Newspaper Page Text
12
Radway's Rea ly Relief Is Absolute!,- In
dispensable to rory well regulated house- ;
bole. It instantly relieve* and quickly j
cures all Colds, Bcre Throats. liitluenxa,
Bronchitis. Pneumonia. Rheumatism. Neu
ra’gia. Headache. Toothache and al! Pains.
Internally tor Malaria and all Bowel
Pains. Sold by all Droggists.
uaoo IH CASH
Ofcrei fprOislritofaAmcoj lhe
tarta Io
The Weekly Constitution
€ •
- •>.» » p .!••» ty of our ’•rent
I • ..i •.«. -r an chi: gro«lr.4 ue
-1 ok. * ;«•»».. e», •" have dacidod
V- .n a ~.«'h Ute people may
t *»:-« ‘ **l tt»» -F C«li* u-dftlMKla.
•%’ «n niovirum: :$ »h<
• and WO are sure that
. . _ reach at MN ot o\.r
* . r »h ■ ehl r •!» l ets.
•. h- ...!(■>•>. •■•tent for .caking a
g > • (WM must
: i •
m Wcrk.v Oonstitut.on.
S, .... a »e record’d u.s»n other
t-»:•»*. ’■••• ns.' or g -u: hv ae-
I no k
a m • ••• las* you antewrite, w:i en-
< » >u lo ' a cure* afterwards. The
t st come w .n tne subscription er -
A C ZZAT SOUTHERN PORT.
I he Constitution proposes to Jis
ti btitc ami ik it- >uhscriberc
$4,000 IN CASH
th'»Mr estimating correctly the
x: <>k‘i i %NS
from June igih, »-'>Q5. t« May 15th,
‘lfoO-
C £pq va-h to the person guess*
in« correctly the num
ber of bale'- received at New
Orleans within the dates
mentioned, provided the
- : c- f led before fkxem
i .*r Ist. iNqs-
fC HPn if the correct guess he
%)..'• ULb made before January 1.
f* • r ■ For the correct guess if
.wvJ made before March 1.
IK9O.
the correct pmm if
«p.. J-U je between March
Ist. and 'lay i.-t. iS<Xk
Cnnn ' r f * !t correct guess it
- ’' ' > ... after May 1-i ufoft.
fiap oximation Prizes-
*rnr> * n u *” r the M.VPIiSI
3m*Uu gutss t<» the number of
hales, and this prize and all
fo>fo*ving wiil he awarded
w.hout regard to exact Ce
ltic NEAR*
151 estimates; whatever
they may be.
so *' ,r second
nenres; gue.-- to the num
ber of hak s
In Cash for the third
15 . --u> the num-
ber of bales.
CiTQ •- Cash for the fourth
w»vU . sto in.- num-
ber ©t bales.
’ for the fifth near
-I gti >s t<» ihe number
JJC C.-i t foi the sixth near
<£ / est r .icto me number of
.• i W h •!«> OIHC ■
I' *-U*. im
..it •
•y : .ce ■ ■■ ■- -- - ?r «* •-* v'-
* *** -
■* . rr
■ . - « nil ’ a< . .Murw ~v. a’
Sia'is’ics ol Former Years
•• .*. i-HW*, i*> «>* '* S-Wi,
Jl - IV -*a > -««. a-’s •.
Lu ofj< - HC* •• •* |<
U. >•* »*%« ■* dU.-i e - li.v..-
t :>« • cto** * M. K* T. o
t.l • p* I * r-ish
:.c'<*r r I" 1 -’ •* ,>n * *** <••Jp- t.
•
■ ~*«rjr t h c
f-h K.lti* *i <v* ry «lsiv .«• 3
• t s, .•. rn .. .
• wb«j *•: ** s*«id express* th*
.j” - i* t.,, afx * that no one vovid povfibly
l
1 1”"'" ' .. —— ■ -- ■
•r f --F " *
1 sl?ort Ea!R6 tl?e er? U/,?O
' 7 Guide tl?e Plow —frjapy Question®
jJPI / About tl?e farm ppju/ered by th®
’» 'S— J j Editor of The
I <2 «
Winter Care of Livestock.
' Il Is a common Imast of those who write '
I and speak about the Incomparable climate
of the sunny south that ln-‘st<s-k require ,
but little ••are the year arouwl. It is I
claim’s! that th • southern lalur-r may work |
; out of doors every month, if not every day. I
in tit.- year AuJ we do not mean to say
1 that Uietc Is an; exag^ration in Mieli
1 statements and claims. It is true that stock
r»stulre but little care to carry them t'lrmntii
• tin winter, when we cotniNUc the cheat*
Istruciun-s for their prou (lon. that answer
ev. ry purpose, with the iui|M>sing aril eost
j ly barns that, nre almolutely lmlis|»-mahie ■
; In the states north and west of us But it is '
a fact that W lien but Intb <>fTort is required i
I ey. Il that ilttlc 1« often Withheld. Himply
, I--. in«e a horse or a mute can go safely J
through the winter months with no le-tlct |
protection than a m< r>- «h« <l. or a I ■ iky- j
roofed lean-to. or that a vow will survive ,
the short winter without any jiroiis-tion
w hatey.-r, furnishes a poor r.: «nn. to say
the h>ast ot It. for failinc to do our duty
to tiu-se drpetid.-nt and helpless friends of
the saran-r. Th- moral consideration the
duty we owe to our domestic animals to
pr >t<s-t them from th. pain utid siifferin
incident to extmsure to wind and r.iin. i •
say nothing ot occasional snow--, ought (■•
I- suflh lent to con drain u to incur the |
little .-X|i< n«- and lauor that nr- n. eessa- ,
ry to a-'compUsh the work Rut th.-re is a j
<-on>id. ration th..t Is o;t.-n more |-ow . i ful j
as an Incentive to ctfori (to our sham- I- it
sai-ii than the humtine Mea- it is tin- dollars I
• and '. nt involved in the question. Many •
farmer- seem to think that they have dis
charged their duty when a cow is giv< n an |
armful of shtick-' and permitted to stand in ;
a. convenient fence corner during a driving ‘
t-torm and afterwards fornge ..round in a j
tifty-a- r. ti.-id for . ny possible additions to
h.» ««-.inty bill of far.-. Indeed, s..me jh ;
t>li ipj- ar to think dial unptb animais haw
no right.- that we ar-- itoiind to n«pi-l. !
\V ■ do not believe, however, that such
brute- ever r.-ad Tito W.-.-kly t’on-titution.
an-J. Uivrefure, it wouiu be a .-b<-. r waste of
-oa.-c and time to b-eturc on that line. Ibr.
how ..t-*'it tho~. who s.-.-m to tuink that the
question i- not worth considering as one of
dollars and <•• nts- H-r- i< the pro|»er vie*
01 it: In festing an animal a large proixir
tion of the so- • is <• ••i-unn-d. literally burn
ed. aa fuel, for no oth.-r puriio.se but to keep i
the atiim it*i-at in ’fie Ihmlv. If tiie tem
peratur* of a cow falls below alx.iit l”l *i* - :
tr.-i-s. or that of a horse falls lielow :«:• i«-
.-r> • s fPahr >. it is either proof of a very
al.norir.at condition, or that th.- animal is
t. • - zma to death a a matter of fact, the
animal • - on-.n.y will not p- rnist th-- tvnq>»-r
--atu- to f ill t- low tli.-s ligur. < o loin
.s iw 1- ,t.v fat or tl< sit on 1h- b-.ii< o
tb- suff.-r.-r that ••an into tu-d
to k.-ep ii.» tlia temis-ratu’e Ye-, it i
tru-- that it t! no.-mal quantity of food Is
w.-l. 'd tl» tat and - v--i th- ban tlesh nl
r-ady laid up in th. ix-iy -.till !••• - all-d t<.
•io duty in th- lune as I t.-l And this
ta--t in anima! <• >nomv tc-outits for tin
oltii-r ta- t—tiiat when ;:n animal is insuf
lien fitly fv-1 it le - tl< n and I- -otn---
:«->r.-r and poor, r until i-atli i -li.v-- i'
suft ring-. Th- lung- ar- just as truly a
tuvi for h’-ating th • body o; ~n animal
is th- -•-mtno’i iron -iov that w- t-• d w ith
w.x»q or ■ <»a! is a- otitriv .•m-v i-.r li- nim
ttw- air In :> r«otii. But or-i ,i-i-l oat- ati-l
liat is -illy i»- .1’ Hi- t -• •- - plains an-
-•ill- - r.-gioti- >in- :•»••• - v- no oih- r
r>-soqr,-es and :h>- li< av y ft- tit liarg- i
up thi market valu- t-cs so.-d stuff Th--
chvan.-st Way to ma. itti.ii the anima! t- n.
p> rat lie is to proi-. ; th. .minials from w- ■
and --old winds by means <-f Wat-r ..-i-t
wind light roofs and walls 1: . ->s.- a tarm
r v- ry in.i.-h lews t-. keep out th- .-x.-cs
• y.- wind- .and -obi by mean- of suit
• •I - buildings than t<< . tuff tie- animal lull
of grain and hay mid otiv.-rt tin ioma--h
info a r-goiar -lave or furnaee !.< t an-.-
farm, r trj it and h- will .—on !. . ..ni .iu d
!-• turn turn vti-- of a pair of mat-to-i
steers. <•- on. -■! a pair of mu* .-. in < .plat
--mdition and phy-i -<i vigor, inio ;.u op- n
lo- n. oth. • to t» k< HI a dry
warm stall; giv-- • oh ..m of th-- pair
euougti Io -j to k-x’i Lilli in th. satin’ •"
dilion a- In w .< at t!i.- Is i-ining - f the
• y;w rn. -:-l - I t* < vp- run.-nt r will «.
a-toni-h.-d t-- Im.! tti.il it will r. quire m tr
ly IIP. • tnu.-h t< ■ d far tti- poor olivas
• -for tie- lucky one uis -l. the stable. <<f
- o ir-. nrn-ti dei-< nd- u|m-ii tin- w- .itin-r in
tin ev|* rim<-ii.'. but tin- i- -ul- will 1..- mor.
w Uss signiticant if the i. t l»- mad.- dur
ing any on- >-f our winter months.
A: .mi. -h. ar.-iPiv-nt is ju-d a- -ippl-.- .<-
lie t,. whet-- | tie arnn-iil i< t- d t---
fattening pui jnc- s ->r for nnlk. or to wool
In • a--h -as- th- ;« r.-.-nf.-.g-- -if •
taken into th- -oma. >hat mu?
y . rt. d fr.-m tic- t- al puri—.- oft;.. -ting
to ih.it . • K-- idtig up th- i.urm.il t-i.i >. ra
fiir. of tic- is-ly w ill in-r. a— iu-t in pro
portion to th-- f.in-iimt -.r i- gr. • ..f i ...-ui ■
•if the an.mal to th.-. 1-1. A man ii.is n--
rr.-t-t :•• rx;» .•: his <--w to give him a f-.1l
void of rods w‘n-n »i.- p rmi-s itor-- I ii-r
t<> stat, i in a muddy . nltiiy --oupn, in al)
... of '.»..t»h-- X.-r in tv- h- I- - s.:-ab!..
r- -.fi-iin’. iliy u-d- r -imilar i-ircumsta:.<-.-s
c-h’ fi-lu-r. that ta ll k *-|- -try aa-l r*-.
-oiia'.l; wane nd - ..mi-irlabk . y ry tn
mat on h: premises. p-> to work a' on-•
and 1.-i.i i |. • i If.-i Wby, y. p f,
ii.: i - qii..' -f mi-i-.r- . ,-. >;| |- .-nr i
U Vr su. il fay ai t ■ -u. ! tlon w -ul .
pro mor than ' . ••<• i r f t such
. -»n li’ion -.f th- bari-s an 1 stabb s. <- r t!.»-
■ -.me of such oU’idtng is on. of th-
i o. .. itio-is of t- -- mm In-oil of farming
nd fa 1..-- in aly eoimtri .
Nor -■ • .tin t. u. that tie nri.m 1t- k-pt
dry ov-riuad and ar.-und him he mu t L»
• ■-nt dry under t--..i a- w.-ll S■• that iti.is
1.-, tian- for w.if. rto s- p ir, ..- oih r
wisi get in. and make a u.-irtar iic 1 of filth
und« r his t. et.
S im- ifte. n y.-ars ago we were siipplie-l
* :h i-utter during th summer Ly a friend
Jiving s- y- r:! miles in th. • iintry. The
DISTRESSING
ti’Vx DISEASES
SKIN
xjp w )\ \ Instantly
V 7N®Z A I Relieved
X _x and Speedily
Cured hy
(ytoira
hath* with < rrirt «a &;• nth oi
».< it.’ni- nt . dMII : IUI j
Kc«ot.v«xT th* r.e* LRmxl puritier*.
n*4’F N'lMflT *<<»Jrs I
Laudva. P(jTT fc « l>sm Wu • Prop*., UoMon I
THE WEEKLY CONSTITUTION , I ANT A, GA., MONDAY. NOVEMBER 18, 1895.
nrrangetm nt w.-rn to continue Indefinitely.
Ab-iul tiie beginning of bad weather we had
occasion to visit the farm of tills gentle
limn. We had iioth-ed a falling off In the
quality of tie- butter wo were getting. I
expressed a d.-sire to .see his cows, a sug
gestion that he evaded rather suspiciously,
but yv- slipiH-d down to the barn while our
triend was otherwise engaged, and lo and
liehold' ins cows, the very cows that were
furnishing th.- butter for which I was giv
ing J*, e.-nts |ht iHiutid. were standing half
l.-g deep in a- nti-lluid, nasty mixture of '
mud and tii ir own tilth! I’gh! of course I
1 quit taking butter from that dairy, but I
lack.-d the moral courage to tell him the i
r.-ason why. Now, farmer reader, can It be
said of you. as S iinu. 1 said to David, “Thou |
art the man? ' It. J. REDDING.
FARM QUESTION BOX.
Vttrious Subjects on Which the Fann
ers Ask Questions.
T N . Addin.-, iMss.—lnclosed find '
specimen -ii grass Nos. 1 and L Name ,
and give value as hay. Is I Ni-i-mh-’f amt
January too eprly to la-gin <-oni|Hi.siing in
1" ns. if so. when is the proper time to
b- gin su-di work?
No. I is tripsaeiim da- iiloides. or Gamma
grass,” a native perenial grass, formerly
quit-- common to swamps and other damp
place to which cattle have not free ac
cess. It miik.-H a course but nutritious
hay and is a very large yielder. Stock are
v- ry fond of the growing grass, but con
stant grazing soon destroys it.
No. 2 !•• I'aiii.-um prolitirum, also a native
south, rn grass, springing up in midsummer
and makes a good hay. but is not partic
ularly desirable for cultivation.
To B. 1.. 11., Ileidsvillc, N. C.—The rase
nonplus. , ii and your letter has ls---n sent
to Din • ter H B Hettle, Raleigh. N. C„
as tie has a veterinary surgeon at the
\ N. w Subs, i ilh r. i.oui-ialia- There is
a dis--:.-.- -,uit- common in this locality I
anioi.i: <-alv.-s. yearlings arid young grown i
< attl- I l ay- known but on- or two tn |
n-riiv.-r from it No om- in the neighbor
iioo.l knows what the disease i~- nor any
r< m.-dn s for it.
in the many cases I have seen >h-- first
notie. able y mptom w.i- a slight swell
ing und-rthe low-r jaw . whi--h gradually in
er. a-.-d an-! extended to tin- throat. Wh.-n '
opened a yellow fluid pass-d from it. I 1
hinl ..... frequently i- - --rn>-.• nthn
dis. ise. It altaiK l»nh fat and L-an an
imal.' Some di- iti a few days, wlul-- |
utiu-r- may linger several we-ks. The
a; jh lit, seems very good in the early ‘
-t ,i;:.--, but soon fail-, then the animal
1h gin t-- look dull and sick arid stands or
li-■ al>out till death relieves it. It occurs
tn fall, w-iiiter and spring
W ill y-.iu kindly inform us through your .
d. - - rtm-eit of the w-.-klv Constitution
wii.it th- 4:« a ■ •- and th.- r-.-ne dy
I t'a'.e v. r y ntly L.-.-onu a subscriber. ;
- o phase don’t ref. r in-- to back numbers .
us th. paper.
M e suspe.-t that th.- di ■ as.- is w bat
- known as anthrax or eharlion. ot which
w In.v- n. •< r ‘ll a < as- Anthrax is
i.i-o.lu •-i by a narth-uhir 1.a.-lit.-ri'irn
known a- aullir.ix ba illus. and th. dl.o-a.---
is apt to br* ak oh' In low-lying .ectloni,
• -ih.--.11 in th-- low . r Mi--.-i-sippi valley.
\\ . advi-e you -o apply 'o til- inf lior,He
Iyoil < x ■ ini- nt : ta>ion iat N< wml -in
a.:-l Baton Iboig- I for a i ■ t rin.iry -'Ut g.-vn
t , ..me t” your m igli'-orti-.od and -nsp. ;
-in- .1. sea d .ninials.
\y M,s - ..- Monti* i-.r. Miss. 1 have
i .no.. .on: ~ars old lust sp.-uig that has
-om. tungl I .- string halt In walking sb-
■ t-ag -- to.-i little m Hrs: starting.
- . w H i. ii. t t up sornet’mes t’ld
ti r-i :g .r--iiml. tier leg will at t-rnes ne
pe11..-., si’ll and drag ir>und Sm- also
p, - -.ilby -ores under her bell'., from
■b. gi-’ ,i o n.i de Site s :n good eon-
I t on and ti.-arty. You will please adv’se
in.- through The t’oust : tut ion.
\\ . piesutne your mar- lias “springhalt,"
i- you Jiave d. - i 1..-d tin- .-imptoms of
that .l ine it y-ry el.-arly Th.-re is no
.-nr- far it mt. : .-i.us.-d by' some
it-.. di.-.-oe, *i, ti is no: unlikely- n
a. ,s. Hu y out qserptieu of tit.' “dry,
..i.i.y ’ do :.ot furnish sut!ii-;,-nt in-
.-•rtn.i: m upon yy b - h to predicate an opitt
,..n is to w-i» it :- or a description for its
relief.
A. .1 Mur,-.y, Grange Grov . Mss A
. w k nd oi i has I -• this
year n "I, lo ~1 ty • all. I Egypt an 1
I would like to know yvluie i can be ob
r.i . 1 for s.-.-d at a reasonable pi c,- and
how rm h sow to tiie a and oblige
a subs -r l—-r.
\y have only recently heard <,f “!-!gyp
tia.i ’ ri,-“ (from anot’ier eor--■s,.ond--nt)
and do not kimw anything about it.
\v YY I. y. . M. 1! - r’r.s k. N. <"
:•! use g.yo m your weekly < l i on rem
edy t-> taoy-- worms in iiorse-
'll.: tie- liaise has I‘asi -d for iw.-lve
hours ,v>- the follow ng ! dram of i-op
p> ras. i 4- mi ,il tart or .-me:; , 2 drams
f ns. .-d -i. al tor Lr.ini. mi-, and give as
■ d. ■■ ab-l at niorni'ig and night for
w.-. k. T- ■ a pii-gal.v-- of I pint
raw I ns,-. 1 oi! .id I oune. ,q :p r.ts of
ti.-p, -i’ n.- as -n. t-,.-- Yf- r :h ■■■ w- ,g i
rep, at .i. -n: :r* itnu;- in order to
■a ch young v. -:nis tbai have -a: -'t-i
.1. Yt E. .! Mild YVo..d. Ha TI. ase
atisw - the foi iw ng tiiro.igh Th- t’on-
■ o-i. is I u.-. -I .-o sc I meal, acid
‘phut. i" i 1. ■ n on -third of each,
io l.iiu - pound' : • ,cr lor < abbagt
I- this a • ottnd' :• f- 'iilizer for eab-
i '■-• po-pi 1 ' ‘n. ,bi.v mixture
sutHe : . nt .m I, num-. I ’ lat has .. sandy
lo.iiii wth a..-lay sui.s . l .’
The proper’ oils' or very good, .'i fact,
the formula s ih. om- w have .-.viral
■in.-- r-- -mm nd--,!. A. can foim no nd
< qtiate id, aof th- fort lity if tile s-.il from
y eir gem 1-al sia-.-men of its elianu-ter,
bu: w doute ' pounds |s-r ai-re
h- enough and would prefer tu us.- 1,5»t or
2.i»n pour., s I s not I k.-ly that you will
m.ik- tin land too r !i for cabbage.
Brack. I'ranklitit lie. N. t'an yo i tell
•m- ti. matter ami renied for my noise’-
ll - sin at ' is badly sw.ilb-n, e r.-ular i-i
.- i.itH -w li. dto nisei’ liv. jn -hes in diain
et< r do, - not s.-em t • affect him in any
way Hid he s hearty to -at. IL- was
• Iterd ,ery young ami I th.nk h drill dr ps
t rum h’m. 11. -a tin, w.-ste.-r, horse.
I’l, C-. answ> liro'igli The i *o'istitu'.ion.
It -..-ms to be nothing more than an
ordinary- eas* of “foul” sheath. Wash out
lit.- sheath carefully with soap ant warm
water, being --areful not to us,- any vio
lence u drawing down the yard and par
’.i-ularly careful not to s-raleli th,- parts
yy t.-i th« iitig'r nails, else the yard may
swell to enormous size. Repeat the wash
m. in future, occasionally as may seem
to be iletnan b-d. S.mi - horses are rather
pr-in- to this trouble.
(The ibove lett-r was addressed to “Dr.
\Y 1,. Jones." is it poss tile that some of
oar readers have not found out that Dr.
.lories has not written J >r this paper in
several years? Editor.)
It. B. J., Bass. Smith County. Tenn.—
Pleas, tell m- what to do with my appl,
. i.es. My trees air- ulsiilt twelve years
.•Id ,nd prior to lx-.«> did all right, but
- t o,- that t -m- hav<- eoa, me no good.
Tb.-y are full of fru ' n--.irly every year,
out alwiui he time they get grown they
rot am' .’all off. . sp.-.-ially my Beu I'av.s
and Shoi-kly. My early apples do very
well but my winter apph-s do me no good
w hatever. Eor the past four or live yearn
i lta\- planted my orchard in p-as and let
f
my- h n in ft to get the rotten apples
and pt*7 I'his year my- trees were loaded
down the fruit, and by the time 1 turned
my hr g pc t the ground wiis covered with
rot ten My orchards have been well
cultivut W Please give me a remedy.
ExamlV your tries for borers and re
move thi*i. •r,-fttlly prune out all decayerl
and ehaiing l.mbs. Wash the stems of tin
trees from the ground up as high as you
can reach, especially in the forks of tin
large limbs, with a mixture of soft soap
(lye s >api and ashes. Fertilize the ground
aroun-i t-tch tree with a of etl'Ja)
parks acid plmsphate and kainit, say two
or thr» e pounds around each Ire. extending
out as far as the branches extend, and work
it in v>.ih a prong boo. The locality may
not be suited to apples, which require a
rather stiff, moist clay loami.
J. E. Dicky. Ranger. N. C-—Please give
throug’ Hi.- columns of your paper a re
ceipt f--i making corn and js-rsimmon be. r;
also how to put up green apples for sav
ing during the winter.
YV» have at hand no receipt for making
corti and persimmon beer. Will some
rva'd.-r kindly furnish one?
■Select sound, unbrnised apples of a good
k<s lying var’ety, pack closely in clean flour
lull e! and keep in a cool, dry place, but
whey® they will nut freeze. Some are
sue. ssful In keeping apples in barrels
strat fled with cotton seed.
Twenty silver dollars
will buy a premium High
Arm Machine, includinqr
a year’s subscription to
the Weekly, and all at
tachments to machine,
freight prepaid to your
depot.
“Hog” Butter.
From’Th,- American Agriculturet.
Apologists for hug buiti r uru very fond ->f ■
affirming in tho must positive manner that
their product is i wholesome, nutritious,
palatable article of food. In no way deleter
ious to the public h-i-lth or w-lfure. of
course, to make out their ease, they are
ready to furnish opinions to that effect
from -loctors and chemists, which they can
purchase at any time and in any quantltj.
Sum.- of these opinions wire written y. irs
ago when oleiunaigarine was actmtllv man
ufactured, but now that this commodity is
no longer made, the opinions an- as obso
lete as tiie commodity to which tin y refer.
No intelligent, bon.- t student <>f by-:ien<-
would dare maintain for a moment that a
compound of which at least two-thirds is
th. fat of Ilogs and which has n- ver been
subjected to a beat great enough to destroy
bacteria, can be as healthful a butter
from h>- milk of cows. YV,- have n.-v.-r seen
a defender of the fraud tiiat wus not an
"artful dodger" of the rial issues. I|. is
always readj to . ontrast it with rancid
butter, but he never want to talk of its in
gredients. Ilerolls out tie word ■’oleomar
garine" most melliil uoii.-'ly, though the
rascal knows all th. whit. that, there is
no such a commodity in th-- market Ail in
all they are a bad lot and it is a refreshing
sign of the time- to know that sine, the
I’nited States supreme court d- cision sus
taining the Massachusetts anti uleo law.
less trouble Is ,-xp-ri. need in enforcing in
other states statute- designed to compel
hog butler to Ih- sold for what it is
There are altogether too mane chemists
in high places whose opinions can Ih- pur
chased on this oleo question Back of
every food adulteration an-i counterfeit
you will find a chemist. The clu mist, or
rather certain chemists, are the scientific
prostitutes of tin- ar—. And yet it ought
io b- known tiiat chemistry cannot deter-
mine tin digestibilitv or wlioli suni'-n. s- of
auv io, d articb Nothing short of in a
tual slomaeli can do that
Th« largest . ream, rv in th, world i the
one at Si. Albans, Vt Ii is own-d by the
Frank < i ('ream.-ry <"•::• tton and has .hi
..mt -. f '-i.i»>, »qj ol butt,-’' p, r de.
ji . I.j cr. am ti * ■ ;ixt>-seven skim-
mii stations and runs th«- er.ain in its
ow-t 11 ’
Ur. Price’s Cream Baking Powder
World's Fair Highest Medal and Diploma.
Horse Beef and Oleo.
From Hoard's I'airymaii.
Th- latest inspection order prom ilgaled
bv S.-.-tetari Mor.on, to go into -
u.-iry I J proximo, is intend'd "• pr, .. nt th.-
cxporlaiien ol 1,,,rs ■ meat as ’• an tied !r.-ef."
salt'd 1,,-.-1 " ~r und., any otb-r of the
various tub which it is alleged hav- been
applied to this product to facilitate its
sal,- l>.v d. •-. iv inc the pi • • miser. The secre
tary i reported to have said that w title
be has no authority uniter th>- law to pro
hibit th,- sale ot hors.- meat. I it is
recognized as an . dlbb . ' h. hop, s to
accomplish th. satm- < nd by th. se amended
r<-gillations, which require th-- inspectors
certificate atid stamp lo snow not only that
tile produe, is 11., trout disease germs,
but also lb.- Sp, ci-s ami origin of the .
animal I rem w inch it is taken.
t'an it 1.-- possible that this is the same
S- erelary Morton who not so long ago w as
apologizing tor and d--t- ml tig 0,, '.margar
ine and d. ' tving against any and all laws— ■
not to in, 11Lion .-xeeuuvi- orders lor pre- :
venting ns masquerading lor what it is
not? If lio- is th, same Morton, what
is it that <-aiis.'t. him to re.-ogmze and con
demn fraud in hors,- lw,-i ami justily it in .
1,, _ buii't" Is it I"'.:IIS.■ «erunn pMinai .
and !'• dill, al relative- at'- intere.-i, -.l in th
macula l'ir.- of It ne ami not th.- otliet ’
J ,o. - kinship, as well a a gift, blind the
,v. ’ It not. why has not our -secret ur.v, ,
who e ... -hl, ot toncue ami lacib- with the
p. n mam- pitbli- some indignant protest.
u-ainst th-- s.:.i. i- .vm-r-. aii . ..mm- r. .- m
ti,,- i. ,-eiit fraudulent . xporiatioi, <U oleo
I-. rt.i Ri. o ’
Hog Cholera
|- til, I ,v. a li'.m.sl.ad I >l. T. J. i kjdgc.
Ham Itoti. 'll . giX'S l"S method ol e'.riag
ami prev.nting nog ehm ra, which lie I'is
me ! fo' year.- lb ha ,-xp- nm- uted witn
it by plaei i.' a li.-ak -.y hog among si, I;
oik-s, and has kepi it well bv the us, ot
this remedy. Tm preteriptiun ami due,
lions i.r,- as folk vv -
Arseni.-, otie-ltaif pound capo •d.rs. ono
liaH poutid. bln - vttri it, on-■ lou.-tti ,H,uiai. .
hia- k antimony, om ounce. < Irmd and mix '
the letmuv vt. It b, lor.- u.- ng.
Tii - following ar. tie: directi--i-1 lor us- ■
I. Si, k hogs in all c i»-c.s to he separated
from th,- wed om- am: plan, d in ury pens I
with o.tlv tiv,- large lugs —r el —lit small i
ot. s in etu lip, i.
2 .-’< ,-d imt mug Ini' dry food, but. no
water, only tho stop containing the remedy,
until • in-, d.
it When the bogs refuse to '-at turn
tti,-mon their backs. a..d then, with a long
lian 11,-d spoon, put the dry medicine down
, their throats.
I. De-, for largo hog: One tcasjioonful
three times a day for t.hr,s' days, th, t,
miss on,- day, and ren at amount until
,ui I Shoats or pigs om-half Hu' amount.
.-' A a pt-eVe-HiV" o’l t eaSpoontul one.,
a week will keep our n‘gs in a. healthy
. eomiilion to take on fai.
Make Them Show Their Hand.
From Wailac.- s I-arm lyid Dairy.
Tit, manufacturers ot ol omargarinc suc
ceed<-d in '-rev, ntmg the auti’-oleo bill from
reip-tiing a vet,- in the upp<-r house of the
Illinois legislature. We wry much mis
take tho temper of Illinois dairymen, how
ever, if they give nt, the p’;ht for good.
They mad’- a good light, a d >n tn.v other
Slate til' < rgv put I d av-ould have , ar-
| ri, d Hi' bill through h c»< li-o men real
ize that if the.' lose II 1 'their last hop,-
of swindling lhe peoj 11 be gone. 11l-
inois dairymen -houl w»"-' ’’ eommcnee
a m-vv eampamn and 1 '* r "gil'e matter into
politic in tm ,oi to ~T.jj s t r jefs Make
everv eandiuat' io t.iert „ h-elare
his position on this ~w imiri before ,!<■,•-
•er hate
Drama’-’ ’ \
~ . ~ whole yea!’
xt A .so your lack for/ studying
to wait »
Mr B Yes, and llt , i , 1 r.’ssing very
1 R V.‘ i,lb \.. <• ie’hills, th
I ? ' ,W ,’ ar in the liver
Air *. B bhn has o, an ihrt »T photo- '
j graph taken do L- / .hiox.is Sifi-
I J I. Hi, j
•> »"■ y ~
’GENE FIELD'S DEATH
I
Sets Arp to Ruminating on the Un
certainty of Life.
THE YOUNG AND LOVELY DIE
While the Old are Allowed to Remain.
Some Reminiscences of Grady.
How He Got an Ad.
Oh, what a pity of it; Eugene Field Is dead
Yv pen evert oody loves a man it does seem
hard that he should die. Just in h!s pr.me
and getting riper, purer, mellower as years
rolled on. We of the south had learned to
love him for he was gentle and kind to us.
He loved Grady and Grady loved him.
They are together now somewhere. I won
der how their spirits met and what they
said. It Is hard on the south to lose two
such friends. They w-re ot the same age
lacking u few months. Bove, k-ndness,
tenderness of heart are redeeming traits
In human nature, and they had them.
1 was reading YYallace Reed's pleasant
reminiscence of Henry Grady in last Sun- j
day’s jiapcr and it carried me back to the ■
hard days when Henry, I ke Fields, was '
struggling against fate to make his paper j
a success. The merchants had not then j
, learned tho value of advertising, and Henry
pieaded in vain for a more liberal patron
■ ate. A leading merchant who claimed to
; bo his friend stubbornly declined to give
him a big 'a.l' and said it would be money
1 thrown away, for nobody read them.
"Don't read them!” exclaimed Henry.
! "don’t read them! Well, I will show you."
• Next mornin :’s paper contained a short
ed.vor.al on eats and told how cat fur had
recently come into great demand in fash
able e.rcles in New York and how the long
I coarse hairs were eliminated and the real
fur was made into lippets and muffs and
every fashionable lady wore a feline, etc.
Not far off in another column was a dis
play ed advertisement that sad:
“W ANTED l,'i,i'i cats, for wftlch 50 cents
each will be paid."
The merchant’s mime was signed to it.
By noon the cats began to roll in. Small
boys. win:, am' black, brought then, in •
baskets and bags. For a wh.io the mer- i
chant enjoyed tie- juke, but soon got tired
:i'id went away to d.nner. By the time he
returned the boys and darkies from
the suburbs were coming in ami the s, :■
walk was blockaded. lietiry bad laugh’s!
until h,- was exhausted imi sat on a win
dow sill across the str.-et, threatened, he
said, with -t eatab-pue nt. Neigfilioring ,
me' - , hunts and t heir eb-rks gat'n‘red ar,mm,
and laugh, d and shouted and 'Tied at every t
new arrival <>i cats. As fast as the mer
it ant ilrove off one crowd another Idl'd '
their pine . Hi arim d himself with a big
stick, but at. last he closed his doors In '
sheer tlespair and mght relieve’! him from
the pressure.
But th.- next, morning tho catastrophe I
was worse, 't he ••., laloguo was not ended, ,
f,.r the eountrv p.-< pie had heard the news
and brom nt cats in ml their wood wagons
amt i,n.i.r their buggy seats and ted up
in .’oiton baskets i,ke chickens. Henry
took ms stand m ar by a id leaned against a
t egiapti pole tor support. He ami Shank
lin d' ,r old Shaitkiiti a'. I the folks who j
loved fun. were .<ll there and while it was
fun to the boys and death to the frogs, it.
was su, Ii a rare ami racy jok, that Hie
n>, ti 1..nil eoui'U ct c.-i mad ami linallv sur
r, ime’-ed. It, made an appropriate little
I, 1,, 11>, crowd and toid Henry that i
speech Io 111, eroW'l ami lol.i iiv-niv vcac ,
it be would pi.,mi.-e novel t,, do him so any j
more I:, wold I give him the biggest "ad” I
I, had ever had in his pap, r. Henry prom- I
• . ill, mischief tiiat wa ‘in his rollicking |
But on,-evening Henry w.is sick and bft
bis junior lo nutk> up the paper. It was
just on the eve ot an exciinig mnaicijxii
el,-' lion mid some hitler things bad Iweti
published an I mor, bitter things bad been
said It was fcaf.'d that some of the eon
temlin; parties would come to blows. A
candidate who hid been sorely maligned
wrote a blit, r ib nunei ition of his O|,ponent
and to ,k it to the junior Just before the
paper w, nt to press It was received and ’
insert'd ami printed in about three bun
died copies when H.nry walk'd into the
otlice t.l see wh it the boys I id done in his :
absence. He read th,- article ami was hor
ror-stricken. ".Stop that pr.-ss"’ cri,-I he.
“Stop it. stop it. I would not have that ar
ti, b- go it, for siji'". Both those men are
my p, rsonal fri* mis. and they will light.
There W ill I ,- bloodshed either on the street
or in a duel Both have wives and chil
dr, n ami it would be a shame to widen |
the hr-.u h. How many hav< you struck ’
off?”
"About three hundred," they said.
• ’.V'-U, get your knives and scissors and
w- v. ill ent it our of ev,-ry one and print
no mor,- with that bloouy piece in them "
All hands went to work and soon had i
every' paper perforat'd with a bob' 2x4 !
itu-hes, and so they were folded and mad- '
cd. The town wondered, but Henry had
sworn all bands to secrecy ami not more |
than live of us ever km vv what bad b.-en
,-u: out. i." ig years after he said to me -
one day in his AtkUiia otlie, , "1 believe I I
saved a m il' - life that night and it was -i !
good spirit that mov-d n to get up off a
si.k b,-d ami - > down to ov rick the .
pup' r "
H.-nry i - dead and Shanklin, whom he
loved. . -id Dwinell and lolin Itilev a-id I
r-.-kon ,-v ry body els. who was connected
HEROIC WOMEN.
Their Mrusnrlc \gainsl ;t Common and
Merciless Enemy.
srr- tat. to oca i.adt bsadeba *
- Woman's hero
v '*>. ism Is not evinced
by fe»i iessness or
/f enterprise in time
/ ..f.i.’tm/er.imther
5 ? courage and iorti-
i r tMB 9 tilde are nnques*
4 f / tiunable in time
\ k ~R_
' r,,ink o1 ’ {ht
wnman who
- '■—smiles and tries
to make those around h r cheerful, while |
she is racked with the excruciating tor
tures of womb tronlde.
Think of one « ho, day by day, bogs her
physician to help her, while the torture
of tortures could not add to her misery.
Does she yield No! Sheen •shoe
agoni'-s, an t meets her irien is witU
cheerful m-is.
I ids is woman’s heroism, and few men
realiz : how prevalent they arc. I’hysi- ;
ci.ms rarely render relief in such cases.
Yftertwenty years of siteee.s, v.ithever
in Teasing popularity. L>/<lia i l ’. l‘ink~
it't n'a Vegetable t'onipotini is, to-lay,
M • -inti’s only sure an 1 safe refuge frp ti
in 1 limitation, ulceration, fallingan l dis
plaeem.’nt of the womb, ovarian trouble,
leiieorrh-i-.A. p-iinfiil an 1 suppressed men
stnutions, kidney trouble, nervous pros
tration, an I all manner of distressing
an 1 life-sapping female diseases.
*• o my sisters, believe wl-.at istol’you
of this won li-ri-d medicine ! Before 1
took it 1 had falling of the womb and
leueon ui a. My womb came down m»
bi Hy I could not walk across the floor; 1
the pam was excruciating; now all is so
changed, asid I am so happy. Lydia
E. I’inkli.am s Vegetable <'om|K>und has
saved me from a life of misery. Don’t,
don’t suffer, I say. when a cure issoeasily
obtained.” Mks. William Howl, 103
Ai'toinbtrevt, Detroit, Mich.
= THE BENEFITS DEEI VEI) FROM E ’J‘J *‘ ~
= T "' > M * k _ rU . Bt fz the i)> Whfcb ylrid to =
=
! HOT SPRINGS, ARKANSAS, |
5 UNDER GR# MT FR°X THE
= UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT. =
VJAXX nKT-Aspc l»«i »o snreenetolly -
S A* no Sanifitrinm in the wo I K *' I T *., h t'’ vro a'ns' ' -.im «>thont • rival. -
3 MMlquicklyCl KEl»«.i.t HOT Si’KINGS, ARKANSAS Ah. nn SAMK =
- If yna cannot to Hot Springe, Arkansasn =
•• TREATMENT you woakl receive by personally visiun- '•
3 from oner W» ho , ha '‘i .ups* 3
~ ..CVS. then- been O’Kbet.'nal”'"'- ''Oft _vvV bP 4 C<>
3 ,ft c> ‘ all other B1,k»1 !»•**• are Hainflt x Z
■■ nia/t of
Z NT m AGS, UK. ALL PBUGGiSTS. ONE COLLAR. 2 S CcxrvAaoT Sr. -
= v Cw yo **' -
X KB>'- Fend for In wriptirc Pamphlet. 3
“” U,e,X< .
with his paper. His brother is dead an<- j
his sister. Only his good old Christian .
mother remains of that family. It seems *,> !
me that old Father Tim ought to tak- us
,by our age and b-t the y ,ung live on
I Eugene Field was not even sick nor for,— ;
warms! This heart failure is getting- alaTii-
I ing. It is a good text for Alootly, for no
! body is sate n»w:uiays.
! Titere is another of that trio—Grady, Field
ami Joe! Chandler Harris, ill atsmt c.i
same age. Two shall taken and t”e
other left. May th, good la,rd spare Ir.m ,
till he s< es his three-seore y ears and .en; ,
yes, till the nxl locks turn to gray. It is v i
deeper grief forth, se to die who ar- in ;
th- prime of life and usefulness. A younv
mother died here the other day who ail m->
life had Isen well and strong, a good I
daughter, a loving wife, and our hearts f,,1l
of sympathy w-nl out to th,- l>ereav«-<i on,-'
• inly a yar married and full of hop- and ,
joy and love. The child is there and the
father's tears fall on It soro-tim. bu.
what is home vvitTiout a mother’ After a 1 ,
that we say about ■ .icti oth.-r the world .
full of sympathy and one rom-.t of nature
mak, s us al! akin. Ti" •- v. p.r :n-
that w,,re ever written were found,si upon
love, ami that is why everybody !ov«d
Field. His “Little Roy Blue” is lov- itseli,
and even his prose was full of it. That |
| sweet little story of "The Oi l Man” wi'l |
i bring w--tc ime tears f- ni <-yes uni’s,-d ‘
i to the melting mood. I*llo poem that haw
j lasted the longest and lill live in our
I hearts arc not tho stately measure.- <>f 1
■ Byron and Shakespeare and Poi>e. but they
are from Leigh Hunt and Coleridge ami
Goldsmith and Tom Hood and Burns and
J .I - ; • I• vv I
man’s i'rayor" aloud the other night and
had to stop before I go> through, forth.
little six year old grandchild tilled up
and began to sob like her heart would
br, ak I learned the Hermit wh„n I v.'tu:
i young and I lovo to repeat it now. Hal-.
I■■ k a'nd Bryant .ire grand. Longfellow
• is beautiful and Holmes is delightful, but
they don’t touch deep down like those
i 1 have named Gen.-viove and the Hermit
and The Song of th.- Shirt and the Cat
i tor’s Saturday Night will live as long a-
our language. A goo«j heart loves ,
ito weep sometimes. A man who ,
can’t shed a tear over poor Rip Y'an I
Winkle is acted bv Jm Jefferson I
• ' n Walt s ■
i savs that tho only tiin, he ever .-aw ;
Burns was in a room where there was :• i
painting of a young mother with a bat- in [
her arms who had just found h,-r busband j
dead on a battl.-n. Id. and underneath the ,
picture were these lino.-.
! "Beb- -r her babe, her eye dissolved in •
d'*W’,
The big drops mingling with the milk he
drew.
' Gave the sad store of h future years— t
■- ,i f ( serv I. ’pttz«-i .. ear *
Scott says that Burns could not conceal j
his emotion, but w, pt like a child. And
y.-t there are folks who fancy t: ■■ painting
of a great battle with all its blood and ,
~ar ig- ami m.sery A. T. Stewart fgii'i
-for on,-. It is m w in the Central
j part: gallery in N>-vv Y’ork. The on, thn'-
! Burns wept over ought, to be eight under
! it as a contrast—ait .•■>>>.•■ t lesson.
• • i. .
; these jiarts now Th, re is no
I war nor pestilem "r .< gr.-it . aiamitv .
Th, land is till' d with jI. at- in,l 1 i,s-,oc
our people ar- th.ltikful. Th,* god bo--><
-•ay»: "Whcti i n- :n s ways please the
Lord, 11- maketh - ven his enemas to ’>-■
alp, with him." It does look like- our
■., ini<s are I .unionizing of !•• more
than at any Hm, Since the wir There is
nobody breathing out threatenings an-:
.'laiightei against us now except old maa
Hour and he is almost dead. There was
comfort in what Mr. Loomis, of YVilk.s
barre. I’a.. said wle-n he get ba k bom,
“The south has n, ver had ach ine, s. ■< ,
I th, war. Stripp I bare as a I one i,,, i
money, no annuity, no p-nsiu'is -it is pas.
reason how she has com,- to the iron’. ,
; Think of it! The government has sin, •• he j
war paid out in pensions alon,- sl, ,f'.ar-.oi', |
; that staid ir. Hi,- north <»f this vast sum ■
the south had to pay her part taX'S a: I j
got not lung. Just give- her as a I
starter amt in to . yeans the north wo
howl at her progress. • • • Xnd we are !
compelled to look to the south lor tru |
American patriotism. Th y .-ir,- all Amert- i
cans down there with their blood put,- ’
I through a century of American parentage, j
! It is refnshing to run up against a uhulv |
I community »1 pure Americana."
How is that for a manly confession from I
a leading business man in a northern c - .
publican city . 1 wish that he an.! all such I
wouiu acme down her,- ind domicile wits '
: us. They can bring their pensions with :
! them ami scatter the money around. So it
I circulates in our iialw’i homi it is .-ill right. |
.May the Lord Keep us humble and happy. '
BILL ARP. .
A Child Enjoys
: The j.leasmt flavor, g title action and
soothing < iT'v-ts of Sv rup of I-’igs win : .
I nee I of a laxative, and if the father or ■
! motlcr lie ccstivo >r bilious th,- m«*.-t
gratifying r, -nits follow i u.-> so that
. it is the best family r, im-dy kn >we. ami [
every family should have ... bottle ,-n .:•>■ .. |
THE WORLD OF TRADE
Very Little Change Is Noted in the
Past Week.
New Y ork, Nov- nl„-r Br ■ Istroet’s
it morrow will say
“The condition of general tm le contin
ues irregular :ir.,l without t ■ tterial
change I’h.-r,- is a di- in-t f il,i - off u.
the detnin-i i n iron iiti-l -t'-l. with per
haps the In-aviest reaction in nu<>.ations
in those lines n-port -I it: aux week -i':ef
tho lat- boom in those rmt ils rea -h, .| it- *
! climax. Central western citi, s -ontimi, 1
. to fee! the unfavorable inlli’,-n,-e of tin- I
I seasonably mild w.-ather, wliii.lt i. true!
j as w>-ll of cities at the northwest. Th, t. ■
there L- the •< r,g list of d, cr.s in quo- i
rations for tn. : -li.mdi s Tie- ,-“nv,-rs.- in- i
eludes :ui um-xp<-cted itnpn-v tn, tit ii. '
| woolen goods.
"Octo -er gr« s railroad • .irnim. r> fl"ct I
ger ,-rally improv'd trade and ai • ay 1
heavy movetn, tit of spring wheat is ti.,- '
larg<*-t gain shown for any month’s nut i
June arid July this year. YVith the ex; j
I ,-eptM’n of the -outhw. stern roads ar-: •
! tho coalers, w hich show deer.-as. s. ex • ,-y (
' other group shows -gains. All the trunk -
■ lines and nearly all :he -southern roads I
show inereasts. the latter in spite of tne
short cotton crop.
"Renewed gi IJ expor, :. amoumirg for
I the ’.v -k to R’.fje.to-. have , lack' ll th> *
bullish tendency of the N'-w York stock i
market. The -veiling, hewever. >- proft - ’
sional. th,- short interest eidarcd ami ,
| the liquidation at par,-ntly completed I
, Further gold shipments are expected 4text I
w--,-k.
Bank clearings at cities throughout the t
' I’nit.-I States u-.-gr, -gal, 5t.171.0»,.,h>>. the I
week. I p"-r cent mor- than las: w■ k A :
comj’ared with the eom-spo’ -ling period i
in lx',?, at a time when bank clearings t.
tnls were exo- ptiotially heavy, th,* falli: „
off this week is 12 pt r cent
“There are ?,:• business failures nportot,
throughout the t'nited Slates this w,a-k. I
compared with 2t’o last w,-k. 25a in th,- •
week <»ne year ago. and as contras; -I w.th i
only 2< in the corresponding w, ek < i
j IS'.*?. The increase in the numb, r ot fail- ,
ures this week over last is tm re than ac
counted for by southern ami New England
stat, s.
“Other features include Very generally i
i satisfactory mt rcantll • co!l< ct'or.s east, ,
i west an-i south. , xcep.ions being eonsj,’:, -
■ nous by ll.eir In frequency. Th, r,- is a .
1 position in the gulf states to market cot
ton more freely, .'cd Texas cities r. ;sirt a
check,-,! volume ei biisit"-ss resulting from •
; lower prices for cotton."
Working Overtime.
Front I’uck.
St. Peter—YVell. are they all awake y u t? I
Gabriel—No; I will nave to Now again j
for Philadelphia.
—-z- — •
CARTERS
AveiVak -JiTTLE 1
■
Positively cured by these
JJttle Pilis.
Ther also relieve T»t r ess from Dyspepsia
Indigestion and Tcx> Hearty Bating. Apo
j feet remedy for Dizziness Nau ea, Drows.
! ness, Pad Ta tc in tiie Moc.rh, Coated Tongue
Pain in the Side, TORJ'ID I.l' UL The?
Regulate the Bowels. Put ely Vegetable.
Small Fill. Small Dcse
Smail Price.
Your Wife
© YVid like it.
0 So wiii the Cook,
t 1 F yonr better half does the cooking, that
1 is an additional reason whytheresboul
be a CHARTER OAK RANGE OR BTOVI
in .our Lichen. The use of theta prevent
worry and disappointment.
! Always
OAK
Re,iab,e -
MOST STOVE DEALERS SEI E THEM.
If yours does not, write i->
EXCELSIOR KFG. CO, ; ST. LuL’.S, MC
Braotso Cigarsu?
2&I81 6RD FHIISHEdB.
' Ow, . 1-.1 It ...••.ft,••'Ft*'
/■--f ' • '.
iKlifm - L - . O '•> • a f-r 4,
c 4 :-»**■ l w » t ' h » n
■
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.r *eTF. t > v h l-rnGa <f-
i zat ♦;.!> rr*'-. Tha
Vs
w uVfc*-» *-« J t*Y "V na caM wa
vi* r xs.’ . x:
O f ’ V • <•-».*-■* < r i*,ll*<* X
fl', e «v<(ch b’ ’ t- -« t. I , • -t r • • •coin. A vtreafl
THE NATIONAL MFC ;« IMPOP-INC Cl .jl
334 Ds»rt>orn Street. Chic-iso. HI.
Mention The Constant! ’u
! THERE IS 10 UNiL 111 iMERIU
To Compare with
....THE ATLANTA....
CONSTITUTION ALMANAC
__AND—
WEATHER FORECAST
FOR 1896
; PRICE, - ... 25 CENTS.
Encyclopedic in Ils Scope
TREATS ALL SUBJECTS
Briefly.
Concisely.
Comprehensively.
1 508 Pages. 10.000 Facts, 1,000 Topics,
Weather Forecast* for Every Dav
in the Year.
READY' DECEMBER 13. Igor,.
Sent as a premium with Weekh
i Constitution, si.oo per year, with
out charge.
AND
WEEKLY CONSTITUTION
Ono Year Only
i-ts 1. EBO .
The Conxtitntion has receive,] , o » >n y irquces
to club a magazin* that we have decided to do • x
and offer you Mri’lnre a v.gaUn, and y,. WeekJ?
Constitution one year for $2.00. Now, if yon wam
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and cheapest magazines this is y oar ehaace. Sei.u
for an jonneentet a tor the <nm:ng y.-aj
, Have you seen our recent gun
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