The Jesup sentinel. (Jesup, Ga.) 1876-19??, October 03, 1877, Image 4

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Vanity* Tlie fun comes ttj* and Ib© *on goes down, ana ihe Jy ami night are th *a ■* ■ on© wur grows gr en and the veer ilvas brown, And what is it all, when a I ( done ? (Jra n< f somber or shining sand, j'iiditij: in*o or out of the hand. And men jo down in ships to the sran, And a hundnd >hip are the same as one ; And back ward and Toward blows the brec7f% A ml * hat is it all, when all if done ? A tii- with never a shore in Bight, Setting Me id ly on to the night. 'I he fihci dpoppeth Ida net in the atiearn, an i a handne t a reams are the same as on#*, And <k in :iien d.wjmeth her love-.it dream, a nd what i>* it all, when ail is done ? The tie’ of th * fisher the burden hiwika. .1 ud always dreaming the dreamer wakes ACiIMCrLTI THAI/. Every amateur gardener knows what .lamajres are dune to potted plants and (lowers hv worms finding their way into tie mold. The Journal d’ Agriculture pratique states that these can always i>o got rid of by using fur the plants water to which a tenth part of grated horse chestnut has bean added. Under this treatment the worms must either fly or die. Farming for profit. Not for large crops, nor for notable appearances, but to sup port the family and accumulate a surplus for old age. laet the premium idea wl crops disappear then, and destroy much of the romance which comes from literary agriculture; the true premium crop is the profitable one; the true romance Is the comforts which attend prosperous results.— Scientific Farmer. In the Miallaa. Several cardboard boxes bearing ('ana dian post-marks have been found to c-iii ttin living Colorado beetles, which were destroyed according to instructions from the postmaster general. it has been ordered by the department that all such packages in future shall I be Klrictly examined when possible, and burned if found to contain the Doryphora Jrrem lineata, in order to prevent the introduc tion of this terrible insect into this country through tho post.— hm<Um Farmer. Crimson Clotcr. This ]lant, as forage for stock, is equal to red clover. 1 am informed by a jiVominent farmer of Halifax county that it flouri-thed finely even oo light sandy soils. It is sown in August or early in (September, on ground prepared as for turnips. It furnishes fine grazing during winter for pigs, cattle, sheep and horses, and may, with a favorable spring, be cut as early as the 15th of April, ft can be cleared from the land in time for other crops, ami the hay comes at a time when greatest needed, generally, by our farmers. The only objection yet found to it is that it is an annual. This grass being so tenacious of life, ail of such vigorous growth, it is regarded among the cotton planter of Mecklenburg county as a great pest, llut its immense yield, its rapid growth, its nutritious qualities, its endurance against effects of heatorculd, its ability to grow and increase ami strengthen even on the poorest soils, makes it of great value to the slock growers. It was in troduced into Mecklenburg twentydive or thirty year- ago, and, for reasons stated above, it soon became unpopular with the cotton planters and no effort was made to extend it. A specimen ol it, said t) have grown on medium laud, is now on exhibition at this office, which is nine feet four incites high. Report Xnrth Carolina Dept. of A'jricutturf, I In* Tlnn* t IV I Kom's. It, lias now passed into an axiom that roses need feeding. The more food the richer the colors, the huger the size, the more solid the texture, and, more marvelous still, the sweeter fra grance the rose. Tills is not according to the ancient cultivators, who not seldom starved their roses into puninoss for lack <d head, and could hardly have borne the sight and smell of any kind of manure within view of their sweet roses. Hut a'l that is altered now, and to the ex tteme. Many rose lieds or borders are more like a heap of compost or manure tmn soil of auy kind. They arc soft, r .oh, juicy, savory; in fact, the richness ot the root runs of roses is not seldom n drawback to the fuller enjoyment of the fragrance of the flowers One can hardly g H near to admire or gather them with out being brought up sharp with the string and disagreeable odor of rank dung. This arises, no doubt, at times from manuring to excess ; ofttimes proba b y from manuring at thr wrong time. Ami thin leaJs u< to our |K>int —the bent time to manure rosea. Many manure Ux> late. They stem to fanev that when the * rain is heavier! on rores or other (ilants t hat it the time to arMit them with rtimu l.mt-* No doubt, could the rtimulantr o ilv get at them, but it taker a long while for rolid drerringr at the rixitr to reach rore-leaves ami tlowerr. Even liquid manure, which we are accustomed tj speak and write of as if almost acted at once, takes davr, weekr, it may l<e month#, t reach the placer where it ir mist netded in our rose trees; while a# tor solids, they have to undergo no one knows how many processes of comm inn turn and chemical decomposition, and lierliapr recomposition, before one parti cle of their strength can go to support the rose either in its etlbrts at growing or flowering. Hence the bet time to ntx nure roses is, probably, November. M inds, rain*, frosts, snows, sunshine and s lowers, heat and cold, and all those ruh- tl - atmospheric forces--many of them p ‘tent in the ratio of their subtlety; pre ...re the manure for the plants and as ► the roots to absorb it. The roots, too, are a!*) abnormally active during win ter. They 1,, ver cease absorbing unless frozen, and then during the winter and early spring the manure may be turned i t or out, or t-issed about, in any wav best suited for the roses, without creating muc'l or any nuisance.— Jjon<]„n Farmer. .applyms Hess Oust. The amount of bones or phosphate to Is- applied to wheat will depend on the condition of the land. II in good heart or fair condition, 150 to 250 pounds to the acre will give good results. If the land is only fair, Use 250 to 300 pounds to the acre, and, If the land is so poor that you fear young grass will not make a good catch, then apply 300 to 400 pounds to the sere. The above amounts are for the ground raw bone and the hist class of phosphates. If the bone is cesrse or the phosphate poor, then much larger amount# mttst be used to obtain the same results. We get a fine, pure, clean raw'bone fertilizer here that is all we can ask or desire. We get the best results from this bone by dulling in with the seed, for a smul! application. But if you want to make a heavy application, of say about 300 pounds, we drill a portion of the bone dust separate, and then go over the same way fishing with the bone and wheat mixed in the drill together. We used to get phosphates in the east which were made of bones, but now some of them seem to have very little bone in them. We value them more for a quick start of the Crop; but when we want a fertilizer that will give good present, and at the same time long continued, results, we want either bone or else a phosphate that is made outoi hone. In our former discussions here over our experience in Using fertilizers, we have settled down to about this conclusion, that the farmer who is settled on his own land had better use the best raw material he can get to put into his land, and let the elements in his land do the manufacturing of his phosphate or superphosphate, as you pre fer to call it. In conclusion I would say to my brother farmers—buy good goods only, and there will be less disappointment. My observation is that the fertilizers which are sold at the lowest prices per ton, are in fact the poorest bargain. For my part 1 do not want to encourage adulteration in fertilizers by buying ar ticles which are offered at less price than pure, houest goods can be furnished at. We had better buy a little or what we really need than large* amounts of some thing our land or crops can not use. I should have said that if bone is applied broadcast it should be sown on tho rough land before harrowing, so when harrowed the bone would be as deep in the soil as possible. If sown after first harrowing, the effect would be to push the grass inoro than the wheat. — Cor. Practical Farmer. < nlllt IIIIIIK Sum 11 I’lirilli. The American Farmer for August con tains an admirable address by Judge Fullerton before the Piedmont agricult ural society on Virginia farming, from which we cop The necessary steps toward an improved husbandry in tli istate are: 1. To cultivate less land. 2. To make that which is cultivated rich in plant food, so that it may pro duce large r tops. .'i. 'The practice of a rigid a—tpn of rotation of crops, and mixed fe >■ I The cultivation of grasses a.. iess of the cereals, and feeding upon the farm the most of its products. 5. liaising clover and [enriching the land by turning under green crops. 1 speak earnestly and sincerely when I say that I believe that the faithfu practice of such a system oi tillage would in ten years increase the value of real estate in Virginia 100 per cent, and place the farming population in an independent condition. There is nothing new in these suggestions. They are the same old,old story, oft repeated and often dis regarded. They, nevertheless, employ the true policy lor tillage, and the time will come when they will he universally adot ted. The advantage in small farms can scarcely ha overestimated. France is an eminent example of this, and she is to day the wonder of the world. With a territory not equal to one-fifteenth ot our states, and but little greater than Texas, she raises nearly double the wheat pro duced in the United States, and besides supporting a population of nearly forty millions, her exports the last year ix ceeded our own. This arises out of the fact that her farms average less than sixty acres, and are made to produce to the lull extent ol their capacity. The tanner who finds in his own garners that which is needed to supply his daily wants is far removed from the vexations and losses attendant upon outside pur chases which ro severely tax his means. It is not unfrequently the case, when he produces hut a single article for the market, that it commands a price which hut (SKtrlv compensates him for his laKir, while he lues to pay exhorhitant prices for that which he is compelled to pur chase. This is “ selling the hide for a penny, aud buying hack the tail f..r a shilling,” which surely is not a profitable transaction. There can lie no rational or successful rotation of creq*, unless grass, including clover ;and for all present purposes 1 shall treat clover as one of the grasses) holds a conspicuous place. The great need of Virginia, to day, is grass. It is the great source of the world's wealth. 1 do not overrate its value as estimated at the present, or in ancient times. Importance of Aarlcnlllirat Knott 1 A recent writer ou agriculture has said. “ What literattire has done for theology, for astronomy, for all the sciences that elevate and adorn humani ty, she is ready to do for agriculture— the art of arts—to which we owe all the comforts of civilized life.’’ And yet. wiiat a prjudice still exists in the minds of some in regard to what they are pleas ed to term “book farming.” and why is it ? Can any person tell ? To bear- rayed against knowledge, progress and the light 'of the ninteenth century. For, to-day, the chemist over his cruci bles, the scholar in his study, and the experimenter in the field, are walking hand in hand together, searching for the hidden truth, that the scientific result may be obtained i Change is one of the tendencies of this age. Even educational systems are changing. Our literature is becoming more agricultural in its character. The highest talent is rushing to the aid of the once despised science. Ho that farmers who do not wish to lie left in the rear— far in the rear—must devote their spare moments to comparing their experience with that of others given in agricultural books and papers. When the young child, growing up and learning to read, v.itl add to his knowledge, and his father’s, the experi ence of others, he will be much (letter prepared for the great work of life. We ri! still groping in the dark , but the tints of light may be seen in the far cast—soon they will burst over us in all their splendor and beauty. Is it too much to believe that tho time will cenie, and that ere long, when every process on the farm will lie conducted with the same certainty of result which belongs to tho other sciences? We are no prophet, but we watch and wait. iliililanga- < M ! 11l rc. A correspondent of one of the leading agricultural exchanges says: There is something to know about grow ing cabbage for market a profit, followed by a crop for household use. The cut ting of a cabbage from its stem is an item that every grower should fully under stand. Cutting it at tho lowermost leaves is wrong, because when cut so low the stem seldom sprout much afterward, whereas, when they are cut up as high and far as can lie done without injury to the head, and as many of the leaves arc le t as possible, there are soon many side heads emitted from the stems, and each of these Ultimately becomes as useful in the kitchen, or for pickling, as the first heads. This course of cutting may be pursued any time from May to Septem ber in our northern middle sections, and all the year round south of St. Louis. A deep, ticli and mellow soil is needed. Then we should use largely of salt and gypsum or land plaster. There is no question, that salt, away from the sea shore, is one ot the best specific manures ia the whole list. The application of salt and gypsum should be made on land of moderate richness, in the furrow or line where the cabbages are to he grow when the plowing or digging just before planting is made. Even insects can be at once and readily destroyed by drop ping as much salt as would form a large sized pea on the bead when it is in moist. This salting, but mingled with plaster, should be given again after the first or early head is cut away. It may happen in applying the salt, or salt and plaster, that now and then a plant has been omitted by carelessness, or thinking of s i.ietliing else, or someone talking to i-.o workman. Such being the case, go over again with the salt, and do what was first neglected. t'nrni anil Iloimeholif. Ivy poison can he cured by making a paste ot tlio yelk of one egg boiled hard with a tablespoon of good, fresh butter, not salted. Apply to tho parts affected A few puffs from a cigar or pipe, or a smoking lamp, will scent all the milk in the room. What then must he the ellect ol keeping milk in a room where the air is constantly saturated with foul vapors. Pictu.un Onions.- -Use non# butsmall I onions; peel; drop into cold water to prevent changing color, then drain and Isiil them for five minutes in equal parts of milk and water; drain and cover with hot vinegar, seasoned with red peper and white ginger root only. Custard Cake.--Two cups of pow dered susar, one-half cup of sweet milk, six tablespoonfuls of melted butter, one teaspoontul of baking-powder, two and one half cups of flour; bake as for jellv eake, and when cool add lh - following: Custard—One pint of milk, three eggs sugar and flavor to suit the taste, and prepare as for boiled custard. Nritsi'KY \rn.E-PpnPiNH. Orate some stale bread into a buttered dish, strew upou it a layer of sliced or chopped apples sprinkled with sugar, alternate crumbs, apples and sugar until the dish is full; then cover with crumbs and small pieces ol butter, moisten with a little milk, put in the oven, and hake a light brown. Chili f'AUCE,—HaIf a peck of ripe tomatoes, six large onions, and four red peppers chopped together. Add two cups of sugar, four of vinegar, a table spoonful each of salt and ground mustard, and two teaspoon in la each of cinnamon, allspice, ginger, nutmeg and cloves. Boil tor an hour, strain through a coarse \ sieve and bottle for use. Lemon l’rdpi no.—Take six eggs, i beat them well; boil half a pint of milk : j let it cool; hut before it cools put into i it two ounces of fresh butter; when it is perfectly cold, mix it with the eggs: i then add two tablespoonfuls of sifted white sugar, and the juice of a lemcn ! Line the dish with puff paste, and pour in your pudding. Hake it in rather a quick oven for half an hour, tserve hot. Apple Bread.—A very light, pleasant and healthy bread is made in Franee by a mixture of apples and dour in the pro portion of one-thirtl apple-pulp to two thirds flour. The usual quantity ot veasl is beaten with flour and the warm pulp of the apples, salt and a little water. If the apples are sour, a little sugar may be added before putting in the flour. It requires rather longer time to rbe than ordinary bread, and should be eaten fresh. ToMATo’FiGB.~The sidSU varieties of tomatoes are the best for making figs. Make a syrup as for preserving. Crop in the toruatoee, a few at a lime, and boil a lew moments, skiin out and lay on plates to partial! r dry in your tin oven, or in a cool bailing oven. I*t the syrup boil down a littie, or add more sttg to it and then put in more tomatoes. A few cloves, cinnarrton root or lemon nliced may be used as fiaVofirig in the syrup if liked. When the figs are partly dried, pack in tumblersorjars, sprinkling sugar plentifully between the layers. Cover with paper smeared with white of egg and keep in a dry place. It ih a foolish plan to be seeking the liesl method for putting down eggs.” This used to be deemed one of the first tests of thrifty housekeeping—the num ber of eggs put down for winter use. But a much better way is to have your eggs fiesh the year round. If hens have enough to eat’and of the right material, they will lay in winter as well as sum mer. Farmers always expect to feed some giain to the fowls. Then, if they would save all the waste meat that accumulates in the fall, to feed the hens in winter, they would be repaid, in fresh eggs. This makes good work for the boys, in saving such refuse in some out building, to chop up and use when needed. Chinese Lotteries. We gave the facts a few days ago that a Chinaman had drawn $2,000 in a Chinese lottery, on an investment of one bit. Every town on the coast has a branch of this or some other scheme, and it is kept constantly running, with drawings made every night at ten o’clock. The mo dus operandi is as follows; A peice of pa per is marked off into 100 squares and numbered from 1 to 100. The person “ bucking ” at the game has the privilege of putting down any sum of money he chooses —the prize being governed by the amount put down. Then you have the privilege of marking ten of the num bers. A duplicate copy is given you, and the original is kept by the agent. When ten o,clock arrives one hundred numbers are put into a jug, and ten drawn out. 11 three of them correspond with the numbers you marked on your ticket, you get your money back; it four are drawn, your money is increased fifty per centum; live, double, and so on, and if ten are drawn you have a bonanza indeed. One gentleman in California on a four-bit investment drew $5,000. fie was told if he had put $5 down he would have broken the bank; so great would have been his winings. Many Chinese and not a few whites invest in it, but somehow a prize strikes about as often as lightning does. —Reno ( Ncv ) Journal. Thiers ami the Three Empires. It was said by the opponents of Thiers that he glorified the first empire, created the second and prepared the third. This relation to those sources of opinion from \ Mich the empire derived strength was real, and his accession to the republic was a value there. Aside from those city populations, who are republicans by the necessary impulses of intelligent vitality, all classes of French men have their apprehensions excited by the very name of the republic, and these apprehensions refer to the experiences the natron on great occasions. Gambet ta, pictured by his opponents as a Robes pierre, Marat and Panton all in one alarms and disturbs the equanimity of the would-be peaceful bourgeoise, but the fact of Thiers’ association with the apprehended radical calmed men’s minds. —X. Y. Herald. V Curious Use for tin* .Magnet. A curious instance of the utility of the magnet is mentioned in the Adelaide Register of June 14th. A young lady sat down on a settee on which a needle had been earless!y left. It pierced her thigh and totally disappeared in the flesh. Medical men said it could only be reached by a large incision, and concluded to leave it to time in the hope that it might work itself out. The pain, how ever, became so severe that the young lady was confined to her lied. So a mag net was suggested, and a powerful one being procured and applied, in four hours tho needle reached thesurface, raised and protruded itself through the skiu, and was instantly extracted. It had been in the flesh three weeks. Wn.HOFT’B Fever and aufe Tonic —This medicine is used by construction com panies for the benefit of their employes, when eugaged in malarial districts. The highest testimonials have been given hv ton tr.u-lors and by the presidents of some of the leading railroads in the South and West. When men are congregated in large numbers iu the neighborhood of swamps and rivers, Wilhoft’s Tonic will prove a valuable addi tion to the stock of medicines,and will amply reward ihe company iu the saving of time, labor and money. We teeommeti*i it to all. G. R. Finlay A Co.,Proprietors,New Orleans. For sale by all Drcgoists. After an experience of over twenty five vesrs, manv leadiug physicians acknowl edge that tne Oraefenberg Marshall's Uterine Catholieon is the only known certain remedy for diseases to which women are subject The Graf/rnbera IVgefmVi* Pills, the most popular remedy of the day for biliousness, headache, liver complaint and diseases of digestion. Slid by all druggists. Send for almanac. Graefeuherg Cos„ New Tork. WiTHOtT pretending to say it will “ minister to s mind diseased, or plnck out rooted sorrow," etc., we do aver that the prudent use of Home S*tomaoh Ritteks : will promote health and longevity. Prepared by the Home Ritters Cos., bt. I-oui-. Mo. Oellriuus l oukerj. The lightest, sweetest,most wholesome and delicious Ytenna rolls, tea biscuits, bread, muffins, flanne! cakes, crullers, and all arti cles prepared from flour, are always possible ,to everv table oy using lksU-KY's east Powder. This celebrated Raking Powder has stood the critical test of the best house keepers aad consuming public generally of America for twenty years. It is absolutely pure and always of uniform s'reugih. Tne genuine is put up in cans. Most ail good j grocers sell it. The SlUdinrllos ol'lhe Bile The ijJis4rection of the bile, a cooseqenee which ensues *hen the liver is inactive and the bowels torpid, produces* number of bod ;| T evils The blood becomes contaminated with the bilious fluid, causine the skin and the whites of the eyes to assume a yellowish tinze • dyspepsia and nausea superveDC, the *” g 4’ e becomes furred, the breath foetid, „„ -.sins in the side and between the t J' f*' vfu.ies -he urine is high colored and shoulaer blades... , avate j cases, jaundice sealdine, and in a£,- , ]iver ensue. All and inflammation of the .^ vent „ d or ob . these consequences may be Pa. Bitters, riiied by using Uqstettei s Stoat*.- ulates a vegetal'!# alterative tonic whichstm. be inactive lit B> e*ert itself in and directing the bJI-- the bowels and removes evei, - r * ce OI gestibfl. D. W. Hatch & Cos.: I h* ve sold your Universal Cough Syrup nearly three Tears. ] t gives goo<! satisfaction, and i lia\e no hesitation in recommending it as equal, it not superior, to other remedies of its class. Yours truly, A. VV, B LLLOGK, M. I . p S _t have sold more Universal Cougn Syrup than any other tough Grasshoppers, potato tram F ß and traveling agents are the farmers cui.; The last can be avoided by buying direct. Five Ton Wagon Scales are sold at SSO each. On trial, freight prepaid, by Jones, of Bing hamton, Binghamton, y. Y. < HieoM4 COXaTIPATIOS is not cured by simply unloading the bowels. The ine.icine must possess tonic, alterative and cor rective properties. These qualities are combined in Dr. run’s pills, and they will permanently cure this serious disease. 18 Murray Stteet, N. 1. MARKET UMJ’ORTS. MEMPHIS. Flour $5 SO a 8 00 Wheat. 75 a 105 Corn 00 a 02 Oats 40 a 4o Lard JO a 11 Bacon —Clear Sides 9ja Hay—Best 17 00 a 20 00 Whisky—Common 85 a 4 00 Robertson county 1 75 a 3 00 Bourbon 5 00 a 5 50 Lincoln county 1 75 a 3 00 Highwines 1 13 a 1 15 Cotton Ordinary a 9.| Good Ordinary a 10| Low Middling A 10£ ST. I.OUIN. Flour $6 75 a 8 50 Wheat 1 141a 1 17J Corn 41 fa Oats. 26 a 26f Mess Pork 13 00 al3 12* Lard B}a Whisky 1 09 a Cotton—Middling a 10J 1.0115V11.1.K. Flour $4 60 a 8 50 Wheat—Red am! Amb’r. 1 23 a 1 35 Corn—Sacked 46 a 50 Oats 29 a 31 Hay—Timothy 9 00 al 2 00 Pork—Mess 13 25 a!3 50 Lard 10 a 10 J Bacon—Clear Sides Of a 9 KKW Orleans. Flour $4 75 a 7 37 k Corn 60 a 70 Oats 40 a 42 (lay 14 00 aid 00 Pork 14 00 a Sugar 7fa 9£ Molasses 45 a 60 Whisky 1 071a 1 10 Cotton a 11 PROF. BEDFORD’S LETTER SHOWING SUPERIORITY 0 r THIS ARTICLE OVER ALL OTHERS. FOR SOAP MAKING.SENT TREE OYMAIL ON APPLICATION TO H.M.ANTHONY 104 RFADF ST N r WYORK. THE GOOD OLD STAND-BY MEXICAN MUSTANG LINIMENT FOR MAN AND BEAST. Ks'ablished ;n years. Always cures. Always ready. Always handv. Has never yet failed. Thirty million hare tented it. Tne whole world approves the glorious old Mustang—the Host and Cheapest Liniment in existence, 2h rents a bottle. The MiistHiigLininient cure-* when nothing “lsr will. __ NATURE'S REMEDY. 'V. VEGETIKE> The Great Blood ?mnzn.jr .4 sovncK or anr at a \ mi tt. Boston, Mass., June *, 1872. My daughter has received great benefit item the U'e of VKCKTINK. Her declining health was a source of great anxiety to all her friends. A few bottles of the Vfgetink restored her health, strength and appetite. N. H . TILDF.N, Insurance and Heal Estate Agent, No. 40 Sears Building, Veaetine is Sold by Ah Druggists. SiINBAL-WOOD A pws'ttve remedy for nil dis^as^sof the Kidneys Bladder and Urinary Orjrans; aUo ffood in Dropsical Complaints. It never produces sickness, is certain and speedy in its action. It is fast superseding every other remedy, capsules cur* in ix or eieht days. No other medicine can do this. Beware of imitations, for. owing to its great uc cess, many have been offere 1 : some are most dan gerous. causing piles, etc. Ottntlas. iAirk A' Co'tt. Genuine Soft Capsules contains Oil of Sandalwood. Sold at all drug stores. Ask for circular, or send for one to and 37 " ooster street. New York. SI.OO SI.OO Osgood’s Heliotype Engravings. The choicest household ornaments. Price One l>ollar each. Send for catalogue • JAMES R. OSGOOD & CO. BOSTON. MASS. SI.OO SI.OO I 111 l MORPHINE HABIT #fwdiiy ft K MIS DJI cured by Dr. Beck's only ■ ■ I [ f known ami sure Kemeriv. BVITI XO CHARGE for treatment until cured. Call on or iddree* OR. J. C. BECK, aWttßpwl CgCOOiTLQ \ I'. S. NchiMil A < ollese nirrrlorv l*r 1^77. .v’. p.tecs with map- vni illustratedcircuUr* -f all leading sch xM* .• inhined ix ihi-* one prbJiciti >n. c mpiled ex or- ssly for thx>se lia\ ing chiidreu t* ed ucate K * hies parents to select sch- <!s r*r their . luidien w ni: it tr ub r f\j u-r tit .< . T U !T>\\ * R ill BIS' K N EY. rin Su| ' - JO I ~ ’ HEADACHE. I>R. C. U KI N SON 'S f I t HO V > l>( II VMG vf j | f' |*||,t.u are prep r : etpressl? o cute SICK IIK % 1> hi SHMh- Villi'- S*'J’T- 4 HKiDAtll). Ml Hl-1%. SI'HI Ol S\l SS. SI.KF.PI.USS S l.ss :im<l niiDureNß* rae. Oflire iif€ N. I ninii St . K:i‘tinoie. *fi Nrefree. *>y .tli drusci-Uaiid rouuirt store*. O H I iionard Btmk.K-J --t i more- Tld. \? on; sam Aets w anted K, M. GALI SllA.Jerich. . Vt. fIOBD’S EXTRACT. POSD’S EITBACT. The Peopled Remedy. The Universal Pain Extractor. Note: Ask for Pond’s Extract. Take no Other. “Hear, for I will speak of excellent thine#.” nnv-ws VXTRACT-The great V eeetable prompt curifive vi.; *^ EN*. 01 No' fami l s’ can afford to He with- VIIU.U. “lev" al- Ooimirtf’ona, ‘ ''ted.!! application. Promptly -"“instantly by -.ns, Scalds. Excoria in. naln* of t>n *orei Boils, Felon**, r die' es WT* nation, reduces swell tion. Chau. o, *Yin(l;mu discoloration and SrfeMfSk, ' "mages the it. u:2* htjst friend. ’ -a, pa!* - to which they ..f- c f notably fullness and pressure .y ttft an venifsl etc. It promptly am-lio, '•Vjßt.'J* . nently heals all kinds of inflanuna.Hww and . , JfjfJi li'it'no'i ns or PII/ES find In this the only !,F lfn. ‘“!'ter‘d' r and ultimate cure. No case, how ever chronic or obstinate can long resist Its regn '•Wi-'oSE VETSS. ft Is the only snre cure, lilEed 1 r fifmcdlcs fanlfto arrest Weeding .T-nr nose, Mtninacli* lons*, and cl?cw an d ataSSe relieved ihd 9ftcn wlth H jr® ll *tSVfeftora of commendation from KrrsSfßffe’-* ron ET : “r “ f E f ftemSret'Sorenl-a*, ’ionderfuliy improving the Com breeder, n > I ' t ,-/ ]ea rij n e Livery Ftftltlcfl, Street ptlroads la Jew Yor g City. }'VH^nrßi n e C edbig£ r^c^onK I l.aceratlons, nu Ita ranK e of action Is rhop.i, hiilb .. . ’r f .affords is so prompt that Jtls and Krawanl as Well as in every ! l"anii U house Let It be tided once and you will ;!“^r^";er,^U.|useiiUoU lerprep 1 erprep— V.s,ys'eia h „s. a and in™ this country find Europe. ¥T n r pond’s Extract, in 11 ISTOIf Yan F f re e on application to ..n'sil'-'W EXTHAET COJIPANV, W Haider Lane Sow 1 ork. mm— A Special Offer TO THE READERS " OP THIS PAPER. A Genuine Bwlss MagnetlcTlme- Keeper, a perfect (Jem for everybody desiring a reliable Time-Piece, and also a superior Com pass. usual watch size, eteel works, glass cr/etal, all ! n n superb Oroide Hunting-Vase, warranted to denote correct time, end keep in order for two years— Perfection guaranteed—will be Given away to every patron of thi paper as a Free Gift. Cut out this Coufow and Mail if. COUPON. On receipt of this Coupon and 50 cents to pay for packing, boxing and mailing charges, we promise to send each patron of this paper a Genuine Swiss Maonetic Time-Keeper. Ad-lreaa, Magnetic Watch Cos., 1 ASHI.ANI), MAB3. Thin i your ONLY OPPORTUNITY to ob tain this beautiful premium, poorder AT ONCE- This offer will hold good for 30 days. If currency cannot be sent conveniently, post age stamps will be taken instead. f ESTABI. S R l-.’CC! /84'&. Straub Mull company's fijr A A' C INC INNA Tl W.VS N7/U/NG MACHINERY Sr. MILLERS SUPPLIES. YTONR&MWA- CINCINNATI. GRACE’S Salve! A 4 tJlihT Kill; I*KI I'Ak VtION, Inv* n ted in the ITtli century by Dr.M illiam Grace Surgeon in King James’army. Through its agency lie cured thousands of the most serious sores and wounds lli.it bafiled tie skill of the most eminent physicians of his day, and was regarded by all who Knew him as a public benefactor. l£ii cents a box. For sa'e by all Druggist- generally. Sent bv mail on in reieip of price. Prepared by SETH W. FOB'LE •V SO VS. *< Harrison Avenue, Boston, Mass. Eg GLOVE-FI VT'FJCIa m CORSETS 0 The Friends of this ItSI vailed corset are now numbered by IW MILLIONS. E 2 W&M \\ /'/ ////Prices are much reduced fall H \yW\ medal RECEIVED Em \ AT CENTEN NIAL. ltd EH \ '/f Get the-Genuine. and Wl p| 'Kbeware of fmnations, n IfeJ ; askalso for |BJ X \ THOMSON'S NM h<l\ J UNBREAKABLE STEELS TT\ \ y The best goods made. E* fvj N. / See that the name of El W Nt. . X THOMSON and the Rl W j E3 Nj/stamped on every Corset JiSteel-fS^ ..asnoufti t-i mOßii ifianT’g Cos. WORCESTER, MASS. Sole Mangfactomrs cf Chicigo. cf 1 PATENT STEEL BARB FEHCiiG. ' ■J; i A STEEL Thom Hedge. No other Fencing so cheap or put np so quickly. Never rusts, stains, decays, shrinks, nor warps. Unaffected by fire, vein 1. -r flood. A complete barrier to the most vnrv.'.T stock. Imoassab'.e b 7 man cr beast TWO "AND TONS FOLD AND PUT UP ' >U!:INC- THE LAST YEAH. For sals at the • kardwoxo stores, vclth Stretchers and THE CHEAPEST l BEST ADVERTISING To Reach Readers Outside of the Large Cities. We represent over 1000 Newspapers, hating a weekly circulation of over 600 OOOeopien.ilivideil into six differ* nit covering different lections of the conn try. Advert:* merits received for one or more list-. For at iivgwes •- 'training name* f ropers, and other information and for e-timatea, addres*. BEALS & FOSTER, , ’ * Times Building. ■ 41 iVirfc Bowi .VEIT YORK. at home. Supplies worth fl C (Id wecfc in your own town. Teims and gsoutlit free. H. HALI.ETT4 CO.. Portland. Maine. 1 O a day at home. A cents wanted. Outfit A terxriH fr< e. TRCE4 I’O.. Augusta, Maine. PPT7HT MW T’RT’P Seven shot revolver nJIj V U-Li v Xj 1\ j. SaiJljL} with box cartridges. Address ■) Hown A <t.u. l- > A I"- Wood st.l’ittsl-HrR.I a. Annnn \&/Sri I can Tie made in oneday with lIUUU WLLLourt-fo WELL A ion:. Send for our auger book. t T . S.Auger Cos.. St. Louis. Mo. A MONTH—AGENTS WANTED- SO best ahuuU Belling articles in the woild; one sample. v\-.yc. Address JAY BRONSON, Detroit, Mn r r New Seebwhf.ats. llwjes’ Prolific yield 4‘j bus.. Champion Amber,7l bus..per acre Send lor descrip tive price list. Edwu J. Evans & Cos., i oik. Pa. - _ K. IXGRtItAM * CO.’S || f gl9l ¥/ H are superior in design aifd not 5I" 'l5 \ equalled in quality,ores t me- Pfii is keepers. Ask your jeweler for WMV VfiabJ tluin.Mauuf ' t<4>, bristoßCt S I procured or no pay, for every wounded. ruptured, accidentally injured or diseased Soldier. Address. Col. N. W. FITZGERALD, U S. Chlim Att’v. Washington. I>. C. mm I’UEMIIM WAT(!I AM) HI A IN-;* ’ *8 stem-winder.?'ret* with every order. On ~'w9yV f rep. .1. \j. Gaylord 4 Cos., Chicago, 111. v 'V to Agentti. Wnteliro S3 toB7. *• t, S2-7C>. OvrlOULatestNovclties. fS \ ty ' T SUP PLY <Nash ville. Ten n. H toux v#. V *s4<;„..aac*± A’gts send eta m pfo r catalogfiu j TRUTH 18 MIGHT V 7 \ profcic- a*avfine*. th* rl ) 6ar and Wl*r4. Will for 3< <-•* / -f i with W*r *•. *<4 / *W i -r hair, .end to Jrt <'rr>et r .rfr. - _ "7i 6t. B-StoD.MaM. 7*... t> - mm #c*<e>BssasgatgßS , * niv silall by $lO to $23 ■ r | *5 Cents. Illustrate ton, [Establishe <A'*' -f perpetual JM EVAPORATOR mr>. s‘2o. s2a. CHEAP & DURABLE i hen I) run CIBCULA-* 0 . I.Mlitr.BS the only Manet rers jCHAPMAN & 00., - MaJiKOM. la. JEEP’S SHiKTS-omy one 'L u ““R7i'i;', h '1 Bcs Keep’s Patent Part y-lnarte Mre-ahhlrt a- Can be finished as easy as hemming a Haudkercl Tiie very best, six for §7.00. Keep’s Custom Shirts—made to measure. The v*rv best, six for £9.00. a An elegant set of genuine Gold-plate Collar ana Sl2eVe!!uttn ß gh-envnheahbalfdoa.K f e,Pßfttortv. Keep’s bhirte are deliver-! r !i K !’■ on receipt of prtte lu any part of Ihe I mm.-no express pay. . Samples with full directions lor peH-nie.isurement fent free to any address. No stamp i cal dir. c ly with tin*MainitactiireraodgeUJottoin Prices.KeepMamifactnung C0..165 Mercer *^t AGUE! Price. <•, per box , 3 . - Druggist, mail, prepaid. K 1 •* *{•.,. -.j,s fur Ague, Pys- Chicago. save. ‘ I sell li t t* , -now thev euro.’ pepsin and Headache, because l k AMreß "’ . J.„ke- A’?enne,. , M^°’l!h ■* .. ~ i / -W--W-■* ■A Sf ' Aenei*>* n, ‘ u.i.,).;,. IT 'jftiS'w V l-%; all in Ehll.h4l,m to ■Pii> ■ List, • tencil.it*., i • our city ~r we ;of-r run to any PAMIiBR!, The Great Finniy Medicine oi the Age lH<i to . Fe • Thirty-seven \ ears. Ho* been leslen in every variet y of riimaie.aml by almost every nation known to AmericHUH. 11 ih the almost constant companion and inestimable triend -*f the mission ry and the .ravler. on sea Mid land, and i.o on*; thoiild traveF on oi l lakes and viveis without it. > ol( l by all midi iji u; "pi’s “EAGLE CLAW,” ✓7 The best trap in ilie world for catch //I ing Fish, animals and all . imls of game. Samples by mail, prepaid.^™. " I> "'' LTi:\TA V : ,?. \j te ' v w ■ the Kidneys, ill snider and Urinary Or? area.n. Hunt’s Remedy is pure y vegetable and ■ prepared expressly fr the above diseases. It has loured thousands. Every bold*’ warranted, b> W. j E lfyourdruseiauron t havo iL hoVlll onfcrjtforyoß^ " JI ladies llpl * lESsSSi" Imitations. CHEAPEST AND BEST! CHICAGO WEEKLY COST, v ol tints.) One year, pottage paid copie*. ** Liberal terms to Agent ß . Address. THE POST, Chicago# a AGENTS V/ANTED FOR THE irnILLUSTRATED HISTORY The great riots It contains a full account ot the leirn ot tenorin Pittburgh, Baltimore, Chic, go and other cities. Tho conflict between the troops and the mob. 'ierrible conflagrations nd destruction of property. Thrill iiijy si mi incidents, etc . etc. 8* nd tor a full den ripi insi “I {I,- -..0k ami our extra terms to Atents -di - NA 1 IONA LPI BX ..m .Louis,Mo AGENTS WANTED!! and. l.;mgody and his work. Thejearliest, latest, most complete, best, and by far the cheapest of all books on Moody and Bankey. Uiograpbb-s. Labors. Sermons. Addresses, Stories. Bible Portraits, Doctrines, Bible headings, Songs, etc., ell in one volume, and sold at sl.2'>. New edi tion just out. Now is the time to seenre territory uni i.beral commissions. Address. AMERICAN PUBLISH ING CO . ( incinnati, <*. Three Thousand Mile* Away, in another hemisphere, -parkie* the >elt7.er Spring. In every drugstore in America you may obtais its equivalent, put it in your pocket and carry it with you to the world's end. it ycu choose. Tarrant's Effervescent Seltzer Aperient is simply the living fountain ol health, in the form of a powder capable of beine i onverted into a bub bling. flashing far simile of the liquid product of nature in one minute. Armed w ith this antidote, all climates and every atmospheric change may be f*C-d without :ear Asa remedy in malarious fevers. n a h complaints, irregularities ot the tow 1. nervouseis rder*. m'-ntal depression, head ache. an over flow of bile,dropsical ailments,nausea and const patiL n. it has no equa:. bj alt drug gists. TT r HF> WHITIMi TO AI>VKRTISKRS. f > tlcaKcTToiiiaH lheadierti*ement 1 a tala paper , B. U. 86, BABBITT’S TOILET SOAP. jig vj, | - t Tie FnrEST TOILET SOAP In the W . ,1. Anif r x-j* r -seiahie o*ia need m ti* *rta-> -i - -- For Use Ih the Nursery it has No Eciual. w rta fen I mta bent toevn _ .- - . Mc&dtsn. S*r;rie box, cvcTJcs-rg i ->f 6 c*s. ta.n, ..rr u> acv imt oz. receipt . f 15 A idre B. T. BABBITT. New York City. Lr F*r sn-e ty