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BIG PANORAMAS.
Painting Scenery on an Im¬
mense Scale.
Many Men at Work on the on eat
Circular Canvas.
“As a wanted to see how pano¬
ramas are made,’’writes a press corres¬
pondent of the Picayune, “I went to
the spot were Philpot is at work, up
by the place do la Ilastilo. The place
Is in disorder, the space between can¬
vas and spot where the public will
stand being crowded with scaffoldings,
ladders and barrels.
•“One painter, as high up ns the
fourth story of a house, was making
sky by laying on large daubs of blue;
another was whitewashing buildings;
lower down, on the first and second
landings, were two collaboralenrs of
Philpot, MAI. Du Paly and Sabattier,
who were painting in the characters.
I was as nothing standing before the
immense circular canvas on which so
many thousand persons were pencilled,
though they have not yet received the
baptism of paint brush.
“When tlie plan of my panorama is
ietiuitely decided on,” said Philpot, “I
ro in search of ail possible informa¬
tion, for later it becomes of great as*
sistatice. If the subject is one that
takes place in (lie present time, I leave
town with inv two collaborators and
proceed to the very spot, where we
take views of the place as carefully ns
though we were making a picture. If
Ihe action passes in olden times, as it
loes in the panorama now being
painted, we go to the Carnavalet Mu¬
seum or to the National Library to
:onsn!t engravings and books of the
period. After this, dresses arc pro¬
cured and placed on models in my
studio. The first thing is to make a
series of small pictures containing all
die scenes that are to form the jum-
srama. That done, a small panorama
is constructed, about one-tenth the size
af the real panorama, and this is, so to
speak, the model.
The small panorama being finished
in all its details, is photographed in
parcels, which operations are done in
the studio, and then the artists carry
their necessary working materials to
the place where the panorama is to he
constructed, where the virgin canvas
is ready. This one contains 5850
square feet, and if we recommenced the
designs already executed on a small
scale on th ! s canvas we should not he
ready in several years. What we do
is this: Tlie photographic stereotypes
arc put in a magic lantern, which pro¬
jects them on the canvas to tlie re¬
quired size of the real composition.
“Before this, however, tlie canvas
has been divided iuto squares like on iv
checker hoard, and the stereotype
plates correspond exactly with these
divisions. A counter-drawing of tlie
composition is afterwards made, so
you sec the matter is very simple. The
task of producing a panorama is thus
rendered easy, and what could not he
done in less than a year without pho¬
tography, is designed within a forl-
niglit. The design finished,each pain¬
ter begins his task and finishes it with¬
out ceasing. One man paints the sky,
exactly similar to that of die small
panorama, another paints the houses
with the personages.
‘■Tlie panorama once painted in Us
entirety, 1 go over it again completely,
and give it finishing touches, so that
tlie public will not see that it has not
been done by one hand. The canvas is
held in [dace by hooks at the top,
weights being suspended to the bottom
so as to prevent any creases. Tlie
perspective is obtained first of all on
tlie small panorama, and it is then
faithfully’ reproduced on (lie large
canvas; and what adds to the illusion
is that the public, at a certain distance
from the canvas, do not know where
it commences or where it finishes.
The space where tlio scaffolding is
now placed, and which is 4.7 feet wide,
will be filled up with real objects that
will stretch from tlio public to tlie
canvas without any cessation, and in¬
stead of the panorama having a gilded
frame like pictures, it will have a
framework of natural a tides. The
illusion is thus complete, the more so
as the public is i:i the shade under
velum, while (he canvas has a full,
almost blinding light thrown on it.
Origin of the Term “IMn Money.”
l’in money is a lady's allowance of
money for her own personal expendi¬
ture. Long after the invention of
pins, in the fourteenth century the
maker wus allowed to sell them in
open shop only on the 1 st and 2 d of
January. It was then that the court
ladies and city dames flocked to the
depots to buy them, having been tirst
provided with pin money by their hus¬
bands. When the pins became cheap
and common, the ladies spent their al¬
lowances on other fancies, but the
term pin money remained in vogue.—
[Dry Goods Chronicle.
.is Parlor Variety Is Better.
Mable—“I hear that George and
Sallie do a great deal of their courting
over the telephone l”
Amy-—‘-I should think they would
not enjoy an electric spark.”—[Epoch.
Hog-skin is used for carriage cush¬
ions, book-bindin—, card-cases and
purses.
FOR FIRM AND HARDEN.
CORN FLAVORED nY THE SOIL.
hero is a great difference in the
»woctnc 8 s of tlie same kind of corn
when grown on different kinds of soil.
This is usually attributed to admixture
of seed, but there is good reason to be¬
lieve that the cause lies deeper than
this. There is probably a variation in
plants depending largely on what
plant food they receive. A soil rich
in nitrogenous and mineral fertility
would naturally not produce so sweet
corn as land where roots received
chiefly moisture from (lie soil, and the
plant was built up by absorbing car¬
bonic acid gas from tlio atmosphere
through the leaves.—[Boston Culti¬
vator.
REMEDY FOR CABBAGE WORMS.
Ihe worms which are found upon
cabbage are tlio larva: of two or three
kinds of butterflies, which deposit
their eggs on the leaves, chiefly on the
under side, for protection from the
weather. The worms when hatched
gather for shelter in the heart of
plants. There are several ways of
preserving the cabbage from these
pests. One is to dust them with plas¬
ter, either dry or mixed with a little
turpentine or carbolic acid, or with
Cayenne pepper or with insect pow¬
der. Where only a few plants arc
grown, the worms might he picked
off or crushed with finger and thumb.
— [New York Times.
RAISING DUCKS.
All the farm animals worth raising
arc voracious feeders, and the duck
especially will eat her own head oil
several times over if not managed with
the best economy. But there is money
in ducks if they are properly reared.
A swampy meadow is the best run for
ducks. They can he reared without
any swimming place to speak of. They
may he allowed to run out all (lie year
except at laying time; then they
should be shut up at night, being let
out in tlie morning as soon as their
eggs are laid. They lay about day¬
light. They find their own feed dur¬
ing the day all summer, but should lie
fed some grain when they come in at
night.
Put tlie eggs under a lion to hatch,
nine to a nest. Feed the ducklings on
boiled cornmeal anil oatmeal, with
chopped onions and green food, every
1 wo hours, and plenty of clean water
to drink. A duck is a most producing
machine, and this must bo kept in
mind. A pair of fat, young roast
ducks, three, months old, is a feast for
the gods. A duck at this ago will
wcigli four pounds, and should then
be marketed.— [New York Herald.
1.1KES AND DISLIKES OV BEES.
A lady reader writing from West-
field, N. J., who is seldom stung by
bees, while a farm laborer in tier em¬
ploy cannot go near tlie hives without
being badly stung, asks if we think it
‘‘true that bees have their likes and dis¬
likes?” There is no doubt that the
exhalations from some persons are of¬
fensive to Ices and a cause of at¬
tack by them, when other per¬
sons might come equally near their
hives without exciting their animosity
in (lie least. For such persons to un¬
dertake to keep bees would he not only
unpleasant hut unprofitable. Their
numbers, however, are not great, and
quite as often the attacks of bees are
caused by tlie fear many persons tiave
of them mid by their striking at tlie
bees and dodging them, when if they
quietly came about tlio hives without
making anv quick or hostile motions
they would be unmolested.
11 is said that nervous poople and
such as are addicted to tlie use of to¬
bacco and liquor never make success¬
ful bee-keepers. To some persons the
venom of tho bee is a serious poison.
Such persons, of course, had
not keep bees. Generally speaking,
frequent stings are (he result of the
nervous condition of the individual.
Such a ono by learning to control tho
nerves may become a successful bee¬
keeper.— [New York World.
fast walking for house work.
Most horses can bo trained to a
more than ordinarily fast walk. One
good way is to lie quick and wide
awake yourself. Tlie horse (and hired
man) soon becomes considorah’y like
his master. Work-horses, 1 think, can
he trained to walk faster if they are
never driven off from a walk during
the working season. Many a time
coming hack from market, farmers
have overtaken me and went by, slap-
bang, only to be overtaken themselves
by a fast-walking team before they
reached ihe top of flic next hill. When
they s.oppod trotting their horses
slacked up to about half the rate of
speed that mine kept steadily.
I have always thought I got around
just as quickly in the long run, and
with a saving of horseflesh and wag¬
ons, by not trotting a step when doing
heavy teaming; that is, where the
horses are trained to wa’k fast and
know that is (he only gait required of
them. It is called twelve miles from
my house to Akron. The last three
teams I liad tvould walk it from three
hones to three hours and ten minutes,
coming home. Going required thirty
to s xty minutes more, on acconut of
stee.j hills. This when they went over
tlie came road nearly every day in the
month.
At homo on tho farm we never work
tho horses more than eight to ten hour*
a day, and for this length of time
they will keep pretty well up toward
the four-mllo-an-hour gait when draw¬
ing many of our tools. I saw men
just moving last summer behind a
slow, moping horse, cultivating corn
and potatoes. My man, behind a freo-
waiking horse, easily cultivated seven
acres of our narrow row s one way in a
day of about nine hours. The other
man will get, over about three acres.
Which do you choose? The fast walk¬
ing would throw dirt over the little
plants, you say. No, we have on pur¬
pose teeth so narrow that they cannot
throw dirt, so as to accomplish twice
as much in a day.
Another good plan, after you get
your horses trained to walk fast, is to
never hold them in, on cultivator or
plough—or any other tool unless it ho
necessary—let, them work at a natural
gait. How it provokes me to see a
man make a free-walking horse drag
him along by the reins I I will not
alloyv my horses to be discouraged.
When ploughing or cultivating, after
getting started, yve always hang the
reins loosely on tlie handles of plough
or cultivator.— [Ohio Farmer.
FARM AND GARDEN NOTES.
Salt your field stock regularly.
Remember corn fodder and millet.
Get good household Help for har¬
vest.
The best Incubator — The mother
lien.
Nine times in ten it pays best to sell
any crop as soon as ready for market.
If possible see some of the get of a
stallion before breeding your mares to
him.
Don’t let tlie clover get too ripe be¬
fore cutting. The same will apply to
grass.
Don’t stop tlio drag or cultivator for
any ordinary hindrance. Long days
now Help long crops later.
It is not too late to put in beets for
a fair crop—don’t he without roots of
some kind for tlie stock the coming
winter, unless you have a silo.
This is a good time to start a com-
post heap, Work into il all the aui-
mat and vegetable refuse about the
house and barn, garden and farm.
Well drained land warms up yvhen
the sun’s rays strike it, but yvet land
remains cold because of tlie constant
evaporation going on from its surface.
For potatoes select good ground.
Never plant on land that is low or
poorly drained. You cannot afford to
risk seed and the work ou that kind of
land. Riant to corn if you must plant.
Wheat grown on a rich soil contains
more gluten and nitrogen than that
grown on a poor soil, and tlie short
wheat kernel contains lo?s nutriment
in proportion to hulk than the long
one.
A Queer Chicago Custom.
A red-faced young mail with short
trousers, a corn-cob pipe and a long
yvhip rushed excitedly into the Central
l’olice Station. “Say, mister,” lie
cjacu'ated, addressing Desk Sergeant
Codman, “I hitched up my buggy
outside the City Hall a short time ago,
but when I got back after doing my
business I found it gone.”
“Where do you come from?” asked
“Palos,” yvas the reply.
“Well, your best chance is to hang
around, keep quiet and yvait for de¬
velopments.
A few hours later the young man
turned up again. “I swow, if you
wern’t right,” he exclaimed enthusias¬
tically, “I just went round the corner,”
and when 1 came hack 1 found my rig
hitched up just whore l left it.”
“That’s a regular daily occurrence,”
said Mr. Codman. “Frequently peo¬
ple who are in a hurry and have a
good deal of territory to cover calmly
walk up to some rig which they see is
not being watched, unhitch it, driy-e
round town, finish their business and
tlien take tlie first favorable oppor¬
tunity to replace it. I suppose it’s an
example of western push, vim and
vigor, and I think I may also say
■gall.’ ”—[Chicago Post.
The Wooden-Shoe Trade.
“Are there many wooden shoes sold
in Cincinnati?” was the query the re¬
porter addressed to a dealer in the
article.
“There are 10,000 pairs sold an-
finally, at an average price of 35 cents
a pair.”
“Where are they made?”
“Iu Indiana, chiefly. A solid block
of poplar wood is shaped on the out¬
side with draw-knives, and the cavity
for tho foot is gouged oat with pe¬
culiarly shaped instruments.”
“Are they warm and light?”
“Yes, more so than leather, A man
with wooden shoos on his feet appears
clumsy, but lie is wise and feels com¬
fortable.”
“Who buy most of them?”
“Dairymen, gardeners, street-car
drivers aud actors. For wear where
the feet will be subjected to damp
nothing is better, and there is nothing
on earth that can equal them for mak¬
ing a racket when containing the nim¬
ble feet of a skilled clog dancer on a
polished stage floor. at*
“When is the trade iu them its
best?”
“Just at the opening of Winter,
when slush and mud become com¬
mon . ’'— [C.’ncinnati Timcs-Star.
QUAINT AND CURIOUS.
Paper is made in France from hop
vines.
Foolscap is a corruption of the
Italian folio-capo, a folio-sized 6 hcct.
A man in Pennsylvania cats his
meals in Erie county and sleeps in
Crawford county, all in the same
house.
Tho original manuscript of the poem
“Scots Wha’ Hue wi’ Wallace Bled”
has beeti purchased by nil American
gentleman for $350.
A spoonbill catfish weighing nearly
two hundred pounds was speared in
Smith's Lake near Little Sioux, South
Dakoto, tho other day.
The Chicago Sun believes that rail¬
road affairs arc slowly shaping them¬
selves so that governmental control
xvill ultimately result.
Tho late J. J. McKIhone, stenogra¬
pher of the National House of Rep¬
resentatives, could report equally well
xvith either hand, and in tuking a
tong speech in the House lie would
frequently shift the pencil from one
hand to tlie other without interrupting
Iris speed.
The grapple plant of the Kalahari
Desert is said to he a real vegetable
curiosity. In its general appearance
it looks more like a star fish than a
plant, and each ray or arm is tipped
with barbs, which, when fastened to
tlio tvool of sheep, have to ho cut out
as the only way of removing them.
Among the Chinese no relics are
more valuable than the boots that
have been worn by a magistrate. If
lie resigns and leaves the city, a erotvd
accompanies him from his residence
to the gates, where his hoots are
tlratvii off witli great ceremony, to he
preserved in the hall of justice.
A farmer’s tvife living near Dover,
N. J., broke a duck egg in a frying
pan a few days ago, when out rolled
an egg of smaller size. Tho larger
egg was of ordinary size, and con¬
tained a perfect yolk. The inner egg
was about one and one-half inches
long, with a perfect shell and normal
in every way.
The seven Bibles of the world are
tlie Koran of the Mohammedans, the
Tri Petikes of the Buddhists, tlie five
Kings of the Chinese, tlie Three Vedas
of tlie Hindoos, the Eddas of the
Scandinavians the Zend Avesta of the
Persians and the Scriptures of the
Christians. The most recent of these
is the Koran, dating from about the
middle of the seventh century.
The virtirs of tlie kola nut have
been recognized on the west coast of
Africa from time immemorial, as
cementing a mystic bond of friend"
ship between tribes and individuals.
No treaty is binding there unless the
chieftains shave this fruit, which re¬
sembles an apple, and private persons
are linked in ties of brotherhood it
each of them take a bite of Us acid
pulp.
Mrs. A. F. Wood, of Kennebunk,
Me., a lady who has been lame for
several years, went to the barn loft to
gather some eggs, and in sliding down
upon the hay with her lame leg, hear-
ing something crack, she felt she had
broken some bone, She called to her
husband for help, and when he came
and helped her up she found she could
Avalk belter than before, Tlie liga-
ments which had adhered to each oilici
by non use tvere broken apart,improv¬
ing her lameness.
Tlie Chinook Jargon,
“Volapnk has a vigorous rival in
the Chinook jargon, which is tlio me¬
dimn of communication between about
fifty tribes who would otherwise be
utterly unable to understand one an-
other.” This was said in the Richelieu
a few evenings ago by Dr. C. E. Bevin
of Portland, Ore. “This language is
not a hundred years old,” continued
he, “hut it is now in current use over
a vast territory in Oregon British Co¬
lumbia amt Alaska. It originated be¬
cause of the great number of distinct
languages in this region.
“It was impossible to do much
business along the Pacific coas t nnti ?
trade language cf easy form had gradu¬
ally formed itself. I think that Horatio
Hale, at one time a member of the
United States Exploring Expedition,
was about tho first to devote any at.
tontion to this subject. He drew up a
vocabulary of about 250 words. Oi
these 18 were of Nootka origin, tit
were Chinook, 10 formed by onomato.
pteia, 31 English, 34 French, and the
remainder of doubtful origin.
“In 1863 the vocabulary liad increased
to 500 words and a simple grammai
had developed. Now we often licai
Jargon in Oregon. There are diction¬
aries of Jargon, nml sermons*an
preached and songs sung in the new
Chinook, it has rendered an immense
service to commence in our part of the
world, and demonstrated that an in¬
ternational language would he prac
’.icable.”—[Chicago Tribune.”
Exactly Like the Bnllding.
“Dinguss,” said Shadholt, as th«
two met iu front of a hotel, “they sat
that this building is settling. Can yoi
see any indications of it?”
“No.”
“That reminds me, Diuguss, by the
way, that you haven’t settled for that
last $10 you—”
“I’m just, like this building, Shad-
bolt,” said Dinguss, sadly, “1 can’i
see any indications of my settling.”—
Good Water,
Good water and an abundance of it is
ono of the prime necessities of modern
civilization. It becomes more difficult
to obtain, both in America and Europe,
as the population each year grows denser.
Hydraulic liud engineers are just England. now wrest-
with this problem in In
France, Austria and Germany it is still
unsolved. The medical faculty of these
countries declare that the surface supply
can not longer be relied upon, for hy-
pienic reasons, They suggest the
sinking the best method of very deep procuring artesian ndcquute wells as
of an
supp'y of water that shall be perfectly
pure. The first experiment of this sort
has just been tried in England, where the
new London Water Company lias just
completed a well eleven hundred feet
deep and obtained an aburdant flow of
water, the analysis of which shows an
entire absence of organic matter, Hero or any in
element deleterious to health.
America the same comes up from nearly
all our great cities. Philadelphia is se¬
riously alarmed at the condition of the
Schuylkill, which has supplied the Quaker
City for one hundred and fifty years. New
York is complaining of the scarcity of the
limpid element, and wants the lakes of
the Adirondack region tapped for the
benefit of the metropolis. Chicago, with
Lake Michigan at her doors ; should have
a supply of good water, if it is to be had
on the continent, but Chicago declares
that her crib and grand aqueduct must
be carried ten miles further out iuto the
lake to insure a perfect uqueous supply
that is unpolluted. 80 it goes. To the
engineer who can devise some method of
meeting this urgent demand there will
ing inure great reputation and a correspond¬
fortune.
Two Great Institutions.
When Yale College matriculated 400
freshmen and Harvard 441, every Ameri¬
well, can thought we had, bad for done wonderfully
and so we we are a com¬
paratively young nation. But the two
great English universities, Oxford and
Cambridge, in their July reports arc far
ahead of anything we have ever known in
university matriculation in America.
There are 1,000 freshmen at Oxford already
and about 4,000 students in all the classes.
Cambridge is somewhat more popular than
her elder sister of Oxford. She has 1,200
freshmen and 4,000 students in all the
classes and specialties. The reason for
Cambridge’s Liberal university popularity England, is that she while is Ox¬ the
of
ford (founded in the yvar 1214) is the
more Conservative or Tory. They are
both great institutions, enormously
wealthy, and with an endowment worth
about a million dollars a year each.
The First Bridges.
The first bridges were of wood, and
the earliest of which we have any ac¬
count was built in Rome 500 years B. C.
The next was erected by Julius Cresarfor
the passage of his army across the Rhine.
Trajan’s great bridge over the Danube,
four thousand seven hundred and seventy
feet long, was made of timber, with stone
piers. The which Romans also built the first
stone Suspension bridge, crossed the origin. Tiber.
bridges mentioned arc of remote
A Chinese one, by Iiirshen,
made of chains, supporting a roadway
eight hundred and thirty feet in length,
was built A. D. 65, and is still to be
seen. The first iron bridge was erected
over the Severn in 1777.
Puree of Peas.
Wash a pint of green peas in cold water,
then put them imo a saucepan with boil¬
ing water and cook twenty minutes.
Have them dry when done. Pi ess through
a colander. Boil a pint of milk, add a
small onion, three or four cloves and a
small sprig of parsley. Rub a teaspoon -
full of flour and butter each together.
Strain the milk over the peas, put back
in the saucepan, stir in the butter and
flour, and let boil, with stirring to prevent
sticking. and Season pepper and salt,
serve.
To Dress Cucumbers.
Five tablespoonfuls of vinegar, three of
salad oil, pepper, salt, one cucumber.
Pare a large cucumber from the thick end
into very thin slices. Put it in a flat glass
dish and sprinkle over with salt and pep¬
per, pour all over the salad oil and vine¬
gar. This is particularly nice with boiled
salmon.
To Renovate Chairs.
Willow chairs that have lost their na¬
tural color can be restored by using a
solution of chlorine. Clean cane-seated
chairs with salt or ammonia and warm
water. Apply it with a nail brush,
scrubbing it well, rinse with cold water,
and dry thoroughly. and Wet it the under part
of the seat when dry will become
taut.
what “That champagne,” said Bligg’ns, gods.” “is
I call a nectar fit for the
human “Maybe, beings, but it’s it something strikes me.” of a misfit for
Orate Bars
for any size Boilers eau be bought at lowest
prices of Joe B. Nix, Atlanta, Ga., who is tbo
leading dealer in lino Steam Engines, Saw
Mills, Cotton Gins and Timber Lands. Give
the length and width of your fire-box in order¬
ing grates.
A piece of limberger cheese is like a tack in
one respect—you can always find it iu the dark,
All through summer and fall I was troubled
with chills aud fever. which I finally got a the bottle chills of
Smith’s Tonic Syrup, tret's, stopped
at once.— C. H. Mhlvittc , Ga.
Sweet is much are the uses delicious of adversity. when Tbo straw¬
berry more “crushed.”
Albert Burch, West Toledo, Ohio, sat s:
“Hall’s Catarrh Cured saved my life.” Write
him for particulars. Sold by Druggists, 75c.
ardly The that peculating he dares bookkeeper strik becomes so cow-
not e a balance.
FITS stopped free by Du. Kline’s Great
Neiive Restorer. No Fits after first day’s
use. bottle Marvelous Dr. Kline, cures. Treatise and 82 trial
free. 931 Arch St., Prnla., Pa
Warm
Weather
Causes
That Tired Feeling.
To be Strong, Take
Hood’s
Sarsaparilla ,
flPggJi RB YF .l iImSShi out and cured tii’u BtfWSK Whiskey at home Habits with- i
wnw l ■
IT Atlauta.Gm Ollice 191 >„\Yhi(eh&U St
The Literatnre of Disoontant,
Dante, la his history of the Wonderful
pilgrimage through the abode of departed black,
spirits, silent tells us tiiat he pussed a
pool, lying sullenly among the
shadows. No ripple stirred upon the
somber waters. No wave curled its blight its
lip, surface but bubbles and broke rose ceaselessly there upon by
one one.
And from below, among the slime
and ooze, ascended forever faint,
stifled sounds of lamentation — the
voices of those who had been “dark and
sad earth, within unthankful them” during for the their warmth days of the on
sunshine and the blessed blue of the sky.
But finally he became ill. He prayed for
health and strength, for God’s aid, but
it was never his to touch that strange
bright sometimes ideal he sought. If he glimpsed he
at it among the shadows,
cried, like Flnubeit’s sfhiux, “Ici
chimere, arrete-foi 1 ’’ but the flying
shape still answered, “Non,
jamais,” alobe and the dreamer was the
left once more in the silence of
desert. “Withered leaves” he called the
days of his life. No man better under¬
stood his own weaknesses. He drained
the “deep “questioning discontent cup” with to life” the dregs. His
was an out¬
growth of his higher nature. The thought
him; of acting he decisively dreaded wrought make terror forward with
to a
movement lest he should fall short of his
own standard.
Malaria,
Is your system all full of malaria ? Do you feci
weak and mean over ? Have you sot tlio
ague? Then why don't you do something to
get well. You say quinihe doesn’t do you any
good. Well you Is needn’t let that discourage
von. There ono remedy, Smith’s Tonic
SyrUp. Ky., that tnado by ahead Dr. John Bull, of Louisville,
is far of quinine. It will cure
chills and fever when quinine and everything
else fails. This remedy never has failed. In
some neighborhoods where chills and fever
are common, it is found in every household.
Why, food a man would ns soon refuse another his family
to eat, as to refuse to get bottle
of Smith’s Tonic Syrup when 1 ho old bottle
gave out. It is a great preventive of agUC. A
single A dose will will sometimes keep off an attack.
few doses break up the fever and cure
the after chills. effects It does quinine not leave any Unpleasant
as sometimes does, it
will not harm the most delicate invalid. Give
it a trial and you will soon bo Well.
The trouble with Justice is that she Joes so
little besides holding lief scales.
Children Enjoy
The pleasant flavor, gentle action and sooth¬
ing effects of Syrup of Figs, when in need of a
laxative and if the father or mother bo costive
or bilious the most gratifying results follow
its use, so that it is the best family remecly
known and every family should have a bottle.
The man who Is suffering from green corn,
strange to say, never goes to the chiropodist.
Your child is troubled with worms. That’s
why Bull’s he Worm is so peevish and gross. Give it Dr.
will him Destroyers. healthy'. They taste good and
make
One’s self-satisfaction is an untaxed kind of
property which it is very unpleasant to find
depreciated.
Erie Railway.
This popular Eastern Line is running solid
vestibulea trains, consisting of beautiful day
coaches, between Pullman Cincinnati, sleeping and dining York ears,
Boston. All trains Chicago, via Lake New Chautauqua and
run
during the season, and passengers holding
through world-famed tickets are privileged to stop off at this
resort. Be sure your tickets read
viaN. Y.. L. E. & \V. R. U.
WORTH A GUINEA A BOX,
For BILIOUS & NERVOUS DISORDERS 7
Sick Headache, Weak Stomach, Impaired
Digestion, Constipation, Disordered Liver, etc.,
ACTING LIKE MAGIC on the vital organs, strengthening the
muscular system, and arousing with the rosebud of health
The Whole Physical Energy of the Human Frame.
Beecham's Pitts, taken as directed, will quickly RESTORE
FEMALES to complete health.
SOLO BY ALL DRUCCIST3.
Price, 25 cents per Box.
Prepared only by TH08, BEE0HAM, St. Helens, Lancashire, England.
R F. AT.LFN CO., Sola Agents for United States, COC & 3117 Canal SI., Feu'
Fork, who (if your drtigyiat does not heap them) will mr.lt Jivechnm’s Fills on
receipt of price—but inquire first. (Mention this paper.)
•1 FINE U
JEWELRY.
WATCHES
-AND-
SILVERWARE.
Largest Stock, Newest Styles & Lowest Prices
J. P. STEVENS & BRO.,
47 WIIITEHAU, STREET.
FOR DROWSINESS,
BILE BEANS.
Try “BILE BEANS SMALL” (40 lit¬
tle beans in each bottle). Very
small—easy to take, Price of
either size, 25 cents.
WBUY OF YOUR DRUGGIST.
Hays City, Kas., Jan. 18,1890.
“Bile Beans” is the best medicine I have
found for constipation. mTm.
Bannister, City Clerk.
$10 QCD rtn n UH A V made by first-class c.m-
Grand I vassers handling the
New Census Edition
of Cram’s Atlas. Outfits now ready.
Will contain 30 pages more than any previous
edition. New Maps, New Censusand New
Statistics. A regular BONANZA FOB LIVE
agents. For terms and territory address,
M. C. HUDGINS & CO.,
No. 33 .South {frond St., Atlanta, tin.
IF YOB WANT A
COTTON PRESS,
J' ket* ClicapCMt iSreel on the Idned Mar¬
or n
Ha.v Press, Description
and Price Sent by Ke-
tpgKOKK qticst. Address. H'OAN-
liWOKKS, IKON A WOOD
MlUsa. Tenn. Chat tan oo-
Bex 26’0.
(SAVE THIS PAPER.)
ITARMFPQ I" Mil EVIL lid I ! being * lyou knapped want your cotton gin free and from
8 or cut, re-
ceive the highest prices for it, have it ginned on a gin
sharpened Sharpener. with tlie Farmers’ Gin Saw Gimimer
No tiling. Write to J. G. FALLS
Ex. iv CO., for circulars. .Memphis, oOOin Tenn., Ro T>ed m by No. the 19 O' Cotton
throughout use. Mills
the South. Ma bines shipped on t i .1.
Make Your Own Rugs,
Price List of Rug Maebiues, Wanted, Rug :
Patterns, Yarns, etc.. FREE. A veil I s
E. ROSS'dt CO., Toledo, Ohio.
nriioinun PENSIONS OLD OLADIStiRTrUl)
I Nl>ER NEW LAW.
for blank a pplicationa Soldiers, Widows, Information. Parents, Patrick seud
ana
O’FaRjrell, Pension Agent, Washington, 1). C.
All the year round, you may
rely upon Dr. Pierce’s Golden
Medical Discovery invigorate to purify
the blood and the
system. It’s not like the
sarsaparillas, that are said to
be good for the blood in
March, April Medical and Discovery May. The
“ Golden ”
times, works e qually d in all well at all of
an cases
blood • taints, or humors, no
matter what their name or
nature.
It’s sold the cheapest through blood-puri¬ druggists,
fier,
because you only pay for the
good you get. is returned
Your money if
it doesn’t benefit or cure you.
Can you ask more?
“ Golden Medical Discov¬
ery” contains no alcohol to
inebriate, and no syrup o.-
sugar to derange digestion.
It’s a concentrated vegeta¬
ble extract; put up in large
bottles; pleasant to the taste,
and equally good for adults or
children.
The “ Discovery ” cures all
Skin, Scalp and Scrofulous
affections, as Eczema, Tetter,
Salt-rheum, Fever-sores, White
Swellings, Hip - joint disease
and kindred ailments.
I f you wish a [smf&mSM /->—- _________
k good
REVOLVER ((Q’sfctl..
Lratccl purchase one of the cole-
SMITH & WESSON AV
arms. The finest small arms (( ))
ever manufactured and the V\
first choice of all >erte.
Manufactured in calibres 32,38 and 44-100. Sin¬
gle Target or double models. action. Constructed Safety Hummer-less entirely of best and qual¬
ity wrought and stock, afoel* they carefully unrivaled inspected forwori-
manslrp are for finish*
dnrabilitv nml accuracy. Do not be deceived bp
cheap often malleable sold for the cn«t-iion nine article imitations and which
are onlv unreliable, but gen dangerous. The SMITH are not
WESSON Revolvers all stamped &
are upon the bar¬
rels with firm's name, address and dates of patents
and are sriinrnnieed perfect in every detail. In-
gist upon having the genuine article, and if your
dealer cannot supply you an order sent to adores*
below will receive prompt and careful attention,
Descrptv itivecatalogiio SMITH and prices furnished upon a|>*
plica ton. & WESSON >
S^-Mention this paper. Springfield, itlafl*.
WALL PAPER
BARGAINS!
We will guarantee all these clean new goods just
made, and full length,—8 yarclf s to the roil.
An S-yd. roll White back Paper, 3 to 6
An S-yd. roll Gilt Paper, 5 to 10c,
An S-yd. roll Embosaed Gilt Paper, 8to 15c.
Gilt Border*, 4 to 18 inches wide, Z and
3c. per yard#
Borders without Gilt. Z to 9 Inches lc. per
yard.
Send 4c. in stamps for samples ot ihe best and
greate st bargains in the country.
F. XX. CADY,
305 HIGH STREET,
Mention this paper. Providence. R. T.
Distinguished Business Educator
Prof, E, W. Smith, Principal 131)
of the Commercial College cf
with Ky, University, his Lexington,Ky,, received tne
son, Mil
Gold Medal and Diploma of
Honor at the WORLD’S EX¬
POSITION for SYSTEM of
Book-keeping and General I
Business Education. Ue can
refer to 10.000 graduates in business,
J* ”
cognized ns the Cheapest., Be«t and ,/
Highest Honored, numbered last year 1000 fitudeftts from 30
States, in the Business, Phonographic. Type-Wri ting, Penmanship
Rii-1 Telegraphic Departments, preparing to earn a living-, and to
hold high Rnd honorable positions in the business world. CoStof
full Business Course, including Tuition, Stationery
a:ui Boivvd, about $y:>. For circulars, address
WILBUR R. SMITH, President, Lexinqton, Ky.
a C LA—5-1 OF D M FURNITURE, BININ tTNVAl.lD'_> G 5 ARTICLtS)^^ f I
f & I SY.YYVYLS ANO 75
SW$B3Ru^\WHEEL YteTfjtKKj CHAIRS////; I J
jr
Wo Kltol.Mle.fa.tory roti'ii utthe prices tau-rst ,CREK *rfipe
Sand logue. stamp Name fur goods Oat»-.'OdMJJVO/Sgi.geiXL desired. VLtZ DKI.IVMil, F8EB
I,Ultimo Tt a. CO., 145 s. 8th St.. ruiuU.. V*.
BOSE WELLS! MAKE
Our Well Machines are them OSt MONEY!
RELIABLE. DURABLE, SUCCESSFUL! JL!
They do MOHK WORK and JV
make OttEATKR IMIOFIT. (fh
They FINISH Wells where
others FAIL! Any size. 2 ,
inches to 44 inches diameter. j
LOOMIS & NYMAN, Catalogue
a, If Dw FREE!
TIFFIN, “ OH JO. sEL Ma
WftH. FITCH & CO.,
1 O'i Corcoran Building, Washington, D. C.
PENSIONATTORNEYS
of over Z5 all k.uds in anortes*
cute pensions and claims of succesmwl.
possible time. *JT*No FEE unless
PENSIONS is Great Tlie Passed. PENSION wiSsou: Bill
ajft&lC KSvstefc* STUIM'. Eook-keeplni, business Forms,
thoroughly Penmanship, taught Arithmetic, Short-hand, lrec. etc.,
by mAlL*. Circulars Y.
Bryant’s Col egre, 457 Mam St., Buffalo, N.
OPIUM easy IIARIT. J. L. GTI ST E= = Certain e World. and 1) : r d
I prescribe and fully only
dorse Big G as the
specific for the certain cure
fGcarsDtoad t3«| of this H.INGRAHAM,M. disease. D-, ^
not G.
ate r (»uio Stricture. « Amsterdam, N. Y.
Iff d only by the We have sold Big G fo*
Euss Cheated Co. many years, and it has
Cincinnati,’§|||£© — given the best of satis¬
•:< faction. & . CO.. ^
P. R. DYCHE 111.
Chicago,
51.00. Bold by Druggists.
E2 51, c‘rs
A. N. U....... ..7....7Thirty-:lir e, 1304
CUSES1YHERE ML ELSE FAILS. Use
Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good.
in time. Sold by druggists.
2.5 ms?