Newspaper Page Text
“I.ATITI/DK I \.
Like lonely Mllora on • foreign are,
Without a oomjWAA and without a chart,
Vnh!j* (t by all their love of **lll*ll'a art,
Houle drift along the vaat mytry
Of love'a * There cannot U-
A solitude ao patiilnaa a a heart.
No undleeovered iatea lie eo far apart
From him who ae ka. aa ile the though:* that we
Forever yearn to read liehlnd dear eyaa—
Tha dear ayaa that wa love, and love to Idea.
Ah, well! Hut one thing mat tore to our bllea.
Ho lonjt-a* love'a aun goea not down, all akiea
Are clear ; all ahoraa are friendly ; iraaatira Ilea
On all; we ahall not one awoet harbor mlea!
//. //., in ita ilnu-i
Market* for Fruit.
It was thought, ten or fit toon year*
ag >, that luixl owners had net out as
many apple t rees as the markets of tlio
country would warrant, and oven then,
while many of the orchards were young,
uu abundant sea on gave surh a sur
plus that largo quantlt o* rotted and
went to waste, Since then a foreign
market has taken in over 1,400,000 bar
rels of fresh apples, and the export of
evaporated fruit is about 6,00t),000
pounds, or 3,000 tons. Canning is eon*
lined mostly to other fruits. Although
tho value of second-rate apples for
feeding domestic animals was well
known to some farmers many years ago,
they arc still permitted to wa.to in
large q antities hy those who do not
feed their animals enough succulent
food in late autumn and thr, ugh win
ter. The market for gi oil fresh fruit,
after the regular demand in lit s coun
try. and In all the different countries of
Europe, shall have been fully supplied,
may still leave a largo remainder, mid
here the evaporation will come in and
c nsumo vail quantities. Nearly one
hall tho yearn w passes withe nsuin
ers in this a untry when they cannot
obtain fresh apples in market, or when
farmers a e de-titute of them; and to
fill this long vacancy, evaporated fruit
is destined to furnish vast sup
plies, to say nothing of the exten
sive demand which may be created in
Europe by judicious introduction. One
of the most fatal drawbacks, h wever,
to a successful f, reign market, is send
ing po >r i r defective fruit with the at
tempt to pass it o'Vasgo, and in quality.
A few uns rupulotiH shippers arc
un ugh to taint tlie whole market with
their Imil ropulati n, and if it wore
)i ssilile, there is nonius n why as great
a penalty sir uld not he imposed upon
such frauds as for passing counterfeit
in noy, f' r the harm extends in agreut
cr i r loss degree to tho whole trade,
which is n it the case with bad money.
Wo trust that the energy of the lar.o
class of li n ruble dealers and fruit
growers will liiid a full remedy for this
wrong, and when Iho greatly increased
markets which the future is destined t>
open shall bo accessible to us. t geth
er with tho home use which may he
made for large surplus crops, in the
manufacture of jelly, vinegar, mo
lasses, and f, r the food of d>-
mestic animals, there will be little
(laiiL'or of having too many apples.
The lesson which those facts suggest
will, therefore, bo, for tho-tt who have
the land for good orchards and who can
procure the trees, to plant without hesi
tation. They must, howotcr, bear in
mind that merely planting is only tho
hegipning tif orchard work. Intelligent
cultivation and proper management in
successive years will ho absolutely es
sential; and iio more should lie set out
than can receive the best care.
pasting outiroly from this üb
jiiot, a few words may bo useful as to
the host, way to so lire and use surplus
windfalls or wormy fruit, for feeding
cows, sheep* pigs and horses, in lute
autumn and in winter, a moderate
quantity of which* in connection with
dry fonder, contributes to the health
and thrift of these animals. They should
not be thrown in heaps on the cellar bot
tom, where decaying ones will become
mixed through the whole, and the later
supplies be more rotten than sound.
There Are always two conditions with
such apples, those which will decay
soon, and those which will keep weeks
or months, and those are mixed together.
The eye will not distinguish the long*
keepers at first, but time only will show,
if they are planed where they can be
seen. The best arrangement, therefore,
is to ju'ovidc a series of narrow shelves,
extending all around the walls, and all
through the Interior, with passages w do
enough to depos t and take out the
fruit These shelves may be of rough
boards, with spar ■ enough bolweuu <nu
and the next above to see nod v otei t. .
The shelves around the walls should
not be more than a foot Had a half wide,
and they may have a foot space between
them. Those in the interior may' bo
two and a ball feet wide, as the attend
ant can pass on both s'dos. The apples
are placed shallow on these shelves, ami
the attendant parses along daily with
his basket and takes those which show
signs of decay. After a little praetieo
he does it rapidly. This will savethem
from spo ling by rotting in quantit os.
By ties management, we have kept ap
ples into dune, which were not supposed
to be long-keeper'; the whole secret
being to remove the decaying ones as
fast as they appeared and to retain
those which were the host keepers, and
which could not he selected by the eye
till the trial was made. - Country (leu
tlema w*
Wanted His Oats.
Last week a commission house' which
<loes bus ness on the Board o Trade for
country dealers received a visit from a
largo stranger with a highly indium and
nose and otherwise doc dodly sensation
al aspect
“Sou bought some oats forme a
thousandbushols, didn't yer?"
•* If your name is ” began tho head
of tho tirm.
"Pott*, yos. sir. l’otphcr I'oits, of
Pottsville, Pott County. You wrote nut
on a circular that ton dollars would i uy
a thousand bushels of oats, and 1 scut
you the money
“ Yes.” replied the commission man.
“Well I want the oats.'
“Tin* oats have been sold, and there
is a profit of tif y dollars to your credit
on our books.”
"Sold! you sold my oats! What in
thunder did you do that for? Who old
you to sell iny oats "
"You know you didn’t have any oats
in reality. The ten dollars you sent us
was merely for margins. Ifoashadde
clin and in prieeyou would have lo st y our
money.”
" *oh here, if 1 understand this mat
ter you bought me a thousandbushols
of oats for ten dollars. That’s what
you -aid you would do, and they're
wor h now something lit e sdl.O or 9400,
and by the great horned jumping spoon
1 want ’em, and 1 want ’em naif”
This conversation occurred early in
the meriting, and it too', nearly all
da. to force the fifty dollars on Mr.
Potts and tret him out of the olliee.
—A sewing girl employed in a New
York shirt factory has found out now
why the wearing of hoop-skirts was
prohibited by tho proprietors. She dis
obeyed it the other day, and had not
long been at work when" she felt herself
seized by the shafting and wound
around it, escaping with her life and
two broken leg-e She will try and not
be so fashionable hereafter.
( liungps In Cufft.
Adam wore no cuffs, and to Solomon’s
levon hundred wives was denied the
lelight of soeing their liego lord decked
Julia a clean shirt and collar. How tho
limdies of those days managed to look
•ospoctablo is a matter of melancholy
wnjeeture. The history of the mod
ern ctif is a startling confirmation of
Mr. Darwin’s theory' of creation. It
was evolved from nothing. What aw
ful an 1 fantastic shapes it may yet as
i ume no man can toll. Fifty years ago
the cull' wns as much a curiosity as was
i linen shirt fifty years before. The
gentlemen of tho Revolution wore
. utiles or ruffs of lace or crimped linen
shout their wrists. It was about thirty
y ears ago that the first linen cuff was
made. It was a plain band of linen
lowed to (he shirt sleeve and was fast
ened by an ordinary porcelain button.
Its use grow rapidly’ in public favor,
and in a few years there appeared in
tho market a cuff, buttoning separately
to tho wristband. There had been still
no provision made for the orna
mental button, but several years after a
cuff was made having in one end the
mueli-eoveted hole, and from that dav
tho success of the invention wa< assured.
A piece of white linoii was a good thing,
but a piece of linen and a chunk of gold,
and the first sleeve buttons wore coined
of that precious metal, combining as
they did utility and beauty, comfort and
elegance, at once found their way into
permanent popular notice.
The linen cuff of to day is as unlike
that of twenty years ago as is man and
the monkey. There are now sold by
the trade three classes of cull's, respect
ively made of linen, percale and cellu
loid. The celluloid culf, when first it
made its appearance, created a genu
ine furore; hut now it is worn as a
rule only by traveling salesmen, who
have to iio their washing on the My, and
poor people in the summer time. The
per. ah) cuff, likewise once high in tho
estimation of the wealthy and the
esthetic, has gone into at least a tem
porary oblivion, although wholesale
jobbers say they find ready sales for
both tho percale and celluloid cuffs in
the extreme South and West. Tho cuff
which laps over and buttons at one end
is now considered barbarous. Tho ultra
fashionable kind is the cuff which is
bound together by a link button. It
should bo attached to tho shirt sleeve
by two delicate slips, extensions from
that part of tho cud which a sailor
would call “amidships." One reason
why the private culls went out of fash
ion was because they cost more than a
good linen article, and were not nearly
so decent in appearance. About fifteen
years ago the paper culf, likewise the
paper collar, was held up to the admir
ing ga/e of consumers. .Millions wero
manufactured, and it was thought the
desideratum hail at last been found, Imt,
tho paper cuff, like tho percale, is now
only used in the South and in the ex
treme West, around Onlveston, and in
the Black Hills. Nino-tonths of all the
cutis sold in this country arc n nnufuct
urcdinTroy, N. Y. Homo years ago
agr at many wero imported from En
gland. Now none are brought across
the ocean. On the other hand, Ameri
can culls are finding a largo sale in
l.omlon mid l'aris.
Six years ago culls were made, in two
or three pieces, ami one st yle, in par
ticular, was about nine inches long, and
then doubled over to within a half-inch
o tho starting- 1 oint. All of the cuffs
of to day are what is known as four-ply
that is, they are made of four thick
nesses of linen, with the interlinings of
cotton. All-linen eu Is are but little
worn. They cost froVu sixty to seventy
t ve cents per pair, and have not half
the rapacity lor holding starch and
keeping stiff that the “adulterated”
goods possess. There are three general
shapes in cuffs, square corners, round
corners and chopped-off corners. In
New York and Boston the round corners
are fashionable, in Philadelphia the
square corners are all the go, and in
Washington and Baltimore one secs
nothing but t ho chopped culls.
In this city men like a big cuff, as big
ns they can get it. In New Orleans the
bon-ton wear diminutive wrist-bands,
and out in the boundless West they
wear anything that happens to be handy,
from a dish-rag to a pair of nippers.
The latter is the all-prevailing style in
some places in Colorado and Now
Mexico. Then, again, there are what
urc known as single ami double cuffs.
The former are now but little worn, and
never by fashionable people. Different
denominations wear different kinds of
cull's. Quakers want small single culls
that lap over mid button at the end.
Actors wear big culls and largely patron
ize the gaudy percale with polka dots
and rainbow stripes, like hill-po tors.
It is permissible to wear a tight-fitting
cuff in the winter, although the present
st vie favors a roomy one that will come
down cleverly over the wrist and yet
not Uiek in the coat-sleeve, like a fat
man in an alley. None but fops wear
theit cuffs down to their knuckles. The
best, distance is from an inoa to half an
inch. To vary much from this standard
is to display excessive modesty or un
becoming loudness A dirty cuff is a
thing tone washed and not talked about.
—Ch it'd (jo He ra UL
Illrds on Iho Farm.
Tho utility of bints in agrioußuro,
particularly tho utility of certain B)>e('ics
of birds, lias been tho subject of much
discussion for many years. Audubon
ami perhaps other of the earlier natural
ists old not always hare tho means with
which to publish the knowledge they
paim and concerning the habits of the
birds ami animals which the.\ watt lied,
and some of the later ornithologists
have found the field of discover, so
large that they have hail little time to
do more than describe tho distinguishing
features of the numerous species. The
farmer has formed opinions concerning
the good and evil done by tho birds
which inhabit his fields and find protec
tion about his building-, but often these
opinions have been formed without that
careful method of observation required
to determine a factor settle a question
beyond dispute.
The variety of opinions held by differ
ent persons concerning the real value
of the English sparrow brought to this
country some years ago, ana the crow
and robin, so common in our fields, is
an illustration of the difficulty ordinary
observers experience in coming to a
unanimous conclusion. I*ro f . \V. A.
Stearns, of the Massachusetts Act:cult
ural College, in hi s recent address be
fore the Connect cut State Board of
Agriculture, discussed the bird question
from the standpoint of an educated obser
vor, who has given many \ ears of study
to his subject, and yet he was far rem
claiming that he knew all that ought to
be known even about some of our com
monest species.
- Crooked feuee-corners iuthe I'nited
States occupy more land than would
suffice to supply the farming population
with bread, if properly cultivated or|to
furnish food for more sheep than are
owned in the whole country. —Detroit
Jr’rce l‘roes.
Herman Population and Emigration.
The London Ttmesgivcs tho following
summary of recently published statistics
of tho ineroaso both of tho population
and emigration throughout Germany.
The population of Prussia Increased,
between 1816 and 1864, from 10,360,000
to 13,260,000, while, up to 1876, inclu
sive, it mounted up to 21,500,000, or 106
per cent, in sixty years’ time. From
1875 to 1880 the population of all the
Get man States has been increasing at
altout 625,000 per annum. At the last
census, in December, 18H0, the number
of inhabitants was 45,250,000. which, if
maintained at tho same rate, would lie
60,000,000 in 1900. The increase, as
compared with that of France, is very
remarkable, the French population dur
ing tha last live years showing an in
crease of only 383,(XX), while the ineroaso
of tho German population during the
same period was 2,000,000, the birth
rate in the latter country being 3.91 per
100, whereas in France it is only 2.47.
There Is also this great difference be
tween tho two.thatin Fram e the increase
has been almost entirely in the largo
towns, whereas in Germany the increase
is general throughout the country as
well as tlie towns. Tho number of emi
grants that liavo loft Germany during
the last sixty years is over 8,500,000, of
whom the greater part have taken
their de, arture within tho last thirty
years, tho United States having absorbed
in 1881 no less than 248,323. Dr. Fried
rich Kapp estimates tho amount taken
away by each emigrant at not less than
460 marks, or £22 10s , so that the
capital transferred to the United States
during last year amounted directly to
£6,587,267. And this, it should be re
membered, is not returnable to Ger
many in tho ordinary ways of trade or
commerce, as, in point of fact, the Ger
man emigrants to the United States be
come Americans, and, conse piently,
competitors with Germany in agricult
ural and industrial pursuits. Dr.
Engel considers that the cost of bring
ing up a young person of the lower or
middle class to the fifteenth year is
about £2OO, and tie estimates the loss
to Germany during the (mi gration of
the last sixty years, in cash and valu
ables taken by ea h emigrant, at over
nine milliards of marks nearlv tw; n
the amount of the war indemnity paid
by Franco in 1871.-- Ilnidxtr- el's.
Compartment ß Do Not Sato the Ship.
Tho sinking of tho steamship < ity of
Brussels within twenty minutes fro n
the time when the collision occurred
raises again the <|uestion of safety in
marine construction. This ship was
furnished with several iron bulk-heads
completely dividing the vessel into
water-tight compartments. The theory
of the company advertisements is lhat
any one or oven two of these compart
ments m glit bo filled with water with
out sinking the ship luvest'gation
brings to light the fuel that this is far
from the truth Aside from the inci
dents of open doors through the bulk
heads, and insuiiicient strength to stand
tho enormous thrust of a large body of
water, both of which elements may bo
counted ■ pon in ordinary oases, there
are practical questions involved which
make it really necessary that the mid
ships compartment should be much
larger than the other-*—large enough,
that is, to accommodate the engines
niul the boiler-. There is no great dif
ficulty in making the bulkheads near
the ends of the snip strong enough to
do the work intended. Fience these
protections are ample n case of bow
collisions, and there are a number of
examples of vessels com ng safe y to
port a‘ter a collision which would have
sunk a ship not thus provided. But n
case of a collis on amidships, as this
was, the compartment feature is of no
value nt a’l. And for th s there does
not seem to boa feasible remedy.
Be Ready Early*
A season of activity Is near at hand.
Spring Is coming, with its pressing work.
Are farmers ready for sowing and plant
ing Kver\ implement should I e pro
vided beforehand, that no time may be
wasted in making purchases or repairs
after the w ork should begin. We liave
known a half day of plowing to be lost be
cause the whit! etreos were not at hand.
Some farmers start out with their spring
plowing without a single plow-point in
stock, and when one is needed, the
team is taken from the field and driven
to the store. Nnch a loss of time is a
serious matter, and should be thought
fully guarded against by ample pro
vision of all such articles of tno farm.
It is a poor time to mend a harrow
when it should be at work in the field.
We do not favor that economy—if it
may be so called that relies upon
the neighbors for manv of the
tools of the farm There are
certain firm implements that may
bo owned in partnership, as a
ro lor or reaper, but the constant bor
rowing of rakes, forks, etc , is not a
wise and economical practice. Be pro
vided with all those essential farm tools,
and have them in good order, and at
hand when the time arrives for using
them.
Now is the time to look to these
matters, and make all needed prepara
tions for the busy daysthat will soon he
here. In the peace ol winter prepare
for the war of spring. Ayrietillurisl.
Ipitniitc ns a rouse or Irs nUy.
The father of a Washington lawyer
guilty of escapades has recently given
the following explanation of the erratic
victim: “Thinking it a safe thing to do,
my son has been in the habit for months
of carrying quinine in his pocket, and
taking it in small but frequent doses,
and the result is an elated, sanguine
state of mind, quite beyond the bounds
of reason. His memory is not yet im
paired, and the marked improvement
already consequent upon being deprived
of the drug gives his friends reason to
expect complete restoration in a short
time. Meanwhile, let this case be one
of many others to teach us all that, ex
cellent* as quinine may be in many
cases, it is, like chloral or opium or al
cohol, exceedingly dangerous to trifle
with.” The question which naturally
arises in the mind of the physic 1 an, on
reading this is whether quinine has
ever been reported as causing insanity.
There are at least two such cases on
record, both of them reported in the
Journal of ferrous and Mental Disease ,
July. 1881. In both, insanity a)wavs
followed upon the use of quinine, and.
from the character of the two reported
cases, it seems certain that in some pre
disposed cases a brief, curable insanity
may follow* upon the use of quinine.—
American Medical Weekly.
—The Southern t> et. Paul H. Hayne,
is a nephew* of Colonel Hayne, who
many think bad the better of Mr. Web
iter in the celebrated argument He is
i man of polished manners and natural
eloquence.
—Some one employed in uudoing old
cartridges at Mount Valerien, Paris,
disregarded the rule never to use metal
in the process; result, thirty women
frightfully Lurk
A Word fo Farmers.
Now, while seed-time is far distant,
farmers should examine their seed
corn.
Last season was cold and late, nnd
much soil that was planted failed to
germinate by reason of the cold, damp
soil, while that which managed to start
grew but slowly and sickly, and was
long in maturing, so that when cold
weather camo on all was more or less
soft, and tho autumn being cool it hard
ened but slowly.
Much was entirely ruined for seed by
the early frosts, and noarly all has since
had its vitality destroyed by the cold
snap in early Decamber which froze the
but partly-dried germs.
Those farmers who, early in tho fall,
fearing that there would he but little
com suitable for seed, gathered their
seed ears from fields uninjured b the
frosts and hung them in airy drying
places, may be pretty certain that they
will experience r.o inconvenience from
their seed not germinating but still it
may be best to test its vitality, and for
doing so there is no time like tho pres
ent.
A good method is to select a hundred
kernels indiscriminately from your
seed-cars and place them between tivo
woolen cloths, which must he kept
rlamp and in a place of seventy degrees,
Fahrenheit's, or in theordlnary temper
ati re of a living room in winter; or the
kernels may bo pla ed in a ght-s bottle
and covered with water, and hung in
the w ndow or near the fire; or if con
venient place the kernels in a shallow
box of earth.
In a few days, if the seeds are good,
the sprouts will begin bursting their in
teguments. and then the germinated
kernels can I e counted and the |x-r
cent, that will deve'op is readily ascer
tained, and plans made accordingly,
ft is surprising what a small number
of kernels have vitality the present
•enson.
The majority of farmers select their
seed-ears when huskiug. as in this man
ner they obtain the best and most pro
ductive ears; iml lli s year such fann
ers have performed a losing labor.
Those farmers who examined their
corn during the time that the mercury
fell so low in December, noticed it
looked dark, as though it had been
cooked, nnd on breaking the covering
found the sprouts frozen. Com laints
of this nature come from all | arts of
the country.
Such corn, of course, will never ger
minate. and it will be necessary to ob
tain old corn for seed or produce no
corn. There is hut. little old com in
the country, and. if any can bo found,
every farmer should obtain enough of
it for seed- Probably a good price will
be asked for it, but. it is better to pay a
good price for good see I, than a poor
price for poor seed.
New corn is twinging a low price at
present, as much of it is souring in the
cribs and dealers arc loth to take it,
but probably before another summer it
will touch a high price. Old corn is
sound and reliable, and prices paid for
It seem fancy, though not in reality so,
as it is much superior to the new.
Farmers’ time and laoor are not
pressing us at present, and we can bet
ter a'Vord to give a little attention to
our seed now, and li - sure of a good
crop, than to labor nil the spring and
find our seed refusing to start, and
be obliged to hunt up some old com,
if any can Imj had. and plant all our
lields over again right iri the busiest
season, /’run t< h'unmr.
Tlie Spun! and Size of Atluntlr Waves.
The London Nautical Mayaiine con
tains an article bv Captain Kiddle, the
Atlantic steamship commander, on the
height and velocity of Atlantic waves.a
subject which, as he says, is to seamen
one of the most important of the day.
It has been asserted that the average
velocity of great Atlantic waves is about
nine m les an hour. But Captain Kid
dle states that he has frequently meas
ured the speed in Atlantic gales and
found it “twenty-five miles per hour,
plus the rate at which tin* ship was
steam ng through the water when nearly
or quite head to wind (say four knots
an hour.” This estimate is no doubt
much nearer the truth than the former.
I r. Scoresbv gave the rate of travel for
waves of the largest size at about thirty
two miles an hour, and Lieutenant
Maury gave it as rarely exceeding
thirty miles while other observers men
tion still higher figures us occasionall y at
tained by waves of excessive length. It
is known that some of the great Atlan
tic gales which assail the British coasts
move progressively, as the English
meteorologist 1 oy recently recorded, at
a rate of more than sixty miles an hour,
and it is, therefore, highly i reliable
that in the severest hurricanes the ocean
wavo may be driven with greater force
than even the most observant naviga
tors suppose. Admiral Fitzrov men
tions that Scoresby was skeptical as to
the reports of seamen who recorded
waves thirty feet high until his last voy
age, when he made measurements of
some exceeding tnis height. According
to Captain Kiddle the height from the
trough to crest occasionally exceeds
fort s feet. The question is one of great
interest to safe navigation in the heavy
Atlantic winter gales, and the able offi
cers of Atlantic steamships would do
well to make careful observations on
the height, length and velocity of the
4 ‘mountainous seas” they encounter.
Precious-Metal Mining i Die inl
States.
Whoever looks over the whole field of
American precious-metal mining will In*
convinced that this industry is certain to
make a very rapid growth in what is led
of this century. He will also come to the
conclusion that the production of silver is
destined to increase very rapidly for a
score or so of years to come, provided the
demand for this much-slandered metal
does not fall too far short of the supply.
Beyond a brief term this yield of >u\vy
will surely diminish, especially if there is
any considerable lowering in its price.
The observant eye can also see that the
production of gold is likely to Ik* ex
tended to many new fields, and that the
yield of this metal is, in the future,
likely to be rather more steady than that
of its bulkier sharer in the greed of men.
North America and the twin continent
on tlie south are doubtless to be the
great producers of precious metals in
the future; their store of silver must be
of greater value at the present price of
this metal than their store of gold. If
the world continues to use silver in the
coming century as it has in the past
thirty centuries, there is a fair prospect
that our continent will win some thou
sands of millions from its silver-bearing
lodes. Even if we make what seems to
me the mistake of gold alone as a
basis of exchange, the production of
this metal will no doubt give us a larger
mining industry than any other country
can expect to gain.- Atlantic Monthly.
—At a recent marriage ceremony in
one of the Prov.donee churches* the
c ntracting parties were thirty minutes
behind time, and the organ pealed out
••Oh! dear, what can the matte, be?”
mrJ’roruiuicc (A’. L , Journal.
ELDER MOSE KITE.
Ills Ifalr-lirr&'lth Ksnapea from Soon and
Unac-en Foes.
Troy Katina* Chief, January It, IV>3.
Most of our older citizens well remember
Mode Kite (who lived In Petersburg Bottom),
the hero of our Btste’s early political history,
who was of stalwart build and powerful
physique; who In ISM led s colony of our
people to Pike’s Peak; who fought the In
dians on the plains and was shot through the
body; who on his return hereafter the re
bellion wns converted and baptized by Elder
ileushult, of the Christian Church at Peters
burg Bottom, and became a revival preacher
of celebrity all through this section. They
will also recall the fact that, attacked witn
consumption and reduced to s skeleton, he
was obliged to remove to the Rockies in the
hope of saving his life. None thought he
would succeed. Last fall, however, the editor
of this paper met him at the head of the Re
publican River, bigger and more robust than
ever. “Why, I thought you hod died of con
sumption long, long ago, Elder!”
‘•Me! I never had consumption, man!
though pec,pie thought that wan what ailed
me, and I thought so myself. But the doc
tors had sent me on a wild-goose chase after
a dozen other diseases, junt aa fatal, and this
was the wildest one of all.”
The good Elder then recounted to ug, in a
charming rein, his many adventures In the
rough and ready life he had led, “hut,” he
said, “remarkable hs you may think my w ar
like life has been, I leave a much more Inter
esting atory to tell you.”
“ You know what a rough, noisy fellow I
used to he; and I could stand any hardship.
Why, on a wager, I have knocked down an
ox and a mule with my fist. I have fought
ruffians, border outlaws and Indians; but 1
was
DODGED FoH TEAKS
by a more dangerous uuseen enemy that was
ever getting me more completely In Ida
clutches. 1 was shot by an ludian In a fight
on the plains, hut thnt wound healed readi
ly and gave me but little trouble. After I
returned to Kansan and commenced preach
ing, I first began to give way. I had a dull
feeling, ercompenied witti a pain in tho right
side. fir. Butler, our family physician, -ant
my liver was out of order, caused by the
malaria of the bottoms. I had always had
an appetite like an ostrich, but my digestion
became seriously fmpal el While on the
circuit pre.-ehlng, 1 consulted a doctor, who
Bal l I hnl dvspepsli. After that, distress
tug palpitation of the heart followed, and
the physician said this was caused by my in
digestion and diseased liver which would
probably ter.i fnate fatally. So i etlmes I
bail a ravenous appetite, nt others none at
alt. I was feverish anil then chilly. Mv
food see t.ed to do me no good. A spec-1 list,
told me I had a tape-worm 1 Then 1 was
troubled witti unusual quantities of water
and a frequent desire to urinate, which was
done with difficulty anil great pain. Tin
aped dial, said 1 hail a touch of the grave!,
caused by use of the alkaline water of the
plains. I then began to suffer severe pains
in the loins and the small of the hack, ac
companied with sudden attacks of dizziness,
during which I had to sit or lie down, to
avoid falling. I was forced to abandon
TRAVELING AXI> PREACHING,
because I could no longer ride on horseback,
or trust myself out alone. I began to be
seriously alarmed, and sought the advice of
the most noted physician within reach. He
•aid that my frequent horseback riding hsd
Jolted and jarred me until the old ludhtn
wound, which had injured my kidneys, ha 1
beco i.e inflamed. He treated me with rmd
icinea and electricity also, but gave me no
permanent benefit. My painful sympto ns all
returned. I began to cough, got very thin
ami my legs were disagreeably numb. I l>e
gun to despair. At each attempt to cure, my
ailments became worse, with new symptoms.
I next consulted a celebrated physician from
the Last, who, after thumping and examin
ing nc, stated that I w’aa in an advanced
stage of consumption and threatened w ith
diabetes and paralysis! lie thought 1 might
possibly prolong ray life for a year or two, by
seeking a h gher and drier climate. This
was my condition when the people In your
part of the country last saw me.
Then I stirted for the Rockies* but liked
this country, and settled here. At first the
change helped me, but about three years a.<
the benefit ceased. Then I filled so rapidly
that I could be out of tied only part of etch
day. All my old symptoms returned. At
this crisis, a party of Eastern gentlemen,
ON A BUFFALO HUNT,
made my house their headquarters. In the
party "as a Dr. Wakefield, who informed me
th*t I had a b and case of incurable Bright's
Disease, and gave me a preparation which
might, he said, ease ine for a few weeks or
months, but tnat was the best that could lx
done. Around the bottle was a lie's a per.
Now a newspaper was a rarity in our h m \
and I sat in my chair looking it over when un
eye providentially fell upon an article reUtl g
a most wonderful cure of Bright’s disc.m
the very malady that was killing me—by the
n-e of Warner’s Safe Kidney and Liver t uiv,
(of Rochester, N. Y.). Convinced tlt t
further delay would be lata], and everything
else fa Hug, the next morning I dispatched one
of my Ijoys to the nearest r&llroid station,
nixiiy miles distant, to obt In a bottle of Un
safe ( are. The druggist said the demand fur
the (hire was so great he cou'.d not keep it \ \
stock, and he had to send to Kansas ( ity fur
more. It was more than a week before ft ar
rived, and 1 was daily getting weaker. But it
came at last, and I it once began to take it.
When I told Dr. Wakefield what I whs takiu :
he gave me a look, half of seoru, half of pity,
as much as to say :
* POOR FELLOW !
he Is putting his trust in a humbug.’ Never
theless I persevered, and for the past year
and a half 1 have been as stout and rugged
as I ever was in my lift*. After escaping the
attacks of India::* and half a dozen doctors,
I w’is lying at the mercy of a still mure
dreadful foe that was about giving me the
finishing blow, when that great remedy
sicp. ed iu, slew my adversary, and placed me
firmly un my feet once more. 1 have com
menced preaching again; fur I look upon the
circumstances .uni manner of my cure as a
direct interposition of Providence, and to
Providence are my services due. That is my
story. 1 think it is os good as a romance
ami much better, for it is true.”
Such is the substance, an l very nearly the
lnnguig'of Elder Kite’s narrative. Tioso
who re ul it, and re suffering, may benefit
by his experience, if they will follow his ex
ample.
PrvMATiK exports more butter than
tlie United States, although she lias not
more than one-twentieth as many cows
as we, and it coots twice as much to pro
duce butter there as here.
A Toothsome Morsel,
This from the Maditon (117,*.) Demo
rrnf, conveys its own moral:—Hold on!
Wo are cognizant of tbe fact that an
selling tooth was last Diglit cured by
the application of St, Jacobs Oil. The
young fellow got mad over his raging
tooth in the ball room, and rushed
straightway to a drug store where he
applied the good old German Remedy;
.n ten minutes the toothache had gone
—Mary Tripp had a longer experience
iti trousers than most women tlo when
they put them on. She wore them at
Abington, Mass., and in other New
England places, for seven years. She
lived with her husband part of the time,
but occasionally went away for remu
nerative employment. Her last venture
was in horse stealing, as a result of
which she is now in prison.— N.Y. Sun.
Ladies A shildren's boots & shoes can’t run
over if Lyon's Pat, Heel Stiffeners are used
—Among the latest bills paid by a
well-known club in New York was one
“for mending the leg of William Cullen
Bryant.” A statue of that gentleman
had met with an accident.
Pure cod-liver oil. front selected livers
on the sea shore by Caswell, Hazard A Cos.,
N. Y. Absolutely pure and sweet. Patients
who have once taken it prefer it to all oth
ers. Physicians declare it superior to all
other oils.
CnaprEP bands, f-c*. pimples and rough
ski) cured he U inc Juniper Tar Soap made
b> Caswell, Hazard A Cos., Sew York.
Th 7 man who drives the heaviest
wagon lias the best show on the road.
Everybody has to turn out fox him.
SxiwwT Men.‘‘Wells’Health Re c'
stores heal th cures dy apepsia.impotence sl.
“Wells’ Rough om Corks.” i!sc. Ask for
It. Complete cure. Corns, warts, bunions.
OW THIItT! nits Tin 41..
TheVoi.taic Bklt Cos., Marshall, Mich.,
will send Dr. Dye’s Celebrated Electro-
Voltaic Belts and Electric Appliances on
trial for thirty days to men (young and
old) who are afflicted with nervous debil
ity, lost vitality and kindred troubles,
guaranteeing speedy and complete renter
ation of health and manly vigor. Address
as above. N. B.—No risk is inc urred, as
thirty days' trial la allowed
Dot e cup. Advertisementin another columr
Xatlsfarlory Evidence.
J. W.O.hao, Whclea'a iiojglst, of A-iit'i
Tea , wiltsa : ”! have tiefn had- ling Lr IVi.i
Hall's Baoain (or the Lungs tor the peat year, and
have found It one o! the meat n table cu* dietnes i
have ever had la my houee tor Coughs. Colds ar
ev n Consumption, always giving entire oatisfa--
tlon. Please tend me one gross l>r tfsturdaj’.
■teamer.”
Hr. Urren’s Oxygenated Hillers
Is the oldest and treat reuiedv lor Dysyepele, Bll
llouanees, Malaria, Indigestion, all diaoidera of the
stomach, and all diseases Indicating an impnie
condition of the Blood, Kidneys, and Liver.
Durno't Catarrh Hnutl cures Catarrh and all af
fections of the mucous membrane.
mlremed'l
FOR PiLIISJ.
CURES .
Rheumatism. Neuralgia, Sciatica,
Lumbayo. Backiche, Headache. Toothache
More Throat. Mm el ftprnlni Bruiß,
linrn*. *••!**. *'•■•< llllen,
AM) ALL 4FTIIICR HOBILY TAIN* *M> Al HIM.
Roll Uj DruuuU ami !>••. -t e' • ry v*here f
DlrwUii in II
THK riIAKLRM A- \U‘.I ILK <•
Th-s-si—W, • 4 *'*.. I.IR * Oft-* d* wit l •■*>. Rif.,* S. A
lIOSTOTERV— * ■ .****?* r*
If w eutiiuTii ■IA rl " u kT
p |>|ia, 91 auffanag
tram l larrikla i
-hiY> i : ~jjk. kau*ti#n that Hall***
fft tha Murkl
1 if f 4; ••••, ih Uatimea*
_ STONIACH _ & f, .. . S. .11
ME B (Mb KJV iHB Drujr.l. >nd oul.es
o|TTE”‘
'PFAPRrDQ W A lirPm Borvarint.laa. Addrves
lilfluntinu W Ail IliliwithitA-uDfur applica
tion forin" and c-py of our “ Public School Journ !.’*
National Teachers Agency, Cincinnati. Ohio.
"TIT AN TKD rtaleeimn to Introduce anew hou**-
ii bold title la. rella like wlldflrp. i'icfita
ler**. J*irit dozen free on rifcelpt cf 12 cent* In
prate*-* stainpe
wesson MANUF G CO., Providence, R. I
HEALTH IS WEALTH !
I>b. E. C. Wnn* Sri** a r> Bkair T*katm*!t; a
RrvdM ifle for Hjr*t*>ri*, luzzitißM, Countlaionii, Nerrotu
liwftdAoh#, M*rtfl I)#pt<••4)011, i.ov of M*u:rr, l’rMU*-
lur Old A*e, censed fy ori -osesrMoo, which l*-ad-* to
aierj.dMj and death. Uu* trt wiii cur#
ch#**s K*ch bo* contain* on# mouth'd treatment. On
doll*! • bos or nix boxoe for flv# dot lira; #nt by mail
jot pud on receipt of pr jo#. SV> giuiroa<* nix bo*e# to
euro Any CM#. With each order received by us for <u
b re's, accompanied with flee do;Urn, we will tend the
purchaser our written giisrvnte* to return the money il
tho treatment rloei not affect • cure. <xußrant# js*u#d
nlr by <J. J. 1.1 II A. 4 liarle4on. ft. I . Orders
by mail protaptlj aueuded to.
EL A STIC TRESS
R&jtjg dHijJb Has • r*ddlfbrlMfrem al I otS*.*,
*;S ’*%Sj9IP l* enp*ii*js, w.ih B*lf-A3,oUITA
m* liaj lin cDtar, aJaptol telf u, all
■U SENSIBLE Mp* ‘ ot body, while the
Wy T 8 1... £g IfaJlia tbec#ppr#e baehf <
89H9 Jmjf lui*Ua#J[)9iaaap(rt inwotld
with the rte. At .h ii*fet
• prmert! th: jl :.iat* bald Mcsme
lafftod alfLt. r.u a radical cure crria'a. It is eaey, dambW
•Hnl wbeap. Scat L y mati. Circular* fm.
aaULESTOH TBLSB COm CMcago. XIL
CONSUMPTION.
I hare a poaitlre remedy for Lh# a bor* hr ft
an# thou aim 1 of rmeee of ti*e woret kind and of kgtv,
eCaikdinir haee been cured. Indeed, eo itr-mw la my faiti
In iU #lflo#cy, that I wifi Mnd TWO BirTTLES FHSK. t#
rether with a V ALCABLK TKRaTIHK on thle dieeaei. W
aar Ktflirtr Give Kr>m# and F O. addrw
PIL T. A. RLQCUM, Ul P#ftrl Bv . New Teck.
H CUBSS WHEgf ALL tlSf FAILS.
pi Best Cough Syrup Taste# gor-i
l ■ l >y
APCNTfi raooy Mlllag m
” "■ ■I O Medicine* N# capital reent -</
Standard Cars Ca., I7 P*-rl St., N. T.
is fOflP® r(3a y athomff Samples worth $6
9 J fl l/U tras. AiIdrtMSTUIBOM 4Go. Parti ansi. M
AS fUK Otm* far KyAlrmj ar Ftli f* 24 baora. Fr*
u nor Dl Kkil iu Aracaai SV..SC L*ul*. M
Ttiin Photos of Female Beauties. 1 Or. TlluttraUd
IVVU C4Uu.oaut 8 da. J DIE 1/ RJU
Rheumatism quickly cured; s*nd t*mp ter tre
prescription. It. K. iialpUauciina, W*jbing(on, P.C.
©A $3 ROiO FOR 60 Ots.
To introdiK e staple goods and *ho*
their quality. I'M send this elegant
Colo- platko. Hbavy Band
Ring on receipt of soc. aud address
oi to persons vou think wil Ibuy Ol
I'll send prepaid my Agent's Out 6<
( staple article*) ring included. prr*
errr J-, lor only ft. This being an honest offer to se ure future
patronage, act quick. J. D. MfS'RV. Bm it?. Buffalo. N V
This N.Y. Singer, S2O
With ss net of AttneTuoenta Ft ea
Wsmnui irf'i Light . urvntßg
llfticMK /Yup qeiet, hamlisome skc >inruble. Seat
■MI fII aa text trtel plan hm dastred
■SBI VV Reeds." I? >t*ps Vf£ i*aiOai Sul
_■,% X JOWn laas. octave eo'tirr, S knee aweils
Mir fsjfm wHA in steel and ft Boak.ordyt ’
f J (11 A!sa ea.t an t-i trial plan If de
er /t r SSMr rkiA *r—d nicjfetit naaa.
aS tuft*. 4uwLir maiff* tad oat. Ctr
< a onlar ith Tes\n,nl*ia.f'■*•- Arl
B *i’'i “Th*rd a* Ohlcag*
Or. LaFIEUS' FRENCH MOUSTACHE VIGOR
fa heap! no tlie rmooUMni? fare in 2©darter
L tty l money refunded. Never fi < S*-ot r*n receipt of SJc
F♦ yf Stamp* or silu-r: 3 \ mi„. "-r sl. ttt-wureof '-beep
JAL \ itniuliatiors ; none other Send !.rcircular.
ZXXkJk Addre-v T. W. SAX 1 . . Warsaw.lad. U.S. A.
STRONGS PECTORII PIUS.
A rBF. BEMEDI lK
COLDS AND RHEUMATISM!
Ensure healthy appetite, good I on. regular
ity of tbe bowels. A PRKCioi boon to dku( at*
fcm a lkb, soothing and hrjM'maf the nervous sys
tem and giving vigo;- and hoa!th to every fibre; <>f
the bod v. Hold by Kor Almanacs with
full particulars address C. K. Hi’ll A Cos.. Box
650. New York-
OiP WTa If AM i oi the Fast and Faataa
#*i ing Pictur;*: Books and Bib a*. Prices re
duced 13 par ceot. RaTioaa;. Pcai.tsHiaa Cos.. Atlacta,Ga
(TQOA WEEK iu tour own town. Term* and
jODII outfit free. Addr'i H k Oa.Portland. M *
combination of Pro-
m u,.r uir Of Iron, Frruvia n
W/tdf*/w*lMr*X k ttszssissrvz
REV. A< I. HQBSS W rites;— /■ • m ■■■■ a "7 BET •J. I*. TOWNER
After a thoro'ish trial of the / PURI r IE O T h
IRON TONIC, I take pleasure / TH£: / Industry, 111., says:-
in statin? that I have been fTy'X flB A I consider It
greatly benefited by its / Ul lllpßl/ft most excellent remedy foi
use. Ministers and Pub- / UM/ the debilitated vital force*.
of the greatest value
where a Tome is neces* gjfcaly JS 0 W t
sxry. I recommend it OUffr MM jt m m F M m FW M i
as a reliable remedial ~Jf#F W ' M J 'J #
agent, possessing un* 1 W W£ W ijr M J JM m i ## JIHI
doubted nutritive and w m m m ** m M w M M JJ w
properties. ¥W if M M m
touitrui*. Ktj., oa. 2, i-.y2. ujssj^sssJ|^2!22S2Ss2!Hss^Hl^H^sS^H^^^S^^s^Sf
ragjgf7B7 xa DB, HABTE& lirmr.rav. f.ft , mra cr gi yynif,
IP YOUR
WATCH
Has been ruined fcf iuoompeleot work*
men, or needs repairing, send H by • |
SeTp. Its™ WiJCH FACTORI"
where uuly skilled workmen and meti
improved machinery U employed. We
a- '“• ’tLW any pert U-at boa been 4m*
c T'l-* or w’-rn. Prices for repair! will be
' v u yon fiEFOBE the work i* com—
mencec. All work gna ran teed. Pet
vour iiAni* and sddrees in the peckaffe
.h the watoh. for our n.£(7t
"•HATKDCATAIX)GI!E AND PRICKS.
. V. STEVENS WATCH CO..
. anufseturers of stem-winding watchen.
actorv ard Office 84 Whitehall Ht*e
ITtAifTA, lift
"’".‘.Etstj Flute Ii
A Plenty Ot SctvJ#, 45 cU. |*cr <loz. Paper*
A Cl'* Mill. | lfl 00 to 935 00
A Wuu s . IU 00 to 150 ot
A Fruit l>r f, 40 60 o 800 00
A Stilky Plow. 47 50 to WOO
A Riding Cultivator, ft 50
A Walking Cultivator, BO 00
A Wheel florae Rake, BOOOto *SOO
A Screw Pulverizer I*s 00 to 110 00
A Fitrt-I Roller. ... 45 00 to T 5 00
A One Horse Harrow, 600 to 11 00
A Two 11. f* *l;.rr“W. 50 to MSO
A Mower A . aiMT.MrComuolßytf r 00 to 800 00
A Two IF *4t Turning Plow, * ? IB OB
A Oqb silornfl Turning Plow, 400 k 850
A HruiuAs vr Fargukoa Plow
~st .-k, 1 M
A Feetl Cftlter, 850 to 85 00
A ( otton Planter, 10 00 to 18 00
A l orn Planter, iOS to 18 00
A Crain Drill 81 ou to I*s 0B
A Cimml Churn. 640 to B 0 00
A Spring Tooth Sulkey, Har
row an*i S taler oouabinetl, 71 00
A Farm Bell, 500 to B 0 00
A u<t we have them for you. All warranted.
5 |„*r cent, discount for with order.
Jones' or HeriongV CoMon se<l at 52 50 per bu.
—PI. AAT BRF.TS.—
We have a large Stock, and will sell vhrap tr.
*tart Uh* hall. IWt;<-r for Cattle than Tornlp*.
ami |.eial!y good for Milch fa>vra.
Blood Turnija Becta, per pound. 0c
Long Blood. Boot, ~ M
lamg Bed Mangold Worzel, - ***
Bound Ololie, ‘ ’ ” - {#•
tlnhleu Giulia, ** ** r
I tKKlirx mKF.TH I.OW T*
lamg Orange Itftnf, - • “ “
ellow Herjniin, uo . w
Four Pounds will plant so ace*.
Tomatoes itre F.icellent iff Ctw
Also
wof a pound will plant a good patch,. •
U of a pound Rattlesnake Watermellon seed**
•Mf-Add 16cts. jer lb. if to go bv
Send for I’ric© Iml of Field Seeds.
Mark W. Johnson A Cos.
27 Marietta Street, ATLANTA, CAi
m rr aa U Mfkß!n|; kOfl fDta.
SiM' * N Convulsions, St. Vitus
CURES AND " Itance. AleoAoliMo.
Opium
rjj y. vnusdebitttyjKforaiß
U>X*l Al -a and all Nervoos nd
_ J+g* HlGod diaeMfps. To
- |( require ft nerve
k _ NCYCR FAILS. tonic, appetsaer or
Üb, M 0 etiniuiant. Waniarltfta
ValTCk vrf N SN,T--ine-, Invaluably
''ILM V i MM^Thnunaoßsproclaim 11
■ W w ( j„. nuwt wonderful l-
MKllil*";. 1 “ !“ le I‘rv.l'rietora. Bt. Juaegh. B_
ter 0N r 7 the invalid'* boon and nurae’# d#lht
Iwooanß# Ti! GIVEN FREE in DH^'fXmfß
Hkai.tii Monthly to thf**c acodln*
tu ygggmgggf M onlv •* letter rtemps for 3 monjo#
i £ v> tn.il nabscriptioo The I KWH CUT
O ;n **urrfl uorurmteiy one drachm and
>• £ ° prevents nneteke# . the e*rk - #cr#w
< a. prevent# lirmkmK cork# ;oid knife
> f 5 f,],.##. th* Henltft Monthly prevents
mj ' *• hnfimn 111#. Addr### M. J*ill Pi'ft.
< x CO.. Box New vwk City.
I <■! !' r. IBEV HFNRT C. lihVDKR
/\ Those wishing f mako
Ml I 1/ money in
eon COTTON FUTURES
VC U ran get fall inforninllon
himl rirrnlan mnilesl free on
(B |plienflon to
V JU LOUIS C. FREY Sl TO. t
COMMISSION HftoKSOII,
51 OvJ Keener Block, NEW ORLEANS LA.
a a toiemai. fi<iaiaaa. v.ouaga,
a/• U, N J W nta far Ca*alega.
OPIUM HABIT~
AND DRUNKENNESS.
J'osltivelv speedily and permanently cured hr
iK KEELriV'H GOLD REMEDIKh, containing
no forri' of Opium. Truth Invites Investigation.
Keferenc*s Im*i n the State. For terms, pampb
.et aud proofs, add rose, with three cent atanip,
W. €. BELLAMY, M. D.,
-2 Hrowtl Wt., Allwnlft. fjq,
KEYSOLi>S 9 IKON WOItKS.
k />. A. MIL I.A \K, Manager.
P.O. Bo* IC9O, - - NEW ORLEANS. LA.
M* r Cal-!'-*t**l riatf-rm COTTON
PRESSES. JUwd .1 11 *>r *• P.-rr; STF.AM
km; in I.'. - . \V. MILLS, \ ACII M TANS, Steamboat,
if. 0.l M*nv Patrat I>r*.t|t*h' , at Work. Lormnotioa
and Rai: v il Car Ir. n W.wk a F|Ofiallr. Snildinf I rcata,
I 'olumti*. K> Machine Wnrk ia jr-a
rral. G. C. Tii* i*tet ELK' A TORS foralorr*. Order*
: t-d •• ! Mi.d- t., (he Maaaror.
ADD TO
Club* ofTers the surest means ■>! making regular monthly
nmfltit iromlDvestmenfaofllOtotluuOor more dealing In
BRAIN. PROVISIONS A STOCKS
member getstlte bene fit of combined capital of the
Club He porta sent weekly. Dividends paid monthly.
ClnblS |taid shandtoldera Iwirk their money tn protv, (■
past three months, still leaving original amount making
money in Club, or returned on demand. Hliares, fiocacti.
Explanatory el mi la r sent free. Heliablecorreaprindcnt*
warned wcrywhcie Add re** IL E. hiMuak Cos..
Com'ii Met* f- r- ira ia Sail** III.
. TvmJ. caot Uul ivulkaa
A~rt-ii£ •** am 3S
tirvJ— 9-y WA jAAjtal WA
Xa ctva a uUL a—A lal %aeai|
Xm SSAJJ^AAtUf
/LvctrV.
SPRATLING COTTON PLANTER
AND
GUANO DISTRIBUTOR.
The cheapest and
\ best. Opens fnrrow,
I distributes guano,
/ / drops cotton seed,
CUmM corn. peas, etc., at any
>f!SiNS^^SS k distance, tn any num
itr-iT her. Covers at same
time. Price. fin.OD.
Agents wanted everywhere. For full particulars
address.
W. C. SMITH Sl CO.*
’ubbphers' UnieD, Atlsnta, Ga Fee**.—g3
MILL and PACTOEY SUPPLISB
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