Newspaper Page Text
The Air’s Transparency,
i
I nlike ft>g, hare ommn<>iily occurs
luring nn unusually drv Mute of the
lower Stratum Of air. In - onsideriug its
rnusv, it lilts tuon *uggi'fitod timt the l
small quantity ef uiMi-tniuspareiit matter
required to preduee the dimming effect
should aln. , mind 11 the
eye can observe tho ehange tlint comes
aver a drop of water when the fifty
millionth of n- gramme of fuehsiuc is in-
I reduced, possibly u weight of water or j
■Iuh. not mmh p .t.-r would suffice for
usibilitv in a column of mr l.tJUO feet I
long. Ii. at nil timis cliurged
with dust particle* to a degree difficult to
realise. The purest nir tested by Mr.
Atkius when making Ids measurements
ail the top ot Hen Nevis eoiituined about
M.000 dust partiules to each cubic inch,
which cubic would foot, pi Vo .his i particles to
every or Il’i. 232,01AM >00 to a
horizontal column of a thousand feet.
This being the case, it is manifest that a
condensation upon a -m ill proportion of '
these or n momenlarv adhesion by elec- |
trie attraction would suffice to produce
the optical effect called “haze" or "hazi¬
ness.'—[St. Louis Republic.
Oncer Ilo-jiitul Incident.
At the eiiv h ‘■/itil i- "'end days ng».
the clerk 1 lit 1 red M ward. and. walking
- . •
••You ran g . out to-day. Your mime is
on the difi-lunged list. Jm lg. who was
suffering with heart disease, leaned over
on his elbow - , nnd turning to Dr. Wolf. !
who whs standing near l»y, asked in an
anxious tone: j
••Doctor, am Id:--larged? -W hy.no,
B • physician could
utter amrili r b wuri 1 lie patient Wolf dropped
back on the lead. Dr. was «
nt hi* side in n moment, but Juclg was
be valid nil 1 >pc. The patient was for-
merly nn officer in the German army nnd
was at one time stationed in Africa.—
iCiuciunati Enquirer.
,1 * E * r ' -1,rn * Q«H«ie«
Comm ml .0 nubile approvat the California
liquid fruit remedy SynipofFigs. Jt is pleasing
to .. th» eye, and to the taste and ,. by gently act- .
la. OU the kidneys, liver and bowels, it . lean-
tea the system effectually, thereby promoting
the health and comfort of all who use it.
The real estate speculator is rarely sat¬ I
isfied with bis lot.—Columbus Post. i
j^^NDUCTOU J'. DOOM IS, PetroH,
Care is wonderful." Write him about It.
ttoM by 75c.
Where 1« JohnsonvlUe t
the ~I moot have u nwa. \ work!*™Tor yon, RDdaMdt b I
This in Uh a. flow isstn , w-wnoS^XiinuJoh^'nlin^ extract frum W. H.
a letter frt-m
sfci&ser. Thi* you njj roan start* I in business
•offif .j a
doUar. nro! be has made wonderful progress, j
The firs! year his jroHr? footed up to over
Thxre ar- bond red- and thousands ol
5- in* m i t • r JU . country of ours
w^o t »- * ' as good work as Mr. Skinner. !
ffioad. Writecnickiy Va.. ad to B- F. Johnson & Co., ttieh-
tunity tio a they win give you au oppor¬
to as we. I or better.
rn - . Run'S Gus* !
; ■-••fii j ;
tetttofree. I>r. Kli ne. SB 1 Arch Si.. Phila.. Pa.
If •-e«:'v; - r ii r . i- iae Thninr>-
son'*Ere.wat< r.lir'u^!-!-ill 2T, • P~r bottle. I
■s
Catarrh
Hood’* Marma'tttrUla, Iloitw n ion-
mtifntiannl tlemedy, licniiilu
Reaches and ' are* it-
ts A 5 Cft*C c gratu aad a to benefit fho§#
ftfIStet*'!, r" me l' o rpeommeafi Hood'* Sara*-
p«1!J* t<? ft! catarrh. For many years I
wii trout** r] ’I nfa aad Indigestion ant! gen-
era! debi *ay )W i could not get around tbs
home. I tri strife fa saw rr-c^m mended
tor catarrh, in every Instance of bein^
relieved, l b
Very Much Discouraged. j
At !a«t I 4erM("! !«* Li HckxI's Sarsaparilla and ba- .
gas to get relief. I hi enow - i within ivo >ear», '
tenor twelv bottle; and I fc* I better than I have |
for year*. I attribute tny ini pro vement wholly to
else use of i
Hood’s Sarsnp?rilla
Ms*. Cha5. Timsr, Corner York aud Pleasant Street*, -
Kao over, Penn.'’ ;
iieud ** I** 11 - — For the liver and bowels-, act
easily yet promptly and * fr.cieuUj . Price A%c.
Advice to Woken
If you would protect Profuse, yourself Scanty,
j from Painful,
Suppressed or Irregular Men¬
struation you must use
BRADFIELD’S
• FEMALE
REGULATOR
CinTEnsvii-LK, April 36,1886.
JSMShESiS: from Menstrual Irregularity*
T ear> treated without benefit by physicians,
were at length completely cured by one bottle
of Brarilleld’n wonderful. l oinalo J. Uegulator. W. biHAsat. Its
effect Is truly
BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO.,
ATLAt ixJ UOOI8TB.
won halt: nr 5 J>B
DONALD KENNEDY
Of Roxbury, Mass., says
Kennedy’s Medical Discovery
cures Horrid Old Sores, Deep-
Seated Ulcers (li 4.0 ^ vo 1 ir.''
*
standing, Inward 'r I amors, and
every disease of the skin, ex-
cept Thunder Humor, tnl-fin' and
Can nor that liu« rcct
Price, $1.50. Sold by every
Druggist in the United States
and Cauada.
ELY’S OATWRRH
CREAM BALM __ . THE ^**@£8
-hen sppiiei lino tho
sffectumiT, *i|a 1
-leius'ng tke head o f? fc, I
„
itaiiaytinflammaUDn, ^Mfroi^additioaa ft, if*
2 _J
coida, complete;, A
”oacl,! flia d\ fcK
s^it os ’sSrZT
! w^o 7 “ f
r ‘ FOR FARM AND HARDEN.
*
nf.w method ok pruning <;rapes.
j t j, announced that a French grow-
er llM disoorercd a new method of
1 lie . . made
pruning tlic grape. cut is
nt the nodo above the point where it
r. intended the end of the wood shall
eventualiy remain, at the same time
destroying tlio hud found tlierc. Tlic
gtump thu* left is removed the follow-
, B ’ when the death is complete,
. base collar ,, lias . been
!**"l when nt its a
formed, which soon closes after tho
dead wood lias been removed to its
level. The theory is that under this
method the wood dies slowly and
without decomposition of the tissues,
— [New Vork World.
floor for a stable.
A stable floor should bo dry nnd
non-absorbent. It should be of some
durable material, and should not be
slippery. All these good qualities arc
found in cement saturated with hot
gat tar. But a good floor may be
made of hemlock plank three inches
thick, or of the 6auie plank double,
hut Hie lower one may be one inch
thick and the upper one two inches,
This makes a water-proof floor, suita¬
ble to go over a cellar. The floor
should slope two inches in the whole
length to afford sufficient drainage.
A “ eXCOl,en ‘ * r0nud *°° r h * > bcc "
made of cement and coarse coal ashes
sifted from the small dust. This ma¬
teria’. binds well and wears well. One
part of cement is used to live parts of
the coarse ashes.
the silo.
. g a q UCS tj 0I1 whether it is wise
q # . , 0 coru wjthont caUillg . But few
do , lt, . and ... is it not probable ..... that 111
’ 1
f il 0,,t of llie sil ° an<l fpedin g
it, the uncut corn entails more labor
and expense Ilian it w ould cost to cut
it into the silo? As to cutting it when
it conics out, that seems to be out of
the question- Henry Talcott of Ohio,
w ] 10 j, ag tried botli ways of siloing
corn—that is cut and uncut—lias con-
eluded that it does not pay to put corn
into the silo uncut. “I shall never
advise filiiug silos with whole corn-
stalks. Wo have tried it two winters,
but it does not distribute grain even-
'•
It is a hard job to cut it up in the
winter time or get it out of the pits in
any way or shape to feed, and the cat¬
tle have a big time pulling and liaul-
* n ff to tf ct tl,e eal ' 9 o£ corn before they
willcntu F tl,e ' vholc8talks - Tofo,k
out Out or pull Out or get Ollt of a pit,
from ten to fifteen feet deep, ’ corn-
ss;lks—wet, „ slimy, .. stringy . stuff—be- . ,
gets the highest of exasperation and
the greatest need for prayer.” One
man writes us that lie cuts it out with
a broad axe, and another says lie uses
a common bay knife. But we doubt
if it pays to silo whole cornstalks.—
[Hoard’s Dairyman.
JIOIV TO FAIL WITH POULTRY.
To fail in tlio chicken business, Wil¬
liam F. Bice, in Farm and Home, says,
clean your lien house once a year. If
your chicks have l.cc, let them alone.
If you can And only one kind, borrow
from your neighbor and start right.
If there are any cracks in tlio house,
don’t close them, as you may wish to
ascertain what roup and s^re head are.
In case tho roup appears, just let it
run; it will stop after a wliilo and so
will tlic chickens, and thon you can
boast that chickens don’t nay.
For drink in summer, keep a cess¬
pool on hand; if you have none, by
all means make one. If your fowls
get cholera, simply give nothing; per¬
haps they will get on nil right ;I won’t
insure this, but it is a part of how to
fail. Lot your fowls roost in trees,
and if yon have no trees put up poles
! ten or twelve feet from the ground, as
the higher you get the purer the
atmosphere.
Again, you need not pay any atten¬
tion to tlic nests; the liens will look¬
out for themselves. If one should
j hatch abroad, let her hover near tlic
pasture so the little fellows can goont
in 1,,e t,<MV nm1 ca,c1 ' ‘be gapes ; then
you can save feed, for they will not
j eat for some time, as it will require
all tlieir time to open and shut their
mouths.
Symptoms \\i> <ti:k or HI. Vt'KI.Efi.
Tlic symptoms of blackleg iu cattle
are: Tlio animal becomes languid,
the cats drop, tlic eyes are red, tlic
j iJ U,,J aril fccb!c nose hot b’ ami 8° tlry, to 120 the pulse beats
ra P » an >
’ l’ 0 ’' minute. In a short time swellings
^ appear about the loins, back, bead,
l,ec k, bri-ket or legs. They canto
P a ' ,is au d stiffness, and make the ani-
'“a! unwilling to move. The appetite
Ms entirely lost and tlio animal does not
chew the cud; the bowels are cons'i-
I paled nnd the urine scanty and daik
in color. In a short time the symp-
toms of exhaustion deepen rapidly,
tke nH ‘ m al cannot rise from the
ground, the eyes become fixed and
staring and the breath shallow, and
ll,c a,, 'mal often dies in convulsions,
The swellings avo cool or cold to the
! touch aud are uot very tender or paiu-
1 hey are dark or nearly black in
color tt " d kave tlle »l>pearance of mor-
,
; tification. There is as yet no specific
1 101 lakP C,,l0rale d * sc:we of - l>»tasb <>l,e remedy half ic
i ounce,
wateron « P h,t ; mix «’ H ‘ «ive three
| times a day. Another is chloride of
time two drachm*, prepared chalk one
ounce, laudauum two drachm*, mix
and give in a pint of gruel every two
or three hours. Still another i* to take
sulphite of soda one ounce, chlorate of
potash ono ounce; give in a quart of
water two or three times a day. A
help with any of these remedies is a
seton in tlio dewlap, which should bo
smeared with irritating ointment and |
turned every day. If any of the ani-
mals dio they should be buried or
burned at once, as the disease is very
dangerous..—[St. Louis Republic,
AS IIEItll BED.
An herb bed is a necessary part of ;
a good kitchen garden. Nothing gives
*0 much variety to (lie tabic as the
proper use of herbs and flavoring.
Herbs are in perfection in flavor just
before their time of budding out for 1
flowering, and they should then be
Sphered to dry for winter use. The
»hnplest way of drying them and the
best is to cut off their roots nnd bang
their stalks from the rafters of the
kitchen where they are gradually dried
by the heat of the stove. After they
are dried, they should be taken down
slid the leaves stripped carcfu'ly from j
the stalks, pounded fine and put away
in air-tight tin boxes for winter use.
It is much easier to buy tlio herbs
already prepared,_bnt tlierc is an im¬
measurable difference in the quality of
herbs properly dried and kept but a
season and those which have been
dried by the wholesale methods of
dealers and may have been in stock
for years. The best time for gather¬
ing herbs for drying is on a sunny
day, when tho leaves are not wet with
moistu e. All herbs, like fruits,
should be dried rapidly in order to re¬
tain the aroma, and for this reason
many people put them on pans and
dry them in Use heating closet of the
stove which is usually under the oven.
They believe that they dry more
rapidly there than when hung on the
rafters, but in 6ome stoves this closet
is so situated that there is great
danger of the herbs becoming
scorched.
All the herbs used in the best
French cookery may be grown in a
small plot in the ordinary back yard
in our cities with very little care, in
sufficient quantity for the use of tlic
average family. Summer savory,
thyme, sweet marjoric, chervil aud
tarragon may be way
and dried for family use, though tar¬
ragon is rather better fresh and may
be raised with parsley in a window
garden in a kitchen during the cold
mouths. Chives and chervil also
thrive well in a winter window gar¬
den and are an important part of the
outdoor herb garden in summer.—
[New York Tribune.
FARM AND GARDEN NOTES.
Clean up the barn-yards now and
get ready for winter.,.
Bough treatment and fright cause
cows to shrink in milk.
Bo careful with tlio teams when you
have fatiguing work for them to do.
rutting sugar in butter, instead of
adding to the flavor, detracts from it.
Hot days and nights are as hard on
horses as they are on people. Be care¬
ful to prevent c Ids.
If a cow’s udder and teats are not
dirty don't wash them; simply rub
them off with a elotli or brush, or even
tlic hand.
Sheds for Hie colts and idle horses
are now in order. If you can aflord
nothing better put up straw sheds.
They arc as good as any while they
last.
A lmlf daj- spent in picking the
burrs from the pasture field now may
save several times as much labor later
on in picking them from the manes
and tails of the horses.
Remember that it costs as much to
keep n poor cow as a good one. If a
cow that makes 100 pounds of butter
will "pay for keeping,” then one tlmt
makes 200 pounds will pay a profit of
100 per cent, on the outlay.
It is doubtful if it pays to sell bay,
even at a high price. Better prices
can be obtained for it when it is con-
verted into meat or milk, as (lie ma¬
nure will then be au item in the profit.
The labor of baling, Hauling- and
shipping of hay should also be added
to its cost.
The Story of a Tombstone.
A^iovc the south portion of St.
Paul’s cathedral is a figure of a plios-
nir, a bird famed in fable, and the
Latin motto “Resurgam” (I shall rise
again). The story goes that after the
sire and position of the vast dome had
been marked out, a laborer was (old
to bring a stono (to be used as a guide
to the masons) from the rubbish of
the old cathedral that had perished in
the great fire of London. It happened
that the stone the man fetched was a
bit of a tombstone, with nothing of
the inscription left but the word
Resurgam in large letters. The inci-
dent being regarded as of happy
omen, lliis word was adopted as a
motto for Sir Christopher Wren’s no-
hie building. The phoenix was a bird
that was said to live for five hundred
1 and then to burn itself ashes,
years to
out of which it came with renewed
j life for anotlier period of five cen-
I turies. In choosing this bird, allusion
was intended to the new cathedral
rising out of the ashes of the old.—
jjUttte Folks' Magazine.
8 I m i N
•*.
/i trV.
Only a few Announcements can be included in this advertisement, but they will enable the friends of The Companion to judge somewhat of
the scope and character of the reading that will be given in its columns during 1892 —the sixty-fifth year of its issue.
Nine Illustrated Serial Stories.
The Serial Stories for the coming year will be of rare interest and variety, as well as unusual in number.
Lois .Mallet's Dangerous Gift. A New England Quaker Girl’s first Contact with “World's People”; by Mrs. Mary Catherine Lee."
A Tale of the Tow-Path. The Hardships encountered by a Boy who found Life at home too Hard for him; by Homer Greene.
How Dickon Came by his Name. A charmingly written Story of the Age of Chivalry; by Harold Frederic.
Two "Techs” Abroad. They set off on a Tour of the World in quest of Profitable Enterprises; by C. A. Stephens.
A Young Knight of Honor. The Story of a Boy who stood at his Tost while Death was ail around him. Miss Fanny M. Johnson,
A Boy Lieutenant. A True Narrative; by Free S. Bowley.
Smoky Days. A Story of a Forest Fire; by E. W. Thomson.
Hints on Self= Education.
Articles of great value to Young Men who desire to educate themselves.
Hon. Andrew D. White, Ex-President of Cornell.
President Timothy Dwight, of Yale University.
President E. H. Capen, of Tufts College.
President G. Stanley Hall, of.Clark University.
President Francis L. Patton, of Princeton College.
Professor James Bryce, M.P., author of the “American Commonwealth.”
Five Special Features.
A Rare Young Man. Describing the life of a young inventor of extraordinary gifts; The Right Hon. W. E. Gladstone.
Episodes in My Life. A delightful paper telling how he came to build the Suez Canal; by The Count de Lesseps.
The Story of the Atlantic Cable. Mr. Field’s narrative has the thrilling interest of a romance ; Cyrus W. Field.
Unseen Causes of Disease ; Three admirable articles by the Eminent English Physician, Sir Morell Mackenzie.
Boys and Girls at the World’s Fair. What Young Americans may do as Exhibitors; by Col. George R. Davis.
Glimpses of Royalty.
Housekeeping at Windsor Castle; by Lady Jeune.
How Queen Victoria Travels ;%y H. W. Lucy.
The Story of Kensington Palace; by The Marquis of Lome.
How i Met the Queen; by Nugent Robinson.
Short Stories and Adventures.
More than One Hundred capital Stories of Adventure, Pioneering, Hunting, Touring will be printed in this volume. Among them are:
The Flash-Light.
My Queer Passenger.
Molly Barry’s Manitou.
Shut Up in a Microbe Oven;
The Cruise of a Wagon-Camp;
The Illustrations will be improved and increased in number. The Weekly Editorials on the leading Foreign and Domestic Topics
will be marked by impartiality and clearness. Household Articles will be contributed by well-known writers. The Children’s Page will
be more attractive than ever. The Illustrated Weekly Supplements, adding nearly one-half to the size of the paper, will be continued.
a A Yard
of Roses”
Specimen Copies sent free Send Check, Post-OfUce Order, or
on application. ADDRESS, The YOUTH’S Coa&PAmON, Boston, firlass. Registered Letter at our risk.
NEWSY GLEANINGS.
Cohea is bankrupt.
Fiji has 123,000 souls.
Germany has 10,000 locomotives. [0
California has a big potato crop.
Uncle Sam has 30,000 millionaires.
t
Canada has au enormous apple crop.
Returns indicate a moderate apple crop.
Forest fires have been raging in In
diana.
Apples are being exported in largi
quantities.
The pecan crop in Texas is unusualh
large this year.
Tue public schools in the United States
have 13,500,000 pupils.
Russia has prohibited the exportation ot
all cereals excepting wheat.
RuDiNiis framing a bill to reduce t-hi
number of holidays in Italy.
The cranberry crop will be twenty per
cent, smaller thau that of last year.
The newly adopted small bore rifle hai
been introduced into actual use in the Italiar
army.
An English locomotive has completed its
millioneth mile and is still in good con¬
dition.
A late estimate places the peach crop ol
the Delaware Peninsula for 1891 at 6,000,000
baskets.
The estimates for the Police Department
of New York City for 189.2 amount to So •
018,801.63.
The United States Government is about
to make a geological survey of the State of
Washington.
There is $69,831,000 deposited in New
Hampshire 264 depositors. savings banks. Thera are 166,.
The Board of Lady Managers of ths
World’s Fair will probably employ a num¬
ber of Southern women as guides and inter¬
preters.
It is proposed to close all liq uor stores in
tho famine-striken districts of K ussia to pre-
vent for drink. peasants spending their relief money
The Government Engineer of Honduras,
who regulates the mahogany cut, estimates
the value of the trees now ready for the mar¬
ket at S200.000.000.
Ground has been broken at Brownsville,
Texas, on the Intercontinental United Railroad,
which is to connect the States with
Mexico and Central America.
The Argentine Republic has sold oils
thousand square miles in the Grand C'haco,
the Hirsch Northern the part establishment of the Republic, of. to Hebrew Baron
for a
settlement. One million dollars in gold has
been paid.
HELD UP THE EXPRESS.
Armed Brandits Kob a Missouri
Pacific Train Near Omaha.
The Kansas City express train on the Mis¬
souri Pacific road was holdup by six masked
men about 10 o’clock a few nights ago, eight
miles from Omaha, Neb. At the point in
question the train had to stop before cross¬
ing the Fremont, Elkhorn aud Missouri
Valley tracks. Two of the men boarded tbe
engine and, with cocked revolvers, The com¬
manded Engineer Hall to get off. others
boarded the express car, and when the keys
to the box were refused which proceeded they bad to secured break
it open with tools
from a section house.
While two of the men worked on the strong
box the others compelled the passengers t'
keep their s9hts. The thieves secured abou
16000 from the safe aud then disappeared i
the darkuees.
Railway Life.
The Safest Part of a Train; by Col. H. G. Prout.
Success in Railway Life; by Supt. N. Y. Central, Theo. Voorhees.
Asleep at his Post; by former Supt. Mich. Southern, Charles Paine.
Roundhouse Stories. Humorous and pathetic; by An Old Brakeman.
0 !d Thad’s Stratagem.
Very Singular Burglars.
The Tin Peddler’s Baby.
Blown Across Lake Superior.
A Young Doctor’s Queer Patients.
Free to January, 189 ^*
To any NEW SUBSCRIBER who will cut out and send us this slip with name and address anti
SU.IS, we will send THE COMPANION FREE to January, 1892, and for a Full Tear from that date. This
offer includes the THANKSGIVING, CHRISTMAS AND NEW TEAR’S DOUBLE HOLIDAY NUMBERS,
and all the Illustrated Weekly Supplements. New Subscribers will also receive a copy of a beautiful colored
picture, entitled “A YARD OF ROSES.” Its production has cost TWENTY THOUSAND DOLLARS. 4‘>
“August Flower 55
There is a gentle-
Dyspepsia. man at Malden-ou-
tlie-Hudson, N. Y.,
named named Cantairt captain yy. A Cl Lt. Porpic i aids, wVir*
has written us a letter in which it
is evident that he has made up bis
rnuid concerning some things, and
this is what he says:
< < I have used your preparation
called August Flower in my family
for seven or eight years. It is con¬
stantly in my house, and we consider
it the best remedy for Indigestion,
Indigestion, and Constipation we
have ever used or
known. My wife is
troubled with Dyspepsia, and at
times suffers very much after eating.
The August Flower, however, re¬
lieves the difficulty^. My wife fre¬
quently says to me when I am going
to town, ‘We are out
Constipation of August Flower,
aud I think you had
better get another bottle. ’ I am also
troubled with Indigestion, and
ever I am, I take one or two tea¬
spoonfuls before eating, for a day or
two, and all trouble is removed.” @
THE SMAL LEST PILL IN TH EWORLD!
• TXJTT’S pills® A
tiny liver
It two all the virtues of the larger ones; ^ a
equally effective; purely vegetable. 2 ?
Exact size shown in this border.
bftcco ISO than PURE REWARD!"# HAVANA
filters of DON’T brand of ciffars. Cuttings in the
our
DON’T buy a get 10 cent good Cigar xvli uen you 5
can as amok" a cm e for
cents. bON Many 7, T >Kers iu now
to 10 cent cigars. ose prefer-
enc-e
W. B. ELLIS A CO.,
WINSTON, NORTH CAROLINA.
i in AGENTS ffiSiSJlTiiasteiS
T. M oj desiring year, uur a Home, copyrighted or business methods ehange. free to all
to $ioo Mom illy. Teachers and I-adies find
big pay for spare hours. Treasury Pur¬
chasing Agency', 27 4th Arc., New York.
jriwlllasfta’Kte |a ia a w i auuiai i uj> B.M.WOOLLEY.M.J)
Atlanta. Ga. Office 10!;. Whitehall St
AGENTS WANTED ON SALARY,
or comm'ssion to han iie the New Patent Clr-mical
Men Iok Erasing Pencil. Agets making per week.
roe Eraser Mf ’g Co., La Crosse, Wls. Box 831.
SjsSjfil Weak, welt and Nekvovs, Wretched mortals get
keep well. Health Helper
— tells how. 50 cts. a year. Sample copy
bee. Or. J. 11. UVL, j^i;or. Buffalo, ft. T.
KNSlONS »,‘«1. #115 r lea Dpe for till SOLDIERS! H. «s-
increase. jjLvm e^penenoe.
jL'A 1V TO 85*00 A |)A\ working for ufi; s few
4 vaonneies la this County ; write qtrok fir
particulars, free. L:vuis Rich & Co., Richmond, Va.
Touaregs. A Story of the Sahara; by Lossing G. Brown.
On the Lone Mountain Route; by Miss Will Alien Dromgoole.
Practical Advice.
The Habit of Thrift; by Andrew Carnegie.
How to Start a Small Store; by F. B. Thurbcr.
Girls and the Violin. A Valuable Paper; by Camilla Urso.
A Chat with Edison. How to Succeed as an Electrician; G. P. Ijttlirop.
Boys in N. Y. Offices ; Evils of Small Loans ; by Henry Clews.
The Girl Who Thinks She Can Write. Three Articles of Advice by
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His Day for the Flag.
Capturing a Desperado.
In the Burning Pineries.
The Boys and the Wild-Cat.
On a Cattle Steamer in a Stormi
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