Newspaper Page Text
AGRICULTURAL
TOPICS OP INTKRKST RELATIVE
’TO FARM AND GARDEN.
Grafting; wax.
How to make this is often asked, and
While there are many receipts given, the
one that we like best after forty years.of
experience, is as follows: lse one pint
linseed oil, four pounds resin, one pound
beeswax. Melt all over a slow fire; sfir
well and pour on water; when cool
enough to work grease flic hands well
and work it like shoemaker’s wax or
taffy. Then roil balls of convenient size
xrrafrin"' n< Jt*shoiih) C L Vi r
moderate bufr S? fire c! mid not %°£ r tfwm'Z -
crack in cold Weather nor run even if
the weather gets unto 100 degrees in U
the the fthiulA shade, lojiutar »> / ° '
Gardening. ,, , .
Feeding Young Pigs.
It the young pig is not gettingenough
Jnilk from its mother to push it, whi< h
usually occurs about the fourth or fifth
week of its life, fix little troughs so that
hone but the little ones can have access
small to them, and daily give the pigs two on three
rations of cow’s milk. Jt. is
not best at, the start to feed whole milk,
or, if so, it should be diluted with one
third water and fed to them warm and
perfectly sweet. Half a pint at a feed
until they are Mx weeks old will be found
a liberal allowance, in addition to what i
/ from the sow. After the
eighth . they
Week may have the ;
whole milk, and the quantity may j
be increased graduafiy until they have :
all they will consume. About the tenth i
or twelfth week, jj a small ration ol j
corn meal is added to the milk, the pigs ;
xv, 1 THckly respond with added growth i
stud appearance. The milk is making
bone and muscle, ,
and the corn meal will |
interlard a streak ol tat that will give to ;
the hams and shoulders that fine marbled
appearance that butchers and connois
sours delight in. If the feeder is near a j
city or large home market, where he can
supply certain butchers, it, is no hard
matter by a little care and foresight to
establish a brand or butchers’ pork that
will readily command one or two cents j
above the market. But there must be j
real excellence iu the product. It cannot
a < one with any kind of a pig, by
° ■imply frcdiug making the u Berkshire very fat. and For Essex, this kind if |
,,n j ?r c< arc P ar ^ ^iarly wcll adapted. ;
lcu 1
My » follow mg the plan indicated above,
with grass or clover in summer, and
steamed fodder or hay in winter, it is no ;
rou ile to turn off pigs of 200 to 2o0
pounds weight at seven or eight months,
tind this is the most that butchers want
for the local market, while during the
Slimmer Lit) pounds suits them better if
1 his, however, applies ..... chiefly to small
arms ami nearness to market, aud no
doubt the same practice can be followed
b,\ thousands of oar largest feeders with
aadod profit to their present course. It
is witlun the observation of thinking
breeders, that if there is any hog disease
ie country certain ones seem to get
_ le than their share of it. t his is for
the most part due either to _ 111 -breeding,
01 to an exclusive corn diet. Either of
these will debilitate the constitution,
I, are es pecmliy to be guarded against
if one would bo successful in tins Imsi
ness. As to how long the milk diet can
be profitably continued, we desire to
quote an experiment made by Professor
1 - lelton, at the Kansas Agricultural Col
lege. His experiment was made with
ten pure-bred Essex pigs, whose average
age was eighty days, and the average
eight forty one pounds and a fraction,
icy were divided into lots of live
self. 'ft', 1 ’ Boon ft ,u after ' I’JS the experiment h' 1 ' 1 ft P en began, t° it
|
oik pig had to be withdrawn
ft 1 ' ou, fr °( sickness. f from One the lot
‘ft n ft W i ft ( ‘ s l lots shorts cow, and
01l ' r
, . All feed , accurately weighed,
1 ei. . was
and several facts are deductible from the
experiment, but we wish to use it in its
relation to milk as pig food. The result
alter feeding 100 days was that those
which received the milk diet weighed
141 pounds, while those that got no milk
neighed 101 pounds, n difference ol just
iirvp ( iun 1 1 s e:uhin la\ °r ol tlio milk,
But this is not all. I rofessor Shelton says;
Hie milk fea pigs at the end of the ex
pmment butcher, while wore those ripe and that ready were for fed the on
shorts alone were quite unsalable. The
pigs which had received the milk were
sold to the butcher at the highest market
price; the others with possibly two ex
“fiV™ y. ee t f*, ble 10111 on ’y, 11 as not * t0< weigh, ' k ft r *-’
’
four , months , latiu as nuicli as the nulk
fed pigs did at tlio end of the expen
ent. American Agrtcultund.
Farm and Garden Notes. !
Poultry will not thrive in wet | j
a or
damp place.
planted Large in growing trees should not be
small yards.
The codling-moth has got to Nevada | j
»nil become a squatter.
Mr. Strong, of the Massachusetts Hor
cloth ticultural Society, thinks very highly of
as a substitute for glass iu raising
vegetables, and expresses the opinion
that it might be used with great ad van
tage in forwarding crops.
Air. E. S. Goff, horticulturist of the
New York Experiment Station, found,
as the result of a long series of tests, that
the productiveness materially of any strain of pota
toes can be increased bv the
continued selection for seed of tubers 1
from the most productive hills.
The fanner who will succeed the best
m growing crops will be the one who
prepares the land the best. We now
nave so many improved that there implements for |
stirring the planting soil land is really no!
excuse for that is not well I
pulverized. thoroughly mingled The mauure with the should soil that be so [ j
no
within portion of it inches shall be without fertilizer ]
a few of it.
lu working land early it willbe dumpy
and must be worked fine. W. D. Phil
brick advises, in American Cultirutor, j
that especially in preparing the land for
horseradish, deep-growing it roots, like parsnips and
is necessary to run the
plough and, after very harow deep ing, and take plough a narrow again slice and j
rake radishes fine. and Quick-growing lettuce, spinach, crops, like
etc., do
not but require so deep working of the land,
will usually well repay the extra ex
petisc two tnanwiaga. of two ploughing* und often of ]
Large pansies are comparatively a mod
. ern invention. In Harrison’s FlorU
i J cultural Cabinet, in 1840-45, the first
large improvements are painted. their In full ten
years they had advanced to
development, larger and no raised larger; since. a little In
ones have been
1850 the ru*t took them, as it subse
<pientiy did the verbena, and the raising
of new named kinds was discontinued,
Seedlings revived their health, and pansy
gee( j instead of pansy plants came to be
popular. .Modern improvements have
been in the line of new races rather than
increased size,
The asparagus bed should be well
j manured and dug over early in the
season; if there be any grass in it, it
‘ S 1> 0U M he all carefully cleaned out, for
i L > s not half as much labor to keep an
1 i
em
as it is to keep it half cleaned , out.
1 ” 0t K °°'\ l Joll, y to manure with
barn manure, because of the weed and
grass seeds. Ground bone and muriate
of potash applied a few years will enable a
good fanner to Vie rid of his load of weeds
and to be able to neglect cultivation
during the period of cutting. Some
neglect cultivation and keep the weeds
down ,, y the liberal use of salt, but this
is very lar^e poor policy, the asparagus is not
as or as good flavor, whatever may
be said to the contrary.
S
About Living Queens.
Queen Victoria has now reignel over
England longer than any monarh but
two—Henry III. and George III. She
overtook Queen Elizabeth six years ago,
and has outdone Edward III., who only
reigned if lives 148 days over half a century,
she a few years longer Victoria
will have reigned longer than any other
Royal personage of history,
Queen Elizabeth of Houmania is in
tensely musical, fond of dancing aud has
written a ballet.
Queen Olga of Greece is practical,
dresses plainly and goes in for domestic
economy, bonnets, etc., even making her own
Dagm’ar it is said,
of Russia, the Princess of
Wales’s sister, is said to be politically
smart, otherwise. though not very intellectual
Like all her sisters, she is
very clever with her needle, as they had
to make their own clothes before their
father got to be King,
old Eugenie, ex-Ernpress, is said to
have developed strange idiosyncrasies,
besides being a recluse. One is a ten
dency to Spiritualism and a belief that
she can communicate with her dead
Prince Imperial. It, is well understood
that she intends to make Princess
Beatrice of England her heiress,
Queen Natalie of 8ervia, after bein'*
band, long banished, is going back to herhus
it is said, the trouble being
patched up. It was charged that she
wiis ter off trying the to crowd her lord and inas
throne.
| The ex-Queen of Hanover, an almost
forgotten personage, is now in her seven
tietJi year, and lives in a secluded, out
of-the-way spot, where she spends most
of her time quarreling with her son, the
| Duke of Cumberland,
| the Tlio performance, Queen of called Spain, recently, after
Sarah Bernhardt
into the box and gave her a bouquet tied
, j u ribbon and secured by a splendid
sapphire, Mario, the mounted daughter with diamonds,
of the Empress of
Austria, is about to marry Prince Ru
prccht, of Bavaria, who is, according to
the loyal Jacobites, the heir apparent to
the English throne
Victoria of Germany, it is said, tastes
portions of every article of food intended
for the Emperor, and superintends the
preparation of most of it herself,
and Queen Marguerite of Italy shows more
more fondness for American litera
ture, and, it is said, gets all the leading
magazines published iu the United
states.
The Queen of Sweden since she
learned and began cooking by the ad
vice of her physician for ‘her health
takes long walks aud often goes into the
peasants’nouses and shows them how to
ma ke,good dishes,
oiga, of Greece, is the most beautiful
Q, lccn of Europe, and is sister-in-law of
tho |,; mpress 0 f Russia and the Princess
0 f Wales
The Queen of Denmark is intensely
deaf, but fond of music, that and has a big
and Elizabeth powerful of organ Austria has she developed can hear.
an
„ nfortuimt e skin disease and wears a veil
continually,
Isabella, ex-Queen of the Spaniards,
when she appears abroad wears a cos
tume very much tho same as that of a
Tho Q „ con of England’s grandson,
George “Collars and Cliffs,” is irreverent.
H 0 was danding pWi.m at a ball recently with
a J but partner, when his
br< (her c „ii e a him to account. “You
go and hum, God save grand
mother,” was his rotort, “I’ll dance
with whom 1 please.”
The Queen Regent of Spain chooses
the word which daily for the countersign,with- admitted
out no one is to the
communicated palace by the many guards. This is
fo the highest military
official, who happens to be Marshal
Campo, iladelph who in proclaimed Times. Alfonso King,
—i*/i
A Grateful Country’s Rich Grant.
There are thousands of chairs in Hyde
Park, London, Englaqd, which can" be
hired for a penny each, and their history
is an interesting after one. It dates back to
shortly the battle of \\ aterloo, when
an English General, who had done good
service, found himself reduced to ex
treme poverty. The Government of that
day gating acknowledged him and his his heirs past services by
forever the
ft!'* I 1 ft,n C *ft lnL ' °, n u ft 0 ‘ hairs at Hyde
1 a ft k - IheGeneralgathered his resources
ft” 1 started out with a hundred chairs,
. 10 re aro uow- tkel over t.,000 chairs, the
ftftft? 1 !!!!, rom A ” amounting lark to over
Oi 1 a year. etc Graphic.
---“ -
A Curious Pack of Cards,
Governor Fitzhugh I.ee, of Virginia,
lias been asked for a photo of his phiz by
an inventor who is getting up a pack of
cards,forty-eight of the forty-eight of which will show the
faces Governors of the
States and Territories. Four more will
have the pictures of the Presidential and
Vice-Presidential candidates of the two
fifty-third leading parties, and the little joker, or
card, will bear upon its face
a picture of either Air. Blaine or Mr
leads Butler. the Truly, the American inventor
world iu fertility of resource
and audacity Herald. of consummation.— Haiti
mare
POPULAR SCIENCE.
Tlio fact has been noted that seamen,
as a rule, are peculiarly subject to color,
blindness. In tests made in the British
mercantile marine standard green was
pronounced red in 107 cases out of 189.
One of the three finest collections of
butterflies in the world has been made by
Mr. Berthold Neumoegen, of New York.
It contains 100,000 specimens, and has
cost twenty years in time and $85,000
in money.
An argument against allowing children
to drink milk in summertime is drawn
by Dr. V. C. Vaughn, of the University
of Michigan, from the liability of the
fluid to develop the poison—tyretoxicon imjmediate
—which of is supposed diarrhoea. to be the
cause summer
A wire charged -with electricity which
remained dull at ordinary atmospheric
pressure became incandescent in a mod
erate vacuum, while, on the other hand,
a current which vs ould fuse a wire at
if ordinary pressure wiil scarcely reftden it
the pressure is sufficiently increased.
Snow produces, when melted, from
one-fourth to one-eighth of its bulk in
it water lias according been compacted to the degree to which
before melting.
Taking one-fifth as a rough mean,"we may
estimate the weight of a snow drift at
feet . 12.0 pounds per cubic foot, or 100 cubio
ton.
A well borer in St. Louis says that it
is very seldom he can penetrate the
earth to any very great depth without
fluences. coming in contact with magnetic in
spikes and otlior On withdrawing iron substances the will tool
ad
here to it. Sometimes he encounters
magnetism two or three times in the same
well.
The decay of animal teeth, and to
some exteut the lo;-s of teeth of all civil
ized races, has been accounted for by the
ablest English authorities on the scora of
the heavier draughts made bv the brain
on It is general supposed physical and nerve systems.
that the force that would
be applied to repairing the teeth is used
elsewhere.
A curious effect of the wear and tear
to which the earth’s crust is ever being
subjected, is exhibited in the singularly
capped river, pinnacles existing on the South
in the Wahsatchmountains. Tkcro
are hundreds of these slender pillars,
ranging in height from 40 to 400 feet,
most of them crowned by large cap's of
stone. They are not works of human
art, as might almost be imagined, but
are the memorial monuments of the once
rounded hills, from which they have been
cut by the action of air and water.
The affection known as writer’s
cramps is not confined to users of the
pen, but appears in telegraphers and
others who make continual use of o:ie
set of muscles. These cramps were long
regarded as incurable. During several
years plying past, however, Wolff has been ap
gymnastics combined with mas
sage to the muscles affected, and has suc
ceeded in curing more than half of the
many cases treated. His process is
neither difficult nor tedious, being
simply regular movements of thle fingers
or other parts, with rubbing or gentle
Striking of the muscles, continued not
more weeks. than^an hour a day for several
A United States Navy officer has in
vented a life-saving device for the
dreaded emergency of “man overboard”
which promises to be of value. A raft
buoy of sufficient size to support a man
is attached to a long and strong but light
wire rope. The buoy is stocked with a
small supply of provisions, and is fur
nished with a potassium compound
which upon contact with the water
ignites and burns brilliantly for twenty
minutes. by the flame, If the drowning man, aided the
succeeds in reaching
raft, he can he drawn to the vessel with
out the necessity of lowering boats.
Should the rope break and his own ves
sel lose track of him, he has, with the
provisions, until a chance of sustaining life
picked up by others.
The Grief of a Cowboy Dog.
A cattle man from Arizona, William
Wilson by name, recently paid a visit to
San Francisco, says tlie New York Sun,
and brought with him a dog that would
have delighted the heart of the author of
“Sartor Resartus.” For the animal
flaunts a real Carlylean contempt for the
fripperies adornment of civilization and the useless
of clothes.
Sir. Wilson sent Nugget, the dog, to
board with a dog fancier in a canine
boarding house, and then went to a
clothing boy’s store and clothes exchanged his cow
rig tor new of the latest
cut. The next day he called on Nugget,
but Nugget would have none of him.
The master whistled to the dog, petted
him, and made every effort to make.uim
understand that affection was not
changed, looked even though clothes had been.
The dog up at the silk hat which
had taken the place of the broad
brimmed slouch to which he had been
accustomed, sniffed at the dude-like
cane, and surveyed the light trousers
from several points of view, and then
walked off to the corner of the room, lay
down, and gave a long, mournful howl.
Mr. Wilson tried to coax him out of the
corner, but could not. Nugget would
look up at him with a knowing expres
sion in his eye, and occasionally give
the feeblest little wag to the end of hi a
tail, but he could not be induced to re
consider his evident determination not
to recognize his master in any such
ridiculous attire as that.
Mr. Wilson went to his hotel, donned
his cowboy rig again, and then returned
dog to Nugget’s him quarters. The instant the
saw he was almost wild with
joy. and his delight at seeing his master
again clothed as he thought a man ought
to be was almost unbounded.
A Devout Southern Dog.
Orlando Belonging dog to a prominent citizen of
is a who takes great, delight
in following his owner’s carriage and
His always enters any hoiise his owner does.
dog always owner attends is a church-goer, with him and and likes this
to
get Sunday a place up near the minister. Last
the dog annoyed the congregation
by he his constant scratching so much that
was driven out of church. His dog
ship determined not to lose his sermon
and immediately proceeded to another
church, aud one, too, that his owner had
never attended, and there paid attention
to the discourse, after which he quietly
and sedately went home .—Saramuui
Utm.
Fearfully and Wonderfully Made.
One of the stories which has been cur
rent in social circles at Washington
lately is in regard to the remarkable
make-up of The a well-known young society
woman. mould in which she had
satisfactory been cast by alike an unknown fate was un
to herself and parents,
who finally concluded to try the effects
of foreign travel for her. After a long
absence abroad the family returned and,
to the astonishment of all who had pre
completely viously know n her, the daughter was
tall, angular metamorphosed. girl, From a
she had not only be
come well rounded, but buxom, with a
noticeable broadening of the shoulders.
After a while it leaked out that while in
Paris the girl had been taken to a model
maker, who, in consideration of a large
sum, agreed to construct a wire figure
of the desired proportions, which was
ingeniously made to open down the
back, and was of such fine, soft material
that its presence would fail to be detect'
ed save by the keenest scrutiny. This
wire cage necessitates, with evening
dress, n band of velvet or collar of some
description, ually and as long as worn effect
precludes the idea of decollete
gowns on the part of the wearer.
As Summer comes, we may have to
listen to the old story one more: “Where
is my wandering boy to-night?” while
the poor boy i? quietly enjoying the
musk and watermelon in your neighbor’s
patch, provided he can find the ripe ones,
as he is raising them in the dark of the
A Common-Sense ItemeGy.
In the matter of curatives what you want is
some! hing that will do its work while you
continue to do yours—a remedy that will give
you no i .convenience nor interfere with y ur
bu-iness. Such a remedy is Allcock.'s Por
ous Plasters. These plasters are purely
vegetable and abso utely harmless. They re
quire no change of diet, and are not affected
by wet or cold. Their action does not interfere
with labor or business; you can toil and yet be
cured while hard at work. They are so pure
that the youngest, the oldest, the m st delicate
person of either sex can use them with great
benefit.
Beware of imitations, and do not be deceive !
by misrepresentation.
Askf r Alt-cock's, and let no explanation
or solicitation induce you to accept a sub
stitute.
“The King’s Daughters” now number 20,
0(30 in the U. S. The society is to have a paper.
Would you know the keen delight
Of a wholesome appetite,
Ui restrained by colic*.-, di i;e,
Headache’s curse, or fever’s fire,
Thoughts Then Dr. morose, or icy chills?
Pierce’s use Pierre’s pills.
Dr. Purgative Pelletts—the original
and only genuine Little Liver Pills; 25 cents a
vial.
Before 600 Chicago waifs were taken on a
picnic, their hair was cut and faces scrubbed.
It will and pay ail who use Cotton Bins, to get
prices ufacturers. testimonials The Brown of those A No. Co., 1 man
Cotton Gin New
London, Conn. They lead the world.
The income of Andrew Carnegie, the iron
manufacturer, is said to be $15,000 a day.
When a threatenine lung disorder,
Shows its first proclivity,
Do not let it cross the border—
Quell it with activity.
Many a patient, quick young or olden,
Owes a recovery
All to Dr. Pierce’s Golden
Medical Discovery.
acid Newspapers make good soaked plug in for a solution holes. of carbolic
a rat
A Summer
a
Summer’s heat debilitates both
nerves and body, and Head
ache, Sleeplessness, Ner
vous Prostration, and an
“all-played-out” sensation prove
that Paine’s Celery Compound
should be used now. This medi
cine restores health to Nerves,
Kidneys, Liver, and Bow
els, and imparts life and energy
to the heat prostrated system.
Vacations or no vacations, Paine’s
Celery Compound is the medi
cine for this season. It is a scien
tific combination of the best
tonics, and those who use it begin
the hot summer days with clear
heads, strong nerves, and
general good health. Paine’s
Celery Compound is sold by all
druggists, $1 a bottle. Six for $5.
WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO., Prop’s,
Burlington, Vt,
AND
Hot Weather
Invigorator
sS M M;lSi5S‘ e Inspirator?
i
gj
J
■ : tofiaiLUt
i •
n waste
5
Cotton and Hay
\M/ FRESS.
The best and cneape^t made.
HUNPItEDS IN ACTUA L USE.
Ba.es cotton/«*#<*« th an any
gin ROANOKE can pick. Address
IRON AND
WOOD WORKS tor our Cot-
3? ife ton and Hay Press circulars.
Chattanooga, Tenn. Box .60
FLIES! mailed, iv'stacr* paid, on rrndpt
sts or grocers. K. DAWliEi, JIannfac
of •> cent New \ oik.
turer. -57 ia an m.
PfSO’S CURE FOR CONSUMPTION
- < n a
• B 3 2 as
Firifii WM
Q S’
Immense Clock.
The new dock just placed in the tow
er of the University at Glasgow, Scot
land, is a tremendous affair. The main
wheels of the striking and quarter trains
are twenty inches in diameter. The
weight of the hammer that strikes the
hours is 120 pounds and it is lifted ten
inches. There is an automatic ap
paratus attached to the clock which
stops the quarter peals at night and
starts them zinc in the morning. The pendu- the
lum is and iron, to counteract
influences of temperature. The bob of
the pendulum is cylindrical and weighs
300 pounds, and the beat is 11 seconds.
A Business-like Offer.
For many years the manufacturers of Dr.
faith, Safe’s $500 Catarrh for Remedy Kasai have offered, Catarrh in which good
a case o;
they druggists cannot cure. The Remedy is gold bv
at only 50 cents. This wonderful
remedy tation. has fairly attained a world-wide repu
If you have dull, heavy headache, ob
struction of the na-al passages, discharges
times falling from the head into the throat, some
thick, profuse, watery, and acrid, at others,
putrid; tenacious, if the mucous, purulent, bloody and
eyes are weak, watery and in
flamed; if there is ringing in the ears, deaf
ness, expectoration hacking or coughing to clear the together throat,
of offensive matter,
with scabs from ulcers; the voice being
changed offensive; and has a nasal twang; the breath
smell and taste impaired; sensation
of ing dizziness, cough with mental depression, a hack
ing from nasal and gene'al catarrh. debility, The you complicated arc suffer
more
your versity disease, the greater Thousands the number and di
of symptoms. of cases an
nually, without manifesting naif of the above
symptoms, the result in consumption, and end in
grave. No disease is so common, more de
ceptive and dangerous, or less understood, or
more unsuccessfully treated by physicians.
There are 75 colored men employed as clerks
in the Pension Office, at Washington, D. C.
Conventional “ Motion ” Resolutions.
Ry Whereas, Tile M .non Route (L. N. A. & ('.
Co.) desires to make it known to the world
link at large Pullman that it forms the double connecting
of tourist travel botween the
winter cities of Florida and the summer re
sorts of the Northwest; and
surpassed, Whereas, its Its elegant “rapid transit” Pullman system is no.
d Chair between Buffet Sleeper
an car service Chicago and
Louisville, Indianapolis and Cincinnati un
equalled; Whereas, and
Its rates are as low as the lowest;
then be it
trip Resolved^ it is That in the event of starting on a
Cormick, g,m Gen’l policy Pass. to Agent consult with K. O. Mc
Dearborn St., Monon Route, 185
send Chicago, Tourist for full particulars. (In
any event for a Guide, enclose 4 c.
postage.)
Seek & Gregg Hardware Co,,
AT IjiVJVTA, GrA.
L ; "
Write for
Prices and
mention tliia
paper.
iV -c
L Jfeslf !
fir &Cjl v rwkjr wStSSSk JB
~
■ ’■
■
Sail LiH sis: I
Hi
so M
TO S
SUCCESSORS Pq H a -5 w
©
JOHN T. LEWIS & BROS.,
WARRANTED PURE
White Lead, Red Lead, Litharge, Orange
Mineral, Painters' Colors and Linseed Oil.
CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED.
^UferBiScBsM ,ivgrCflmplaids.
1 n 1 m 1fT1,T ^ T
IMSpmm m
---» ___7SI
09 GOOD' “OSGOOD”
. U. S. Standard Scales.
BjiiSHAHT0.ul wl Sent on trial. Freight
a paid. Fully Warranted.
< %Trf.i —3 TON $ 35
■rry-; 23 .
j' m Other size^ proportion- Catalogue
ately low. Agents well paid. Illustrated
free. Mention this Paper.
OSGOOD & THOKPSON, Binghamton, N. Y.
$100 to $300 A MONTH can
made working for
us. Agent9 preferred who can furnish their own
horses and nlve their w'hole time to the business.
Spare moments may »>e profitably cities. employed B. F. JOHN- also.
A few vacancies in towns and
SON * CO.. 1013 Main st.. Richmond. Va.
Address TEXAS GODEEY LAND?;!!K^SS: ifc PORTER.Dallas.Te x.
HERBRAND FIFTH WHEEL. ISKSSS&
Improvement. X1ERBRAND CO.. Fremont, o.
m I Terms Live at anythingelsc at home and in make the more world True money Either working eex. Augusta,'Maine. Costly for 11 s outfit than
ran. trek. Address, & Co.,
Cincinnati OCfT27§ JULY4 th lj
P»
*?
Jt±. ts*
ill tMMl:
CPiSljL'EMSIlIap BRAND JUBILEE celebratmg Y 01 Territ LE 1
the Settiement of the Northwestern ory.
UN SURPASSED DISPLAyT
EXCURSION RATES~FROM ALL POINTS.
m CANE
TJ O &> o &> < FURNACES MILLS
(0
ftf**** $
$
PURE 0
O WHITE V)
v ->
LA*>
TRADB MARK.
MEAN WHAT WE SiV I
BALD SPOTS
THIN HAIR
DANDRUFF
thin beard
HA5R
ff.chter remedy CO.,
New Haven, Conn. Box 86 F.
grad this to some bald headed frier*..
w
<*■
•Siil p
0*
H
’J1
©
&
We cure these
by means of
Ferliter*« Fa,
moil* Kalriron.
Send for par
ticulars of
our remedy.
® ® @ © I
© © © o 9
YOU SUFFER
from Biliousness, ConstW- SouKh
Piles, Sick Heada^e S >
ach, Colds, Liver Troubk Tast’/n
dice, Dizziness, Bad p'
Mouth, etc.- You need
no longer.
WARNER’S SAFE PIUS
will cure you. Thev
penonty; sugar
vegetable, contain ” no~7alo^j
mercury or mineral o f_anv~P^i
take; d o not mild grip e;r^rsicke^^’ inoperaS^nTanfSi
these -____y reasonsareespecraii the
favori tes of wome nTA^f^
WARNER’S SAFE PILLS,
*
m l-T
m ■BiMousStLi fej.
SSSf
ENDORSED BY THE LEADING ARTISTS SEMI
NARIANS, AND THE PRESS, AS THE
BEST PIANOS MADE,
Prices as reasonable and terms as easy as consistent
with thorough workmanship.
CATALOG rES.M AILED free.
Correspondence Solicited.
WAREROOMS
Fifth Anenne, cor. 16t&
MARVELOUS
DISCOVERY.
Wholly of unlike mind wondering. artificial (systems.
Clin*
Any book learned in one reading.
1500 Classes of 1087 at Baltimore, 1005 at Detroit, 1218
at Boston, at Philadelphia, large classes of 1113 Columbia at Washington, Law students, at
Yale, igan University, Wellesley, Oberlin, Chautauqua, University Ac of Penn., Endowed Mich- bj
Ac.
Richard Proctor, the Scientist. Hons. W.W.Astoji,
Judah P. Benjamin, Judge Gibson, Dr. Brown, E.
H. Cook, Principal N. Y- State Normal C:>U<‘r>h t*.
Taught from by PROF. correspondence. LOISETTE. Prospectus Fifth Av*.. post N. free Y.
237
t fo’ WHESKraSTI
Msroftraim gffl*.*
■A \ "rBiBciis&LiverfeiSl
X Ui 66 OHO ” WELL
h DRILL
All cuttings of the drill in clay, sancL gravel, rock
tools. Noted for success where others fail Drill
Catalogue drops 70 to OO times a minute. Profits large.
Free. LOOJIIS & NYMAN.
TIFFIN, OHIO.
n§t 1§BS> &%nSS— ^WXand Pistols.„ 1
[BBS. Send S V%£s. Cheapest •? ™
for free andbc ' t I
ff Ulustrated^^^NotS ft -
r 2
CI m :
Box V. Nevr Haven. Conn. \ v v
1064
Seines, Tents, Breech-loading double Shotgun *t$M&.
•ingle barrel Breech-loaders at $4 to $12; Ervpcn-loiun
Hides to $•><); $3.50 Repeating to $15 Rifles, : Double-barrel 16-shooter, Muzzle $lt to $30: loaders ^
$1 to $20; Flobert Hides. $2rr.o to $8. Guns sent C. O. jj. w
examine. Revolvers bv mail to anv P. O. Address
IfO.VS GREAT IVESTER?* GI V WORKS, PitUbarg, Fenat.__
VSasv&c^aVSs.
|r 1 Bill
BLOOD POISONING,
Full SSeSSSS size sample bottle sent free on Ye^ri 1 e r ei ^i ris i»-i'
,. 1 . , •
Blair’s£ills.3»“H!??” JVBt
m to $8 a dav. Samples wortb Ni.
Lines not
Brewster
O worth OLII $1, is
A. N. U........ .........Twenty-nine, ’88.