Newspaper Page Text
REV. DR. TALMAGE. |
TIIK BROOKLYN _______ iftVINL’S _______ SUN
PA IIAV l st.BM SEtlMON
Snhlerl bnhjetl. * “ Forwlveness rorgl Tenons llefor* ncrnri Sun
down.
TrXT: tint the tun i/e (town upon
your uraOi .liplu itiitn* iv,, UK:
Whnt n pillow embroidered of all colors
lmth the (lying dsy. Tho ernille of clouds
from which the min rises is Is nutiful enough,
but it i'( Mirfmxaist by tho many colored
mausoleum in which at evening it is buried.
Sunset among tli" moinitaiiin! It ainiost
ta Hies bl'ent li a wav to re( nil til” scene.
The Ion.' diuilow stiet'diing over the pluiii
made tho glory of i h- tl put ting lighton th*
tiptop ( tag - iz$a* tsaa
Mingo the in
S2 t. pm p le mid l .Tima......iiin.IngUsl, All
ensiles : cloud ................... Burn
ing II dee: tin Hunting par'li*nH
n lit tin Ir O *t la’ll I Banner* of
nd ns it I aril' ir. tlie battle
t.r tin Ictni'lltH. i" ini ■long the Adi
rondft' ks a ml the Nw nni' mg the
inisintniiis Alps knov v wtmt \ft P ■ f . 1 ! ng roll- the
•t »• i th«
ing fir :imle fir int i « hi h th n down
to |ntli>- i it ni;,hff.i|i ii s' tl t mike
weird and Mf’finij'l f!r<*iti ir for n
lifetin \ r His*it 1 I in rom
paresi t I It
blit tli )•
lie tlii •I f I, I h» 'll.
Paul I t r
HI ii
a i, A I
'ft, II Hi- t
th I I II
ut t nit hi ’ tli" t
h l not ill
! I
than t
UP •r i i
in it ti ii
ft t J t, Uii) » t *1
)» *i out r.iMi of
r ii t.r ml sir**,
t r ui’
'll.if iv 111 '; ll | re st
ill'll I III t t n to
■in 1 t ml liii'l up anil
a .I •t "'1 1 1 thidi I,.tel
all. t il I llftt.'lv b' I ■re
t 1 Hi ft
I It- Ml
t n I tho M
ii Ml?.
I I t.r
is'H'ftll t. r
M A the
pi. I. id
h I i | I "l -1 led or
in I I I soiiii* wav
I II! is t i-lillllful
I I ui itu. and
tl 1 vv imi I”
Ion -..I ■r isjilcasmg to
11 I lii'ii.'O the
■I' t: ”l.i t not
t 1
t W’iiv
t 1 1 . r 1 1 tuntft
I I, 'IL *t
\V
1 il ll il I I’.Mll
ii- I thin!
let t
I nigh
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a a. I said
IF
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M .ii a ft ('in in liav
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till'! i ( 1 !<
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\ f. i.
I it 'I. t
i it
l I i; II M m h
II r L
i i
for
I Art.
>
rt
r
ll I t
t t 1 **♦ int*^
1 t -,| t
n* .v
I t ir
w 11 r I. I'*
C'y ■bit i'i iii.'i.TiTtrTr 7 P,,, F ! nil I
n. Mow far t'is ■ i'is»i L‘ N t
-scrsil that family a-Uft! Ih<. hour Jf ’ *‘ ' a, j !' > ,U wa wa ,l I! ,u h k, ’ , lllu ‘ to
nopracti
(treat, says thf* old king- was t*
fosaor he must be at peace with f
he wanted to enter bnveu. ThaKWVB'to AHr __ tSfcer
his wife, thoyneon: Write to nB”jKMf,
after I run dead that I forgivs majesflM^Etter
tin- eon feasor, said: ‘Her 2 jflj®jSb»
write King, “after him immediately.” I dead; that "• wiirSBCT* Nr
am 9 HTgo
Ko he let the sun of his earthly 4 d
down ujion hU wrath. tMoHteet
Again: We ought not to allow
Is-foro forgivenem takes plm-e, AgjMhat we
might not live to see onotherday. the|n»rf V
it we j^rty'^^^rrdE^* should lie ushered into
Z Between (tittftWbck
mu lit. 11 o'clock p. m. the^fca^Hsr*
a in. there is something which to
whh'h i-i'laTes i he grip the
the soul, anj piost people arrsSed
Feid lops'' Go. 3 may to hare make The gut »on
that way so as I have sheen
traat the more glorious. musbfare
sunshiny days in this world that
down ami sunrise, they afaays unit this world Jlte 3
darkest, amii W.yen. bright, Out of w blck- be
th«» brighter for that contrast. W
m - into irradiation. Khali wr th,r, thtfavfcu, leaf.
the rose.to bank of stms t into
hunting ground of disease with and death, Who c«*jr- wfttld
in' cur nniuwdtles usf whonRre
»ftiit, to confront leaded, against
ha\o all done meaner things than eatTying^M anybody
Inn ever «l«n» ng.imut u*,
wIst* H"w «an “■
not willing Vo Crivo oSS the {S»
NiijioU'oti was *d to undertake Corlenuifais i lie
1 >u, ;of the A 11 >."♦ uecaos 3
htv !
r J
r t
I is
tlih I te into the next, our one pleajrtll
1,1 f " r JMtiey, audit
' if v!';; lme;v.°not f n^n JOerfor ■»
; IP nil v ir le iiveiBy mB
ir t iv#pa*s#»**. w hat or."!Wliartn* ft e’iuht
If VVo t:t* 1 thvr«* Imtii :g tl.is
till! , hipI uiebiti^ ilibone ai*' 1 tgmSiS^
•in no o 'ho a ci’amitv. il.'i'iLmd a
-
needing for;'lv. n.ssforte. . Whan
tliomund ohh juitios ot heart and lifu.
oin* last lioiir > oiiias, v, a want it to find uiall
right. IU dly anything afferta tl^dtriSkd mo aomMi
u-aa'unt!of 1 tl' e sMiibr who°after
for many eenturks been covered with the !
umIk's uful 8 iMrif <»f 8 iviu 8 t s wan found
standing in his ]>!u -con guard, Itod hand on sptur j
an Icinlet on le*a I. UtJiefM at thaawful
ni
r if. i. lit when |> K-it ion. last Ami it will bo a grand wdkre tmng
our moment comes,
I un.I in right position toward the world, as
ns t'wht pos-tion toward Ood, on
"li n'd an I il IV *
no Mint t:n ni‘ dontli I do not snpiK>«thafe I
ft ,i itav mol ■ow 1 than most people,
I Hit 1 i clai i" to you that L would not daif to
sle p t night if Mi< were any being mall
ti r Ii xvi’ll " I won!'! not glajSly
III v ill of distni i monwr^l^i-.W l# denied j
an in >(• forgiven"' my un waiving sp rit,
In
But fiy mi* woii/iii “ there hor
r*l un* 1 h. 1 t ha'Ho in |Ui d nii’tb thui
1 I lib'll l! with !kt would 1 ; rm."
V •Iir nay tako &
f • r it will 0 ,dm
I 1 II or tiP eternal
ii.'tit nf vmi. says s.irdBMinn
'Ill it Il'IlllW lieat .I ine out etUtaor OT.thos.■
it, I my I'Usiness
tut.' 1 tin m tlie newMdbs.
1 ' di 7 •gns
t 1 ioi'.’H him •Ot-—F*r
II J will II wvn, i.i-.ithee, taki
v or i will never lie MjBMOt
( I \ r It 1 witk'iVum
: V 011 i would not tliilTiAt get; so
11 .......... in a ns In so »
II in ii with t he * Jo 1 \t!,
I Ml! M I \y ill repor.
[| ! J 'illiu I ik’* hint 1 swjMUfToi utoAftto
ii rm,
1 1 I l III .fe Mian yi t ti you dauia^a iOjdjni Kic
1 ii makiiig heaven for yntfr (Svi
it an i i.iii! If tn will uot }i*
■ lleilld to veil. I Hieile l to him. jn
ii\e")■ six Ijoiiis it «ij| l«i siimlowin*-Wio
■ In 111 ut' will a I'lm nil lotaiimt the vaMw-n
.S' " licre 11 tw is n l ami tlmt take a
hnv.’l 1 liiirv the old ' Ut |eftj»t ^ X
I V- /.(■; not the sun go down on yopr
w r -
a a I have more Miau-d i-fcn
ti i is put up-.ii me, and 1 am Rbt
t. one it I am sum a Imt rev ’ll# til aad
ll ll! Idu-n I think of tli lit o chad
ii T of some goods ft om a sto/Je.
i putting some rolls ot gotfk.
package after 1 ».K -xn -e, j
i It it eliiU is 1 " iiigbvai>
M t i ou^lit not t i put upon
l, w i.iii iv (londct *'! i 'atli*r j
11 i li I can ru.TV an !
1 li lt III (AV t mu ll in SfiTyH !
i t IV Of tit r
I " ;
i no annoyance t jo
t lu i many,’ vciilv la I t,"ii#
ti atlioe
1 , IV TV
A i id' v tli 'sdXihl 0 i
,11 il !' Ii I t 'li 'llliss U«
r t it a of li¬ III ft ■il limy with nss'viutJj tlio ti '■iut#.'the iu» uoiim ;
It is a most ili^i^i t
t j « r> ill'll e;,-|W'i leue*S
r i s. There is u Irne
a i T ii I rr-t HM-ft i •d ^our |
a it ti t lace nr
I t X i
Hill II. ft iiwfiff*, |
r HI a 1 !; 'Mk*r«
H IIH I ft i til. 'oainaMmt
»' tin I n H •f j“y in Ww
You Mr I.ii but, ft'(tk 4
t >i ■ plea suit ii'i-manea
tii a 'i ir, or the iichhi
ii lli- sunrise. Is.*
eau l living at
ll I M I Ot i*r
u I I* it tin Set
H itinl out,.tup
II lb laitrcils (‘.ltd for
■Ii I cl lit it is tie- tn -t
il. \' .*) ii'tiee. mi'! lit th*
tu li . t • failure. I Hit
I if;.
r li 'ioix- i.rt
r l Yi'UU P*
I ), •it \ a
t ll V i I In ll" I ■
I Ah I 1 you will eoiiiti front
t i' I to t! ■ ino t itifll "Uit. lei}
h I it ll 111 : U-r of lie IT, HMll (loti
M M iii Ullll of ll Go ft- !. t who »“ laying will I hold I 'll) IIS ' to f “a!
n> ii 1 t « 1 « >. K*tii la 1
m*mI < v ont ro v < t
l-HSt I I Uit ft'il t- Ift
1 it it I- er
\ till
i.i t -"H
t . I ft HI ■
T roe t»
I' H •s th
i ! r
! i i nuu t
I. 1 Ii butt! i ha-.tr
t ;\ ii • in- I). ' and tli '^4
ii' lilt So lot til'
•n* Null that i i t to hi,line tn!:i
til * tirst too Vnvni ii, Tlio m Z
inr)st makes III 111 1 \vi vv I! a it. 0
it ( t.ul ll'tll to 1)3 ft')
t p;-i imliimt
f b :i Imdy und_
ill ire (lire 'Or !odr
ni t. and improY')
> 1 Nl t l am tiike u dia-p
■ ■ovi-s tlie i on»
at in ini. ling He, ami tin- pin Bright- j
1 ' i! ii ;t i«l l t.ia •• yon
I i l H H * is He i-i nipo- in.|«f
1 mmol
t lie i ". mi l ft.
I i' 'lit, Utl'l ft a: i not
,1 v it In h broad sweep
. and ail instills,
ni n tl nviy ei py
111 ) With Ml it I \ lull 11 tint
ubtinii* art r Hi t iintuuinal
tlie ii .f in- avtni
ns to lu iu •! li ternUit*
f Hi's wiv
S’ I ut
l Ap
I I l 'ortll as
a i »t lei
T It be
y» ur
I i|' of
t \ t > of lire
r Mi \ “f lir*
I III- iu
i i"ft Ii.j
i< t
il- I
g h
I. .I i \Ur
:i a
ir
I
!b
I
1
I
h I
■r ■t m
l I l I't sup
I t i ro-s."
A I M a-l
•list mot
I I, of su.'h
,
i t 1 ' n the wall
r in Mi - ■ MX',
I I HI 1 t • Vuti. an.
tii" in I X' ■t i gall'-riti all ing>,
i* y mi* < I. "HI' I.iso oFto-iI 1
i t Pt fr worrv- '
i, at a If we are
r I ■mi:. e«.loix>.l
t ■ ll • i our action.
I I I •l- a ui.i'tet |-:e as
(J 'V n nn 1 have 1
a * a 1 . ia.i*t t*e very
r r l« u* ihrou.tb in
Id I'd 1 ■ if the western
u.lst rr of
77 j ■ 'ii.' 1 .it ir j 1 ue wliat
i.-H 7 ti* t< . b. rh'» tg eii.iuiest
'ffff, S.tbiu' un g 1 down iijsm >oar
A I
t -,i l I iie sworl is tho key of 1
i *’> 1 hell, n drop of liiool s'iod is btit-
1 111 !M ;g. mi 1 wotin U u the day of
I! • i - ■ .i.i Fn’ as vennil.o.i and olor
■ I,! •* rut. m.' h-uret-x, in ihr ,
J -y • "il fill ju*t Mk* o-iiio.itti of j
Mint to I e (!•' ■ UH'I t lilt th • Sft.int III,ver HU j
jix.-ft is gix-a I si- r tu n a Un .I Mia h ii 11 ' 1 nuke* li Ii ik - * wh.i >h«» tiitiin. tlisnv, lira's lisa's a;ul aud wound* woundi that that f | j
I,, ft 1 i m -s
ou Ml* same ring aro two key,: U.yf* for.,
0 at two uiand keys our unlock unlock forgive " Paradise. oiwi of enemies;
id those
And And now now I I wish wish for for all all of of yon a beautiful
autwet anreset In In your earthly existence. Withsomo
of you It haa been a long day of trouble, and
with other* of you it wilt bo far from calm.
When the sun rose at 6 o'clock It was the
morning prophesied, of but youth, by the and tim? a the fair noonday day was of
nmifi had come and the clock of your
earthly gathered mdstence ha l struck la, cloud racks
and temiiest bellowed in the track
of tnmpeiA But as the evonins of old age
approach**Imray Uodthe sk:esniavbrighten
with mounted ^ Tr
moveas cohorts come to tike
yon home. And as you sink out of sight lie
JS'VSSLm? “J" 1 rir.on mav timh^v? there to a radiance t
ten in letters of sapphire, and oa the waters
in letters of opal, and on the hills in lett-rs of
enimtild: ‘'Thy sun shall no more go down,
5«^^2uriar •mn^rnh»iijny moon withdraw , L‘%a» itself, f.v
So shall the suiwot of ear,h become the sun- !
rise of heaven.
—»
Her Special v Butter _ .. Dish. |
_
experiment A vomtg aim lady has told been mo of trying. a scientific Her
boarding-hotiso exofusive and is a very
and excellent one, but of
late the p, rversities of the I,titter’have
been tr^'iu^. Hut tor BometimoB has a
way of lieiuff perverse, ami this usually
tokl this young lady that if cream were
buried in the eartlifortwentv-four hours
it would then I.,-found to have become
butter of a superior quality and flavor.
8 he longed to test the truth of thisstate
ment, and, eefessing her ainlntiou to
Duuiel.Miirrimnti, she was made a
*lir^seut Bigelow of farm, a bag hhe of told eream from with the the
me,
minuteness indispensable to the deserip
tion of wsicntiile i.roeednres, that the
* ,ft K Wfts of white cloth, of strong and
firm material, and that the eremit, of
ooum», btin^ from tin* Uigelow farm,
wan of lovclv richness, of t)io sort usu
flJIy kftt'l*-' d«*seribed tm ludng 4 ‘tl*i<*k .otl,,,i enough
SlK.i r
oavation in tlio ground, of the necessary
size, and deposited her cream and eov
ered it tip. After t wenty-four hours she
uueiirtbed it, and it was a bull of golden
dclichats butter, wauling only salt
to make it perfect, and this she added
' with her own fair hands. There were
. no traces of but'ermilk: it had ail lteen
alisorbed through the pores of the cloth
into the earth. It is improbable that
that the young lady w ill go on making
butter ufter this manner, but her method
may indicate that Ui«tc is shortly to be
a revolution in the art of butter making.
Tho new way lias to recommend it a
great saving of labor, and, one would
•av, of care as well. In these wonder
ful days it is impossible to prophesy
wluit great an l momentous results may
wtif from such a happening as this.
------
How (o Save Garden Seeds.
Peas and beans should be left on the
vine until the pods are well wrinkled,
when they should be pickled and spread
until they are quite dry. Small quan¬
tities may lx- shelled by hand, largo
crops are threshed with u flail. Keep
them in a dry place.
Mi'lon, cucumber, squash end pump¬
kin seeds should be taken only from
ripe, perfect shaped specimens In a
small u tlie needs may Ik- simplv
taken out, spread on plates or tins, anil
dried. Cutger quantities have to bo
washed l-elon- drying, to remove tile
sliuie that adheres to tiu-m. When tlie
seeds tire thoroughly dried, tie them in
bogs, nu t 1 . in u dry place secure
from roioo and ruts
15 -‘(*ts, parsnips, turnips, carrots,
onions, cauliflower and eahbngo will not
Pcoduee seed until the aecoiul year. Set
out plants in early of last May, strong, well-matured
- senson’s crop. When th*
seed is ripe, cut tlie stalks and put tin
‘L* 1 ’ cover to drv ;then lwatout the seeds,
1111,1 ti( ' j11 l ,n lbngK
Feeds of all kind should be fully rip
when gntlier "d, but it is also ini* id
to liurvia! litem ns soon as they are ripo.
Tor keeping am.ill quiilititiefi of seeds,
paper 1 mgs are prtfcrnhlo to cloth, ns
moisture they nHold and b insects. tter protection Always agaiust mark
each package with tin* name of the seed
contained in it, aud the vear iu which
p grew Cold d s not injure the vital*
itv of seeds, but ti inature is (b-trimental
to all kind rimn Aoriculturist.
A “Moving” Scene.
r)
A. i
• 1 .pi >
V %*
,v \r
• it”
•tr
‘•'A'lien you:' horse becomes fractious,
Vrlix in’t you give him the spurs:”
•*I do; but the brute moves away from
them every tim Flktjende Blaetter.
The New 0 . A. ll. Cointnauder.
0Ssik
.*V ♦e-.-'X
;iut
11
X ii#
'ji
I %
m a. w :
WM s
% % ii
\* VI
OT
Jtr )GE REA, OP MINXKSOTA.
------ —
Ins and Outs of Travel.
l,
/ate IP ' .
r ii
C
y V kj
1
i "clS
7 L
/
Doorman at Depot.—“A ll aboard!'*
CttORis or Travelers Bf.iiinu Fat
-,>. 1 KTr W hat's the matter!” “Hurry
** I* - ' •I.it 1 er go. Gallagher I 00 k
alivel” “Rats! ’ etc., etc.— Li/e.
At a Concert.
A pianist at a concert had stupid been pound¬ fot
ing away the same piece
O', ci an hour. “There's nothing
•ttangc •«•*•»*- about - that,” said some one.
**bs*» “Ira’s de anil can t hear himself.”
“Theb,” ‘*Thctl,” remarked Jones, “you d better
Signal to to him that he’s got through.’’-*
FABM AND (JARDEN.
DniractltPimu ones* or „»• insects.
T *“ a recent lecture Professor A. J.
Cook, in discussing the rapid increase
of injurious insects, said: There arc two 1
„ r oininent reasons whv insects are so in
*
creasing in num Timi ,i„, >ers, r , and , in . their ... ravages.
first, at is true with the cutworms, thc
locusts and the curculio, we are destroy
ing their native food plants,and they are
mnidlv U?atcJplants lenmino v«nrliv just”wholcsome rtbat mir enl.
nri and
even more toothsome, than their old ail
ment which we hnve ruthlessly destroyed,
Again, we are constantly introducing which
new insect pests from over the sen,
prove to be more destructive than in
their old homes, and more than rivals
for our native insects with like habits,
Thf , c(K iii n; , n „ ( th, currant slug and
these unwelcome r foreigners. m*
-
Is Fall Plowing Advisable?
Opinions of rr Goo<l tf farmers differ upon
this point. Borne argue that because a
imrtion P? of the fme«i the " „,j| i,„
f , , . .* „ T rl i|,‘
w . •. "h t , , ,
. 1,7 «i ; 'dit ' ‘it’-.i iw i ver and tli ad'oin "
•* b, nelhed ' Thf mdhmTf
1 . 1 1 1 f ,r t l ,V ,K \
*
. • , , i
,
«•)’ in K "P"! iw'“H h'll s| d« s ,whu hare ^ liuli.eto Jr
»«■ washed >y fall tains, and certain light
will Le found mile .more proltta
' e o piepare thegroum for wheat and
1,1 < he lull when then* is not usu
f spimg. 1 -. SU,h T1 I he i ' teani , ru,h is .*’ f generally " ork I1 ,w in . iinun ,h ‘*
/-in than h!V.rSl 11 * ' 11 or Mev' r„’/r e '
_
... W nst lug . Fodder.
A few days since nneighbor with who n
Hu* were before ta.king the concerniag outtiag
<orn frost came, made
this remark : “You won’t care so much
for fodder this vear as 5 you have before,
I»r .- Tlu‘ i orn wa. a
little green to cut forgetting the most
and In st of the grain, and the verv
abundant hay crop suggested the tliouiglit
that the corn-fodder would not lie altso
Jufcly the necessary to rot the stock tluough
winter as it hid Mimetimcs b'pnbe
fore, aad so one need not 1 e as careful m
saving it. To tin • arcful. prudent farm
er there i 110 need of saving that such a
course would he a most luiw j-i ind
wasteful one. I if habit of ,uvuig
should be formed. Save not because
one in specially needs it at the time
or the near future, but la
cause waste is a ( rime i gainst nature.
The lack of care a >f crops after they arc
grow n is a double wasti •. Not onlv has
one lost the use of his capital the ust f
his lamb, but he has lost the labor In b
lias already put into the crop, the manure,
the plowing, the planting a: d hoeing a
W **IL and is careless of the kind I’rovi
deuce which lias given the favoralth sea
son and made the crop possible, No
judicious man will be h ireful in
saving all he has raised r in careful an*l
judicious feeding, because his harvest
has been more abundant than usual, oi
more than his immediate necessities de¬
mand.— Urmmtt M' I’trhimiii.
Water in Biittce
While salt will readily dissolve at ti ft \
degrees it is uot easy to get the butter
free from the surplus xvatei mil it is by
tliis neeilll water tlmt much injury is
done to huttei Fifty-live degrees would
be liettei and salt the butter at sixty de
grees. Water is a great solvent of ease
ine and sugar traces of which will be
found iu all butter, how ever well worked
—but the more water remaining after
woiking over, the gieaterj the chemical
action, and acting upon the minute par¬
ticles of curd or chi it becomes rancid
by will known c!u*niica! action, lluttcr
should not contain more water than is
necessary to dissolve what salt it will re
tain in the form ot brine, and fourteen
per cent ■Ills to lie a hunt tlie amount
More water than thi' lutes tie brine
and (lefeatsby -o min ii ill t «.r tin
use of salt iu butter—ti !•!■ ■iVc tie
cft'cine from ehemirai mu¬
can be a coiniilislieil -a in a tem|M-rat un
below fifty degrees In the Usual cream
cry lnitti ind all that made !• -Id
setting, the maker often iininlenlioiui)]y
leaves more than twenty {ter cent, of watd
in butt t, not understanding that butt e
made from cream slightly acid, retains
more moisture than that male Ij-oui
sonicr cream. The souring breaks up
the textur f the cream, and the butter
'('parnti' better rom tin- buttermilk,
Then all tin liuttc '-maker need - t i
to chill li the ripe,ied f mm ji! ,i low
temperature than is i e*le«i i t
use salt i;i li time in wapitiii*f t ir
from iMittViTiiilk, an<) when the rnru
tion amount of Kail is used l i tin*
butter, let it dissolve, mid tin n by gently
working and packing, know that tin
•’litter i' free from any execs* of water
ubove fourteen jter cent. Then if kept
b' low fifty degrees, and away front the
influence of the air, butter made from
soured milk must keep well
: '
llow to Black Nlraw I*i-o|»ei-lj
Mlu-nit is possible, the farmer should
stack his own straw, or employ-ome inmi
to stuck it for him w ho will do it wa II, I
hands are secured by changing work, i ■
is well for tw to ugri t.i stack e 11
other's straw. In anv c.i'i in- man
should he detailed by the owner to stack
the straw, and should he provided with
good enough job. helpers to enable him to do a
Tin- foreman of the 't; '
should lay out the bottom so as to get
nearly is the proper si/.e as possible, in i
often verv hard to do at the s art. i
( lally when threshing from the >1
and it retpiir praeti i nlsre •or
re tly. Old threshing-machine men often
ae<|uirea the srood eye should for determining how
large stack lie mad iml thi
should be consulted If tlie 1 udntion
is made two large, tin »tib k will 1 »> fiat
when it has settled, and if miv t
Ill the stack i' run i high that a part
must be shoved off at rtc side, where it
IK t fton jdloxved t< , ... I build
mg Jar tin ks. it is preferal t«> lna
them quite long rather than too wid t*»
shed rain well. The foreman sho
direct where tin- straw i< to 1
and where the tramping in t
i lone. In building the out of
the stack, he sii itil.l stun 1 at th - outer
i nil of the line of piti \\ ne tin
straw himself riit i. i should 1 11 !1
straight up to about ot half tl i- height
the stack is to be whi- n vomj iete. anil
then drawn iu at an angh n f v
five to sixty degri-i s.
The tramping should h loBcma III
th - center under tin- ridg of the stiM-k,
as this ]nirt ft il |.port th i test
wi jght, and it is de-irabli ohave m c-.tii
less than the o h to run thi
water nut -h aid 11 tin - | dint when
tin* to|i|dnu-( t i> i gun. the mi la. i
should i k< ot level. Fef e beginnitig
to draw the sides in, thoi enter should be
rounded ’•I tlamped tlimeu .1 and
k> pt in that sliaj to th t<i B\ thi
method the -ueee-sivi i r hi *ttaw are
iced ;i' to lap IV h other like
-hiiig le% und as tin st.iel 'cities most
around tit ■ cdgis tin tem till i.i that po
sit ion, 'bedding thi rain much better
than if the 't s I 11 > 1 an 1
tramped should tli i. 't around the edges. The
stack be built np untformly to tin
tup and not topped out one .-nil at'iitinv
A 'tm k built by system aud plan will not
settle down in phe ( id let tlie r.iiu run
into holes, m iking rotten ores reaching
to the ground is is often found to be the
ise in 'Haw-pill s.
l'ai-in mill (iai-ilon Voles.
Big jMitatoi-s \xhen fully ripened.
1 ‘rom 'te exercise among the fowls.
le t the w.ti n a mill'll cow be
clear and jiur'
tlme One good i -v i> la-tter than two ■r
medium m e'.
Frt**h und cl»*«n mixtures are he! ter for
h tli ui is an ir nneuted doji.
Sheep and cattl eat 1 ilv mauv
XV ' nil grit"C' wliii-h a hog will not
tout ll.
(•at -tr.iw i> uio«t Y.tlimlde f*»r stock
when fed with clover h.a\ r <*ottoii see* I
or oil meal.
ijw7..rvi«5rjs^s»j *11 l *•
fifteen cents.
turnips, carrots and other roots are
very beneficial to sheep in winter to pro- 1
mote digestion. :
Quickly-grown, „ . ,, shade cured hay is the
host thinir :
to make yellow butter, savs *
the Gvernneu ', lircrtier '
,. 0 rass f an<1 ‘lover , do . . best on rather ,
s a
fi r, n st»il having a fine surface. Bo do
^ cereals for r that matter '
• unnower seeds should be fed to
poultry they in moderate quantities, otherwise
will cause early moulting and make
the feathers fly off.
President I hilips, of the W o-t Mirhi
gan Horticultural Society, regards un
leached wood ashes as thc best fertilizer
known for vineynids.
It is recommended to spade the poultry
yards frequently, and then sprinkle them
with lime, as the In-d mode of cleanin'' r
—sweetening them un as it were Z
•. ' ««*.
Ihus lot t |, c c . r ,,„ is Icm w«Vl „ V ed ll!u am!
prevent * the invasion of 1
• garden , work . next ,
preventing season.
Wind-milU and artesian wells arc verv
satisiact'iry K ..,: sr ..,/„ subst.tutes lor r rtu.miig
breams without whu h it was fori:icily
suppo.ad pastures could not Ik 1 kept up.
John Gould, iu a I lii!ade!phia paper,
savs if water could be ev pel ltd Don.
Li.tt.-r it wenid keep a- well :.s k.rd
whose kcepini; uunli tics a: e dtie to this
fa*t
” ’ z ■ ! ' 1
•
1 lie d.hha is regaining its former
|<op' , anty. For line tlower-i the btam-hes
should lie thinned out a little and the
flowers should ..ever suffer tor the want
of water.
H is said that while ealtie are tutmd
upon young clover, il only hay is dls
| c-ed where the beasts can get it, the;
w. 11 cat enough of it to prevent bloat
fn in the clover.
( lean culture ou moderately rich land
early in tic season and no cult i vat ion of
the noil nft* r midwinnmiT i< mi,« wv. t i.f
m,with oendies •teeordiie'- the
. -c • ,
' 1 x< l ' in g‘ ..... '■•J 8 - " 1,1111
"‘7 , .
w ‘l', ral '‘' a 1,11 ' ,H “' u ' c -
11 ■ , ‘ me when cal ed. and then put it
with thc (lock ISy calling the petted
hlinlvthf other' W 11 follow
Kngli'li authority rci om i end t wad
dl.igtiiplac thc best of bran, thing paper, in which shavings, pack
1,1 !<>
peadics and tine fruits to la M’l I for
exhibition or special market
It is quite as ECucsarv to j; keep pas¬
tuns up by manuring as it to apply
fertilizers to grain fields. As clover is
jM-rlmps the only herbage of whii h the
growth incicascs the fert 1 it v of the land,
so is the sheep the only animal which
can pasture! n gra-sis without absorbing
more fertility than it imparts.
ar.ition Attempts to bur.i out Muonic in prep
it for plowing heavy and rarely long. s;u ed un
!i ss is very Cat straw
is soft, thus allowing it stubble to absorb moist
tire that ill wheat or rye falls off.
The latter also stands np better, giving n
better chance for the wind to fan the
f] lines. Kvcn a stack of oats will not
burn with the same fierceness as of othet
grain, but it makes a smouldering fire,
easier to put out by smothering th in by
water.
SKI.EFT SIFTINGS.
There is u roo-ter in Kentucky with
three throats.
Tin- first Uriti-ll writers were (Midas,
Ncuninc and Bide, in the seveidh een
t Ill'S.
To her litter of three kitten a Kansas
cat added two young rabbits, and later
three young raccoons, all of which she is
nursing devotedly.
riio star rhamlx i tribunal m Eiuclaml
was institute*! in tin* tliinl year of the
reign of Henry VII., and abolished in tin*
sixteenth vear of the reign of C*hai 1
A >iian in the Duchy of Anhalt has
w r t 'ffniiO mark that with t wo
\ ii' can i t lie whole of i lie Ilib.e.
I'tttK tu.ition I. uit mg
mistake.
ll i' slated that hawk re ficqucntly
seen winter, Hying uthward on the approach of
but never « en on the return
(light, though found again in the north
x\ hen winter is ini't.
riie oldest Known painting' in Eng*
(l ate portraits of ( leiueer and iletirv
IV The portrait of the former i .1
panel, and was executed about F.si : that
d' Henry IV. was painted in 1 iOo.
Ficcro relates that the ( lial lean- and
Baetriaiis claimed celestial ol I'vnuons
i;o. Oil years but t akin i day as
m a'trotioiiiieal peril I, it bi eotni •s i:‘,iM(
lar veal •r takin the ill 'Ol i lunar.
•JJM»o vear-i.
In Brown County, III., is the Inuue of
a man who is in hi'eighty-sixth year,aud
has never -ceil railway, a piano,never been within
ten miles of a never won: a eol
lar or nceklie. never had on ;t pair of
socks sin, r he can remember,
i'here is a Bible p sed by a family
named Seheboldt, who resides iu l.ueas
County. Midi., that, during the persecu¬
tion of the Cluistiaiis iu Bohemia and
destruction of all Bibles, was saved by
b ng baked in a loaf of bread. It passed
t! ongh the oven utiitijmc 1 .
A proec s ior nisiantaiie iio generation
f steam 1 ■oliti lately lieen patented kahh in
England h Biutn Iteiii.ii
claims are made for its in ;o;iiv It will
saV( , ■VI per cert if file la; per eint.
, j,, |, ier -pi' e, ; id r.ti |kt cent, in cost
of f.hiiit. Moreover, hv its u-c a boiler
explosion I lies a ii impi ibilit v.
A Sailor's WoiHlerfnl Kmmjh
( iintaiii WiiUor Tlintiipsutt* brought nf tin i
bout Mary < to Savannah
recently tin* news of a remark able < I <■
of a >ail*»r from a liorribh* <l«*:ith. r l hv
Xorwi-oian bmk T«*lcm:u*!» was lyino at
'* ti I'oint waiting tin* arrival of Cap*
,:lln * humps i t > pilot her t a. \
tilin' named Toiii rtirkh*. < ii. Nor
v. egian, w a n? aloft, and white he was
on till- inuiniopg u:t yard he I »>t his
hold and fi ll I‘tiring h!s rapid lligljt
to the ilc k lie 'trm the liguing several
times, but B la I fell a distaiue of BO
feet r In II I; no!hi.'«r until he
struck the deck. ’1 h pfatti and sail
ors rushed to bit xp.-eting to find no
tiling but It mangle I remains, but in
stead they x e s imri'.'d to' hint arisi
and stand u If u pal b
man, but to >r a. Tu. li¬
U en wa- too badly scared to : nk b>r
a while, but after a moment 1 m lib
did not feel hurt air. where. II hid not
i mop ii hi. I. and lie did not
in to be suffering from any internal
tiiji ries. Hi- was stripped and carefully
examined, and tin- i tiiy marks u; ou him
were- ii few red 'puts that had been made
by tin rojv s ft here he 'truel 11 rigging,
back The Capl.i'n wanted to sen thc limn
to Fa aim di. but lie protested
a t • mg •f t Heie, ml finally he
was j.emiiMed t i itinii' on the vnvage
1 Btlt-li • is Ayres as ft!) .!(• bodied i a
I’iirklecen i very hug nan
ft iiing in t neighborhood f it ■
und'. He fell i O fee
The Bo.iej Be I*.ant
Billing the recent meeting ol the
American Association fur the Advance¬
ment of Science, ln ld in New Ymk, the
Ii y bee plant was under considera¬
tion. A lengthy pap.-r was read plant" by Sir.
1 '. I’eas Ihe honey-bee is of
i tlii'tle bki- gto'-th, and po-s a
great attraction for bee-. Tl ix
senible oats in form. The seed ft'erc
brought to the atHntiou of Mr. IVase
some linn- ago, and be ili'eo' e i d that
thev eoiitaine I considerable vegetable
oil," He ma lean inx I stlgntto , and tlnd
ing that the seeds en uld MMiiilv In beaten
from the bails, and that tin v wi fe full of
nil. he rami- to th onehision that the
plant might some day 1 old .1 prominent
ila-e a* an oil producer in the eoin
,
nereial world. Pease After found making experi¬
ment' Mr. that the oil was
equal to the best lin-i-id oil. residuum Imt more of
like poppy seed oil. The
the honey-bee p'ant seed po se.-c« quali¬
ties closely allied to qtiinim-. and the
taste aud effect are almost similar. Each
j'la’it in*ii s from twenty to tliirtv balls
and innumerable seeds. It is c|iilte proti
tic throuffhouf the .^tate of New York,
cre tio«. of the sub'w-t v,d J t test ot
the .nuditiesof th , lUJji. - . ' t.
LIEUT. KISLINGBL'RY’S DEATH.
HI* Brother Bound to Find Out
Why He Starved to Death on the
Greely Expedition.
John T v P P. Kialin Kislingb try, nt of Rochester,
who u a brother of Lieutenant l reder
iok Kislingburv, Areelv the second in com
mand of the expedition, was in
the city the other day savs the N Y
Tribune. The object of lira visit was to
communicate personally with some of
the Arctic survivors regarding a reopen
ing of the Government inquiry concern
ing the expedition. A point which he
claims has never received attention is
“'J 8 '' Lieutenant Kislingbury died from
starvation op June 1 , yet on June G
Lieutenant (now General) Greely •'“km or
wrr,ttelt,r B '. H « nr - v . otherwise known as Book)
# L° r 6teall ?'K l^ovsions. Mr. Kisling
bur) about, would if there like to know how it came
June were provisions couldTlie to steal
on 1 that his brother Dfomer couict me
from stauntion on June b. Mr. Kis
lingbury there reiterates the statement that
was no flesh left upon his brother's
body the authorities when it was received by Yard, him from
at the Navy except
npon the head, hands and feet, and
states also that an examinution of the
dead man’s stomach bv expert chemists
ilte
^
derbiek, the hospital steward of the
Greely expedition, who is now an in
apeotor of customs at this port. Mr.
Biederbick was averse to saving much
lingbury regarding the death of Lieutenant Kis
ornate the alleged post-mortem
caunihaliem, but he freelv expressed his
opinion about, the want of appreciation
shown the men who risked
and died horrible deaths by the House
of Representatives, which* killial the
Senate bill giving them back pay
omountiug to «? i Off.to each, which was
due the enliwtca i uvvivnvs or tlieir legal
representatives. this Mr. Bi#‘derl»iek Is a eousetiuenee tlie <»f
savs tlmt widow
of l.C ol , 1 „
United Unites higtifll t orps aud t mom
her of tlie expedition I ui>w in a poor
liouso in Mussueluisctts, ami that tho
widow of \V. II. Cross, an ouginoor,
who also ilieil a tnnrtvr to tho cause in
tlie Arctic regions, is in destitute condi¬
tion Mr. in Washington. Kislingbury
says that lie will
never rest satisfied until the facts which
he declares have hoen withheld from the
public which in relation substantiate to tho expedition charges and
will of iti
eompoteney mnl bad conduct on the part
of General Greely are laid bare.
Yaluahlc Find
About three years ago the Texas &
Pacific Railroad Company undertook to
sink mi artesian well near Sierra Blanco,
!*o miles cast of F.l l’aso. The pipe was
down (100 feet, when a cavern was struck,
the drill dr ppeil rushed about six icet and a
current of air tip the pipe. The
well was abandoned, and the tubing
acted as a flue from the cavern to the
surface of tlie earth. Ever since that
time the people of the vicinity have re¬
sorted to the spot in summer, to enjoy
the cool and invigorating air that air conies
up the pipe. The current of ebbs
and flows like the ocean tides, the
the current heing outward OIK day
and downward the vered next l'he Upward
flow has been di to | yssess niag
netic properties, ml tin 1 i-oplo who
live near the well call it tli fountain of
youth.
lias Throait-Canen*
Notwithstanding doctors the efforts that Imre
been made by thc in attendance
upon the Crown Prince of Germany, to
keep the the public in the dark concerning
true nature of their patient’s malady.
it is said to 1 the eommon belief of
physicians afflicted with in Germany, that the prince which is
cancer in the throat,
will soon pmve fatal If tli he the true
state of affairs, tin U'T ff Europe
seems to depend tlpot li\ i '. both of
which must soon terminate, the Emperor
being extremely old, and he who comes
next to hint in the su sion hi ingmori
buud I'poa the death of the jirinre and
his father, the et vn will go to young
Prince William, whose tspirations for
military glory in general are eonibiued
with strong hatred of Frant
A ahaup engagement took place on
the frontier of S rvia between Albanian
brigands who had a*tempted a laid into
Sc-rvia and a force "f frontier guards.
Ten Servians and twenty Albanians were
killed. Two Servian battalions have
been ordered to the frontier.
Itr u>» l.lille .Tollr.
.!< ‘Why Brown, how hisfric*n«l t-hort your eont
IH otlay to Brown, wl \\ if illy
n 1 : Hit it w ill Ik a»n« *Ul 4 t ■ft >r«
i K* t i Nimit im-Ji sji il n mu
ninth iiM"*that i • itli«*r h« al i lull, 11 hum
that n tlies i* with tli in like hi ,r. vi
its v mill lar fa Iwtw htt-riu i
Wer In In'" of till Ullgs. -linrtlii" nf in t!i anil
lltll gering mfis. siinii 5 Id io tlie miiifie in
ueiicti of that tli ii val n ii iv. l)r. it. V. i'i-rr c's
( ioiifi ti Meiiii-.'ii 1 li' •y
rule” .Mary whirl) And rs ii wears a cloak in “A Winter
(ih ift ftniiu ll a Weeks to make.
Otter No. 1*0
IREK! -To Mem HANTS * > l.’i \ tin ror-f ’
F.emh«t ill", ix. nviil- profit Sti ( 'ft! \«i<lr '
ut ome, I it. 1 \ N Sl l.l. tY 1 ri 5 stutc si,
Cbicufio.
Oniinlilrr*. Wive, unit ttoitiers.
Send fur Pamphlet on Female Uisrases, free;
-onrely senJeil. J*r. J. It. .XJari hi'i, I'tica, N'.Y.
Catarrh
May affect any p«»rt»«»n of ti b'nly v*h«*re the mucotia
inenib it* ft tl- But catarth of the hoa*i ii by far
the mobt >n, and. btrangt* t<> say, th« ino«t liable
to lie n-'KlegOftl. It ori. 1 i:.ten in a c'd, or sue
of roldtt, cniub)m **1 with impure bl .1 Tlie wonderful
ftucces. Hood's S.i'.p.rill. bus h. 1 t (Hiring catarrh
w.rr.iiti! ns in ur*raiff all wtio miffer n » thin thseant* to
trr the pnuili.r medi If rom and invigorate*
the blood and tones ty organ.
“Hcud' Sarwaimt , cart'd ni f
of the bronchial tutM*san i terrib'u iad.vt n.ci;
dons, UamiltoD, Uliiu.
Hood’d Sarsaparilla
Held by all .IransisU. *1 • aii for Prei'aieil only
by C. I. HOOD A CO. Auoilieeari «>woll, .Mai*!*.
fOO Doses One Dollar.
SOLDIERS ESSSSSbk' B fee.
relicvofl; ‘ZZ voars* practice success WaMifiw, or ro D,C*
.. 2 t frw. A. W. McCormick A Hon.
DATE NTS!;:;'* ZViSTVJ
1 ham, Patent Attorney, H .(.-It inKM-B. B. C.
i o I* I> •** W..rtl» ^ P*tt t’s KyeSaWsis
i fiurh Jjl.tM*. b'ti a li i by dealer*.
MUSTfiNG
I?! LINIMENT
iispist;
*■* '■ r
“
MEXICAN a 1 *'*
It Must he 1 'npleasant,
‘•Never marry a widower,” was the
advice of a young matron to a friend.
“But you married one. Wliv
“It's bud enough to have to hear about
your husband's mother's cooking, but to
have his tirst wife’s thrown into your
face everymorningis simplv unbearable."
- Ti l Bd a.
Cot Ncir, for the Defe nee—“Gentlemen
at the jury, tho term of punishment de¬
manded by my learned friend, the public
prosecutor, is far too savers; besides, I do
not think that the prisoner, with his weak
constitution, vr 11 be able to work out $
sentence of penal servithde for life.”
*500 Raward.
(WSSSSisS tor a case of catarrh that^M? couldnot
l ne cure,
fer. All present druKifists proprietors have renewed this of
the sell this Remedy, to^eth
er with the "Douche,” and all other appliances
advised to be used in connection with it. No
catarrh patient is longer able to say “X cannot
be cured." You get $SOU In caae of failkre.
show Sixty of the wealthiest negroes i n Alabama
an aggregate wealth of Fah.OU).
| tem^qui^i/eure.fTy 1 ierce's -Favorite Prescription,” ?L°Le he 0 f"f ^. 1 H. SJ V
? health and It removes
I druooi 1 restore9 strength. By all
s
---
Mr. Spurgeon, th® noted English Baptist
1 "' a ' * er ‘ aswlth<lr » wn f ^ that c hurch,
‘ onsuinpiion, Herninio, Uem-rai n.-billt;,
! Tronic Wanting Diseases ot Children,
Coughs and Bronchitis, can be cured
,h i S s; "‘ «,srr,rr U v ™, t i
i»leV y 8 4 S^ c 8 the*^following>¥Ks?Jt% .
: read
fcmuisfon for an Apuitits? obstinate Cough 2 Kuttom“ISS- with Ilemor
Loss of E th,
!! ISSSST adleve ’* your c ' Emulsion All lias haw asved now a,cae* 1 and or I
M ''ell-deveioisrdConsumption."—T. l> Stltr J. Fismav,
; - - -
When the mum.
cry is, "Now is the tune to raise cluhfc”
1 Sk TOn^^^
i 1 ,, nnrvelious.
for truly their It is not an unusual fi) ami t hint;
j 'SSSS agents to moke as high an $au
i Krs&fe^aaastm's.te
tonanmptiou Hureir Cured.
To the Editor.-l'lenso inform vourr eadern
.'•a-u-ahavetieen ‘^v'lt^tlm^vuee thou»mh of
. aend permanentlycni-ed. bottles ot^mj^remedy I
"hull be gla.l to two
' "mpt'on 7 thoywiil S‘l me their Eapr«^
| ami 1 *. <». address. SL.OCL. Ite»i*ctf«Br. ,M. e* v ,
T. A. .,
ti'iis'-itehiiigiiinlstinginK: — Moisture; .
worse by scratching, of
! "w” f< mu which
1 sVavn'i-''s omin^c the itcliing very sore. and
uintmknt sto >ps
iiludiag, Ik.iN tihi.r ation, «nd in many casea
icuiovi-N it: tin- tumors, It is equally Oil. SWAYNE& efficacious
curing all Skin 1 list-uses.
SON, Proprietors, I’hilii. Bs mail tor 50 cents,
S\VA V.Sfc\s JI.NT.Mli.NT for Sflil by ill liiririAts
Every person is interested in their own af¬
fairs, ami if tliis meets the eye of anyone who
i-.'altering from the effects interested of a torpid getting liver,
we will admit that ho in in
well, (let ■ a bottle of Prickly Ash Bitters,
use it us directed, and you will always be gift :
you rend tills item
The l.tteet ot'.Nleepiiig ill Par*
I' Hu contract nig of cold whit U often results
st-rioi isly to Die lungs i. Novel • okce neglect Remedy u e Id
Imt take in time Mullein—nature’s Tayl< or’s l l.er o
Sweet ‘lit (iiiin aud great ci
me ine
RffiUaYASH I, Bitters
IT IS A PURELY VEfiETABLE PREPAHAU 0 N
l ajjJjASD i t SENMA-MANDRAKE-BUCHU
wit QT8iR EtyjAiiy EfflCIENT RWCDIES
14 bas Btood tiie Test Years,
mmA i n Curing all Diseases of the
^SBRHtek^hLOCD, ISP 1 ' ACH, KIDNEY LIVEE, 8 T 0 M-
8 .B 0 W
<trkcuV‘ll ELS,&c. ItPurifiesthe
B ' 00(i r Invigorates and
JAan L | cleanses the System.
BITTERS I DYSPEPSIA,CONSTI¬
D?S PATION, JAUNDICE,
AIL [AS E S C rtHEj SICKHEADACHE.BIL- COMPLAINTS,&c
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1 KIDNETYS disappear at once under
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! i[ STOMACH j I iti. purely Cathartic a Medicine
AND ns its proper
|uUWLLp| j yys^va nc*r c ties forbids its use as a
| beverage. tie Itispleas- and
\[ ant to taste, as
« easily taken by child
’! | ren as adults.
fPRICEf .AILDRUGGJSTS dollar! PR1CX1Y ASH BITTERS CO
! .Solo Pi oprietors,
Si .Locisuu 1 Ivans a
i
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FOR 1K88.
A Remarkable Volume.
Increased in Size. Finely Illustrated. 400,000 Subscribers.
Eminent Authors.
Special Articles of great interest, written for the Companion, will appear from the following
Eminent Authors of Great Britain anil the United States:
Right Hon. W. E. Gladstone, Gen. Lord Wolseley,
Professor Tyndall, Clara Louise Kellogg,
Gen. George Crook, Justin McCarthy, M. P.,
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And one hundred other well-known and popular writeri.
Six Serial Stories,
■WILL B* OtreN IK 1888 , Fl'I.Lr lt.t.VRrnATED AM) JIT FAVOMTB At'TlIORS, INCLVDIK 9
J. T. Trowbridge, C. A. Stephens,
AND OTHERS. ALSO,
200 Short Stories; Tales of Adventure;
illustrated Articles of Travel; Sketches of Eminent Men;
Historical and Scientific Articles; Bright Sayings;
1000 Short Articles; Anecdotes ; Sketches
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Twelve Pages Weekly, instead of eiglit page., will be given nearly every week dnring 1888 , inereaning tlio
size of tlio paper almost one-half, giving an extraordinary amount and variety of choice reading and illustra¬
tions, without any advance in the subscription price.
Two Millions of People Read It.
FREE SPECIAL OFFER. A $ 2.50 i
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TO JAN 1, •end us this Slip, with name and P. O. address PAPER i
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Registered Letter or Chock, for a year’s sub*
1888 scr ription to tho Companion, we will send the FOR $ 1 75.1
paper freo each week to Jan. 1st, 1888, and
. for a full year from that date to Jan. 1st, 1880. .
If ordered at once this offer will include
The Double Holiday Numbers
For Thankaglvlng and Christ mas, twenty page* each, with Colored CoYer* and Full-pijt* Froatiipiece
Picture*, which sre s festure of the Companion volume. They will be nittfuslly attractive ttaii year.
Address PERRY MASON & CO., 45 Temple Place, Boston, Mass.
Specimen OoplM asd Colored Aaaonicwtal a ad Oaieadar fr**, If you mention this paper.
>onc in mock.
Grocer (to new boy)—“Wluit did that
lady want. James?'*
New Bo y— .Salt mackerel. I told her
we hadn't any.” James; I told
Grocer—“Great Scott!
you we had a dozen kits come in lresh
this morning!” Boy—“Yessir.but she didn't want
New
'em freshshe wanted ’em salt.”—Acts
York Sun.
CoiXKcnoNs come hard in hot weather
and many business men hare to rest on
their owers until antumn.
MARVELOUS
MEMORY
DISCOVERY.
Wholly nnllko artllcial syotenio.
Any book learned In one reading.
Recommended by Mark Twais, Richard Prootob,
the Scientist, Hon*. W. W. AflTon, Judah 1 ’ Bksja
ms, Dr. Minor, dr. elsu of WO Columbia Low atu
denu; College *0 ot Meriden ; Jd» ot Norw Ich : saa ot Obnrlln
: two closte, of *0 each ot Yale ; 400 at Uul
varsity of Penn, Philo.: 4 o) at Wellr*lev College, and
three Crosprctua large cl»**es at from Chatauqua Unlvertlly, do.
post khsr
PROK. LOISKTTK. 21 ? F.lfth Ave„ New York
KIDDER’S
1
J
A AFRK CURE FOR
INDIGESTION and DYSPEPSIA.
Over 5 . 0 M) Physlrlans h*ve Mnt u* tlieir approval of
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We have never heard of a caM of Dyapeptt a where
D 1 GESTYUN wa* taken that wa* not cured.
FOR CHOLERA INFANTUM.
IT WILL^UHE^THB vOmItInG^nViTk iN^NCY
IT WI 1 j L V 'toMWaVioX
WILL RKUBVK
For Summer Coin plaint 1 * and Chronic iMtirrhtea,
which are the direct result* of Imperfect •llKratlou,
DIGESTYUN will efTei’t an Immediate cure
Take DYGESTYLIN for all pntue aud disorder* of
the stomach ; they all come from lndiK< k fcti<m A*k
.(.ur drutfalst If for D 1 QB 8 TYLIN (pri.e $1 per lar«o
liottle). he doe* not have It tend on© dollar unit
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!>o not heal tale to send your mouey. Our noute it
©liable. k*f«bli«h©d tw-cotv l>Ell flveyear*.
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ELY’S niTADDli AIA K K H
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ClfaiiHos tlm Nasal si
Passages, A 1 lays
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Restores the Senses
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TRY THE CUKE. HAY-FEVER
siooto IV S3Q0 wtlwU Ain. N I Iiri'ferreii
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employed also. A few town*
AGENTS WANTED SIX! iiVTK,’®: an
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Blair's Pills. Great English Gout and
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WORK
*4 MONTH. AorntatVttntffi. 00 be*t sell*
.YX VAdUruHH.M I I»l’ artjt ]»•« in thtMTurJil. 1 ftumpJe Fr>t.
V linuNSt)N, iHtroit, MU h.
■■ to a day. Sample* worihil.no, KKF.K.
uot un<ler the horse’s feet, write
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PlSOS CURE FOR CONSUMPTION
■ -i- -I- ►!< -i- -I- -i- *r* A j* <£',]%'> •■i* •b -b '•i* •P ’I* -h *b *-b
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I St.'MU bn ! lA/cr C I i&? r ' v, ,', n .^:^rv.si , r.j R j , Ni:
I'lilo ar.llvii nett I" ll ww nllinr With t f ib \ cry cm
a bfitip b< b«' Datlly t.tkt n in, but also ■ U ■ ■■■ Mm B Uiv i. oii!\ p-rf. tt Wiiul mi I Wnivrpro oof
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m hml,’ m, but 31:40 lluw
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> w
Mum. McSi’il 1 k 1 > s' mot Li r is stopping
with tho family, and ttu-ru is sunn) littlu
feeling. Johnny MeSpillkiiis was leading
in a Texas pa|ier about n man xvl.o lind
killed his brother. Johnny asked; “J'a,
i* a man who kills his brother a fratricide?”
“Yes,” responded McSpillkins. ‘‘What is
a rnau who kills h’s father?” “A patricide.”
“And wheu he kills his wife?” - Txo icide.”
“And when he kills his wife’s mother?”
“Justifiable homicide,” replied McSpill
kins, glariug at tho old lady.
____
There are right just two salon and to the temperance
question; a side a wrong side. It
is hardly probable and that criminals the saloon keepers,
gamblers tther are on the right
side. It you are with them look weil
your footing.
\
lIlSHl
Cures msMm
Bmall liver Coinplaiot, Do*e. For Sick Constipation, Headache, Anfci-ttfllou*. Blngjisn**#,
affcctlona, foul breath offetulr* Drugget*' Ouora A*a
for “Rough on Catarrh." 60 c.
ROUGH°“TOOTHIiCHE ~g‘ 15o.
RODGH ow CDRNS sSktcohns, 15 c.
ASTHMA
BiiWi™""™::! aisr
UR. HAIR’S HYSTK.n of Trrntmeni,
which Unow rccognlr,(»l by Ihe medical world m
Uio only Asthma, on© that will kindred positively aflWitons and aud permanent all blood )y
rure its
i“g
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lift n r n ut UAID nMln, W* w, foi rtii st.,
Ui tf* CINCINNATI, OHIO.
JONES
BE XI
PAYStheFREICHT 5 Ton Wagon Hrnlrr.
Iran I-#v*r». Bif*T Biaflifi BfiJ
Tar« Bfaoi an* Box far
*. 1 tlaa $60. Aral*. Kor fre» lid
»«TT ft rui#
" BitctUa
V tbit »»p*r aa« a4di
^ iOftfS or •INONAMTIR. V
BINGH AMTON. N.
I OIIDE E|TS 9
a^saas^s^s f»iled for u.it
ether* li»«» Semi m n.i re**"n IreeUieend n.iw Free reee.vieK Mulll'i *
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ROOT. . 11 , 1
J. P, STEVENS & BRO.
JEWELERS. Atlanta,
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■Sctiil (or ('ntnloffue,
OPIUM; ml WIIISK I. V 11 M (IT 4
urm! ut Iimmim withotit Urn':
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B M. Woolley, M. D ,
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II Street. Mention tin* Dnp*r.
BUSINESS
Kducatton * *pecialty at .HOOItLVS IIUNINFHS
I MVI liVSlTY, Ati.i ii 11 «, i.ii. One of the i>« »
bcuooIh iu t lio Oouutrv. Suiol for (circular*.
| AlllMS at liume van mfiNe nuiney by working i r
evil ■wii', for no cnvaisnin*. Ww fnrni'b nmtvriftl and i»-y
'.(iKfavtory Wftrk. Sen t I (Ht for tansnl
C. O. llt.’CK A CO . to Hrninlifl il St , Bot,t,.n. Mas
A. N Fort y-tour, h ;
Won't Have ^ Shovr.
It WH' vi ry late and Brown was steer¬
ing Robinson homeward.
■ What will you lay to your xvife?"
Brown asked.
‘ Not a (hie) word,” said Robinson.
“Why r.ot? ’
“I wont haveailtic) chance .”—Feta
York Sun.
One of the curious para loses of life is seen
I * n tll ? *® t '' °* Ja bequest of SI J.XD having
1 ^ l L ft b >' a 1 ^ ired w,,,e m ? lchanli
to the British Nat . onnl , l eiuperan ce L eague,
J° ’! K‘ VUU ai PJ' lze- J * 18 three best essays
hi :utvocacy , of the principles of total abstin-