The Fayetteville news. (Fayetteville, Ga.) 18??-????, November 16, 1888, Image 4

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.... . —+mm+mm~mm tfflragWKSffir ,, ,v'Llv. . J ’* * ?• f\i iMlMMMMiMMHl IDEAL. RBLATIVB OAROBN. *h® Frightened Horne. The feeling of fright is probably a sen sation common to all animals from man kind down to the lowest grade of life. It is also true, that the higher the grade of life, the more sentient the animal, the keener is this sense developed. The horse 1* universally noted for his sagacity and intelligence, therefore in him tright is innate. When a horse manifests fear it is because he'has by exercise of his reason decided that there is danger to himself lurking in some object, which he accordingly endeavors to avoid. That same reason will, if properly di rected, undeceive him and convince the animal that he is mistaken. The horse being, unable to reason, except from liis experience, you should convince him, by careful examination, that the object he dreads is harmlesa Bring him in direct contact with it. It is a common saying that if the nose is touched to the object the animal will be satisfied; generally this is true; the animal becomes ac quainted with his “enemy.” It is a ter rible mistake to use a whip on a fright ened horse. The animal is already ex cited, and will, in all probability, associate the whipping with the object of his dread. Exert your own common sense and calm your horse. Colts especially should receive most considerate treatment, and above all things make your lessons thorough. To leave the object of his alarm before hav ing made him thoroughly familiar and careless of it, is often worse, tenfold, than no attempt at all to break him of his skittishness.—National Hone Breeder. Making Vinegar in Small Quantities Where families have no cider mills and but feW' apples they may easily make their own vinegar by mushing apples in a tub with a pounder. The pomace should then be put into a hall barrel with holes in the bottom, and be placed over another tub as a receiver. A fol lower can be vdaced on the pomace and be pressed down by a lever or stationary weights. The juice should be kept in a ksg, bung open, and in a warm place until the vinegar is made. By frequently replenishing as it is drawn out, any far mer’s family can easily keep up their stock. A few apples mashed and nut in a stone jar, covered with water and the juice of some soured fruit i and berries, can be used for this purpose, Vinegar will stand quite a low temperature, but it is better not to allow it to freeze. . Vinegar from other substances is some times made. Wine vinegar is from soured wines and the juice of grapes. Wine vinegars are extensively counter feited by chemicals. For sorghum vine gar, to one gallon of sorghum syrup add five or six gallons of water, with a little yeast, or to a barrel of the strained juice of the cane, a pint of yeast aud a little syrup. Large quantities of vinegar are made from xhisky and acids that have ® good appearance and sharp acidity, tui are untit for family use. For molas ses vinegar, take one gallon of New Or leans molasses and five gallons of water, put in a little old vinegar to sour it, or Start it to fermenting with a little yeast. Keep in a warm place and cover the bung-hole ol the keg with netting, to keep out the flies. Fine honey vinegar is made in the proportions of one pound of honey to a gallon of water, thoroughly mixed. For healthfulness and general utility apple cider vinegar stands at the head of the list.— New York World. The Culture of Rhubarb. At the request of several of our sub scribers we give the following hints on the culture of rhubarb. The best time to plant rhubarb is in the fall after frost has killed the leaves, or early in spring before it has made much growth, but it may be set out without much risk at any time in early summer before July 1. The old loots should be divided so as to have but 0113 or two eyes to each piece, and should be set out about three feet apart in the furrows of a small plow, with'four feet between the rows. Cover two inches deep with a hoc. Rhubarb is in no way particular about the land is grows upon, provided it is not a dry gravel and is well manured. To grow it well, however, demands very heavy manuring; ten or fifteen cords per acre every year of strong manure, rich in nitrogen, is what is wanted. Hog manure is best. Spread the manure and plow under when preparing the land, and put some more along the furrows in planting. Afterwards rake off every fall the dead leaves and rubbish about Nov. 1. l’low a light funow from the plants at each side, fill this with ma nure, and cover with plow, ridging the land well over th^ crowns. In early spring cultivate across tho ridges and stir eften with plow and cultivator, and hoe until it is growing too high. The best variety for general marketing in Boston is the Victoria, on account of its large size and very heavy yield. Thirty tons per acre is not unusual, and even forty tons have^bssa grower. The Lin nee us varifiiy'fs'earlier and preferred some buyers for its milder acid, but -ir does not yield much more than half the crop which tho Victoria will pro duce. To grow rhubard profitably one should bo near his mnrket, for the bulk of the crop sells at less than $15 per ton, and often for $10. The expense of market ing at long distances is considerable. It is mostly grown within six or eight miles of market. The bed should be replanted after about five years bearing, as tho roots spread about and crowd, making a largo amount of small stalks, involving double the labor in cuttiug and bunching for market, and making an inferior product j to that grown on a young bed. A new plantation should not be cropped at all ' the first year, and will not produce a full crop tho second, but after that for five years is in its prime. The price of rhubard is always high early in the season, and some growers grow a little of the Liunoeus variety in sandy land on the south side of a fence, so as to get it early.— Cultivator. Farm and Garden Notes. Keep tools handy. Cut corn fodder from which the sweet corn has been picked. A window facing south in the poultry house this winter will pay in increased eggs. Every time yen worry your home you shorten their lives ana days of use* fulness. Sheep are better scavengers for small, unripe, wormy apples than swine ere, it is claimed. The English rarely drive their draught horses faster than a walk. Trotting a cart-horse would seem barbarous to a cockney. The longer you put off transplanting strawberry plants the less they will grasp the soil and the more danger there will be of winter-killing. French farmers report very beneficial results from the use of copperas solution as a manure on strawberries, pears, let tuce, peas, beans, carrots and vines. Wash dairy utensils, pans, pails and vats carefully with cold water, in which is a little salt or soda; then rinse, and then thoroughly scald with hot water. Professor E. W. Steward advocates flaxseed as a medicine for pigs. It is soothing to the stomach and intestines, and it is also rich in food for muscle and bone. To have fowls moult quickly they should be well fed, in good health, young and vigorous, and, according to the Poultry Yard, a little extra stimulation just before and during moulting can be defended. A Mender of Artificial Limbs. The place, says the New York Tele gram, looked like a ghastly caricature of a butcher shop in the land of the canni bals, but it was only the inner sanctum of a manufacturer of artificial limbs. Arms, legs, hands, feet—what you will —hung on walls screened in glass cases or laid about in heaps, greeted the eye wherever it rested. There were audacious pictures of gentlemen in variousactive employments who, having “trie? your vnluablo leg would have no other.” One of those grateful men was pictured in tho act of riding a bicycle. Another bore his whole weight on an artificial leg while plying a miner’s pick at a mass of rock over his head. Still another stood on his sound leg, and with the arti ficial leg drove a spade deep into the soil of a garden plot. Threo were farmers following the plow, blacksmiths shoeing hor.-es, and a pedestrian without a nose —all with at least one artificial leg. “Do they really do all that?” inquired the reporter. “Perhaps not quite as well as you’d suppose from the cut, but it is true that there are a good many thousand men with artificial legs doing work that one would think likely to require the aid of sound limbs.” “Then you come pretty nearly sup plying any natural loss.” “Pretty nearly. The war gave a great impetus to the manufacturer of artificial limbs, and we are still making limbs for the veterans.” “How long does an artificial limb last?” “That depends upon whether it is an arm or a leg and upon various other con siderations. I’ve known an artificial leg to bo in use twenty-five years. The more elaborate attempts to counterfeit nature the more liable the member to get out of order and require renewal. We make arms and hands with which the wearer writes, uses knife and fork at table and performs many operations that one might think impossible.” ^ “What is the cost of artificial limbs?” “Anything from a few dollars up to hundreds. The simplest ‘peg legs’ or wooden legs cost from $5 to $50 each. Anns cost from $25 to $75. Hands are from $10 to $25. Then there are in numerable contrivances for hiding de formities. They may cost almost any thing—the price varying with the nature of the deformity to be corrected. Oh, our friends with a leg or arm missing are not so badly off as they once were, and if science goes on in its march of progress there is no telling how soon the so called cripples may be objects of envy.” Mild-Mannered Cannibals. Every traveler in New Zealand always expresses astonishment, when they dis cover tho cannibal propensities of the inhabitants, that so gentle and pleasant- mannered a people could become on occasion such ferocious savages. Earle, who wrote a very reliable, in telligent and but little known account of the Maoris very early in the present century, speaks of the gentle manners and kindly ways of a New Zealand chief, whom afte-iward he discovered to be an inveterate cannibal. He relates that he visited the place where was cooking the body of a young slave girl that his friend had killed for the purpose. The head was severed from the body; tho four quarters, with the principal bones re moved, were compressed and packed into a smali oven in the ground, and covered with earth. It was a case of uujustifiable caun’balism. No revenge was gratifitd by the deed, and no excuse could be made that the body was eateu to perfect their triumph. Farle says that he learned that the flesh takes many hours to cook, that it is very tough if not thoroughly cooked, but that it pulls to pieces, like a piece of blotting paper, if well done. He continues that the victim was a handsome, pleasant looking girl of sixteen, and one he used fre quently to see about the Pah.—Gentle- man's Magazine. How to Reduce Fat. For tho reduction of adipose tissue, Banting has, in Germany at least, been superseded by pedestrianism, and the walking is not to be upon level ground, but up-hill. This new fad will certainly not be adopted by indolent persons, and most fleshy people are more or less dis inclined to exertion. In fact, laziness is responsible for much of the accumula tion of fat.- The new relief from obesity has been experimented with by the re nowned Bismarck, who has in this man ner reduced his weight from two hun dred and seventy-four pounds to one hundred and ninety, Tne principle of the new system is to strengthen the muscle of the heart, which is best done by climbing heights. The patient is in structed to walk up hill at a siow pace until palpitation comes on, when he is to stop, but not to sit down, and then to S o on. He must walk several hours a ay, and clifab more or loss. Slowly walking up stairs is recommended. Pro fessor Oertel, of Munich, is the inventor of this new “obesity and heart cure,” and he advocates mountain climbing for valvular defects of the heart as well as for all diseases associated with oorpo- lency.—Boston Beacon. WOMAN’S WORLD. MiBASANT litrratvrb for FEMININE READERS. Tho Trousseau Not So Elaborate. A good Parisian dressmaker says that the troussea lias ceuscd to be tho gigantic outfit which it used to be. Fashions now change so rapidly that what is in vogue to-aav may bo nntiqnatod six months lienco. Half-a-dozen dresses nt most are now given to a bride ot tip-top quality by her parents. Tho usual num ber is five, to wit: The dress, par excel lence, which can bo made to servo, di vested of orange blossoms, at dinner parties and tho opera; a traveling cos tume; a visiting gown; a morning gown, and a ball dress. There is the same economy shown in providing hats, bonnets and mnntlos, aud underclothing is only provided in a quantity amply necessary for cleanliness and comfort. It is found that the store-keeper is tho hi st custodian of feminine finery, and that tho less there is given over to the safe-keeping of the servants, the better. Then a quantity of lumbering boxes are such a trial to temper, and such an impediment to running, accord ing to one’s humor, from one place to another. It is a fearful responsibility for a Frenchman entering tho wedded stato to have a wife with a voluminous trous seau. If she dies within threo years after her marriage, he is bound (allowance being made for wear and tear) to return it to her parents. Whatever objects are lost must be accounted for. He is fur nished with a list of 1 lie garments, and another is retained by tho bride’s family. The notaries of bride and bridegroom nlso receive one each. The struggle for influence between tho mother-in-law designate begins when the bride-elect must be placed in the hands of a dress maker for her outfit. ( ne of the old ladies wants her own favorite priestess of fashion, and so does the other. There is often such a tug of war that tho match is broken off.—Argonaut. Tho Era of Hair Dressing. Tho era of hair dressing is at hand, days in which the simpler styles will b« forgotten and women shall vie in the elaboration of their tresses as now thej do in the cut of their gowns. What is much nearer and surer is the prophecy of growing individuality in the arrange mentof the hair. Fashions in hairdress ing are dangerous things to pass from hand to hand. What is one woman’! beauty is ihe deformity of another. Good-bye and bon voyage to you, Psyche knot. The pug of Cupid’s ladj love has worn well with the summei f irl. It is easy to anange under sailor ats and easy to keep in place. But to wear it with a home toilet wants a facs as regular as Sappho’s, a figure poised like Diana's, the lightness of movement and grace of a llebc, the culture of an Aspasia and the clinging robes of a god dess or eastern queen. Alas for the commonplace ancl pug-nosed girl, thq high-clieek boned, the long chinned girl, the girl of the Homan nose and hard fentuies, when the ! syche knot walki abroad, degenerated into a hair club, with two corkscrew curls depending lik. the tnssels ot a patrolman's knob "stick from the end. Hair is going higher; it is also coming lowo", and neither style ought of ueccs- sity to matter much to you or me. Look at your face first and no fashion thai suits it will be wrong. Of the simpler styles, which one need not call a hair-dresser to ai range, a fiat coil of small braids wound pancakq fashion against the back of the head threatens to come in. With a full,round cast of features and straying tendrils ol front hair to relieve it, this plate coiffur! sometime? goes well. A small, round coil, low in the neck, but not resting on the collar is more generally becoming than any other suit of hair; it is almost indispensable when the ears are promi nent or largo, piling tho hair on top ol tho head, making, in such cases, the offending inembcis more noticeable. Ill-shaped ears want the hair pulled loose above and behind them. For the evening toilet it is probable that tho bang has received its death blow. It struggles bravely, but the Louis XV. and yVI. styles will kill it. It would not be surprising if a bare fore head were exhibited this winter by many women who can doit with impunity and some who cau’t. A coming style calls for a small soft roll oxer which the front hair !s carried up in waves, the ends being coiled and fastend iu round, wavy loops with small gold or amber combs. A curl or two is allowed to fall on tho forehead, but not to hide the brow. With such a coiffure the home hair dresser twists tho back hair into a flattish French 10II, coiling the ends loosely on top. For occasions calling for more elabo rate arrangements ns many puffs, twists and loops ns the mind of man ever do- vised are intricately entwined.—Detroit Free Press. Fashion Notes. Ribbon bonnets will be worn through the autumn. Many of the new felt bonnets have appli ue designs upon them. Gray and blue reseda and ruby are likewise effectively combined. Cashmere colored brocaded ribbons are shown in widths for bonnet trimming? and sashes. Miniature brooms of green gold, with platinum handles, are woru as earrings by ladies of political proclivities. Polonaises with diagonal fronts are in high favor, and have the advantage of being becoming alike to slender and stout figures. Long redingotes, plaited skirts, pol onaises and Directoire coats are tho lead ing characteristic? of the nearly im ported gowns. A favorite arrangement of colors in a costume is a brown polonaise over a S reen skirt, which is bordered with rown stripes. Large “picture hats,” similar to those worn during the summer, are imported in felt aim velvet for dressy autumn and winter wear. Black and white onyx is the thing for half mourning jewelry, while inch thick rings.of jet aie the pioper caper for the earrings in the depth of woe. Victor Hugo said that God had created woman the coquette as soon as he had tn the fool. WHT WOMEN W ED. Nd Komanoe 'Whatever Nowadays in Finding a Husband. A man asked me the other day how women find husbands. It' was suoh a puzzling question to me that I constitu ted myself a committee of one end went round among a lot of married women to see how their husbands proposed to them. There wasn’t one who had ever had an absolute romance of love I There wasn’t one whose husband hnd gotten down on his knees, caught the loved one’s hnnd and besought of her, unless she wished to see him stark and cold with a broken heart, that she would wed him! '^iere wasn’t one who had ever known tne rapture of being held, with a pistol at hor head, while the brave lover pronounced that unless she accep ted him, he would kill her and then himselfl There wasn’t one who had been gained oven at the dagger’s point, and not a single wife had keen drugged and wedded while iu a semi-oonsoious state! Dorothy,I confess to a certain amount of disappointment. The nearest I oould get as to how the question of marriage bad been reached was always that they bad drifted into it. This is deliciously vague, but it seems to mean that they knew the man, that he had the privilege of holding their hands and criticising their frooks for some time,and that then, when there was no special excitement in Wall street, a presidential eleotion wasn’t going on, nor anything else that was distracting, they suggested that it was about time for them to get married. This is the general experience. And I think it a sin and a shame. Few women have more than one opportunity to marry, and that ought to be accompanied by all the frills and frivolities that tl e best novel writer dreamed'of. The Howells and James business in ti e way of olassio love making may be most desirable for nervous people; it may calm and soothe them, but when cham pagne and lovo are offered it wants to be sparkling, and it wants to taste as if suoh nectar had never been offered be fore. The cigarette imbued, white-skinned, colorless eyed, smooth-faced young man that is so prevalent just now will never offer anybody anything but the flattest eider for champagne, and when it comes to this, I say, give me ice water aud platonio.—New Yjork Star. Before aud After. A few days ago as a Ridge Road oar was ooming up Luke avenue, the driver stopped on being signaled by a young man on a crossing not far from Driving Park avenue,says the Rochester Democrat, The young man was accompanied by a rather pretty young woman, who was dressed in a light, niry summer attire, and carried a fanoy-oolored sun parasol. The young man jumped aboard the car first, and rushed inside, scouring the only seat vacant, leaving the young woman to follow ns best she could. Of oourse every one expected that he would give up his seat to his lady, but he did not do so, and she,after standing awhile holding on to a strap, oonciuded to have a seat anyway, and, without a word of warning, plumped down on the lap of her esoorfc, saying as she did so: “I’m as tired as you are, darling, and you will have to hold me until 1 get a seat." He gave a grunt of the hog kind, and told her in plain English that “she oould stand or sit on tho floor for all he oared, but he would not hold her.” At this several mule occupants of the oar offered thoir seats to the young woman, but she declined their offer and said: “He is as able to hold me now as he was before we were married, and I will sit here where lam.” The passengers were up to this time silently smothering their ’laughter, but the last was too much for them, and as one remarked: “The cor will be thrown off the track if we don’t stop laughing so hard.” Realizing the fact that he was making a target of him self, the young man rose hastily, nearly throwing his darling wife on the floor, and made a rush for the door, saying as he did so: “Yon take my seat; I’ll walk home.” nnfl left llio car. Tho wife was not dismayed in the least, but sat there quietly enjoying the fun ns well as did the rest of the passengers. The Coining Ruler. The young Crown Prince of Germany, aged CJ, who will be emperor when the prefent young emperor is dead, is already being turned into a soldier. Every day he is compelled for over half an hour to move his chubuy legs and hold his im mature body according to military dis cipline, and is severely drilled by an an cient sergeant major. lie wears the regulation uniform, and returns the sa lutes of aged generals with dignified nonchalance. Ex-Ppoultcr of tlie Aosembly of tho Stato of Now York. State of New Yoiik, Assemuly Chamber, I Albany, April 16, 1-80. f My family for the last twelve years have been using Allcook’s Porous Plasters, and have found them wonderfully efficacious In coughs, colds, and pains in the side and hack. About ten years ago I was thrown from a wagon and badly bruised. In three days these plasters entirely removed the pain and sore ness. Twice they have cured mo of severe colds which threatened pulmonary trouble. They also cured my son of rheumatism In the shoul ders, from which he had suffered two years. James W. Husted. Tho So it hern Pacific 11. K. lias mortgaged its road for $311,000,000. A Secret Ofgcod health is found in the regular move ment of tho bowels und perfect action of the Liver. Theso organs were intended by nature to remove from tbo system ail impurities. If you are constipated, you otter a ‘‘standing in vitation” to a whole family of (jiseases aud ir regularities which will surely be “accepted,” aud you will have guests unwelcomo und de termined. All these unliuppy conditions may be averted by the timely use of Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Purgative Pellets. Powerful for tho effectual regulation of .the bowels ;:ul Liver, establishing a healthy actum of tbo entire wonderful organism with which wo are cre ated. The kitchen of tho White House in Wash ington, D. C., is run by a colored woman. A Poser I Why will you suffer with indigestion, constl- natioii, piles, torpid liver and sick-hcaduche, when a few cents will buy Hamburg bigs enough to relievo your distress at once and ef fect a cure in a low days ? Ho ceuta. Dose one pig. Mack Drug Co.,_N.Jf. Safety o mother and child and less liability to ail unpleasantness after confinement result from theuse of Mother's Friend. Best, easiest to use and cheapest. Pise’s Remedy for Catarrh. By Druggists. Me. Philanthropic; Work. Lady Herbert, of England, widow of Lord Herbert, who was secretary of war in Groat Britain during the late War in this country, has come to the United States to work among the colored peo ple of tho South. She will erect a col ored orphanage in Baltimore. Lady Herbert is extremely charitable, and has passed a number of years in tho West Indies in doing good to the negroes. Sho is the mother of ton children, the Earl of Pembroke being her eldest son. Anothor son, Hon. Michael Herbert, an attache of tho British legation nt Wash ington, is to marry Miss Leila Wilson, of Virginia. TnE mausoloun of tho Emperor Fred erick, of which th; coiner stone has just been laid at Potsdam, will bo a repro duction of the Sepulchre Church at Je rusalem. IToney-Moon. "Say, Perkins, old boy, why don't we see you at the club any more? Has your mother-in- law shut down on you?” "No, Brown; the fact of the matter is, my home is so happy now that there is no inducement for me to leave it. You look incredulous, but it’s a positive fact. You see, my wife used to suffer so much from func tional derangements common to her sex, that her spirits and her tomper were greatly af fected. It was not her fault, of course, but it rnudo home unpleasant all the same. But uow, since she has begun fo take Dr. Pierce’s Fa vorite Prescription, she has been so well and so happy that we are having our honey-moon all over again.” The composing room of the New York Times is in the thirteonlh story. If Sufferers from Consumption, Scrofula, Bronchitis, and General Debility will fry Scott’s Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil with Ilypophosphites, tl ey will find immediate ie- lief and permanent benefit. The Medical Pro fession universally declare it a remedy of the greatest vaiue and very palatablo. Read ; "I have used Scott’s Emulsion in several cases of Scrofula and Debility in Children. Results most gratifying. My I It 1 lo patients take it with pleasure.”—W. A. Hclbebt, M.D., Salisbury, Ill. Statistics show that this year’s potato crop is tho largest ever raised in the U niled States. Use the surest remedy for catarrh —Dr. Sage's. Eight missionary ships are now cruising in tho North Sea. The Special Offer Of The Youth's Companion,of Boston, Mass., which wo published last week, should he no ticed by our readers, a the opportunity comes hut once a year. Any new subscriber to The Companion who will send $1.75 atone, can have the paper free to January 1, 1889. nnd for a full y- ar from.tb at date. This offer includes four holiday numl ers, for Thanks ivin-', Christmas, Now Year s and Easter, all the Il lustrated Weekly Supplements, and the An nual Premium I.ist, with GOO illustrations. Really a $2.60 p:iper tor only $1.76 a year. if nfflicted witli -ore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp son's Eyewater. Druggists sell at 25c. per bottle. SHU Sewing-Machine "o at onaa aat.bllah trad. In nil pan., by piaclof our m.vhln-» ' good. urban tbe paople' them, art will aend free to ona « eraoa In anch locality,tbo -fry eat aawing-roachlae made In world, with all tho attachmenta. 0 will also Bead free a complete oe of our eoetly and valuable art implee. 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For Gilding or Bronzing Fancy Articles, USB DIAMOND PAINTS, v Oold, Silver, Bronze, Copper. Only 10 Cent*. © ©I ©I © m © ETERSON’S MAGAZINE is the cheapest and best of tho lady's? books, excelling all others us a magazine of literal re, art, aud fashion. IGHT original novelets will be giveq during 1889, besides numerous short stories, from the pens of some of tbs most popular writers of the day. Oui list of contributors is unequaled. HERE will be, in 1889, 14 elegant steel plates; largo double-sized colored fashfoi* plates, and handsome fancy or woik-tabll patterns, printed in colors, monthly, be* sides hundreds of fine wood-illustration^ VERY number will contain a full-size papei dress-pattern, worth tho ptice of the number in itself, ns it will enable a lady to cut out hor own or hor children's dresses. NOWNED places and people will fumlsb subjects for handsomely-illustrated arti cles; thoso, with a series of papers— “Talks by a Trained Nurse”—will prove valuable features for 1889. I0K-R00M, toilette, cooking, nnd other recipes; articles on the garden, house* furnishing, and household management; also a mothers’ department, make “I'etsr* son ” invaluable to every wemun. UR fashion department will contain the newest and most stylish designs in dress for ladies and children, both loreveryday and outdoor wear; also the latest styles in bonnets and hats. ® 0W is the time to subscribe or to get up • club. Terms, $2.00 per year, with great 1 reductions to clubs nnd clegnnt premiums for gotting up clubs. Sample copies free to those desiring to get up clubs. PETERSON’S MAGAZINE, 300 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Fa* MmnoN this paper. ETERY FARMER’S WIFE know lug what the matter was or how to effect % remedy If she does recog nize the Disease. This Is not right, ns at an ex pense of 25 cents (in stamps) Flie can prooni^ a 100-rnge BOOK the experience of a practical Poultry Kaiser (not an amutour, but a man working for dollars ana cents) during a period of 25 years. It tenches you howto Detect and Cure Diseases} how to Feed for Eggs niul nlno for I-ntteniug} which Fowls to Have lor Breeding Pup- C omchj nnd everything* Indeed, you should uow on tLU .U$ 6 CG ^o.rt^aulfor Me. 134 Leonard esircri. N. Y. City.. MEN AUD BOVS! lia you mint to lenrn all about < a Iloran f Uow to Pick Out a Good Oner How to Knowlmuer- fcctlou* and no J Guard nynin.t i K ruiidf Uow tne oteut Dlncnni-t and effect n cure' wben anine in 1 DONNlble * Uow to Toll tbe Ab» by tho Teotli ? \vhnt to cull tbe DUI'orcut Parts of tbe Aniinulf . . How to Slioe a Uorao Properly 1 nnd other Vnluublo Inforinntlo to tho Equine Species ran be ol rending our 10«.PA( K ILLITMTItJ HOUSE IIOOU, wlil< • we will forward, cei N pt >tt nf' ?/ni?y 25 GTS. IN STAMPS. IIORSF, BOOK CO.. 134 Leonnrd St., N. Y, HOW MANY LINKS IN THE CHAIN? SISS IN CASH GIVEN AWAY! Mall yonr antwtr with 25c. illvvr. «nd yo« , will receive frno for $1x moqtha the brifhteat and I most InUrntlng family ntwipapvr In thi U. 8. C Flni correct guen will aho receive null |&0 in ) OMh; HIM; Sd, $15; 4th, $10; 6th,$5: next 60 f 1 each. Premium! will be distributed March 1, 1880, and name* of wlnnun published In Thu Family Fbibnd,—«splendid newspaper worth many times the |— esked, which should m in every home. Address Publishers Fstnl)/ Friend, Chicago, 111. Plso’s Remedy for Catarrh la the Best, Easiest to Use, and Cheapest. LsJ Sold by druKqtats or sent by mall. 50c. E. T. Iluzeltlne, Warren, Po. ASXKpyNHi mediate relief iu tho worst caaea,im»iire« comfort- all able sleep; effect* cares where I trial oonvs'neee (Ae mott nkttpiical, ■— — ma jL j ARE YOU MARRIED? tins Hociety, which pays its members i$!50 IVSI^cW'S 1 froo ' N '^ MU If you are not, should join N . r tV^UJ T U *l! ’ < £l? , Minneapolis, Minn. PEERLESS DYES nilllTAC 2n lovely, fufi-lenirth beauties, only 10a —-- PHOTOS 00 tor 250. TUurbur &Oo.,Bay Shore,N Y. | A. N. U GOLD, . mittc. Terms ruts. Address, Tuu* 4 Co., August*, Live at home and make more money working for ne then anything else in the world. Either sex. Costly outfit ... „ . ny. Samples worth fl.fi0PRE& uder the horse’s feet. Write fety Rein Holder Co., Holley, Mich. Forty-six, ’88 The man who has invented from three to five dollurs in a Rubber Coat, and a* Ills first hnlf hour's experience m a storm finds to his sorrow that it is hardly u better protection than a mos quito netting, not only feels chagrined at being so badly taken in, but also feels If he does not look exactly like Ask tor the "FISH B11AND” Sunni dnis not have the nsn iirakd, send for descriptive cat. a|a ►!< aja ►!. 4a .J. .J. .Ja »|a »Ja .Ja >Ja aja >J, .J* .J. (not style) a -Celts pfC