Cedartown advertiser. (Cedartown, Ga.) 1878-1889, February 12, 1880, Image 4

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AGRICULTURAL, HE FIELD, THE FABK, THE GARDEN ORCHARD MANAGEMENT. There are some fanners that think frui trees do hot like much manuring. They stanre their trees as they do their poor ch^s'ahd sheep. Where manure is applied as a top dressing to fruit trees, it proves a decided stimulus and benefit. We have heard of trees that did not bear, and the reason assigned was that they grew too luxuriously. We never saw tne trees: A cheap material to top dress under orchard trees will pay. If the farmer has no material for top-dress ing, he should run his harrow through the summer to keep down weeds and to permit the roo s to have the benefit of what littls food there may be in the soil. Orchard trees often receive too much pruning. In young tress o ly thin out so as not to have the main leaders cross ing or interfering one with ano her; or when a few shoots are observed to be growing much stronger than the rest cut them away. By a long series o' bearing, branches will often get bark bound, and stunted, preventing a passage of sap to the leaves. In such caseS the sap seems to revenge itself by forcing out vigorous young shoot a long way down from the top of the tree. It is down to these vigorous young shoots that it is recom mended to cut the bearing branches away. Of course, much of this work can only be left to the judgment of the grower. If the tree bears as fine fruit as ever no such severe pruning i • necessary; but if it fails to yield satisfactory crops, now is the time to do the cutting. HORTICULTURAL NOTES. A pear tree, when it is bearing fruit, emands a great deal of water. If pear demands a great deal of water. If pear trees are watered daily with liquid ma nure, or water from the house sewer, and chamber slops, the fruit will increase in size and quality. New York pear-growers regard the duchesse as the most profitable dwarf pear that can be grown. They are planted twelve feet by six. In culti vating, the plow is run between the rows, and the loose soil thrown upon the grass under the trees, thus keepmg down its growth. In trimming off branches they should be cut close to the trunk so that no dead stumps shall disfigure the tree, also that the bark may readily grow over. Many fruit trees become hollow or fall into premature decay from the rain pene trating through old saw cuts made in pruning. Scars should be painted or tarred, or otherwise protected from the rain. An application of lime, wood-ashes and old iron put around the roots of fruit trees that are not doing well, will restore the trees to a healthy con dition and improve the quality of the fruit. A good wash for nursery trees—- Heat an ounce of sal soda to redness in an iron pot, and dissolve it in one gal lon of water, and while warm apply it to the trunk. Apples, in addition to being a de licious fruit, makes a pleasant medicine. A raw, mellow apple, is digested in an hour and a half, while boiled cabbage . requires five hours. If baked apples are eaten frequently at breakfast with coarse bread and butter, without meat or flesh of any kind,' it has an admirable effect on the general system, often removing •onstipation, correcting acidities an; cooling off febrile conditions more ef fectually -than the most approved medi- •ines. FARM NOTES. To keep the striped bugs from cucum bers saturate ashes with kerosene and ap ply a handful in a hill. Persons using nitrate of soda as a fer tilizer ought to bear in mind that of all fertilizers it is the easiest washed out from the soil. To destroy bugs on squashes and cu cumber vines, dsisilve a tablespoonful saltpeter in a pailful of water, put a pint of this around cadi hill, shaping the earth so that it will not spread much. It is also good to kill grub in peach trees—us ing a quart to each tree. To prevent young pigs being killed and eaten by the mother while farrowing, feed the sow with plenty of root,, raw or cooked, and season them with salt. An other—Give the, sow a slice of fat salt pork daily for the last few days previous to farrowing. Bran mashes sal ted are al so goorf. Green clover might be fed daily, and salt be put where she can get what the wants. PLANTS AND FLOWERS. We have one or two letters asking questions about certain plants and flow ers. The writers apologize for writing by saying that they love flowers. Why should not everybody learn to love these beautiful objects of nature? “In all places and in all seasons, flowers expand their light and soul, like wings, teaching us, by persua ive reasons, how akin they are to human things.” From the “Wte modest, eiimson-tipped daisy.” of Burns, to the magnolia, who does not love them ? The verbena can be easily grown fr. m seed, and the flowers produced from seed are nearly always fragrant, besides being produced far more plentifully than on a plant raised from a cutting. To keep insects off of plants indoors, use tobacco dust freely. The lantana is an easily cultivated plant, growing freely in any good soil; the best compost is a good light loam and old manure or leaf mould with the addition of sand to keep the whole •pen. By constantly removing decayed flow ers before a seed pod can swell, the f rowth of the plant and the continued evelopment of new buds and flowers upon the new growth are matters of •ourse. To destroy insects on roses, mix a table- teaspoonful of white hellebore in a pail of water, and apply it with a sprinkler. This destroys the insects and the roses ■ re clear. Another effectual remedy is whale oil soap, one pound of soap being added to eight gallons of water. It is applied at night, the plants being thor oughly drenched every two or three days. Fuchsias after being exhausted with blooming, should have the terminal shoots of all their branches clipped off; then set aside for two or three weeks, giving very little water; then repo - in a soil composed of well-decomposed leaf mould, mixed with a sprinkling of good garden soil, a few rusty nails, and a layer of charcoal at the bottom of the pot to secure good drainage. In a few weeks new shoots full of flower buds will start all over, growing very rapidly. SOMETHING OF CHEMISTRY. To the best of our ability we will re ply to a letter signed “ Chemistry,” writ ten from Coweta. In the formation of soils, oxygen is .-he primary agent. It combines with •alcium, magnesium, aluminium, silicon, and forms respectively lime, magnesia, alumina and silica; these four solids, from the basis of our soils; the princi pal constituents of soils are clay, lime, sand and organic matter, or the decayed parts of animals and vegetables, and the three alkalies, ammonia, nitrogen, and hydrogen. Soils differ greatly in the proportion of their constituents and in their origin, and so have names indicating some special element they contain that give a character to the whole mass. Ana bo we have clayey soils—meaning not that they are composed alone, but that they contain a large per cent, of that dense earth. What is ealled clay by farmers is a combination or mixture of pure clay and sand. Then we have silicious soils, meaning not that snch soils con tain not only sand, but that this consti tuent is so abundant as to give a sandy character to the soil. Then again we recognize calcareous or limey .soils, not indicating bv that term that such soils are composed entirely of lime, but that this constituent abounds in quantities unusual in other soils. Clayey soils are not free from sand; silicious soils are not free from clay. Calcareous soils may. contain silicia and and. clay, so that in fact these several soils mingle with each other. In examining the soils of any fields we can easily make an approximation to their composition. We can easily distin guish a sandy from a clayey soil, or from a calcareous one. We can easily distin guish organic matter from clay or sand. Even fields that yield paying crops vary greatly in their composition. The best way for a farmer to examine soils and to determine their capacity for raising spe cial crops is to sow patches of different seed ana ascertain by actual observations wbat plants grow the best—what fields yield the most remunerative crops. Other circumstances exist that add fertility to nearly ev. ry soil. Drainage may often render an acid soil sweet. Few rootlets are able to withstand the harm ful action of long soaking. WHAT FERTILIZER? A farmer must learn by observation and experiment what his soil lacks and what his special crops require, before he can understandingly apply any special fertilizer. Whenever stable manure is applied to hoed crops, the nearer you can keep it to the surface the better. ITS IMPORTANCE. The cotton crop this season is half a million hales greater than ever before. Tobacco is in excess of all former esti mates by 12,000,000 pounds, sugar 200,- 000 hogsheads, the excess of wheat is 20,000,000 bushels, and corn 100,000,000. And yet even farmers themselves cannot realize the importance of the agricultu ral interests, and not only farmers, hut politicians, legislators and the public generally. There is no industry so de serving the fostering care of the govern ment. How She Served Twe Masters. [Camp Meeting Corrsapondsne*.] The sweetest oratory that I have lis tened to on cliff of in forest was when I awoke from a twilight dream which had overtaken me asTsat leaning against the base of a monster tree. They were upon the opposite side, and I could not run. She said: “Since we were chil dren I have felt a deep interest and friendliness in your welfare, and since I came to know the blessedness o' hope, I have longed to share my joy with you. Will you give your heart to your maker?” He said: “I can’t do that, Molly. I would if I could, because you wtsh it 1 gave it to you last winter during our meetings of the ‘Jeu ’d eaprit,’ and if you really don’t want to keep it yourself, and really don’t in the least care for it, you may give it to whoever you like, for I shall never have any use for it. I would like, you know, to share a blessedness of hope, very likely much the same as yours if you would only arrange things so that I might have you all the time to divide the joy with which I hope you mean; can’t you, Molly?’’ She said: “O Johnl” and then there was a fumbing, and if he didn’t kiss her and she didn’t kiss him, why “ Katydid” and the woods are full of them. Then Bhe said: “ You must tell Da how you feel;” and he said: “Isn’t it too soon after getting a new heart to tell a fel low’s experience?” and she said: “Not at all. It is proper and I am very happy.” He said: “Not as happy, Hclly, as if I had given my heart to the Lord, are you?” He asked his ques tion in a pathetic and apprehensive i/ina unrl all A ranllAfl • 13 flll t.llfl tone, and she replied: “It is all the same, John. I’ll see that the good Lord gets it at last.” Then they went off to inform pa and get an earthly blessing from him, for John is in the leather business and very prosperous. An Old-Fashioned Hotel. [Turner’* Fall* BeporUr.] It waa one of those old-fashioned ho tels where "every thing runs itself.” The landlord was a jolly old fellow who had to be hunted up when anything wanted by a guest. An eccentric drum mer came along one night, and gave orders to be called at five o’clock in the morning to take a train due at that time. The landlord was thunderstruck, but in a moment the effect of the shock passed away, and he began to nod in his chair again, while the traveler put his valise under the counter, “Did you say that I should be called at that time, land lord ?*’ queried the traveler; “I mu3t go if possible.” The landlord yawned, stretched himself and scratched his head all at one time. “O-o-o n-o-o-o, we never call anybody here,” he yawned. “Haven’t you an alarm clock, then ?” oaVnd fVisz lmnafiint trtTAl«r ‘‘Oh uoe THE LIGHT Of THE FUTURE. UtMi'l I3»«lril USkIMS St LaM takes asked the impatient traveler. “Oh, yes, we can fix you out that way,” said the sleepy old Lowlow as he rubbed his eyes, yawned and disappeared through a door. The traveler arranged the alarm to strike at 4:30, and turned into bed.^ After he had fallen into a sound sleep, he was startled by a vigorous knocking at his chamber door, and asked sharply “What’s wanted?” The landlord’s voice came through the pan el, “Stranger, seeing as you’ve got the clock all fixed, I wish you’d call the other chap in 85, who said he’d like to take that early train if I could find any way of waking him up in time.” The traveler was displeased, but be was the only one to complain of the manner of conducting the hotel in forty years, the old fellow told us. ,--■■■ Activity Is not Always Energy. There are some men whose failure to succeed in life is a problem to others, as well as to themselves. They ars indus trious, prudent and economical; yet after a long life of striving, old age finds them still poor. They complain of ill lack. They say fate is alway against them. But the fact is that they mis carry because they have mistaken mere activity for energy. Co’founding two things essentially different, they have supposed that if they were always busy, they would be certain to be advancing their fortunes. They have forgotten that misdirected efforts is bat a waste of activity. The person who would suc ceed in life is like a marksman firing at a target; if his shots miss the mark, they are a waste of powder. So in the great game of life; what a man does must be made to count, or it might al most have been left undone. Every body knows some one in his circle of friends, who, though always alert, has this want of energy. The distemper, if we may call it such, exhibits itself in various ways. In some cases the man has merely an executive, faculty, when he should have a directive one; in other language, he makes a capital clerk, for himself, when he ought to do the think ing of the business. In other oases what is dons is not done either at the right time or in the right way. En ergy, correctly understood, is activity proportioned to the end. We extract the following description of Edison’s late invention on electric light, from a late issue of the Cincinnati Commercial: It will be recollected that a premature announcement of this dis covery agits ted England in the fall of 1878, and caused a panic among the holders of gas stock. This happened owing to the unauthorized publication of a few enthusiastic phrases from a private letter. As a matter of fact, at that time Mr. Edison waa far from the solution of the mystery of producing and diffusing light by electricity. He had not then earned the splendid suc cess he has now achieved. Then there were interviews of Edison by enterprising newspaper correspond ents of American and English journals, all expressing great expectations and giving picturesque accounts of the mighty inventor and his mystical work shop. After a period of almost total silence, as Edison began to refuse to see interviewers, for the reason that they took time and strength, and committed him to inaccuracies that excited the meckery of men of science, we heard of the lamp in which platinum was em- ploved, and its complex gearing to pre vent the flow of too much electricity. The general effect of this was to re duce the anticipation of Edison’s suc cess to minimum. The panic in gas stock passed away altogether. The ap peal to American miners to find enough platinum to make it a cheap metal ex cited amusement rather than alarm among the holders of investments in il lumination. The point of the discovery we make known this morning, is that carbonized paper anewere the purpose that it wai thought platinum alone could terve, and is not only as cheap as ashes, but better than precious metal. All diffi culties but this of the composi tion cf the wick of the elec tric candle had been overcome. The generation of electricity ha* become familiar. There are many well-known electrical machines. The divisibility of the current has been found possible. It is as divisible under Edison’s process as a volume of gas. Wbat of the Edison lamp? It can be made at a cost of twenty-five cents. In the simplest form it is as cheap as a gas tip. It is a plan glaBS globe, about the : size of a small .orange or large lemon. In the bottom is fitted a metal lic stopper, through which the copper wires pass, and a strip of carbonized paper, shaped like a horseshoe, connects the wires. The air is exhausted in the globe. Turn on the electricity, which , is quite as simple an operation as turn ing on gas, and the carbon becomes and remains luminous, giving out a soft, brilliant, powerful light, and the wick endures. No limit to its endurance has been found. No matches are needed to strike a light.' You touch the key and there is your illumination. The glass globe dees not become heated. It grows warm, but by no possibility can there be any combustion. Break the glass and the light is instantly and ut erly extinguished. The moment the air en ters, the light is out. It would be per fectly safe, therefore, to use snch a light in a powder magazine. It will be of inestimable advantage on shipboard. It can be applied with the happiest re sults in mines heretofore extra hazard ous. It will, by at once abolishing the use of matches in our houses, and intro ducing a light that neither heats nor enkindles, vastly reduce the liability of fire, and thus speedily pat down the rates of insurance. This light will do away with the necessity of heat in well lighted apartments. One can produce a dazzling illuminatian without chang ing the temperature. As there is no combustion, there is no smoke, so that this is the light long sought for picture galleries. W herever a wire can be stretched, light may be cheaply produced, so there will be no excuse for dark alleys. This will be the terror of the burglars, for by the noise less touching of a key, not only an apartment, but an entire house, may be instantly flooded with light, to the ter ror of all who seek darkness that they may do evil. It is a light that does not harm the eyes, and that may he shaded and regulated at pleasure—combining the softness of the oil lamp with the splen dor of the burning of carbon points. The opinion is not entertained that an entire city could be supplied with electricity from a single establishment. New York, for instance, is to be divided into twelve districts, each receiving the magical current from an independent center. From four to six districts under this system would comprehend the com pact portion of Cincinnati. Edison’s favorite theory on the sub ject is that the gas companies will he glad to buy the right of lighting under his invention, and that the wires will be conveyed through the gas pipes, the new lamp being simply screwed on where the gas tips are found. Very fine insulated wire will suffice. All the appointments are simple. Agents are already here for the pur pose of introducing the Edison lamp. The object is not to sell the right to in dividuals, hut to employ capital in sup plying districts. It is Edison’s careful sti mate that the cost of the electric ight, according to this system, will be omething less than one-half the cost of coal gas. He is sure it will not exceed that figure. Beyond that, he proposes to use electricity as a motor, to run sewing machines and the like, and has prepared a meter for the exact meas urement of the electricity furnished to each house. We need not dwell upon the importance of this discovery. It is revolutionary. ! e f£ Hra. Spriggle. a [Atlantia MeatUf.] Not a week later Mrs. 8| seated herself again at black dress had suffered _ .. contact with muddy roads en the way. The black Bun-bonnet was limper and rustier than ever. Their wearer drop ped into a chair, and crossed her hands dejectedly on her knees. “ Recon ye done heered ’boat my gal bein’ married,” she said, without raising her eves from tie floor. ' “Yes,'I was much surprised to hear it,” tne mistress replied. “She must be very young.” “ Yes, she it tol’able young, is sis— goin’ on fifteen. But now, I was married at thirteen—I was sol” She looked up quickly, but, catching an expression of disapproval on the mis tress’s face, she cast her eyes again upon the floor. . “The wust on it is,” continued she, “ he ain’t got a cent, nor he can’t make one, nuther.”_ *• Why did you let your daughter take him, then I” “ Well, he come a-dwellin’ round sis, an’ he’d alius a powder-horn a-hangin’ on to him; so I just ’lowed he’d a gun, and could keep sis in coons and ’pos sums. She’s a master-hand at fresh meat, is my gal. He scraped up tw' dollars somewbar to get the license with an’ to pay the preacher; hut I don't reckon he’ll ever arn any more.” “Not earn any more!” cried the mis tress incredulously. “ What is the matter that he can’t work and support your daughter properly ?*’ Mrs. Spriggle pushed back her bonnet and crossed her knees before she an swered. Then she shook her heSd mournfully. “ 1 never found out,” she said, “ till they was done married as how he’d nary gun at all—nothin’ but a powder- horn. And,” with a gesture of dis gust, “he’s the powerfullest no account critter ye ever did see.” “ You must feel badly to let your daughter go away with such a man.” “Oh, law, she ain’t gone! Did ye think be had ary house to put her in? Why, don’t you know? They’s a-livin’ to home with me.” This amazing piece of intelligence nearly took away the mistress’ breath. Before she could reply, Mrs. Spriggle continued: What’s did’s did. ’Tain’t {no] use fussin’, I reckon.” “ But how could you let her marry him without knowing more about him than you did?” “ Well, it’s flyin’ in the face o’ Provi dence not to take up with a husband Bemarkable Spots on the Sun. Some large and remarkable spots iiave recently been seen on the sun, and it is worth the whi.e of those who have tele scopes to watch closely the solar disk. Sun spots are interesting objects, even when they remain substantially un changed in appearance from day to day; but when, as sometimes happens, start ling changes are seen to take place under the very eyes of the observer, the inter est rises to the highest pitch. What student of nature would not willingly spend hours at the telescope with the chance of seeing, for instance—what was once actually observed—a great spot on the sun suddenly split in two, the pieces gliding rapidly apart as though sliding over smootn ice? Sun spots have an especial interest on account of the unexplained connection between them, or their cause, and the phenomena of terrestrial magnetism. As a general rule, when sun spots are numerous, the mystic curtains of the Aurora are frequently seen waving noiselessly in the northern heavens. It is not unlikely this brilliant auroral display may be seen this winter. when he comes along." She glanced up appealingly as she spoke. “ Gals can’t get a good husband every day—they get a good can’t sol” But,” said the mistress, “ it seems he is not a good husband.’’ Mrs. Spriggle’s face, which had brightened Blightlv, took on a gloomier hne, and she palled the black bonnet down over it. “ That’s so,” she assented, tearfully. “ He’s wuss than nary husband. That’s so, I do say. But,” as she rose to go, “mebbe he can ketch rabbits, if ha knowed how to make a trap, now I I mast be gettin’ along.” A Sad Story. A very singular case of loss of per sonal identity has been discovered at Bellair, Ohio" and has attracted much attention from medical men, who all admit that nothing just like it has ever before come uuder their immediate ob servation. Some nine months ago, a man, apparently about 50, rather slender, of good address, and neatly at tired, found himself standing od the platform of the railway station of that town, a little money in his pocket, and a valise in his hand, containing under clothes and toilet articles. He had no idea of his name, and nothing furuisl»ed any clue to it except the one word “ Ralph,” written on a night shirt. For two or three hours he tried to trace some connection between himself and the past, but without avail. Eveiy- thing was blank to the moment when he seemed to have awakened from a long, oblivious sleep. He went to the nearest inn; informed its keeper of bis peculiar mental condition, and retired early to bed, persuaded that his memory would soon he restored. The next day a temperance lecturer came to the house and getting acquainted with Ralph in vited him to hear his discourse in the evening. Ralph was present, and while listening attentively was seized with an uncontrollable desire to run out-doors and break the windows of an adjacent groggery. This brought out a number of its patrons, including the barkeeper, who, after falling upon him and beating him very badly, caused his arrest. Several prominent citizens became in terested in him and labored in vain to learn something of his antecedents. The physician of the county (Belmont) infirmary made his acquaintance, ana after a while, seeing that he was very intelligent, quick-witted and trust worthy, appointed him his assistant. He has far more than average capacity, has a good knowledge of business and is a very expert penman. He is men tally sound in everything except per sonal identity. Many people thought him feigning" at first, but nine months of close observation has convinced them of his absolute sincerity, and Dr. He- wetter of the infirmary has reported the stransre case in full to the Hospital Gazette. “Many Hen of Many Minds.” [r-n i-i n. all OommercUl.] “ All that your journal lacks to make It really interesting ia* little more at tention to the art news of the day,” re marked a gentleman to a local reporter. “Now, I sent a long letter myseli to your paper upon the ‘Spiritual Philos ophy of the Ancient Art of Greece’ mp(e than two weeks ago, and it has not appeared yet. Now, people don’t care anything about these murders and the little things that happen about town. It is art that we need. Artis the great refiner of humanity.” The reporter was duly impressed. (Reporters are an impressible race, with an exterior system of nerves.) He re plied to the disappointed author that these were precisely his sentiments, and that he would have sacrificed a week’s salary any time to have read that paper on the “ Philosopy of the Ancient Art in Greece.” The amateur author and the sympa thetic reporter parted affectionately, and the reportorial intellect strayed into the house of a leading publisher. It was evident that something had slightly disturbed the usually fine equi poise of the man of books. He looked interrogatively at the reporter, whose mercurial sensibilities perceived the variation in the intellectual temperature of that leading house. “ I haven’t seen those reviews in your paper, although I sent your editor ad Soolal Fallacies. We commit the still gnat error of plunging into ice-water every morning, then scrub all the akin off with a horse hair brush or a coarse board towel; ait down to breakfast of oatmeal sawdust: dine off a tablespoonfnl of wheat and two berries, and make a supper on cat nip tea, and then be pnt through a Rus sian bath of five hundred degrees; sleep under an open window when the ther mometer is at zero; wear long hair; dress the women in pantaloons; make all the property over to them, then sit down in the kitchen corner and nurse the baby, and when it is asleep, wash np the tea-things, and go to bad at 9 o’clock, to be “ont of the way.” What will become of us men? Surely we have fallen on evil time. A better and truer mode of life is to have everything that is good te eat and to drink, which im parts nourishment and strength, and as .much of it as vnn want. The idea of getting up I. i -■ 1 .'■ > hungry is un natural and absurd and hurtful—quite as much so as getting up in the morn ing before your sleep is out, on the mis chievous principle that “early to rise makes a man healthy, wealthy and wise.” Early rising, in civilized society, al ways tends to shorten life. Early ris ing of itself bever did any good. Many a farmer’s boy has been made an in valid for life by being made to get up at daylight before his sleep was out. Ladies’ and children’s shoes cannot run over if Lyon’s Patent Heel Stiffeners are used. For one cent purchase a postal card and send yonr address to Dr. Sanford, 162 Broad way, New York, and receive pamphlets by return mail, from which yon can learn whether yonr liver is out of order, and if ont of order or is any way diseased, what is the "d to best thing in the world to take for.it. C. Gilbert’s Pat Gloss 8tarch for laces, etc. W-ulrS. Sherman & Co., Marshal, Mich., want an agent in this county at once at a salary of $100 per month and expenses paid. For fail particulars address as aboTC. Chew Jackson’s B;st 3vect N ivy Tobacco Female Weakness. THE DEAF HEAR THROUGH THE TEETH Perfectly, all Ordinary Conversation. Lectures. Co”‘ certs, etc.,by.A'eu? Channels to the JlcrVee_of Hearing by means or a recent wonderful s ci t enti, KT^^£.Vi —the Dentapbone. For remarkable pubiit* tests on the Deaf, also on the Deaf and Dumb, see the A/w vance copies of all the leading maga- | Many a young girl has been stunted lines,” said the man of letters, a trifle | in body and mind and constitution by being made to get up before the system had had its full rest. All who are grow ing, all who work hard, and all weakly persons, should not get up until they fee' hastily. He could not be anything but courteous if be tried, but there was a shade of possible disturbance in his manner. The unworthy representative of repor torial talent mournfully stated that he had himself written those reviews, and sat up till long after midnight to steer them safely over the quicksands that attend the transubtantiation of manu script into “proof,” and that then he commended that proof to the divinity that doth hedge the managing editor and himself to Nature’s sweet restorer. But that, alas I on calling for the morning paper before he was awake, he perceived the editor had made a mistake and in- Ex-Governor McArthur, of Ohio died fifty years ago, leaving some mil lions of dollars to be divided equally among his family when his younges >uld be grandchild should be twenty-one years of age. He forgot to say living grand child, and the United States Circuit Oonrt at Washington is endeavoring to decide whether the estate can be divided until the tribe cease to multi ply and replenish the earth. The Uninformed Yisitor. [low* State Register.] The funniest scene of the year oc curred at Gen. Sherman’s headquarters Tuesday. A Senator was showing the sights of Washington to a country con stituent, and introducing him to dis tinguished men. Among other places. 1 he took him to see the General of the Army. The constituent shook hands with Gen. Sherman, and remarked, in an innocent way: “ You were in the late war, were vou not?” The Senator says that Gen. Sherman was never before nonplussed in his life, and as soon as he could do so, decently, the Senator dragged his friend out. It is understood in “official” quarters that the man was from Keokuk. Drunkards’ Wives. If there be a lonely woman amid the multitude of lone and sorrowful women more to be pitied than another, I think it i| a wife looking upon the one she has promised to honor, lying upon the bed with his hat and boots on. Her com forter, who swore at her as long as he could speak at all. Her protector, ut terly unable to brush a fly from his own face. Her companion, lying in the stupor of death, with none of its solemn dignity. As he is entirely unconscious of her acts, I wonder if she never employs the slowly passing mo ments in taking down her old idol, her ideal, from its place in her memory and comparing it with its broken and de faced image before her. Of all poor, broken idols, scattered into fragments for the divine patience of womanhood to gather together and cement with tears, such a ruin sis this seems the most impossible to mold anew into any form of homeliness. And if there is a commandment seemingly impossible to obey, it is for a woman to love a man she is in deadly fear cf, honor a man she can’t help but be ashamed of, obey a man who cannot speak his commands intelligently. The theory of recognizing our friends in a future world is a beautiful one, and worthy of much thought, but I think it is commendable to try to keep our friends in a condition to recognize us in this world, try to keep a man while he is alive so he will know his wife and children, and not, as often oc curs, turn them out into the storm of a winter midnight, or murder them in his frenzy. What to Teach.—Rev. Charles Brooks, father of the State normal schools in America, wa3 asked by a teacher this question: “ What shall I teach my pupils?” Ha answered, “Teach them thoroughly these five things: 1. To live religiously. 2. To think compre hensively. 4. To reckon mathemati cally. 4. To converse fluently; and, 6. T< write grammatically. If you suc cessfully teach them these five things, you will nobly have done your duty to your pupils, to their parents, to your country, and to yourself.”—Sdentific American. serted telegraphic dispatches and Na tional n( reviews. tional news instead of those magazine The book publisher listened atten tively, and it was evident that his wounded feelings were - somewhat soothed. “ Of course I do not blame any one,” he said, “ still there is reason in all things, and you see it is book reviews that the people want. Now the Semi- Daily Trumpet is a very good paper, as newspapers go, but a little more atten tion to literary matters would do a great deal for its circulation. Literature is the bread of life.” “ Certainly,” responded the reporter, “ I agree with you. If I were the edi tor of the Trumpet I should make book reviews the leading speciality of the paper, and”—but just here the reporter caught Bight of an insurance man, and fearing to be told that life insurance should be the leading topic of the journal of which he was the unworthy representative, he hurried his oreide watch into his pocket, picked up his five cent handkerchief, which in his conster nation he had dropped, and made the best of his way to the obscurest corner of the office of the Semi-Daily Trumpet, where he mediated upon the capabilities for differentiated tastes presented by the human race, and he wondered why that fellow Huxley didn’t write it up. Men TYlio Require Presence of Mind. Many railroad accidents are pre vented by a presence of mind on the part of engineers. A passenger train on the Chicago, Burlington &. Quincy Road was rounding a sharp curve, just under a piece of tall timber. The watchful engineer saw a tree lying across the track Bixty feet ahead of the locomotive. The train was running at the rate of thirty-five miles an hour, and to check its momentum before reaching the obstruction was out of the question. The engineer took in the situation at a glance. He threw the throttle wide open, and the engine shot ahead with the velocity of an arrow and with so tremendous a force that the not so cool a head would have made the best possible use of those sixty feet in the way of checking the speed of the train. That would have caused a dis aster. Bradford, an engineer, was bringing an express train over the Kankakee line from Indianapolis. As the engine shot out from the deep cut and struck a short piece of straight track leading to a bridge, a herd of colts were dis covered running down the road. The distance to the river was only 100 feet. Bradford knew he could not stop the train, and also knew if the colts bent the locomotive to the bridge they wouid fall between the timbers, and the ob struction would throw the train off and probably result in a frightful loss of life. It took him only a half a second to think of this. The other half of the second was utilized in giving his engine such a quantity of steam that it covered that one hundred feet of track in about the same that a bolt of lightning would travel from the top of a lightning-rod to the ground. The colts were struck and knocked down the embankment just as the were entering the bridge. for Vrkb" Illustrated descriptive pamplilet M,tb» American DcntaphoueCa, ciaciuuati, Ohio DaajtaTPri. Wfrt-a anil Mother*. Dr Marchoi s Uterine Catholieoo will po-Itirefy cure Female W»-fenesa. fuch as Fd'Pngot the <Vomb, White*, Chroirc Inflammation or Uicerv.ticn of the Womb, Ircideatrit Heinorrhaeeor Flood in/,Painful, 6uppro* j fd and Irregular Mensti nation, Ac. An old aca reliable remedy, rionl post'd earo lor a pam phlet, with trednvnt, cures sed ceitiflcates from physici :ns and patients to Howarth & Ball ird, Utica N Y. ~ol* by ail druggists 8150 p*r b ritK Ho better remedy in th» Whpl* matsria-madfcwt has yet been compounded for the relief and ont of Female C omplaint*, of the ordinary kind. tbam Tenet*no: It seems to actJn these cufli with un worn sd certainty, »ad.never fail* to giro a new and healihfcl tone to thhtem«flB*t**n«* ^ laxed debility and unhealthy store a healtbfnl vigor and elasticity. One*of the - most common o three complaints Ie-A#eueorrtu*eor Whites, whfeta are brought on either by the pree* - ence of Scrofula in the system or hr tome affection of the womb, or even by fmeral debility. For all these (ompldntsr and when d»nf.r »egin*. to threaten wonifn at the mrn of Iff*. Tegetfnw eai he - commenced without quailTcatr 11. *- * great j>rer- ■ alenceo! these disorders, and ti*eir cwrbf line, hu nmplr shown thst the .nr« .Ue.lftUp / r agent r mail:* not yet to be oisc rered, nut la al- rva..ykno*P. and faroilte with AmerfynnJto- , * dies. Toi Iodh has it been the custom to rreseribo nauseating untf nncerta : n remedies In pi*ce eF , . what is ; leas>nt. efficaci es and cheap. Taj Ve»£ ’ * • “ -~wer to carry yoa satsly ‘eating . t is t leas s at tine, and do not donbt its power through danger and diseas 1 *. Woitlilfss stuff. Not so fast my friend; if yon could see the strong, healthy blooming man, women attd childten that hsve been raised from beds of sickue's*, suffering and almost death by the use of Hop Bitters, you would say “Glorioos and invaluable remedy ”—Press. eel as if they would be more comfort able to get up than to remain in bed; that is the only true measure of suffi ciency of rest and sleep. But one who gets up in the morning feeling as if he “ would give anything in the world ” to remain in bed a while longer, does vio lence to his own nature, and will al ways suffer from it—not immediately, it may be, but certainly in later years, by the cumulative ill effects of the most unwise practice. In any given case, the person who gets up in the morning before he is fully rested will lack just that much of the energy requisite for the day’s pursuit. As a people, we do not get enough sleep, we do not get enough rest, we will not take time for these things; hence our nervousness, our instaDility, our hasty temper, and the premature giving out of the stamina of life. Half of us are old at three-score, the very time man ought to be in his mental, moral and physical prime. Half of our wives, especially in the farming dis tricts, die long before their time, be cause they do not get rest ana sleep pro portioned to their labor. Nine times out of ten it would be better for all f iarties if the farmer should get up and ight the fires and prepare breakfast for his wife, she coming directly from her toilet to the breakfast table, because it almost always happens that she has to remain up to see things right long after the husband has gone to bed. This is a monstrously cruel imposition en wives and mothers. Guard $ gainst Disease. If you find yourself getting bilious head heavy, mouth foul, eyes yellow, kidneys disordered, symptoms o! piles tormenting vou, take at once a few doses of Kidney-Wort. It is nature’s great assistant. U=e it as an advance guard— don’t wait to get down sicV Meteorological observations have now become so extended that evidence is rapidly accumulating to enable us to determine positively the source of the cold aerial waves v*ich sweep across the country during our winter season. The indications are that we owe them to the great area of high barometer in North eastern Siberia, where the pressure sometimes exceeds 31.50 inches and the temperature falls as low as 76 degrees belew zero. The pole of the greatest cold is in the neighborhood of Yakutsk, on the Lena, where the average ther mometric reading in January is 41 degrees below zero, and where the sever est cold exceed* by ten degrees that ex perienced by explorers In high arctic regions. This is also the region of the highest barometric pressure known in winter, and from it, doubtless, proceed the waves of intense cold which play so large a part in our winter experiences. tree was picked up by the cow-catcher and flung from the track as if it had . , been only a willow withe. A man with There are also two papers by Mr. The December number of the North American Entomologist contains an illus trated article on a new para»ite of the willow tree, by Miss Emily A. Smith, late assistant state entomologist of Iili- Grote describing some new species of lepidoptera collected by Prof. F. H. Snow of the State University of Kansas, and new specie* from Florida and Texas. An Editor’s Dream. He fell asleep after a time, and lo I he dreamed again. And it seemed to him in a vision that, having armed himself with certain papers ana books, he turned his stepB once more toward the place and knocked at the gate. “Hello, is that you againf’ said Peter. “ What do you wish?” “ Let these persons again come forth,” replied the editor, and Peter this time made them all pass through the gate and stand outside. They came as before and uttered the same cries as before. “ Why didn’t you notiee that big egg I gave you?” yelled the first. ** It was rotten,” replied the editor. “ Why didn’t you write up my soda fountain ?” cried the druggist. “You had your tickets printed at the Lthe local other office,” calmly repl man. “ Why did you write about old Tom linson’s hens and never gpaak of my new gate?” shouted the third. “ Old Tomlinson paid for his adver tising and you didn’t. Here’s the bill,” said the editor. “ Why did you snell my name wrong in the programme?” groaned the local programme?” talent. “ Take a look at this manuscript of yourB&nd see for yourself,” said the edi tor with a grim smile. The rest of the company yelled their complaints in unison, and the editor calmly sorted out a series of bills for un paid subscriptions, and presented each with one; and it was so, that when they had received them, they all tore their hair and rushed violently down a steep place into the sea, and St. Peter, taking the editor calmly by the hand, led him within the gate and said: “ Come, friend; these chaps managed to slip through here in spite of us, but, thanks to the press, we now know, what sort of fellows they are. Come in and stay; we need a few such men as you in here.” A medical advertisement says skinny men or women are not admired. Neither would they be if they had no LATEST MARKET QUOTATIONS. FLOFR, GRAIN AND MEAL. ATLANTA—Flour: Superfine, family, f7.75; extra family, $8.00; fancy, $8.25. Wheat—the following prices are millers’ buyimrprices: Tennessee choice white, $1.40 al.50; Tennessee medium. $1.30al.40. Corn; Choice white, 68a70c; yellow, 65a67c. Oats: 50a55c for feed oats, and 60a75c for seed. Meal is in demand at 67i£c. Grits: $4.00. ST. LOUIS—Flour firmer, double extra $^).35@$5.45; choice to fancy 46.00i$(>.45. Wheat higher; No. 2 red fall. $1.21%; No. 3 do. $1.17. Corn higher at 33%. Oats higher at 36%. LOUISVILLE—Flour: Family, $5.00@o *0 A No. 1, $5.75(2)6.25; fancy. $6.50(2j8 00 Wheat: Red, amber and white $1.30. Corn White, 46; mixed, 43. Oats: White, 40c; mixed 39c. CINCINNATI—Flour: Family, $6.0Ga6 15 fancy $6.40a6.75 Wheat: $1.27ai.30. Corn: 42c. Oats: 40c. NEW YORK—Flour: Common to fair ex tra, $5 S0a6 25; good to choice extra, $6 75a Wheat: Ungraded winter red, $1 40al 40%; Corn: Ungraded, 58a63. Oats: No. 3, 47%. I'OrNTBY PRODUCE. ATLANTA—Eggs, 18a20c. Butter, choice Tennessee, 22%a25c. Poultry: Large, 18a22c. hens, 22%a25; small sizes, 13al7c. Sweet po tatoes 50a60cents per bushel. Irish potatoes, $2 75a3 00 per barrel. BALTIMORE—Butter: Prime to Ohoiee wes,em packed, 20a22c. Eggs, 20a22c. LITE STOCK. ATLANTA—Choice Tennessee cattle 3c; common l%a2%e; Georgia raised, l%a2c. Sheep, 3c for choice. CINCINNATI—Hogs: Common $2 7 r a3 40 light, $3 40a3 75; packing, $3 80a4 90; butch ers, 3 80a3 90. PROVIftlOXR. ATLANTA—Bulk meat: Clear rib sides, 7c; pork strips, 6%c. Bacon: Sugar cured hams, 10%al0%c; sides, 8%c; shoulders, 5%c; breakfast, 8a8%c. BALTIMORE—Mess pork, $13 50. Bull: meats: Loose shoulders, 4%; clear sides, 7. Bacon : Shoulders, 5%c; clear rib sides 8c: hams, 9%al0c. Lard, refined in tierces 8%. CINCINNATI—Pork, $13.00. Lard, 7% Bulk meats: Shoulders, 4%c; clear ribs, 6.60c; short clear 7%c. Bacon: Shoulders, 5%; clear ribs, 7%c; hams, 9al0%c. Lard: 8c. NEW YORK —Mess pork, $12 62%; long clear,$7.20; short do $ 7 40. Lard, 8c. COTTOH. ATLANTA — Good Middlings, 12%c. Middlings, 12%c; good ordinary, ll%c. xrrur vadk xfi.l.lllr.,. m.Unrl.- • NEW YORK— Middling uplands, 12%c ; middling Orleans, 12%c. GALVESTON—Middlings, 12%c; low mid dlings, 11 %c; good ordinary, ll%c. NORFOLK—Middlings, 12 M6c. BALTIMORE —Middlings, 12%c; low mid dlings, 12%c; good ordinary, 12c. SAVANNAH — Middlings, 12 %c; low middlings, 12c; good ordinary, 11 %c. AUGUSTA — Middlings, 12c ; low mid dlings, ll%c; good ordinary, ll%c. Dr. C. E, Shoemaker, o R ^diog. P the only anrnl sunreon in the Unit d S ales who devotes all ins t : me t • the ires tun n't of deaf ness aud diseases of the eer a?.d > ata rh; es pecially rnnning ear. Nearly twei.ty years ex perience. Thous ;nds tei>nfy :o his tki’l. Con suit him by mail orornerwise. Pamphlet fr«. ,, . | ON LIFE & PROPERTY. U SIO.000 ATTACRM 1ST. SOLD J-Y ALL DRUGGISTS SAPONIFIER Is the Old Reliable 0 once a rated Lye FOR FAMILY SOAP MAKING. ring e.ich Diraciioos ... .... Hard, Soft, and Toilet '■o qulidii IT IS FULL WEIGHT AND STRENGTH The market is fl<»oded with (so-called) Lanc< tratod Lye, which ia adniior-ited with salt e re^in. and won’t ru*k'’ soap. SA VE MONEY AND BUY TITh .1 Splendid Medicine.—Heart aid Kidit; DTseaw, Female Teakiess. 8ijr mfrer t»k: _ _ two bottle. I was completely ctf-ed an<t h.Te bo o a he.i'tby woman ever .IBM, Ithooch I ■ tti in mT eixtv-eixtb year. IO.heartily c< mnend it a» a aplendiJ medicine to *11 *«»•*•*» * I have le.ni. and I blesff ibo'jLj thst ft my bands. j r -,i M?i; 31A BIX Scrofula. Liter Complaint. Dyspepsia. Rheumatism. Weakness. pract’cfar H. R. Stevens, Boston: I haVs ■*<— _ i< dicine f r 20 year?, and aa a rem*ij foe Scrotal*. Liver <'«>m^’*int. Dyspepsia, Bhenmestir ”‘ *" of the blood I bars nsvsr er had c . - Id Veamtine fbr mm d Imre never had one bfttle returned. 1 would heartil> recommend >t to tTioae in need of * blood pnrifter. Da. W. BUS9, Druggist, Vegetlne in Mold by nit ddreae J*. O. Vickery, f»FT RICH selli g otlr Rubber Printing Stamps. UTj 1 Samples fr e. Ooolt & Biwyell Cleveland. O. dT/yn* weelr.piz a day at ftowe wnly mads Costly a • tomtit free. AddreiiTarttLo . AngnsXa. Ms, Terms and S3 ootf t i iso-ek in yonr H. nali.kttAOo.Portland.M* $66 <fir7i7 v Month and expanses guaranteed M>/ / atfi ' “ ‘ utflt fr^c. ^havr & Co . Aiieurta. Me 0Ff PJnhlt fared in IS to uO d.iV* Sow till Cm <mL B Dk. J. STiCi'HlC.'fe*. i^banon. Uhltt. Clf IM |Prof. Hr-.bra’s Treatise on Disease* OI\ld i f the ^kin.describ ng symptoms of HIS t AQPSl-kindisea-ei.with directions fcr holr nreenre. Bmt fr c et «T1 af- PII L p (1 flitted. A ad ft in, with stamp. E. S. I Until* Iwehmfer. N./Hb street.PhUa P*. __ B 1 I KSTIFT M AN’f ’G (X).. Bridgeport. WANTED kiftES3^ lxtract*,«te..bj saaple,to & II the "Cy.lotted* etTUace Wm* ripOod. T.rart very MWfai *o«*« 5 Bridge 1 fdo.uoo rheits of Choice M.n»'s for Organ. 3 sheet* tor IS cts.; ._ .... _ . d9. Catalogue free. J. I-. PATTEN A CO., 47 Bore'ay Street. New York. MUSIC! SAPODHFliH MADE BY THE Pennsylvania Salt Manuf’g Cc* PHILABE3P *2*. BELL & HALL1DAY, (Successors to Cairo Box & Basket Co.) 31 mnfartnrers of "I>"V" CJ Fruit A Yegtt ible _i_> v/A. Vj iO WRITE FOB CATALOGUE. 'rui* ci:iim-n > lablhiied ic II If © J) 4$ p* te. Real Estate. A LI N r, of Genuine titiof to suit, for asn. balance 6, 12. B, For I'ac price* an-1 pi C LNSfGNEE To Printers! ATLANTA, CA, Successors to the Southern Newspaper Union BEST ROLLER Ever Made-Price, 40 Cents. St. ck" furnished ami Rollers rust of all .^tT les a u dp. ah we p all azact-diamete' <•#roller. _ i Book Inks, alto C -lortd Jr»‘> Ink con- l hand, tj'.-nd for price- list of Inks. *5 io S20 rjd'^v; OPIUM! S3 i Reliable e ^iven.and reference to cured patients and phj nd for ray book on the habit a~ -i iis cure— FREE TO ALL. Our I Hint rated Descriptive Catalogue of Plants, reeds, '■• ntalning use ful information to the ama- Catalogne. Goods guaran teed first quality.ScndS-ccnt ■tamp for postage. Also, To Consumptives, 4-nod remedies < „ .. The man which the Co • Liver Oil is combined witl the Wild Cherry en hies it to be a*sim.lated by th ,. st delicate Btomacb, insures i of the oil. ton <i ge.tion .... es coogh, increase qf fl.’sh pnd strengt . Endorsed by .st eminent phvsiciar.c. A w •'] kno-.vn Vpec- *liit in Lu;g A ffect ous has used it the hundred caacs'and says •'there is ■»'o combination eqnal to it for Consumption; Scrofula,” etc. Tnous- ai ds of snfferers np*>d and desire to ab“ a com 1 iua tion of Cod f.iver Oil. but have been unable to do so. Th-ywifl find that they can take this preparation readily and with ex^ Ilent results. Price, <»se Dollar prr B .ttle; Six Bottles for Fite Dol- Circulars and valuable information to all __.b eeut on re eipt of a de*r-iption of case. Address all orders to C. G. A LODE It .Vanufac- tuiin: Chemist, !5 9- h stunt St , Philadelphi Miff r STARCH l WARDS Fine Shirts for 1 Pnn ked'd: raction's for seffirfljeasi^r^m“rtH and Piice Lists free cy rriu’i..' E.M. &.W. WARD. Pimples and Humors on Face —In j. this condition o f the t-f io, the veg^t-me ia | the great remedy, as it act* directly upon I the cause. Icdeauses and purifies the blood, j. thereby causing humors cf all kinds tu aia- 381 BROADWAY. VOUNG MENSrg&rcrSiH!? mouth. Every graduate guaranteed r» payiM ^lt jstion. Ad-lreia B. Valentine.Ma• •asss?' vim iif at Philadelphia VllULLIIlL at Pari* Exposition. Exposition This wonderful suostance is acknowledged by phypiciana throughout tho world to bethe bes? rem- eoy discovered for the Cnfe of Wounds. Bn rum. Rheumatism, . v kin Diseases,' Piles. Cat«rrb, Chil- Ac In order that everyone may try ft. It to . in I. r >and 2 cent bottles for- household use. Obtain it from yonr druggist, and you will find it mperinr to anything yon have ever £ W ell Tools \ AUGERS, DRILLS, HORSE PrtWEt Machines for Poring and Drilling wells. B'st America! *25 A DAY MADE EASILY. 1‘•k Free! Address LOOM IB A b THAN, TJFFIa TRUTH AOfc.NT WANTEli Rare chance to JUK E MONEY RAPIDLY srnly r the L:r I SCOUT, HITfirKB A GUIDE >n by Himself, ic book giving a tali aeceua ofhtfl wonderf 1 carter on the frontier; recoantinff hn thrilling adventur»8 ni hair-bread'h escapes. ment »s Scout and Quids. dor.-eii by Gee- P H Sheridan and highly recou nt! d by the Press, making it arare_book far Douglas* Bros., 55 W Fifth ftt.» Pups, Pups, Pumps. Warehouse. .*> park P * AtitN ; o l-Ofl ThF 75 Tt 1U1.H |« (• nil I I.G I VII I lit Pictorial HiSTOB'ftfmWOP* r It contains 072 fin historical engravings asd 7 260 laige double c lomn page., fs the^r pie Hi-tory of the sat «ight. " frrid ever pnblirbsd. It Send for specimen peges and extra why it sells taster thaa t, POBLisiiiao Co., 8t. Lonls. We. I 7 30 DAYS’TRIAL We wi I send Electric Appiie wmm itn n< Electro-Voltaic Belts and other ._„j noon trial frr 30 days to tho* ■6rvcUs Debility and di eases*/a j ...... ... —«d di . sonn! nature. Alsioithe Liver. Kidneys, Bheunm r«m, Paraly»'s, Ac. A sure cure guaranteed pay. Address Y -l««l • »eIlC%.Mi ALESMEN WANTEI good'menTO SELL* IGARS TO DEALERS- A month and expense* J)lUDsamples Free. ; Cut this Diotfce Oat IndKcnd • ithvourapplice.tion.klst Send a jc. Stamp to insure! answer. FOSTER Sc CO. f P. O. Box 1379. Cincinnati. Ohio.l carLetofs household HA lR sfl *11 iirrM ENCYCLOPEDIA. The most valuable single book ever ptfn&t.. A Treasury of knowledge. There has never rteiore been published in one volume, to much ineful infor mation on every subject. Beautifu It illustrate*, price *2 50. A Whore l ib’ ary ia On> Vslnme, __ ^ f Sold only by ►ubfcnption JtM TO l GEhTS, G. W. CA ILL ETON & C >’. Pnbliehem. N. Y. City. The Koran. A cariosity tc every ■ stndertsofH story • Oil A M Yi ED ; t SJtle. ” _ . ..misted trum.to. Arabic b. bs ri> published at 12.75; * ne , ,_ Dff*stl- fultype. neat, cloth-bound edit.on ; price » ceata. for postage. Gata'ogae ot many standap* r markabiy low n >-rica, with: extra term* - fr*»e. Su where ycu saw this advertisement. American Book Exchange, Tribnn e bnildinv. N. Y, puauiiwiriih 4TLAaTi-a^fl appear. "pUSS'SerEo* BUTTER COLOR Young men,go West,learn telegraphy. Ad- I Thousands.of J*** dress K. Valentine, Manager, Janesvilie, ,Wis.« use's it, where to cet it. jund. The large* ..^FECYV Uv-ti by alltl ^ . l.iry Fair. Ask yonr druggist print-j "bant fori t; or write to aak WELL*. KKMAttiOAlff * C». Piwm+tm+1