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HOUSEHOLD BREVITIES.
—To wash silk handkerchiefs use fine
white soap and lukewarm water; rinse
in clear cold water without 'blue. Wring
dry, fold in a dry cloth and iron while
damp.
—English Rhubarb Tart. Prepare
the fruit as for using when stewed, fill
a pudding-dish with the prepared fruit,
cover with family pie-crust or puff
paste, and bake; serve with sugar and
cream.
—For burns, equal parts of lime-water
and 1 nseed oil mixed together and ap
plied to the burn will take out the in
flamation. If the burn is deep, wash it
off with warm milk and water twice a
day; then renew the dressing.
—When ironing if a starchy deposit
attaches itself to the iron, it may readi
ly be removed by sprinkling a small
handful of common salt on a piece of
old carpet or thick cloth, and passing
the hot iron over it several times.
—To cook asparagus, boil tender,
either in tied bunches, or broken in
pieces as preferred. As it cooks quickly,
twenty minutes will suffice. Then
drain, lay it on slices of moistened and
buttered toast, and pour over it a thick
ened cream gravy.
—Orange Icing.—Add the grated yel
low rind of one orange to one cup of
powdered sugar, add a tablespoonful of
boiling water and sufficient orange juice
to moisten. Spread this over the cake
and stand aside a few moments to har
den. —Troy Times.
—Nicely made cranberry jelly made
sweeter than for eating with meats,
forms an excellent combination with
blanc mange. Put the jelly first into
the mold, then a layer of blanc mange,
and so on until the mold is full. Set it
away to cool and serve with whipped
cream or simply cream and sugar.
—Graham Pop-Overs. Three eggs,
1% cups Graham flour, half cup white
flour, 2 cups milk, pinch salt. Beat the
eggs very light, whites and yelks to
gether. Add the milk and salt,
and sift in the flour rather slowly,
to prevent lumping. Strain the batter
through a sieve, and fill heated gem
pans. Bake in a quick oven and eat im
mediately.—Harper’s Bazar.
—Few appurtenances of the home are
so well worth paying well for as the
fixtures of the bed springsand mattress,
however good the mattress may be,
made of the very best and most expen
sive hair it is wise to have it remade at
a responsible, first-class house at least
once in two or three years. It pays for
the day’s trouble, and the two or three
dollars' expense.—N. Y. Observer.
DOMESTIC HAPPINESS.
It Exists Only Where the Housekeeper Is
Also a Home-Maker.
Home-keeping is something more
than house-keeping. Wherever there
is a man of our race there is, if not a
home, the need of a home, and wher
ever there is a true lady of the Anglo-
Saxon lineage there is a “loaf-giver,” a
home-maker and home-preserver. As
all the rivers empty into the sea. as the
sea forever feeds the sources of every
stream,so allcolleges, schools, churches,
all arts and trades, continually give up
their results to the home and are, in
turn, dependent upon the home. It is
the level of the sea that fixes the
measure of the mountain tops; the level
of the homes of a race measures all the
institutions of the race. Whatever is
rooted up or borne down in the vast
progress of civilization, the mother w ill
survive, and will give her stamp to life.
It is a woman’s peculiar province to
create beauty and order in the habits
and associations of daily existence. She
takes the raw material, in the shape of
her husband’s income, great or small,
and from it she evolves as much
comfort, as many legitimate grati
fications, and as many of the
finer uses of a home as she can. There
is a wide range for many varieties of
skill and knowledge. In one home we
see the results of thorough domestic
training; the mother possesses all the
resources of a wise and practical system
of household management. Another
covers the unprepared intuitional wom
an, who loves because she loves and
makes a home without previous train
ing. as a bird builds a nest. Our home
keeping shall not show inhospitality to
woman’s thought regarding home mat
ters and whatever concerns humanity
concerns the home.
In these days materialism is knocking
at every door. It has even found its
way w’ithin the sanctuary, and invades
the very nursery. To wives and mothers
it offers the insidious plea that modern
civilization will relieve her of her cares.
Multiplied conveniences and trained
servants are to be the important facts
of her home; she is to “preside,”
ruling only as a queen rules when her
constitutional advisers govern her as
well as the kingdom. This is a false
theory of home rule in the family,
whatever it may be in the State. Home
keeping implies an earnest and re
sponsible charge of sacred interests. In
the administration of home affairs the
house mother can trust no one between
herself and God.
The cooking, sewing, furnishing, are
all good, needful things, to be done
more or less by proxy, according to cir
cumstances, but all worth knowing
about. The necessary precautions for
health in modern dwellings, the secret
of nutrition for infants, for the aged, as
well as for those who can enjoy all the
varied dietary of “a good table;” the
wisest methods in the mental develop
ment of early childhood; these are im
portant branches that belong to home
keeping.—Dora Read Goodale, in N. ¥.
Independent.
SHEEP-EATING PARROTS.
'alley ("online Their Love for Animal Flesh
Almost Exclusively to Mutton.
A singular bird has recently been add
ed to the collection in the London Zoo
logical Gardens—the much talked of
carnivorous parrot, which confines its
love of animal flesh almost exclusively
to mutton. According to the naturalists
that have examined this rara avis, it
possesses two qualities heretofore un
known in birds of its species. The first
is this flesh-eating propensity, an ex
ception to the whole parrot family,
which is frugivorous, living on fruits,
seed, leaves, buds and the like; and sec
ond, the fact that this carnivorous taste
is not natural, but acquired.
This curious bird is the kea (Nestor
notabilis), or mountain parrot, and
comes from New Zealand. Its general
color of plumage is green; its length
from point of bill to extremity of tail,
twenty-one inches; its bill, two inches,
with upper mandible much curved and
very’ strong. It inhabits the higher
wooded glens and dark recesses of the
mountain districts of the island above
named, and like the owl, is generally
nocturnal in its habits. Although the
kea has been known to ornithologists
since 1850, the above specimen is
She first of its kind that has
»ver been exhibited alive in
Britain. In the time of the
Maori rule in New Zealand the bird was
as innocent and harmless as any of the
parrot species, and it was not until the
higher tracts of the country were util
ized as sheep runs that the kea was
tempted to desert its fruit-eating habits
and join the destructive army of the
caronivora.
About 1868 it was noticed that the
sheep of the uplands were suffering
from sores and scabs in the region of the
loins, and that almost invariably the
sufferers were those fattest and health
iest. Many discussion's ensued as to
what could be the cause of this singular
state of affairs. At last a herder said
that he believed the parrot did it, but
was only laughed at, yet subsequent
events proved his theory the correct
one. Soon after some of the shepherds
saw the feathered cannibal seated on
the hips of a sheep helping himself to a
dish of live mutton. From that day for
ward the bird was known as the sheep
eating parrot —the feathered wonder of
the antipodes.—St. Louis Republic.
—“There is a good deal of fun made
about physicians,” said the doctor to his
wife; “but what would people do if there
were none?” “Yes, indeed,” said the
wife; “what would they do? They
would die without their aid.” —Boston
Courier.
Maher & Grosh, whose advertisement
appears in this paper, is a perfectly reli
able firm, and the reader can feel sure that
every representation made by them will be
carried out to the letter. The Chicago In
ter Ocean says:
“In calling attention to the new adver
tisement of Messrs. Maher & Grosh, of To
ledo, 0., we are not recommending anew
firm to our readers, but one that is well
and favorably known already. Country
merchants have in conversation with us
repeatedly alluded to the knives and other
hardware specialties advertised by Maher
& Grosh, and the testimony as to the qual
ity of the goods and the treatment received
has been always most favorable.”
If anybody doubts the dignity of labor,
let him ask a $lO hotel clerk what timo it
is.—Van Dorn’s Magazine.
.. ♦ «
Sir Novels Free, will be sent by Cragin &
Co.. Philada., Pa., to any one in the U. S. or
Canada, postage paid, upon receipt of 25
Dobbins’ Electric Soap wrappers. See list
of novels on circulars around each bar.
Milkmen are poor people to interview.
Naturally they do not like to be pumped.—
Oil City Blizzard.
I
Will be found an excellent remedy for
Fick headache. Carter's Little Liver Pills.
Thousands of letters from people who have
used them prove this fact. Try them.
An unthinking partisan, like a sighties*
monkey, blindly follows an organ.—Texas
Sitting*.
THE MARKETS.
Cincinnati. June 18.
LIVESTOCK—CattIe —Common?! 50 @ 2 50
Choice Butchers 4 (X) @4 25
HOGS —Common 3 00 @ 3 60
.Good packers 3 65 @ 3 80
SHEEP -Good to choice 4 00 @ 4 50
LAMBS—Spring 5 75 @ 6 25
FLOUR—Family 330 @3 50
GRAlN— Wheat— No. 2 red 84 @ 85
No. 3 red 80 ftt 82
Corn—No. 2 mixed 37 @ 37%
Oats—No. 2 mixed 31 @ 31%
Rye—No. 2 @ 55
HAY—Prime tochoice 12 00 @l2 50
TOBACCO-Medium lent 11 75 @l4 00
Good leaf 15 00 @ls 75
PROVISIONS—Mess pork ..10 75 @lO 87%
Lard, prune steam 5 75 @ 5 80
BUTTER—Choice dairy 8 @ JO
Prime to choice creamery... 16 @ 17
APPLES—Prime, per bbl 3 75 @1 Oo
POTATOES—New, per bbl 2 25 @ 3 25
NEW YORK.
FLOUR—Fair to Fancy 3 00 4 65
GRAlN—Wheat—No. 3 red 87%@ 88
No. 2 red @ 94
Corn—No. 2 mixed, new 40%@ 41%
Oats—Mixed 112 @ 40
PORK—New mess 13 75 @l4 25
LARD—W estern steam @ 6 10
CHICAGO.
FLOUR—Winter patents 4 85 @ 5 25
GRAlN—Wheat—No. 2 red 85’4'10 86
No. 2 Chicago spring 85?i@ 86
Corn—No. 2 @ :;4 %
tints—No. 2 28 @ 28%
PORK—Mess @|J 75
LARD—Steam @ 5 85
BALTIMORE.
FLOUR—Finally 3 60 @3 65
GRA IN—Wheat- No. 2 @ 87%
Corn—Mixed @ 40%
Oats—Mixed 32 @ 3t
LARD—Refined @7 50
PORK-Mess @l2 75
1 A I'TLE—First quality 4 00 @ 4 5>
HUGS 5 ID @5 50
INDIANAPOLIS.
GRAlN—Wheat—No. 2 red @ 86
COHN—No. 2 Oh 34
Oats— No. 2 @ 28
LOUISVILLE.
FLOUR—A No 1 400 @4 50
GRAIN-’.Wheat—No. 2 red @ 91
Corn— Mixed @ 38
Oats— Mixed cm 30
PORK—Mess @l3 00
LARD—Steam @ 6 75
WHERE TO SPEND THE SUMMER.
If Undecided, Perhaps This Will Help
You.
Where to go, what to do, how to do it,
and the expense involved—questions agitat
ing so many households contemporary with
the advent of Summer—are all answered
satisfactorily in the pages of the handsome
volume entitled “Health and Pleasure,”
just issued by the Passenger Department
of the New York Central w. Hudson River
Railroad.
The book is profusely illustrated, con
tains several valuable maps, and the in
formation is presented in a concise, yet
readable manner. It embraces an exten
sive list of Summer hotels and boardiHg
houses along the Hudson, among the Cats
kills, in the Adirondack Mountains, at Sar
atoga, Luke George, Niagara Falls and
other famous resorts.
Copies of the book may be obtained free
upon application to W. B. Jerome, General
Western Agent. No. 97 Clark St, Chicago,
or will be mailed post-paid upon receipt of
ten cents in stamps, by George H. Daniels,
General Passenger Agent, Grand Central
Station, New York.
Wires an exquisite young gentleman is
first married he uses the softest side of a
velvet brush to polish his silk hat; after the
seventh child has come along ho sometimes
uses tho blacking brush instead. —Somer-
ville Journal
—————■
Fortune Seeking Emigrants.
Many a poor family that seeks the West
ern-wilds in the hope of winning a fortune,
is preserved from that insidious foe of the
emigrant and frontiersman—chills and
f ever —by Hostetter's Stomach Bitters. So
effectually does that incomparable medic
inal defense fortify the system against the
combined influence of a malarious atmos
phere and miasma-tainted water, that pro
tected by it the pioneer, the miner or the
tourist provided with it, may safely en
counter the danger.
Tub woman who can refrain from saying
“I tokl you so” sometimes gets a new silk
dress. —Exchange.
J. C. Simpson, Marquess, W. Va., says:
“Hall's Catarrh Cure cured me of a very bad
case of catarrh.” Druggists sell it, 75c.
Could a man who became intoxicated on
aerated beverages be said to be air tight?—
Light.
No specific for local skin troubles equals
Glenn’s Sulphur Soap.
Hill’s Hair and Whisker Dye, 50 cents.
Settling a plumber’s bill is “paying the
piper” with a vengeance.—Boston Budget.
Do not purge nor weaken the bowels, but
act specially on the liver ami bile. A perfect
liver corrector. Carter's Little Liver Pills.
.... ■ ■ MM
Quinine does not come from Chili, but
seems like it ought to.—Washington Star.
No Opium in Piso’s Cure for Consumption
Cures where other remedies fail. 25c.
The policeman’s club is not a social one,
but it commands respect
—
After dinner smoke “Tansill’s Punch.”
Planked shad is good board.—Washing
ton Star.
A Noted Divine Says:
‘•I have been vising Tutt's Liver Pills
ifor Dyspepsia. Weak Slomacli and
X’ostiv'encss, nitii which I have long
been afflicted.
Tutt’s Pills
ARE A SPECIAL BLESSING.
I never had any tiling to do meso much
good. I reccommend them to all as
the best medicine in •xlManee.”
Rev. F. It. OSGOOD, Slew York.
SOLD EVERYWHERE.
Office, 44 Murray St., New York.
DR. OWEN’S
ELECTRIC BELT
A.ND SSTJ-JBJH>3s:T<r®O3?t.-sr.
Patented Aug. 16, 1887, Improved July 30.1889.
8 DR. OWEN’S ELECTRO
GALVANIC BODY BELT
tAND SUSPENSORY will
■.cure All Rheumatic Com
plaints, Lumbago. General
.-and Nervous Debility,
iCostiveness, Kidney
Diseases, Nervousness.
Trembling, Ex
haustion, Wasting of
Body, Dis-SyjMj; eases caused by Imprudences in
Youth. Age,Married or Single Life.
(ry-SKYT TO IIEHPONSIBI.K I’AKTIKB OX RO DIYR TRIAL.
dr.owM electric insoles.
Also an Electric Truss and Belt Combined,
bend Bc. postage for pkkb ilimit'd book. 2'24 pages, which will be
■ent you in plain sealed envelope. Mention this paper. Address
OWEN ELECTRIC BELT & APPLIANCE CO.
306 North Broadway ST. LOUIS, MO.
826 Broadway, NEW YORK CITY.
StPCN SEVCMTCCW _ .p-, rL/tnir
To cure Biliousness. Sick Headache. Constipation,
Malaria. Liver Complaints, take the safe
and certain remedy. SMITH’S
BILE BEANS
Use the SMALL SIZE (40 little beans to the bot
tle). They are the most convenient: suit all ages.
Price of either size, 25 cents per bottle.
84T SQ Q 8 ski? (f* at 7. 17 , 70: Photo-gravnre.
rvrvvlttvi panel size of this picture for 4
cents (coppers or stamps).
J. F. SMITH A CO.,
Makers of ‘'Bile Beans.'' St. Louis. Mo.
MOIHERCTEND
MAKES CHILD BIRTH EASY
IF USED BEFORE CONFINEMENT.
Book to “Mothers” Mailed Free.
BRADFIEI.I. REGULATOR co.. ATLANTA, GA.
Sold by ai l Druogists.
MFNAMX THIS rAFtll.i.r, tin. you WrU«.
BEECHAM’S nUS I
ACT LIKE MAGIC
ON A WEAK STOMACH.!
25 Cents a Box. |
OF ALL DRUGGISTS.
I Invent something and make
PA {ENTS K- FORTUKE! i.S
■ “ OF JNSTIK’CTIO.VS FiCEE.
Address W. T. FITZGERALD. WASHINGTON, D. C.
THIS PAI’kK every time you write.
fin Yon T,lve In n House? If so, you want a
Uv HARTMAN Steel Wire Mui. Absolutely flexible.
Endorsed by Pliyslclans and U. S. Government. Semi
for price*. HARTMAN MFG. CO., Beaver Fal'a I’u.
TKIS PAPKE (vary Ur-a jou wnl*
W
ENJOYS
Both the method and results when
Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant
and refreshingto the taste, and acts
gently yet promptly on the Kidneys,
Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys
tem effectually, dispels colds, head
aches and fevers and cures habitual
constipation. Syrup of Figs is the
only remedy of its kind ever pro
duced, pleasing to the taste and ac
ceptable to the stomach, prompt in
its action and truly beneficial in its
effects, prepared only from the most
healthy and agreeable substances,
its many excellent qualities com
mend it to all and have made it
the most popular remedy known.
Syrup oi Figs is for sale in 50c
and $1 bottles by all leading drug
gists. Any reliable druggist who
may not have it on hand will pro
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it. Do not accept
any substitute.
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.
LOUISVILLE. KY. NEW YORK. N.Y.
w>g c n n■■ A TII'.VN 10-dnv in the
gHR & IB ? 3 SOUTHWEST to invent
i rT arts K your Burplusearningais
IliL ULu I Pittsburg, Kansas.
It is centrally located for the entire United States.
Endless coal fields furnisiiing coal for twenty
yearn to manufacturers, at 50 <<euta per ton.
F* H A can ninke more money
P fi H W P K \
I J ? L- l than any other point on
■ H ns Q eiii bhli t v this continent, because
It is a mining, smelting and manufacturing city.
DITTODIIDO r' : -
I* 3 ■ 8 089 K!■ ulatiun. Destined
■ 25 R tjLSUISIJ to be the greatest
■ ■ ■ 0 ° manufact uri ng ,
mining and smelting town on thiscontinent. I f yon
want a safe investment, buy a lew lots. For maps
and information, address
PITTSBURG TOWN CO.. Pittsburg Kan.
WXAME THIS PAPER, tvery time you write.
A AR and Tumors Cured, no knife, book
5E $ 9 5 S’ 1 S'? Dr.-GratlgnyA
VPSils 119 bbS l* 163 Elm Street, Cincinnati, Otuo.
■ rVAXZ THIS PArrKe, r, tin,..ou write.
I aisMraßPinrgraa jm - «Pp
BTHEBESTCOUSHMEDIGINE||
s■■<£l swin Br mtt ttGISTS EVERYWHERE.
B' sli d It+Ji JlBtMMi
! ’3BFBD&-' MAllßffil V" AMK P® Efa SAP Os this KNIFE Is S 6 per dozen; retail* at «s<*
B M fWUBBn kVcti Ert To induce consumer* to try us we will mail a sam.
I ■aß EL ljW Fs‘l/1* tlr*»w£■ ■ IB K Bn pie, postpaid, for 48 cent*, to any one for a short
""■*** tl ■ > irn * e i T fi E MAHER & GHOSH blades are hand,
forgred from razor steel, warranted. Prices are lower than you pay for trash. I hi* <*ut in the exact size of
<»„>* ftw* >_-,-ys-»i 11 ■ ii two-blade Jack-knife. Bladea equal to any $2 razor.
P> *oo Far ■ /THE'_ ,_ iheprcacnt.4«cents, postpaid; 5 lor
lco ,o i l Lady's 2-blade Pearl,S&c.; 7-inrM
' ~~.. mu 11...,_ Shears. 60c.. postpaid, 65cl
.■ n l l e and Shears. $ 1 .00.
* •: ' " ' “: ‘ Maher &
I 1 Grosh,
J 6 S Street,
: v ’■ oui <».
“I wept when Iw&s born.and everyday
*”*»”'■ shows why?sa.id
who didnhuse
<MW - HA <*
> v®Jw sß»>®s®Bsasß
is c&ke W
ofscouringso&p used for eJI
cleaning purposes
“Ah! Ah!” Cried the house- “Oh! Oh!” Cried the DIET,
wife, “The Secret I know, no “At length I must go, I cannot
DIRT can resist withstand
SAPOLIO.” SAPOLIO.”
To Our Customers.
WE TAKE GREAT PLEASURE IN CALLING TO YOUR NOTICE THE FACT THAT,
IN ADDITION TO OUR UNSURPASSED READY-PRINT SER\ ICE, THIS HOUSE CAN
ALSO FURNISH TO THE TRADE
JO Betti anil Siffllui
IN ALL ITS BRANCHES.
OUR FACILITIES FOR THIS VALUABLE AND HELPFUL BRANCH OF SERVICE
ARE AMPLE, AND WHILE SOLICITING YOUR ORDERS IT IS GRATIFYING TO US
TO BE POSITIVE IN ASSURING YOU THAT
Our Work is Not Only Good, but Absolutely THE BEST I
IN ORDERING BE CAREFUL TO SPECIFY EITHER WOOD OR METAL BASE, AS
WE AIM TO FILL ORDERS WITHOUT DELAY, BE THEY LARGE OR SMALL. OUR
PRICES WILL BE FOUND CONSISTENT WITH THE HIGH GRADE OF MATERIAL
AND WORKMANSHIP FURNISHED. ESTIMATES CHEERFULLY GIVEN.
A. fl. KELiLiOCG NECUSPAPER CO.,
368 & 370 Dearborn Street, Chicago, 111.
224 & 226 WALNUT STREET, ST, LOUIS, MO. I 401 WYANDOTTE STREET, KANSAS CITY, MOl
71 ft 73 ONTARIO STREET, CLEVELAND, OHIO. 38 ft 40 JEFFERS N ST,, MEMPHIS. TENN.
177 & IT J F'M STREET. CINCINNATI. I 74 TO 80 EAST STH STREET. ST. PAUL MINN.
BORE WELLS I i money”
Our Well Machines are the moat ■iiviißea ■
KRLIABI.K, DUnABLR.aUCCKKSrOL! Ll 1
They do MORE WORK and ifVC
makeGREATER PROFIT. Zy B- ■
They FINISH Welle where (A M CiZXI
othcra FAIL! Any size, 2
inches to 44 inchea diameter, ■fytr EgL
LOOMIS & NYMAN, 1®
TIFFIN, - OHIO.
•■-NAME TUIB PAPKii «nry Uoa you wnu.
“THE BEST IS THE CHEAPEST?*"
THRESHERS '">ENGIN£|
SAW MIRS MtolS CLOVtR
For Pamphlets HULLERS
write to aANIfltL# C
THE RULTMAN • <Bay wb.r. £
TAYLOR COMPANY. ... iD« >
R : s o s o E fs L YEAS BOOK
Thrcahem. Threahlnf Engines. Haw Milla autl Saw
Mill Endues, florae Powers. Stationary
Plain or Automatic* and ROILERH. Address
RUSSELL 4. CO., - MASSILLON, OHIO.
eorNAMK THIS PAU Lit every time you writs.
■ IT IS 18ED by < HID
DRENS CIHLDKF.N.
Thouaands of young mes aa{
women in the U. 3. A. uvre
their lives and their health asA
their happiness to Ridge's Food
their daily diet in Infancy
and Childhood having baWb
Rtdge's Food. Ry
33 cent. up. W <M»I.Il ICB
ALL COVHTBIU. * CO., Palmer, Mew.
WK Hil inEaffi AND WHISKEY HABITS
3 £ K wwlS cured at home wini
'r ’ ES HP 19 H 3 3 Ukiß out i-AIN. Book of JpiiT**
S H ■ MJt Stlfl ticulnrs SENT FREE.
KHSffl nwe ail B. M. WOOLLEY, M.D,
XSl’ ATLANTA. GA. Gfflee <F»% WhlteheUAt.
THIS TAPER every time you write.
Fi E" Al Ci mEy 10,1 ' " ,o «hiK
1 iZL IW Ck II Iw O aehlnt-ton, D. C.
Successfully PROSECUTES CLAIMS.
Late PrincipalKxamiuer U. 8. Pension Bureau.
3 yrs in last war. 15 adjudicating claims, atfy sinew
•3TN AMF. THIS PAPER every time you write.
automatic, portablb
Lni ff s Int L V or STATIONARY.
b I Pi LU w, ffid E iCT. ?.°*
ALL KINDS. tiT Catalogue Free.
BABY F ’ RE I
►V.... snv !•.•!■ lb. rwud Also JUMPER!*. UICVCLBI
\siiwEsM r-AFETlfcf* OlKLb’ TRICYCLES. <»•• or moro at
nne. Mt C. 0. I*, d.rvrt Goin 1. BPENCEK‘B Farterj. <BI W.
Him .«■ Snoot ( HIUAUO. > l to 110 »a»*d. Hood stump TW
coKlotoo. Too UiguLl factor/ iu ibo world. Latest Hl/toe.
tcSßa day. Samples worth $2.15
FREE. Linesnot ■ nder horaes’feet. Write
'dJ BHI.U TEH SAFETY KEIN HOLDER CO., Rally,Mieh.
AMI 3 THIS PAPER evory time you wnte.
TDCC SALESMEN
B KIS.Ro Stauk Nurseries. Louisiana,M«v
•7-NAME THIS PAPER every time you write.
EDUCATIONAL
COMMERCIaJcO LLEGEOF KENTUCKY UNIVERSITY
LEXINGTON, KY.
, Tnl Hizhe.t Aw.rd at WorW. Kxpodtiov
7? Ji w Boot-lieeplur.Bu.ineM,Short-band,
X* -7* Writing and Telegraphy tanjht. 1,000 Sw-
derit*. 13 Teacher-.. 10.<H>0 <1 raduate. in Buaineiw Brg.n nwa-
A.i-ln-.s W. KUSH SMITH, I’re.’t. Lexin«ton, Sy.
A.N K.—E 1296 _
WHEN WKITINU T<» At»v 1 K I isi lts n*AMb
state that >ou caw the Advertisement in thia
pc per.