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FARM NOTES.
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Cuthbkrt.— “This variety of raspberry
has done so well with me that I think it
worthy of general cultivation. It is the
most vigorous plant of any red raspberry
I have ever cultivated.”— M. Palmer,.
Ohio.
Raising Onion Seep. —“To raise seed
I select some of the smallest bulbs of the
spring crop and set them out either in
October or January in rich, mellow soil.
In the spring I keep them free from
weeds and draw the earth up about them
to keep them erect. In April they begin
to throw up their seed stalks. The seed
ripens in July.”— C. ./. Rogers, Terrell,
Tertis.
Peabodyßranching Corn.—“l planted
a little of this variety May 17, one grain
in a hill, two feet apart in row on new
ground, rich, sandy loam. Greatest
number of ears produced from one grain,
11; greatest number of grains produced
from one grain, 3,978; average number
of ears per stalk, 3 b Quality of com
not above medium. Ears usually ten
rowed and, aside from culls, average
about 450 grains each.” —Asa Pirn,
Rochester. O.
Ears op Wheat on an Acre. —ln
answer to a question the agricultural
editor of the New York Times says tlmt
the usual number of ears of wheat grown
upon an acre of ground is about 1,250,-
000, and this number varies biU little,
whatever quantity of seed is sown. Maj.
Halles, an English seed-grower, who has
produced some excellent varieties of
wheat, gives the following statement on
this point.
Heed sown per aero, Ears on a Ears on an
Bushel, square yard. acre.
1 263 1.272,200
2 283 1,307,920 i
2 .• 265 1,282,600
2 270 1,306,800
3 269 1,301,860
Lice on Stock.—A number of letters
ask for remedies for lousy stock. Ver
min of some kind very frequently infest
domestic animals; they are mostly of the
louse type—small parasitic animals that
must be removed by the application of
some insecticide. A number of substan
ces have been used to greater or less ex
tent, of which a few are mentioned be
low: One pound of tobacco and six
ounces of borax boiled ill two quarts of
water, to which soft soap is added to
make a thick paste, has proved a vermin
salve. A mixture of carbolic acid and
soft soap in the proportion of one to foul
makes a compound easy to apply and
very effectual. Shortly after the parts
to which the soap mixture has been ap
plied should be washed with pure water
and a non-drying oil rubbed on. Oil of
turpentine, and lard oil, equal parts, with
a little carbolic acid, is perhaps the most
convenient mixture to make, and effect
ual in its application. Animals that are
affected with vermin need better care and
higher feeding in order to overcome the
drain that these parasites make upon the
system. Exchange.
Cutting and Grinding Fodder, —
While some Tgo so far as to claim that
it pays to grind straw to a fine powder,
others affirm that for beef cattle it does
not pay even to cut any fodder. Cattle
are fully provided by nature with means
for masticating their ordinary food, and
we need not bo surpised to find that both
ordinary experience and careful eV', T-la
ments agree in showing that little it ~liyt
hing is gained my cutting. In fact it
appears from some experiments that
positive damage is done, as the fodder is
not so thoroughly chewed and impreg
nated with saliva, a portion even passing
at once into the second stomach. Cut
ting alone can do but little gcod, even
with old hard-stalked fodder, without
the softening produced by cooking, for
it cannot open the fodder to digestive
action, uor save much labor of mastica
tion. By far the greater part of this is
expended on chewing the cud, and it is
best that the animal should perform this
entirely natural operation for itself.
Profit able Farming. —Among the
influences contributing largely to render
farming profitable in the Middle and
Western States, besides that of cheap
transit by railroad, perhaps the most im
portant are the rapid multiplication of
grist mills, grain elevators, butter fac
tories, cheese factories, canning factories,
cider mills and similar industrial works.
Of these the grain elevator may be said
to have originated in the West, And
though these establishments are often
spoken of as centralizing in the great
cities, they really exist at every import
ant village or town along the lilies of the
railways in the grain-growing States. At
these elevators the farmers from the
whole surrounding country obtain good
cash prices for their grain, and this is
the influence that renders the ascendency
of the grain interest in the West per
manent. The operation of grist mills,
cider mills, butter factories, cheese fac
tories and canning factories is very simi
lar in rendering profitable dairy farming,
the production of fresh vegetables and
fruits, orchard farming, etc. The in
fluence of this is seen in the magnitude
of the dairy interest iu consequence of
the large number of butter and cheese
factories iu successful operation in the
{States. The canning interest flourishes
at the present time over a wide extent of
country in the New England, Middle and
Western States. These are the agencies
that chiefly contribute to increase the
agricultural wealth of the North and
West.
Secret of Large Crops in England.
—One of the strong points in English
farming was emphasized as follows by
Professor Roberts, of Cornell University:
“Herein,” he says, “I am satisfied,
lies the secret of England’s success in
raising larger crops. It would take
away the breath of a prairie farmer to
hear even an Englishman’s enumeration
of the ‘spuddings,’ the ‘grabbings,’ the
Switchings, ’ the harrowings, the eross
harrowings, the rollings and crushings
that a heavy clay field is subjected to be
fore it is considered ready for wheat.
What is all this for? Simply to unlock
the full store-house of Nature. That it
is full has been proven time and again.
By actual analysis it is found that an
average of soil contains, in the first six
inches, plant food enough for from fifty
to 150 full crops of grain. I do not de
sire to discourage the purchase aud use
of fertilizers, but what I do protest
against is, purchasing on time commer
cial manures at §4O per ton, which are
really worth only §25, to enrich cloddv
fields already fairly rich in plant-food,
locked up, it is true, but there none the
less, only waiting a little judicious ap
plication of brain and muecle to set it
free. If these hastily jotted facts and
impressions are the means tf inducing
my fellow-farmers to remove some of the
useless trees and fences, or to give the
fields an additional cross-harrowing or
two before casting in the seed and asking
the Lord to bless the labor of their
hands, my object will have been at
tained.”
HOUSEKEEPERS’ HELPS.
Bread from Grown Wheat. —Scald
the flower when making sponge and let
cool before adding yeast. Knead the
dough a little stiffer than for good flour.
Roasting Chestnuts.— Cut a small
piece off from each shell—just enough to
show the meat—and put a cupful into a
corn-popper. Shake over a clear fire
until they become mealy.
Lemon Bread Pudding. —One pint of
fine bread crumbs, yelks of four eggs,
one quart of rich milk, two tablespoon
fuls of melted butter and one cup of
sugar. Flavor with lemon. Cover and
bake about one-half hour. Beat the four
whites to a stiff froth, mix with it a tea
cupful of powdered sugar and the juice
of a lemon. Spread over the pudding
and return until slightly tinged.
Apple and Bread Pudding.— Put a
layer of apple sauce in the bottom of a
pudding dish, then a layer of bread
crumbs, sprinkle with sugar and little
bits of butter. Another layer of apples
and a second layer of bread crumbs are
added with sugar and butter, and a cup of
rich milk to w r et the top layer of crumbs.
Bake in a good oven three-quarters of
an hour. Eat with sweetened cream.
Flavor with nutmeg.
Mutton Hams.— Allow one-quarter of
a pound of saltpeter to half a pound of
sugar. Put into an oven to heat, and
while hot rub thoroughly into the leers
of mutton. In the morning rub well
with common salt. Place something
under the mutton to raise it from the
drippings. Let stand three or four
days, then give another thorough rub
bing with salt, and after a week hang up
to dry. You may smoke them, if you
please. When dry, keep in canvas bags.
Hard Soap Made With Washing
Soda. —Poi;v five gallons of boiling
water over six pounds of -washing soda
and three pounds of unslacked lime.
After it settles and becomes clear, pour
off. You may turn over it two gallons
of clear cold water, to be added from
time to time as the soap is in danger of
boiling over. To five gallons of soda
and lime water &<ld six pounds of per
fectly clean fat and boil about two and a
half hours, or until it begins to harden.
Throw' in a handful of salt just before
taking from the fire. Pour into a tub
and let stand until solid.
To Prepare Hulled Corn.— Take
about three quarts of w r ood ashes, put
into a large kettle, and pour over six
quarts of cold water. Let come to the
boiling point and boil five minutes,
skimming several times. Take from the
fire and pour in a kettle of cold w r ater to
help settle it. Put three quarts of
shelled corn into another kettle and pour
over the strained lye. Now let boil
half an hour, then skim out the corn and
rinse well with several waters, rubbing
with the hands until the black chits come
oil’. Put back into the kettle with clear
water and boil until soft. Salt and eat
with milk, or butter, pepper, and salt .
Curing Hams.—l have used the fol
lowing for a long time for my hams and
think it preferable to putting the liams
into brine, for I think brine has a ten
dency to make lean meat hard and taste
less. For a common-sized liam take one
ounce saltpeter and enough fine salt to
rub the ham twice. After rubbing the
hams thoroughly lay them in a cask with
a hole in the bottom, or anywhere, so
that the brine may run off. After one
w eek, take up and rub on remainder of
salt aud saltpeter. After a week or ten
days longer, take up and rub over with
salt alone. After another w T eek they are
ready to smoke.— Cor. ’ Rural New
1 o i 'he r. __
POPULAR SCIENCE.
It is proposed by Dr. Oppermann to
construct roads in this way: First, a bed
six to eight inches thick of coarse be
ton with hydraulic mortar, is laid down,
and then on the top of this-bed a thin
ner layer of smaller beton, cemented
with a mixture of lime and one-half part
of Portland cement or Boulogne cement,
and one-half part of slag.
Friction tapers are made in England
from a mixtuie of one ounce saltpetre,
one-half ounce powdered orris root, one
eighth ounce minium, and one ounce
phosphorus ; on the latter being dis
solved one or two ounces of castor oil
are added, the quantity variyng accord
ing to the result ant tenacity or flexibili
ty required.
The Consolidated railroad is building
at its shops in New Haven, Ct., anew
palace car, in which there is a device for
keeping out the smoke, dust, and cin
ders that come in at an open window.
It consists of an extra outer window,
shaped somewhat like a curved bay win
dow, in which the glass is only half the
width of the window, and slides up and
down. When pushed to the front side
it presents a curved surface against
which the cinders and smoke strike and
are thrown outward, while air can enter
from the open half.
The effects of professions and trades
on mortality are great, the term of life
varying from 65 years 11 months for
clergymen to 40 years 10 months for
lithographers and copper engravers. In
England, according to the census-office
statistics, the duration of life has been
found most defective among the steel
workers, polishers, and grinders ; and
next to these the life of the collier—that
fearless delver in the bowels of the earth
—is least secure, owing greatly, no
doubt, to the occurrence of accidents in
the mines.
In a memoir published at Christiana
Herr Sophus Tromboldt considers that
it may be accepted as certain that the
aurora borealis is a local phenomena,
circumscribed by very narrow limits,
and occurring not far from the surface
of the earth. The light, he finds from a
careful comparison of a large number of
observations, is generally white, though
sometimes red or green; but further
north than Bergen the aurora often pre
sents spectral colors. He believes, also,
that there is now evidence enough to ac
cept the statement that auroral displays
are sometimes attended with sound.
Some late inventions ought to be able to
set this last alleged fact beyond dispute.
How Famous Writers Work.
It is curious to recall the manner in
which “The Great” seek inspiration
and liow they work.
M. Alexandre Dumas, fils, is a morn
ing -worker ; the dawm finds him already
up. He salutes her with a genial coun
tenance. His habitual good humor
proves that his health and his mental
faculties are in complete equilibrium.
He is hungry immediately on rising and
attacks a good plate of soup with the
eagerness of a rustic. After that he
seats himself before a large secretary
and writes until noon—in negligent
dress, as you may suppose. M. le Comte
de Buffon, before entering his study, al
ways put on liis court dress, did not for
get his sword, and did not deign, except
in lace cuffs, to occupy himself with the
humble animals whose history he was
writing.
There are few coats more threadbare
than those of the master of all. I have
named M. Victor Hugo. M. Hugo is
also an early riser, but he does not live
on soup. Before noon he lives only on
his thoughts. He writes a great deal
and liis heart is in the work. In his long
w alks he prepares the work of the mor
row, and as his memory is prodigious he
lias only to write out what his faithful
memory dictates. He has often related
to his friends that in liis youth, during a
rainy winter, he was occupied with liis
“Marion Delorme.” He had chosen as
a place of exercise, under shelter, the
Passage du Saumon.
The first act, a marvelous commence
ment, full of passion, poetry, and fire,
was the work of two afternoons spent in
promenading in the passage of dingy
shops, where were sold, side by side,
stockings, straw' mattings, and butchers’
caps.
Lamartine, another early riser, com
posed his most beautiful verses on horse
back. That was a habit worthy of an
aristocratic poet, a lover of the open air
and of heaven, who, not possessing the
Pegasus of heroic days, gave wings to an
English saddle horse. Byron showed
this sportive taste, probably because lie
had a club foot.
The poet, beloved of lovers, Musset,
adored the reveries of evening.. But it
was not under blue heaven, by the splen
dor of the stars, that he evoked the muse
of night, w'hose voice still vibrates in
young hearts. It w'as in the glare of
candles, at the angle of a table reddened
by overflowing cups.
George Sand always wrote at night.
Lady of the manor during the day, de
voted to her guests, making preserves
and engaged in needlework, it was at 1
o’clock in the morning, when the cha
teau was fast asleep, that the genius
awakened and gave to us “ Mauprat,’ (
“Francois de Champi,” “ Consuelo,”
and a hundred other works. —Paris pa
pa'.
[St. Louis Republican.]
It is very rare that the Republican
consents to editorially forward the in
terests of advertisers of wiiat are known
as patent medicines, as it does not fre
quentlv fall out that w r e can have posi
tive knowledge of their merits. How
ever, w’e take pleasure in saying of St.
Jacobs Oil, from individual experiment,
that it is a most excellent remedial agent,
and as such we can heartily recom mend it
They have the speaking tube in Ger
many, but not the telephone as yet. One
day a tenant waited on his landlord to
pay his rent. The landlord, seeing that
the peasant intended to stay, thought to
hurry him by saying through the tube:
“ Gretchen, "bring up my lunch.” The
peasant declared that the instrument was
a wonderful invention, and asked per
mission to speak through it, which was
granted. He at once approached the tubo
and puckering up his mouth, whispered:
“ Gretchen, you may bring up lunch for
two. ”
[Galveston News.]
The Madison (Wis.) Democrat, in en
deavoring to treat the wounds received
by the candidates for the presidency,
wisely prescribes St. Jacobs Oil. Of
course we could not expect our worthy
contemporary to do otherwise than rec
ommend that famous Old German Rem
edy,—which “heals all wounds but those
of love” ami soothes all pains,—save
those of political disappointment.
Beneficial Effect of Vexation.
A French paper mentions the follow
ing as a fact: “A shoeing smith, resid
ing in the Rue Princesse, who had been
for some time partially deprived of the
use of his legs by rheumatism, perceived
that some thief had taken away a num
ber of horse-shoes. He was so excited
by this discovery that a profuse perspi
ration burst out all over him, which to
his amazement, had the effect of restoring
the use of his legs, and the first use he
made of his recovered powers was to
walk to the commissary of police to make
b declaration of the theft. ”
Father is Betting Well.
My daughters say, “How much better
father is since he used Hop Bitters.”
He is getting well after his long suffer
ing from a disease declared incurable,
and we are so glad that he used your
Bitters.—A lady of Rochester, N. Y. —
Utica Herald.
The Worship of the Drum.
A writer in a contemporary speaks of
the extensive prevalence at one time of
the worship of the dram or rattle. Sav
age people have a singular tendency to
venerate whatever makes a noise. The
great seat of drum worship was South
America. Even at the present day it is
found in full vitality in the interior of
Brazil; but a hundred years ago it could
be said that * ‘the drum was the only ob
ject of worship from the Orinoco to the
La Plata.” This is two-thirds of South
America, and, as it is more than proba
ble that Patagonia should be added too,
tlxis would make the area of the practice
nearly co-equal with that of the conti
nent. In former times drum worship
also prevailed in Lapland.
“The Doctor* SM
I would never leave my bed. That wa three
montfife ago, and now I weigh 190 pounds. I
can not write half of what I want to 6av, but
Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Cure did it all."
H. O.'ROUBK. Rahway, N. J.
The happiness of your life depends
upon the quality of your thoughts;
therefore, guard accordingly, and take
care that you entertain no notions un
suitable to virtue, and unreasonable to
nature.
An Incident of Jealousy.
A great many people make themselves
unhappy by needless suspicion and jeal
ousy. They cannot reason themsel\es
out of it, for as Shakespeare says:
Jealous souls will not bo answeied so,
They are not jealous for a cause,
But jealous lor they’re jealous.
It is therefore more easy to ridicule jeal
ousy than to argue with it. An old Ger
man who lived in Baden, and was af
flicted with this malady, was suddenly
called to Frankfort. While there the
p:ings of the green-eyed monster seized
him and he rushed to a clairvoyant.
This prohetess closed her eyes and
said slowly,
“ I see a young and beautiful woman
looking out of the window.
“ That’s my wife,” said the poor man
to himself; “ I wonder what in the world
she is looking out of the window for?”
“ She is evidently very anxious to see
someone,” continued the sleeper.
The husband began to feel like a pin
cushion full of pius.
“ Ah, there he is, she sees him now,
and how her face lights up with joy.
“Oh, heavens!” cried the excited hus
band, “how I wish I was there,” and
his eyes flashed in a very dangerous way.
“Now,” said the clairvoyant slowly,
“ she rushes down to the front door to
meet him.”
Here great drops of perspiration began
to gather on the man’s brow. He had
been looking for positive proof for a long
time, and lie had it to his heart’s con
tent.
“And now,” said the seer, “ she takes
his head between her hands, calls him
‘ her precious ’ and ‘ her darling, ’ and
kisses him again and again.”
This was really too much. The poor
man trembled in every limb.
“And lie,” continued the seer,
jumps about the room as though he were
mad with delight, and barks, and wags
liis tail.”
“ Barks and wags his tail?” cried the
frantic husband, “for heaven’s sake
what are you talking about?”
“ Oh,” said the seer, “I think I for
got to tell you that it is a dog that I have
been looking at all this time.”— N. Y.
Herald.
Answer This.
Did you ever know any person to be
ill without inaction of the Stomach,
Liver oi kidneys, or did you ever know
one who was well when either was ob
structed or inactive ; and did you ever
know or hoar of any case of the kind that
Hop Bitters would not cure. Ask your
neighbor this same question.—Times.
CliildreiFs Ideas.
The natural philosophy of children is
very interesting; they invent just such
theories of the universe as the wild na
tions have, with a sweet unconsciousness
that they are originally myths. During
a tremendous thunder storm a little fel
low of four year old was overheard ex
plaining to another child that lightning
was just “red water that runs out of the
clouds,” and the thunder “the noise it
makes when it goes into the ground.”
He lost his courage concerning thunder
iu one of the showers, and afterward had
to be comforted a little' when one oc
curred. One evening, to calm his ap
prehensions, his father assured him that
the lightening he saw was a great way
off, and told him that if it were near, he
could hear the thunder at once after the
flash, but this time he could notice that
there was quite a while between the two.
The boy mused over this a little, and
then queried:
“Papa, what makes the thunder speak
so long after it’s got through?”
A question -which might be asked of
many a public speaker.
She thanked me for my assistance in
a voice as clear and musical as if she had
just taken a teaspoonful of Coussen’s
Honey of Tar, the best medicine in the
world for clearing the voice, curing
coughs and colds, and all diseases of the
throat and lungs. You had better try it.
Price 50c. For sale by all druggists.
The Frig-ale Bird.
“I see,” says Michelet, “a small, blue
point in heaven. Happy and serene re
gion, which has rested in peace above
the hurricane ! In that blue point, and
at an elevation of 10,000 feet, royally
floats a little bird with enormous wings.
A gull ? No, its wings are black. An
eagle ? No, the bird is too small. It is
the ocean eagle, first and chief of the
winged race, and daring navigator who
never furls his sails, the lord of the
tempest, the scomer of all peril—the
man-of-war or frigate bird. We have
reached the culminating point of the
series, commenced by the wingless bird.
Here we have a bird which is virtually
nothing more than wings; scarcely any
body—barely as large as the domestic
cock—while his prodigious pinions are
fifteen feet in span. The great problem
of flight is solved and overpassed, for
the power of flight seems useless. Such
a bird, naturally sustained by such sup
port, need not allow himself to be borne
along. The storm bursts; he mounts
to lofty heights, where he finds tran
quillity. The poetic metaphor, untrue
when applied to any other bird, is no
exaggeration when appliyd to liim; liter
ally, he sleeps upon tlie When
he chooses to soar his way seriously, all
distance vanishes ; Jae breakfasts at the
‘ Senegal; he dines ih America.”
Prevention excels cure every time. Always
keep Dr. Bull’s Cough .Syrup convenient; take
it in time and you will be free from Coughs,
Colds, etc. Sold everywhere. Price 25 cents a
bottle.
Pure Cod Liver Oil made from selected
livers, on the seashore, by Caswell, Hazard &
Cos., Sew York, It is absolutely pure and
sweet. Patients - who have once taken it prefer
it to all others. Physicians have decided it
superior to any of the other oils in market.
Dr BULL’S
COMB
SYRUP
The only way in which some people
can draw the attention of the people to
themselves is to go to church late and
walk the whole length of the broad aisle
in creaking boots.
No Preparation on earth equals St. Jacobs Oil as a safe,
SURE, simple and cheap External Remedy. A trial entails
bnt the comparatively trifling outlay of 50Clnts, and every
one suffering with pain can have cheap and positive proof of
its claims. DIRECTIONS IN ELEVEN LANGUAGES.
SOLD BY ALL DRUQQISTS AND DEALERS IN MEDICINE.
A. VOGELER & CO.
j ßaltimore, Md. f TJ. S. A.
If 0
J * TO ’ SACH^^
Sleep, Appetite ami Strength
Return when Ifostetter’s Stomach Bitters
is systematically used by a bilious dyspeptic
sufferer. Moreover, since the brain sympa
thizes closely with the stomach and its asso
ciate organs, the liver and the bowels, as
their derangement is rectified by the action
of the Bitters, mental despondency produced
hv that derangement disappears.
For sale by all Druggists and Dealers
generally.
Encyclopedia
TIQUETTEIBUSIESS
I liis is the cheapest and only complete and reliable
work on Etiquette and Business and Social Forms. It
tells how to perform all the various duties of life, and
howto appear to the best advantage on atl occasions.
Agrents* Wanted. -Send for circulars containing a
nil description of the work and extra terms to Agents.
Address, National Publishing Cos., Atlanta, Ga.
MAV- -
k g SETND FQ P : Q'ATA LOGUES a
Allsirl Fern® Mints.
Second holy session begins 15th February
Full Faculty. Superior advantages. Increased
patronage. * TEIIMS REDUCED. Apply for
catalogue to Principles.
11. H. Rawlins, A. M.
W. P. Dickinson,
Charlottesville, Va.
E~
Also SALARY per month. Ail EXPENSES
advanced. WAGES promptly paid. SLOAN
A Cos. 800 Gwrge St. Cincinnati- u.
|h “W "9 "9 A TEAR SBC hcmim t>
SmS AieaO. Outfit Ere*. Address f
e *L I I lOk VICKERY, Angaria, Uvrt
40UNG MEN SaMTirSXS
gylf yon are a If you are a
wr of business, weak- \tggjg man of let
-5 ened by the strain of Wm tiers toiling over niicL
S your duties avoid nitrht work, to res
■ stimulants and use O tore brain nerve and
I Hop Bitters. g| waste, use Hop B.
@ If T ou are young and Q suffering from any in-
M discretion or dlssipaß tion ; it you are mar
-9 ried or single, old or g young, suffering from
§| poor health or languish King on a bed of sick
-1 ness, rely on Hop! Bitters.
Whoever v 0 u are, ASUftaia Thousands die an
■ whenever you feel <f SI nu&lly from some
S that your system jMyJ form of Kidney
I needs cleansing, ton- disease that niiuht
■ in? or stimulating, jSf. J have been prevented
jfj without intoxicating, [W£ D, by a timely Uoeof
take Hop Hopßltters
Bitters.
jJpsia, 7 kid-*eu& D. I. C.
or urinary com- 1 T" 5- ' —
plaint, disease 'St §• jf an absolute
of the stomach, , ij ITfIT) |jI„J/T! 6 ,? J yfl
botcels, blood, | ! IS!!r or
liver or nerves } | lILJ A lldru..kenness ,
You will oe g■■ nirrrnnS tobacco ,or
cured if yotluse g 1111111118 narcotics.
Hop Bitters | H j I Lliul *
If yon&resim- SI Sold by dmir
& >iriied, try I' NEVER i Circular. ||
fa 11 It™ 1
life. It has I Si lA I L I! g
saved hun-J a gißoehestcr, s. t. H
Ci retlS. & Toronto, Oct. I
OiDfess,Ear Diseases, GatarA
try maU“ 4 th *“ W P treatment; price 0
**'* lu t*"* l ** **• imimi
THE
GREAT GERMAN
REMEDY
F€>R
RHEUMATISM,
NEURALGIA,
SCIATICA,
LUMBAGO,
BACKACHE,
GUOTX'S?,
SORENESS
or TUE
CHEST,
SORE THROAT,
QUINSY,
SWELLINGS
SPRAINS,
FROSTED FEET
AXD
EARS,
XJTJZO-ZSS-JS
AND
SCAID3 7
Generalßaiily Pains,
TOOTH, EAR
AND
HEADACHE,
AND
ILL OTBEfI PIS
AND
ACHES.
eWalr Dr* ii kh NAT*
nd BEST; It set* tastantfc.
leouflr. producingth bqo*N
iatural snides or Black **
by wn ;4oes NOT STAIN IK
I a favorite on'erery w.iT
rials and applied by Kafi
Jresters. Depet CtS WIJ.
ft. ckITTINTON, Af J.
CELLULOID
EYE-CLASSES. v
Representing the choicest selected Tortoise-
Shell and Amber. The lightest, handsomest,
and strongest known. Sold by Opticians and
Jewelers. Mada by SPENCER OPTICAL
F’O CO., 18 Maiden Lane. New York.
An Open
Secret.
The fact is well understood
that the MEXICAN MUS
TANG LINIMENT is by far
the best external known for
man or beast. The reason
why becomes an “open
secret 99 when wo explain that
“Mustang” penetrates skin,
flesh and muscle to the very
bone, removing all disease
and soreness. No other lini
ment does this, hence none
other is so largely used or
does such worlds of good. _
AGENTS ! A i TEN rION l
Joslnli Allen’s WJfo
HiS “ROTE” A N W 80-K,
“My Wayward 'Pardner/
on;
MY TRIALS WITH JOSIAII, THK WIDOW KUMI’,
AND ETCETERY.
Apply at once for territory and terms to
Southern Pub. Cos., Box 116, New Orleans, La.
ASENTS WANTSD
—FOR—
GASKELL’S COMPENDIUM.
Best book on Business, Penmanship, Book
keeping and social forms ever published. c
have also two oth< r new and popular hooks.
Apply at once for territory and terms m
Southern Pub. Cos., Box 116 New Orleans, La.
ATOM'SAWMILL
For S2OO.
Our Vo. 1 Plantation taw Mill is design,d t* tvs ra hf
I, 10 *r 12 hors* power Agricultural Engines. With this
power from
I, to 4,000 Feet
sf lumber can ha cut in a day. A product 25 to 50 per cent ,
freate? than can be cut with any reciprocating saw mill
with th lamt power. Th. mill. ai complete eic.pt
nw, and will bs put on toe car. in Cincinnati for the low
price of *2OO, and warranted in every particular. Eat*
Mill* of all sizes, Engines, Boilers, Shafting, Gearing, &.
Illustrated circulars stjd free.
LANE & BODLEY CO.,
John and Water Sts.. Cincinnati. 0.
Literary Revolution.
? CENTS each, formerly SI.OO (• SI.SS each: i. Mae
-it.ay's Lif* ol Frederick th* Great. 11. Qarljrl*'* I>!f el
Robert Burns. 111. Lamartine’s Lift of Mary quaes t’l
tents. IV. The*. Hughes’ Manliness ol Christ, g GTSL
ach, formerly $1 o each: I. Areola-’* Light .f A.ta. JT.
loidimith’s Vloar of Wakefield. 111. Baron Wunchau.
a’s Travels and Stsrp.ialng Adventures. For SIX
U K -V is Si Buayan’* Piloriaa’s Brogres*. Illustrated catal
ogue sent free. AMERICAN BOOR EXCHANGE, eska
J. Aldan, Manager Tribun. Building, New York.
Every Pl-mtrr r.-n FlLEhlStvVntT*il|
if i HE r miT 11 Cotton 3 R
SNk Hull, sa
Uis the best. Saves time and labor. •Src'tt
Vy ind Uf'ementß. Send for Prire List. Made only
- 1 y W. S. N ewtcn, Norwich, (Greensville) C t*
dfTo W7\lA WONTH. Waotw*.
i d*et ssilfngarticle* lr, the world | *.
qyO gj V/pieae,*, J A r BRONSON, Detroit, Lick-
Morphine nabUCnred fin 13
to tto Gaya. IVr*s.y 4£II CaraA
a D*. J. STsriuewfc, Lebanon. Obi*
BABY CABINET ORGAN—NEW STYLE 109-
THP.EE AND A QUARTER OCTAVES, in BLACK
WALNUT CASE, decorated with GOLD BRONZE.
Length, SO Inches; height. S3 in.; depth, 14 in.
This novel style of the MASON & HAMLIN CAB
INET ORGANS (ready this month) has sufficient
compass and capacity for the performance, with full
parts, of Hymn Tunes, Anthems, Songs, and Popular
Sacred and Secular Music generally. It retains to a
wonderful extent, for an instrument so small, the
extraordinary excellence, both as to power and quality
of tone, which has given the MASON ft HAMLIN
Cabinet Organs their great reputation and won for
them the HIGHEST DISTINCTIONS at EVER’/
ONE of the GREAT WORLD’S INDUSTRIAL EX
HIBITIONS for THIRTEEN TEARS. Evert one
WILL ES FT7LLT WAnEANTED. CASH PRICE $22 ;
on receipt of which It will be shipped as directed. If
ON RECEIPT AND TRIAD IT DOES NOT BATISFT TEE
PURCHASER, IT MAT BE RETURNED AND THE MONET
WILL EE REFUNDED.
EIGHTY STYLES of Orgahs are regularly made
by the MASON ft HAMLIN CO., from the BABY
CABINET ORGAN at $22; to large CONCERT OR
GANS at S9OO, and upwards. The great majority are
at SIOO to S2OO each. ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUES,
CIRCULARS and PRICE LISTS free.
MASON & HAMLIN ORGAN CO.,
154 Tremont St., BOSTON; 43 East 14th St* NEW
YORK: 149 Wabash Are.. CEICAGO.
pl B o*B cu 1 e
Publishers’ Union, Atlanta, Ga. No. U
- A T® * PLATS I PLATS ! PLATS l
For Heading Clubs, for Amateur Theatricals, Texnperancs
Plays, Drawing-Boom Plays. Fairy Plays, Ethiopian Ploys,
Guido Books, Speakers, Pantomimes, Tableaux Lights.
.Magnesium Lights, Colored Fire, Burnt Cork, Theatrical
Face Preparation#, Jarley’s Wax Works, Wigs, Benrds
and Moustache* at reduced prices. Costumes, Scenery,
Charades. New catalogues sent free, containing fill! de
•oription and prices. SAMUEL FRENCH i SON.
mm v ISA* etr.„, g av YarV