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ENGLISH FAIRS.
Annual Assemblages that are
Becoming Obsolete.
The Fakirs and Wandering
Traders who Frequent Them.
Tho annual or semi-annual fair still
bold in many towns in England, is an
old custom which is becoming obsolete.
Its only practical usefulness would seem
to be tho market portion of it held in
tho morning, in tho case of one day
fairs, when cattle, sheep, etc., aro sold
and farmers exchange views and greet
ings. Somo larger fairs extend over
throe or four days, tho last being some
times called “pack and penny day.”
Tho marketing business over, tho re
mainder of the day is spent in visiting
the shows (with exaggerated exterior),
shooting galleries, fancy stalls, etc.,
KMPy •■bvu the country rustics especially,
for somo tirao dwolt in pleas
^ptn, Participation old of the sights coming to
can meet friends and enjoy
alio sweetmeats and wonders in store for
them. The owners of the different ob
jeets of amusement appear to be some
thing of tho gypsy kind and move about
w,tu their belongings from place to
place, paying a certain “royalty” for
standing room, the showmen be
:ng placed away from tho main streets
to prevent their noisy clamor from
frightening horses. I ho cracking of
miles and smaller weapons,noisy rivalry
of the sliownon, mus.c of tho merry -go
rounds make up one unceasing “pande
momum. Hero one may bo invited to
try his skill with a small gun which
fires a dart propelled only by a porous
won cap, with the assurance that it is
tho very gun that killed Bonaparte;’
next, perhaps tho visitor is drawn into
a wonderful peep-show, whore tho more
recent tragedies scon through a magni
fyingglass aro dolefully described as
hoy appear m trim. I recall a hideous
looking picture of a man the true like
ness of which I was unable to dony and
which, with a peculiar nasal drawl, was
stated to bo ‘ ‘correct representation of
Hona Sahib, who committed thoso fear¬
ful atrocities at Cawnporo and Delhi in
India.” Tho cxtornal amusements out
side the different variety showB usually
excel tho inside performances, but they
work up tho anticipation suffi¬
ciently for you to enter in rosponso to
tho invitation to “walk up.’’ I re¬
member an eloquent showman yelling
lustily: “Walk up and see tho Great
African Sandpiper which, whon hunted,
buries his head in tho sand, from which
plnco of security ho laughs with delight
at bis pursuers;” and “hear tho animals
roar,” tho rosponso being an unearthly
noite from men inside. I rcquontly liv
ing monstrosities aro shown and allowed
to take up a collection from tho audi
cncc, being, perhaps, their solo remu¬
neration. Tho “Cheap Jack’’ who sells
all kinds of “Brummagen" goods,
chiefly cutlery, in a sort of mock
auction, is also a humorotu character
who amuses tho spectators with funny
speeches attd songs during his sale.
Thus, after gaping “at nil the sights iu
town,” frequently adjourning to ono of
tho many taverns to get his exchequer
replenished by his father, tho small boy
retires from tho busy scone to dream of
all tho things ho has caton and beheld.
—I Detroit Free Press.
J. Wilkes Booth’s Body.
All sorts of rumors have been afloat
from time to timo nbout what disposi¬
tion was mado of the dead body of J.
Wilkes Booth. Somo any he is still liv
ing, and is occasionally seen in various
parts of the world; others that he was
killed, and then under secret orders of
tho government, taken on a vessel out
to sea and dropped, “food for fisho3,”
no man knows where. Mr. Bingham,
with other government officials, visited
a gunboat lying in tho Potomac river,
and there viewed the dead body of J.
Wilkes Booth, which was identified be
yond a doubt. Booth, with all tho rest
of tho executed traitors, was buried
m A ' 'mediately era their under scatenco the was floor pronounced, of tho room
loir relatives and friends, soon after,
by threats of violenco frightenod Andy
Johnson into surrendering their bodies
to them, and all aro now resting quietly
near deceased friends in various parts of
tho country. Booth was buried besido
itis parents in a Baltimore cemetery.
Mr. Bingham also mentioned a singular
circumstance in this connection, which
I havo uever seen in print. Tho course
taken by the bullet fired at Mr. Lincoln
produced instantaneous, painless death,
while that shot at Booth, though enter¬
ing at exactly the same spot, took a
downward courso, causing the most ex¬
cruciating torture and lingering agony.
—[Atlanta Constitution.
Too Much (Jucstioning.
A physician in tho American Maga¬
zine, illustrating the evil custom of talk¬
ing to an invalid about his pains, says
thatonce ho requested amotherto make a
stroke upon a paper each timo she asked
a sick daughter bow sho was. Tho next
day, to her astonishment, she mado 109
strokes. A three months’ visit away
from home was prescribed.
job farm and garden.
Xratuplantinr Trffi,
1 A writer is the Load on Garden offers
somegood remarks in favor of more care
ia transplanting trees than many persons
' i givo them, the substance of which ii as
follows: First, tho ground should be
j well-broken up; secondly, tho hole for
! receiving the treo should be partly filled
j with fine mellow soil on which the roots
aro to be sproad and pressed, which is
much better than placing them on a
hard bottom. Every root should bo
carefully extended in all directions, and
tho soil then filled in—over the bottom
roots first, aDd over tho upper ones
afterwards. If ample roots have been
secured when tho tree was taken up, no
staking is required, but when tho cx
ternal bracing is nccossary, it is to be
done with three galvanized wires fixed
to a collar at a convenient height, and
the othor ends to stumps driven into
tho ground at a proper distance from
tho tree. Wiro appears better than
stakes, and is cheaper in tho end. Tar
cord may be used instead of wire.
j It is conlmou ror a0W3 with thcir
young to rcsort to a ccrtaia placo to
8 ; eep( evoa Jn tho pasturc< It is ood
practice to watch these bedding places,
aad overy two wcoks or B0 8Catter a
double handful of sulphur over the bed.
Thh wiU not only k the ; 8 from
Ret ,i a g lousy, but mangy as well, and
koep their skins and systems in good
condition . for a ortioa of it wiU be
nbsorbod ^ ^ ^ ^ an
altcratiyo u „ oa tho 8y3teln . Around
‘
tho , ot# aad carboli<J Bcid should
bo used with no sparing hand, and no
monoy th#t tho brecJcr / d| will
turn 80 g0od aa intero8t It not oaIy
disinfects from foul odors and noxious
gascSf Lut i(3 freo uso wiu nt
cbolura and olhcr d ; 3Ca8og _ if aot di .
rcctly iinportod by briagi infcctcd
animaIs on tho ^ u dcar8 ftnd
purlftc8 thfl ground aad floorS) and tho
nir a8 woU .-[American Agriculturist,
Poultry Note s.
Ready cash is convenient on every
farm, and may bo secured by a well
managed poultry yard.
;
Ono of tho best products of tho farm
in an ordinary way is eggs, and tho
market is always open for all offerings.
Boup is produced by a bad cold,
neglected. “An ounco of prevention is
worth a pound of euro.” Don’t neglect
a cold, as it is much more easily cured
than roup.
Gecso may bo picked every six weeks
i n warm weather, but they must bo well
fed with a mess of meat once a day.
When they are picked oltcn they do
! not lay, as the growth of now feathers
weakens and debilitates them,
i
| An excellent cgg-producing food is
| ono part comment, two parts bran, two
parts ground oats, ono part ground
meat, and ono part middlings, to which
may be added a small proportion ofbono
meal and salt; scald it and feed early in
j tho morning.
Meal fod to poultry should always bo
mixed with boiling water, which par
tially cooks the food. A common error
is to make tho food too wet and soft '
in which state it becomes injurious to
tho fowls, compelling them to tnke
rnoro water than their nature requires.
The farmor who kcop3 a flock of
twenty-fivo cr thirty hens, with tho
usual accompaniment of a huDdrod or
rnoro lively chickens, and allows them
to share his domain in common with
himself, his other stock and farm uten¬
sils, finds perplexity and most aborniu
able company at every turn. Tho hen
at large, in her multiplied form, is
worse than an army of locusts, and hor
following as offensive as a pc3tilonce.
Watkini; NlKcep IBt'forc Hillpiirin;
Galen W’ilson says in tho Now York
Tribune: “Much has boon published in
regard to tho barbarity of tho usuul
j node of washing sheop before shearing,
They aro timid animals aad particularly
fearful of getting into water. Itis very
difficult to drive a flack across a stream,
and when one does succeed in doing so,
they invariably jump it. They havo an
innate dread of wotting even their feet.
It is not so with other farm animals.
Then when sheep come to be plunged in
by the washers and retained fivo or ten
minutes, what mutt bo their feelings?
It must bo a shock to tho system, and
shocks a o always bad. This heroic
treatment is downright cruelty. Wash¬
ing removes only tho looso dirt from tho
wool, and it is doubtful if that embraces
two per cent, of tho whole weight of
fleece, yet buyers deduct from 30 to 30
per cent, from unwashed wool. Washed
or unwashed it has to bo scoured beforo
manufacturing, and hence why wash it
at all? Farmers do it simply
to save such an outrageous deduction on
tho price. Three years ago a friend
with a flock of sixty sheep did not wash,
and said he should not again; but when
he sold his wool ho was compelled to
submit to a discount of 30 por cent.,
amounting to nbout $25, aad now ho
has rcturnod to the old process. At
a woolbuyc.Ts’ storo I have seen unwashed
fleeces thrown into the general lot aad
It Is doubtful if manufacturer! matte
nsucb difference if any. In the absence
of desired information as to the true in¬
wardness of this woolwashing business,
it must be concluded that somebody is
taking advantage of the woolgrowers
who fail to present washed floecea. As
soon as they can get full price for un
washed wool minus the weight of dirt
washing takes out, just so soon will they
be glad to relinquish the unnatural pro¬
cess, It would be well to test one or.
two fleeces this season by washing after
shearing and then one could know just
what shrinkage there is.
Care and Handling of Htlk.
A Scottish authority, Mr. J. A. Ste¬
phenson, in a lecture lately delivered
upon butter-making and marketing, has
this to say about milking and the record
of milk:
In addition to having suitable food
and pure water, dairy cows should be
provided with properly ventilated
houses, constructed in such a way as to
resist tho heat of summer and coldness
of winter, and to ensure a circulation of
iresh air without drafts. Uniformity of
temperature is very largely conducive to
a regular milk yield, and if its quantity
is depondont upon tho kind and
amount of food consumed, its quality is
affected by tho kind of air inhaled. So
far as concerns tho purity and flivor of
milk and butter, there nood be no hesi¬
tation in asserting that tho expense and
study devoted to a proper system oi
fcoding is largely thrown away in tho
caso of cows kept in an iil-vontilated
building and breathing a vitiated atmos¬
phere, charged with carbonic acid gas
and ammonia—the products of decom¬
position. A due proportion of oxygen
in tho air breathed is essential to tho
purity not only of tho blood of tho ani¬
mal, but also of tho milk, which is a
secretion from it.
Tho milking should bo dono in a gen¬
tle, thorough and cleanly manner. Milk
or “strippings” left ia tho udder
through careless or incomplete milking,
aro either re-absorbod into tho system,
tending to tho fattening of tho cow and
her spoliation as a milker, or become
sources of irritation and disease. Woro
any conclusive investigation practicable,
it would probably appear that diseases
of the udder have very largely rosultod
from this cause alone, In order to
have proper cleanliness, a pail of water
should be provided, in which tho milkers
may frequently rinse their hands.
As an item of good management and
economy, tho weighing tho produce of
cows at every milking is very strongly
to bo rocommcnded, which, with tho ap¬
pliances now to bo had for the purpose,
can be dono with the minimum of time
and trouble, and with tho following ad¬
vantages: (1) It provides an effectual
check on tho work of the milkers,
which, in consideration of what lias just
boon said about tho consequences of in¬
efficient milking, is a matter of vital im¬
portance, especially in tho larger
dairies, when hired milkers are
employed. (2) It furnishes a re*
liable indication as to tho gen¬
eral health of the cows, the milk yield
of which is affected by the slightest ail¬
ment. (3) A most valuable result ob¬
tained by tho regular weighing of tho
milk, is tho exact estimato it enables
ono to form of the comparative valuci
of individual cows in the herd, not
only in regard to milk yield, but whon
a proper test is regularly applied, of
butter production also, a matter of the
utmost importance in selection, which
is at the very foundation of the dairy
farmer’s success, the uso of inferior
cows resembling tho working with im¬
perfect machinery, at a sacrifice
both of labor and produco. (4)
Tho daily milk yield of thecow, supple¬
mented with particulars of tho butter
contents of tho milk in ounces per gal¬
lon (a natural systom having been per¬
fected by means of which tho necessary
testing can bo dono in an accurate, in¬
expensive and expeditious manner),
these together provide tho details for a
record of much value, not only for tho
determination of the merits of individ
ual cows, but also furnish tho basis for
a system of proportional feeding advo¬
cated by Sir J. B. Lawes, and tho de¬
tails of which have since been worked
out for practical use.
The Greatest of the Three.
When tho Czar Alexander visited
Wilhelm at Etns they used to sit down
in tho Brunnen promenade and chat to¬
gether. As soon os it became known
that tho two groat emperors could bo so
easily seen, tho promenade bccamo
quickly crowded. Tho czar was
troubled and irritated by the public
curiosity, and wished to movo away, but
tho kaiser never felt any distaste for ..tho
ioyal swarming of tho German people.
However, ono morning, in order to com¬
ply with tho czar’s wish, ho rose to go,
when ho caught sight of Prince Bis¬
marck coming along tho promonado.
“Ah,” said he, “now we shall havo
quiet.” “Why so?” aslccd the czar.
“Look there,” responded tho kaiser,
pointing to Bismarck, “yonder comes
tho man whom they will think a greater
sight than cither of us. When the peo¬
ple Caleb sight of Bismarck they run
after him and leave us alone.”—[New
York Ptess.
Fearfully and Wonderfully Made.
I
One of the stories which has been cur¬
rent in social circles at Washington
lately make-up is in of regard well-known to the remarkable
The a mould in which young she society hall
woman.
been cast by an unknown fate was un¬
satisfactory alike to herself and parents,
who foreign finally concluded to try the effects
of travel for her. After a long
absence abroad the family returned and,
to the astonishment of all who had pre¬
viously completely known metamorphosed. her, the daughter was
From a
tall, angular well rounded, girl, she but had not only be¬
come noticeable broadening of buxom, with a
the shoulders.
After a while it leaked out that while in
Paris maker, the who, girl in had consideration been taken to of a model
agreed to construct wire a figure large
sum, a
of the desired proportions, which was
ingeniously back, and made of such to fine, open soft down the
was material
that its presence would fail to be detect 1
ed save by the keenest scrutiny, This
wire cage necessitates, with evening
dress, a band of velvet or collar of soma
description, and as long as worn effect¬
ually precludes the of the idea of decollete
gowns on the part wearer.
As Summer comes, we may have to
listen to the old story one more: “Where
is my wandering boy to-night?” while
the poor boy is quietly enjoying the
musk and watermelon in your neighbor’s
patch, provided he can find the rtpc ones,
as he is raising them in the dark of the
moon.
A Common-Sense Remeffv.
In the matter of curatives what you want fs
something that will do its work while you
continue todo yours—a remedy that will give
you no inconvenience nor lnterfero with your
business. Such a remedy is Ai.i.cock'8 Pob
ous Plasters. These plasters are purely
vegetable and absolutely harmless. Tiiey re¬
quire no change of diet, and aro not affected
by wet or cold. Their action does not interfere
with laborer busin -hs; you can toil and yet be
cured while hard at work. They aro so pure
that the youngest, the oldosi, the most delicate
jicrson of either sox can use them with great
benefit.
beware of imitations, and do not be deceived
by misrepresentation.
Ask f->r Allcock's, and let no explanation
or solicitation induce you to accept a sub¬
stitute.
“The tlm King's U. Daughters” now have number 20,
000 in 8. The society is to a paper.
Would you know tho keen delight
Of a wholesome appetite,
Unrestrained by colic’s (lire,
Hcndache’s curse, or fever’s fire.
Thoughts Then Dr. morose, or icy pills. chills?
use Pierce’s
Dr. Pierce’s Purgative Pellotts—the original
and only genuine Littlo Liver Pills; Z5 cents a
- vial.
before 600 Chicago waifs were taken on a
picnic, their lmir was cut and faces scrubbed.
It will pay ai> who me Cotton Gins, to get
pricos ufacturers, and testimonials Drown of Cotton those A Gilt No. 1 man¬ Now
The Co.,
London, Conn. They lead the world.
Tho incomo of Andrew Carnegie, tho iron
manufacturer, is said to bo $15,000 a day.
When a threatening lutjgdisorder.
Do not Ict.il cross the border—
Quell it with activity.
Many Owes a patient, young or oldon,
■All to Dr. a quick Pierce's recovery Golden
Medical discovery.
acid Newspapers make good soaked plug Jn for a solution holes. of carbolic
a rat
A Summer
■ ■ 1 ■ Ml
Summer’s heat debilitates both
nerves and body, and Head¬
ache, Sleeplessness, Ner¬
vous Prostration, and an
“all-played-out” sensation prove
that Paine’s Celery Compound
should be used now. This medi¬
cine restores health to Nerves,
Kidneys, Liver, and Bow¬
els, and imparts life and energy
to the heat prostrated system.
Vacations or no vacations, Paine’s
Celery Compound is the medi¬
cine for this season. It is a scien¬
tific combination of the best
tonics, and those who use it begin
the hot summer days with clear
heads, strong nerves, and
general good health. Paine’s
Celery Compound is sold by all
druggists, $1 a bottle. Six for $5.
WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO., Prop’s,
Burlington, Vt.
AND
Hot Weather
Do you want
§ £ /
C
TOQQlLtrV
aii
WA51*
Iraq. wuss BllO\VN &: KING
Manufacturers And Deniers in
Cotton. oral \Vgolcn m“ Supplies. and Gen
‘V rou nfiul Inlron PI acacia. 1: Filth! . a
' llrnss
fl 5.1380051. ATLANTA. GA,
ROANOKE
Cotton and Ha;
FXISStSS.
The bent and cneapestmftde.
B Hundreds in actual use,
B Bales cotton fatter than any
f pn can pick. Address
T- WOOD ROANOKE WORKS IRON AND
j for our Got
gpy- ton and Hay Press circulars.
P’ ’ Ohattanouga, Tmiu, Box 260
FLIES! pfM
turer* 57 Beckninn St cet, New York.
PISO'S CURE FOR CONSUMPTION
Immense Clock.
The new clock just placed in the tow¬
er of the University at Glasgow, Scot¬
land, is a tremendous affair. The main
wheels of the striking and quarter trains
are twenty inches in diameter. The
weight of the hammer that strikes the
hours is 120 pounds and it is lifted ten
inches. There is an automatic Ap¬
paratus attached to the clock which
stops the quarter peals at night and
starts them in the morning. The pendu¬
lum is zinc and iron, to counteract the
influences of temperature. The bob of
the pendulum is cylindrical and weighs
300 pounds, and the beat is 1£ seconds.
A Business-like Offer.
Eor many years the manufacturers of Dr.
„ Catarrh Remedy have offered, tiood
faith, “aff® 8 J50D in
for a case ot Nasal Catarrh which
they cannot cure. The Remedy is sold b,
druggists remedy has at only 60 cents. This wonderful
tation. if fairly have attained a world-wide repu¬
Jtroction of you dull, heavy headache, ob
falling tlie na-al passages, discharges
from the head into the throat, some¬
times profuse, watery, and acrid, at others,
thick, tenacious, mucous, purulent, bloody and
putrid; if the eyes are weak, watery and in
named; if there is ringing in the ears, deaf¬
ness, expectoration hackipg or coughing to clear the throat,
o' offensive matter, together
with scabs from ulcers; the voice being
offensive; changed and h-iB a nasal twang; the breath
smell and taste impaired; sensation
of dizziness, with mental depression, a hack¬
ing cough and gene al debility, you are suffer¬
ing from nasal catarrh. The more complicated
your disease, the greater the number and di¬
versity Dually. of without symptoms. Thousands of cases an¬
symptoms, result manifesting calf of the above
the No disease in consumption, is and end de¬ in
grave. so common, more
ceptive unsuccessfully and dangerous, or less understood, or
more treated by physicians.
There are 75colored men employed as clerks
in the Pension Office, at Washington, D. U.
Conventional “ Motion ” Resolutions.
Ry Whereas, Co.) The M non Route (L. N. A. & <
desires to make it known to the world
at large that it forms the double connecting
link of Pullman tourist travel between the
w inter cities of Florida and the summer re
sortsof tile Northwest; and
Rurpa-sed, Whereof, ils its eieg "rapid mt transit” Pullman system Buffet Sleeper is nn
and Chair car service between Chicago ami
equalled; Louisville, Indiunapolia and Cincinnati un¬
and
W/ ‘beU' lts Tates are as lowas tho lowest;
then
trip Resolved, it That in the event of starting on a
is Ode id, milieu to con-ult, wit 1 K. U. Mc¬
Cormick, (icn‘1 Pass. Agent Morion Route, 185
Dearborn St., Chicago, for full particulars. (In
any event send for a Tourist Guide, enclose fc.
postage.)
Beck 6 Gregg Hardware Co.,
at laivt GA.
Write for
Prices and
mention this
paper.
I
IfsFS
teiii v: g^gS am
si afp 1 if
!;
im
succnssons 'ro
MORDECAI LEWIS.
JOHN- T. LEWIS & BROS.,
WARRANTED I’UHE
White Lead, Red Lead, Litharge, Orange
Mineral, Painters’ Colors and Linseed Oil.
COliKEHl’(SNDENCP. SOLICITED.
sesESfcxS ’■
JferBffimisgtLjvErCwlaifilSq
IWE MEM WHAT WE SAY I
^CURED^J BALD SPOTS We cure these
THIN HAIR »y means of
Fertile r”* Fai
DANDRUFF nous Falrlfon.
THIN BEARD Send for par¬
ticulars of
-i FALLING H.A!R our remedy.
FECHTER BEMEDT Cf>„
New Haven, Conn. Box8GF.
Bend thi* to >omo bal<l beaded ft lend.
“(OiSGOCDB”
U. S. Standard, Gcalsa.
fS» / Sent on trial. Freight
paid. FullyWarrantcd.
3 TON $35.
Other size., proportion- Catalogue
ately low. Agents well paid, illustrated
free. Mention this Paper.
OSGOOD & THOMPSON, Binghamton, N. Y.
$100 to $300 A MONTH can be
made working for
us Agents preferred who can furnish their own
horses and ».lvo their whole time to the business.
Spare moments may tie profitably and eiiies. employed B. F. JOHN¬ also.
A few Vacancies in towns
Ki: S' a v . CO.. t*HS M ifn st.. Ittchm nd. Va.
few 5,000.000 acres best agricul
tural and erasing land forsnle.
HERBRAND FIFTH WHEEL 8!
Improvement. UE11BEAN1) CO.» Fremont,
m I LWc nt anythin* at home else and In make the more wo rid money F.ltl nor working p*’x . Cortl for uk y outfit than
ruxK. Terms FKKE. Address, T HUE & CO., Au Rusta, Maine.
Cincinnati JULY 4 SU 0
m OCT.
/X Red
Hi m mmm M ft||| m
iSUUli
t .* *•
GRAND JUBILEE Mlebratin g the Settlement of the Northwestern Territory.
UNSURPASSED DISPLAY.
V at© im D M
EXCURSION RATES FROM ALL POINTS.
CANE MILLS,
FURNACES.
Evaporators
Established
1772.
0®-l PURE O ttOS.
>' O WHITE
V'l
trade MARK.
YOU SUFFER
from Biliousness, Constipation,
Piles, Sick Headache, Sonr Stom¬
ach, Colds, Liver Trouble, Jaun¬
dice, Dizziness, Bad Taste in the
Mouth, etc.— You need Suffer
no longer.
WARNER’S SAFE PILLS
will cure you. They have
cured tens of thousands.
They possess these points of su¬
periority: sugar coated; purely
ve getable, contain no calomel,
mercur y or miner al of any kind;
do not gripe ;neve r sicken; easy to
t ake; njtil d i n opera tion; and for
these reasonsare especially the
favorites of women. Ask for
WARNER’S SAFE PILLS,
m %
*
1 [ Ji^Bifiras&LivCTCoraS
WEBER
PIANO-FORTES.
ENDORSED BY THE LEADING ARTISTS. SEMI¬
NARIANS, AND THE PRESS. AS THE
BEST PIANOS MADE.
Prices as reasonable and terms aa easy as consistent
with thorough workmanship.
CATALOGUES MAILED FREE.
Correspondence Solicited.
WAHEROOMS,
Fifth Ayenne, cor. 16th St.,N. Y.
MARVELOUS
MEMORY
DISCOVERY.
Wholly unlike hid 'tviimleriiijr* artificial nystems.
Cini> of in
Any book learned n* one reading.
1500 Classes Philadelphia, of 1087 nfc Baltimore, Washington, 1 OO-p at Detroit, I2IO
Boston. at 1113 Columbia at Law students,
at Yale, ‘Wellesley, Inrgo classes Obcrlin, of University of Penn., Mich¬ at
RicHMtP igan University, PROcT01i,the Chautauqua, Scientist, Ac., Hons. Ac. W. Endorsed W.Abtou, by
Judah P. Bfnjamin. Judge Gibson, Dr. Brown, E.
H. Cook, Principal N. Y. Slate Normal College, Ac.
Taught by PROP. correspondence. LOISKTTE. Prospectus ‘.137 Fifth A POST N. FRRK Y.
from v*..
MsrctaiSBi'E'fis. WBHSSfiS *
“' ^OorBilicnsetLiverCciaplai^. ^JjA, ilmmi»iiuniiim.-ntv f e»’"~E 1Tf| l ln r* ri ^
‘
;■£ H OHO ” DRILL WELL
All cnttinjca of the drill in clay, Bfind, gravel, rock. &c ,
are discliarged at Mil*face without removing
tools. Noted for succors whore others fail I#rill
Cataloguo ilroim 70 to 00 times LOOIIIS a minute. ti: NYMAN* Profits large.
Free.
TIFFIN, OHIO.
for Shot Guns,
% % RIFLES and Pistols.,,, Ei i” H if f
gt Send ^ Cheapest
for free sadbot. ■
v ^ Illustrated n * B Ss
0 " m Ideal Catalogue. foVf’g Co.' r ■ 1 3
Box l'J6i V, New Haven, Conn.
Seines, Tents, Brcccli londinpr doubl? RhOtCfUn at $9.00;
tingle barrel Breech loaders at $4 u> $12;
to 3fd pRepeatlncf Flobort Rifies, HWshooter, $3. $11 Guns to $30: sent Revolvers, C. O. D. to
$1 to S -J; Revolvers Bltle.s, mnii S2.r*0 to P. O. Addrt^s 40UI*
examine. UBGAT by WORKS. to any PitUWp, Peniu.
ITON S WK^TKRN (1UX
h V9S5SBSSS&™
i<ras&LwBrCSzr, *.
HSK!
BLOOD POISONING, Our
Urinary Organs positively cuied or no charge.
medicine is a preventive of Malaria and Yellow Fever.
Full f-izo sample bottle tent free on receipt of 2.
centB to prepay postage. Address ’I'Hh_ HAIC*.
IHCINK <’<>.. Box 301. ITiiiwnvilles
BSair’sPills.'MM^i* Ov al I5«x, 31: ound. 14 Fills.
r
Wif* to SS a day. Samples worth $1.50, FREE
Lines not under the horse’s feet. Write
IqWVMP Ytrowki “r Stn’cty iteln HoMcr Co. . Holly. MloH.
n Ol.l) is worth $500 per lb. Pettit’s Eye Salve is
vx worth $1,000, but i3 sold at Sao. a box by dealers
A. N. U....... ........Twenty-nine, ’88.