.
But heiH likely to find it in a worse con.
dition than be ore. If these persons
had observed that the grass cut late in
the afternoon and put up at the same
time as that cut in the morning was in
finer condition when used, they probably
weuid have had their thoughts turned
the right direction, and discovered
ihat the trouble was too much drying
instead of too little.
In order to have hay free from dust, it
should never be cut when wet with dc-w,
because dew, when drying on the wilting
grass, forms on it a glutinous substance
that afterwards loosens and becomes dust.
Neither should it be allowed to lay over
night when cut early in the day and
received the dew on the following morn
ing. Jt is as bad as a rain on the dead
grass, and more apt to make it dusty.
It is a most erroneous idea that grass
when cut down must lie in a burning
sun till it is as dry as a bruBb pile.
If readers think this theoretical and
not practical, all we ask is for them to
try the following manner of curing hay
when cut at the proper time, and see if
conviction does not follow. We speak
of fair weather. No rule will apply to
rainy time, unless the hay maker is pre
pared with an outfit of oilcloth caps,
which are expensive but in tho end profi
table.
Start the mower in the morning
soon as the dew is off; and let it go on
during the day if desirable. A hay
tedder should follow two hours later, if
ono is on the premises, but it not, there
should be a free use of the fork, in spread
ing the green grass wherever left in
bunches'by tho machine, so that it will
have a chance to wilt in the sun.
About two o’clock in the afternoon
the raVe should be started, for by that
time, if the day is fair, the grass will be
thoroughly wilted, and should be put up
carefully in medium-sixed cocks. All
that is cut by the middle of the after
noon may be put up the same evening,
and that cut after that time should be
left as it fell, without shaking, till the
next forenoon, when it will be round
that the dew has only bleached the
upper surface, without much injury.
The programme of the second day
should ba the same as the first, only the
rake started sooner.
By the third day that which was put
up first will be in a condition for put',
ting away in the barn, and will have
retained much o» th6 natural greenness
01 the grass. A quart of Balt to each
wagon load as put in the mow will save
it from becoming musty and add to the
value of tho food. When this hay is
u°ed i» the winter it will be found that
tho natural color is still retained,
the blossoms of clover will be red.
Hay put up in stacks should stand a
day longer in the fiald, in the cock, for
if it should rain while sweating in the
stack it will absorb moisture and spoil.
Jtia the sweating process that adds to
the quality of food, and a close barn is
better to cure hay in than an open one,
if it only has ventilation at the top.
Many farmers are afraid of spontaneous
combustion if put in the barn green
This is mere fiction.
It is all nonsense that hay must be
parched dry in order to have it keep.
It wants just enough of sun to kill the
grass and evaporate the water it contains
and no more. In the sweating process
the valuable qualities of the plant are
retained and the others are expelled.
Every miller will tell you that wheat
stacked so dry that it will not “sweat 1
will not make good flour. It is tbe
same with hav, and we often see
farmer’s live stock looking well when
fod on hay alone, whilo those of his
neighbor, who feed a liberal portion of
grsiu, are inferior in condition, and it is
because, the hay in the latter
almost worthless, if not positively in
jurious. Stock will do better on good,
clean straw than on overdritd bleached
and musty hay.
with 'lemon and powdered loaf sugar.
The feat of loosing the pancakes in the
pan requires dexterity, but is not dlf-
ficult if the batter is very light.
TO CAN PEACHES.)
Choose the clingstones. Pare, halt,
and stone them. Boii the stones or pita
until all the flavor is extracted; then
having everything In readiness (the eane,
with their covers and the **xx to seal
them), pour ofl the water from the pits,
and when it is at boiling point, throw
iuto it enough or peaches to fill three or
four cans ; sprinkle over sugar to taste,
about as much as would be sprinkled
over fresh peaches for the table. When
just ec&lded, can them, placing round
pieces of writing paper dipped in brandy
over the tops of the peaches before put
ting on the covers.
MIXED PICKLES,
gallon good cider vinegar add
one-quarter pound cloves and set on the
stove to heat; fill fruit cans with small
cucumbers, beans, onions and green
tomatoes; if you .like first wipe them
with a dry cloth; do not crowd them
into the can, but fill it full when the
viuegar comes to scalding heat; skim it
if it needs it and pour into the cans
slowly until filled; then seal them tight.
I have put pickles up in this way and
never had any trouble with them. I
never salt cucumbers or any thing else
for pickling. I have pickled barrels of
cucumbers, tomatoes and beans, simply
putting them into oold vinegar and never
had auy turn soft, yet I put a few gal
Religious Reading.
A THOUGHT-LOVE OF HONEY,
Savannah Roeortl.
It is impossible to dfrguhe the fact
that the love of money is our natural fail
ing, our cultivated fault and consuming
passion. Tho desire to grow rloh, the
wish to possess money, absorbs the
American mind almost to the exclusion
cf every thing else. This Is the Moloch
to whom we sacrifice health, time, honor
aud reputation. We throw all into tho
balance, even our immortal souls, and
care not if we lose that eo we gain the
world.
“The love of money *s the root of all
evil.” It was true in the days of the
prophet and is true now. The desire to
make, to hoard, to save, to increase, be
comes with some a passion, a sordid and
bss3 passion. Neither honor or truth;
integrity or justice finds a lodgment in
the heart of him who works, thinks and
acts alone and all the time for money.
Whenever a man will hold debate with
his honor or principles for moneys, he
will lie, cheat and steal, swindle and
misrepresent whenever the opportunity
presents itself. Tbe man who acts from
the motive that “honesty is the best
policy,” is at heart and soul a cheat and
a swindler.
When Joseph was tempted by Poti
phar’s wife, he based his action upon a
principle; upon the trust and confideno
nposed in him, and felt that his integ*
rity as a man was at stake; but he also
ions o' viuegar in the barrel, throw in I at the same time, lecogniz^d a higher
whole cloves, put in my cucum-1 principle as the rule of his action, by
bers; then add vinfgar and cloves
fill the barrel up.
GREEN CORN PUDDING.
Take six ears of corn aud with a sharp
knife cut off the corn and chop fine. To
this add three pints of milk, three eggs,
three dessort-spoonsful of butter, the
same amount o f sugar aud salt to tsste.
Beat the sugar and eggs together, add
the corn aud milk, and bake until the
top is nicely browned. The sugar may
be omitted and a handful of corn meal
or powdered crackers used instead, and
the dish served as a vegetable and not a
dessert.
CINDERS IN THE EYES.
A very simplo and effective cure is
within the reach of every one. It is
simply one or two grains of flax-seed.
It is said they may be placed in the eyo
without injury or pain to that delicate
organ, and shortly they begin to swell
and dissolve a glutinous substance that
covers the ball of the eye, enveloping
auy foreign substance that may be in it.
The irritation or cutting of the mem*
brane is thus prevented, and the annoy
ance may soon be washed off.
Painless Death.
HOUSEHOLD HINTS.
PANCAKE*.
Take three eggs and stir them into a
pint of milk; add a good pinch of salt
and enough prepared flour to make it
into a thick, smooth batter. Fry in
tailing fat till nearly done; roll over on
the other side; drain, and serve very hot
'In one of his lectures Professor Tyn
dall spoko of the great probability that
entire absence of paiu accompanied death
by lightning. It is popularly supposed
that an impression made by the nerves, a
blow or puncture is felt at the precise
instant it is inflated, but such is not the
fact. The seat of sensation is the brain,
and intelligence of the irjury must be
transmitted to this organ through a car-
tain set of nerves, acting as telegraph
wires, before we become conscious of
pain. This transmission or telegraphing
from the seat of injury to the brain takes
time, longer or shorter, according to the
distance of the injured part from the
brain and according to the susceptibility
of the particular nervous system oper
ated on. Helmholtz, by experiments,
determined the velocity of this nervous
transmission in the frog to be a little
over eighty-five feet per second, in tbe
whale about one hundred feet per sec
ond. and in man at an average o‘ two
hundred feet per second. If, for in
stance, a whale fifty feet long were
wounded in the tail, it would not be con
scious of the injury until half a second
after the wound had been inflicted. But
this is not the only ingredient in the de
lay. It is Delieved that in every act of
consciousness a determined molecular ar
rangement of the brain takes place, eo
that, besides the interval of transmission,
a still further time is necessary for the
brain to put itself in order for its mole
cules to take up the motions of positions
necessary for the completion of con 1
sciousness. Helmholtz considers that
one-tenth of a second is required for
this purpose. Therefore, in the case of
whale, one second and onestenth would
elapse before an impression made upon
its caudal nerves could be responded to
by a whale fifty feet long.
Tho Modern Society Young: Man.
Hoiton Sunday School.
Scene: The billiard-room of a fashion
able club-house. At eight o’clock enter
Augustus, who removes bis summer
ulster and discloses a dress suit.
One of the Players—” Hullo 1 Gus is
rigged out under full sail and all the
candles lighted. What is it, old fellow ?”
Augustus—“Oh, I have been to make
my party call on Miss Banker. She
wasn’t at home, so I left my pasteboard
and came around here,”
Thirteen young men dropped their
cues, seizs their hats, remark, “ That’s
the racket for me,” and slide off to
Bacon street. At eleven Miss Banker
gets horn?, finds fourteen cards, and says:
“ How funny that all the boys should
have called this evening 1” At the same
hour Augustus receives thiee “smiles”
and ten cigars, the grateful offerings of
thirteen young men who have made their
party*call without the trouble of dress
ing or the expense of a hack.
We have improved on the old proverb
“make hay while the sun shines,” and,
to be up to the times, it should read
“when the tun shines, let the hay make
itself.”
saying: “How can I do this great wick
ednetB and sin against God.” So with
him who is tempted with a desire to
make money unlawfully, by misrepre
•entation, by abuse of confidence, by im
position upon ignorance, by taking ad
vantage of one’s necessities, and by grind
ing the poor aud fawning upon the rich.
The question of individual principle
cornea in, and the recognized responsi
bility to God should govern men in all
their actions.
The intense lover of money shows it
in his eye, in his talk, iu his actions, in
his dealings, and in his religion if he has
any. He is in for that which pays and
pays all the time. The wants, woes and
necessities of others never trouble his
metallic heart no throb of sympathy
beats there, no tear ‘of sorrow dims bis
eye, or word of hope, or expression of
regret falls from his lips
O cursed love of money; when for thy
sake
The fool throws up his interest in both
worlds, •
First starv’d In this, then damn’d in that to
“The love of money, that me 1 nest rage,
And latest folly of man’s sinking age,
Comes skulking last with selfishness and
fear,
Aud dies collecting lumbar in the i
A Newspaper Got Up by Lunatics
ITEMS OF INTEREST.
Thero is a bint for the superintendents
of American madhouses. The ipnova<
tion has been introduced recently in tb,
great Vienna establishments. A litho
graphed newspaper, published in the ins
stitution, is contributed to by the in
mates. Those patients for whom this
Blight mental exertion can only be ben
eficial send articles and essays on the
questions of the day, and it is only fair
to say that it would be a comfort to
readers if some of the matter published
in tho Vienna newspapers,’by people
generally considered pane, were as clever
and well written as some of these letters.
Those who are Afflicted with any mono
mania may ventilate their delusions and
support their convictions by argument
and example in tho columns of this ex
traordinary paper. The lo^ic employed
in an article in a recent number (says a
correspondent) by one gentleman to dis
prove the belief of another that his beard
was of heather and required constant
watering was so faultless and incisive as
to have done credit to a Regius professor
of moral philosophy. Alas i he himself
firmly believed that his nose was made of
sugar, and, to prevent its getting wet,
and consequently melting away, always
drank through a straw. Had he only
been able to apply his logic to hioesrif
he would have been curod.
It takes the average woman an hour
and a half to get ready for church.
The salaries of fourteen of the princi
pal officers or London aggregate $124,-
000. The lord mayor, In addition, re
ceives fifty thousand dollars.
Mirth should be the embroidery of
tbe conversation, not the web; and wit
the ornament of the mind, not the furni
ture.
The statue of liberty, the gift of
Frenchmen t«» America, will be comple
ted within two years. The lottery in
stituted to procuro the required funds
has proved successful. In height it 1b as
tall as the column in the place Vendome,
Paris.
General E. O. 0. Ord is having »
sword made from a meteorite which he
picked up in Mexico. The meteorite is
composed mainly of iron, but is so hard
aud brittle that the workmen at the
Springfield armory find it very difficult
to harden the metal sufficiently tor the
blade, though they will probably be able
to finish it in good shape.
Red snow, which is usually found
only in the Arctic latitudes, is seen on a
summit near Mount Stanford, in the
Sierra Nevadas. For several acres the
vast drifts are of a beautiful pinkish
tint to the depth of three or four inches.
One explanation of it is that myriads of
minute organism cover the surface.
A man in Kansas who presented him<
self as a “practical larmer,” visited all
the fairs with a prize pumpkin, and took
the premiums every time. It measured
seven feet round, and weighed two hun
dred and thirty pounds. Several days
ago, at Council Grove, a rival farmer
attempted to tap the pumpkin in the
absence of its owner, to get some of the
seeds, aud he discovered that it was
made of wood. This beats the ingenious
Connecticut invention of bass-wood
cucumber seed.
Cotton growing Is assuming large di
mensions in the central Asiatic provinces
of Russia, reaching yearly at present
more than 50,000,000 kilogrammes,
which is partly utilized in local indus
tries and partly finds its way to Russia,
which again returns a considerable pro
portion in the shape of cotton fabrics.
As the northern boundary of the cotton
zone in Turkestan, tho valley ®I tho
river ot Arys is usually taken; but also
iu the regions round Tashkent
siderable quantity of cotton is grown,
which ripens about October. In these
regions the American cotton also flour
ishes ; yet in spite of lepeated attempts
to introduce its culture, it has made but
little headway. Still better than the
cotton of Tashkent or Kojend is the Bok-
harian cotton, which by careful atten
tion to the plantations is paid to ap
proach the American kinds in quality.
The largest crops of cotton are obtained
in Khiva, the smallest of the northern
cities of the Turkestan region.
minating fatally, arc prone to ‘attaok the
tourist by land or voyager by tea in unac
customed latitude—more particularly those
near the equator. The best medicinal pro
tection agiinst irregularities of tho bowels,
stomach and liver, not only from the above,
but whatever cause arising, is Hoatetter’s
Stomach Bitters, a medicine in wide and inn
creasing demand in sultry portions of this
hemisphere, and also in the tropics. Travel
ers, emigrants, dwellers and temporary so-
louruers iu malarious distrio!s use it very
extensively as a safe guard.
The Iiiver Dauube.
remedy has never failed to rednoe a corpu
lent person from three to six pounds per
week. It is perfectly harmlqts and positively
efficient. Sold by druggists.
That Quinine will cure Chills and Fever Ib
well known. But it is strange that the other
febrifuge principles contained in Peruvian
bark are more powerful than Quinine, and
do not produce any annoying head symptoms
like bussing in the ears. This faot is proved
by Dr. F. wilhoft’s Anti-Periodio or Fever
and Ague Tonic, which is a preparation of
Peruvian bark, without quinine, accord!ni
to the doolifration of its proprietors, Wheel
ock, Finlay & Co., of New Orleans.
The destructive progress of that insidious
>e to life and health, fiorofula, may be ar
rested by the aid of BoovilPs Blood and Liver
Syrup, a botanic depurent whioh rids the
stem of every trace of scrofulous or syi *
tio poison and ourea eruptive and otl
diseases indicative of a tainted condition of
the blood. Among tbe maladies which it
edies are white swelling, salt rheum,
buncles, biliousness, the diseases incident to
women, gout and rheumatism.
Some of the new styles of Mason & Hamlin
Cabinet Organs introduce a style of finish
with embossed gold bronze ornamentation by
a new procesf; at once the most elegant and
chaste finish yet employed on such instru
ments. Prices are very low for such workman
ship.
Valuable and Reliable.—“Brown 1
Bronchial Troches' 1 are invaluable to those
exposed to sudden changes, affording prompt
relief in coughs, colds, ete. 25 ots.
Do not Begin your Binging Olaasos Before
Examining L. O. Emerson's New Book,
THE VOICE OF WORSHIP
'VfTlllLB containing n Urge and v tillable coIIoca
ii mol Church Music in the form or Tanes
anil Authcms.it is perfectly fitted for the Marine
‘ and Convention hr tho large number of
Duets, tilers, Ao.,nnd its well made Klo-
.rr Course.
o |9.(Mi cor dozen. Specimen copies mailed
JO.
D for circulars and catalogues, with full list
standard Singing School Hooks.
EMERSON'S VOCAL METH0D.„ y L . 0
EMERSON, SI.Mi, Is n valuahio now Hook Tor Voice
Training, containing ail the essentials of study,
plenty of exorclsoi, and pl-lu explanations, and
ting ^mucli less than the largor works on tlm
S UBSCRIBE i
a •
One pair of boots or shoes cm bo saved
every year by using Lyon’s Patent Heel
Stiffener. Sold by shoe and hardware dealers.
Chew Jackson’s Best Sweet Navy Tobacco
Insist on having C. Gilbert's Starches.
Onnalitore, Wives nntl Molhrrx.
Dr. Marchisl's Uterine Oatholioon will m
itivelv cure Female Weakness, such as Pil
ing of the Womb, Whiten, Chionic In flam-
ination or Ulceration of the Won.b, Inciden
tal Hemorrhage or Flooding, Painful. Sup
pressed and Irregular Menstruation, &'*. An
old and reliable remedy. Send postal card for
pamphlet, with treatment, cures and certi-
’oisns and nntients, to
, Utica, N. Y. Sold by
r bottle.
$5 to $20 £
Pfr—■ Address »l. Ham.ktA
vn Torres and ••‘■pntfti
- Oi.Portland,Mo
11777 ft- »o!Vddross ifjl, Vlckerr.Angnst.t.Vio
flftPTPyA Month and osoonsoo iruamuteod to
# 4 agonts. Outfit froo. Show A Do. Augusta. Wo
POCKET niSiTIOllAIIY. woHs,and
HU{tBAY^ItLfc BSffuO.. MW K. uV.h itT/fc.T*.
Urlce UcnflST HIlA
SB NDWVWjawsaa
**^the world. Kironsivo outfit free.
r tho MU .SI UAL RECORD.
od music, for $
ru
Press. WHITE ROOKS,
unday School Song Hook.
OLIVER DITS0N A 00., Boston.
C. H. Dillon * C o. J. E. DlUon * ۥ
Droadway, N.Y. 923 Chestnut st..Phtl,
Tarrant’s tieltxer Aperient
II savo much rain and danger. Nature somi
i is so outraged by tho burden nhe is mado I
- through the heedlessncss of her childrei
3.:
shots and punishes fearful'
cr treatment when tho e;
k riV«Vi l M
!n7SV
WeutHtfioc. Address T-u
THE SMITH DHGM (1.
First lSstnbllshod I Moat ttoW.Wti I
THEIR INSTRUMENTS btiw * fjoflftrd
value iu nil tho
LEADING MARVSKV
OP THE Y/OBLD!
Everywhere recognized ns tho FI1IJ8T
IN TONE.
OVER
Made and In uan.
Host work nnd low. ......
W Bend for n Catalogue.
taut St, opp. Waltham Si., fain, Ms
80,000
Now Designs constantly.
i froo explaining eT ® , J r ‘t ln f;
It * CO.. Baakfrs. 17 U nil at.. W.I.
YOUNG men ssrgasrjsrw.tt
situation. Address
| pay — With Stencil Outfits. What cost
OPIUM
Hablt& Nkln IMseaw'-h.
$3S0s”
jth—Agents Wanled-M Wat
I. Jb.
Tnrm ir mioiityi
ra a l'5?4S.'£55 , 'S /
ftagffiflURSS' 1
AGENTS, READ THIS
srcskr
siososafa—
Tl%™ifiw t fmn , VtftT.-|Unky».a3w.nI. i
Jeo.P.li
■' SffiMKIhiyrayS!;:
"'ttttAB VT&zr'"-
Four Hours in llie Dark.
Scientific American.
It is a humiliating confession to make
—but geography in pitiless and our
national vain-glorv must bow to decrees
—that for four hours in twenty-four the
entire territory of the United States is
deprived of sunshine. As the sun goes
down on our farthest Aleutian island its
morning rays are just lighting up the
hilltops of the western coast of Ireland,
and the wholo breadth o the Atlantic
lies between us and daylight. To our
Fenian citizens this may be another and
cogent reason for annexing the dear lit*
tie isle of the harp aud the shamrock ;
but until it is done the exultant cry of
tbe Rocky Mountain Presbyterian, that
the nun never sets on the United* States,
must be admitted to be a little exagger
ated. It does set every day, and para
doxically, four hours before it rifles. In
the depth of- our humiliation we may
would wiggle and writhe as if suffering
from an attack of colic. It had two
heads, of course,but which was the head
and which was the tail was more than
the General could find out. Some think
that the worms breed in the intestines
of the fish and then cut their way into
the meat; but the General has a theory
that tbe worms tackle people under the
arms, and make it their business to stay
right there and eat a pa-sage into the
body. Millions of these fish die of too
much worm, and float over the falls, and
the regular sea-gull can be seen feeding
upon them almost any ftinute in the
day.
..He knowH enough who knows how
to bo silent.
The river Danube has figured largely
in history for two thousand fyeara, and
it again become) the object to which tho
eyes of tho whole world have turned,
It furnisnvd i uighway for the Turks in
tho sixteenth and seventeenth centuries
to "penetrate Europe as far as Vienna,
and in the days of the Crusades it be--
came an outlet for the religious enthu
siasm of Europe to flow to the Holy
Land. The Danube, from its source in
Baden to the Black Bsa, is one thousand
eight hundred and twenty miles long,
and it drains with its tributaries an
area of over three hundred square miles.
It passes through Bavaria, Austria.
Hungary aud Servia to the Carpathian
mountains, where it separates Roumania
and Bulgaria, and passes into the B'ack
tiaa through soveral mouths, the princK
pie ono being that of Sulina. The Danube
is navigable for steamers as far as Ulum,
in Bavaria. At Nicopolii 1 , in the four
teenth century, one hundred Christians
were driven by the Turks into the
Danube, and, in the fifteenth century,
forty thousand Turks were slain on its
shores at the siege of Belgrade.
Golden Silence.
New York Herald.
“ Now, if you speak another word I’ll
lock you up,” said the Essex Market
Court Magistrate yesterday to a loqua-
ious man named Moran. If you hold
that tongue of yours for five minutes
I’ll discharge you.”
“All right, your Honor. Moran has
nothing eke to say,” replied the prisoner.
“ Keep still then.”
“ That what I intend to do.”
“ He silent.”
“I will."
“ You are not.”
“ 0; course I am.”
“ You’re speaking now, sir.”
“ No, I’m speechless.”
“ I’ve given you a trial.”
“ Yes,1ir.”
“ And I fine you ten dollars.”
“ By the heavens above, then, next
time I’m silent I’ll say me say,” eaid
Moran, as ho was eroorted to the prison
Japanese Fish.
Tho Smithsonian Institution at Wash
ington has just received a collection 01
184 species of Japanese fish, being very
nearly a complete collection of all tho
known species, in that empire. Tho
specimens aro beautifully arranged, and
are correctlv labeled both in Latin nnd
English. They come under tho exchange
system so widely practiced among the
scientific societies of tho world. Not
long ago tho Smithsonian Institution
sont to tho Tokio Museum a collection
of North American birds, equaled by
only three similar collections in this
couutry, and‘to tho museum of the edu
cational department a collection, also
complete, of South Americar
II
j’li'-NtiiM- ii. uii.K h min
Itcnirily faiUtoouro. uivue
inuiHkiiote n-llof, cunn enm-a
^
7
rds.
bir<
The li flarni-puM'llmafe.
Tlie influence of climrio upon a constitu
tion subjecte.l to a trying change iu atmos
pheric conditions, in water, and in food, is
TEAS!
mnal coil. Ueit plan ever offered to (hub Axont.
a ad large bnyon. ALL EXPRESS OILY RUES
PAID. New torms FUEB. _
Tie Great
I Ve»ey Street, New York.
THI8 NKW
ELASTIC TRUSS
Hot a V*»d dlBirins from all olhtn, ta
... - — porting RUI
le Hernia Is hfldeecarely dy - ^ ( ^ - -
' ‘EaglMlon’TrTist'Co*, dhicanoHlL
The Weekly Sun.
A large, eight pase rarer r t Bfl bread columns,
will bo^ent^postpaltl to any addrt-M uwtll JThuu
FOR HALF A DOLLAR
ThleCInltu-Hoaso KatMbllaheil SOT.
Pensions
I. Addrozi with stamp,
UKOHOR K. LKMON.
-. 3*5. Wmhli ylww. I).
MQUER’8 "g COD-tiVIB OH
Pronounced tho trcut by Dm high
Hies in the world. Gl\.-n hlvhfe
’’u KriHwitione, and at I’nrm, I8».
W ieirrlli»dfc<;u.-N I
UPHAM’S
FRECKLE, TAN
-AND-
PIMPLE BANISHER.
A few applications of this
preparation will remove
freckles, tan, sunburn, pim
ples or blotches on the face,
and render the complexion
clear and fair. For softening
and beautifying th skin it
has no equal. Price, 50 ots.
Sent by mail, post paid, for
75 ots. Address
JOHN F. HENRY, CURRAN & CO.
24 College Place, N. Y.
SALVE
A SURE RELIEF FOR THE SUFFERER.
A Vegcrnblo Preparation, Invented In tlio
/7th century by Dr. William Grace, Burgeon In King
James* army. Through Its agency ho cured thous-
nnds of the most serous sores nnd wounds that
baffled the sKlll of the most eminent physicians of
his day, and was regarded by all who luiow him as
a public benefactor.
WAHTS, DUSTERS, TAX,
Ii, JXUBoVmo SAILS, NETTLE UAHIt, MOSQUITO A
d ull cutaneous diseases and eruptions general
PRICE £» CENTS A HOX. BY MAIL 33 CENTS.
URUflniSTK 'czprpssnto paid), on receipt
of 1^4>00—about eleven ccclo a box*
SETH W. FOWLS Sc SONS.
S5 HARRISON AVENUE,
BOSTON, MASS.
W n. II. BURf/RM. Rich flqanr*. If. 4D ,
Inventor and Manufacturer of the lloanoke
Cotton Press. Chieftain Press. Chain Lov.-r Pro#s
and others. Some very cheap. Ilolstlug Pulleys,
Ac. Also a New Procoss of making Wells any ueptu
in from one to three hoars time. There Is mouejr in
jS.©RGAN
WISEST !|
Manufactory f RATTIEBORO ^
nglSON & HAMLIN CABINET ORPINS.
tfisnniHMMMRwTitt
via: at Farm, 1W7; Viknna. :,.78» Eantiaoo. ItIO
Piiif.Af>r.i.PHfa, t«7ft; Parik, I87H; and Chans Mats
i Gold M dual, iris. Only An-niceu Organa*«s«
ardrd highest honors at any soi l,. Hula for cask
-fonts. flliu'rtiUd Cauil * *“ -
tylns and prices, sent fi .
" “— “T CEIOAkt 1
PURE TEAS Si wS
OUMPANe.au rnltonit-.N Y. r. O. II IV. I. ^
WASSISJMrSJpilMTS
WifUVKR SkSl Ml Brnailwny. fi. V.
“fil UNT'aKK SlV. fi'vV ft
SS.'raSr'.'SSu'rtSS
Dll...... IIUNT’K I1KM-
KuY euros Din botes,
Gravel, Dropey. General
Debility, and Pains In the
_ UU*AT’8 C lt EM H Dili
BUSIEDY.
.aJ f., KKK , rro „,|.„„, k. 1.
AGLNfS WAN I I.U I0R HIE
ICTORIAL
HISTORY optiieWPB* 17
fine his" ‘ ‘ "*
_f the
eighty Send for
other book. Addross
iubltshed. It
.gen and extra
•ents, and boo why It sells faster than any
Addross
NATIONAL PUBLISHING OO.iBt. Louis, Mo
PERPETUAL
Sorghum Evaporator.
S15. $20. $25.
CHEAP AND DURABLE.
DR. JUDGE’S
M V Tho vreat Fattening Remedy and Blo'd
ISSDSmEI
eyes bright and sparkling; tlm cheeks
Mump and rosy: tho broatn pmo and swoot. Price.
agents
BUFFALO "BILL.”
The famous Si
ten bv himself—Is the livelios
; book L
i, Ilnntoi
— elier —
id tor s .
at worn are making big sales, fiend at onco and
secure territory. For circulars aid liberal torms,
apply |° BAMK B1||IM Hurl ford. Casern
e bis Pest-office and Xxprvss address.
DR. H. Gr. ROOT,
<»» Pearl KV, M«W
PUI1L1AHER* UNION. ATLANTA—No,
RAPONIFIER
Ii the Old Beliablo Concentrated Lye
FOR FAMILY SOAP MAKING.
Directions accompanying eaoh can for making
Hard, Soft, and Toilet Houp quickly.
IT IS FOIL WEIGHT AUD STRENGTH.
flooded with (wvcallcd) Ccneen-
P quickly.
AND STT~
----- —d with Ciwcu...
^whlcLMs adulterated with i
SAVE HONEY, AN]) DO7 THE
SaponifieR
MALE BY *ITfE
Pennsylvania Salt Uanuf’g Co.,
PinLAUKLPHli-