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SOUTHERN FARM AND HOM$.
-Manure*. jl >
D. M. Ferry & Co., in their new cata
logue have the following: -Anything,
which being added to the MJ, directly
or indirectly promotes the growth of
plants, is a manure. Manure di
assists vegetable growth, either ' f t
ing into the Composition of p ah\s,'b.
absorbing and retaining moisture from
the atraosphere, or by absorbing it from
nutntive gases. Manures indirectly as
sist the growth of plants, either by de
stroying vermin or weeds, by decompos
ing in the soil, by protecting ptahfs from
sudden changes of temperature, or by im
proving the texture of the soil. The ma
nure of cows and all animals that chew the
cud is considered cold and suited
light soil; that of horses, hogs and
try is hot, and best suited to a __
heavy soil. AH new and fresh manure
engenders heat and has
engenders heat and has a tendency to. be served with apple sauce, onions and
lighten the soil, while old, rotten manure potift^eibdlTed anapeeled hiitnot 1 mashed,
is thought to render it more compact aid
firm. The manure of birds ft richer than ’
that of any other animal. Three or four
hundred weight of the manure of fowls,
turkeys, etc., h equal in value'T&Tfoffl
fourteen to eighteen losds of animal ma
nure. Uruano is a manure of this class..
It is x/ell to apply about two hundred
weight per acre, with one-half the usual
quantity of other manure. Guano riuuld
never, in a fresh state, cbme in dUact
with seeds or the roots of yplants,
sure to destroy their vitality. Af ,®Ak
coat of hog pen or bamjyard nfepire,
spread on the garden anerfurned inqvxry
spring, will enrich, warm and lighten
the ground better than any appShgisf
of other manures. The principal ahi-
mal manures are those o£ Use horse,)
the hog, the cow and thn.&ftee{CCfei
these >hs horse manure's the most valu
able, in its fresh spate, but it shmild) be
exposed as little as possible, as it begins
to heat and loses its nitrogen iidlietti^
ately, v may be perceived '
mix i* with other mani
with absorbents as sooh*
the cow is at the bottom of the list.
The richer the food given to animal*, ghr
more powerful is the manure. If aniJuM
manures are employed in a
they should be well mixed' wr
and given to coarse-ISs^ing
as com and the garden pfa,,
all plants do better irthe
compostod and fully fermented uciy.c n _ . , , ,
use. Bone dust, mixed with ****** pW&f* ® •
liulvarized pfinrennl ntirl cnnm 1..-..«-1 ...1.. t sunul pieces. Add to this a half pi
Vore^teffing. Chop two large onions
fine, AtUp to them a tablespoonfulof pul-
verizerksage, a teaspoonful of black pep
per and two teaspoonful of salt. Mix
these ingrediants’ 'With - crumbled bread,
put in-the body of the bird and sew up
closely all the openings. This prevents
: steam Jtom going out and the fat
m getting in, and adds to the flavor
id tenderness of the meat. Put ho
water in the pan. A slice of fat pork or
some butter ms.y oe laid on the breas
when it is phi in the oven. Baste with
with its own fat every twenty tnihutes.
Two heyrs will bake e gooae if the oven
■ft hotf NTheif done ‘it will be brown all
over, then remove the bird to a platter,
pour all the fat from the baking pan, add
to the brown gravy in the pan. tbe gravy
from tjje giblets, but no flour, bring to a
TJiudfd serve in a gravy boat. Save
itle fii for %iidteijial and otoer purposes.
It is not good for food. Goose should
be served wit!
....«} ... CH *CJ*EN,FJE. .
Clean, draw and cut up a-pairof chiek-
ens, put them in a sauce pan with water
«!«*gh *to" Wj COT them ana let them boil
till tender, skimming them well. Make
a pie crust with a quart of flour and a
half, pound of butter or lard, wet with
sweet milk or cold water. Cover a deep
dislMtfitb. the grunt, lay the chickens in,
r bitgof baiter rolled in flour, fill
feh with -tj)e wafer in which the
ens *-re abifiled.. , Insert a.cup in
teiStf t^e5li=h; this will keep the
X Mroth'e'crusf. Cover
.-isli with a neatly-fitting crust. Or-
top of the pie with thin
leaves if paste, cut out with a jagging
iron. Bake in a^ow oven and serve
Buck- are stuffed and baked like geese,
th, stufljpig fitedufks mace is an
excellent seasoning
A A very nice idMT may bo made out of
tough old hens by boiling them till they
inty of water,
’f an hour of
of the hog comes next in value, while, bping done, make nice biscuit dough
roTTit thin #nd- lay it over the top of the
boiling fowl. Bull fa-t till done. Lay
the dumpling on one platter, the chicken
on another, add milk, butterand flour to
BUlfflWHUU'l ntffifpot, enough to make
ijlijfc ho® fjSfcf whil^aeTre with the
llfKW* ISA *■
TO RECOOK COLD TURKEY.
pulverized charcoal, and sown brosdeast
over the ground at the
bushels per acre, is very
the mo-t valuable for tu , a
etc., and the quantity needed for an
acre is go sin<ll that the expense is-lest
thar. almost any other application. Com
won salt, at the rate of sEfjjb
here, sowed in the springfefc
tant from the sea shore, not only pro
motes fe tility, but is very useful in des
troying wo ms and sings. Marl, where
it can be obtained, mayjhe Rpjplikfl Witlf
advantage, especially to sandy soilar c ''" t
is excellent to drive ,off: irfctit*
vermin. Very little of this can lie ob
tained, but it should be carefully pre
served aud applied in small quantities to
cabbages, turnips, cucumbers, lotions,
and all plants infected with insects.
Charcoal renders the soil
ble, and gives it a dark color an
tional warmth for early crops. When
composted with night soil it becomes
poudrette, and is second only to guano as
a fertilizer. Leaves, straw and rubbish,
thrown together, and moistened with a
pint
:ed oysters,
ew lie bottom of a
___ ^d^kaKamns. cover
a layer ofTurkey and a layer of
.tcr^aM a very Lt'tlp salL cayenne
perTnrn in ace. Repeat until the tur-
■ Add a little
jsters and set
them in an oven Tor twenty minutes,
then add m|fr4ysler|lijif5l,'’pn ejff
beaten, .4 reew frrtalf ramps Tjf ''butter,
some emokfAcrmnte and a grate of nut-
5 y i»<W 4et4t Mm nicely. This timely
[( j fflfipe from Aunt “Addie.”
rear Blight.
It is generally' fconiftdcd that pear
iMight'iaieaqsSi" by a minute fungus
which developes in the bark and pene-
.jiiiiSMUAkiUwiwittylttg the cell struc
ture as it proceeds. Trees should he
washed annually with pure linseed oil,
sulphur wash or others things that will
kill a fungoid spore without injury to
the hark.
Sometimes pears crack. As a remedy,
fees and shrub?. Swamp .the tr^es. It will not only prevent the
with salt, lime; or leached frnffTtfitn bracking, bnt ft will increase
TO COOK l’OTXG AM) OLD
Poultry is everywhere Jegi
luxury and a delicacy. No cook can get
up the enthusiasm in prepairing fi-h of TTgHInmg while watering milk.
of poultry in made delicious ;Jby*’b»m£-> .human being. *
ler, the choicest birds may be spoiled. c —’—‘
Old poultry may be made tender and
savory by the followiqy j ,fiaai
it in cold water with a handful or two o
mixture of lime and salt, if kept damp dissolve copperas in water and sprinkle
until decomposed, forms the:b$£‘k£ywn'|rthe"teiluti()ii freely-artmnd the roots of
manure for trees and shrub?,
muck, mixed
ashes, is of value where it can be obtained;
hut of still more value is the leal mold,
or black surface soil of the woods. For
the vegetable garden, it is best composted
with fresh animal manure, but can be
applied directly to most plants in the
flower garden, many ol which wilt not
flourish unless this material is preagfe ifi
the soil. Tan bark, decayed chips, saw
dust and shavings, covered withiSoil, are
of great advantage to potatoes. Wood
ashes, leached or unleached, may be used
with decided benefit as a top dressing to
most growing vegetables, especiaily tur
nips and onions. Plaster, sown upon the
growing crop is good for turnips, cab
bages, b ans, cucumbers, squashes, mel
ons and all broad leaved plants.
thg yjgpr qfjtheytree..
Spring Vegii-tnbics.
In getting ready for spring vegetables,
remember they require rich food, and
you.lnust.put-on the manure. A rauk,
l*fch growth is WTiat makes vegetables
t aude*, ayd they cannot have thisgrowth
without a rith ssc^l. Deep soil is also
•rtecessAtv. Asparagus 1 Beds may have
the soil i-lightly raked from them; it al
lows 5 tne Miri'tcf rfet to the roots earlier,
and the crop is forwarded thereby. If
the bed is poor dress it with guano or
superphosphate. Poor ground will not
make asparagus.
DAIRY .NOTES.
"an'o’t- give a'golden color to butter.
factories in the
Chicago milkman was killed by
quadrupedal flesh for tha table
has in cooking a bird, thohgh i$ he.
a goose. As fruits, fed on air ianj sx»n
slune, rank higher in out eStijfaatl<5n tnal
vegetables that cling to and *re em
bedded in the soil, so wiuged fle-nTs
more highly esteemed thaff thaF which
ploddingly goes on all fours. Jp thT"" ^r'TTt'oporti.'m of medicine required
hands of a skillful cook, alNiostfchy^fciiid) is,tdd Whieta# much as for a
Of pbvelry, as well
'ofrom sour
as been formed in Chi-
Many fal
collars
ilk.
m A A°nuiapy
delivery of milk jxi sealed
’glass jiffs. * i‘ - t
There ar*bf*D4K)fe00# cows lir the Uni
ted States, bringing in a revenue of
aftOilMIDiflODnn—P-
out 130,Qi
under fivd
ndent u^Sir
ar m vpal The estimate , ,
, la^kruh defrauded by t^e sale of
bnatp reitwJ skimmed and JJJ^ered milk, of ^40,000
:i - v -©vH PCB
e niUkere at the well-known Echo
requires thorough ^
derdone it is tasteless. A turkey weigh
ing eight pounds should be baked-three
hours and basted every ton or fi
minutes with its own drippings and
melted butter. If proper care is t:
in dressing poultry it will not oeed W
ing. A wet cloth may he usSl to i
it clean if neces'ary, but >sqakinr itir\
water takes out the 'flavor. YWlng
poultry may be known byhavingeawoth •-
and clothes
are the rule and regularity is demanded.
Tiftrewre Wrapeeial rnles'fof milking,
—p* '—"p -p when once
ll^mi, treat the cow kindly, get the last
"ilrop‘ as Voon as possible, and have reg-
- t - -- f A »ll -LI - - , . - '
legs and Bupple feet. 4 If tbe legs ,»re
romli and the feet are stm, the poultry
fh- litir tours fur. fepikihg. j
rm«
This
stuffing improves it. Soile
seasoned Irish or- sweet
used for turkey stuffing.'.
tie it in shape, lard the tbh
of bacon over it, wet the skfn uiFaifiB-
kle itwell with salt,' pepper end: io».
Have the oven not very hot till the tur
key gets heated thresh, {KBEKfef^BS
the heat. While the fowl is cooking boil
the giblets, neck, liver and swaebdsre:
chop them fine, and when the gravy is,
made add them to it. To make "
after the turkey is removed
baking pan put the pan over
dredge flour into it, and when
stir in boiling water or stock;
every bit of fat, add't'
with salt and pepper.-
ihildren in New York
ars of age, are largely
nk as foods uito -At
is, that the people of
ashes thrown in for twi
pick off the feath&rs
twenty-four honra II
boil for a quarter of an hour
broth or water; take it out,
hake it; when ne» r ly done
hot butter. By this
of a young chicken may be imparted to
an old fowl. Poultry j*. 11 P
. I seoretedp to protect
_^.njeq^anism from dust and
sects, and to keep it supple. It shoujd
not. ordinarily, he cleaned -hat. A
Biwifrggf niartiM'flf iiA&ir~~^~
•Bftycertay-.diseaaed- ponditions of
tfceWWiternar’Sar ajuufevtlte wax to
harden and accumulate, giving rise to
Train symptoms. Among these
are noises in the ear, which sometimes
~ ito sfMSffttgly HSV
lallueiuqtaons and
“suffeide. ' A skilledphy
love the hardened wax—
is old or stile.
TO BAKE A TURKEY. 1
After it is dressed*
inside; make a fAee' tnfflrt ’
cracker crumbs, season with summer s
vorv or sweet majoram. To this fod
meat chestnuts mayj;
put over the fire in a sauce pip to!
the skins, then boiled in
whole oysters, well seasoned^ may he . .
a i uffi ? g - Trnffles^lte* !^® 0 ^ can determine its exist-
used. A couple of eggs added to any
€i52ng^eiiaiia sometimes pot
into their beans*.aqd, other small
whISfci ike wax gather
"ittle ^oy pushedbeani
botldari. Due was removed, but the
ier remained, the parents not being
two. During
course, brain
and he was forced to
’ies and betake himself
thehean,
wax, was removed,
,,-je Iffaio'disap-
prospects for life
;ears of age,
__ fe profession,
impossible* To? "him to hear
'judgd ^rthe witaesse. He
;' able ’-to return
ft,-after-the real cause of the diffi-
and the, jrax was
^wxrin wafer injec-
used in the stuffing, add them
gravy. Oyster stuffing shouli
just before the turkey is baked;
other stuffing it is well te.li
number of hours before cool
flavor may permeate the - F
a.
baked GOOBBn ifiMnf naidr&rtisai,'land sometime* we
A goose eight monthniql^ h* woaid prefer a little more charm and
ifet j£i£$iu£ye4li 'lwwii
best for baking, feet
two, then remove every
singe it well, and takeadi
not edible, including all the loose fat.
Stew the giblets by themselves ,aud*uak(J d^Jr, hpt ft, if a pretty good thing to
a pie of them. Goose requires high Jia- swear By bn general principle?.
usic. We also lo7e sleep. It is
'e can’t .gee so much, charm in
_ lei > Wdhon’t know
who left the above sentiment on our
THOMAS BREUS AN’S SPBE€H.
Hade at tMuaMa InUSA t»a UutM
alt* aad for WUtk He Wat Arriated ha
tbe Stb font* for MlfoM tiicranM
bad Tarawa la daliki CaaUekar.
Soffit time ago It wiU be remembered
that^Davitt, Daly ahd, KiHen wete ar
rested in Ireland for sedition s utterances.
In Consequence of their arrest great ex
citement has prevailed and there is both
there and in this country a greatediffer-
tence o£ opinion as to whether the causes
leading to such utterances justified
them in making them; However that
may be, We below reproduce, the speech
In full made by Thomas Brehnan at
Toonamoie oh the 22d of November to
ah excited crowd of Several thousand
people, and for which he was arrested on
the 5th instant upon the charge of se
ditions utterance. He said:
Mr. Chairman and Fellow-Coun
trymen—t beg to second the resolution
which you have just heard ': proposed by
Mr. Wallsh. We are here to-day for a
three -fold purpose. We are here, in the
first place, to protest against the evic
tion and possible death of nine of God’s
creatures,
name
against the unconstitutional arrestof our
leaders, who are now paying the penalty
of their devotion to the peoples’ cause fi.
voice: “ Three for them.” Londcheers},
and we are here to declare our .determi
nation to go on with this movement*ntil
victory is secured. [A voice: .‘iYictory
or death.”] Until that last trace of
feudal landlordism fe,swept from the
country. [Cheers.] The English Gov
ernment has come to the rescue, of that
accursed institution, but can not save <m
.e yt ,
- r „, , „ ... .. .duced as many JaUway rails as the
res. [Cheers.] - To protestimtlw,. wliol( rgjp&Jt .produced prior to I860,
of^.our oountiV and • of jlie fouiTStatos; - IHinois, Wisconsin
-. - - - Jhdiafgi? 1 tiwnifartuied
over one-third ef all the rails- produced
in ’.he country. The ad.vani|ages which
these Statek-have ju distributing their
heavy iron freights over the^reat lakes
old crumbling edifice, which must fspL
[A voice: “The structure is rotten.”
Laughter.] Prison bars cannot hide the
light of God’s eternal truth, [*’ Hear,
hear.”] andthouxh.lta>aylisrae to follow
Mr. Davitt and Mr. Daly [“Hear, h‘ear”]
the cause cannot be imprisoni ' *~
cause fe just and must be tri
[“Hear, hear,” anda voice, “Wewjllnot
lajl in going with it.”] 0Or lives SIMM);
lopger our own. They belong to our
country, and to jiftice [ohjer?], f n£ M
must consecrate them "here to-day
to the advancement of that cause
for which our friends ate suffering.
[Cheers.] I for one am not here t»-
withdraw any thingJI have ever, paid
in this movement since 1 stood upon
that platform iu Irishtown, [Cheers'
and criesof “ Never.” A.yoieg: “ Three
cheers for Brennan.” Cheer?,] ''and
whatever may be the wofdS ^ihich Mr.
Davitt tried in the Gurteen meeting, I
hereby adopt them to-day [ioutP'Ind''
continued Oheering], «/ifddi 0 I knad
them I would repeat, Jhep^ I,believe
ir| my soul that they "are the words of ^
jiritice and -truth.- [feond'cfaeeis:] Tt
wjHb^e.^ Wnjttamk^yi:
wjnaea OraweBS. —tiiiercimwifo-spetNlN-
junking has gone by; the hour for fhe
resolve andthe act has arrived,. [LanuL
cheers-.] The speech '"Weay- rtn fee 4n-*
dignation which I see flashing from
your eyes and the determination which
rests upon your brown [Cnf9r*)];1jiunk
of the possible scene which we might
bo called on here to-day to witness.
Think of the poor man who MaunffW Ending Delaware and Maryland, from
186 000 to 258,000. According to the
lati collected by Mr.’ Porter, the manu-
agturing districts of the West are bet-
tef places lor the mechanic than the
Eastern or Middle States. From his
-tabulated statement of annual @ara-
ings and expenditures, we learn that the
total yearly outlay ior a workingman’s
family is c G70 in the East* and $788 in
der cabin, the hot fever darting wildly
through his brain. [“Oh, oh!”] Think
of the poor child who'eyery trme ft gs'
for a morsel of bread s4hd9" a'pdng'rar
sharper than s bayonet throet through
its mother’s breast. [Groane aipd. cries,
of “shame.”] Think of this, then;
think of the victim’s groans. I ypslv
the landlords were here that hi?.
might catch the execrations of the peo- Middle States, $818 in the South,
pie. Think of him, as_ he enjoys Ml ' Anff tTli in the West. On the otter
the luxuries of life, ,and pockets .ill®
iean dog
to the common enemy; 1 [Lorlb cheferS'J 1 ’
Sure, if you are ever to’be earnest ft is
-now. When, your best; aacHbi»ves*iare
in -prison; n»wr>’when HberRyof AJeech
is proscribed-in the, fenjd*; jftW when
the gaunt specters of' famine ana death
are standing upon "ySTTr thresholds. , , ,,,
[Cjieert,]ls[qfnoo si 1 u ’sm reSne more costly a:
I apjieal to one class in the community. i —- — -< ~* —
I’ appeal to the Royal Irish Cop stab u-.
laryi and -I afek rirffinffibe they eodterff t%!
be the deslidytte of .their owufeitfeMid
kin. [Loud cries of “ No. no.”] - [Ad
dressing the police;! Look at apossiMe
picture. Look iff yhur dWrfbfhnrt^lying
in konder ditch, dead, and.naked. [Oh,
oh^^ Thp.best gyn
measure of meal., fqr
wljose body the fom
'n ow fastened. [Gi
'are yon hurnaa qatu^
mep of the Royal Trn
caa you look on Bucb'scsrres, and strong
men as you afe, d» j»t».MotiifetUy*>»t
knees tremble, aji] fe i?ot ^mg'sgjgurgU
ing in your Hirqfttf Nnw 7 r rep^er
th$t m 47 when calTecl; oc;io work
similar to tliatiflflHb yBkate tnfearened,
and when one of fire ‘fcftm’i’ftd on a
crowd he found five minutes later that
•‘rtear.”] You are “fnshmen, and I
donbi not ihat bei.onth many
m.irr’s jacket h warfti Irish
<.u<iebeet's.]-,-Ara:yB»jei
\b lie the destroyers of^wowr
dr j \ypRld
th^m and snatch victory from dea
safe the lives of thequreple. [Turning
shwwsss’Mffis
j_i 1 cd. ;? Keep.hefore jonr.migdqtjtkgpMt
fact that the land of Irelaziff ’heloags'to
tbe people fif ITeland. J, ^OT8''CTbmV) ,
Follow tba’teacbir^s.of.the-qntjeriqfoof
your creed; Who ardrihw Its rtlartytS and
its confesfjftrsa, We tell- yau ishatr has
been told; you.ircm. every plntfOTmTi.^, ^ f
your conntry: We; tefl you Wpjay, qq,« i Wnihr^tamimtiiMVsttt
rent nnHl yon can get a-retedriqblB^" S#*"**! «?*’?*!!*.
duction [cheexs]; we tell ypqfej In
land from which another man has
evieted. [Cheers and cries of “Ndf
“ Down with the lahdirtbbers.”] And
should there be found so mean a wsetoh “"v ta'.^n'^ jS'iallnlLwSat^^^lis^rbeen.
from
d, I say, go, mark mm T
t froto'flffbs&clety'hT V,, e
old weaver himself examplifiet.
»-pkh of his words, for a, sorry w3ght
of follies and* eins allied
io mortal w
as: to take a farm from
man has been evicted,
well. ' Hoot him out -_.- 3 ,, *
men,as an unclean thing. ; [4-. ^oiiie:
“ As a mad do®-.’’! ’ ;
Let no one be found to buy.dr-seil' .
with: Mm and', watch how
J udas Iscariot will prosper: Tfledq«e,-of * N^i^avcr ihe inotsbe *6<ea , la-”
our comrades throws neWdutfes- dfeps '
aud we' must take off our coats ‘and go
to! . work earnestly , in fliii. ..feioVe-
ment. Although Dayitl, is now -in
m*
Manufacture* bette West,
jKomCItyltoM.]
Nothing fe math noticeable of laid
than the rapid development of Manu
facturing industry in the West, forty
years*ago they Wefe restricted , to the
Eastern State*, but silently and rieidlljr
they have-' followed the tidal Wake of
immigration across the Alleghenies,
until An' apparent revolution & tain*
effected in the. busines* and indmtriea
of the-' country in their march toward
the conjmodious and predeminiting
West. In the current number o1 the
Princeton Bmitw, Mr. Robert P. Porter,
of Chicago, presents some remarkable
statistics on this subject, showing the
“Comparative View of American Prog
ress.” For example, the iron and »teel
trade is rapidly moving westward, in
spite .of the. seeming great advamagea
which .Beasaylvattia possesses, it fe
-said tbit the quality or the 'iron ere of
the Mississippi Valley fits it bette: for
steel mannf Acturesji and as steel fe rap
idly sppnlantinff iruji ^n t|ie arts, this
sriveatjhe West A g*eai advantage. In
the vear 1878 the State of Blinois pro-
are aljo Very great. Jibe furniture trader
has mo»e«l ; w#stwwrd. The, ‘leading ho
tel at Dqndqg, Stoljabd, H furnished
throu[
te-day leWe'rgd-'tVeh
less thaWi^.'can be mar
owing* flfe Cheap linn be
saving mac! ’
fuinilure,
liy
r England
Georgia and Alabama are
a handsome start in manufac-
tur,
prpi
.but
been
Nine-
eotton
rfilthe
'ufacture.
have advan
jvhich
wfet the f
t
■dll* are growing
- * art building,
ipression has
SwEngland mills,
manufacturers
orth, and all
Northern
States, howi
same
the North?
Eng-
steel
STAGS AN® K0STBUM*
Lotta fe 32.
Liszt fe 68 years of age.
Frank Mayo fe in Ban Francisco.
OLE Bull’s fiddle fe 816 years old.
Booth’s theatre in New York is to
let.
Nillson makes her debut at Madrid
(n “ Faust.”
Bandmann ought to play “Tried bf
Fire.”
“Evangeline” will cheer np the
New Orleans people.
Albani has distinguished herself m
“Elijah” in London.
Richaed Wagkkr has gone to' Italy
to write a new opera.
Naples has a real steam engine on the
Make.
Genevieve Wand fe playing in
^Edinburgh, Scotland.
Donizetti wrote sixty-four operas,
but he didn’t play on the accordeon.
New Yobk is crazy over Mile. Mari-
•toon the newly-arrived prima donna.
LATEST MARKET QUOTATIONS.
FLOUR, GRAIN AND MEAL.
ATLANTA—Flour: Superfine, family,
$7.75; ekfra family,’"$8.60; fancy, $8.25.
Wheat—the following prices, are .millers’
buying prices: Tennessee choice whHS; $1.40
al.50; Tennessee medium, $1.30al.40. Corn-
Choice white, 68a70c; yellow, 65a67c. Oats:
50a5oc for feed oats, and 60a75c for seed.
Meal is in demand at 67Me. Grits: $4.00.
ST. LOUIS—Flour efeadj; doable extra
$5.65@$5.80; choice to fanCr $6.25a$6.70.
Wheat lower; No. 2 red fall, $1.84XaJ.3l74
No. 3 do. $1.25. Corn easier at 372$. Oats
higher at 38.
LOUISVILLE—Flour: Family; e 5.25@5.50;
A No. 1, $5.75@6.25; fancy, j-6.50a3.00.
Wheat: Bed, amber and white $1.31. flhrn
White, 45}$; mixed, 4dJ$. Oats: White, 4c;
mixed 41 e.
CINCINNATI—Fiona Family, $6.1C@0.35j
fancy $6.90. Wheat: $1.33@L35. Corn:
44a46c. Oats: -10a41.
NEW YORK—Flour: Common to fair ex-
tra;$6.60ft36.50; good to ehoioe ex., $C.9?a8.70.
Wheat - Ungraded winter fed, $i.49al.4Sj$.
Jfo.y do, $1.47Hal.4S. Corr: Ungraded, 60a
•IO.. ’XTA- G chi;
63c. Oats: No. 3, 50t.
eerxTBT rkonct
ATLANTA—Eggs:- 18a20e. Butter : Choice"
Tennessee, 22^a25c. Poultry: Large, 18a23c
t „» r . , I hens, 22Jda25c; small sizes, 13ai7e. Swee
ILLIAH MaboN the pianist has gone lp 0 t a toe»: 50a60c pei bushel. .-Irish potatoes
) Germany on a Visit to Raff, the com* j2.7Sa3:00 per barrel.
tsbr. I f*A r/i’I.MOHK—lintter: Prime to choice:
western packed, 20a22c. Eggs: 21a2 2c.
' Sidney Buet has joined the Berger
Family, taking the place of Sol. Smith
RujseL
’ + ojtN T. Raymond is making his
anji tfereMrisissippi ant^’Tributaries, ^nififens and matdriag pennies in Ala-
■j>a:
•t Tanny Davenport will please tbe
angust Senators and Congressmen at
.. . a , /-, * an HUBl CclialUlo BAJU
rmturemwe at Grand ^r^ hiDgton this week.
rion of
.. fustrial.
^writer.'
mvo in
734,000, and
that- of thirteen Southern States, ex-
has wrought from the land- [“’Heir?
hear I”], for in this enlighted nine
teenth century Go3 T s* first decree
to fallen man fe cflntraiYjjned. Tii
what right - must '■■tb® n}!iyr,r• Af
mankind work and toil to support a iqw
in idleness. [Cries of “Too true!”'and tj, c
groans. Av«W- “DbwnwRft ftertiaf mdre, in the States west of the
band, .flip aggregate yearly income of
such a household, was $787 in the East
ern States, $985-- in the Middle, $885 in
thi Southern,iapd',$946 in the.Western
Rates, t IA fpUows .that while a work
ingman’s family can contrive to save
E. A. Locke, author of the The. Jfea-
tenger from Jarvit Section, has ysritten a
neff play for Lina Tettenborn.
Gamp AN ini, the tenor, tried to he a
blaetamith. Perhaps that is the reason
helello.ws so now.
Carlotta Patti charges the St.
Lojis Perl $25,000 for one reported in-
tomcation undertheitem “dibel.hi'' ■ r
Ak English duehess is going to marry
the* tenor who sang with bliss Kellogg
in London twelve ybart ago.
he latest Parisian play is entitled
Hotter i, Eyeglasi. Of course it isn
tacular piece.—Chicago ttribune.
}lass while at red heat is piling
1 oil and made so hard that morte
pestles may be nrinilfaetured in
-way. <» nsvd orn-’
:y say that Marie Roze’s voice is
grooving richer, and ehe attributes toe
beginning of the change in it to; the
effect of our climate.
J iss Neilsjn i» .going through the
lfry again, leaving n amberless
’.Tjfokendieafted young men and photo-
reonsin graphs in her wake,
ng ex- The Folly Theater has been recqftned
-In London,’ under Mr. ‘L. Toole’s man
agement, with A Fool and Hit Money.
Appropriate. »■
fclARA Bernhardt says: “One thing-,
woald prevent me fromgoing to America
_ —namely, if I felt that the newspapers
irir{ _would-treat me too severely.”
' - Herr Rubinstein’s latest, opera,
* Kelaschnikoff, the Merchant of Mos-
cow.” is to be produced for the first time
at Bt, Petersburg next February.
The world is not all had. There are
many worthy men in itr,'blit there is also
a large class of able-bodied young men
who seem only to have been created to
sefeke and chew and spit.-
Ia^kson, Miss., is building a new
opera-house, capable of seating nine
hundred people, and it is said that when
completed it will be one of the prettiest
theaters in the South.
Hamrrt must have looked terribly
mildewed to Olive when she characterized
him as the “mould of form.” She might
as well have called him a frightful old
fungus, and have done with it.
Send an American girl to Italy, to
Alleghenies.
-voq_-
Another voice:. “Groans fotocthe
tyrants 1” and,groans.] Think of the
blasting ruin spread.; think of the work-
house and the emigrant ship. [“Oh!
Ohl”] Think of starvation and death
and coffinless graves if“ heart’hear*!’bji _
and then (.fell; me to-day,.will^ontfeet,
true to the preaching, flfjoju; Trieste?
[Cheers.] Shall ourgeneratign wjtjess
such scenes as thosfV.of.18477 '[A voice:
"No; our blood Js' tip!’ 1 ’'-Lihl'nter.]
Forbid it, heaven. I "call oif every one
of you to-day to do everything in your
power to avojd^t, Organize .for
protection of onr own race. Combine, poorest classes from birth to man-
that you may offer an unbroken ffhoirr 1 Uoi a,!It does nof require us to asceud
The Cost,of Raising a Boy.
Wor.th.fr.]
.H^the heayicatLaxthatcan.be imposed
and coffinless graves-[ heart near*, fe tuD$n a nation is one that is paid in hu-
elusion is irresistible. If We look
ati jQdlingltf purely economical con-
sid;rarious,.we -may obtain very re-
rr.atjfahle reeilltB.’ It has been estimated
tli: t^a actual money cost of £300. is in-
fcu red in raising a Doy, cradled among
vejybigh in the social scale before we
find that this estimate.must he trebled.
If ito take wbaOwe may call tu* the cost
pritefcf
tiufo;nay at AoOOou arriving at
rit : psod tfeing phwer Of tie-unit fir
qu stidiw^U B^ar.SOme-relation t"
ostlyandearefull
w?hiahle resuit as to productive power.
'If the'laborers who earns'44*. or 45s. a
we ® P et annum, to tie wealth
of the iswntry, the physician, the scien
tific, itititgrV or naval'officer, the btfr-
ris ererLthe engineer may look forward
to the tithe when his yearly labor will
tw vfaftli more 'than, a hundred times"
thdb amount, even if■ appraised only by
tlnj in adttdKy paid for JttB.
timm XakiiigAny producing individ
ual, whether valued at ~00 l *or £5,000 per
an: ^uy,period of hfe" sareer„ no'
inc line tax to wLieu he can fcesubje
ag: nt —
in once’
agning-power or
th:
pe:
IPtr^Whfir.iHodm-wftRver-ohtnced
’ " ^RT nalWe ‘
hags adfeeneed
as in sonle qusSnt utfertmc©Uld doiili.
. brnten threads,. TJ ,
1 iW»tfe«fi*>rNOf 'iii^erfectkKF'itm,
peWftci weds
c* a ,. - ^win. oT
broken threads
dUitoeeerthe knots be vt>ren in;”
tftWi; to order onr hop33 and aims
; desire outstrip result, M
Wd can yet show work that no labor shames,
.*i«l ifl hur requital of toil exult;
.Ar *
at no mortaf WQRTingpo^ld-gloss from sight-,
luSrfauJts w.ejie such asppr fate jintjeds
''tluMitk)ure6fan,ij^it thick‘6r tlifn.
. tTfin bill of fare of the average Amet-
icin nian of family, for. the two days,
-succeeding Thanksgiving Day reads
prison, he. must know ‘that not .qne,. ahput''as follows: Triday—breakfast,
hundred, bilt one hundred thousand warmed-turkey; dinner, turkey hash-;
men are prepared to-takeup and carry lifu^pe*, fried turkey dressing.. Satxr-.
out the work he began. [Cheen.]- i day—bteAfeast, tnrkev remnantsc dto-’
f turkey A
Bather .(thrusting hjs.feeac
it' of his box)—“Hi, boy,
inglv out
bo-oyl” Boy—“Sir?”^Bather—'“When
are my pant* 1 Ikjft tfenrifff
went |n; End tit) W. Lean’tuna
of them?” Boy (having sought vainly
for them
you had .
lir?” v :.-a.’.irJlfo*|J6Hdl
, tnykey remn*n»;':dfe-
rihlets; ■ supperj beded*
.urkey, wjth the turkey .Jeft oat; &qd
hen onfiBumlayfal’dihner generally oc-'
ciir the grand turkey.pQtrpourri et finale
wind up. ,
; ma, -A-ii ,—“r,\\ ■ ;
rHE very -t«Hdertsir-Wt bf i '-wdmai#’s
man-she
r em on when you came . uim—«nU pai*
LIT2 STOCK.
ATLANTA—Choice Tenuessee cattle 3c
common 1Ko2J^c; Georgia raised, lMa2c.
Sheep 3c £ur choice,
. jCINCTNNATI—Hogs: Common $2.75a3.40
light $3.40a3.75; packing, $3.80a4.90; butoh-
ers, 3.80a3.90.
PBomiouft
ATLANTA—Balk meat: Clear rib sides,
7b; pork strips, 6%c. Bacon: Sugar cured
hams, 10 Ma l(J2£c; sides, 8>#c; shohlaerf, 5%<r,
breakfast, 8a8^c.
BALTImCRE—Mess pork, $13 50. Bulk
meats: (Loose'shoulders, 4^a6; elear sides,
a7. Bacon: Shoulders, 5c; clear rib sides
8J4c; hams, 10>^allc. Lard, re£ned ic tierces
■$8K- .
CINCINNATI—Pork, $|3.5d. Lard, $7^a
JJSO: Bulk meats: Shoulders, 4%c; clear ribs,
6.70c; ak orfc clear 1*^0. JBacon: Shoulders, b%:
short ribs, 7 34c; hams. 9al03^c.
NEW YORK—Mess pork, $12 30al3 6O7
ft>n* dear, 7%c.; short-dp *%e, Lard, $7 &7>£a
8.05. *
c«ttoi
.ATLANTA—Middling, nominal 11 %c
NEW YORK— Middling uplands, 12)^c ;
j M iddling Orleans, l2%c.
. ypALVESTON—Middlings, ll^c; low mid*
minfrs^ll Uc*good ordinary. 1114c.
NORFOLK—Midffiiags; Ism.
BALTIMORE—Middlings, 12%c; low mid
dlings, 12J^c; good ordin^rj’, 12c.
SAVANNAH-—Middlings, 12^c; low
raidirUings, ll^gc;, good ordinary, ll%c
AUGUSTA —Middlings, llj^c;
A Medicine Kboold noi bo GauR/d
By the suddenness and viohnee of its effects.
Self-evident as this propssition would teem,
there ar^ many foolish persons wbp are con
left! only with a remedy which acts abruptly.
The p 4 aud other npstruxn^vendors who
tr&de upon the credulity ©t, this class,, find
then* ^best holt,” as poor Artemns Ward
termea it, in the sale of violent pmgAtives. 80
long fs they wrench'the bowels of their dupes
soificiautly, they are pretty sure of a certain
mf asure of success. If instend of such pe»-
Dicious rubblsh/Hostettrr s Stomach Bitters
i$ UFed, the results are vtdely different. The
bowels are relieved, bat always gently, ly
this pleasant laxative, which dees not weak,
en but invigorates them, and en lows the co
operative organs of digestion and bilhn? se
cretion with aetivitt and regularity, etrergth
ens the consti ution and ph! sique, and while
it is safe in its constituents, is suMciently
prompt in op^ratiop.
A U3iKX££4^. BjaMKDY.—“Brown’s Bron>>
oh’’al Trcches” for Coughsj Colds and Bron*
<hlal Affections, stand first in public favor
an i cob-fidence; this result has been ac*»
qnired by a test of many years. 25 Cts a box.
The habit of running over hoots or shoes
corrected with Lyon’s Patent Heel Stiffeners
Arable dispatch to the Associated Prefs
says that Mason 4 Hamlin have been award*
ed the highest gold medal at the Paris Expo
sition for their cabinet organs. Thirty best
makers of tbe world Wo»c ooH>p«fik>!T.
learned to warble, and they call her
Gifilia Yalda. .. .
. “(Jardinal Manning, iu a recent lec-
tur^, condemned the employment of
married women outside their households,
saving a that “ when a woman married
ohef entered Into a solemn^ contract for
djfe that she would gijm Uqr time to her
husband, her home and her’Cmldren;
and if . the did not do .so it destroyed thei
whpla domestic life.”
Had Him Either Way. ,
Ct. f ' ' ' [Cbicngo Tribune.]
■ S 1 sculptor had seht a Jnarble Venus
to ! sbini ''international exposition or
other, and when it reached its destina
tion, lol one of tbe bands bad been
knocked off. -The furious artist brought
snit against the railroad company for
dalnaees, and the judge, (who ’was, the
brother ef.the -railroad company’s presi-
, dept)’decided as follows: “ ft a Work
ta that . art ft one of transcendental merit, its
iywdto value is-fiofc imparled by mutilation.''
Thug, the Venus of Milo, though bath
artri have been broken 0ff,^is, ; nevertbe-
leai, ef priceless . worth. (Ruskin, JV.,
11 44; Matt. IraolO.i, 1809 X
seq.) On the other hand, a statue of a
■tommonplace and inferior character is
robbed of most-offts value by such an'
accident. It remains for- tbe artist,
therefore, to Aid toeGoudt inappraising
■the vglnb-of.ihiiietatue.”. “-Ob! fhe
amount to mqcb. It.was wbat you have,
called n eomincfirdace sfudiirferioT pftce*
prince Milan Gbrenovieh, toe reign
ing sovereign- of - Servin, is said to be a
strong belierver in toe Divine Right
theory, exacting from all who surround
him the nwst sfevito.subservience, and
feeling iiQ difference between a Minister
wfWtate]au4 i ! cani?‘footman, as far as
■cobcetns the meteu^'hf ■seivilrty they 1
owe to him. Drt Risticb, the Servian
S raier, it is sled said;* does hot hold
same opinions, and athisHighness’
parties sometimes argues in favor of
i.one qf
became
greatly excited, and addressing hfe
: prime Minister,’ energetically’ ' ei>-
cliimed: “ Ristich, if 4 order you to
jump into the sea you will certainly
plunge in, head. feretoP**-” Di. Ristich
bowed respectfully and moved away to-
2 srd the door. “ Wither are you going,
istich7" inquired’ his Highness, bend
ing his brows in displeasure. “Tdnr
Highness will pardon me,” repHed the
astute statesman, *1 am going to learn
how to swim.”
IHxOd Items.
A lodierous transposition occurred ia
in the maxe-ap of a conple of tele
graphic items in’the New Haven Jour
nal and Courier- Monday, which pro-
duced toe following effect! The first
Item read, “A large cast-iron wheel,
revolving three hundred times a min
ute, exploded in that city yesterday
after .a long and' paTrifuJTlIness. De
ceased was a pfomfineqt toil ty-iecond
degree Mason.” This was followed by
-the second item, . which read, “ John
“Fadden, -the well-khown florist and
real estate broker of Newport, R. I.,
died. inJWasdnerA RtwaelFs sagar Aift
at Crystal Lake, Ill., on Saturday,
doiegi$3,OO0 <feM*ge>i ior the building,
and uritltiflg several workman asdfeoir
xwN-«mtac
sm
Thi waists of a yon
economical as.cpmifert
-i of tha skirt,
C1.VUU01A—.illumines, h/qV ]
(Uings, ilJ4c; good ordinary,lib.
low mid-
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572
w ■ ••ontatiree. Aauresn ^ * -
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KiODER’3 ?A8TILLE8.^".?u^^
aaNMPNMDHMO—T^iarleetiown. Mul
VOUNCMEN
mouih. Mvery pradnate gu*r»nteede f
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M .r*A»r—With tfssMictl until to. What coaiif
cts. sells rapiltf Tot 50 eta. C'taljfne y 9
Ho M. Spencer. 112 Wash’n gt..Boaton M»ja.
gpiUM
I n fib It and b'm XhMMSp. -.fhonaandt
eared. Lowest r^icn. D’.'isot f\U U
Dr.F K.friArwKOnig^v-J*^
. Ohy Child Pood insmes robust mitnhood. Feed
yonr'children * n Aidse'w *oid. *Aak yonr druggist
for .fl. TrUl can» 53 cent .
WfcRfltn BFffS CDKSfre
Yopnz men, go West, learn telegraphy Ad-
drees K. Valentine,Manager, JanesviHe Wie.
For one cent purchase a postal card and
send vour address to Hr. Sanford, 162 Broad-
wav, New York, end. receive pamphlets by
return mail, froiii which yon can learn
whether your liver 4s out of order and i/
out of order dr is any wav diseased, what i*»
the best thing in the world to take lor itC
~ yvreui«?U;
Sherman & Co., Ma»6hal), Mich., want an
ageiit in this county at oilce at ft'salary of
$100 per mouth arrl .expense! paiil. For.lull
fi^L rfertihnls^
Iddrestt ns above.
Hm* Ww'-et Wat*’
• lls Wiso an# Bnppy.
If ftih will'rir-p all your extravsghrt
and wrong notions in doctoring yourself
and families with expensive doctors or
hcmi),ug cure-alls, that do harm always,
and use only natnre’s simply remedies
for!all your ailments—you wmI be wise,
well and happy, and. save erect expense.
The greatest remedy !gr Inis, the^gteatp
Wise aild good will tell you, is fiop Bit
,ters—rwiy on it. -Sw another column.
- Frees.
When exhausted by mental labor take
Kidney-JVort to quintain heqlthy ac
tivity ol all organs.
fll’T atcums
Ol-I s-r-Tnl-". tree.
-wfeeu In
DHtfeUifel ior If I
er,,N r.
Korpkina ItabitlAirH lU 18-
<» ’-^O ilayn. Wwjmj till furwl.
lift,
, iiarn lauiicrTt:
i, /Bch,
asaifiiMrS’isS.
MAR DISEASES
.
i A L L bia time to the
iruaimentof IN>af|te8s
^lijoTflce. His hmccoss lias g ven him a national i<p-
utatioi. especially on Uunniug Kar and Catacrlv
Cail or H4-ml for It is little book on the Kar. ftel) s-
ea$<’4 hintUi/rir J reatmont—Crw lo
boulT(35» t»rts**abt*rfc0 *».*#. Address
" - 8iioEnAiu;u.
1 1$. HeasilhK'P*.
PIANO
c Sf—1.1 at
PARI^RNjtoslTIOK.
WtJaLilaix u'ip<;Di:SKT
f -.■■tnw Jot toHr-.t
IMPROVfO HtALTSF '0im
umsfie with tlw^au-ruY
flexllrle Kiri <rvataj»i r
Frank Leslie’s
Frank I.eatle’a !F**w
iff a tni<hfnl t«xrd ot enrre t events for
demmtic. in the poMUcal. social seieLtific
mercial world. Assn entertain
Eift J
and educational
mercial world. As »n entertaining and educatioiml
jmrnal it Is uneqcale*. It !>• sidefi the
domestic and forejen news ol tbe w«>ek. edHonals,
domestic and forer...
aeri-1 and shc-rt BtorifB. persoual go6*tp,
Amubii
c*trtoons and leanufill l
ti n». ft
nas nearly reacn«,i«» Semicentennial \
Piubltsbed everv WfdtiCflday. p:ue Ucrints. Annual
sabhciiption t4, pf stpaid, ..
Frank Leslie’s Popqlar .VEoil hlr is re-
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hensiven*ss. audits fep^tstion is firmly established.
The l est living writ! rs are craon* its contnliutvJS
its coum-s Represent every dei oflitcra
graiifi-U '«£d all
n-ent and in»tructioi
ried coutsnte filling 12S <jua.
that all taste* will
es of readers derive enterf
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cle Tts
•UOR rfebts "W 3«i day4’ invtetmeut
PJ/440 in fcrjv It. It., Octoter H-—
ProporttoBBtretnriis mtty we«k,<'*^to«lC£Pi k>n • 0,
820, — $50,— $I0«, 9 Of.
Official Kepovtsand Circnlare free. Address T^FOT-
ThK \V> 1GHT A CO.. Bankers. Wall?
?-^,OUU Ar-ntf w- nt***.. I hat. iae !«*.
baluoiu a da-. -cm? Ptaafr 1- r rarrun ».«.
r.t s. -r. Bl - K.Millon. l-.or^haoiN-ri.iul. I -
3re=ferilU SMITH’S VALVE ORCAW
aaiflBBritopa
N w.York.,can tearb the exact^o 1
•d line of A-*>verilsi*g it. Awnc»n^*«Wt»
II-prepr* I’-» «*1 ol* -♦**.- * ee.
is
yn f .rt -o.V,>!tv»c and other
9 own tri il lor today tothoeeaf-
. UehilJry ar:.?.rUMHe 1 of g-par-
Mark Twain’s New Beek,
mi TRAMP ABROAD!
GOOD TIMKa FOR ASFKTS AHEAD
PTCrPcfusofor Jhiuioi.rr.allr looke-llor BuJ
oowr-aV!. nml «t»» l.rrltorr- »
w^rd to the wise is sufficient.’ • ■
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nrth A- Rill.rrJ. L tica. 2.. ^ - Sdi(1 L.t ali UrCggWU*—
\ r?,JUicii£3
(rtpiioe
[ UTZCLfUX
c;m* F'-iiiah’ \VraklJ^i.Hiieh aAralS-
- — • IiiltcwumUirm Off
r loo gngrari ns s embellish each ti
ogethet
the 15th t f every montu) priAs
annum, postpaid.
Fn nb T^siln'* Otlmwey 'cU*rn^r. -'This
beautiful periodical h»s, tor nearly tw, tity fenr*.
nidi n tit inc d iis snteriority overall crmpi’tlto:
family jonrpsl. story paper aud h
atkractT*^
?>raceserial novel , uovett es, $kotci?e<J adv.nt'Tos,
ntiiapbii ‘
ndny Jlagnrlne.-Tlii*
mdonhtedly rna cheappat
rid}
. N
. tantiy present* d, and the ta>
writers contribute ia It. The co’
1 novelties, ikotcis’*; ai
,. ..jcdot e. etc 8 xteen png.N. e.»«ht of
which are r eeut fully eml/vll>hed. ruMhhwl ev
ery. Mor.day, price lOcentff. Aunc-1 cu!.'8'”r.pii6n st,
postpaid.
Frank I^slls**a $
brilliant perfudifcHl la
Snm'uy kisgsf.ine in the wci
cmed C r It an immense circul »t»’
the warnu st commend .lions « f the religions and
secular rre * Pfire and healthy .in tcue afld teach
ing, strictly non--ertanat?. it im-nl^ates principl s
short stories, adventBres.fcaafys, poema, aids ■■ iff-
cellanr embracing a large variety o- rmjecis, IL'
qnartapMtes and 100, iil,ust’atiou# in each number.
Fnbh^ht'don thd mth’ofevrry month. Price, sij.R e
copy, 25 ctht2 ; annual subscription 83. port paid.
Frank t.ady 4 » -fffnrnnl is thenro^t
popular, a-tistc and entertdinfug of the we.kl*
jonrnikls of fashion. Each number rdntS.ns sixtei n
pegw, with excellent pictnrcs and full uerc. irtb-n-
of tbe ve y lafeet rtyleff ot Udiee and chil-Jrft’. H
w8ar, use/ol inlcrmatron on family topics, rolect
stories, ooetry. tashtmiaMe“intetlicer.cf4. r^reoiiwl
chitcnat. e c , etc. Fashion Hates are lnirorte.l
month y fr< m Purls. exc nMvely lor tae Um i
JoCbsal. I’ubli-hed every Friday, price 10 cents
Annual subscription 84, postpa a.
Frank I-^lle’a I^idy** ]»!*»«:»»lue.-The on*,
ly complete Fashion Msgagir.ain Ameilc*!. Its r* s’
ports of the ever-va ying styles of c stuive-. hats
bonnots, et- . aro pt.hlUihed slmnUaiieotsly with
those in the Fr-ncb jonrual-,se that th Mibscritiers
receive the»urlit»t info.niBtiei:. 1 ho pM a-«i c - 4
orwd ;»«blon pintt*4. imported mnnilily from Paris.
arO accompanied with a enrate de criptl ns. nnd
the illustrations ate iu the blgl est st> le of art Th ■
liteiary (!ep«rtment ia of a varied and enteitaihivg
ebar.-cter. Ptfbllsbed monthly, animal subscrip
tion S3 50. poet paid ^
Frank I*t Bile’s'if a magsrhi^ of bn-
morouaaud sparkling stoi i-f. tales of
ventmesand mtlfe. A m'st enteitaMiitig rn’ lcn
f* in c.fyRqn RI to pages, filled with-interestic^tf*
.. ...^_ ..dvsntures BiHrttinv itfriiUnt*, ate-
e dotes, etc., etc. It is profusely and hanuayintly
illustrated. Pablistood month!*. hi»gl«- &
cents, annual subscr.'lttion 31.5'), postpaid.
Frank i^slte’u Boys’ «rd Olfls’ Weekly.'
-The oldest ap l b<8- juvepile jug ,pubJtsligd A
com anteucceeei^n ol seimlarn! Bhntt etort*. fBl.
uf 1uii. at and brightness, nod .free from
sensatlobalii-m. Portrails rtin vkw.ctes td-disPin :
gus-ed pn.ils in the pubi c echool3. adventnyes,
tsSr
Monday.. P^ico. hiagtanaB.ber. 5canta ;-aniiuAt>m>-
scription. t2.Tu, posfdge irtcInJed*. ‘
Frank l>B*’|***if «*lHowra.—\ month
lya pt ilodical cojLtainiQg Jiteratcre of Uw mod
pleueing ohersclbr. taiCT. Inrtfttil*!. "dvanmree,
poetry ptc./fftr. EVcr/ story is contDlet- in eac h
nunil er and tb© pHg«e abound. vTIth b»wnwnii ©tfe
cravings and exceedt. gly deltebtful t^nu/t nfer'iiti 1 -
ingreauing. A pleas..n» hour edn alwayg he pa*ed
in its company. P.rico. 15 cts.‘a copy*- 'AnumiT suo-
senption, $1 .V». postpaid.
Frenk l-e*lle’N t h.vl'etboxii expressly de
signed to rlease the cyp with P iciur ; "•
and to entertain a d instruct yonthfulri aders with
its carefullv prgBhrwt rwrr Content-, which w-iU
not fail »o ifx tlP- artefirfhn Wf. V mt ibferrst hud iiT
struct children oi‘ «nd«-r v-ars. Cn • 7 t k
mould 1»* in evorf houseii«ffM. Pnliwl-ml
Puoe only lo ceuts a copy, or fi n I“ar, pottage
free.
Frank Leslie’s FnMisliri-g* Ifenscj -
53, 66 aad ST.Fsrk Bit.ce,
.KBW.YttfeK. 1
First Kital.li.l.t.t f Mast--ff
TFIEUVIXSTI.WMENTE vji',.4
'•‘Tkfelfttf'edl *0 we Let nut n-w st
LEADING 'MlElb,;*.
OF THE WOIiJuD:
Evurywh :rt recogtjixc-d - th i'«i. — w r
1>* TONL. * • ?
OVER 80,fiO«
'I.«<!« in ubo.. Nw I>4>«pjs ctmBka^»
dost work and lowest prices.
£hh'-<’. ior X CMploffte. t~.y
it,ecTj, Watks Slnte.ka
CK*TEB«, WELL AMB*F««rfi
of o’l kinds and for all pnrposes Also fare Eu-
e nts. Hysranl c tiams.-Amalgaut Bells. l,oin Sbel-
Ifc Fofcatt$dogn©s ©f other informa*t«v?. addWw,'
TilK GOULDS MAjiUF’G ‘ O ,
factory. Seueca Fa l$;*F. T .
WarchQnse, li Tark Place. New York
«AS0NAHAMUk CA?lkEI qge%-
AfSiW&wi
»&! at PiP.is. 1867; V-.ISXA. h.ri > W-y
PHH.AD7IPHIA, !S7*T rrKt^Trare? B.-U W«I C ^ »-
>jrw «»SJAV 'ixt. g - ,y ’ >
CURED FREE!
Aa-taUIUSM Lr*|t*4 :rc? - , , # *' 3 * 1 '*
Epllrpv or Fall ins in©**, warrau u
- — u aOoct tBBfnt dr FEW' *
B
■ ^ Treat** B*pt tf
• Tp^st-c ( /5!c»sx2 Xspr»sa tdareee, p ^
~ ‘pa.Hi Gr- BOOT.*
fvrfccMr pnre. Prononoced the best by the pic^
__l nie.HA'ri viftkrtrftiriH itithe world. Gi\en-fuctto»
sfwird at 12^WbrlrPii Pans.
Lift of Wdfciri^ Xhefi* nrJ
IN THI!)
ill 1 nil
| Hi;'T'N ctKXv.ny
j cores excessive internper»Lce, v
SPnerirt’v^biiitrr grwTel, « it
b-. tes, pfein in the .bark. *$*1#
or luiur, and all disease: of ttiA
kidneys, bladder and urruai.v-otgans-'
Physicians prescribe Ml*’’ 1
WHOLE!
The Weekly Suk.
ONE DOLLAR.
P Aut.Ni 5 yr AW | til lUrt IHt
iCTOElAi.
HISTORY"'“WORM*
I.rontJiin e:» flue bittcrifo 1 Xf.’Kt'JJt
I2fi« la*ee <1 -i b e (nlmnn fffrf. gtid is to© nto©*
ails faster than
r ismiVgr?o.. rt. Ijonit.
t V .ny
dthwrhouC. Addr
N *.
m HSEUIE '•
EFTBOLEtfM.
Grand lb
FcilaiJ 'l.
at .Exposition.
Tills wonderfn! mbstanci
ylfsicia
JELLY.
dver MedaT
at Pail*
Exposition,
knowlhdged ty
ebes<
fjiri 0AH-UiSfiHGLL*
EWCYelOPyEDlA.
t.»la.l.]e einjle Bo k erer'srinlej^A
* — * ‘ b;*uy iB hurVolume
rt only Nt snb-cript ©n
ell ev^r known
TO. ASa5i 3.
r- G: w.tCAjlLKTp^- .t I noti -
•ft.Ur ,jnu‘.1^5- .
onS
i'i'w-: « M Vii-Vr, uua iiiw»rti-
Pensimw jlitts w dncUarftp or -deatu
AJdre%v with staaiP.
«i.ofyi&r. i rspN,
r. *2* ' v w». »k r.
rV NKMBli.liJ.'l -t-Ci.'tiw ttfaet-Uto-.g^
apHh '
,01d Reliable (
•^c6ntTa^a
MAKING*
. *v~
re-’C, one i£tw!t,iw|>'’»/flji. J ._«w
SAVE Ml jfY. A\".''l>T?y THa ‘
fe ‘
Jrtffr. Vv'THI! - - j
r’trtuaayttoiniE. Salt’JSanaf’g Oc^'
•••in iur.i Hfi*
kSVESCO?^ PLAINTS, I
|Constipftlpt| and Piles. J
IT HAS - ’OT
BlilVrr&jTTiE POtvfeLS XST* 1
fmraA tfBffciifaifc*
5 »ocaflL’S3f.ft cJc '.nces [the system ofl
itftdpo^sono js humors that developel
in-JCMneyan^ t/rlwary diseases, BBH|
icusnesp, tia^ndlco, Constipation,V
Piles, Neuralgia|
:^ c i^rr^s ciisorcers -,
j JOTJ R - WORT U a dry vc C ctiiM© ©
ToaxIarJ cv.-z be scut by nudl prepaid,
anil! Wsiw-rte-'Sk’
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"rf^si-osT, 1
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rin.nliu#««ivt>. **m*t»-*.. a.
TaTrirtDr otIhi*”. tjuiuc.n*Mr.ii‘fi‘;-«if-i-x<