Newspaper Page Text
‘A BIG CITY'S PIES.
New York’s Annual Consumption
i is Enormous.
A Visit to a Great Metropolitan
Pie-Foundry.
In New York it has been estimated
that the annunal consumption is fifteen
whole pies for each man, woman and
child within the city limits. Pie bak
ing has been made a eeparvate industry
and there are now twenty establish
ments in town that bake pies exclusive
ly. Of these there is one “pie-baking
company’ that turns out 8,600 pies a
day, or 2,560,500 pies a year, not
counting Sundiys, and another that
averages 7,000 a day or 2,191,000 a
year. Many Dbakers bake their own
pies, but by far the greater amount of
the pie of commerce is supplied by the
“companies” and delivered at the
bakeries by the pie-delivery wagons.
The companies also supply hotels, res
taurants, boarding-housesand private
familics. A visit to one of these great
pie-foundries is well worth while,
and it is a revelation to those who
have only seen pies made one at a time
in the old-fashioned way.
Entering the large wagon-door on
the ground floor of a big pie-factory
one first sees the iong rows of delivery
wagons receiving their precious loads.
Men in white aprons and caps scurry
about with trays of pie and near some
of the wagons trays are piled as high as
a man’s head. Each wagon will hold
600 pies ncally packed in shallow
. shelves at the sides, Little doors close
over eacl tier of pie, and the pastry is
transplanted without the slightest dan
ger .of Dbeing crushed. In another
part of the ground floor pumpkins,
eqnashes. apples, peaches and cran
berries are being unloaded and stored.
Only a small quantity of these per
ishable fruits is kept in stock and the
supply has to be constantly renewed.
In the basement are the great brick
ovens, the mince, custard and cocoa
nut departments and the large rooms
devoted to the manufacture of crust.
Everything about the basement is spot
lessly clean, and the bakers are dress
ed in the white uniforms of their pro
_fession. The pies are all hand-made,
but the rapidity with which a single
one is made ready for the oven is
starting, = »
“I'nere are long benches upon which
eighteen or twenty bakers knead great
«Jumps of dough, while others roll it
out in great sheets. Piles of pie-ting,
six, nine and thirteen inches in diame
ter, stand about, and as ecach square
wooden tray for the reception of fin
ished pie is filied it is marched off to
the oven room. The department for
the manufacture of the fruit inieriors
is upstairs, and the great wooden
dishes containing pie contents are
brought down to the crust-room on
elevators. In the bakeroom, which is
entively of brick, there are from ten to
tweunty brick ovens, according {o the
size of the establishment., -These
ovens are to all intents -and purposes
like the old-fashioned brick ovens, and
their usunal size is nine by twelve feet.
Atone corner of eachovenis a grate
upon which live coals glow and give
forth the heat that gives the pie its
proper browning. By an ingenious
arrangement of drafts an even tem
perature is muintained throughout,
and the burning of a pie is an unheard
of calamity. The pies are put in and
taken out of the ovens by means of
fong-hnmlled wooden gpades techni
cally called “pecls.” As the pies
come. out, dore-to u beautiful brown;
they are placed in one of the square
wooden trays and taken to the ground
floor, where they are packed in the de
livery wagons.
Three sizes of pie are constructed,
#ix, nine and thirteen inches in diam
eler, and t'c average thickness is
three-qu.rters of an inch, . The avers
nge weight of a nine inch ple is eéigh
e ounces, but this vaies greatly,
tecording to the variety, The kinds
now most in demand are apple, mince,
peach, plum, lemon, cranberry,
pumpkin,custard and cocoanut, Cocoa
-luf, pumpkin and enstard pics are not
riade,in sumnter, because of the diffi
’ully‘of leeping them. ~One third of
all the pie made is apple.
- Pumpkin and mince are just now the
pext most popplar. It is this year
difficult to get good apples, and with.
ont doubt the demand for apple-pie
will steadily decrecase. The demand
for plum-pie is the smallest.
« When the wagons aré all loaded
flxe_y are rapidly driven to the restau
rants, hotels and bakeries, and shortly
afterward the business man is munch
g a piece and telling his neighbor
bow much better pie his mother used
to make.—[New York Tribuge. 3
e
" Sketching by Lens.
A rapid method of making sketches
in the field has been introduced by M.
Blain, a French cavalry officer. The
apparatus consists.of a regtilinear leng
- byewWhich ‘an immge of the view to be
- sketched is formed within a makeshift
“ lark chamber,” censisting of a small
b ack curtain hung on a frame over a
P armbl? mfvi?ggxxglgle. The draughts.
pian simply copies the image in pencil
or water-color, on a sheet of white
“Pwet. The whole appliarce, with
cump-stool and table, is made very
"”2‘:’?6 portable, 50 as to Le easily
- ourried about.—[New York Joyrnal,
~FOR FARM AND GARDEN.
2 P
N g
The fact that heifers will not give
80 much nor so rich milk as the same
animals will when fully matured, is
well known, 1t should not, hiowever,
prevent good feeding and careful
milking. More than usual pains
shoud be taken to milk clean, by
which is meant getting the last drop
that the udder produces. Too many
carcless farmers only milk heifers
while they produce consderable
amounts, and {f the milk comes slowly
they stop, thinking to make the heifer
grow. As tlus last milk is therichest,
its absorption makes the heifer fat
rather than thrifty, and this tendency
to fatien decreases the cow’s value as a
milker ever wfter.—[Boston Culti
vator,
CEMENT ¥OR WATERING TROU GHS,
The joints of water troughs may be
made tight by this mixture, viz. : Iqual
parts of air-slaked lime¢ and wood ash
es and linseed oil sufficient to form a
paste. The joints should be beveled
a little on the ingide and filled with
this cement before water is put into, |
the through. In a few days the cem- i
ent becomes like stome. With raw |
oil more timeis required. This cem- ‘
ent is useful for many purposes, as
for closing the joints around stove
pipes put through roofsor at the joints 1
of water pipes. Another good cement |
which is perfectly waterproof, is made
of glue soaked in water until it is
soft and still retains its form, and
then melted in linseed oil gradually
warmed upon a moderately warm
stove. When dried this cement is
hard and unites all kinds of materials.
—[New York Times.
LIGHT BRAHMAS AS LAYERS.
And now a (,‘ounoctic;u{. poultry
fancier makes the averment that Light
Bralinas are the best winter layers in
the world and Jay the biggest eggs.
He says the reason why people do not
find them profitable is because they do
not treat them sensibly but fatten
them so much they cannot lay. Kept
down in flesh with bran-and oats, and
made to work by digging out their
grain from straw, they will lay con
tinuously. e feeds rowen, and finds
it one of the best foods. It is cut-fine
and moistened with warm water,
when the fowls eat it with avidity.
When moliing, Light Brahmas, like
other fowls, have a heavy drain upon
their systems and then they need
heavier feeding to aid them in grow
ing the new feathers. When nicely
feathered the corn and meal should be
graduoally lessened and then dropped
altoge.her.—[New York Witness.
TIRE-SETTING WITH HOT OIL. :
Crossing lots the other day, I met
the owner of a job wagon, who was
tightening the tire by giving the fel
loés a bath in hot raw luseed oil. The
oil was contained in a trongh of sheet
iron three feet long, perhaps eight
inches deep and six wide. It was set
over a hole in the ground and under it
a fire of chivs was burning. The
wheel was jacked up so as to turn on
its axle and the rim was slowly moved.
I learned it required”-three or four
hours to each wheel, and that two
quarts of oil was suflicient for the
whole job. ks
But the practice was not a success,
the man said, if the tires were loose
enough to slip, the proper time to apply
it being as soon as when the wheels
moving under a heavy load showed a
solution of continuity between the tire
and the feiioe. My informant said
that by watching his wagon in adry
time he could tighten the tire so it
would continue for a vear or more,
and so save &1 50 for the resetting,
and avoid the injury to the wheels fol
lowing over-dishing. 1 suggest that
some substance might be found cheap
er and more penetrating that would
fill the pores of the wood more readily,
and increase its bnlk, and thus tighten
the tire more; perhaps crude pe
froleum will do it.—[Country Gen
tleman.
: POULTRY POINTS,
Clabbered milk is a very nutritious
article of food for hens and growing
pullets. It is usually fed with bran,
well mixed together. 9
Autumn is usually a non-producing
season in the poultry vard; a few
eggs, and that is all. Good care now
will receive its reward in spring when
the hens become active and are laying
well. Don’t neglect your stock at this
season, Winter is a hard season for
them, and good care is necessary.
The Muscovy duck has not been
very extensively bred by farmers and
breeders; nevertheless it is good for
crossing with the large breads of
ducks, making a fowl that meets the
demands of ‘our markets. Muscovy
drakes weigh from 10 to 14 pounds
each, and ducks. from seven to 10
pounds, 1
1f chickens have been properly fed
the past six weeks, they should now
look plump and be in prime condition
for maiketing. None but select birds
should be oftered. Poor prices will
usually predominate, and, if very
choice and attractive fowls are offered,
they will sell much better than the
osdinary kinds.
Any one who doubts the strength
and vitality of incubator-hatched
chicks should visit some one who
hatehes by artificial means, o slheald
gfe"t' an incubator and try it, ChicAsns l
hatched artificially seldom hav, » mug
or inscct upon them. This aione
miakes them mdqp strong and vigor
ous ¢hicks. Never “condemn arfificial
hatehing; it is doing” moré for the
poukry industry than anything elso
has ever done.
To make a wire-bottom nest-box
take picces of board about fifteen
inches square, or, better, two corners
rounded for partitions, round side
down, and then for sides and bottom
use wire netting, three feet wide, any
length required, Light strips can be
nailed along * the upper edges; ‘the
front may then be fastened up casily
on hooks, It:-can be cleamed very
thoroughly; all dirt and filth falls
‘ through the wire, leaving a clean well
’ vetilated nest.—[American, Agricul
‘ turist, S
{ FIX THE FARM BUILDINGS.
~ Lvery farm building, from, the dwel
ling to the smallest ounthouse, should
be put in good condition at this season,
not only for protection against frosts
and storms, but for safety and conven-.
ience. Many farmhouses need repairs
to make them warm, and also to ren
dervlessicksome the labors of those
who do tlhe housework. Farmers’
wives and daughters and their ¢help”
should be provided with Ifrany con
veniences and labor-saving contrivans
ces of which they are now deprived,
esseciaty as the “nrén” folks” have
the best of machinery for out-loor
operations. Secure the home against
the rigurs_,_gf winter and make it as
chieerful and comfortable as possible.
After providing for physical com
fort do not mneglect 40 seetres.such
reading matter as will tend to brigliten’
and improve the minds of the various
members of the family during the
leisureraags.and long evenings which
are coming on apace.”” -All.barns,
sheds, piggeries, poultry quarters, ice
housts #ic., should now be looked
after and made fit for the most advan
tageous use or occupancy practicable.
Wheie ¢lose stables are used see that
they are not only battened and warm,
but properly ventilated. A stable can
hardly be too warm in~ this mnorthern
region. Muake open sheds as comfort
able as you can for their four-footed
tenants. :
Special pains should be taken to
shelter the manure and to keep dvery
thing snug and orderiy. Shelter for
implements is one of the best invest-.
ments a farmer can make, *dnd every
one who neglects it thereby pays trib
ute to ‘the manufacturer. It is:{rue
cconomry to have all farm tools care
fully housed where tll:z'y"’may‘ be re
paired and painted duaring the leisure
of winter. Btorage houses and cel
lars need frequent affention. < Itapays
to have-a good wood-house and keep
it well filled. 1f you have- an ice-.
house clear it for filling, and if you
have none it is in order to bulld one
earty. —[Chicago Tribuue, 2 .
FAMMMND GARDEN NOTRS.
Don’t have any broody hens abont.
A large scarlet comb indicates that
the hen is laying. All healthy fowls
| should have bright red combs.
. Pat. coarse manure where you veant
a mulch, and fine where you:want it
to speedily mingle with and ®enrich
the sdili- v " »
Don’t be in a burry to buy more
land until you have got what yo‘u‘al
ready have up to its mmaximuwm pro
ductiveness.
The poorer the road, the greater the
wear and tear and the consumption of’
t.me, and hence the heavier the tax for
travelling pver it ;
The farmer who does not believe in
science has great faith in the inflience
of the moon and often mistakes hol
low stomach for hollow. hoin.™ ' ™~
Perseverance is the secret of sucecess,
and in nothing does ,it show its .effect
more than afteeyou. raise your floek
to kuow how to sell them to advan
tage.
Aceofding to Dr. Collier, growing
animals take only six per.cent.sof. ,the
manurial value out of their food, and
anjjch cows nine ‘and . one-half per
cent. 3 TR e T e
A good authority says: Hyposulph
ite of sodua is a sure cure for chicken
cholera. Put a tablespoenful of the
soda to a half gallon of waterand, g ve
to the fowls to drink.
In arranging the shelter for slock,
ventilation is an item that is often
overlooked, and yet it is very impor
tant for thehealth of the animals. The
best plan is to fully provide ventilation
when the building is put up.
eit ebl .
Photographic Map of the Sky.
All over the world on moonlit nights
astronomers are . busily prepariug a
photograplic map of the sky. It will
be a stupendous work of some 2000
sheets, and wal exhibit many stars
not before noted, Sky photography
is practically a new discoverw,” and
promises more for ‘the astroncmical
science than almost any mechanical
discovery which has preceded it. A
«snap” exposure shows only the stars
visible to the lnakcd"i:ye, or through a
weak glass, but as. the plate remains
‘exposed more and still more stars con
tinue to make. their appearance-upon
it Exposure for four or more hom‘é,‘
with such extremely sensitive plates
as=are now perfected, lias - disclosed
countless celestial bodies which even
the largest {elescope 'lmf _ never.
reached.—[Times-Democrat,
I' '* QUAINT AND CURIOUS. ~
TLondon has more Scotch than Ed
.. inburgh. S ,
The quantity of coal carbonized ror
~ year in the United Kingdom is 10,
. 600,000 tons. :
' It is estimated that the number of
passengers carried by all the railroads
in the weorld - averages 6,560,000
day. .
It was Richar?“ Cobden who, upon
one occasion, praised soup as the real
‘souree of the prosperity of the. French
f Hll“oh- N .
In some foreign cities there are men
hired to attract a crowd to their em=
ployer’'s windows by staring and gaz.
: ing into them.
! Within sixty-two years Mexico has
i had fifty-fonr presidents, oneregency,
‘,und one empire, and nearly every
change of governmént has been es
- fected by violence.
| The loveliest summer resort on earth
is probably ‘the plateau of Newera
* Elli., the #King’s Summit,” as the na
tives call it, in the highlands of south
ern Ceylon.
' Justices of the peace were first ap
’ pointed in England by Edward IIL,
1 in the year 1327, and in 1360-1 they
! were empowered to try felonies, while
g.. their wages were fixed by Richard I
in 1389,
It is interesting to know that the
hair which waves from the helmets
of Frendfl dragoons is the real article,
being the product of Chinese and
Tonkin skulls. It is finet and lighter
than horse hair,
According to Captain Wissmann,
of the African exploring party, the
i paradise of birds seems to have been
j found on the shores.of a lagoon com
; municating with the eastern extremity
' of the Albert Nyanza.
‘ IL'Q‘ Aungel, of Weatherford, Tex
- as; was in good health on a recent
. Sunday, but he told his wife that he
1 would | die. the followihg Monday
' night. ~ He made his will, altended to
' business Monday as usual, and that
night lay down and died.
i Several factories have just been
started in England for manuficturing
. tea from hops, and the demand is said
| to be greater -than the supply. The
faculty has discovered that theTiipulin
of the hop counteracts the excessive
tannin of the ordinary tea.
" Bonaventure Island isin the Gulf
of St. Lawrence. It is. located in
Gaspe County, Quebec, opposite Perce.
It is two and a half miles long by
three-fourths of i-a « mile' wide, and is
well settled. It forms a natural break
water between Perce and the gt
It is strange muses the Chicago
Herald, kow fast American rifles have
,Jigd the new world of the larger car
nivora. Within the .Fast -fifty years
wolves and bears have entirvely disap
speared.from hundreds of thousands of
square miles'ivherd*they once wete as
numerous as rabbits.
. A lady rn}urn_inég to her home in
"’t’drson‘s‘l\lills':“‘&_lass'.,'vf’:xs. greatly as
tonished to see a live pickerel weigh
o ing'about one and one-half ‘pounds
_.drop iu,lhd'msd,;ttiher feet. Looking:.
she discovered-shévering about the
spota large American eagle, which
had evidently secured the fish from
oof ¥ neighboring brrodks.
English naval officers have made a
demand to be allowed to year russet
leather Dboots "at: sea. The sudden
popularity of-unblacked-leather is one
- of the freaks of fashion: “Very little
else was to be met with in Europe
l‘ this year® Vaca'ion boots are qiow
i almost invariably'mt{fiq brown and are
.everywhere the fashion hmqug'forcign
tourisgs.
' An English writer tells of two cats
which advanced daily from opposite
ends of a long and lofty - wall, and,
meeting in the middle, fought with
. great ‘fary suntil one :or both swere
precipitated to the ground below, upon
'which the fight ceased immediately,
’ ‘the combs}‘!a.u'ts I:omqggnting the wall,
| and basking Jreacefully*side by side in
the sunshine, e
. The d’u‘i}\g; bell is said to have been
used in Phenicia 520 B, O. Aristotle
speaks of it 350 years before Christ.
The application of the.diving bell in
“Fdtope was first noticed by John Tas
nier. It became generally. known
about 1620, and was noticed by Bacon
{ in'his Novum Organum. The first use
of the bell in Americd was by Bedall
of Boston in 164 2. .
; Mush is Mush.
The struggle of childhood = with
synpnymous terms is jliustrated in the
case of a fivo-yea'r-old Tioga Doy,
who was recently visiting an aunt in
the country.
tJaels: take this mug into the din.
ing-rodm and put it on the Dbuffet,”
said hi§ aunt “oné” afternoon. ek
marched bravely off, though evidently
mystified. o L
«I know what buflet is, auntie,” he
remarked as he came back; ‘‘why, it's
the sideboard.”
The next morning at the breakfast
table fried mush was served.
«Auntie, what is° mush?” asked
Jack. :
«Mush? Why, mush is mush,” was
the reply. ‘
“aOn ! R
‘Then a moment later he murmered :
f‘«B'uflétfi sideboard? mush is mush;
wonder what ham is?”— [Philudelphia
Press,
o 4R e ”fiw%:fl~“flv4'r:";l'.v;4';)ia»‘;é-xdr;
| Bewsl g,
A noto with a seal runs ten years,
+* Amarried woman can will her property
os she pleases, ... .
The father, as a rule, is entitled to the
custody of his minor children,
Two actions of ejectment may be
brought for the same tract of land.
There is no exemption against a judg
ment for the conversion of property.
" The widow can convey no title o the
land which belonged to her husband.
Prior possession is sufficient to support
an action for the unlawful detainer .of
land,
Damage suits against railroads must be
-brought within twelve months “from the
injury sustained,
It is malicious mischief to injure a dog,
though a dog, in the proper sense of the
term, is not property, '
It is a criminal offense to hunt on Sun
day, and to shoot along or across the
public road at any time,
A promise to pay the debt of another
is void unless it is in writing and ex
presses the consideration,
Suits for lands sold at tax eales must
be biought within five years, except
where infants are concerned, -
Suits before justices of the peace must
be brought in the precinct of the defend
ant, orin the precint where the contract
was made,
" The tontiacts -of infants are voidable
and not void, and a ratification after the
infant becomes of age makes his con
tracts good, '
The half blood inherits equally with
the whole blood unless the inheritance
comes from the ancestor not of kin to
the half blood.
If “more than 8 per cent interest is
charged npon a loan, the lender- under a
plea of wusury, loses all the interest,
whether paid or unpaid.
Oné wittiess to a deed is sufficient cx
cept in cases where the grantor is unable
to write his name, ond then two wit-’
nesses who can write their names are re—
quired,
Adverse possession for ten years with
color of title, and twenty years wjthout,
gives a good title to land, except when
infumts, and married women, under the
law before;lßß7 were interested.
When a laborer hires for an entire year
at a given price and quits the employment
voluntarkly befere the expiration of the
vear, and without the fault or consent of
his employer, he can receive no wages.
If a party agrees to completea contract
for work or lsbor within a certain time
and fuils and the other party receives or
uses the property in its incomplete condi
ti-n, the contractor can recover the name
able yatue of: his labor,
A note without a scal is barred in six
years, and a note with simply a seal with
out the, words, ‘‘Witness my hand and
seal,” .is in law a note without a sea!,
while a note, with the words, ‘‘Witness
my hand and seal,” and with no seal at
tached, isin law a sealed note,
General Debility.
One by one the great generals of the day
have.passed away, but therg.is one general
who 18 ever with us—General” Debility is his
name. He is no respecter of persons or of age
or of sex. He imposes on the young, dnd in an
unfair fight with gld age, comes off victor.
He is constantly battling against fiood health,
and his delight is to make mankind miser
able. His weapons are a lame back, an aching
side, weak kidneys, inaétive liver, poor diges
tion, non-assimilation of food, extreme nerv
ousness, universal lassitude, short breath, un
natural le.ti%ue. etc. However, he is not to
be feared. He is easily disarmed by a use of
Dr. John Bull’s Sarsaparilla. When this
remedy is used ‘o counteract the attacks of
General Debility, he is made to retreat every
time. In fact, General Debility aud Dr. Bull’s
Sarsaparilla cannot be in the same system at
the same time. , Try it, and you will soon get
strong. 4
A prudent man is liike a pin—his head pre
vents him-¢oing too far .
Denfuess Can’t be Cured
By local applications, as they cannot reach
tlre discased pertion of theear. There is only
one way to cure deainess, and thatis by con
stitutional remedies. Deafness is cansed by
‘an inflauned condition of the mucous lining of
the Kustachian Tube. "When this tube gets
inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imper
- sect *mearing,.gnd when it is entirely closed,
Deafness is the result, and unless the inflam
mation can be taken out and this tube re
stored to its normal condition, hearing will be
destroyed foreverymine cases out of ten are
caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an in
flamed condition of tne mucous surfaces.,
We will gzive One Hundred Dollars for any
case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that we
cannot cure by taking Ha.l's Catarrh Cure.
Sead for circulars, free.
¥. J, CaeNey & Co., Toledo, O.
Sold by druggists, 75 cents.
The childish miss resents a kiss and runs
the other way, but when at last some years
have passed, it’s different, they say.
“Don’t hang to my skirts and cry so,” said
mamma, to her peevish and pale looking little
.girl. Ah! mother,if you would give it Dr.
Bull’s Worm Destroyers it would soon feel
well, and contently play with its blocks and
toys. .\
All those who pass through the door to suc
cess will find it labeled *‘push.”
BRrRoOWN’S Iron Bitters cures Dyspepsia, Ma
laria, Biliousness an 1 General Debility. Gives
Strength, aides bigestion, tones the nerves—
crea es appetite. The vest tonic for Nursing
Mothers, weak women and children.
If a girl knows sho is pretty it is not because
any other giri told her so. v
T wish the world knew how good a remedy-
Dr. Bull’s Sarsaparilla is for general debility
and lifelessness. Itgave me strength when I
was weak and my health was failing. I enjoy
lite for the first time in years.—Mrs. J. D.
Goode, Portsmouth, 0.
An articie no family should be without—A
marriage certificate.
Ladies,
If troubled with any Female Complaint,
write me. State case. Cure certain and quick.
Terms low. Particulars and preofs of cures
by mail sealed. Book on Female Diseases six
cents postage. Mrs. Dr. Mary A. Brannon,
]&\’\'ashington St., Atlanta, Ga.
*“What struck you most in the equatorial
regions?’” asked a gentleman of a traveler.
“The sun,” was the reply.
Timber, Mineral, Farm Lands and Ranches
in Missouri, Kansas, Texas and Arkansas,
Lought and sold. Tyler & Co., Kansas City, Mo.
Po You Ever Speculate? B
Any person sending us their name and ad
dress will receive information that will lead
to a fortune. Benj. Lewis & Co., Security
Building, Kansas City, Mo. "
Lee Wa's Chinese Headache Cure. Harm
less in effect, quick and positive in action.
sent prepaid on receipt of §1 per .l‘otfl(\,
Adeler&CoL22Wyandotte st.,KansasCity,Mo
BeecmAM's Plris cure Bilious and Nervous
Ills.
Oklaboma Guide Book and Map sentany whers
onreceipt of & cts. Ty ler & Co., Kansas City, Mo.
. RE
ave tie oovs
And save the girls—from their intense sufferings
~fFim scrofula an | other foul humors in the blood
by giving them Hood’s Sarsaparila. Thousands of
pareats are unipeakably happy and thousands of
children enjoy zood health because of what this
great blood purifier has dons t.r tham. It thor
ough y eradicates all trace of scrofula, salt rheum,
ete., and vitalizes and e iriches th) blood,
“Serofula bunches in my neck disappeared when
Itook Hood's Sarsaparilla.”—A. R, KrLLEy, Park
ersburg, W. Va,
, .
Hood’'s Sarsaparilla
fold by alt druzglst_s. $1; six for 35 Propared oaly
Ly C: Y, HOOD & CO., Lowell, Mass,
100 Doses Une Dollar
BE 'Ts'l,‘UD* _Book-k;epingv Business Forms,
HGME Penmane);_ip, Arithmetlc,'sbort-nand, ste.,
thorougily taugie by MAIL, Circulsrs iree.
Bryant’s Col.ege, 437 Main St,, Buftalo, N, ¥,
' Nesselrode Pudding,
Bpa A S SRR T ] TRI Pl
Mrs, Johu G, Carlisle is an W
cook, and her Nesselrcde pßudd og isa
revelation and a delight, she was re
cently induced to give the recipe, which
i# as follows: ‘Shell a pintos chestnuts,
take off the skin, put them in a sauce
pan and cover with f)oiling water; boil
ten minutes and press through a
colander, Shell, Dblanche and pound
a pint of almonds, Cut a pound
of candied fruits into small pieces. Put a
‘pint of water «nd a pound of sugar on
‘to boil, let boil fifteen minutes, Beat the
yo'ks of six eggs until very light, add
‘them to the boiling syrup and stir over
the fire until very hot; then take off and
beat with a spoon until cool, Then add
the fruit and nuts, with a teaspoonful -of
vanilli and a pint of cream. Mix well,
put in a freezer and freeze. When hard
stand away four or five hours before serv
ing,
- Theatres and Cloves.
Eugene Tompkins, manager of the
Boston Theatre, Boston, is winning the
friendship and admiration of every lady
in the cu'tured city, ' Atthe end of the
fir.t second and third acts of ¢The
Soudan,” the big melodramatic success
which has been crowding the handsome
Boston playhouse for nine weeks and is
booked for as many more, an in
stantaneous photograph of the audi
ence is taken revealing the faces of
the male members engaged in a general
stumEede for a clove. 'The photographs
are then displayed in prominent places in
the Hub, where they silently, but elo
quently, tell their little tale. It is sig
nificant that while the audiences are ‘
growing steadily larger with each succes- ‘
sive performance of the production, the
number of men who go -out between the
acts is growing Leautifully less,
Then and Now.
Formerly, men had less money, but
they knew better how tospendit. Now
a-days a bag of money is paraded
through the world bound on an asg’s
back, and gvery body worships the ass,
and men lie down and let him walk over
tßem thinking perchance that the beast
may stumble, and the sack burst open,
that happily they may scrape up some of
the coin in the filth of the road.—Ne
Name Magazine.
PAris is a home for the homeless of
the world. It is the most cosmopolitan
ci'y on earth; a ¢ity of men and women
who love the'world, and " ¢lssp her with
the arms of art, pleasure and wealth.
Tue human mind has been called a di
vine puzzle that requires years of experi
ence before we can begin to find out.
MALARIA cured and eradicated from the
system by Brown's Iron Bitters, which ens
rici:ies the blood, tones the nerves, aids diges
tion. Acts like a ¢harm on persons in general
ill healty, giving new ensrgy and strength.
Strange to say, noman ever gets tight unless
he is loose in his habits. i
_FITS stopped free-by Dr. KLINE'S GREAT
NERVE RESTORER. No Fits after first day’s
vse. Marvelous cures. Treatise and $2 trial
Lattle free. Dr. Kline, 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa.
Ifafflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp
son’s Eye-water. Druggists sell at2s¢ per bottie.
Syrupihieg
e A R
ST S\ A e
s
# o LAY RN
ONE ENJOYS
Both the method and results when
Byrup of Figsistaken; it is pleasant
and refreshing to the taste, ‘and acts
gently yet promptly on the Kidneys,
Liver and Bowels, cleanses the Bys
tem effectually, dispels colds, head
aches and fevers and cures habitual
constipation. Syrup of Figs is the
“only remedy of its -£ind ever pro
duced, pleasing to the taste ams) ac
ceptable to the stomach, prompt in
its action and truly beneficial in its
effects, prepared only from the most
healthy and agreeable substances,
its many excellent qualities com
mend it to all and have made it
the most popular remedy known.
Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50¢
and %1 bottles by all leading drug
gists. Any reliable druggist who
may nothave it on hand will pro
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it. Do not accept
any substitute,
CALIFORNIA Fl§ SYRUP CO.
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL,
LOUISVILLE, KY, WEW YORK, M.V,
T v T e S R R eT A
P e ] S - % \ c i C‘Ukr?ro“\'\
e R RS E\ s CEAOO B ‘C(\ "‘1" cATARRAo
DR vgl e il TSSR AP SQLDINHE..
sk S (PR i S S b S
o A L o i B q & S
o b ..“':, R LB L 8 AR B S B A OV
f% AR sgy e Yy E\?‘O\*‘,\
Lt Ay R BROTHERS, 66 Warren Bt., New York. Price 50 cts. 888 = > ==l
SEVEN SEVENTEEN SEVENTY apw .
n""é\ gz_, _;“;, £ cU RE B!llousness’
7 Nly o o SR % Pl emowcmrcommemersrsoos
N )> S 'o‘l’ '
o 8 LS ZoBR Sick Headache,
SR &o o & J".‘.._.,. NG :
This Picture, Panel size, mailed for 4 cents, Malaria.
. J.F. SMiTH & CO,, 4
5 Makers of **Bile Beans,” ! 3
255 & 257 Greenwich St., N. Y. City, L : B_
£ s YTy ey e ALYy : o R T
Tl W
creat PENSION Bill | SHORTHAND IF YOU W'NI
15 Passed, maemsmen: |St lAL TO LEARN
v ————cn | €7B (1) (] pa'n:g::':;:'::. | i\:)lurtrwmd, rend to U}‘.{Tlit_‘?fifiihomhun‘t{li‘]"“"\' '1.1%;?:
o e e cata ogue an ! read it—it costs you nothing. AdA
Glanks fros. Sobsr 1 Somyen 15U §et your money. I 1.0 Crichton. Pri s 04 Wihits ol St .A;;«;;I, filé
% :mdth%skli:eyHablga P[HSIQHS F]:fw LAVZ CL[} 0 ’l]
P cured at home with- pply ‘
B ok L fout pain. Book of par- to Mlm B, LtflVfihb '(\xl)‘n
] fl“\‘}"“fi)s(gfihl"\n‘fg- Atcorneys, 1419 F St., Washington, D(;
G sy 3. M\ EY,M.D. y coit, Clricagoe
@Y Atanta, Ga. Olfice 1034 Whitehgl 8¢ | Branch Ofices, Cleveiand, Detroit.Ch el
b i P :dI preshcribf B:Sd f‘:’“%nw
it et N ig G :‘»" i
TELEGRAPHY AND SHORTHAND || BF NGI ottt
LEADING SCHOOL SOUTH, Catalogue | feed ol & B INGIAITAM,M. Dy
free. COUCH & LUGENBEEL, Senoin, Ga. | 28 wuss birisnure. 8 O H INGIATIET L
— i —_— iz G 10
Posters, Azents, Women, Boys, EVEny. | [L:B Mrdosly by the Wo bave sold BIE %),
WHERY, 10,000 firms want 10,000 persons | WBB @oans Chemisg] 0, MANY }'tg”'be% of £otis:
permanently to hand out papers at $1 a Y RS ;;Sven ke, bes
1000. _Particuiarsior a 2 cent stsmp, o Cincinnatd BEEARS faction. HE & CO.,
AGENTS' HERALD, Box 284, Puiiadephia, Pa. @A, Omlo. &HW D.R.DYCHTE i
e DN e T eFY N RRL R el 4 v Druggists
mulv"iv‘v“m:sso&wdzmnum Silic & Satra Tende SRR ark ¥ 81,00, Sold by Druse 77 s
A €no Lo cov! . Ins, . .. 1890,
2007 bost 250 LEMARIE'S SILE MILL, Lictie sy N 3 |X,N. U, orooon. . ity two, 180
S TE s SRR ML AAEe PRy W |B.W Ut lon gk i iRt
e PIS”'S REMEDY FOR CATAKLKsI.—Best, Easiest to uset T
o Cheapest. Relief is immediale, A cure is certain, For PR
Ry Cold in the Head it has no equal. L
e TR ST ~ T e RSN
_c.‘ i T o 5 2 = F \ S . ‘ *
3 It is an Ointment, of which a small particle is apxflled to the 3
> nostrils, Price, 50e. Sold by drufigists or sent by mail, X %
Address, "<E, T. HAZELTINE, Warren, Pa,
* Thinking Makes It 5,
_ Mind cure is as ol ns Marcus 4y,
who thus expressed it: Do y 0
‘pose you are hurt, and your complyj
ceases, Cease your complaint, ypq
are not hurt.” Bhakespeare descrihey,
in a single sentence when he majes H
let say to Rosencratz, ‘‘There is not
‘either good or bad, but thinking m,,
it sO.” :
|
Al [ \ k‘\
[k 1 5 )
-
0 IN PZ// |
‘ N v
‘ | “ \\ | ///_q
- Copyright, 1890,
. o Help Yoursep
if you're a suffering woman, with
the medicine that’s been Prepared
especially to help yop—Dr: Piercey
Favorite Prescri})tlon. It will 4o
where others fail. For all the g,
eases peculiar to the sex—-dmgging,i
down pains, displacements, and othe
weaknesses; it’s a {;ositive remedy,
It means a new life, and 2 longe
one, for everty delicate woman, [
every case for which it’s recop,
mended, it gives satisfaction, Ity
guaranteed to do 80, or the mongy
18 refunded. :
It improves difiestion, invigorates
the system, enriches the blood, (is
pels.aches and pains, produces re
freshing sleep, dispels melancholy
and nervousness, and builds up bot)
flesh and strength. It is a legit.
mate medicine—not a beverage
Contains no aleohol to inebriate;
no syrup or sugar to sour or
ferment In the stomach and cang
distress. As peculiar in its man
velous, remedial Tesults as in i
composition, - Therefore, don’t b
put off with some worthless com.
pound easily, but dishonestly, rec.
ommended to be *just as good”
FOR A ONE-DOLLAR BILJI sent us by ma)
we will deliver, free oi all clml'g(-u1 to any person iy
gl’_x Unitd States, all of the followiug articles, care
1y pecke ::
One two-ounce bottle of Pure Vaseline, - - 10cts
One two-gunee bottle of Vascline Pomade, - 154
One {u of Vaseline Coid Cream, - - - - -5%
One C: ke of Vaseline Camjhor Ice, - - - - 10%
Onse Cake of Vaseline Soap, unscented, - . 10¢
One Cake of Vaseline Soap, exquisitely scented,
One tvo-ounce bott,e of White Vaseline, - - %4
Or for postage stamps any single artiole at the pris
name:ll. On ;w accgun?tbc persuaded ht) accept from
your druggist any Vaseline or preparation therefrom
unless I«;Lgelled with our nam,pbeclz:uwe you will cer
?(nly receive an tmitation whieh kas little or no valu
Lesebrough Mfg. Co., 24 State St., N, Y,
PRt A e SL iy
. -
= Sy For Coughs # Colds
SCEEERFEME There is no Medicine like
T, e
§ CXEH DR. SCHENCK'S
i on'E
3 E@ o
i o
<3 SYRUP
é% e‘ .. . . |
sk S{@E Tt is pleasant to tho tasto and
Gy @‘. B does not cun:ain a particle flf
USR] opinm oranything injurious.
&%;’”J iaptheßestCoughMuhrim-intho
- - World. For Sale byall Druggists,
Price, SI.OO per bottie. Dr. Schenck’s Book on
Consumption and its Cure, mailed free. Address
Dr. J. H. Schenck & Son, Philadelphis.
A XMAS HEALTH CIFT ,
(Exerciser Complete $5) }fl
Is BesT oF ArL. CIRCULAR Free, i
Books: For “An Ideal €omplexion ¢ € | I
& Complete Physical Development,” ‘~;§;1 ;"uF
39 llls socts. ““Health & Strength in a
Physical Culture,” 40 Ills 5o cts. Chart of Y. i
39 His for Dumb Bells & Pulleys, 25cts. S¥ 1)
Ad. JNO. E. DOWD'S Vocal & Physical g @&
Culture school, 116 Monree St. Chicago - Brd
SI,OOO REWARD!
The abbve reward will be paid for proof of
the existence of a ‘hetter- fINIMEI\' T than
MERCHANT’S GARGLING OIL orabeiter
Worm Remedy than MERCHANT’S WORM
; TAIui‘ETS- Sold everywhera,
JOHN HODGE, Sec’y,
Merchant’s Gargling Oil Co.,
Lockport, N, Y,, U. S, A,
Buy or sell your Cotton on JONES
5-Ton Gotton Scale.
NOT CHEAPEST BUT BEST.
! For terms address
JONKES OF BINGHAMTON,
BINGHAMTON, N, V.
HEN YOU VISIT ATLANTA,
Don’t Fail to Stop at BLUE’S JEW
e ELRY STORE, 73 Whitehall Str‘c‘el-
Largest Stock and Lowest Prices in the City.
¥ Society Emblems a Specialty..&
Send me $1.50 and get a Solid Gold Pin of
any Order you belong to.
BAGGY KNEES POSITIVELY R‘EMEDUCD
fr "
omalr? RIVEEO Greely Pant Steetcher
Ad«pted by students at Harvard, Amherst and other
Colleges, also by professional and business men evary
where, If not for sale in your town send 25c. ©0
B. J. GREELY, 715 Washington Street, Boston.