Newspaper Page Text
Exhausted Pomace.
This waste product of cider manufac¬
ture is usually lost, but there is no more
propriety in casting it away than there
would be in casting away the refuse of
a flouring mill. Exhausted pomace is a
valuable food for any kind of stock that
can eat it, and is especially valuable for
milch cows. Tt is time that the foolish
im aressioi^ that apples and pomace
naturally tend to dry up milk-giving
cows, was done away with, and that all
Waste from the apple orchard should be
estimated at its true value and utilized
for what it; is worth, for there is still a
lingering >r<anv dairymen belief clinging that apples to the minds of j
. in any shape
are hurtful To the flow of WAilk, just as a
few years ago there was ir. respect to the 1
U-o of corn or corn-meat because when
fed in cxress cows were injured by eat
gSbg food it. annually Me are lost remindsS.pf in tb< form the ot valuable
from recently hearing the dairymen pomace
in
the vicirit'y of a large'cider m'li is the
north we-tem part of Pennsylvania give
their experience in Seeding the pw-naefe
.—all of which was carted away from the
trillL by the neighboring dairymen as
fast tiv it was mad*, and fed to tire cows.
They all agreed Ti the good re suits of
its ■us?;. One m.ary a little m ire enter¬
‘his prising than the rest, began far feeding
tunii e:> vs a peck w?4h of the poiaeae night
(morning, the yielt a marked improve¬
ment in and qu liitj of milk.
W'l'om ’tiro this half he gradually a'Smshel incres- od the ra
i., a twice s. day, cau
ithursly wa’chitsg the remit- His cows
kept increasing in their flow, and soon
; l«sjra i to improve in condition as the
|»<:n*’!uity f«i 'was increased, His
«c“.<'niole soon became contagious, and
the mil! was Billy relieved <ef its waste
as it svf.s made. One man, who
•from scanty pastsrre, was feeding grain
quite freely to prevent his cows from
>$itrinking.’ttoend the pomace an efficient
sill)<t.ilute for the grain be had used,
aantl-which'he quit feeding till the pom
#w: was gor.e. Another, who made
llaUSer. safti ’the yield ir. butter was
'doubled, the quantity and quality of
■ ittUk l»eiivg«AwUt so much ieiproved. The
most of those who used the pomace
took their milk to .-chef.se factories,
Mwlicre.,- if there had been any ill effects
'from using'it t hey would it once have
ibeocideveloped, but it turned out that
the-.value of; the milk was -enhanced for
-cheese makiqg.
(There is-net-.much occasion for cau
itioning'faroiere against a waste from be
This-source this year, as 'there will
ibntiv<e.!y iitt>le.cirier made, ewing to the
generally \well shortcrop mind of apples; but it is
to keep in every source of
•cheap-food sbe availad for- dairy stock, fthat it may
of whenever there is oppor¬
iB u t perhaps-some reader will say,
Ihellooks over the,above, *tl have
-several cows to be killed by eating
ples or pomace, wLioh, it seems to
does not at gue that they are good
whelesome food for stock." AVe
known several anima.ls to die from
ing meal* corn in the elover, ear, from eatiqg and
green green oats,
green grass, when overgorged would be
these animal luxuries, tout it
very of«these laene reason various for kinds interdicting of foot
use ;
cause they have proved deleterious when
used greatly in .excess. There is just
little propriety in throwing away apples
or pomace as there would he in throw¬
ing away the other foods named
cause when used improperly they have
proved injurious. The extraordinary
appetite cows reasonable display hint for of fruit their ought value. to
furnish a
Animals are not apt to show an exces¬
sive fondness for what is naturally detri¬
mental to them if used judiciously.—
jUve Slock Journal.
Mr. Greeley’s Humor.
Yeaga ago, travelers going to Canada
t«r way of Lake Champlain used to seek
the steamboat which Capt. Sherman
commanded. The Captain was famous
for the neatness of his boat and the dis¬
cipline of its crew, and for his own po¬
liteness. He was the only man whom
the late Horace Greeley acknowledged
to be his superior in polite behavior.
One morning, after breakfasting, Mr.
Greeley, who was in a capital humor,
turning to a friend, asked :
“ Do you know that I claim to l»e the
most The polite friend, man well in the country that tlie ?” cele¬
aware
brated editor, when irritated, was neither
gentle in manner nor courteous in
speech, replied that he was not aware
that the graces of politeness excellent were prom¬ traits.
inent among his many
. “ But I assure you,” answered Gree¬
ley, with a smile that overspread his
baby face—some one said that he liad a
philosopher’s head with the faee of a
1 aby—“ that I have never been beaten
in politeness but once in my life. ” Then
he told the story of his defeat.
Before the days of railroads, he left
Utica one morning in a stage-coach. gentle¬
His only prepossessing fellow-passenger was a with
man of appearance,
whom he fell into conversation. After
7 a while the stranger drew a cigar case
from his pocket and offered Mr. Greeley
a cigar. He declined the polite offer,
and the conversation' was resumed.
Presently the gentleman, taking a cigar
from the case, put it in his mouth, and
returned the case to his pocket. While
l they were talking, he abruptlv Greeley but cour
teously remarked to Mr. :
j “I hope, sir, you have no objection to
| a cigar ?” world,” answered Gree¬
“ None in the
ley, “when it is not alight.”
ftt “Oh,” replied the gentleman, “Ihad
not the remotest thought of lighting
it!”
“Then and there,” said Mr. Greeley,
f laughing, “was politeness. the only time I afterward I ever
was beaten in
ascertained that my victor was the fa¬
mous Capt. Sherman, of Lake Cham-
1 plain.”
I —A statistical writer says: “Uliode
" furnished of
island has more men na
tional reputation for inherent deviltry
Shan any other Northern State. \\ ild
Bill was born in Providence, ‘Billy, the
Kid,’of recent unsavorv renown, came
^S?^,“a.S!'h!“abStw- ‘Texas Jack,’ for whom, like
port. Homer, cities claim the honor of
i seven Bristol, and ‘Yel
his birth, was born in
lowstone Kelley, the scout of Montana,
' native of Pawtucket.”
The Point Barrow Esquimaux.
The natives who maintain a rather
arduous struggle for existence at Point
Barrow and its immediate neighbor
hood belong to the Esquimaux race,
Lhey are called lnnuits, from the word
“tnnuit, which, in their language,
means man, the plural of which n
“ltinuine,” moaning men or people.
Although there is great resemblance be
tween all the subdivisions of the foqui- Art
ma«x race, there is yet considerable
parity iiws, both existing between the and various fam
in language maimers,
depending, no doubt, locality, on the aesident-.il
cv. cum stances ot surroundings,
etc. The language of an Eastern Es
quim tux Wo&ld be entirely unintelligible
to a native <rt the western ccast ; and
even the native of one side of Behrings
Straits speaks a dialect dfSering con*
siderablv &om that of the other side.
There arev in fact, many more points
..f similmfcy between allithc natives of ;
the eastern side of the 'Lchrings Sea
than there are between thwm and any oft
>he uatvws of the opposite side—thus
the natures of the lliomefe* differ
than from the Sfcoso natives, of (roiowic of Point Bay Harrow in Norton -5oj‘
S<wfKl, seven hundred-or eight hundred'
mile > to the northward. The natives ef
the American side -are, on the whole,.
superior to those on the Asiatic—{tetter
teoking. -looking more intelligent, where cleanliness, and ccere -of
cseani
course,-only raians a leaser degree of
ffithiness—and the nsstires of Point Sar-;
row arc a trifle superior to any of the.
Knti vt-s wo have seen .at any other pf<int ;
em-the American side. 1 l
It seems to be a universal law that. «bej
■eavage .deteriorates When he conies in:
eon tact with civilizatios, and the longer:
#ieconttct the more inject he becomes,!
and nc er,e passing and along Arctic the coast of•
Kehripgs Sea of the fed be Ocean by tfO;
Point Barrows can to struck j
tkti .dear exemplification of tendency this law.';
There seems to be a strong in;
savage -man everywhere to acquire the ;
btd habit-3 of the civittzed, rather than,
tne good, whenever the the two races come f
is contact, and the Esquimaux race is;
no exception to rale. Thus the
natives of Point Barrow , having, until
recently, had but little intercourse with;
the nvhito man, seem to have deteriorat¬
ed less than.the tribes to the southward,
and are They quite-respectable people for sar
aget. are rather a good-looking
people, with handsome interesting, intelligent, In but
not very faces. general,
their noses arotoo flat and the complex¬
ions too coppery for beavty- Their
bodieeave well fanned, not at,-ill chunky,
and of average stature; their,hands and
feet are smaller asid better farmed than
those of the average white man, and, if
they had laid aside one or two rather
nasty habits and learned to wash them¬
selves occasionally, they might the con¬
sidered handsome!
The wossen are more intelligent and
better treated lookiug with than the men, and are
more consideration than
among most savages. Still the man is
the lord and master, and his wife or his
daughters bound have by no rights that he is
to respect any eode of law or
merals existing among them. A woman
can not choose her husband, but is giv¬
en away much the same as a cow or a
horse is, and her husband can beat her
or put her away, or sell her at pleasure,
except she may happen to have more
friends than he has, and then it may not
be altogether eafe for him to exercise his
lordly however, attributes and too fully. Self-interest,
habits the indolent, ea9y-going
of these people, prevent much
harshness to exist in the relations be¬
tween husband and wife, for the females
of a marriageable of the age are seldom in ex¬
cess males, and consequently
there is really little choice allowed, and,
besides, it is imperative that every man
shall have a wife if possible, boeause an
Innuit without one is about as forlorn
be and imagined. helpless an There individual is such as can thing well
no as
is marriage bargain, ceremony. and The whole affair
a of no more importance
than any other bargain. No morality,
in the proper sense of the term, exists,
nothin lg instrinsieally right or wrong,
Indivi duals have got rights, if they are
able to maintain them, so that really
might in is such the great arbiter of right, ex¬
cept in and cases regulating as superstition influence steps
exerts a over
conduct. Notwithstanding all this, the
social relations are carried on as smooth¬
civilized ly, and with as little injustice, as among
people —Cor. Boston Herald.
Locked Hi* Pocket-Book Out Door-.
There is a man in this city who is
considerably given to speculation; and goes few
out into the country buys a
car-loads of potatoes or anything else
that he thinks he can gathered turn to advantage.
The other day lie tog. tiier
every cash dollar he had, and borrowed
all the spare cash that a merchant friend
of his had. the whole aggregating quite
a large sum of money, with a view to a
speculative trip with plenty. That
night lie was very careful to see that
all the doors and windows in the house
were securely fastened. When hn arose
in the morning he threw no the window
to see if the milk-man had got around,
when, much to his horror, his eye lit
upon his pocket-hook in the grass near
the garden walk. The first idea was
that it had bean stolen, rifled and
thrown there. He rushed down stair.?,
and much to his joy found the pocket
book all safe, with contents intact. It
seems that he had stepped into the* gar¬
den the previous evening to get a plant,
and in stooping the waliet slipped Press. from
his pocket .—Portland (Aft.)
—inspector Jewett, of the Brooklyn
police, was so worried about the lost
pistol of John Kenny, who had shot a
car-driver dead, as he wanted the
weapon as a valuable piece of testimony
ao-uinst the ruffian, that he dreamed
about it Tuesday night, and dreaming,
saw it in the saloon corner of F ulton
street and Fulton place. The next morn¬
ing, impressed with the midnight saloon action and
of hi 3 mind, he went to said
found the pistol where he saw it hidden
in his dream .—Brooklyn Eaale.
getting sl p k of ^ er J*“.f* v: ^. J
fnend to help 1 her tmfoe t k w S ort .
late Oh, certamly, " ate
it was too *
replied, -hile “Bm only bean knot
it is »
PERSONAL AND LITERARY.
—Mrs. “Stonewall’ Jackson has fall
en heir to • < r'4,(HW left by a Memphis ad
tuirer of the General.
_ The Georgia friends and admirers
of Colonel W. T. Thompson, the author
of .. Major Jones' Courtship," r,re about
[ 0 take steps to erect a monument to
his memory in that State.
U is sa.:d of f . ,, Ir. „ isitni*l , Read.ot „ ,
... atertown N. V .. who died recently,
h at tos » teniar«ibto record for
t J 1 ®* ,aru > " '.'ontmed to Ins
. , ^’
i'’,' 1 '" r ‘ £lu «' e ’ in sevetf
-' uar *
_ -Deo , hundred , ,
' oanev is otre wr, sev
eu years o.ki, and «m» in Lexington,
ky. She » not #ie ‘famous '“sailors
wife, but a negross who lived on tin
s|, h"of l'0\ingtoa oetore the down <*■/«!
thorght of.
—D. Vi. 1. (Av'iunrd. the efttor ‘of tin
PaUnlic Ttlcgraidi, of Cincinnati, -die.l;
ferith«tvity consideyefc reew.rtly the of pneumonia. la-^fetcst, most He.
1R '« S
‘cultured and ’'most prenftr-ng Founjfi
nuinn the preiession th ere . He it was
’who-au e interviewed tatani.in Utahan
sa
d'vo years of -age .—’’-hicago t nbum . |
— Apropos ot the pnt<aium;i«ftion of
‘VVItittier's v Maud Mutter,'’’ w: quote
the iollowk? from a lotfesr to '#ie Bos
Tor Jonrmu. which sewns 'to “settle-the
matter: "Last smniusr .1 -met 'Mi
'Whittier, sw.d in nnsener to the same
qvestion, <» Inch has ixsoa :nr.ked me
-swore-; of times, Mr. Whittier repliefi
t|J:at the -word family whose preiiouneod sane -suggested their
ike to him
niame'Atul-'ler. They wore Hessians."
—Mrs. filwyer (.ray, -wife of 'tine
oslitor-o: Freemans J\mruaL -of dddfe
Kn, Ireland, is a very handsome and »■
resting woman. Her ae aiaintanoe
nvith f her husband kappoaed in *
rromantie-eianner, while #>he was on at
-risit at BaU vrork, on theeea-imnfi!. near
Dublin, «when; Mr. Gray's lather had a
-summer residence. During a stoma a
achoeaer was driven on tlw» rocks -op
po itc his home, and, in line presence
of his future wife, Mr. Gray swam with
-a rope to Ahe rescue of the ereiv. For
iliis heroic deed he won the medal -of
ihc Life-Font institution and a wife,
How ffcexas Cattle Are UliUzed.
Therense beef-packmg establifilunent*
ttt Eockport and Fulton, Texas, liotli of
which places are in the center of cattle
ranges, in which at least 100,000 beeves
ere e£ the slaughtered is utilized, every year. Every the part
jieef even preserved to tufts
of the tails, wliicli are and
se-ld for the,making of ladies’ frizzettos.
The blood fksws into tanks and is pressed,
and is sold at 2 cents a pound for the
making lean of fertilizers. The canned. tongues The snd
beef are boiled and
hides ore salted and sold again. Tha
fatty matter is extracted and goes to tal¬
low. The bones are boiled to a pulp t(.
extract this fatty matter, and the dry
bones, mainly phosphate of lime, are
sold feet' at 1 cent a pound for fertilizing. the
The are cut off, and from hoofs
neats-foot oil is extracted. The liorny
part of the foot, the shin-bone and
knuckle-bones, are sold for the manu¬
facture of domestic ivory. The horns
are piled up until the pith becomes
loose, and this is added to the fertilizers,
and the horns axe sold for manufacture.
Every atom of the animal is probably
used.
_ _
Prof. Marks, of Philadelphia, stated
statute a 5f m t.tiiit nt . Tf"? he Imu 0f made ^ some pmikll caicula- > I“
tions of the maximum speed nt. which
locomotives could be driven before the
ceulritugul for^e ,m tile toe. o! the Jriv-|
mg wheels would become so great as to
cause them to burst. I hose calculations,
which the were limit approximate speed only, in the showed
tliat of was neigh
borhootl of ISO miles per hour.
re Ah. pul 1
fi
IJj 'A T 1 REFERENCE popular the Companion authors to for of the the this contributors year country, 188.1. and announced The many Announcement of below the those volume will of will Orcat show for lie the found Britain, that coming nearly in have many all been respect*, of engaged the most we ns think, distinguished contributors an extraos- and to
Cinary one; but it includes only a part of tlie features of year.
Illustrated Serial Stories.
r as Serial Story of Boy Life m America, by J. T. Trowbridge.
* A . . William Black.
•> ' / A Serial Story of Boy Life in Great Britain, by . . . Beecher
*-s A Serial Story of New England Life, by Harriet Stowe.
A Serial 8tory for Glrle, by...... Harriet Preecott Spofford.
i A Serial Story of Southern Life, by ... . . Marie B. Williams.
l£ 4 •T2SP Amusing Stories of College Old-Time Stories, Poor-Houses, by...... by , . . . Henry . J. D. A. Chaplin. Gordon.
rP’v*' England Peddlers’ Tales, by Wm. A. King.
Old New ... . . .
Tales of the Old Dutch Farmers of New York, by . Eugene M. Prince.
1 V m ^ Ws. [L/t (Cj- . 1 ’
$
Pill (“if*
\\w
Ii u
\3r
\“-
$1.75, will send j Bul>ecrlptlon T»rlce ©I TS- Specimen copies free.
SPECIAL OFFER.—To any one who subscribes now, and sends us we read thie adoei tieement.
the Companion free to .Januarv 1st, 1883, and a full year’s subscription from that date. I rUate mention in paper you
40Temple Place. Address, YOUTH’S COMPANION, Boston, Mass.
GENERAL.
Will -•n» be oat •»««»«« so tight across «* *2 the «• backth.it r*",
the butt of a pistol sticking out ot a hind
pocket will look like the hump on a cn>
ons <x,me\.‘~Detroit free Prefix,
—A writer in Figaro 'Calls attention, to
the number of French citizens xvho see
getting itch in the slave trs«$fi. flrvo
hundred negroes, at, $500 per bend, he
says, is cargo which pays admirably.
—Beys can be 'law-fall y removed tom
the rear platform df«cars, when stealing
rides, but the Nc.tv 'fork Court of Ap¬
peals has decided illhat the removal must
he k > gentle os *ot to tnjure ffce ur¬
chins.
—The bedroom of a yotrog lady named
Wfcemer, at UDippcr entered M.lford, byanunknown ILeliisrli
County, Pa., was and her brad rob¬
nighty the other alight, air. Nothing
bed of a tine growth of a
else was taken.
_
ttvntb'WMn the
p T , T r> u ^ on’Iowa on fcfo of
. MaSLeviUe-Sd residing: street,
?oet ween Spain, this city,
ne h gt j^bs Oil with tiie
‘ af
jt iblo advantage when
«*»“
Times- Demos i\, t.
There k a quaint story tolti us about
a Texan pseaclier wbo had a Calling out
with his oengregatiou. While the con
gregation-f.nd pastor were «f. daggers’
points, the latter received an nppoinh
mentius chaplain of.«fJonitcntiiwy. When
he came.tb- proacliiliis farewaU aermon,
he Ux)li tlie followiiig verse .for bis text:
“ I go to,prepare a.jiace for you, so that
where I act yo may >Be also.
News.
Thk YoiiH's CompamtiH, of Boston, is n
sprightly paper, CL P o1 s ' and
without" c*£epti S iths best kind
published.
A iiiTTOE boy was walking with bis
mamma, and tlicrc fell from almvc Ida
head tui avalanche of soot blown by the
wind from a neighboring astonished, cliinmey.
“ Helloa!” cried lie, quite
“some nic er snow
25C ba V* » pafr of Lyon’s Pat. Heel ltt ift
euers, m* kesabeot or shoe last t< ice a* long.
Home one, who velocijKide knows all about it, says
that, “ to ride a successfully
a young man should see that his hair is
carefully parted in the middle, having
no more one side than -;n the other, in
the way of balance.”
Rooon on Rat*." Clear* out rat*, mice,
flies, roaches, bed-bugs, ant*, vermin. Ific.
Mother Swan'* Worm Kvm r. tor fever¬
ishness, restlessnes*, worms. Tasteless. 15c.
—Al a co. i,*i i.-.k.iivi.. G :i-;C i nt>,
N. Y., a young man >v.,s ca .zht wiu.
five red ears in his pocket, and the in¬
dignant girls ducked him in the m'll
pond. They were mad because he did
not have more.— Philadelphia News
TWKNTV.FOIIB HOUR* TO 1.1 VK.
From John Kuhn, L*t*r«t(«, Ind., who announce*
that he ia now In 11 jierfect health," we hero the
following: " Oae jeer ago I woe, to all appearanooe,
In the laat atagee of Comaumptlon. Our beat
phyaldana gate my cere op. I finally got no low
that our doctor euld 1 could not lire twenty-four
hcuT*. Mr (rteuda then purchased a Collie of PR.
IVM. IIAI.L’8 BALSAM FOR THE LUN08,
which considerably benefited me. t continued
ontll 1 look nine bottle*. I am now In perfect
health, haring used no other medicine.
IiR. 1)*W1TT c7 KELLI MGER'S LINIMENT
in an Infallible and Diseases cure for of Rheuinatlam, the Bcalp, and Spralna, for
LamenfB* pro¬
moting the growth of the iialr.
BWMUM-* peptonlied beef tom., th. nttfri- only
preparation of beef containing It* dntiri
“<>vi force propertied. It contain* blood-making,
generating and lif*-«o«talnlng propertie* i
,i, 0t in M enfeebled condition., whether ^,
remit of exhan*tlon, nerron* pro*tration, oxer
pulmonary or acute iliieaae, complaint*. particularly If rea’nlting
w.propi-ietor*. New York. Sold Ceawell, Hazard
by druggiata.
Reminiscences jand Anecdotes. t
isss?
On the Stump, numorou* Aaecdote* of Electioneering, Stump Hod. Begaklng^tc., S. oox.
w . ......... o.
, description of the home life ofXhe mM
Victor Hugo at Home. A chatty Richard LeBCliae.
poet, by hi* Private Secretary. . . . . A* £jjP?£?'
Word Pictures of the Houae of Commone. aeon
Brilliant tione of Articles.' Wcetminiter Reminisce* Abbey, by of Dean BtanlcT • Canon a»d I*ictar«jaiieA«eoX F. W. rarrar.
. . p I ,4rTnlii*
The Royal shhem^ESAS? Family of Denmark. Article* cintaln%^a}rS.-. of gf““* r y
Great Wi. ofwUde.
cence- of Gen. Robert E. Lee. "Bton.wjir H. Stephens
Special Articles.
Bleep and Flceplcaene**, Bomnambullinn, etc., by.......nr. wimaui
The Help Series.
The Profits of Literary Labor, by . • James Parfcon.
Salesmen and Saleswomen in City Stores. Theirwage* Elliott. 'U’P' ,r ‘
lunitic*. by ...... . Charles Vance
A M ^ C ^£% Earn Cati ° Living n '. ,,0W *° Art. °*?^Dr By tbe C Winiam Principal of rlammond.' ihc Woman’ll Art
Girls Who a in Susan N. Carter.
School, Cooper Union,...... in different kind* of busincM and
HOW to Start. Papers telling how to start reading t)s:»e act
in 'rad's, aith practical detail*, m. that u hoy ijapere may on
them *af'!v. ofJKnginecring ....
What a Technical Education Costs. By tbe Robert Professor H. Thurston.
of the Inttitute of Technology, Hoboken,
The Kdit. rials of tbe Com**niox will give clear and impartial views of current event* at borae and abroad.
0 and stories adapted to tbe little one*.
The Chlldren’h Page reitains its repuUtion for charming pictures, poem*
J@5MSE&M5S ~ Missouri teacher makes the study
locations aw! boundaries; next States,
u . Km t |,,. ^ui 0 plan; then the United
[states, iwtit the whole subject is mas¬
tcred.
SaSfiifflL
€:;l y.
¥
S
GEAmnreMEIO ® J m
for. CURC9,
Rheumatism, Neuralgia. . «... Sciatica,
Ltmtbago, Backache, Headache, Toothache,
aoreSV'roiit.SnrllUw'.Siny'""- IlrtiUea,
ViHi-nM, Scaldk, FrarlWltw.
as: A LI. OTIIKB HOBII.V PA1JKS *NI> ACHrS.
-SoVityOruusi-ui nml no»l'!r , i<wMjrrrti«r'-^aany ron»» botllc.
SIX* iEzz CSK'..’
ere bu»l»a||^u r.
CNVlflOfiUT* CNVlGi amT'ttra^AWSws a* HAI* MftkM* 4**'i W
nui i«T KD, r**‘ »«* M.h •* •'*
K-» » (M» l daw*
BUGGIESSSxSS
This N.Y. Singer, $20
With $f set of Attachment* Free.
iWarranUni perfect. Li«rlit ninnii»K
m quiet,bandaomaaaddurable. trial-plan when denireri Sent
on tent 4
Hnnnv KM* Organ* I Rjt*
ReedH. M ntopo; Vochonirul RnS
Ba**,oetarocoupler,2 knee nwrlla
wItki $3■toolana $1 bflt.1 Book.only plan If Je
Al*o sont on test
sired. durable Kl^pant laaideand caao. niacrmtlncnt Cir
tone, out.
oular, with testlnsonial*,free. Ahk
fi Borne A OtaAV Third as-Chlcairo
MILL ssd FACT0EY SUPPLIES
or ALL KINDS. EELTING HOSE and
PACKING, OILS, PUMPS ALL KINDS,
ISON PIPE, FITTINGS, BEASS GOODS,
STEAM GAUGES, ENGINE GOVERNORS,
lee. Send for Prioe List. W. H. DIL¬
LINGHAM & 00., 143 Main Streot, LOUIS¬
VILLE, KY.
THRESHERS ndriklb
**,**,a. in*.
ir.tapriMtll'
fm. THBAULTMAlf ATaTU»OO..M«uA*ld.O.
PATENTS Procured hi .1 men
lean I* moil
A|>nr|, IMAII
Btrwb Cincinnati, <A
OPIUM HABIT
AND DRUNKENNESS.
PosIMvel iv, l*kY*S speedily and permanently cured by
DR. KEE OOLl) HEMKHIEH, containing
no form of Opium. Truth Invites Investigation
Iteferene t3T iM^nt in the Stale. For terms, pamph
lets and proofs, adfiress,
W. C. REI,I.AMT, m.
7 1-‘J Ilronal Nl„ Atlanta, On.
C. B. C Cntonmn Buflliu'Ht <'o!lf . .
• N. J. Wi foi *' "t .** •
AACMTC M«k© money nelling uiir © Vnmi)*
Alibll I O Medicincfl. No Y. capila) icqniri d.
Htaiidftrd Cor© Co., 197 P«*arl Ht.. N.
CONSUMPTION. thu nbovo UIbcbihi; by U»
I have u ixisitlv© remedy for
list? thoanandfl of cewefl of tbo v.orm. kind and uf louuf
Ntitndlnir hav© been rnrod. Indeed, mo UOTTI.RU Mtron;< In FltKK, my faltn
In Its efficacy, that I will Bond TWO to¬
gether with a VAI.I7AHI.15 TUEATIHK on thin dibftatiu, to
a uy Hufloior Give K«prewi end 1*. O. nddrefln.
1>R. T. A. bLAMJVil. 181 I'uurl tit.. New York.
AGENTS
wanted for the boNt Helling booh In the United
States. Write, and
at the teims W© offer. CMftmiRSion IO th©
right men. J* Ja* LllAJIIIr.KN ACIlkUfta, « $4f».
Illustrated Travel and Adventure.
A Serial Story of Adventure, by . C. A. Stephens.
Life in an Irish Fishing Village, by . Julian Hawthorne.
Tales of Old Ships and Sailors, by . . Capt. P. Luce.
Old Times on the Missouri, by A Missourian.
After the Mindanao Piratee in * D.ub
p arJnnelK
Adventuree in a Whaling Cruise to the North , '“ i ^ b ^
0 ber Brett
The ”T! fTC f M *Xn.R2X*>n. ndent
*
Child Life and Home Life In Japan. Onrioii. Picture* *««
Incident*, by a traveller in that country, . Pror. K. a. Morse.
““Xft USES KUey,” by Walter A. Moore,
Boy,” and ‘Kxprew Mewcnger . .
In The Household.
Parlor Experiments in Science. Simple *’p o£°l$ b £
r Richards.
Entertainments for Charitable Purposes. Advice *nd B. nogg<'*Uon*, Bartlett. by
George Kven^g »»«gtotoni«tf»
Tableaux with Authors. Direction* for Cbnrmtog
co*t, etc., by tbe C’urntor of Ibe Liverpool Art ilueeum. Charles Dyall.
A CATALOGUE
JUST ISSUED CONTAINING
400 ILLUSTRATIONS
AND PRICES OF
DII 11 S, ITCHES, JEIBJt
AND SILVERWRAE
Will he seat to any address tipro applicatleii to -•
J.P. STEVENS &G&,
JEWELERS,
ATLANTA. - - GEORGIA.
COTTON EAPID MONET
MAKING
f'JTURES OB’ IndiiOdtiaJ
deata or on (ho
Popular and sate
new
Co-Operative PLAN
Ob' CON 8 BBVATIVB
SPECULATING
Weekly atatementa. Monthly Dividends
$ 1,000 Invested *Wrt 25 k’"
Smaller Investments in proportion. mailed Correspondent*
wanted everywhere. Circulars to any iiddrees.,
3)10. P. WOLFFE & CO., Brokers,
374 & 176 i oiumon St. SKW 0W/KAN8, Lit
'XJB33B XllC W
ELASTIC TRUSS
ll»«FVI<IHfcrtn.froin.Mi>t!M!% rtipUtap^wltn MPAeMInt
la MiiMr.KUplAltwIlUldl
11.1110 tte
SENSIBLE po*ttlona of Ibe body, white
TRUSSJ llallm th««pprum»bidttte *pbr*omalt
teuitlittdMiM taTviofttr. WHb IM
with jKBnntteMffBlfthb«Mt*«nw»
jjyRtk) n*gbt, and • TtMeti cuto certain, lttl ttiji donMt
Utti cUt up. Bent by mnll. CtftuUfi »wo»
E0OLEST0N TBU 8 S C(K. Chkwro. lit
EVERY MAN
Nboiiid Vndrratand If to D»»
< on dll Ion
; when fluffierii>a frrnn of mmd or
[ j ceMM, Iwxly r.AUHvd overwor* l>v or imprudent derangement h«hHa, of th« •»
y*l fnoultiea, r«Milun^ in Nervuos DebiHif,
1‘hyxicAl I’rostraiinn or
PRKMATDKK »B«AY.
KFOn receipt of four 3c. etumpfl w« will flend*oor n*w
book. 112 pngen, 8ro., “Ibc l-uw of Life and
•lealth.” ft »eriefl of leclinefl. »nrt nivinu tnvBTnabif*
Information to MAMUKD ANH SlNttLK MIR\ Adrlrew
MEDICAL AND ftDROICAL INSTITUTE, )4>M» IWh8l. t
New York. Name thifl pajter.
STRONG’S PECTORAL PILL*
A ■*»*■ BUUIT *•»
COLDS AND RHEUMATISM.
Vnisra W.llhy 1 eppcUU, fM* «*uUon, H|»l«rt*T «#
th* bowala. r»*oi«o» »oow re u'.iuia rmul
pool Inns hadlth ami bracing lha narroua body. ajatem.ani Slid by eltlBg Pr u*f0M Haw
and lo ararr Abie of tha T. yl(f.
pm Pam ^>l.lato mlnraaa P. O. Bo* boO, W. _. .
j\ ~~A OINVN WARTRB *c BIMae. Iba Mild Friew raduoed futW. W
tailing Pictorial Boaka and
p f ar eaot. litrtaeaL PciMamne Oe., XU.ala, Ae.
When CURE I Hitv curu 1 do i»oi rnenn FITS! wortilji to ilop ftJJggb tv
O tin.ii and I hen bftVO thorn ruturB «l rllo. ■, Kl'lLKPoT
culeuin. I liftvo imutn th© GImoN I
or FAIX1W Q 810t N MS a llfu long Study. BorausA oth®r» warrant harw my.
VOmody t*’ euro tho worat cnoeo.
fBUod m no roaaon for not now rwtrtrlng a enr^ Bandit
«mco for u troutlHO and a Fro© Bottl© of my Infiu nulB
yomody. Olvo MaproAn and Toot OfUco. It CO*tw 3TW
■iL-tlilng Addrnaa lor a trial, uml H. O. I lllMW. will cur© you. ‘etrl SL, Nuvr * lock. * .
1)7. in 1
j ADD TOIIINOOME rcKUlnr monthly
Ululf tfilers Iht MiiM Mt mcaiiHoimuliitiK to$HJU deftllftgitr
i prod in Iroin Ihvchi iu«i lu of $10 0 or i»ior«
GR/UNo PROVISIONS WnHll & STOCKS voullftl of
j Ravli mcmbvv y.vlatlu* nimltmwl th«
Club. Club :i UfimrlH iiiililflluii'elioblerH win weekly. Imck Dlvblcudfl ibeir utoney pHUI I/i monthly. yrotft* fn
H{ three I»« MiwnlhM, Mil ieiivliiK tiriKinal iimuimi making
|« 1 lee ►- $H>meh.
itxplimftiory money in Club, or returned on dcinumi. Shares
elrenlu rn iicnl AddreMH free. It. I(«;l»ablecorrcHpt»mhmta K. Kkndai.i. A CO-*
wunied cvciywlicrw.
Conra Meliffl.. i;r A I'll) .Sillle HI . I Hit y»<||f>. Iix.
Tubl'mb v r«* U DloiyA't lftntft^ ^TrTTT .......t r «n'iy-*iinu.~ -' t H^.
^ A S^f* IlING FOll 50 Cts.
To introduce smulc Krto^b un*f *Mnw
| their «|u.kitty, ri*cen<l this rlevanl
I <*ol.i>- Ti-aiku, IIkavy Rand
' R iflii receipt of «x, mm) admiRfl
'imp,'* on
o l io person* you think wit IhiyOr
$ for fi. Tltte being (Hsinplp articles) offer rln^ inc^fderf.prit«: fwtwTo
over 7 , *mly qnkk. ). D. IinrlR an honest Y, Bo* to Oufftrlo, w ci w N. Y*
i-afroi»a||«,act 137 ,