The weekly telegraph. (Macon, Ga.) 1885-1899, November 26, 1890, Image 8

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\ THH VVKKKLY 1 KLkGRAI’H: YVEDJNESPAY MORNING NOV IS 'BER.2G. 1830. FARM AND GARDEN. ■tks in friends to semi short, o this *!».rarimeat. Ihc era as dawnc d. Let iU iuflu c tbco rn'.Mccs set apart lor f r-w v.Iou htkI experience* (iinr n <l fam life. A so t Horae. Toteli U*a;i*oi any Lv.rre. Inapt ct the 1 *w. r jaw, «.r coarwo. Tbe six front te* lU the Ulc will tell Aud every doubt and fear dUpel. The middle “nipper-" you bebojd Ueft»r-* two weeks o!«l: .. ... wtwta two more will comet Eight months the “coroera" the gum. Tbe outside grooves will disappear rr..<«» mi l He two I :■ Just m o y. nr. Ia t vo years frem the second pair; In tiiree the • corner*,'’ too, are Intro, •At two tbe mldiUe “nl'pers'* drop- At three I'm *ed od pair can't stop: tVb. n tour years old th < third i«ir goaa; At,five a full now set he »how*. 'itn deep black spout will n«*» front flew At six year* from the middle two; •T6e second pair ut »**ven y«ara; At eight the spot each ••coiner 1 * clears. From mlddl- •nippers.**. upperJaw, At nine the black spots will withdraw. Th- second pair at ten are white; Eleven finds the •‘corners” light. A* time goes on the horsemen know •| ns oval teeth thre--*Jded grow; They longer get, project before *— —‘—- — “"low no more. —Spate Momenta *i follows: They are first rubbed with dry call and left to drain for twenty-four hours. Four quarts ol salt, three pounds of brown sugar, on? pound of saltpetre, four ounces of talprunella and lour ounces of juniper forties hie bruised and well mixed together and boiled in tsix quarts of ASD water. The brine is tlien cooled and skimmed. The hams aro taktn from the salt aud wiped dry, and! the cold pickle is pourei oter them and well rnbbtd into the meat. There sBouId he enough brine to cover the meat. The bams are turned every second day for three weeks, after whit h they are taken oat, wiped diy, an 1 a mixture of pepper, *tit and bran is thoroughly well rubbed into the moat. They are then smoked :t Jit tie every d*y for three months, or even' more, until completely dry, when they will keep sound aud improve in flavor fog years. Jlsms shrink in smokii'^ about 10 per cent in weight, whilst m.kled or salted pork gains about 10 per ^ent, so say the carer*. Tlil twenty, when wo k THE HOCSEEEt PER. ed twice crrying ncizu». >M> rv.tr ia at.at. c.vKxrt'Uit» 1VBXE**, kXD WILUkOKtS*. AXf BI'.Al’l Xt>9 OK ArruAxrca. !r xcaxs the economy or yocb GacAT-oi'.Axoxotura, asd tues* lENtx or non ius CIUMIvrKY, ASP VSKNCII AST, AND ARABIAN HorrrrxuTY.-Rmkin. The Tojm My little fcow, who look'd from thoughtful eje* Atrtl movi-d and spoke in f|uieV grown-up wive, Having my law ihescveotb time dlnoliey’d, I struck him, and dismiss'd With har<i words and unkl-w’d. Hi* mother, who wan path n . hHne dead. Then fearing l«nt hts grief nhoulU hinder sleep, 1 visited his oed. Hut, found him shnubeHn? deejv 3' Ith darken'd eyelids, • From his latre obi ‘ limit, Stiidy and Dlacuas. from the Indiana Farmer. •\\liile we believe that fartnera lie under raspy disabilities and that more and bet ter legislation in their Inhalf is necessary to render their business fully proeperou*, yet it ia undeniably true that many of the rises here in the central states ate doing fsulywell and laying up soma money. They*are doing this, too, in regular farm- he, growing grain and raising stack, and fritilixiug with frrra manure and clover. 1q a large proportion of such cases it is tras there is some specially favorable cir- coui*. inert to aid in the result, such ss a good n*ar by market, where everything the fam er has U* sell is in demand at the highevt prion. A friend of ours in this cun ▼ realism some $2,000 cash from his little Isrm of less than tony acres, because httrows and produces articles that the city people want and will pay well for, whea the quality U first-clam; and here U a point oi prime importance. Hundreds of small farmers in Marion, county hardly do more than make both ends meet, be cause they do not know how, or do not cart, to produce first class butter, well- fattened chickens and the best of every thing they rabn to welL But there am some farmers who ntako pay on a larger scale and with crop* .1 are not enhanced in value by ne*r market, such ss corn, wheat;beef cattle and bog*. We have a esse in mind. We ha. s ju r t been talking with the man. He tells ua that for twenty yeats past his farm has cotA-mly improved, and the present season, unfavorable as it was, his thirty acres.in coin averaged sixty bushels per sere, wbifo hi. wheat yielded ibirty bush- intelligent and painstaking farmers; such a man a*, would be likely to succeed in :»ny husiiwm* that he might engage n. He prep nr** his wheat land* thoroughly aud ftpitrul* from ten to twenty loads ol <:ahle manors per acre upoo it each year. Hisoorn 'and* as prepared in like man ner and cultivated five times this year, md with the foftt implements that could M ha/.. The farm ia of ordinary clay ,oam and ha* uu SpviAi auViatag.S. *%i tuccesH ij due entirely to good manage- wient; we should *sv, to tbe best kind of management; t> »» r than i..■ • t f >rn.« r# know ho* to tua. I»4 JO1 it wo ■■■ that a much forger proportion of our oniriit to annroxiinate to such Hairy Iloii’l From the Indiana Farmer. Don’t neglect to furnisli the cows some giound feed as soon as or brfpre tbe early irostsnip the grasses; froeUbitten pasture is poor food for cows. Don’t expect full returns, unless rapid and clean milking ia obserret; food alone, no matter of wh&t charaotei will accom plish it. Don’t try to scold a cow i to cbedience in an effort to make her a««i}ne a desired K sition while you milk her; fixing and ndness ar.- mi ba t*.-;. Don’t raise cslves for tli d.viry from beef breeds of cattle. Dairy t eeds are no more profitable in beef pro< ici ion than beef breeds are for dairy work Don’t rely too much on a bin neck, a long slim tail, shape and hz of horns, width betweet) the eyea or cob ■ of hair, in your dairv cow, expecting val .afrom the»e sources; they are all very w I in thtdr way, but ao milk comes from : iy of them. A roomy carcass, strong const uion, good ’ ' . * tp>" • wt-;I- -11:.111* lid !*-r, Ml 1 ibtlig his t/*ar*. Wt •Hhers of m> tor. fn m tabl<% drawu h^vldu bis h-ad Ho had rut, w thin bis r* acli A box of fountera and a re<l-vrln’d atd A pS.Tc of gSass abraded by the beach. And id* or mm »b«*l1v, A tydtle with tilunt*ll9. And two French copia-r coins, ranged there with earwuf art. To romfort his sa/l b«art N> when th t night I pray d To God, and wept, an ’ ani l: Ah, when at Ian we lie with tranced breath. Not vexing Theo in death. And TImmi rein••inben-<t of what toya Ih Tt. Then, fatherly not Ih.vr.d ♦horn Thou hast molded from the clay, Thoa Jt loate Th> wrath, un i say. ••I will t»« sorry for their c- ildllllpt—,” Coventry Patmors. •Tenn for an Aftcrtioon Rereption. tins Itn Tea. with 8’dccd l emon. Roulllon ClipcolaU*. wlib Whipped Cream, lajh.ter b»u»dwii h.'t. \’ar.t|la Wafers. Climv.Ute Wafers. Olives, pin in and Bluffed. 1'ickttd Lime*. udina M .jricuUunJ in oufu-rions a, the neeiing of -he Unap ht-we u:**eu!.g». ani , and thn- kind disposition, are featura of great- value, and to prove real worths thorough testing of the cow’s yield by Lhiscales and r hum is necessary; for a cer in thing, thi- is the only way. Don’t undertake to run matlrs in the dairy room without a thorcaomier. Don’t bt « 1 :m«! try to 3ske good bu ter by^ working the but:erzai: in, when vraahit g it out is so much belt; 1 1 i-1 tik. :v <,u,. in the s temertof cranks who sav that feeding ri t food to coea hts no effect in producitig nch milk. The breeds have to do with it t a degree, bqt onilitv in milk is governed nainly by the food the cow cats, no mat r to what breed she may belong, and the £*gree de pends more upon the individua ability of the cow than upon the breed. you want butter, feed her it by providio; tbe foods that contain the oils*and fnts ot butler as demonstrated I y analjjis and t *s tow, if ■be is of the rigol kind, will do Die rest to your satisfaction; withhold it r.d disap- jv intmvnl will follow. Don’t be stingy with the cakes; feed geneonaly and give them good fesiment; i o'.hing in the dairy stable psyipetten A ground and at best will go tl|->ugh life with only the abilitie- of a 4 ..ud-rate cow, when if the start had been light, and thrift atd growth maintained llloughout, a hrtl-cla>» protitabie dairy anilal would have resulte/l. No dairyman fho raises calves can afford to neglect then! Ilnsv to Tlanage Colored I'arS Labor. It looks as if Col. Albert U|Oox, the Atlanta lawyer, who larmv itl Morgan county, has pretty well solved tlj difficult problem of su-ceMfiilly manv^irf colored farm labor, llis plan is origins, and haV panned out well for himielf. HihtndhA his plantation as well as he spAki, aiA A nauctUrr’a learning*. Kale Kauffman In la Fnrrr.«-i- lu our active, amoitiousstate of society, every young woman feels a wish to be financially-ud» pendent, l'erhap# there is no class of articles more eagerly read than those shout “lluw Women Can Mvke Money/’ All a young girl’s accomp ish- menb. are cultivated or neglected in exact relation to the idea that “there is money ia it.” la restless quest for money, we often lose sight of things which have n their discomfort n> ovtr by fret .irg an*J - j When the blue Mipdsv dawns into more or fit j than its lawful share sf blueness, the only ' 07 • way to meet it is in fcbeerlulness and de- i termination. Tbe wtak may be portioned out, with something tor evon the smalh*t pair of hands, and t he machinery will n o ve along as if by magic. Breakfast out of the way, the chambers aired and put in order, ill accomplished with energy and prompt ness, there may be an hour in which to sit down and look over the morning paper, or set a good many stitches in the bit of re creative needlework. Fjocristioation is more than the prov erbial thief of time; it pnrloins amiability, serenity and leisure. There can be no real rest and no serene enjoyment where there ia the burdensome recollection of tasks unfinished. The inoat disagreeable duty ahould be dispatched first; that out of the way, the remainder may be accomplished with little effort or fatigue. There arc women—and men—who never undertake anything without the prelimi nary wail: “How I dread it!’* 'ihejr are like conteetanta going into conflict, invit ing defeat without fear and shrinking. One gr#st help, while at disagreeable work which is not too absorbing, >s to en tertain tbe ruind with pleasant thought*. Because the hauds are occupied with im p and broom is no reason why the braiu should drudge with them. It it the best of all titms to recall the pleasant incidm‘8 of a journey, or a visit; the bright conversa tion * f friends, or to review one’s reading. Wt have all of us grown familiar with the exploits of highly gifted women who man age I to emph y their wits congenially, al though they were occupied with things that are c unted menial. It may not be possible for tbe average woman to pare po tatoes and emulate the li ersry perform ances of the Brontes, hut it is possible for everybody to train the brain so tbst it need rot be reduced to intellectual drudgery for the sake of keeping the body compaiiy. In all the ordinary circumstaaces of life cheerful r* flections are tne b-st consolers and the sure»t helps in getting over the 0DR YOUNG FOLKS. r ngx:**—Aunt Jo. A Legend. Thera went a widow woman from the outskirts of the eitr, vforsskeu, eping, thro* the fields, by God ‘ten, little child the rcsp:r Death Sha wandered, and tnan ' Htill callios had taken. When, lo! upon a day met a white-robed train advnnclt-g. And brghti> on their golden heads their golden their gold glancing. Child Jevui led a happy band of little ones - Maying, Far from the rest, the widow sees and flies to u’asp btr tr>a»ire: "Whst aiis tbee, darling, that thou mast not tsko with tfcese thy pleasureV” "Ob, moth»r. little mother mine, behind the must carry. “If yon had ceased to weep for me. when Jesus hard and disagreeable places. M. H. K. A Lovrly Loudon llornr. From the New York Tribune. The following extr.ct from a private let ter from London m y interest some read ers who are r« furnishing their houses for the winter months: “How id i that you should ask for aug- piccious value, and for which no cash lions for your new bedroom, when my could iompen^ate. No one can more re- mind is fu 1 of a most lovely one which I j-dee than l do when I see a girl aspiring ! saw yesterday! Fancy a violet room! It ami energetic, improving hrr gifts, and ' is a color so seldom used that ore imagines claiming for herself a high social position,! there may be reaaons for avoiding it—on but no one can more heartily regret the the contrary it is ideal. TbeonelMW h i/i-lii ;n % lff| took “ r ; All the all „..-4 not OT- ,. a Jo.o,,Q*i»-■•fo °r , :y ,u, ;, r j/'T 0 n ,Mm Irftbim la » ;V Shill. Ed pImUdI. h. W«cl t? li'ioloK. II, tr.ublc w*. unrf..»hie libor. !I« cotllil t,[h a* *f>i-1 BOl Kll or »b»nt!.-n. He 1 7*T •I . ifcMfthliol 1 to u-e lh, co'.oral h.lp |irotil»iil And ho ol tne method. <! ij( II, iol.nl thepn t nil. Hrought line.. I'll I inner, ol th-> ^hU Un.L lie yud. ptodbpj. lie the dn>erttnrntt ol the 0 Ji, , .,U he bought more ltnt II. ha. 1 ■■ ■ - - tV.) hro.d ktm now that t-wm in Tnitt The cUrieo ullter hrtecoio, a practical iarnnr and a K> "*S .lock ’^llere U bU plan, simpt.anllid.it la. and ooe worad. rs some sharpJejr did not hit on it before. He contracts for good vague discontent which haunt* so meny youn< women, Id gut tag their beauty, spoiling their db>p>sitione and making them sore plagues to their parents, instead of the bleeaingnthey should be. However, he qu stion is cot one-sided. The parent owes a great deal to the child for whuae existence he ia responsible, and, although I have often heard young m- th ere r. j dee that a new baby ia a gir>, “be cause girls are so much eatier trained than hoys,” 1 umTs of;«u liiouiSii.- “Bui it m harder to provide for the hsppjneM of girls.” The reason for the difference is easily cn. It -ys like an outside life, ami it is easily found for them, and nearly every businetf*. they undertake brings them in toolset with growing influence*. It serms natural for a bov or man to start oat from home after breakfast. If be has no work to take him out, be will temtwhere to loaf. Just ib« oprafc u true with girls. The activity whir> oest suite them is do mestic, and J-*,aiok most women will ad mit that v is a great croaa to have to go !roq> Lome on a dally duty. J know acoreeof stria who tay that really •V-- ttt— u„..~ u i_4-. 4»—•- --hrr kind, “but there Is no money lu it,” ao they grow uneasy; they want the monev mot money, of court?, but the freedom it'givi Wn/-’ ‘“sSluW OoiM *‘T. up » „ too mail, 'lo, m >"•- '•'* ' - .i.t'l »t t 1 '- '“ J ot ' h ' y'* r ’, a ° c! iVrnM .U that.h- =- -*4 b ’ .hi. lo l-.rti b, «.v^«-yteia2l?JS3K t i.rMlic. ot bU bu.intt*. - by li.. .-‘i-''*' 1 " Vi:,/:.'/", c!rxJio. ..d Dlli.ra, kbould eocotir.«, htulro. lb. mu.unx.ilnl xuljWton i>rt wages, VlO and $12 per month aW. He * . ..... half in cash, reservifoe other toU P uVtil th. tud ol hand, (or ii.it.nc., net* *• » , .n'j-T.-- turn ot tt„ i- the , D j v.iu nilil tb- uml ol th. I lor th. dSXjoTiiCoo Which U.-. Xr H. Tt. it «d ■ 1 ... iri mo - Iwc. t— h. h*. ^ ih. u.**t»r to h«.ow»_Jl -b ,v.« »it. -it •» Pf- j Kvcthir, »ad*t .'t t-oot ■< q«cypi ,,,’v .ml rfiutr^t. il'» birr-r .ml holding hist t T Tt r^ ^ d.do'i know bow Y* 1 mf,nth. Whon l,.r,»t cutr.„d tl. , • l.na r.1,. B.b»oU the »<I- ",kr tin. i. «•• l.»ud to W Un» tho h£K inraij ’"sow h/oORkt' «"»«>• ball 'ot bu earo-d Tra.M. «t the othvf man who is M l tooui the m 'derate uoahle is that I J pa?. * n ‘ ! i P 1 ? 1 .* NVhat he •f otl or things Cox’i ill do to Ull, by will i ll next time. 'v T'i • I., in. -171.C !•- t 'li,,. p'.'M ■ - , . ... i°t ” X ',' bu prnlt to do.thie. j bn-ine.- act h.a wofkod Uk h. mat r-tri.Tt bta ku»«,, Xher. »r, to' “V lV aeaaou lollo.iris tonoinf ,h»» * ,n0 w/;i. « OOa npon l-cnl".;on Ior At > h "* » " “ KfiSaSSaljpjSjia- that lancer, may ® u « »uod how to manage thwr t-iiam mex* «nce«»fuUy. _ rnrtns Pwrk, Frem the haseeican Cultivatoro c sasfiWS&SM) an*, w SSataSsanai Vi o n^’oir.u““‘» d ".Tty*. h /X 2?S. .m. up car.iully in emit. UuSTTot too clo^ -n that th* '“Ok- can ln.lT circulau aud reach e.err part “P^airtn-ulbe porklor.bout l « •«WJ!SJfi sMSLTJS hundred F-t» ■!«»»*. 1‘rtm the “preThS a-blrTYr from the ir ,cu has. not already done 'll ia ti.ie to wean tea lattcolta. X, allow th. colt to (olUrw tt oncer - - - MB«hao thannot ' M ,1 I- " , . TnUlaa Rood tooolh m opal .... plentj <-t drybeddlagtiaier. n0 ^ n p g the!r.k.o^,.t«lnpS • W. are anv in the walls an Vet- r.,* *Vrre they shoul^Varm Late *«*. ha. uo. U- mo. m 1 it that the inor. mature graifum- Tr.a. It ia necmaaiy to kgo >d grain ration tor work boreea nil! turned out on . . in Lsdy M *s bouse—her own bedroom. I have mire <dy told you what admir.xb^ taste she displays everywhere; but thi particular apartment quite .outshines the rest. The d*do ia paimeJ iu white enamel, the paper is broad y striped with two shades of violet, fiuisr ed at tbe top with a friers of clemuif. The principal furni ture, chair?, and writing table, and bed, etc., w«re all white; the curtains of chintz with a pretty pattern of wisteria. Lady went «-Maj lug. - .»nuii! have been* Jeans pisylng.’l THE USE OF JOHNNY CRAFF. From Youth's Companion. A miserable man flicked the maple loaves with his cane while he walked leis urely d«*wa the street. The miserable man had an abundance of money, which cou d not buy him health. He had also a fasci nating wife, whj sometim* s—not of.c i— N ea a few months at a timv in America with her husband, and he had some highly eJucaud and beautifully mannered chil dren, who wrote English with a foreign idiom. “Total cessation from busiuew, and bet ter go Sou’li,” were tbe words which stirred the mouth under the inn gray moustaoLe. Th*y were part of the cootore adrice. “At 45 a man ought not to ha a w reck, even if a /nan has worked hard and lived well—'not wisely but too well,' as tbe doctor says. I hate stale ep : grams, especially on ny-rff, “Cgh! Ia this ihe sunny South? I am chi Kil through. Never suffered so much from cnld in my life as in tbe-e warm cli mates. How do those ff »wera have tbe face to b oom in such a raw atmoapbere? I supimee th?>y are stronger bectuse,al less*, they don’t have to eat. If they had to board at a Southern hotM now”—he laughed at his fa cy. In spite of his cast-iron business princi ples, b* h -d a whimsical streak through his nature. His intimates said that he gratified his whima recklessly, but very quieuy. He threw a disparaging glance at the parole come of wi»ter>a dnn. liog over the ancient hcu-c fronts, aud ihestilea bushes which made a soft glory of pink in the ga'dens. Rotes wtra in blotui, and the map e leaves were red, became it was an April day in Georgia. Ooe saw asucc*a- «ion of gardens all d^wn the street, aud back of them the oid-fashioned mansion:', with their two storied “galleries.” The corn*- house waa ot snuiuer gay little Quveu Anno cottage, psitted half a dozeu colore. It wav a new house and not expensive—a thrifty voung peta- ant, as it were, amid a band of ruined no bles: in fact, it had been built by its owner, a young Northern carpenter. “Why tan t the little chap out,” lie mut tered, ‘ with hie little shawl crossed over , hit chest, and hU poor ih:le bandaged cried the millionaire, With an extraor dinary accent of emotion; and instantly he strods ahead. “I hope '—began the clergyman and stopped, for he could eae. The' carriages were drawn in front of tire house; they could see the house plainly now, the little grave-faced company standing about the door, the streamer* of black crape tied with white ribbon fluttering from the panels— the clirg*man remov.d his hat, the mill ionaire dragged hU, with an abiupt mo tion. low down over hia eye?. They could get no nearer than the yard, for the small rooim> were filled. The mill ionaire, leaning against a tree, his hat over hia eyes, could hear the murmured talk. Fragment* of sentences told him the story. Tne child had caught cold, he was only ill a few da>*, nor did he suffer. His last words were: “Mimmi, te 1 me something pretty.” The mother was quite prostrated •ith grief, but the father had seen toevery- thing himeelf. “Looked like 8am wanted to do it,” said a man to the clergyman; “he said 'twsa the lasthecould do for Johnny. But tbe’a all broke up, sick a-bed. They waa fond and prnu l of him as though he was an an- ge t. Beckon he is, now.” The man gave his eyes a rough smear; and the millionaire pulhd his hat lower. Keeping the same attitude, leaning against the tree with folded arms and hia hit over his eyes, he waited until the people on MARKETS. I Tbla Day. |Y«-t<may. Inferior and Stain*.. 17.50. 1 f (« a* I’l.'fc I- . .. :.d fair—Short rrtns ?!• :'; clear r c- '’ ] ;' r 7:4,:; ,.r: r '/'v t- rm '. S .IJ.; tea. k Our local market is steady at quotatkma At & o’clock race!i* < were as follows: LOCAL a ECU FT*. plained iliai »ui uau ihrui this simple material because they were cssily cleaned and could be often renewed. Above the fireplace there was a mirror with a dash of clematis snd w steria painted across the corner, while below was a moat comfortably upholster.d Hat aro usd the fender. This waa covered with some rather handsome mater ia', plu»h, J think, aad of the mm violet boo. la* bed waa a veritable work of art, with ! hand*? Poor Johnny! Bull think tRey hangings and coverlid in pale violet *itb, elaborately embroidered with wisteria ana clematis. The dressing table also wss de lightfully draped with thi* very decorative work, and 1 must not forget to tell you of the ingenious Device us«d to ketp it c.e*r. -n-J fte- from !?!• snsti's of London. A piece cf plate g'aia, cut exactly to fit tue table, which ttu run ruled out in front, wk .ilfli J 8W, 44*'7*5T i 2 m -Ail :a». J-r. «4J 311 2T3 f’ 4 470 0110 141 tOi 84.1 «T| 040 IR55 COMPAEATIVB BTATESEXT. Ftock ou band Sept. ! Received ulncv Sept. 1 _ f? 3A»3 If* 13 :i Ij 16.456 «?,*«• wav) Thus far this ttjjm Hbam 1W.3I1 "Hr* Vona. Nov. VS.—Noon—Cotton 25 —Turnemto* n-ro , . -Uued. fl.lt/; cood Si.IS*- lar f.rii.f!A\, Cniie :un«t.a, *!? hard. glAO; yellow dip tUOl virgin. fi.gt& ” Cbablistok. Nov, -5.—Turpentin* firm .. I 36Mt. Bono qnlet-food strained, f l.a 0X1,1 u Savannah. Nov. 33.—Turpentine at steadv i? Itostn firm at f i.23al.i)6. y * I New ^obk, Nov. 25.—Rosin quiet and flm. i --•trained common good. 9l.48al.6a TmS tine dull and eaay-40 f. 1 Woof. New Yore. N'ov. £5 —Wool firm un iI mestlo fleece t la-' 9; pulled iTaSt: Texa» q .a t yy*°** > MACON MARKET REPORT OoEErxTrD by W. G SoLoxoa & Co, Mock* mid Itoud*. STATE BOKDS. Stocks and bonds very dull, owing in « Ur*, measure to the present scarcity ot a&rrmZj* 9 du. TO*,* 44 ** | _ '10> Geoijla 7|per cent, due 18W, January Georgia • per —» ana July.... Georgia <1* per cen tiaiy aim July ... Georglarper cent, gold quarterlies; uliug Orlean*, VM. Futures opened steady. Evening—Net receipts 1358; gross ,6,1W; sales 114.ICO. Future* closed steady. Below we give tire opening and closing futurs quotation* In New York fortbedar. [Open’d[Closed.| Open'd Clos'd. Mot ~j Tt3~ ITlaTx' Vsj^ZT. .... 0/5-CC April...I 8,68 ! 0157-8*1 Oct.. Livaaroou Nov. _4»lneea moderate cas middling* 5.5-16: sales 10,000. American S2 0; speculation and export AW; reve pta 45.4X1,40000 Aitortcan. Futuresopeuedsteady. 4 p. m.-Futures closed barely steady. Below ws si** tbs ouvutn* aid dosing futurs dotation* in Llvsrpool for tbs day: | ujeueu. IJp.nU4p.ra. November. 3 B • 1 h evrm her-December | - LCct tnbrr-Jat.uitry.. ;5 H-61 Jacuanr-Frbniary... ,3 13-64—18 64 february-March 3 16-04—15-64 Mar b-April Ift iiMd-:h tfi Airil-May ft 21-6 -0 61 fiiy-June [ft 2i-' -4—i£R4 Juur July 6 24 61 :•••••. ” 3 564 3 3 64 3 3-6* ft 11-64 5 1854 5 ltt 61 3 19 61 3 21-ttl 5 33-61 have got bis hands in a^ap* now, Whst a sight, though, when 1 first mw him! Hi* head all tisd up, and his poor face— but for that hideous disease, he would be pretty child, too.” “He has violet eyes ju»t Jlkt my Bruno’s. ! wssdcrrd how bis ptrcn'.s esuid !st= i«| such id obj -cl at first, and now I am fond l * of th* chti'l n»y»*lf f take him up and carry d him. Abao'utely like to hear him chatter. -• {laid over the cover, which of course sh< They go front home to bu teachers or j through iht crnstal. j Bat be is inch a’ plucky little fellow, and tltrkf, and there is waste of precious m»- ■ “The silver brnshes and ornaments were when he hsfu’t thus* horrible paroxvstnf. terial on all sides. ... i da» ! i fly bright, reflected a* they were in when be wants to tear himarif to pieces, I The eolation of this trouble is proper I ike glass. Have I succeeded in giving roti suppoee, he i* aa jolly! Ilow can he be? appryctalion of the daughter at home. Ac- : any idea of this most»n tessful room? T1 Wcv, c.nrid**r it: that mite, not 4 years fnr,!n.'> l/i - .p A - . 1.1... >k.< . Z :. . i l. j.n . } ■ • * i v i 1.1/ . 1 . • to carry his little friend down the path where those small feet had so. often pa - tered gaily to meet him. He took off his hat aud held it before his face. After a little while he Icoked up, frown ing. Tho line of carriagee waa moving away. There waa no hearse; hut in the first carriage a young man, with a hand- ktr hi f to his eyes, sat alone beside the little fl iwer-covered white ct.ffio, as if he sre taking care of his boy to the last. The millionaire looked at theclergvman. “Well,” said he, wiih a kind of savage abruptness, “was there any uie? Good morning,” and he wu off at a swinging gait down the street. The echo of that question was in the clergyman’s ears all that day and the next. Halt nenperttely, at last, toward evening, he went to the Graff's houie, whether to comfort them or himself he truly could not have told. A kindly neighbor showed him into the pretty, simple parlor, in which he aw only one 0 ject, above the trantel-piece, the large ptiolograph of Johnny taken during one of his “better spells.” The childiab face, a gentle, d Bcaie, e ven beautiful face, the m ak of iu di-ffgurtme it thus removed, ■reoiid to smile upon him. He turned from it to see the father adv toeing toward him; and, with a t..uch of amaz'ment, he twrceived that through the young man’s haegard and tea -named features shone a radiance of exabat on. He did not look iheleae unhappy, but another vivid emo tion waa contending with hia unhappiness. In a few broken words he told the e'er- gyman what bad happened. The night before h* had received a note from the millionaire saying that ha had already placed in the hands if Mil able persons a *nm sufficient to purchase and endow a children'* hospital, "in memory of his little frbnd, John Griff ” “And it i* to b-t called the Johnny Graff Hospital, sir,” said ths father, ateadyit.g nis v.'icc, “snd Johnny’s picture—from that—is to hang in ths hail, and the child ren am always to know ’twaa him gj them ths place. I h*dn’t thcu<ht tnc._ was any comfort left us, but when we read that note written so kind, us if ho wa* grieving too, and we thought ol all the poor IltUe child en that would be spared 10 their parent*, maybe, ou account of our boy, we felt like we hadn’t ought to grieve so like them without hope. And-and— the hardest thing was that we’d new r have w _ w t 00 more to do for him: but now, what we 1 "wOnuu** 5uv.CL-t'otton maikotsteady do for them will U dwio* for hiiu, and wo —rfi can do ell our lives. And he will know.” j That ereslog the mlUion&lrs rccrivtd a letUr from the clergyman. It containtd ODiirthfwe words, sign'd with his name: DearM.-: Th# other day I was not per cent.. 1836, January “ 1! ftA1LBOAB BCXD6. Augusta and Knoxnlle first mort- 50,421 Sn5 e July r C€nt " dUe 1900, J * au **y jo 2J.-60 I Macon and Covington 6 per c*r 4?Mnl due 1*15, March ■ coupons, nominal Central Railroad J 187,103 I cent, due l» ^5u1y. ................. due 1*15, March and September — nominal a ailroad joint-mortgage'' 7 ., due 1803, January X Nov. Noon-HL-otton market cojuiubds and Rome first mortiraee, New Yora, Nov. 25.—Cotton market quiet: . . . . . bans 684; cet receipts 5 9;<l: gross--; sales 176. Fxports—To Britain, ~ ‘ " tment ‘ ‘ ‘ ‘ ■ , 6 per o and July jq Columbus and Wesniru first mort- case, indorsed e per cent, I9ii. January a r.d July Georgia railroad non-mcrtgace c r ■■■' July 107 FI cent, 1897, January awl July.....X.106U icru I Georgia railroad non-mortgage tt per ^ I cvOi, Yj&, January and July ... v RAtLRuAO bTOCES ATD DESEM Atlanta and West Point stock w?*^*^* Atlanta and Wqst Point deLenturm...iiio Georgia Rnilrosd stoou <jno Central Hall -oad stock n* Central Railroad debentures <j7 Augusta and Savannah Railroad stock ......no Southwestern Railroad stock pjv Northeastern first mortgage, indorsed 7 ter cent, 1WU8, May un Novem ber • no Ocean tftcairshlp Company indorsed, 6 per cent, 10M. January and July 100 Geo gta Southern and Florida Rail road, first mortgage tt per c 1X7. January and July South G» o gl* and Ftoriila Rail: 7 per cent., indorsed by »ut< Georgia, due 1«W 118U Uttf I Savanuah.Amertcua and Montgomery 1 6 per cent bonds, due 1 19 06J j local wxamEa. Macon per cent bonds, due 1910...._..ii6 Mfu i a Gas ca l Water bond consols.. »i Macon Fire Insurance Company • cent, > luilmni* mid King uinnnd U 7- 6 o;«i: grow* - : n*K*i 1*»JH: to France 683.741.. Oalveatox. Nov. 25.—Cotton market steady; mklddhngon; net receipt* 4.55: gross 47T5; •*»-■• 804; woes 83i8i Fsports-To continent- coastwise ; to Great Britain 350<; to Frau- , , - spit nen First Nitkmal Rank... jtoaroLK. Nov. CA—Cotton market sternly; | Merclianu* Natlooal Bank 1« rnkt iiiiK 0; ust recelpw 5 «; gross -V43: ami Mace Koyians Iank. . .. ..KX) ; -lorfc W4.T. Kxport— 1 To Great | tVntral City Loan and Trust Cbm- Jlnna "acou stock m.....'.m.J11S is* lfac n Couitn cMon stock 900 SIO Macon and Bavaunab Construction Cvmpony stock ........._..1I5 pn PAX* STOCK. Capital Rank stock 00 M 2UU; spinu< Britain France coastwise 131; continent 4W; i nominal; . .ddllngs 0*6; net receipts —: gross t*S; sale* —, ••'inner* —: •uwk ;o>|, *—— roaatwtse —; to Great Britain 2278; to Hmi continent —; to k ranee —. BOtTOK, Nov. <5.—Cotton market steady; mid- dltaas 0 7-10; esc receipts i» 5- rr.-*s .*. vo: salsa —; stcck —. Exports—To Great Britain AIV; F^t|«rtk-Tu Great Britain — coounrui -. ntu. N-.r. r.-Cottoo market q-' t; mMumoEs n: ast receipts.u; cross & : saw* —; Mock Mkt Lxports 'io Great Britain cooatwtM—> hAvaxsAK. Nov. 27.—Cotton market vry dull; middling*^; net receipt* «t;t; gross *7»j sales 17.0: * tuners —; stucE 1 6 88. Exporto-To Orest Britain to continent ttfcr, to coast panjrstgCL ... Union Havings Bank ^ I'rnlta end Nuts. Cranberries, Cape Cod, So. Figs, dryer, choice, Cuiraou. 7c. Apples, f 11>>. cording to cytr Am r.cau ideas, that home i am null* sure you will find it different is the happiest which can do without tbe from cveryon* elseV and that you will like “htriil girl,” but daughter* who fill this it immenwly. The effect of a pretty roca placs.lb4 bum# than fill it, complain that | —especiallv a bedroom—ia prmluced, not . . ,*/ _^ ie , w, * er ' |l er * [ by the use of rich stuffs and elaborate dec- ' H rations, but by taste in colors and careful arrangement ot the simpieat detail*.” Morjr of a Mckrl, The Annitton Arguv tells a veiy inter- otlng atoiy of a nickel. Ladies, try tit experiment and give the proceeds to the church. The Argus sty*: N rue time ego the Lsdus' Aid Society of this city agreed to invest a nickel in some kind ol article and sell it at a profit and reinvest is something else and so on, to speculate on this capital for two weeks and h« how much each ooe could make. One lady on the same eviniog <f the is the trouble, if a daughter gets fi a week (a moderate estimate of what wo ild have to be Paid to a *ervant <, that Is $101 per year. Her Loard. at $’» a week, is ) per year. Her Ulsure, when »hectu Co much of her own sewing, is worth enough to raise her earnings to *}<j0. The home haiinimsi, tho calm rest-feeling, the healthful nabiia of such a life are worth what cannot be counted in dollar*, and we believe such a just financial arrangement w .uld Le appreciaud by any senvitne girl and give contentment to many of even *u- perior ability. It U, after all, that small sum, 1104 In cash, which makes the plan satisfactory, i meeting bought a cabbage with her nickel. A girl can do a great deal with that, and ! She carried tt home and sold half of it to an*t of lbs in prefer b» do their »; ending [ her neighbor for a nickel. Hhe invested or isvirg. To have ooe a personal e*. that iu vinegar and picklid the remaining penus tc manage give* tuixu.f at and ex- half and told tbe pickle for !!A cents. 8be pomace. • then bought 30 cents worth of doth and a Tbe faiher shoo Id not think hisdaogb'er | spool of thread and made it np into three welt treated because he boards her aud aprons, which she sold for 35 cents each, gives her occasionally a new dress, but, on and took the 75 cents and bought molas*ea the otlirr head, a girl should urt lose sight *od gave a candy pu ling to the children, of the value of her home privilege*. * making them pay lOcan‘1 a plate for the The wife’s empty pockctbook is souther I candy. The molaseea made twenty-one evil against which we might militate, bat, plates of candy, ao aha made $2 10 on one if a wife hasn’t grace anc sweetness enougn ' nickel in teo weeks’ time. How money to gel herself well provided for, it ia diffi- will grow if proiwrly used, cult for a stranger to adv i»e her. _ _ „ I know a fine woman who ha* been sue- I Two Invaluable Kerlpes. cessfully married twir«. Her teccnd bus- J J • hUken.—blew an old chicken band was well-to-do, and I have heard her omii t,;e m#st the bones. Du say that when he cuortcd her the told him | not ,alt ^ «»ter. Break every joint and -yon know a woman can talk pretty *** ‘t simmer a few minut.ta lotg r; re plainly when a man court* her- “I Lr«;- move the meat fr».m tho bonee; chop it Proves that farming 1 ^hat $ 1- at the en.le him gjw her occasionally a new dress, but, on ^ took the 75 cents and Iwughl molas*ce jiw.lt, ri|hl IkMe-RJi, ..let, li m»k» a. hiitJ-io- ' '' ‘ g| mm u»» lo no tohU -KW.-^ !ia,.rioufc , t ri ult o.cr lli. m.u.r .ml ,, v . iTe , ,io Urwerr * work. - h- mul. p, D j CQ »oJ ihkt laproT... ■ ■ i T>ii, pi«> >* i*». 1 *4—" of brown »U«*r lu - Li.r,.!- P^kdowr. for two »«k. mor., ■Sfimk fenu In wwm wtu. SZ ih* U dean wet. ol ntrf, Tin,' dab, which h.T. WcnM«f«dlo a d to; hua udlaato I* ■ : .. re. Mb. ked iteo b. Itfi haw- etr-u. -**re»- i .. winter T-^o oott atwt "m. Sow b the lima WiejaBj .rowlnir and in k 1 ^ j *°®“ fSkSi^om^ ton** l^epc; condiikia .1 ynang l» jap*)r EdncatioD, v »i“ do -i —- lur I.rm. than .ntlr. mvon. i<«cU w.U »o>e lor « u will notl j of e*.ip«-r*» “rSJIJraKSSMi-. tale about Mttjhg 8pli[lKlnMhl| reasons. 1 Isia is sure, I will never s*k a man for money, and what little bit I have i shall not use for household expenses.” Of course, he made her generous i romisee, and, what is better, be kept them, hue said that every Monday ao*n eg of tier married life, withuut a wo<d, be lsid$‘J5 os a cer ain corner uf a certain mantel- p'vce. Only once did she go to the accnt- tomed corner to fit d it empty, but very soon after the received a metsige that he bad forgotten, bnt he would “make it all right.” Not every man could afford so much, but a fsw dollars, according to cir. urn- Mane**, will have the same delightful eft*cl. I tell you, a plan like that will make the domestic machinery run like magic. bread ot Mark. Prom the Inter Ocean. The drudgery of work depends a great deal upoo the spirit in which it is under taken. Id this country, where servauis are uncertain, coy and hard to pl-a^e, the mis tress of the house is frequently left in the lurch, to thiak, pita end do for her family alone ard unaided. This usually happens »b-n c mpany is expe ted; wten there is illness in th« hou* hold, or some impor toot event m impending. It is discouraging, to put it mi’dly, but in oil the troubles that fall te the lot of h :uaai y su'u'iparion is apt to l« datker thtit t? reality. Itbdrpre*MDg to have Monday morn ing dawn upon domestic chaos; he weekly wash immiuentfOad one pair .f h«nd* lu do the straighten log up, the cwokieg and sewing for husband oad children. It i« not j al «ays pleasant to have the unexpected -to amvt at the wrong time; the cl bro.n Kim 1 totou! Wcrtplulu *«»« ««i ‘“ !0 - i '“ c * ' ; season with salt and pepper. Pulver- ed.! n crackers and stir them into at with a lninpof bu ur the tiae of a walnut. Pour th* liquor in the pot over the mix are; weight it down and set in a cool place. A shallow earthen baking d*»h or milk pan is best for ibt purpose. When ready to serve, cut in thin * I ices with a sharp katlo. Often such a dish of meat will serve twenty persons when the pievee of chicken will not begin t • go rcund. It U to rich thit a piece two inches iquate it alt that one can t» to eat. Jellied Meat—Take four pigtfeet with leg* to fi’st Joint; »o*k aud scrape until ibo nughiy c esnsed. Put io a pot tf water wi huut salt and b»il until the bones will fell out. Lift the m« a carefully from th* liquor and set aw*y to ctol. * Pour the liquor into a jir, and wbtn cool remove the gttaxe. Take a good-sized beef shank, sawed atd cut so as to fit into the kettle. Boil in unsalied water no il the meat fails to pieces. Remove it from the liqu> r. Next day cut the meet of beef and pig*, feet into small bits, not mincemeat; put the jelly left of the fret into a kettle; add ail the meat, mixing together, and heat to tbe lh>Uing point. 1 ben »•**—n with red or white pepper and salt. If liked, a little of the bvel liqu r can be odde % bnt i can be used for e up. Pour the content* of the pits into mold* ana when cold it will turn oat in thtpeeof most delicious jellied meet for tea or lunch. Java must be n moral plica to live in; we never *e«- it advertised except as "pure Java.”—Puck. Burkina's trier* Waive. Thebe*> salrsm tbesrocid for mu. brvhv* old, has snffvrvd half a dozen times as mtuh as I in my whole life. Where’s the juitice in that? “Then Uk* th* cave of h!s parents. His mother never had the comfort of a baby to kit* and cuddle and faugh over; Ji hnny was never a baby: he waa atwaya a 'little sufferer—Ah, good morning:” II* addre*s*d a clerical-looking gentle- an in black, with a white necktie, a kind face and a smile. ' Forgotten h!s name,” said the million aire to himielf; “but I’ll wager there is a reverend before it.” They walked along together. “There ia a li'.tle child on this street.” said the clorgvman, “in a hom I am devnly interested. He has a mystcifous skin dis ease. which sometimes makes him suffer terribly, and never quite leaves him. It is nothing at all hereditary; all tbe doctors —they have been to every doctor io the dty, and t) all the quaoks and loditns and fei'h curcrs beside—all the doctors agree that it is only temporary, that be will outgrow it eventually; but he has bad it siuce infancy, oxd U is worse Instead of better. He bu periods, his ‘better spells,’ u his mother says, when tb* discs ss almost disappears for a week or two. Then his parents grow very hopeful; but in a little while—ima single day, very likely— he may be ai bad os ever.” “Is he their their only child?” “Yes, ar d born some yean after their tnarrivg-. and therefore the more eagerly welcomed. Thrre Uone redevmirg feature in th# cs*e. 1 never saw socb aU*chm#at, suck divo ion * i paren's lo a child. You expect it in a m.ther*but the father h»rv i«, if possible, more devoted than tbe mother. "tiome friends of mine live opposite rrn, and I have so often ieeo him even- j;*, when he hu come h. me from bis work, sluing with the child in the ham mock, or walking with it, or poshing itn 1 it lie carriag-. 1 ao to'd that every morn ing at dayliaht he gtl* op and takes into aLOther r om, so that hi* wife may iVp, hrc*u-t tb* poor little creature’s nignu are always bad. “But they are food of him,” taid the lillionairw; “.bey never lose patLnce?’ “Newt!” the cle gyman answered, orally. “1h*y are n>t only fond, but proud of him. The child is a winutng little fellow, too, a great favorite In the ne'ghborho<>d. My friends tell me there L a N-*rskars gentUatis whs takes a great neat of notice of him. He takes him to drive, and sends hi u fruit, and bu bousht him the most expensive lots. I be! ore the parents are as happy ovrr the rocking Johnny Graff. You hkve answered it yourse*/. God bleu you!” LITTLE BESSM'PUZZLE-BOX# 5®. ANAGRAM. (October Birthdays). Mr. U. U. A. Harriot; 10-31 (a fsmtls sculptor). Meta Bnesd; IMS (poet and critic). Haver M. Hill; 1*0' (nvo ofUt). Josh T. hum 17V5 (poet). Jss. Heck lath Kennon; 1S31 (novelist and Poet) AT. WORD HEXAGON. J*. • • --pts SiTSS; . u lllOM rX^Mt- L'rUaln to courtwl«* 7W; to cot Mi-cft.t. Nor. V5.—Cotton DiarEft cssv; t* Id- dliaxt 9 asi rwcriiss tt* : rroia tl o. tales ao. 'tocjf 2 ft 3. Fjport*—Toervostwiss l«Q; IO eoatitwoV—;tnGm.i i.rl’Mit ft tl: ut Frauc.» —. B sarats, Sor. sr.-Coctoa market fln.i; UdaUDfS 9; act receipts t sit; shlpmsnM tl §. lit* o, stock hju.ft?. Atnt-KtA, Nov. ‘-5.—Cotton market steady; naMduax* W; net rscctpu uxA; stupoicou 12-1; ; cetta* i iog are ooi a^reetWe or reiMring, boil a ; wet rscctpu gross ftll*: • ftu; Uiporu—To Great Britain —; coastwise 417; to coo lutes i - ; Fnutot -. Grain mid Prwvtalwtis. Nsw Yore, Nov. S3— Southern flour Arm an i <iul«—common P* fair extra SaXPu; good to chose* extra, gUXmft.t-; city twill pat- eats f4.S; wlwtar worst, low grades S . fiw fair to fawey fS.Mw4.47., pILoU $U3ol.M; Wrair1iisfS.srAl.air; ft». r*teots |«.ft w4.. 3; super- flue ftOASAI; Bos fUOaLIL Woe at o^.td **•••••►* ; uu«l .. tl WtMl it«avy—NV. trad red, !• 4t| in eiwsuir. Options ruled weak •w. ijr a mi te u^tl^aed on V »•».#.»* tiuytng ir- At*, ciossu wttn Ire* seller bMs lwl-»w y*sier- d y\vftwe. whebt momentary Udurbwnc* and tat on failure colioi weaknetw- No. 8 red. No- vmftw W4: !»•*« Mite: tuaU; May 1^. Corn cl< sail Freer—Na 8 nrd, rofoaPi& in rletat'ir. Optk.ns i-loseu lower tba • > orjay; freely o:TerM;<wsy has scIHuk- November lie- cmubcrOM; May tt Oats uu 1 «.ui t - ~~ itenatuw, flMaSO). Lemons, 14 20*4 50 per box. Y londa v*rs"j?es none In tbe i Nut*-Tanwgoma nlmoods Prince** HaprrsbeU. S9ax7e per twuud: walnuts lie per pound, Freoch walaou i*c | peund; pocana IPaUo per p.uad, peanuUtK P TuSS5?-New in markH fl SO to 15 75 pw>*. | n*w Locdon layer* ps «s to »s w per oox, e Muscats. $3 ou per box. Canned Good*. Appl-a-1-pound con*. Sl.tft per doses. Wac berriew-8-pouod can-s fL© per 4om. . Corn-J-pound cans, ♦>» per dotro tolfOpw , - pouadi 5 ro am car*, i »ptr -7.0 lor quarters, and 1 Zt for Axes—8 M per dotm. Bar Lead-Sc per rewind. . ^ buckets—I'alata, I *» per dosu; ccdsr, thns hoop*., a 25. Uurds -f’otton, 8 5rt. Iha u-Trao*. ft into itn per doeeo. Bore - MawIIIa 17 *. fllsel IS^c, cotton UhA Well Bucket*—8 W per dotwa. Wirs-BwtMMl wire P«r pound. ^ Pboes-Horae 4 hi iwr kex. mule shoes l» bhovet* -Am» » ou per doatn. OhoP-DropI 73i«r sack. Ptficnt-l is per doom Tuh*~l'4Jntrd 2 50, cedar 4 25psr dotea Nalls-*4»k.w. fir.. xn<- l tt per doeew. I!iuw t—Ir.>n hHiud S 30 to i Mawsnrrs- Far nest 1 *». gaag*. 1'low Hurt, 'llunni Me. I'rr^iuonTSa dilntaar. IiSTo “ to htyj tww.M tote. Wfcrreo tbee tag, 6c; FrWe offenv •bf**’ Hie, 5c: Griffin S-1 ihirtwg. I l-4c; FraUtiDs •«*. * 1 kklag-Gcesn 5 {^^IlUmer.«12; Hawtt-J " ‘ llamlH.n A A. 151-2; «»»«««»*? sc; bbetuckrt.fi M Jf, m N lick ec; ckriU AliV^Ss^k xTlfc? f to 4, the race did wlai (for Governor), ft to 3 lselnreof kin; 3 to a, a rsttling din. J to 1. a Scottish word; - , 3 to 1. a good conferred! -hfc£u ft to s, to growl la heard. •lXg& •J to .t an EogHsh streams 3 to 4 guides every team; 6 to 4. hit poets s gleam. T -Vv 38. WORD bQUARE. 1. A South American an mat; L A fsmale cbarscur In “Arabian N^ghtm'' 3. Are somw- tlrne* sugar-ceated; 4. An arm of the sea. A Stand for ‘••lleneo 1 ' tn music. (Answers nest weak.) ANSWER! TO LAST WEEK'S PUZZLES. SS.-Eutgma: Thanksgiving. 31.—Double acrostic: U' E A T H E R 1 N C O N N U L I 8 8 O V A LANG ERA i p. w a o m r. ARRIVAL Nf A R 6 II A L 45. -Charade: Axmicster (Axe-Mlastev). Lor i Tennyson h&a left Aldwortb, bfo •uu.u er house, situatotl on the Blackrfown I Mia, with the object of w ntering in ib» more genial climate of the Isle of Wigi.^asbu bean hia custom for soma years. • To Our Subscribers. Do not wait for ag«n:a, but rail upon your postmaster in i get b m to tend iu your tines to the 1 ell7uaPit J xamine et olejui HLhJwCoU Hurt*, f «k~ ivtioaased otl ;t—crude p l *e ; ; jckow prime f-L 3£.l'. l'l.t quMt .Kl iim f o. rxira p • WW It. ''. U q — sceauy •'•a mesM, |7Aa. I plate. |7.0 aT.SO; beef ham* dull’ u aft tl J*; uerred bref ."M ro-etty extra mess India IW^Oair.OOper JMoowwoa CWt Btiu .... at —ptekMM baffles, U puuwds Ski HAled ahowfosrs, . ;ptck!^J kuuft ‘JwmW.. iu*.... short ck-ar ffijOR • « d saskr a d "«>.'erw»*,y j hor-c and whst little Johnny calls his j the label on your paper and He how yon •swpuowa, wad pore.4>ety t box. Fer ante by H.J. Lamm A tom. ^ *Chu-chu-csr»’ as lie ia.” It was characteristic of the millionaire that he *h< tiM not confeaa to being the Northern g» r» Uman, or even that be anew the cl i d. He merely shrugged hU thou • der» with the remark: “Nature is a was e» fol J d *. DmI it ever i trike you how prod igal she is of suffering?—^tuff ring that g ev for nothing, I moan. Now what b the use of that child’s lift of agony? If he o u'dn’t be born well, why heed be be b rn»t all? Wh re is the are of poor lit'!* Jut.nny (irafl?” “Ah, th. r- is a uwe yon will see,” re plied the o< her; “he may get well sr.d le . cue* moral y and sp*ri a ally all hi* life for thU ha»d Iwginninm Aad the di-ci pi ne of eoffe ing to bi« parent*—•an’iyon *♦« yonrtcif bow it may already h »ve mod* them gently, on-- n*h, tender-bearud—I your pir.l n, • at arethoHcaniagew”- “Ttey *re : irtiy »t- pping at Graff’s! and. Lamp Chimn0% v. May • - »Wy adthrs _ „ v „ her 90H; May 6-; No. 8 apvt 4 aMH- Hoi a Amosksg.x X, Wc. easy amiuuC* -cotawmo io cIwmcv ftbi* t lTlwu-Brrw ek, 4 l-8c; ChaityvOak. Oju.m o, imtM Mt^ttly, ck»4ng W down t * 3 up- * Nuvenibrr fl7.-iisl7.3J; Doccmlier fl7..0al7.l4; 8 l it. Martha Ra^dogton^*^ tpM RJo quk-t. sat firm-iair U “ c-rrees lif,. Hugar, ras, quk-t ami steady —fa r rvflulu. 4?i; rwnftrUuwala UJ-te»u B^fiaM*; mined quM and ** tt 3-ltt; cut losf Sif’v Sft'oGK* "t • 5-1 J; off “A'* moulit A. 5fo; a. a A, tt 3-ltt; eoareefcoaort* A tfft. Mola«vw fxiei^ii Ui muml—5.-ir*t l“iq. New v/rleans quiet and nrm-upea xrtua o.uitwoa to Vair. arntt; Hiei Mrm.y with n moderate de steady- •: cru»L*.tt li; IO' ,; cuis>, 6 4; yeiM' Merin.aclr, tte; /^fibyrwbslon flobdft BUtsr siolid*. S ! 8c; Kki l aaihrt;. V. Xntttlng cuttea 89c jar pound; bttfi tkrtad -4 [*r |r..JU L Dunkirk, 8 3-1. C'onwtr) Frsduce, Apples Drteit t to 8c. I)rWi.ache—itrictljrNo. 1 ported, caoupw pound. No 84 C Poultry-Fr STfJSft ddekw) U«SB«Tlwos iuc"aaiebt Hre tnrkry* l pair: Mvc tpwse. 4tfc;duck* JCe. TWaum-HU Betts 5 and 2 50 per crate Drna»* f alnte nnd Otis. Cmwamoa hark—IVr pound totol*. ciimsinSiii^fcw P re-. Rights (to Liverpool by maxnrere 2ftto Bftn floor adph«r<VJ B , roardM)Ipbur4p.V,C4mpbor4a»i»«k,ci»!«ro* . . r i r.u. Ui c'MPa^d— 8 to XUr, ESMSf'rtftU Wl to He. ; fLOtakU; ml IU f .;0- O|duo* H ®J May votk. iGu spot hqfLer; of atom opin.n fl* u, at • d «nce of)4c: anil iu im^urer; C oe a-Ko. 2 CMU 5.JW wki; DsCV^ber fis bid; J u -r> 5 u.d; Ray at Oaf* weak and lower 1 «»««, *•»-** — *—■ «r-r,. :j h,- d z rt -K®. * (w ?Wi [1 enow —; !«; pouaH^ioSc.iryllint ,, M,. , lllilr., — Ai.cbns' aruM Mj»m ;f* 3. kiy soouldcr* i-d I»o^s h l.M. lord quart skins, dry, jrer imxe, 1 U Wool, narabed. lttSX wuhrt wool, 8a 16c. -traigttft p. uce quiet (Goxed lout) •ft.. ; rtbe f&.u); s&.fi.' Hicub aeoJy— ' oulck-ni - »ou - nu~t »b* .8 l ; Mjptr cured ha...* f 13. 0- mi Yu . Kj., l«to4» Bow*— 1T5 .billruit No., t ^-Ftwur ';unI—’.r I ,’. 0 I ■ .iffl | a!..i; i«u<.. 8U al. t*. . n. tr i- No i»M. k,i I ■ TL2R" iau> Oeia uiidi b’m! Hrir—Nol 2 twHnd , , |*p». • * riwd>— Fcwcnanaappw, * ■ • , - - u.t ji” I • » . C I "g&V. ***ZJ*‘ S pucidog batchers f .*» ..ft. -Pmk Bulk n eats qui- |k t -mbs { »tear ftt. . SV'hia*y, fiiu. fLl BxLTtnoax. Nov. :3.—Flour qwiet and stevty— Bflmafof~etu>< V — — Lie*, fa* . wheat p-t-st. t&onwiu*. .-a .ientnarw, active—ft whs 120ft.; lo ruerry, »wC. Waatern twsy—Nr. 8 vnmer . d, tpu* awd November V4>«i-e ; Nov-moer 85V*. May 3iW)(. Corn, boutfcreu. tru*—white. ftOoit;yreuw, «8re>»; sett Pop, clash! There goes the lamp-chimney. No need of your breaking them. Talk with your dealer about it. If every trouble wer equally easy to stop, ! 2^“ there’d be some fun in liv- , •'. ,,; ; ing! “ Pearl-top"C^^chim- | V; m - neys do not break, t—i cx- | S. cept by violence. I STi •' The maker i Macbeth & RSJ • : - .Tt f''’:, Co., Pittsburgh. 1 *** , B0.t. mmll.nnu. ur«*rlM. nitdirtf ... -rtair miMjlgl »-om m>, »i.<*iff 13 ■Ewys^ru* * i«*»i- «■** ■ i3C