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7—T
Wright haa tin* following
i subject in tin* Fancier*
t seem* at least in the highest degree
probabk* that the influence of « given
male last* longer if no successor In* in
troduced, or that, in fact, it may either
remain forucertain time, if undisturbed,
or if disturbed, be iiw a lew time ( but
i>ow much le«w 1$ hardly certain ) neu
tral ized or rather overpowered by the
•weoud. It meins nearly certain that
whatever the prceta time la*, the influ
ence of u given male in ordinary co***
last for a considerable lea* time titan
has been generally tmpposed.
It aeema established that tl
er a art. Not alone in the sheep depart-
iurdt is this apparent. It finds enroll
“ * idra
HORACE GBEELET.
sis in every ring, from that of the draft
not onh t It'
ing beyond the graceful lines of contour,
hut by the exjiert, a* well, who recog
nises it as neceasary to injure transmi**
aion of those virtues he peeks to repro-
The exj*
n testify in jko offspring.
cedtyjH Mioeesaful breeder
t there is such
thing as an extraordinary influence.
That the first union often has a lasting
• ‘wfect is well kuown. Hens first crossed
with a 1‘olish cock have !>eon known to
phow a tendeyry to breed crested chick*
all their lives; and cases in my own
knowledge have led me to think it ex
tremely probable that, say a Brahma hen
first crasHCHi bv a Dorking, might throw
occasionally five-toed chicks afterwards.
which has become as it wore a very
ponent part of the breed.
3 {Aut pt^alsAWecmt at lealtyuAlt* til It
uncc^ypnalW Cagle mesal'iwiec with
puen a stmnjrlymarkcd variety as, sav a
Brahma, a Poland or a Dorking,
not lx; sufficient to disturb tim actual
t parentage or the .general plumage. am*
i jret enough influence may Ik* givVn t<
Mnj»re«s i»n a portion of the clucks th
Aiie peculiar point. Several, cases of this
• mature have come within my notice, and
, they may jorye to account for many oc
currences which have lx*cn attributed to
-impurity of ’blond in the actual parent.
It- appears, in short, as if in a certain
^nse as if a chick may “ have two
father*:” Further light on this intm-d-
i#g i part of the subject is much to lx*
desired.
’ I * m at all events inclined to theopin-
that in ordinary eases, when a male
oird is changed for another of the same
breed, about a week may b? relied upon
to determine tlie jjatarnire. In <vi*«c. of
mi aliep of Inarkwily inferior bird, J
t'w , i l dE, lu)i - evcr, certainly allow longer;
and I am also inclined to think that if
there hau i.-cn very few hens the influ
ence might probably last longer than if
Jh*y were fuiucrouti (r f
recognize* no letter re ason for withold-
ing food from aupnals under hi* can*
than In* find* for re»t rioting the Members
1 his household in tin* same direction,
liven the projx*r kind aad variety of
ood, tin* quantity can safely lx* left to
the instincts of the animal. If regularly
supplied, no more will he taken than
ran prope rly lx* assimilated, while with
a less .quantity some detriment oiust en
sue. ‘Blood ’will tell;’ lmt lU story
will never !*> complete unless the scenes
f its triumphs l«e laid in proximity to
.roduciivu’ pasture^ and welHIM
i roughs."
While generous feeding it thua placed
among the essentials to the highest suc
cess. the same attention to detail—varie-
H#w a Hotel Waa Opened.
The Tremont House, Boston, the
H«w turfiiM «r WHor* | oldest of the great hotels iu the country,
I*. T. V* . | hat just completed its first half century.
I f? lB f lBro V kb tho When it waa completed its managers
which ledI into til.' Mg back room of th. | , fralJ rull ,\ l(1 rUk of op#nta ' «,
JV/f»»,c oflico on. day wl,cu dap-bust | expeMtv , it , 9l i,ution. Tho Botton
I collided with tomebodi. And that j muniJ t tliu, U-1U the curiotn way in
wa, not the wont of U. The oomohodr 1U „ roUem w MW i ve d :
alluded to . .pH upon my foot and why <£„■, tho hoiuer .
mo«t ground mto Mu« B o-meat a part of . Xlmt q Htioii occupied Bo.ton, and Uio
that member which contaimed upon it. | * „ We ‘ h0< „,/, xhere
surface a particularly violent and a#
gresaive corn. It waa an agonizing mo
ment, and in pain which fairly doubled
of tlieN' ujion ncc<viand flesh—wiU lx* fe-
ouilttl that is Ih*s(#i\i«I upon wiiat are
iomniuonly cogpidered the hi^hernrts of
Weeding.’ r.Hupermg with incongruous
field, restriction t*» limited quarters, tlu*
creation and encouragement of a vitiated
ajpx*tite. U*y mtaiinis^ring ot suitable
footl at iiaprojH^ hoitf^oi lmprtqier food
at any time—in short all errors* of man
agement—arc as cautiously avoided hv
the successful breeder as woujd In* tlu?
u*» of a ram possessing some objectiona
ble peculiarity <*f * form or flcee
though the result of joUUke*ii the one
urn! not ]
t those in lla* Stker d
etlon.
Storing Prop*. • *«
It is often the casetluitfannechiMac tin
rewards of their labor through ctrelear
ness i*.i storing their crops. Corn is packed
in largo bulks when it is sure to heat and
l*c damaged, t Potatoes, which slufuld be
fully dry, are packed away wqt apdisd^
bv in «*limp cellars, rurapkii*, vfliiAi
should i>e tluckly oovaredwith straw^arc
covered to be frozen. Thought
fulness mid Wire are dstecessary in storin-;
rope*.««in making them.
Uoir Du«l for T*|» DrmlHs.
K. R. T., Saxonville, \\. I.. asks if b*»m*
dust wou.d not make a giKKt dressing for
grass lanu to lx* applied this fait Well,
:«i» f«»r Unit matter^ we think it Would l*
nettet to *omposf the bone dust with
Fall Plowing. i _
Wo'make |bc following extract from
the New England Farmer ou the subject
©f fall plowing: “Whether to plow in
fall or spring i* a question that lias l»eep
discussed for many years, ahd will con
tinue to lx* discussed for a great many
years vet to coaie. It is one of fiiosd
questions that is cotitinuaHy presenting
itself, and must lx* answered in each case
according to the peculiar circumstances
attending it. As a general rule it mav,
perhaps, be safe t<» say 'plow light sandy
land late in the spring, andheavv clav in
the fall. H envy «av land seems to require
the alternate freezing and thawing of
winter to pulverize and fit it Cor the next
pul
verization. Sandy land will ofte
much by blowing nwav when not c<
by growing crops. Yet there are excep
tions to this as to all general rules. For
a corn crop it is thought, by many, that
spring plowing is decidedly bost on any
land, provided the plowing' is done late,
just before planting, and the plow not
allowed to run more than three or four
inches deep. It is certainly a great ini—
take to plow heavy land in the spring,
whether old ground or sod, before it is
dry enough to crumble and pulverize. I f
plowed while too wet it is rendered lumpy,
and the lumps, will not pulverize all
summer. \\ et land plowed in the fall
will have tlu* advantage of the winter
freezing to pulverize the hard lumps, and
this may be, and probably is one reason
why many farmers have supposed that
fall plowing is always preferable.
Sk>il for Nupr Heels.
The lx*et requires a deep, permeable
H»il, for its roots penetrate deeply into
the ground and are abundantly supplied
with fine fibres through which it receives
its nourishment. If the soil does not
permit tho root to grow down deeply the
top will la* forced to grow alvm* the
ground, and the crown which grows out
of ground in nearly worthless for sugar
purposes. A deep, sandy loam is the
best soil to produce beets rich in sugar.
They will, however, grow on a variety
of soils, and any soil which will plow
and subsoil to the depth of twelve or
fifteen inches is a good best soil. Avoid
all wet lands and muck lrnttoms as
suitable. Beets will not flourish on
lands, and what grow arc not sv
Muck lxdtoms produce large tops
small mots with little sugar In then
- -f
t hii krii.RaUInK in Iho Past.
During the New York state fair even
ing meetings wen* held to persons inter
ested in different branches of husbandry,
At one of the meetings Mr. A. M. Hal
sted read a paper on poultry-raising at
practiced in former times, of which the
following is an extract: “ Fowls wore
regarded os a species of freebooters, and
just barely tolerated. They roamed
when and where they pleased. If per*
chauce they were too free in the garden,
f he house-dog was set ujxm them to
t’rive them out, or they were pelted with
stones, sticks or whatever was m st
handy. They roosted in summer in the
trees around the door yard; in winter,
under the hovels and sheds, on the carts,
wagons, ladders, or wherever thev could
find a place. For nests, they had nearly
all creation—the manger in the stable,
the liay-mow in the barn, the old sleigh
under the cart-shed, the blackberry patch
in the corner of the hog-yard, the brush-
heap ia the wood-yard, or the high gras.-
or weeds in tlie neighboring meadow
Semi-periodical ej?g hunts were made,
and the <*gga obtained were sent to the
country store and traded off for needles,
thread, or other etceteras—many of these
ties and too young for broil-
b
e young
were the same. If a hen succeeded in
hiding her nest, so neither human nor
uniniul foe diaoovered it. she usually
brought out a brood of chicks nearly as
wild as young partridge*. Later in the
season, as eggs became more plenty at
the stores, some hens were set, nnii, ns
the chicks got old enough, they were
killed and sold ns broilers—those which
were too wild to catch, and too late
hatched to bring good price*, being left
for stock for the next season. This was
the only ‘survival of the fittest’ known
to the poultry-keepers of those days.
As to feed, the wood-pile, barn-yard,
hog-pen, and kitchen door-steps were the
restaurants of the summer, and in the
winter, a few handfuls of corn in the
morning was thought to be all that was
necessary,
Advantages or Liberal reeding.
The National Live Stock*Journal says:
“ If the sheep breeder’s faith in the ef
ficacy of liberality in the matter of feed
ing begins to fuller, walk through tho
pen* of a first-class fair, and conversa
tion with a few of the more successful
breeders, will nerve to dispel such doubts
as sure us the moruintf sun scatters the
mist* from the mountiun side. ISize,sym
metry, vigor, precocity and prolificacy
depend for their lx'rlcct development
upon tho wo!l-iille<t granary and richly-
clothed pasture of tho husbandman ns
post. If six or e ight co pis (if this fine
•ft w*re applied to the
me up for au instant, I—-yes, damned
* ily, *
and In good^ set terms,_ qs W.
bhaTkipcare would
of itK*lf,
better for, wiuld act as a xirt of mulch
or protection for tlu* grijv roedfl, and-1f
the soil was vt fill ipclinedto ‘‘heave,” it
wouhl be a pksdtire Ixftntit. -But our
correspondent must remember that tin
disadvantage of using boue. dust
ground bone, done, as a fertilizer, is
fact of its slov action. The nitrogen
and phosphoric acid which the lames
contain is very dourly rend*-red available
for plants, on account of their insoluble
nature; but wlure the bone dust is added,
to yard or barn manure . as a eomp6st,
the bones cause the mass to ferment
somewhat, and tie heat engendered lib
erates tlu* pliospfinie acid and nitrogen,
which i* absorlxll by the manure and
given out more qucklv to ldtntfi when
brought into convict with them. Good
practice and the hst scientific authori
ties have united it recommending this
as the best treatnnnt for • ground bone
a ml the best manner <of its application to
plants. Fifty pounA of ground bone to
a coni of manure would lx* sufficient.—
[American Agriculturalist.
observe. Wife
straightened up, you may imagine my
horror to see that the person 1 had been
laUumatizing waa none ether than Mr.
rcciev. I cpuld lipWangk through tha
floor with mortification, and I stood
there wailiiig in a sort of dazed way fur
the Volley ofprofa*ity which I felt sure
would come. But it didn't. The old
gcntlyman settled himself back, adjusted
his spectacles on his nose, and with a
broad griu upon bis face, addressed me
thus:
r “That'll; right, bub. If it hurts you.
sweaf fike h 11; l vMwld!”
Tatfe Jm^iaused a tnoau nt, imd eon*
tinned:
“Human nature is human nature,
hub; and if it does you auv good, just
d — n uie again! There’-' nothing like itl
Balm of Gilead is nowhere.”
And ho patted me on the head and
passed on.
iiuafrinJar Mis. Greeley wc»t to th#
Wctt Indies for.lier lioalth, and the fob
losing spring she sent for her husband
to oonie after ljcr and bring her home to
New York. Now if there was one thing
the old man hated .it wns tig* sea. The
very smell of salt water made him sick.
But nevertheless he obeyed his wife's
mil,•she was; ftomslys'.oU to obey hw
hvefwWuim. in aue time they got back
to Gotham, and that morning Mr. Sin
clair re#eh«d word tfiat Greeley was riot
fee ling weir, owing to niV voyage, and
had decided to stay at home for the day.
J«Tkfc«WPUl% #M.llr v «, puiup ia
Washington on business, arid so, valis#
in hand, h% called at ikoch y’s house an
hour or two before the train was to start,
lie found tlie old man in bed and actu
ally very ill, having suffered terribly
from sea-sickness all the tray out aim
all the way back. He was alone,
the other members of the family
being cither ill or away from home; mul
Borinolairdetermined to pass the night
with him, giving up for tnat time liis
trip to tho Capital. Presently Gjceley
wanted lii> back rubbed; ard the im
promptu nurse was surprised to find that
the patient hadn’t a stitch of clothing on
his person, barring the sheets and quilts.
“ Sinclair,'’ Niid he in that querulous
whine of 1hb, “ I’m ns naked us the day
l was bom. My trunks haven’t arrived
yet, and I haven’t got »d-n night
gown,”
“But why not wear this?” pointing to
a garment ho had taken off before get
ting into bed.
“Oh, I expect to he out to-morrow and
I want that to wear then, llow the
blazes would it look after I had slept in
was a fear of going overboard in that Into
season. Every day since the grand din
ner* were served, the anxiety iu regard
to opening the hotel increased, the fear
growing gradually less every day. On
the llitn of October Mr. Stetson was busy
drilling, and wondering why the doors
could not bo flung wide* open. In
obedience to orders.visitors of all sorts
wire ref list'd admTflsion, the time haring
been occupied with curious people. At
12 o'clock a triiuk was flung down ou tho
floor of the rotunda. The owner Was in
formed that he conld not be allowed to
remain. “ You must go somewhere
else.” The fat porter looked grimly at
the intruder, then at the officer with a
quiet wrinkle on hisfiMc, but tho order
vm* peremptory and dU not allow enter
tainment .So the. visitor begged to bo
permitted to wait until resteu after his
long ride. When rested he would-take
up hi* baggage and seek a place to tarry
at. ilis manner, and inviting words,
rather won the attention of the officer,
und secured finally the privilege of going
to a room to “ wash and dress.” Tliad
done, “.Then, if you have a cook, why
A Prairie Fire.
ISerlkMr's Monthly.]
Next to calamities like that the home-
Header's wife told of, the great besetting
fear of the settlers on the border—in all
the new ai d thinly peopled portions of
Kansas, in fact-is the coming of the
autumn prairie fire, which so frequently
nteanaccs their stacks and criba, their
helpless stock, their stables and cabins,
and even their lives. Were it not for
it* known danger aud power of havoe.
this tempest and scourge of fire would
. , » —- 11 — J force uud
lie a speot-u ie of commanding force uud
beautv. First, you will catch a glimpse
of what you take to l>o gray wisp* of
hnxe away off on the horizon; and watch
ing, you will see these vagrant particles
deepen gradually, and gather into a de
finite volume of smoke, black like a
raiu-cloud, and bronze about tho edges.
Then the strange, aomber bulk starts
forward across the prairie, and you hold
your breath at the sight of tho rapid
progress of it. (A mile in two minutes
('ora: White, 48c; mixed, 40e. Oats: White,
3?c; mixed tide.
CINCINNATI—Flour: Family, *!MiO(<v6.tK>.
Wheat: $1.28(9,1.30. Cora: 47a48c. Oats:31
@37c.
NEW YORK—Flour: Common to fsir ex
tra $5.7SaU.80; good to choice extra, $U.tI5aii.30.
Wheat: Ungraded winter red, $1.32al.S2H
No.2 do, $1.4254*1.44. Cora: Ungraded,
aiilc; No. 2, 62%aUSc. OaU: No. 2, 40 Lc;
No. 2, white 4IHa42i£c.
. •’•*’»if** Hnonrcas.
ATLANTA—Eggs: 14al5c. Butter: Choice
Tennessee, 22%a25c. Poultry: large, I8a23c;
hens, 92KaSfir; small sizes, I3al7c. Sweet
potatoes: UOatUc pet bushel. Irish potatoes:
$1.7SaS.OO per barrel.
BALTIMORE—Butter: Prime to choice
western packed, 20u22o. Eggs: 2U22o.
live STOCK.
ATLANTA—Choice Tennessee cattle 3c
cuuiinon I Ha2J<o; Georgia raised, l Ha2e.
tllill:
1’t an old bnjver like myaolUetjomp- heavy tii
ng to calf’ A repast followed,,.after; idhttejy i
icli he canw to the front of tht j"— 1
id the bill, and wondered why
Cottou Seed Meal ns n Frrlillaer.
The question *>f the ^se of cotton seed
meal as fertilizer is an Important one to
the planting intorestn of the South, and
opinions differ to its vilue as a special
fertilizer, and .vky? Beinuse we <to nut
know “what afe the mutual chemical
and physical reactions .>f the various
kinds of soil on the different fertilizing
materials in general use.'' Where s»»ils
are rich in availahle mineral plant-food
und jioor in nitrogen, theq the use of
edttori seed meal will prove «»f marked
Ixncfit.
When* the soils are deficit-lit in phos
phate* and iM>tnsh. then if persisted in,
the application of cotton seed alone will
prove injurious. The reason is obvious,
as the meal contain* altout eight per
cent, nitrogen, and only three and three-
quarters per cent, phosphate acid, and
two percent, potash. From tlie nlwve
it will Ite seen that cotton seed meal act*
n* a stimulant and frequently produ
large canes poor in sugar. At other
times it yields very remunerative crops.
The advice «»f a celebrated elu-aiist is,
isunpost cotton seed meal with finely
ground lames, jnitash and dry mould.
Allow it to remain for about two months
and then apply to the soil, thereby ad
ding the most important element* of
food in the most available form.
Signs Attending Feigned Grief.
The expression of grief has recently
been a subject of investigation by an
Italian physiologist, M. l’aolo Mente-
pnzza, who lura studied with great care
all the contractions which suffering pro
duces in the human face, und endeavored
to arrive at an exact distinction of the
f ihenomena of real from those of simu-
nted sorrow. All the forms of dolorous
poerisy lie exposes mercilessly. The
lowing, according to M. Mentegazza,
; signs of grief: 1. The expression is
are signs of grief: 1. The expression
nearly always exaggerated relatively to
the cause of the grief; 2. Tlie, visage is
not pale, and the muscular disturbance
is intermittent; 3. Tlie skin ha* its nor
mal heat; 4. There i* not harmony iu
the mimicry of grief, and one sees cer
tain contractions, certain relaxations,
which arc wholly wanting iu real grief;
0. The pulse is frequent in consequence
of the exaggerated muscular movement;
” A surprise, or any object which viv«
hr
Welt, in due time his baggage arrived,
and Sinclair made a bolt for tlie article
he wanted. After some rummaging he
found it, aud heljx*d the old man put it
on. It was speedily fastened at the neck
and the nurse took up oue of the wrists
and tried to button it. There, however,
he stuck fast. Tho ends wouldn’t meet
by fully two inches. He tugged and
twisted to his utmost, but it was no go.
Still, asthd patient said nothing, lie sup-
j>osed it ought to be fastened, and re
doubled his efforts for that purpose.
For about twenty mujutes lie labored
without success. Then he said:
“This is a failure. It won’t fasten.”
“No,” replied Greeley with exasperat
ing coo’ness. “I knew it wouldn’t. Tho
fact is, I never could button the infernal
thing myself. But you seemqcl to enjoy
it, so I didn’t disturb you. ’
lie lay back on the pillows for a few
moments,'ns if thinking deeply, and
then, sitting bolt upright, he brought his
fist down upon the quilt and exclaimed
savagely:
“ If ever Mormonism works as far east
at this, I’ll be.d—d if I don’t have one
wife to take care of my shirts.”
A Typical Western Outlaw.
was hunted down and killei
kogee, iu the Indian Territory, recently,
stood at the head of the list of Wcste
outlaw*. He was of white skin, though
his blood was tainted, and he claimed
Cherokee citizenship. He was six feet
tall, straight as an arrow, and of stout
frame. Twenty-eight vears of crime
(for his life
eigni vears ot
full of it fror
cradle) had stamped fiercely upon
, - JI — *i 'thci;
his
Indian features the. marks of
devil who expected to die with his boots
on and with the whistle of bullets in his
ear. His fir*t crime was that of whole
sale cattle stealing. So imperfect
the laws of the Indian Territory that
Barker and his men rode with free lmots
and boldly for many years. Triplet,
half-breed Cherokee; Scogd;n, the Mex
ican, and Mason, the Texan, were his
lieutenants. Men were waylaid, mur
dered, and robbed by them time and
again. It is said that every citizen of
the Cherokee country carried a special
bullet in his pocket for Barker. The
culminating atrocity of the hand e
about on the morning of the 2d of
August last, when they galloped into the
and
idly attracts the attention, suffices to
make the tragic inask suddenly fall off;
7. Sometimes one succeeds in discover
ing among the tears, the sol>s, and heart
rending lamentations, the presence of a
chuckle, which expresses, perhaps, the
malignant pleasure of practising a de
ception; 8. The expression ia eccentric,
or is wholly wanting in concentric
forms.
Auccdote of Jndge Cleary,
f'fomc years ago I had a caso to argue
before tho eccentric Judge Cleary, of
Kentucky. While waiting for my*case
♦ t ft
, I listened to the trial... „
brawny ruffian, who was accused of steal
ing two mules. He had been caught
riding one and leading the other, and
though both the animals bore their real
owner’s brands, he swore that they had
been loaled on his farm and raised by
him. Every point of evidence was
against him, but lie swore he was inno
cent with enough oaths to scare an over
land teamster. The jury rendered a
verdict of guilty without* leaving their
scat*. Judge Cleary asked him:
“Have you anything to say why judg-
ment should not be pronounced on your
“l am innocent, and I hope God may
atrike me dead if I am notr
The Judge paused a moment. Then
he said, quietly:
‘ As the Almighty has not seen proper
to comply with your request, the sen-
tonce of the court is ”
ou to pronounce it.
and he went
broad daylight sacked the place, d B
the residents, men, women and children,
like a (lock of sheep, out into the woods.
Two men who resisted were shot through
the heart. A few days ago ten Chero-
kees and two white men caught the out
laws in ambuscade. Hcogden and
at the wine list, and after rumyifl: i4
said, “ How much of this sii
umerntionharwyou sold?”
The' housa> !i not open.'
take a memorandum from the
tie of porter to the end of tlie
n to Montevusat $12 per
t an exceptional rate of speed for a
fire onee fairly under way.) It halts an
instant, you note, over a broad swale
wheftSThere is standing water; hut it is
for an Instant only. The next moment it
reaches the upland again and tlmdry
grass; and directly jt grasps a belt of
tall, thick blue stein, and the flame leaps
suddenly and madly out above the
smoke, then subsides again, and tha
black mass grows blacker than ever, and
rolls higher and higher, ami you can
scent the burning grass, and hear the
distent roar of the fire—an awful roar,
resembling tlie souiuh of artillery in
tiinbiy-* -fSbi'd u is so Cat si inline-
: nwmtfiL Ant you do not so
nrcWna lnissklF' taking of your watch
lii* yah rib; tliefe i$no breath of air
BtiiwigSmlSlm aunis shining, and the
arc blue nnd placid.
Lb th« sWHtu.'.s Mill be broken soon.
It was doue.
don t know you, iflr. “Well, where is
book of arrivals?’ “ lie re.” He
<Bra>ed liis pen into the ink and wrote:
“Nathaniel Searie, Providence, U. ts*
The office th.id heard of the lawyer,‘find
thought the incident encouraging for tha
proprietor. Mr. Searie then said: “Let
me sleep hero to-night” ‘Tfcs,• vea,”
said Stetson, and then calling forAbbqt,
the head porter, gave the order, • £hmr
the doors open ; we begin business now.
A Visit to a Japanese Reuse.
there is no bell to ring, no knocker oh
the door, and no person to receive you;
you sing aloud, “I ask to lie heard*”
when a servant opens the door and bows
down to the floor, and then listens to
you. You tell the servaut what you
want, and she leads you into the house.
There arc no chuirs to sit on, nor are
there any stools or sofas, hut you sit on
the floor with your limbs doubled up
under you as the tailors sit. 1 forgot to
tell you that you havo to take bit your
boots or shoes before entering. After
you sit down, tho servant brings you a
pipe and some tobacco to smoke, also tea
aud cake, nnd tells you that the master
is busy nnd cannot see you immediately.
After awhile the master comes in nnd
you make a profound l»ow to Cach other,
lie then asks you to bis study, which is
well furnished. On one side is a door
which swings on hinges, or can be pushed
back to the right or left. The walls are
not white, but either gray or brown, the
same us tho ceiling, which iy low and
made of wood. In tho corner of tho
room is a rack, covered with a silk
spread. Pictures hang on the wall, but
they are not framed but trimmed with
■ilk aud fancy paper, which can be rolled
up and put away. The study fronts on
the garden, uud you can inhale the fra
grance of flowers. There is no parti
tion between the study and the garden,
except sashes tilled with transparent
* i ..i
paper, which appears most beautiful at
night; but in case of a storm they have
a canvas which they draw over this and
make it secure. Then the majitcr intro
duces you to his wife. He does not call
her Mr*., but simply says she is my wife.
She is dressed splendidly. Her hair is
arranged in something the same way as
tho American lady dresses hers. She
asks you to sit in a high seat and ordtrs
tea and cake. t?he will ask you if you
are married, how many children you
have, etc. The American ladies are juk
ns inquisitive. By her side sits her
daughter and son on the floor, withoot
cushion?. The young lady is dresfad
very much like lier mother, aud if you
ask’her to play, she will get an instal
ment something like a guitar, and play
and sing. Her brother never gives his
parents any trouble, and never asks any
questions.
Snow-Skntes.
A writer in Land and Water describes
the snow-skates used by the Lapps and
the Finns of Finmark, where snow
covers the ground/for half the year, no
ing for Barter’s benefit. Barker fell and
oflered resistance with the only limb •
right leg and both arms wore broken and
nil three limba were amputated shortly
before hits death. Triplet crawled ofl
through a corn field, but limping into
the house of his mother at Vimta on tho
following day, laid down at her feet ami
died.
A Quickened Conscience.
Tho murderof tho Morris family so< .....
likely to remain u mystery, unlcsi tho
muracrer, prompted by remorse, shall
some day reveal it. A man in England
recently gave himself upas the murderer
of a woman in Es-cx while the family
waa away at church, Sunday, Juu»21,
1857. lor twenty-two years ho has
wandered over the world, having been in
every comity in England, nnd sailed to
various parta of the globe as fur ns India.
He did tli is. too, in the faco of $500 re
ward offered for his detection nnd of his
notoriety for horse-stealing, for which
crime bo hud just served a term in prison.
He feels happier Bince his surrender. AII
of which go< s to prove (hat murder may,
rather t|an will, “out.”
Greatness.
’Tis noted of somo scholars, like
Swift nnd Gib ion and Donne, that they
pretended to vice* which they luul not,
«> much did they hate hypocrisy. Wil
liam Blake, tht artirt frankly ways: “I
never knew a bad man in whom there was
notsomethingWrygood.’’ Bret Hnrtehn*
pleased hinmlf with noting nnd record
ing the sudden virtue blazing in the wild
reprobates of tl»- ranches and mines of
California. Men are ennobled by moral*
1 iiu-Gect; but those two elements
“ The form or snow-skates varies in the
different districts of the North; they are
long, narrow, thin pieces of wood or
bark, the foremost ends of which are
pointed und curved upwards.
“ They are fastened to the feet at
about the middle of their length,
some districts the lengths of the skates
for the right and left feet arc the samo,
being about from five to seven feet; in
other districts the skate for the left foot,
which -V usually made of fire-wood, is
about from nine to eleven inches long,
whilst that for the right foot, which is
usually made of some tougher wood, is
about from six to seven feet.
“ gome skates arc grooved for the pur
pose of assisting the skater to glide in a
straight course by preventing sideways-
slipping. The undersides of some skates
are partly, or wholly, covered with rein
deer or sealskin, the hairs pointing heel-
wards.
“ This is for the purpose of assisting
tho skater in his diagonal up-hill travel
ing, by preventing him from slipping
backwards; in other movements the skin
impedes the ska ter.
“ Skills are used chiefly in Xordland
and adjacent parts. Snow-skaters are
coated with pitch or tar. A pair may
weigh from ton to fifteen pounds.
“Over-shoes, with turned-up toes, nnd
with seams lengthways over tho feet, and
gaiters, are worn by *now-skatcs to pro
tect their feet and legs from the snow.
“ The over-shoes also serve to keep the
feet from being chafed by the skate-
fastening. These are wooden hoops,
into which the foot is put, and which
press against the insten, and the fibres of
tiionga for binding.
-roots or leathern
“Snow-skaters carry a* ska ting-staff;
which is about seven feet long, is rather
more than an inch in diameter, nnd is
iron spike, neat
A Gruel Hoax.
Lust evening, just before sundown, a
gentleman who was sitting by his win
dow on North B street, casually re
marked: “ There goes the womnn that
George Brown’* dead gone on.”
Hi* wife, who was in a back room get*
ling supper ready, dropped a plate on
• „ a . .. ui- the baby, and
floor, stumbled ov
mi like a quarter-hone to the window
with: “ \S here? where? Tell me quick!”
'•Theone with the long cloak—just at
the corner.”
Then the woman at the window said
intones of deep disgust:
“ Why, that n Brown’s wife.”
“ Yes. exactly, r * remarked the brutal
husband, quietly.
Then the disappointed woman
other and always beacon to I back aud got the’siipiier ready hut her
, h °ilP ru nt i laBt , l,u *y ,neot in | usuhHv sweetdispoj.ilmu was soured for
the uqB if he ia tu be truly great. 1 the entire evening.
4 brimming etowdtis only a few miles
’ you &n easily trflC 9 the
away nuC.and you
scaiiet Ale'
d- terrific ftaergy at its base;
Ibe smoko begins to -hurt your eyes, too,
and tho boat becomd*heavily oppreesivo.
id smites
and the heat heeehiJa heavily op]
Aud then, all (it once, the wim
and staggers yqu, HUfc appalling roar
deafens you, and the sun is blotted out,
and you are in a darkness as of a raid-'
nighVwitlufut moon or s$ir. It is an ox-
perieace of but a" dozefi seconds or so,
this sudden plunge into darkness, though
it seems a u hour, und when you look out
again} you. find that tbrffiro has passed
a Wlo or more to your right, and
Btill rolling desperately onward; and
efing stacks of hay, and an occasional
house aflame nnd tottering to its fall,
and a! group of men and boys beating
back the outer line of the fire with brush
and old clothes, and sending forward
sible to keep it at a safe distance,
creek may stop it aud smother it when it
gets there, though auch a hope has mere
chance for a warrant ; sAmetimes tlieae
mighty conflagrations vault across
streams twenty or thirty yards in width,
•o swift and resistless is the momentum;
and as a rule they are effectually stayed
only when they reach a wide extent of
plowed land, and have to yield, sullenly,
for lack of anything, more to feed theii
inexorable fury.
How Soldiers Suffer.
The London TUim publishes a terrible
accouut'of the sufferings of the European
soldiers marched back into India, irom
Afghanistan last June, through tho
Khyher Pass. They had only one hun
dred and seventeen miles to go, but the
march occupied twclvo-daye, the men
being able, from the haat, to march only
in the early morning, and the night
march usual iu India being abandoned,
ATLANTA, CA
Huceeuor$ to the Southern Xeurajtaper Union,
Sheep So for choice
I logs:
Ml
mo vision*.
ATLANTA—Bulk meat: Clear rib sides,
»; |tork strips, 6?^e. Bacon: Sugar cured
Imuis, I0}*a 1U>4« sides, *!-<«•; shoulders, 6?io;
breakfast, 8*8«c.
eakfast,
BALTIMORE—Men pork, ilallj^e. Bulk
meats: packed shoulders, 4^c; clear rib sides,
i»K rt - Bacon: Shoulder*.tc; dear rib sides,
ham*. 10*1 It*. Lard, refned iu tierces,
‘ CINVIN'NATI—Pork, »I1.M I.snl, 6’,o.
Bulk meats: shoulders, 4c; short ribs, 6.'.K)
tic; short dear 6e. Bacon: Shoulders, \)io.
lenr ribs, dear sides, 8-Jfe.
NEW YORK—Mess pork, $11 00*11 10;
\y A ; dear, Q.%\ short do 8%c, Lard, $7 30a
7 -A). ». •’ ■*
LOUISVILLE—Pork, UK. Lard,* 7fta8c,
Bulk meats: Shoulders, 3j s a4e; clew ribs.
clear sides (3a6K<$. Bacon: Shoul-
ors noue;.sugar cured hams,none.
* *» • i «»*
ATLANTA — Middling, 11 Ke; low mid
dling, lOKalOKo.
NEW YORK—Middling uplands, 12%e;
Middling Orleans, 12Kc.
GALVEBMON—Middlings, 11 Kd low mid
dlings, He; good ordinary. lOKc.
NORFOLK—Middlings, ll^c.
BALTIMORE—Middlings, 12c; low in hi
llings, 11 He; good ordinary, llKe-
SAVANNAH—Middlings, lljKc; low mid-
.1 lings, U l /ie; good ordinary; 11c.
AUGUSTA — Middlings, 11% ; low mid
dlings, tUJc*, good ordinary,,10}*.
stronger. This you oan do if you will take a
piece of fdvice which has the weight of high
Medical authority to badk it. That is to use
the standard iuvigorant, Hostetler’s Stomach
Bitters, specially commended aad indorsed
by physicians. Among the bodily troubles
which it overcomes aro dyspepsia,'irregular
ity of the bowels, liver complaint, general
debility and nervous complaints. It is also
found very useful in counteracting a tenden
cy to weakueb* or disorder of the kidneys
and blald«r,and persons troublea with rheu-
lighly
influence upon the entire syi _ .
benefic’al, promoting as it does the return
of sleep and appetite, and tbe acquisition of
fl««h and strength. A silent reproof of the
folly of nsuseons drug medication is con
veyed in the success of this pleasant and ef
fective botsnicil medicine.
t is among the n
.distinguish*
ed of musicians in the wo>ld. He mss and
prizes a Mason A Hamlin Cabinet Organ,
and prnuonnceB it “matchless,” “unrivalled,”
styling it “this magnificent and to
precious instrument.'' Ihere could hardly be
higher praise or from more eminent authority
takcu, cholera broke ile .71 route, nnd
“on reachingJarnrudujnlHurri-Singkn-
Boori, nnd.especially a/ they made their
final marches, their distress was very
pparent; their clothes were stiff nnd
dirty from tho profuse perspiration and
dust; their countenAucgs betokened
great nervous exhaustion, combined with
a wild expression difficult to describe;
the eyes injected, and even sunken; a
burning skin, black with the effects of
sun ana dirt, u drv tongue, a weak voice
nnd a thirst whicb no amount of fluids
seemed to rolievc. Many of the-e men
stajrgercd rather than marched into
their teflfa, aud threw themselves drm»,
utterly incapable of further exertion
until refreshed by steefeE^d food.” The
~ were_ur<
and one hundred and. t^enty-one men
had died from cpoUra ju the second
divfaion alon$; more, perhaps, than it
would have lost in a severe engagement
A Cat Story.
A first-rate cat story has come to our
notice from an entirely authentic
source. The scene ia laid in the village
of Yarmouth. An aged gentleman and
his housekeeper constitute the family,
and the good old cat finds the lines are
fallen to her in pleasant places. Family
lousehold, and the cat fell into the habit
of regular and punctual attendance.
No other of the cares that proverbially
crowd a cat’s life was over allowed to
interfere with this religious duty. At
the signal for prayers, she would even
leave a mouse half caught, or give a
doomed bird a longer lease of existence,
nnd decorously coin|>osc herself in the
lap of the housekeeper with au air of
attention to service that was highly
edifying. A t the final “amen,” she went
friskily about her hqsiness. But in an
evil day there came a kitten that was
dc?med Huperfluou-, and sentence of
death was passed upon it. The head of
tlie family undertook tho execution of
the sentence, and, unknown to lum. tho
cat was a witness to the scene. From
that tiny the cat refused to attend service,
and can not now he induced to listen to
the prayers of one who had so shocked
her sensibilities! She faithfully per
forms all other duties as before, and so
cially purrs for the family on all secular
occasions, hut seems to say “ let my re
ligious hours alone.”
Strange Enough.
A pretty incident occurred at Lebanon,
Ont., tho other Sunday. Into the
Methodist Church flew a robin during
service. Perching on a rail opposite the
.... ... * i tli
pulpit it sang loudly when
sang, was silent durin;
the minister preachet
people
sang, was silent during prayer, hut when
d it chirped occa-
mained until the congregation was
formally dismissed, and lien Sew away.
A YORKSHIRE trainer recently re
vealed his method of meeting a conjugal
storm. His plan, he said, was to keep
silence and nod his acquiescence to every
thing, iio matter what was said by his
spouse. “Yes,” remarked one of his
friends, “but then she has it all her own
way.” “Just so,” replied the Tyke,
with satisfaction; “and nothing annoys
her so much. There is nothing women
hate like a walk-over.”
LATEST MARKET QUOTATIONS,
ri.OI II. ORAIJI AMI) MKAL.
ATLANTA—Flour: Superfine, family,
$7m50; extra family, $7.75; I’nnay, $*.00 'flbbl.
Wheat—the following prices art* miller’s
buying prices: .Tennessee, choice white,
$1.40(0/1.50: Tennessee medium, $1.30^,1.40.
Corn : Choice white, 70(a72c; yellow, 65(r$67c.
Oats: 47M($50c for feed oats, and iOu75c for
seed. Meal is in demand at 72a75c. Grits,
44 25.
ST. LOUIS—Flour: Double extra fall, $6.50
<£5.fi0; treble do, $5.75(^5.85; family $5.90
(aO.OO; choice to fancy, $0.05(5,Wheat:
No. 2 red fall. *l.:*i5i in* 1.27: Vo. 3, do $I.1«K
>rn, higher, O-u: die.
1/H ISVIl.l.i: Flour: l'umilv,$5.2.V<»..50;
No. 1. $0.00(«i0.25; choice. $7.00(gj7.25.
Wheat: Retl, umber and white $1.22*125,
Though they may obstinately resist the
tion of other external remedies, ulcers con
taining prond flesh, swellings, tumors, lep
rous granulation*, and scrofulous sores
speedily heal under the purifying and sooth
ing influence of Henry’s Carbolic Salve, the
promptest and most efficient topical appli**
cation ever discovered or used. It is believ
ed that there is no chron:c sore or eruption
that m»y not be eradicsted by this inoom<
parable purifier. Sold by all druggists.
For throat diseases and a flections of the
chest, “Brown’s Bronchial Troches” are of
value. For coughs, irritation of tbe throat,
caused by cold or unusual exertion of the
vocal organs, in speaking in public, or sing
ing, they produce beneficial results.
Tell your neighbor if he uses Lyon’s Patent
MetalicHeel Stiffener he will keep his boots
straight. Fold by shoe and hardware dealers.
For one cent purchase a postal card au
send your address to Dr. Sanford, 102 Broad
New York, and receive pamphlets by
return mail, from which you can learn
whether your liver is out of order, and if ont
of order or is any way diseased, what is the
best thing in the world to take for it.
Sherman A Co., Marshal, Mich., want
agent in this county at once nt a salary of
$100 per mouth and expenses paid. For full
particulars address as above.
-•«*.
learn telegraphy; ■
Unm B. Val«tft
Manager, Janesville, Wls.
To Pr INTERS]
077 1 MouiH sad Mpsssu guaranteed vj u|
tp/ / outfit free, thaw fc Co-. AukusU. Ms.
BEST ROLLER CQMPOSITIOtl
ever Mad.-Prtee, 40 Cent..
Stock* furalaboil aud BoUt-i
dree. No need ef teudlng aitu.da, we keep all
•ml B'-ok Juki, also Colored Job luk ■
r price. Il»t of luk*.
MILITARY
I end Jbi:.d l iiifciiu* -' iilcj-rs* p.f|ulp>n.-ril
I CatamMi^ wl-w- frmfZt
ton'i Caps, Drlfs, sod Shirts.
GEO.PKown4(g-
Newspaper Advertising Bureau.
Newipspsrs tu the
> dlSuVtoVr*^ Ve4Jj
ron Florid* to Urlrleb Columbia. AUo to sit Now
ork city dsfllea aud weeklies.
Night ihoaMUtd Nowspopore kept regularly op file
>r inspection by sdTertisers. Including stU toe
iSSkifttE
'tM. .y AMKI
OPIUM
. ..jiadtea
|reot deiUoe from Uoston to San Krancisco, irom
AMJCHfOAM KKWSPAFgB PI RECTORT
I Uauudtskia i»>s«a.
TboittDds enred lowest Priccn. U
* ~ f. MsiWyOulr-m
CHAMPLIN’S
LIQUID PEARL
*|« nil rxce lent cosmetic.'"-Titians. "The best
v >r used, '-t harlot to Tnosiimsn. "The host Ihnv
ivor used, for (h« lutnie I »h»ll use no other.' -
Uttn- Fur superb r to tho one I b iug over fron
Purls.Jnnsuschek. "Sup-rlortoany fo-metfe.'
-Scott Slddou* S -Id by all druggists. Pnro f*
:. nts n bottle, lh-ws-e ol Imitations. CHAMP
m&TO AfrENTS!
"soil
dost book
eel'V book’of Condenssd l uf«
. .hire*. <U(Ch In ‘-us Short paragraph. >
•le I,lbr«rf. s phsbetlcsllr nrrang«d In our vol
“l# only really rsslul lUidy K< cyclopa-di
- 1 ** ntlfitlly illustrated, 9S.r
TON 4
•riptid
l*n
YOUNO MAN OR OLD,
iiiiiiii ^
B82SSSSP W!
For Two
Generations
Tbe good and staunch old
Rtaiid-b.v, MEXICAN MUS
TANG LINIMENT, has done
more to assuage pain, relieve
suffering, and save the lives of
men and beasts than aU other
liniments put together. Why?
liecause the -Mustang pene
trates through skin and flesh
to the very lione, driving ont
all p.iiit anil soreness nnd
morbid secretions, und restor
ing tho alllicted part to sonnd
aud supple health.
Don’t b« wltboot u. Ollb.rt'T'HUroli—.
Clw» JaTobtoco.
Dr. Uu'hl.i ■ DwlMC.lb.llm will mlUMlr
W FlMdiitf, Pgtnfn!,
m-nation o. .
Wcmb, f BflUsatai psmifrkaasar n
Sunpirfsrd and Irregular Menstruation A? J
ana reltaldo it niS'ly. Send postil card fora
A World of Hood.
One of the most popular medicines
now before the American public, is Hop
Bitters. You see it everywhere. People
take h with good effect. It buildi them
up. It Is not as pleasant to the taa'.e as
some other bitter*, as it ia not a whisky
drink. It is more like the old fashioned
boneaet tea thtt has done a world of
good. If you don’t feel juat right try
Hop Bitten.—Nunda Newa.
Sediment or mucua in the urine ia a
mre indication of disease. Take Kidney-
Wort.
Addrats It. Ham.!
OPIUMS
n«bli Cumi Into
AopnvUII CnrH.
Alfi fAa-w.tr Ontfl:*. Whs; rcs.s
•IBsvs^ntfcSb^aaiaEste
ss«£f:;^‘'| , sdSi*isS s £
SBIISPEARE’S aSTIiSSB.a Sfjf?
Sainpl.copy/Ws. Murray Hill Pnb.Co.,129*. 2sihst..NTr.
>5 to $20
, Ott' ■» WAtCHKS Glim AWAY.
^d""* C ur^1ltlll* t &vor! > whki! >l sv. , ry 8 insn'.
i. bj»r °r girl enn smMv N« ...
All ths rl-gsnt and i
iwsy are folly dsscrifco. . ___
vnyr-vlrgs In s book entitled "TUB COL
I’RI/.R,*'which we will send gratis, ' "
rnited ststt
tJZB," which o
/ dr«s K. GLEASON S i
uoldA
Is themuit reHnbls food li
pu t ryes anil dewlopn the'
saanatu w
Exposition
Kvpo.it ii
This -
pby.lclt
ty.ldsns throughout ths world tohsths besi
iy dtscovcrad for ths curs or Wousds. Burns
ii'nmsiisnt, skin Dlienses, Hllss, CstVrrh. Chl|.'
alns, Ac In ordsr that every ons m«r try it. it <
it up In IJsndJ.csut bottles for household use.
To " wRiem it
TIE
j Uu'roNT'“RfciTK^y'i r
the prompt cure or Kid-
1 BUY enrra U ^ •
el. Droj
UTHOSTIkSS
B.d.1 tor >u>gbh
SAPONIFIER
It the Old Keliable Conesn rated Lye
FOR FAMILY SOAP MAKING.
led L|re, which ^ls ndnltersl
n. NONRY*1m) I
ndnltersted with salt i
Saponifier
MAUK BY TUB
Pennsylvania Salt M&nuf’g Co.
PHII.AIPRI.PHIA.
iiclfhu/
Any hundiqr echool^cnn now afford to stuply its
tot copies, •?.«
U. Kr. m III to lit copies to onn «<]
Twenty c-ptrv or more to otio «d
I No^clisrge forpo.tsgs. ^Piogor
it*tin o* months f*7%S«Ki. *VtiTl«
nh ti ust lie »• nt in •. pneknge t<
her r> i|uiies that es.h clni<
onn audres*, the pitbli< hsr r< iiuiies tust en.h clnh
sukacr ptioii bo • c'-nmpsnled with a list of th»
... ... T *|«-cljnon free. Send nlso fo
i%*e icholnrs' l»*son help . intniniogcolored map
tc. the qusttody will he improved tor '
t JOHN II. WATTLKS,
m SMITH 0RG1N CO.
cnluc in
LEADING MARKETS
OP THE WORLD!
livery where K-.ognired as the
IN TONS.
OVER 80,000
Med* and In nap. New Designs conrULtly
At-ScnTtorl’n Osulogue.
iguaranteed tuapuu
tr end expenses to scent*. Outfit free
$777 ?IiZ? c O. Vickery, AngusU. Me.
IRKK—Obroino Cslslogns-Peniil ee, everybody.
Metropolitan Art 0o.3»Meeseu et.fiV
mmn
Key. B. T Ituck. Milton. Noythumberlnud Co.. Px.
a IJAXTKM A
S. , BA‘¥.r& , s“to-$ioo
,...—rstorus every week ou .lock uuiuuot
tHI A CT>!. l MenkTra. Vjj*”.. N.T
jciiiacra^.—..QfW. P. ROVelt&CO'S
NewY^k, ran Sera'AeVaset coll ofluy*pro
posed Im# of Advertising iu Antericen Newnpei
—-Iw-w |-WI»|-. -
$25to$6000|SgSffiS£
m JiMstbif t e w
T.rrii t. .icnTTi
vats.*■-.
I ,
TEAS!
A LI. TICK TIKP
Tbe very boat goods
direct from ths »u>-
norLors et Unit the
Olob Ageot*
BQBb
PAID. New term* rurx.
Tbe Great Aiertcan Tea Company,
SI aaid aa Ve»y Street, New Tori
P.O.Box ay*. , ,v
ir fliousenliot Soldiers end heirsev •
><i. Ptmaioim data b»ct to diachrtrgo or deeth .
js limited. Addrees with stemp.
t.zokui'. r.. i.kuom.
p.o. Drawer;afia
Pesklnstwe. it. «■
BWBWHirtS
known and sure Remedy.
KO ( HARUF.
for treatment tptU ouretL* Cull on or addtoss
OR. <1. O. BECK,
OPIUM
11S JoBb Street,
CINCINNATI. OHIO
GENTS WANTED/OR A TOUR
I ROUND THE WORLD
BY.fiFNFRAi grant.
Thin Is th- fnsteat-soHlny book over rul.IMn <1,
theoulecon.rlet. etd nutheutic Ili.tory of Ur
Addri-skjfa TU PU^L rair'i <•<»‘."t* V* X. M
WAflfltlj BRO’S^ CORSETS
PA It li” EX PUSITIOjfr*
'.MUhiuKiUPciittfillT
WAItNP.R IM frond»at. N '
VI **ON & IIA ( alHNUl OKHA>S
Demonstrate^ be t by HIGHEST HOXOUSOr ALL
VtOKLti'S EXPOSITION^for nVKI.VK YEARS
vlv.: nt Paris |.W. Vienne^ T3. >*n«i vo l»7\ Phil-
edelpWe 1*74, Paris 1 71 nnd brand woiieh Gold
MednlfWd. Giiiy American Grgnnn ev- r nvnrd .
highest honors ni etiy such, fold for cash or in.tnlN
men re. HllistrstM i. f att»logne. u d fircela.s, wttu
now styles aud prices, suit frre. MASON A II AM Lift
ORGAN (X).. P »ton. New York or Chicago.
JUST OUT,
BELLS OF CORNEVILLE.
A ha-du.mc und c-uipUte editior
Cornovllle. J by PUnountie, is no-
WIIITK KOBZ*. the
TOICP. OF HtiHkHtP, L. O. KMEU^ON
l!»_por dozen
TM15 lEMPIF, W. 0 PERKINS, f.t per
dosso.
NEW wrruoo fok ninging (XA«a»:N
ItaNCK JEWKLS.
UKK1CAN ANT1IKM lloi
ABLOB ORGAN iNSTKL'C
OLIVER DITSON A C0„ Boiton.
O. II. Dltnon d Ce. J. E. Dltaon A Co
NS It roadway, N.Y. V22 Chestnut at..Phil.
EAR DISEASES
DR. C. K. SHOKSf AKKR (the wdl-fc
his ortlce. Ilia success has g veu hint a nntmn«l tep-
utatio'i, esr—inliy on Uiiunitig Her and Catarrh.
Ca I or ud for his little book on the Kar. its Dis-
Issnll. Ilia large
bo.kaSi i*«e*e). price •
K. SHOKH AKS.lt.
Mark Twain’s New Book.
Till! TRAT1P ABROAD!
GOOD TIME8 FOR A0BNT8 AHEAD.
r.o«|ectnsee for th>s universally looked for Book
now ready. Pyeak unlck and secure territory. "A
word to thew.se is sufficient."
WARD'S
I Fine Shirts for
E. M. &,W. WARD,
^81 BROADWAY.
NEW YORK.
M<llJifi3U^_fillMlHP ’>L
la perfectly pure. Pronounced the boat by the -liA
tst i tedical authorities In tbe world. Given highest
a7A,*WJX! d V. , «^?.*hfe.CT
- CURED FREE?
icg x# k Is .>‘o*t-offi«.-: and Axpr«« adarc*
DK. W. G • ROCK 1 ,
The WEtKLY Sira.
A large, eight-pet* **rer, of Bill road columns,
will be seut postpaid to anr addrer, one rrar. for
ONE DOLLAR.
PVBLISUKM'IfNinR, ATLANTA-N* 49
'perfected' BUTTER COLOR
(Btfjssse»iAAnr ’naKUBiiBi
1