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AGJiK 1111 HAL
TOPICS Ol- INTGKI.ST HIX\TIVi;
T«* KAItM \M> a tit IMA.
FKRIMNO COWS
Ju feeding cows there is le-s danger
in nijy <Jcj*.:rturc from ih« Mrict rub of
b'cfiitig, un<! yet row although t}jf* rnjD
acts as a safety salve to let off the execs
sive -jir. ure in this wav. are subject to
damage by infraction of these rules,
cow, of any breed, li as more or lev, abil .
ity to dis|H»-e of food above the natural
requirement- for the maintenance of the
system. The excess of food is di po sod
of in the protluction of milk, and it
the businc- - of tic feeder to discover the
profltabb' abililv nl < row in tip- hi nJ
in this resjx ct Cow- vary very much
m thi# natural nhilitv. s inic arc verita
hie mills in thi- rr-jici 1, taking in a
practically unlimited grist and turning
out a c<*rri sponding product tine cow
especially is rcltorted to have eaten sev
enty-nine pounds of grain food in a day,
ami yielded seven pouwhof butter inslam' daily
rhis. perhaps, is mi unexampled e
of ihe disposal ol food, hut tin-inevlt v
lde n-sult happened it killed the cow.
The food w i more tiian could Ic health
fully dispoved ot ( ott - arc not e vnjipt
I null the ill r. -nlt- of overfeeding, and
the safe way u to tlnd what can be done
with due irtfi.nl to health and maintain
that point constantly while the product
calls for it. Hut, even then, there
danger of an accumulation of iinassim
ilalcil products in the animal which pro
duce Ol make tie row lialilr to milk
lever, tuherctllosjs, garget, m lung fever
hi the end. V, } L /•,,,(«.
STOIIIMI ffdiircn SIIKI.TKB.
Ii is certainly imperative to*tore every
thing under shelter. This includes
crops and the feed, the stock and tin ma
chinery. It is also an item, in storing
away, to arrange as far as possible for
convenience Much of the labor of feed
ing and caring for stock can lie reduced
by arranging the stock, and providing
the feeding boxes and mangers, and stoi -
ing the feed where it can lie fed out con
veniently.
In putting away the tools a plan should
lie devised so that those that will lie
needed first can lie reached without In
ing obliged to move or lake out such as
will not lie needed until later, System
in work always economizes time, in stor
ingthe crops so that they ran tie reached
conveniently, as they are needed to feed
out, the stock so that they can he man
aged with us little difficulty us posailde,
and the ma. blurry so as to save time.
By having aph.ee for everything, and
ihen making it a rule to put everything
in its place, much valuable time. au be
saved, a- very often much more time is
ln-t ill hunting Up a tool or tu tting out
leed that IN needed, than would have
hern required twice■over to have arranged
cunveniently at the stint. \\ lien no ays
tiinor plan is billowed things -mm get
misplaced, and time is lost often wife..
work is pressing ami th. moments are
valuable. And this i- not all. When
no parlii'lllnr system is followed, there i
waste; and w bat is wasted is lost, and
this lessens the profits i'rairit Fm mi '
\hM lii\i; r TIlFF.s.
If the I»est quality S. fruit is to Ic se
cured, and it is unlv i e best quality that
ji.iys (be lest profit, = h very iicccs-ary
to keep the soil at least reasonably rich
While in many ca-.es ii may be sHtUcient
ly rich when the tree arc first 'planted,
yet tin* growing of several crops while
the iris's are making their growing, with
the growth «*f grass that usually follow
Rod the crop "I fruit that hate boon
UTOWit after the trees commenced hearing.
must, to n considerable extent, have d<
creased the available Icrtllilv
It should be understood that the grow
ing of trees and unit tiring of a good crop
of fruit draw - nearly nr quite a- lexivily
upon the available plant food iu the soil
as that of any other crop, and it i-,
therefore. |ti-t as necessary to apply man
lire to the orchard, if the fertility of the
soil is to lie maintained, us to the -oil in
which the field I'ttjts urt' grown.
In nearly all i 'A8*/M tho host WfiV A\c
(dying manure i s to havo the K routitl \\« H
plowed and then utter jmssihle; manure
broadcast « cV( nly a - then
working into the soil w it ll the harrow nr
cultivator = , with tlit 1 orchnnl.
with tho tm-iH \vs», it not ulw *\s
ulilv or hest to j»low u|»; mui thotui ?.rooii
plan in tt» tn wvllrottod ttmtturr,
Utttl make it flue and M’ attor ovouly ovn
the surface. Ash v a iahm! frrt ||t r
to u»e iu the orchard,hut the manure '
ashes should not la applied together, o
there will b his*. ii" ""
mouia.
When the quality of the manure i- 11
sufficient, considerable benefit may ‘
derived l>y scattering under the tr<a
Jar out as the leaves and branches '
It is not a good pbm to pile it up tint
the trunks «>t the tr
Whfde.vef material u-ed w ill be be
scattered broadcast over the >il. und
the trees first, and over the who!
face when tl kjuanttty ox mntum Ntl
lietent. Hi 4K»tv i vtcml out a oonsi«l
erahle distance, and tl u ill b
side to derive a 1. Z uiou nl lu'Urtl
if the '
With \ lie matinr Hm 1L
\\ it 1,
3L
T n 1 r tin
i!
fl, hlv N‘L»rc
One of the \\
lure youuif tnn
ll ktttom
I* 1 prepar U l I I
tbe tre / .X's
tc munur shi
t rated th tl
\I:W an \ ViU ! -
A ltd in th
pla
t
*|#ruig ihr tin xi •
Uf luixt]
Old n ta* ret ti! hv jiion
ins,* ahallo* ud tborough manunug.
pruning and clearing up after whitewash-*
ing the trees to destroy vermin and doing
-itch other work as may be necessary to
1,11 “oil ami Ire,. In * good condi
’ion.
A farmer who had many sheep killed
hy dogs, built round the bodies an in
. closure of rails twelve feet high, the roils
Iteirig slojssl so that the dogs could
,r-jj fn b in omJ r\it inijK>»Hiblc.
| n three jjJ irhf v he euptUTf'd forty-six
hill. Mai ,, . the .. roosters
or give away
after m are through M-tting eggs for
1 he sm. Vou don't waul to breed
from them again; the hens will lay let
ter without them; the eggs will keep
i better if you want to puck them and
you will save considerable feed. "" The
i rooster mii-t go.
No fruit grower should he without a
; upply of ladders, light, strong and
“Ulist'iiiti.'d, and of vatjtttg sizes. If the
[ trees are trained as they should l»e, most
of the ladders should he self-supporting,
so as to place under the branches and en
ible the fruit gatherers to reach what
, "'ey could not from tie- ground. Prop
| great ' r, l ' f( >r, such ladder- will last, a
muny years,
Fate of it Gluss Later.
Murkily Holmes, described by persons
, , v)((1 )mV( . f n . 1|U e„t.lv *«*„ him as a tvpical
. 1)loo< |,,,, American, was killed at
; Sw ,.,. f . w . Ht<;r< Mbs., in a brawl brought
ibout, it i- said, by the jealousy of a
local merchant, whose customers were
being attracted from his store by an ex
hibition of Holmes’s peculiar accomplish
iin ids, which consisted solely in his
ability to swallow with impunity or
pleasure artieli tha‘ would be daugcr
ous or r< •pulsivr tothcordinary stomach.
In the .-quahhle Holme- received a fatal
shot from some unknown person.
Holmes’-appetite for tacks and other
pointed hardware was remarkable; hut
1 if he doted anything it soda water
on was
j bottle-, altlime.di he never turned away
from gla rtides, anti had a well
developed ta-te for foily-rotl whisky,
t pon o. elisions, and for a reasonable
| purse made up by a crowd, lie repeutedly
air* raw chiekeua, beginning on the un
happy fowls while they were still alive.
At one town in Delta tfor lie was m
tin* habit of going from place to place
exhibiting himself) he varied the mo
notony of his bill of fare hy drinking two
gallons of wider as fust as it could he
dipped out and handed to him. It must
la* told, however, be did this to will a
()f ,, pill , of w i ljsky . i u the same
tmN)) |j vl . chicken, he im
| 101IIU .,, (1 that mi the following lame' day his
|,j„ „ f fare xvmild consist of a and
,.,p ( . ( .j H || y uultl!fy dogthat was then a
f. im ilia, < t on the streets,
The gorge of the community rose at
tlu*. nn.l Holmes was ordered to leave
h>wn a , w ,,.. U not appear
thfl , hlwl llny aversion to ordinary
f(H „| btlt thnt he used the tri
m-ticles already mentioned as other
in ,| ordinary men do pepper and fiery
r S solely as condiments,
Recently circus offered him $50 per
^ S cek to travel with it, hut he iudig
unlit ly rejected the offer when he learned
that to earn the money he must .suliordi
nate his will and pleaaure to that of the
manager. he
There is abundant sleight of-hand evidence^hat tricks his
practiced no crushed with on his
audiences, ,,ut actually
teeth and then swallowed glass and other
haul substances. I ’icluhttro ('omnirrrial
//
Mark Twain’s Boyhood.
*'lie was always a rascal," said R. K.
Mini-, the painter, speak mg of Mark
Twain-. >1 was born and rawed in Han
„j b ,,| al „i bnoxv w hen Mrs. Clemens
(Mark s inether) moved from Florida,
Monroe County, to Hannibal Mark was
a dull, stupid, slow going fellow, hut he
, VI 1 full of pranks, and while he didn't
do the meanness, hi planned it and school got
other hoys to do it. He went to
to Di Meredith, and Mark always sat
near the foot of tin* class. He never
took any interest in books, and 1 never
saw bun study bis lessons. He left
school and went to learn the printing
business, and soon after that left Ibmiu
bal mil went to steamboat ing.
I stayed at school, got a good educa
tion. and am a painter, while Mark is a
millionaire. It i- a scandalous fact that
, a . :t boy from ten to seventeen years of
.. ■ Mark was u dull, stupid fellow , and
^ was the wonder of the town as to
w licit end would be his. He was pointed
out b\ nu t her* as a boy that would never
amount to nothin', if be did not actually
coiue to some bad eiul. \nd he was the
II t homely lad in school, too. Franks!
1 * i: think of n dozen t ’em. ami his
Hucklehervy Finn” i- full of Uauuibal
episodes worked over. I read that with
; - much interest a- 1 would a diary of
Hannibal Ui'pt during uiy school days.
Mark is thr o years older than myself,
tin t he was always in ,a class of liovs two
\ S .us your or than himself.”—•
M \
Female kleptomaniacs.
\V*l< talking reocutly, said a writer
J lib t hiea wee, with the manager
large store, where thev -ell every
from a clothespin to :ut overcoat.
rit is lutrdh day,” he said, “that
i* do not arrest i n < - i*r four women for
<liiig We have k- I : roe ,,f detectives
etribtited through t rr ,e house and it
h t v watehi " g all the erxKiked
tt r come in hen Most of
women t__t \\e arrest wo let go with
Hi occasionally a professional
1 f along aud we feel in
cute such offenders,
I'll. ladv wearing silk- and
;iS n to e some articles
S cm real them
<k • .ias taken
the -e and the
her p ,n. •'he
lTL'* .1 n set free.
j tha .n resistible impulse had
d her ... Nt as she did. She is the
nent Board of Trade maa.
We let her go and told her not to come
neat the-tore again. Almost every thief
we irmt xh a worn:; On an average we
have twenty-five ot them a week. ’’
j
M inors facts.
A curly walnut. log was sold hy a
Bimli. Ixuraii ( ounty t\ . V n. > man for
83000.
The fastest recorded time made hy an
electric railway is about twenty miles an
hour on a street car system.
More than four thousand jKrsons per
inlied by a hurricane which devastated
Barbsdoe*, October 10, 1780.
Four telegraphic messages can now be
transmitted over one wire at. one time by
using the quadruple*! system.
It i - estimated that 250,000 persons in
the United States are engaged in business
depending solely on electricity.
Eigliteen years ago a Kansas City man
paid $3600 for a lot, and was laughed at.
The other <Lay he sold it for 8132,000.
An Ohio girl has a photograph „U„,m
containing the pictures of fourteen men
to whom she says she has been en
gaged.
In a colony numbering -eventy-five in
Tulare County, Cal., no church or saloon
is tolerated. Board of Trustees governs
the whole.
.I d. Santa, of DcLand. Ha., ha a
Dutch Bible nearly 300 years old that hm
family earned to the State of New York
when first settled.
Will llcnsiTs wife, of Punxutawney,
Penn., decorated a favorite eat named
Jonathan with a ribbon and a bell.
Jotmthan then ( limbed a tree and hanged
himself.
A wealthy citizen of Alameda, Cal.,
who died a week or tivo ago, provided in
hi- will that if any of his children marry
fir-1 cousins they shall forfeit their share
of the property.
The cost in human life of the wars of
the last thirty-three years, beginning
with the Crimean'War, is computed at
2,253 (100 souls. This does not include
mortality from sickness.
While Charles Lawson .. owing .
wa- i up
stuiiqiN at Kvcrett, Mo., lie found a pow
der can i .iiitaining $730 in gold and sil
ver com. 11 in supposed it was hidden
during the War of the Rebellion
In transmitting a message from Sati
Francisco, Cal., to Hong Kong, China,
via New York, C.’imso, I'enzauee, Aden
Bombay, Madras, I’enang and Singapore,
about, fifteen minutes are consumed.
There arc four brothers in Crawford
County, Penn., all of whom are stalwart
men mid married, and not one of whom
is on speaking terms with any of the
others. Property litigation is the cause.
Five miles an hour is considered good
walking for a man, hut \Y T. Young, in
Morgan County, Georgia, can beat
this. lie walked all tho way from
Duluth to within a few miles of Madison,
a distance of over fifty miles in less than
ten hours.
Oaths were taken hy Abraham B. C.
18112 (Gen. xxi., 24), and authorized
1491 B. C. (Ex. xxii., 11). The admin
istration of an oath in judicial proceed
ings was introduced into England hy the
Saxons. That administered to a judge
was setlled in 1344 .
The bridge of the Pennsylvania,
Poughkeepsie iV Boston Railroad at Port
land, Penn., recently completed, is one
of the largest iu the United States. It is
925 feet tlj inches, and the viaduct is
993 feet 7 inches, making a total of 1921
feet and j an inch.
A young lady from Caldwell, Ohio,
created a little scene in the ticket office
at Zanesville the other day. She laid a
late improved six-shooter on the counter
and proceeded to search for her pocket,
then bought a ticket for Seattle, Wash.,
shoved lwr gun in her pistol pocket and
departed.
Since 1809 more than 00.0(10 bodies
have been buried in the Potter's field, on
Hart’s Island, New York city. There
arc no single interments. The bodies arc
placed in trenches, dug in regular rows,
forty five feet long, fourteen feet wide
and ten feet deep. Each of these pits
will bold 150 bodies.
Tire estimated number of Christians is
over 408,000,000; of llmldhists, 420,
000,000; of the followers of Brahma,
18(1.000,0)0. of Mohammedans, 150.
000.000; of Hebrew. 8.000.000; of
atheists, ilei-tsand infidels, 85.00(1.00(1;
of Fagans, 50,000,000, and ( 1100
minor creeds. 123.000,000.
Several , weeks , ago, while-Mr*. , V ,, ( .
lVatn, i. who lives near I’h. adelphiu,
was gathering iickorynuts. a blm ksnakc
coiltHi uround acv nukle. Mu* rmtrav
ore.1 . to shake . . U off w.thou, ava.l, wnen
m her des,v ratlon she heroically pulled
it off her aukle and threw it irotn her,
whieti ... certain . , tv mitureu , much , nerve , for
1
People .Judged hi Their l.o *k>.
••Four people out of five,” remarked
a gentleman to the Washington /W
talking machine, "carry some distin
guishing mark of occujvition or habit.
Now see. That man is a jeweler. Do
you *.t the peculiar wrinkles around his
right eye aud eyebrow, Those . ome
from habitually carrying hi- i> w dor’s
glass there, Half tho-, jiassvrs-by are
dc-k-w orker.. Their ahouldt rs droop.
Ss-e that voting lady When -he is at
home-he-its with iter left limb drawn
up unurr her—sits on it in fact, The
knee i* forced out s- wheiT it hit>
her skirts? Her walk one-sidnl m
t'onst\jucnc<?. Th iSt: \ouD45 tneti art*
hi« vclo-ruh r^. They walk on their to
like ;» mim inc luKil-trirl. Nmv, * mi
vou tell nit* whv * cirv-irootis * clerks alwavs *
•
hwo anccted walk __ ...
an
l se For the Cotton Stalk.
It is said to have b rn demonstrated
that the cotton stalk, which has hitherto
been t. carded a- w iste.eontains valuable
fiber. A lot of the stalks was recently
sent from Arkausns to a factory iu New
York to Ih- operated on in thi same
manner as fiax and hemp. There we
returned about twenty different grad
of fibrous material, from coarse strands
it the stalk to the glossy fiber as soft a
silk Persons are now engaged in por
feeling a mschine that will spin the tur.
terial. The fiber is sufficiently strong ;»
make the liest of bagging as well as cloth
as fine as liueu.
k
RAGPICKERS.
u<)\\ (o.ftoo MFV \\I> WOMEN
KARA A LIVING IV PARIS.
Astonishing I acts About These
Strange Scavengers of the Streets
of the French Capital—Their
Organization and Work.
i Last Mrs. v> Prank > Leslie t r •
, vear. -uv in a
letter , .. from Paris to the . New .. A oik . TiorM, ... ,,
M. 1’ouff, a dealer in diamonds, lost
tine large pearl, weighing 123 grains and
valued ot 88000. lie immediately put
posters op on all the walls of Paris offer
ing a hand-ome reward for its recovery,
Several weeks elapsed when a poor
woman called on the Commissary of Po
»«’ i«* the Hue Montmartre ami handed
the lost pearl t , that official. Her name
was Gautier. Siie wa- a ehiffonniere, or
female ragpicker, by trade, and had
found the pearl in a heap of rubbish in
the Hue LaffiUe. She lived in a small
wooden shanty in the Rue flu Ruisseau, a
poorly tenanted street belonging to a
quarter known as Les Grandes Carrieres
go named from the 'd irge quarries" on
the northern slopes of .Montmartre, where
the city formerly got much of its line
limestone for building.
The new law that forbids housekeepers
placing their rubbi-h in the streets over
night lias been a id blowtotheeoi'pora
t ion to which this poor honest woman
belongs. Some compensation has, it is
true, been offered them by the tolerance
of the police, w ho close their eyes to the
infringement of the regulations in the
narrow streets which arc lined with shops
and warehouses. They have each their
own concierge, who permits them to
forage at daybreak among the rubbish
brought down by the servants from up
stairs.
They have a longer day’s work now.
j Formerly they started out at ten at night,
an( j .p f ouror ffvc in the morning, xvhei
■ the carts made their rounds, they liar.
! disappeared from the streets. Now they
must remain until the scavengers appeal
on the scene, or at least until the last
boxes of rubbish have been emptied into
the common bin placed on ill" edge ol
the curb hy each concierge. do
They have the work of sorting to
when they get back from their early
morning task of collecting the refuse.
Some sell it to a boss, or trieur (sorter),
as iie is called, "who stays at home and
does nothing else. He sits in his room
like a gentleman, and there quietly as
sembles, examines and separates the dif
ferent articles picked up hy his workpeo
ple. lie then sells the material to buy
ers of various sorts.
The business is anything hut a lucra
tive one. Parisians, however, throw
away every year more than 300,000 tom
of stuff, which the ragpickers collect and
sell for upward of 25,000,000 francs,
or nearly $3,000,000. The daily returns
amount in all to more than 70,000 francs
($14,000), but there are 40,000 men and
women to share the sum between them,
so that each gets an average of one franc
seventy-five centimes, or less than tliirty
tive cents. Two hundred pounds o.
waste paper cannot be sold for more thai
a couple of francs, woolen rags are only
worth five cents a pound, cotton threi
cents, and bones*at best fetch one Iran,
eighty-five centimes, or thirty-seven cents
per hundredweight. night—fot
A man working steady all
they still ply their trade on a small scale
despite the edicts of the Prefect—ma
earn, if ho has a fair amount of goot
fortune, from forty to sixty cents, hui
not more. A silver spoon does occasion
ally turn up in the rubbish, hut a pear
of purest orient hue—well, so to speak,
never. Besides, every member of tin
corporation of ragpickers is bound unde
severe penalties to deposit any valuables
lie may find at the nearest police office.
Each has a card or ticket with a ntimbei
inscribed, and a number corresponding
with that on the card is fastened to the
hottc or basket. Ragpickers, moreover,
have always been noted for their industry
and honesty.
There are no classes or categories
among the ragpickers, as some pretend.
There are only the good and the had. The
real cliiffonuier is readily recognized by
the adroitness with which, while only
slightly stooping, he transfixes a cork or
any bit of rag or paper Uoul.bus. and drops it into
, h;lskl , his it requires
Qf icii} tiw . t<( ( iotl.c H,i, u
m ., lth , () „tc„ms imitctors-'icople \
v.lio , would nun pass themselves u. ou r fx,. tor
. Th( ,,,, an> ple ',, nty o'
gllams wh „ welr th , b!lie b! w and
i^o al)out , . with t1 the » basket, , . » out tue v art
i members , of r the ., corporation. ,• 1 110 }
no
arc mere hide-venders. Catskins still
find purchasers, and the number of rab
bits eaten at cheap restaurants and water
s Jdc resorts enables these prowling frauds
l0 di-po-e of the Inwlies of their victims
Floating Gardens.
Titc floating vcgciabie gardens of China
are prcjsati i in April on b.nuboo rafts
| ten or n kwg hy half as wide.
,
with au inch of straw, then with two
inches of adhesivi* mud, which receives
the The raft* art' moored to the
bank in still water, and require no fur
I thcr attention. The straw and soil soon
give way. the roots drawing support from
the water :douc. In about twenty days
| the rafts become covered with the creeper
spotnoeo replans, wh ost* 'items and roots
are gathered for (XX >kin«r, and whose
blossoms jni nt ;\ pretty appearance in
autumn. In some places marshy land is
profitably cultivated in this manner,
Floating rice fields are similarly "a con
>!n; .,t, Ure n.’.al '. dig held by lay#
0 f weeds. They furnish the rijwned crop
in from sixty to seventy instead of the
usual one hundred days, and may he de
IH'Ul led on when the neighboring land
tiler ; m drought or flood.
The German Emperor s style of after
diiiuer oratory i- like that of a COCi
tar.nder iu the field—his sentences are ;.
scries of -hart, sharp shocks, like so many
words of command.
How to Get a Good Salary.
The Nashville Chrutia,, Alrvate,
'ays: “Recently b student <>f Jennings
Business College, this city, secured a ]>o
sitioti in a large house in New Orleans on
a salary of $ 1.200 per annum, and another
one got a place in Birmingluun at $1,300."
aiu i the Nashville American states that
still another one got a good position in
Texas at $1,800. This school is consid
ered one of the most jJracfieal institutions
of this kind in the world. It has had
students from 18 States and territories.
nearly , • good ...
JL everv • one getting 1
f .
Sum foroktfii.ni.s.s in love for other
ha-a foremost place in our ideal of t hat
aeter. and our rleep homage, as represent
ing the true end of humanity. Who
does upbraid himself for hi- slowness
those sympathies which are as amultiplv
fog minor to the joys of life, reflecting
tnera m endless play £
Probably the early ru e of mankind
were not much superior to other animal
iife. and in the absence of lrnoks and
Otner implements \vei(! c ntirelv destitute
of means except what nature furnished,
vet they no doubt lived a- happily us their
posterity do.
Tis sad to see a woman growing ” olu before
her time "
Mi broken down and hopeless when life
should hold its prime ;
She fee s herself a burden when a blessing
she shoiiid be
\nd Jongs for death (o bring her release from
inbei y.
It thete poor, discouraged women who suf
*r from diseases peculiar to women could
only know that health could be regained h.
tie- Use of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite ITcm ription,
l S5 Every yt Kil!^!::;' who *«t*11 healthy ought
f. woman is
to be told about the wonderful virtue in t his
nedioine. and understand that it is a safe
ward against the terrible diseases common to
her sex. If is yuarantird to give satisfaction
or money paid for it will Ik; refunded.
Cleanse the liver, stomach, bowels anil
whole system by using l)r. I’ierce's Pellets.
Busy people are generally long lived. Ar
ive exercise ot Drain ami life muscle, provided it
Ue not excessive, is the of life.
Kill fill'd lo llie Hesl.
All are entitled to tlio best that their money
will tl , buy, so every family should have, at once
a bottle of the best family remedy. Syrup of
i ign, to cleanse . the . system when , costive . nr , ml
ions. For sale in 50c. ami SI bottles by all
Icu-flinif druggists.
The French cu sine boasts no fewer than six
hundred distill, t nimles of dressing eggs.
SIOO |{e want. 18 IOO.
The readers of this paper will be pleased to
earn that there is at least one dreaded dis
use that science lm been able to cure in all
ts stages, and that is Catarrh. Halt’s Catarrh
ure is tlieonly positive cure now know n to
the medical fraternity. Catarrh tieiim a eon
titutional disease, Hall's Cauirrh requires Cure it constitutional
reatment. is taken in
ernahy, actinic directly upon the Wood and
ini : eus surfaces of the system, / the thereby de
royingthti toundutiem » (tinease, and
■riving th** patient stiniKth.by buFdin^up the
constitution and assisting nature in doing it
ork. The proprietors have so mueli faith in
is curative powers, tliat they offer One Hun
dred Dollars for anv case that i fails to cure.
Semi l'or list of testimonials. Ad tires ■.
K. ,1. IIK.VDV ,t ( (>., To odo, O.
aaf-Sold liv Druea st-. ■.
Smoke tlie bes — "Tansil "s I’unch” Cigar.
The FliicMt on Earth.
The Cincinnati, Hamilton Dayton 1*. 13. is
tlie only line running t'u Iman’s Perfected
Safety Vestibnied Trains, with l-nair. Par or,
sleeping ami Dining Car service between Cin
cinnati, Indianapolis and Chic tgo, and is the
Only Lino mil ling Through Hoc inJnjj Chair
Cars between Cincinnati, Keokuk a «d Spr m»
field, lit., and Combination Chair and Sleeping Di
(Jar Cincinnati to Peoria, 111., and the Only
rect Line between Cincinnati, Dayton, Lima,
Toledo, Detroit,tlie La ce Ive^ions *nd Cau td
The ortd is one oc tho oldeni in the State of
Ohio and ih * only line entering Cin cinnati
over iwenty-five mile, of double rar e, and
from its pan record can more »htv\ jyssure i s
patrons «pee'l, comfort itnd sa etv. Ticket s on
sale every where, and s;e th =-r th * read < M.
Sc D., eith v in u ou of t nclnn iti, iudian
apolh or Tolclo. K. n. M 9 OitMlCK, Ccn
era Passe iger and Tieke Agent.
"l.iiey llllltiiit.”
Hark ! tlie sonnet of many voices,
Jubilant in gladdest song,
And lull many a hear rejoices
As the chorus floats along:
“Hail the Queen of all Tobaccos "
H .w tlie happy voices blend,'
‘•Finest and pure t among her fellow;—
Man's staunch ami true friend.”
<tre*nii. tlie Fnrnili.e ot t , ’nrr,i -rs.
Mild, equable climate, certnin and nliund
crops. Heat fruit, grain, grass and stock conn
iry in the world. Full informution free. Xd
djessdreg. lm’ifrra’tn Hoaril, Horti.ind. O--*.
■
The Plain Truth
Is that Htxxi's Sarsaparilla has cure.I thousands of
p^I’le who buffered severely with rheumatism. Ii
neutralizes the lactic acid in tbe »>!oc>il wbicb
causes those terrible pains and aches, au<l also vi
tylizes and enriches the blood, thus preventing !he
recurrence of Ih« 4i»ea»c. These facts warrant in
in urging you, it you suffer with rheumatism, t)
give Hood*« ^aisaparlllaa tria?.
Having l>cen troubled with luflamnutory rhen
matism for many years, my favorable attention
was <‘&i!ed to Hood's Sarsaparilla bv an advorJst*
mem of cures .t ha'I effect#* I I hav^ ««»w use l
three bottles «>f Hood's Sarsaparilla and can already
testily to beueftcud results. I hi >*hiy recommend
it ns a great blood purifier. ”—/ Aters, Wes*.
Bloomfield. N. V.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggists. $ 1 ; six fur SL Prep arti.i oul
by C\ I. HOOP I'f CO., Apothecaries, Lowell
IOO Coses One Dollar
.1 BUSINESS
l H#j NASHVILLE, COLLEGE, TENN.
o
pying uoid poult Ions many or them r**
I ceiviiik; salaries raiiktiug from $900 to $ la
Ii 500 per aunum. For circular*, address
K. W. JKX.\1\GS. Prln.
--
Ely's Cream Balm
1!K TO * 1 ,kE
COLD IN HEAD
yt icki.v.
Apply Calm into each nostril
KJ.Y BROS..54 Warren St .. X.Y
HEALTH If in search of hvaitfc. or wraltb.
for terms and evldem'Cof tfce n< t
»*KO«‘tTK • f .mi tm> V*?. r BaIks in family ;i%<•
ujp ii »|t r pu pruMkv aud sa*e> • »f domett* '
nCAL I H outfits. AnidrasisNltouhrsan. Me*
Gilbert’s Dress Linings
Id '. ({uUtier nameoaselra^. Be*? in the vr-*rl.'.
BRYANT & STRATTON Business College
LOUISVILLE. KY.
25 018
•V ASEUTS wanted for THfe
WAR SXO^.TT
vi a”* m ac
— car—
mW'- \ Esgis s Hsst
At
MM t m .5 V *•» I John l»£*«»ric E$ten thrilling Cooke.
.g ~ »tory.
mu MB Av- fcfctv. -I'-V iA* 11 V P ,mt tSfJ* “«
fm YT^for .
which th«ra
great demand is
fetf skj^ ™ Y.raj book, ht nscRu>rioN wiUi
Jay BE mS [•«*!*’’iituftra
t‘.eu». Therehu
jnoi* r Cn *
bo'^^roarUonttheBnnthernEt»te»thm"srret i>op u lar
dee dB of valor by o'the those Conf,ders-e fl “ff®. *’ Solder ‘ yes
interest, , Dd
bravely buttled, wilt never grra.- >e»s. This
indents of tli« p'ront «• ntest between th« South
t,nd tbe North. Her* ia a book /or the eld 1.x
Confederate, to re.-all to him the vivid sceuee of
the greatest Civil War ever known, to call back
Aw own campsigne, and tell him of the mighty
Chieftains, dear to the memory of every one who
wore the Gray, Nest ” will find welcome
*‘3nrry of Eagle’s a
in every Southern home. That it may be within
tlie reach of every one, it is published at the low
fbioeof $2, though a large, handsomk voi»VMXf
wuunruu-T illesthatild and xleqastlyeownu.
SOLO ONLY BY SUBSCRIPTION,
Aa the demand for this old favorite book
vkich las be*n out of print so l*n{i, will be large
and applications for agencies very mimeroiife, ail
^ vrhod«*iretoactaa Ai«nt*Efconldwritofor of territoiy. term*
quickly eecara chulco
a. w. DILLINGHAM. Publisher, ■
33 V/oot 23d Gt.. Mow York*
fiVtNTtCf 0^ip
S3
I
Act on t helper and bile: clear the Complexion;
cure biliouifucs.s, sick headache, costiveness,
malaria and ail liver and stomach disorders.
Wc* are now piakitifr small size Pile Deans,
especial !v adapted for children urn! womeu
V( . rv sinH ‘n mid easy to tukc. Price of either
si/i* 25c | ip” hot PHOTO-GRAVURE tie. of the
‘panel size "Kisslmr at T-IV-.U,’ iiuiilc-.i on
above picture, stamp. Ad.iress fho makers ot the
.. ece ipt,,t' :.<■ ACO..' Sti^cuis.
Mo.
ggllllpig VUj&Or
FURNITURE. Spral
®SpiX«jQtlS«$ P~?.ty- «’'■n*"* 11 **
I°f3li?pz«h.73l\WI1FPI svbotjwft, M p r ~n\ A'S
FS^vC^ellds’puaia« ! i jZP «(_, •V
ViS* - tcNV V_
’a ■ ‘.S’riirr
We rstiit «tms ""•<••! inhy
t/A.i.-Cr -t r- y. be TM}fg^^WwHr.El,riHtas,
gS.V^mpforOatk- aud ship bo*™* to
<trMredTxLW V- P ^deliyakv eiV"v eiiEa ^
Li^ue. #*** goods VbiimU./r^
jLLliLKG L'FR. co., 145 Gt,
|
, joiiTr,.^!;T5L:''"r,r.t,:v;:v.r.H..ir.o ofOur^tlfles, o^r-'r oh* "mt 4
i 00 * r»B* < lOAjopMP H' b t
This Tratio
Mark Is on
The Best
f ISB BR^i».SL
srsrt forr-ep d ' .r, \J. T sv.-- v . >j. b'od
$ for a yA Double Broech-Loader
*
Drrrch-Loader», $i to $o0.
Wlm*h<5t.irr Jo-*hot Kiflct. $11 1o .®1S»
Hrvcch-fuakiln-r ((ifi «*% $«.C« <-.i
Srlf.*»*tik’B;c Ilt'volv^ra, Mfkel-' lulrd, f.'.OW.
P*nd 2i-. stamp for 50- p»(r«* Cfvtalc.j*ieuu l i&'e 25 per c?nt.
GRIFFITH & SEMPLE. 6!2 W. FJaln, loaisville. Ky.
AFTER ALL OTHERS FAIL CONSULT
----- — — “ awis
3’tii \orih P trteencli Sr., Fhiiadelnhio, JPa., for
the treatment of Blood Poison*. M.is Kruptionn,
.Nervous Complaints, IiriKlit's id-ease, stricture^
lnipotency and kindred disetur ., uo matter of bow
lone standlug or from what cause originating,
or-reii due- !■■■ |[ciiif‘S fmnl.sherl (lixii.r,. hv mail »npr fHCCa
send for Book ui >l*i.( IV I.
-- ------ -----
JOHN F, STRATTON & SON
43 an«l Walker ftt. N fc. W lORK
:niiv.r*i>ra ami Wlmlc-ai* I ralara In
MUSICAL MERCHANDISE,
I in.iii*. (.min i s, naii,os Acturiii ou». imr-.
uiofiicas. iVc, All itiutis 01 Mriiiij. t *. ( . * *. fr c . *
>LNi* iOl: iAlAl.au,
—
DETECTIVES
m“T» to an ttmier iaatrjctioM ,r. Soors: F«ndc»
work. Rri rart;ior rear u t at; • ex r*c -»i \ and. t* the e 1 liii’Fll At IO aal Pecectiv#
GraanaQ'aV Aga;n»t I'r G ruu&a”, i l Po wHet Gallery o>
Notes Criminxi*. Tlu*«** r«*s*e<i iij dc’^ofive bnajntr-ra. crdH'r
me to ire d*•'•'-! i(#»* ssnii »'*"!• ■ h,- pxriicuiar* Rmt-kivwiest Cor
»! ukl\>A\ PI.TLVTH t Hi KfeAl to. Arem'o.« iaciBaali. tX
01(1 -WHISKEY HAB-
11 llWSl v
liMfnr E u; L
wh t
STI'IIV. 1- ■ V-k.-.-pine.P-nsn:. ssforre^
p|| CC 1 > I>r. “HA-.. - tlaganic Oiniine.c.
■ Known An :■>> year.-. J>iuggistM keep It,
CURED " ill you a bottle f«*r 25 cent*.
lJ AysO-M. 580 X ft CO., PitfTain, N. V.
M >U .♦»> I’hMUI.I.Kg , r ak pjjv l>
f>cii(iiars];tp ana j>* tions, $50. rir«nocc.PC^fLr :
OPIUM RKln Only the Ccrr.ra cutixl. »"ti- llr.
7r l i In %
I pikCAonbA and folly en
jA is specific Big (5 the as the ‘only
Car«« UATB.^ for c«f\s£& cutq
1 TC i of this disease.
not t*
f£rn ctLK Strlcujre. A^iSKTduzn. ti. V.
lirdos’.J bv tkfl Tv> oave sold Bij G for
CiJtiduI 5s. r-.arj;-* years, anfi 1* baa
— m jf.ven ibe of
Vh fartioii.
cue. I*. XL DV CITE ii CO-.
T»4e r a*riiSl*00. ri Sold by Dr,^yiKt«.
A. -V U .. .........Fit fc.
RE ! FO R
Best Cough Medicine. Recommendt-d agreeable by Physicians.
___vs where all else fails. Pleasant and to the
taste. Children take it without objection. By druggists.
0 o z in c 2 ■o V ©i 1
zsgrs'