Newspaper Page Text
KID GLOVES.
ol ,r««>n>S Account or How
They Are Made.
u .- Processes Necessary to the Pre
paration of the Skin.
“Kid gl° ve9 >” ' ai<i leaclill S g love -
I Jer to a reporter for The Minneapolis
r n the other day, “are, forthebcst
made in France. There are some
j in England and Germany; but the
tare of French make, the principal
* being nt Paris, Grenoble,
d Chaumont. Os all the materials
tf ,l for gloves kid is the favorite, yet of
£, manifold operations necessary to put
jac skin into shape to cover the hand
;>eople have any idea. In all there
m 219 separate and distinct processes
fluat the raw skin has to go through
before converted into the kid glove.”
reporter had been brushing up his
knowledge of glove making. At what
oeriod of the world’s history people bc
pn t 0 clothe their hands in gloves he
n ot been able to satisfactorily de
termine. Hi* researches had carried him
back to Genesis, where it tells of the
mother of Jacob covering the boy’s hands
mth the hairy skin of a goat in order to
deceive his father, this seeming to be the
jarl est mention on record. Coming
down to a late date, Homer sings about
them, and they arc spoken of in Shak
jpeare’s writings. Having exhausted his
own time and patience, the reporter had
gone to the local glove dealer.
■The first thing to do,” continued the
latter “is to get the hair from the raw
ikins. A three weeks’ bath in lime
water docs this. The skins are con
ttantly turned and shifted, and when
taken out the hair comes off easily.
“From the lime pit the skins go to the
tmhairing room, where they are stretched
on a wooden block and are scraped with
a blunt knife. Then they are taken by
the fiesher, who cuts away all the worth
less parts, that are used for glue and ge
lantine, while the hair goes for mortar
and felt. The sudder next takes the
akins and removes any hair that may have
escaped the previous operators. A soak
in clear water to take out all traces of
lime is the next step the skins are put to,
and then they are put through a process
of artificial fermentation. It removes
every fleshy impurity from the skins and
renders them soft and supple. The tan
ning of the kid skin is not in the usual
way with bark, but they are put into a
revolving drum with a mixture of the
yolks of eggs, wheaten flour, alum and
salt. It takes no end of eggs, one fac
tory at Chaumont using, I understand,
over three hundred dozen every day.
The skins are kept in this mess for an
hour, then being allowed to lay for
twelve hours. Then they go to the dry
ing room, and are subjected to a tempera
ture varying from 140 to 100 degrees.
This leaves them dry, and they are next
‘seasoned’ or sammied’ with cold water.
Then they are stretched backward and
forward over an upright knife of half
moon shape.
“Shaving is the next process, this re
quiring great dexterity. It is done with
•pecially constructed knives, and re
moves all the under flesh. The skins arc
again treated to a composition of egg
yelk, flour and oil, calculated to make
them pliable, after which they are ready
for dyeing. The preliminary operation
is to tread the skins under water for
several hours to soak out anything that
would impair the action of the dye.
Another egg treatment follows, and a
day’s drying is given the skins. They
are then brushed with ammonia and sev
eral coatings of lye. If the skins are to
be dyed on both sides they are put in a
vat and covcre 1 with the liquid. Black
gloves show first a decided blue tinge,
but this is worked off until a perfect
black is secured. This process is called
lustring. ”
The caller, who had taken in the ac
count of the preparation of kid skins
with increasing interest, began to won
der at this point, not that one of the best
make of gloves costs $2 or more, but
bow they could be made so cheap. Here
the skins had been going through no
cud of hands, and been days on the
way, yet they had only reached the dye
ihop.
“Having been dyed and dried,” went
on the affable informant, “the skins are
given a ‘grounding,’ the object being to
remove all roughness. They are next
•orte l and cut up. This may seem an
tasy thing, but it is called the most diffi
cult, and requires great care and good
judgment, as the natural stretch of the
skin must be taken into account. The
finished skins, having been selected and
mapped out by the sorters, and pieced
out by the cutters, are put over a frame
*bap<: like a glove spread out unsewn.
The gloves, with the thumbs only fitted
iud rent together, are pressed, a:.d
punched, ami trimmed a number of
times, after which the edges are folded
bp machinery, and they are ready for
fr'Wing. Th c stitching is done chiefly
by hand, thousands of women and girls
being employed. The fastenings are put
to, the gloves arc straightened on sticks,
•rranged in dozens, placed in boxes, and
•here they are ready for the market.”
A l>oll tax of SGO it imp sed on all
Cbinamen entering South Australia.
Bald H nls and Powdered Wigs.
“Bala-ueaded men don’t wear wigs
now as they once did years ago,” sadly
said a wig-maker to a New York J/<u7
and Express reporter. “They don’t seem
to enre if they do show a sleek, clean
pate, especially the married men and
confirmed old batchelors. They look
upon the absence of hair as a badge of
intelligence or conspicuous popularity.
Maybe they are right, but our profession
doesn’t think so. Our principal customers
arc actors nnd women. The hitter can
not stand the slightest trace of baldness,
nnd arc willing to pay well for a fine
wig. Many women in society wear wigs,
but they arc so well made and matched
in color to the natural hair that detec
tion is improbable. Human hair is
cheaper and in more demand than form
erly; hence there is no necessity for any-
Ixxly going through life baldheaded. I
deal in all paits of the United States,and
after an experience of forty-five years I
received an order three weeks ago for two
wigs for negroes. They were the first of
that kind within my recollection. They
wanted them curly or kinky.
“Fashion repeats itself, and my im
pression is that within the next decade
the powdered wigs of the time of Louis
XIV. will come into vogue. They had
style in those days. The head was the
centre to dress from then and a cavalier
made an imposing appearance. Now a
big walking cane and a high collar con
stitute the modern cavalier. Bald heads
must go. Even Cossar wore a crown of
leaves to hide his baldness, but these
parquet-bachelors have lost all pride."
The Three-toed Horse.
Prof. Marsh has illustrated the gradual
changes of the horse family from the
three or four-toed cohippus of the eocene
basin of Green river to eguus of the
quaternary and recent. Between these
the fossil remains of about forty species
have been discovered, ranging from the
size of a fox to a much larger animal than
now exists. If classic history can be
trusted, specimens of the ho.se with
three or five toes have been known in
comparatively modern times. In the life
of Julius Ceeiar, by Sutanius, occurs the
following paragraph concerning his fa
mous horse: “He rode a very remarkable
horse—with feet almost like those of a
man, the hoofs being divided in such a
manner as to have some resemblance to
toes. This horse he had bred himself,
and the soothsayers having interpreted
these circumstances into an omen that
its owner would be master of the world,
he brought him up with particular care
and broke him in himself, as the horse
would suffer no one else to mount him,
A statue of this horse was afterward
erected by Casar’s order before the tem
ple of Venus Genitrix.” — Pacific Science
Monthly.
The Fox mid the Swan.
A Fox who Desired to Show nis
Friendship for a Swan Invited him to
Walk in the Forest. The Swan left his
Pond and Complied, but in a short time
the Difficulties of the Way Overcame
him, and he was Loud in his Complaints.
“How Foolish in me to leave the Pond
for the Forest 1”
“And how Silly in me to have Invited
you!” retorted the Fox.
“I’ll never speak to you again 1”
“You’ll never have the chance!”
Thus they Inveighed Against each
other until they met a Hare, who heard
their Complaints and made Answer:
“Had the Fox Stuck to the Forestand
the Swan to the Pond you might have
been Friends to the End of your Days.”
Moral —Don’t Invite a Sailor to ride
Horseback with you.— Detroit Free Press.
She Hustled.
A California woman, who put her all
into a deal in stocks and was shrunk out,
called on her broker and said:
“When will this thing probably come
out in the papers?”
“To-morrow, doubtless.”
“How long can you suppress it?”
“Why, I might keep it out two days,
but not longer.”
“Only two days? That’s pretty short
notice, but I’m a hustler when I get my
bonnet on. I’ll depend on the two
days.”
On the third day the papers chronicled
her loss and her wedding on the same
page. ________
Tfnew the Pen he Wanted.
A serious looking young man went
into a book store and called for some
pens. After he had spent much time in
examining them the store keeper said:
“Is there any particular pen you
wish?”
“Yes, but I don’t know that I'd know
it if I were to see it.”
“Do you know the name?
“Yes, I think so,” taking a newspaper
clipping out of bis pocket and scanning
it. “This says that Col. Baxter always
writes with a trenchant pen, so let me
see some trenchant pens, please.”—Ar
kansaw Traveler.
A Beautiful Example.
They were sailing in the little boat to
gether and she said:
“Are we running before the wind now,
George ?”
“No, my darling,” said he, “our boat
is hugging the shore.”
“Ah!” she exclaimed, “what a beauti
full example you have here.”— Boston
Courier.
Facts About Bells.
The Freeman's Standard says: “The
nature of the country has much to de
with the sound of bells. In a hilly lo
cality a bell will not be heard half so fai
as if the land were level, or nearly so.
A bell will be heard a great deal further
lengthwise of a valley than over the hills
at the sides. Where bell rooms are
lower than the surrounding buildings
and trees, these obstructions break the
sound and prevent its free passage to a
distance. Towers having small windows
or openings, with the lower boards close
together, often box up the sound. In
cities, the noise of steam an I horsecars,
manufacturing establishments, carriages
nnd carts rattling over the pavements,
etc., is so great that bells are not ex
pected to be heard at any considerable
distance, and this is the reason why, in
all cities, several bells are used for fire
alarm purposes, it being impossible
for one bell, no matter how large it may
be heard above the thousands and one
noises incident to every large place.
It is said that the largest bell ever made
in this country weighed 22,000 pounds,
and before it was figured hung on the
City Hall, in Now York. On one or
two occasions this bell was heard up the
Hudson River thirteen miles, in the
night, when the city was comparatively
quiet. It is a great mistake to suppose
that bells can be heard in proportion to
their weight—that is, a bell of two thou
sand pounds will be heard twice as far
as one of 1,000 pounds. This is not so,
for the reason that the larger bell does
not possess anything like twice the reso
nant surface of the smaller one. What
is gained and admired in the larger bell
is its deep, majestic and dignified tone,
which it is impossible to secure in the
smaller one, the weight of a bell invalia
bly governing its tone. A bell of 100 or
200 pounds, in an open belfry, on an
engine-house, a schoolhouse or a factory
in the country, is frequently heard at a
long distance, out of proportion, appar
ently, to one of 1,000 pounds in
a church-tower near by; and in
stances of this kind frequently cause
no little comment in the way of
comparison. One reason for this is that
the small bell has a sharp, shrill, pene
trating sound, that must, of necessity, be
heard very much further in proportion to
its weight, than the low,mellow ‘church
going’ sound of the church bell. The
same principle applies to the whistle of
a locomotive, and it is heard a long dis
tance simply because its tone is shrill
and penetrating. When hung stationary
and struck or tolled, bells will not be
heard as a rule, half as far as when
swung. The swinging motion throws
up the mouth of the bell,
and not only carries the sound off, but
imparts to it a richness that is always
absent when the bell is at rest and
struck. A great effect is to be gained by
ringing a bell properly, throwing the
mouth well up and not lazily jingling it.
It is not physical strength that is re
quired in ringing a bell so much as ‘-get
ting the knack” of catching the rope
just right particularly on the second
“down pull.” The windows in the tow
er should be as open as possible, and the
tower ceiled just above the windows.”
Hogs That Distinguish a Tune.
Farmer Henry Wadsworth of Wolcott,
in this county, has a son Daniel, who has
for years worked at home upon his
father’s farm, lie has a great love for
domestic animals, and an unusual apti
tude for winning their confidence and
teaching them tricks. He has taught
the horses, dogs and cats upon the farm
scores of different tricks, and is well
known in Wolcott and vicinity for his
ability in this line. Several months ago
Daniel heard the old-time saying that
swine had no ear for music. He was con
vinced that the saying was an unjust im
putation upon the intelligence of those
animals, and by long practice, coupled
with rare patience, he has during
his leisure hours actually taught the herd
of swine at the farm to distinguish the
tune of Yankee Doodle when they hear
it. It is his daily custom to go into the
lot where the swiae are feeding and to
whistle the old familiar tunc, whereupon
every hog will prick up its cars and run
to his side. On many occsions he has
whistled a number of familiar airs with
out touching upon his Yankee Doodle,
with no effect upon his swinish
pupils, but when that tunc is reached
only a few bars are whistled before the
herd comes crowding about him. To
any one who may disbelieve this, Danie!
extends au invitation to witness the ex
hibition any fine Any.--Lyons (N. K)
Republican.
A New Way to Find Gold.
A private letter published in the Kan
sas City Times tells of a party of
geologists who were camped in South
western Kansas one night when a meteor
fell near them. In the morning they
found a huge mass buried in the ground,
and still quite warm. They managed to
; break off a chunk of about a pound and
a half weight, carried it to Denver and
had it assayed. It panned out about 29
per cent, of gold, 64 per cent, of iron,
and 11 per cent, nickle, with copper and
■ other metals. The party are going back
with dynamite and tools to get the rest
of the meteor, which they calculate
weighs five tons. If the essav holds out
they’ll get a ton of gold
WORDS OF WISDOM.
Jealousy is the apprehension of sm
p ?ri<>rity.
The love of all things springs from the
lore of o: o.
Who overcomei by force hath over
come but half his foe.
The finest fruit earth h fids up to its
Mnkt r is a finished man.
Good thoughts are no better than good
dreams, miles • they are executed.
No rules can make amiability; our
minds and apprehensions make that.
All history is only the precepts of
m. ral | hilus >phy ieduco.l into examples.
The innocence of the intention abates
nothing of the mischief of the example.
Maine and hatred are very fretting,
and apt to make our minds sore and un
easv.
Merc beauty ever was, and ever is, and
ever will be, but a secondary thing, ex
cent to fool--.
Though men's persons ought n t to be
hated, yet without all peradventure their
practices justly ma ..
A man's nature runs either to herbs or
weeds: therefore let. him seasonably wat.-r
the one and destroy the other!
It was the policy of the good old gen
tleman to make his children feel that
home was the happiest place in the world ;
and I value this delicious home feeling
as one of the choicest gifts a parent can
bestow.
’Tis pitiful, says Emerson, the things
by which we arc rich or poor—a matter
, of coins, coats and carpets, a little more
. or less stone, or wood, or paint, the
fashion of a cloak or hat ; like the luck
of naked Indians, < f whom one is proud
i in the possession of a glass bend or a red
feather, and the rest miserable in the
j want of it.
Rhymes for Borrowers.
Some people have a strange way of
designating their ownership of books.
Os course you remember, when a school
boy, what ridiculous doggerel some of
the scholars wrote in theirs. As for ex
ample :
“This book is John Smith’s
Mv fist is another :
Yon touch me
And you'll feel the other.”
And again:
“Steal not this book, mv honest, friend,
For tear the gallows’ll be thy end.”
A great many grown-up children have
adopted the custom in a graver mood.
i The two verses commonly used are:
“If thou art borrowed bv a friend,
Right welcome shall he be,
To read, to study, not to lend,
But to return to me.”
And this:
“Not. that imparted knowledge dotl
Diminish learning's store;
But books, 1 find, if often lent,
Return to me no more.”
There is one found in a book formerly
belonging to a well-known resident of
New York: “Anyone may borrow, but
a gentleman returns.” David W. Jayne’s
books have the following Scriptural
quotation: “Go thou rather to them that
sell, and buy for yourselves.” The fol
lowing rather severe lines were used by
a Massachusetts man :
“Stern power of Justice, lift thy wand
In spite of mercy's look;
Strike him who with presumptuous baud
Purloins this valued book.”
Aaron Putnam,who flouri bed in Med
ford, Mass., about one hundred years
ago, used these lines: •The wicked bor
row, but do not return again, bee thou
art not one of that number." Duncan
C. Pell, of New York, had this rather
churlish motto, not at all in keeping
with his character: “He does not lend
his books.” W. J. Snelling, one of the
early editors of the Boston Herald, had
these instructions: “Do not turn down
the leaves to mark the place, but put in
j a slip of paper. Do not give the book
J to children for a plaything. Handle not
with dirty hands. Return the book when
I you have read it.”
Rhymes for “Kalamazoo.”
Well, we sat upon a lovely piazza.and
somebody referred to Michigan, where
one of us is soon going, writes Kate
Field in the New York Graphic. Then
somebody else spoke of Kalamazoo and
; wondered whether it had ever been
, dropped into poetry by any nonsense
i rhymer. “Nobody his ever bad the
courage,” replied another body; “though
whv not try, sin e Mrs. Browning has
made ‘modena’ rhyme with ‘God in a’?”
Kalam izoo! Kalaniipoo! the word op
pressed me. I dreamtd last night of
Kalamazoo. Imps whispered rhymes in
my ear and drew illustrations on the
foot broad of my bed. The idiotic rhymes
still linger in my memory, but the illus
trations so necessary to their meaning
have faded away. Listen to an imp:
There was a young lady of Kalama oo
Who never in company flared to say “boo!”
But she looked so so -‘utter”
That she made people stutter.
Did thi.-i un utter able young lady of Kala
mazoo.
Here is another:
There was once a woman of Kalamazoo
Who had so many children she didn't know
what to do.
“But, as they’re boys,
They’ll make a great noise
In the world,” said this woman of Kalama
zoo.
And another:
There was an old fellow of Kalamazoo
Who always to questions n.ade answer:
“Pooh, pooh!
By the g reat mouth of Gosh
AU talking is boshl”
Said this laconic old fellow of Kalamazxxs.
And still another:
There was ante a dudelet of Kalamaz'to,
Being fully convinced th it be everything
knew.
Straightway hired him a hall,
Alack; no one at all
Went to hear the wise dudelet of Kalama-
When we Demoralize the Stomarh
I By excesses or imprudence In eating, we can
not hope to escape the consequences for any
go-at Jenzth of t.me. The most robust digrs
t on roust succumb to abuses of that Important
function. But supposing tea' we have been
i foolish enough to enfeeble the stomac'i, is the
damage Irreparable? By no means. The dys
peptic has only todo two things Ut Insure nis
| ultimate recovery. First, he should adopt an
| easily digested diet. Second, he should use
with regularity and persistence HosU-tter’s
Stomach Bitters, the k-adinggastric invigorant
r-f the age. The multiform symptoms of dys
pepsia, and the almost in variably at tendant dis
orders, biliousness and constipation, will as
suredly tease to persecute the sulfen-.r if ths
above advlrnwis attended to. Who that has
suffered the tormeriU that chronic indigestion
inflicts will neglect to take advantage of a
remedy which, if the most positive evidence of
the medical profession and the nubile is to be
received with due credence, is an aijsoiuts
specific for the complaint.
Paroxysms of Sense.
“Tiiosf who use our goods are very
much attached to them,” is what a porous
plaster company advertises.
An Illinois man recently sneezed so
hard that be fractured one of bis ribs.
He wns evidently not quite up to snuff.
Canada would be wiser to establish n
three-mile limit for American defaulters
rather than for American fishermen.
Can’t something lie done to civil-eyes
the tribe of young savngss who stare at
all our pretty young ladies on our streets?
A STORY entitled "The Penniless
Maiden" has just been issued. It will
have very little interest, for the modern
youth.
Wk sec a lengthy article going the
rounds of the papers headed “How to
Manage a Wife,” We didn’t rend it; no
use.
No man appreciates more the irresisti
ble power of the press than the unlucky
wretch who Ims just got his fingers
caught in the machinery.
A yotno num has a scrap book con
taining th<' marriage notices of all the
women t hat he hits loved, and he sits out
in the moonlight ami reads it and cries.
—
The editor of the Corsicana, Tex., Obsrrw,
Mr. G. I‘. Miller, hail a severe attack of rheu
matism in his left knee, which became so
swollen and painful that he could not walk up
the stairs. Ho writes that after a few applica
tions of St. Jacobs Oil, the pain entirely disap
peared, and the knee assumed its normal pro
portions.
The Baltimore Ihraht says: The vicinity of
Niagara Fulls would l>« a very suitable spot,
lorthe < stJiblishmetil mid maintenance of »n
intermit loon I unat ie asylum just now. 'I bero
are enough bn reel crunkt* in the neighborhood
to give the inntitutlon a line Mart.
Summer coughs and colds generally come to
uiay, but the use of Red Star Cough cure in
variably drives them away. Safe, prompt,
sure.
The Rural New Yorker condemns the prac
tice of scraping the trunks of fruit, trees, as
some people do. We never heart! of anything
so small as that. We have known farmers so
mean that they sold off all the fruit, leaving
none at all for the family to eat at home.
The farmers, in their swamps, we’re sure,
Could find tl»e roots and plants that cure;
If by their knowledge they only knew
For just the disease each one grew.
Take courage now and “Swamp-Root” try -
(for kidney, liver and bladder complaints).
As on this remedy you can rely,
The great success of many agents employed
by B. F. Johnson A Co., of Kie.hmond, is a
pretty good evidence of the excellence and
popularit > oft he books they otter to sell through
their agents. This is a reliable house, and any
contract made with them you cun depend on
will be faithfully curried out.
The purest, sweetest, and best Cod Liver Oil
In the world, manufactured from fresh, healthy
livers, upon the Heashore. It is absolutely pure
and sweet. Patients who have once fallen it
prefer It to all others. Physicians have de
cided it superior so any of the other oils in
market. Made by (’aswell, Hazard <fc Co., New
York.
CiiAPPEn HANDS, face, pimples and rough
skin cured by using Juniper Tar Soap, made by
Caswell, Hazard <fc Co., New York.
Phkvknt crooked boots and blistered heels
by wearing Lyon’s Patent Herl Stiffeners.
An Editor’s TestlmonlnL
A. M. Vaughan, editor of the "Greenwich Review,”
Greenwich, <>., writes: “laftt January I met with a
very severe accident, canned by a runaway horse.
I used almo t every kind of salve to he a I the wounds,
which turned to running sores, but found nothing
to do me any good till I was recommended Hknky’s
Carbolic Halve. 1 iiought a ls>x, and It helped me
at once, and at therm! of two months I was com
pletely well, 11 Is the best salve in the market, and
I never fall of trJHng my friends about it, and urge
them to use it whenever In need.’*
Relief ia immediate, and a cure sure. Piso’s
hrmrdv for < hitarrh.
TIRED OUT!
At, thiu aenaon nearly every one needs to nue son e
rsort, of tonic. IRON entero Into almost every phy
sician’s prescription for those who need building up.
For Weaknenn. ■n»<liiid<-> J.nrk of
Ei..-r«v, < t<-., 11 HAS NO 1.Q11A1., •>.<! i>
tin, only Iron meefieino Hint t« nnr Inlurloun.
It Enrlclien lhe Blood. Invigorate* tlio
Hyglrm* ICcnloren Appetites Aide Digestion
itdoes not blacken or injure tho teeth, cause haad
axdie or produce count ipi* t ion— other Irou meuirlnt t <lo
Mn. J. I>. Bijjikk, 16 High H» . Montgomery, Ale .
asyn: " My system whs gcnernlly debilitated and trie
uliglitest eicrtion fatigued me. After using Brown «
Iron Bit tern a short tune I regained my appetite and
at rung th.’’
Mhs.Gf.o. W (Jahb, 26 Chrstnut Ht., Macon. Ga.,
HftyK ’’ I us«-d Browii'u hon Bittern for a coiDtnnt
feeling of vvearinenn and hiimtude with the most nat
iniactory reauhs. It given me much plenaure to rec
ommend ittoali fceLlo womenasa complete strength
enwr.’’ »
(Genuine has above Trade Mark andcTotwjad rod lines
<«n wrapper Tukr no oilier. Made only by
BROWN CHEMICAL CO., BALTIMORE, MD.
/ Don’t buy a watch until you I
/ find out about the latest Improve- j
/ ments. Send for new illustrated /
/ catalogue and price list. J. P. /
I Htevens, Jeweler, 47 Whitehall /
’ Street. Atlanta, Ga. '
WOIfAN’M Ku rent and Kafest Regulator ia
BELLAMY’S EXTRACT
COSSYPIUM
D'H-tfira recommend it. Hold by *ll druggists
J. B DANIEL, Wholesale Agt., Albmia.Gi.
Tin Tin MOORE’S
rK Ejj BUSINf-SS UNIVfRSHY,
Fort iK 'Har. A 11 ve iwium! Business School
S7OO to $2500
b<* made working f«i ua. Agents preferred iot un
furnish the r h<>r .< s amTglve tin ir whole time to
the buHlnoss. t-j ar. uHuut'rits inay be profitably
ployed also. A few ru ancles In to 'H- mii'l cRi h
B. > JUHNHON A < ■>., lUM Main ■ t.. >J; jloikl, Va
RLIPTIIRF t’Kl'. REM 7
HUI I UllL EDV Erpianitton and test)-
moniala free. Addre-n O. Kx/va, (/►'< Broadway, N. Y
rHDHSTOirSKTGOTHPOm
Keeplug Teeth Perfect and Guins Healthy.
Pensions
I WSaaiUllsA HAM. Atty, WaMhiagUm. D. a
X 'D’SPJMH EUAMI) f’t.K'K KK I* V'*rr«nt*d w*tffrprfMvf, *n<l will k»»p yae dry In
/• w v ■ W\J ').• D.r.iv.t rtf.rrr 1 >.• r>«w POMMKL HLI( gtRI. ■ prrlr. ir. livx emt. **.>
* 4 fw WW IA V* >»44i» F.ew*r« ofirnltationa Man* r*wntß4 vii*r>ut lbs “Fish
U n** u ’ VMe.mark IJi-.h.M <'aUlorn« free. A. J Tows-r, tbMfWt, Mass.
Gray or sandy beards are colored hrown or
dlack by Ihickmghain’s dye fvr the wbialteFa.
One b.itlle of Ayer's Ague Cure will eradi
cate malarial poisons from the system.
After all. this world is a dangerous place
very few ever get out of it alive.
Hhow to use
CREAMBALM
Plmo * iiertiole o< the
Bsln» into each nostrii
and draw long breaths
through the nose. It will
|>o siworbod and begin
its work of cleansing
end heahng the diseased
membrane. It allays in
llsmmAiion and pre
vents fresh colds.
Not a Liquid or Snuff
No poisonous drugs. N«»
offensive odor.
A particle is applied into each nostril and is agreeable
to use. Price Ml vts. bj mail <»r at druggists. Nend for
circular. ELY BROTHERS. Druggists, Owego,
rt C cts. BUYS A HORSE
'W Book telling you how to DR l’E<’ I’
CUR 15 DISKAHK In this valuable ani
mal Do not run the risk of losing your Horse for
want of knowledge to cure him. when Wc. wll I pay
for a Treatise Buy one and Inf -nn yourself.
Remedies for all Horse Diseases. I'lntes showing
how to Tel) the Age of Horses, bent postpaid for
B 6 cents in stamps.
N. Y. HORRtt BOOK CO .
134 Leonard HU, N.
rojk jones
A Ton Wagon Henles,
Hu«T Bcmlsm. Brut
ftMHKMSKdL Tare Bmm end Beam Ba. fur
*b<3o.
Fvcrr alix Scale. Foi free pt lee Hit
**»•• |>»per ami addreea
r wSJ* V 10NU OF BIKOHAMTIN.
• 2 BINGHAMTON. N. >»
Th<« oai tlw|iink«* did not.
“'"I 11 HO' in>.f t 'um t ho
ntooiinl I ../IV. a 111 <|Diil<iy
nnd price td t ho
Enfiine, Saw-Mill,
Mair -ThM Griat Mill, Cotton-
Gin, Feeder, Con
denser, Cnne-Mill,
Ma- him- OH nnd olh«T
Mi.chUw’tv. by willing
to TII OMA H ( AVI 1%
Cevingtun, <4n.
_ S. “Jo nan! What orc you
-about?" What
a ‘v every body talk* about.
| uj jO They Hiiy that for
<d Hispano, Kidney, Liver or
o Blnddoreornplainta,thia
°1 K’liu'dy bus Imvqtml.”
X 1 1 goes right to the Mpot.
• urT’repared nt Dr. Kilmer's
o: U i>iHPKNMAHY,(Hnuhnint4M>,N. Y.
rY WtHnSr-r ‘D LetUtrsof intpiiry nnswrred.
I_l Guide to Health (HcntFroo).
Salvo CUKES DROimSS
find Inlompsranrr. not Instantly,
nut effectually. I he only scientific nntl-
XB dote for tbs Alcohol Ilnblt and the
only rrunsdy (hai dar»«s to send trial
bottles. Highly endorsed by thn med-
ma I profession and prepared by well-
CP known New York physicians. Send
sumps for circulars and n fersnoea
Addmas "HALVO RI MKDY.”
No. 2 West 14th Bt, Now York,
German
FOR ONE DOLLAR.
A first class Dictionary gotten out at small
price to encourage the study of the German
Langimge. it gives r.uglhh words with ths
i 0. rmnn equivalents, and German words with ICnglisb
1 ietlnlilons. A very cheap book. Hem! *I.OO to
BOOK PUB. IIOL'Si;, 13 1 Loouunl Ht., N.
Y. ('ll y. nnd get one of t ti« »«■ books by return mail.
iTiie Greatest curlosllyin nature.
Ths Mexican R ran erection Phi nt, apparent-
I lv tie,ml, when placed tn water soon comts to life,
shoWngall the tints of the rainbow $2 to >4 per
dav ea 4 y >na 10. a‘< It sells so four out of five per
soiin at al ;ht. Hend 23e. for 8, or 5Uc. for 7 sainples
(Hi ll for 4!>C enclil. Low prices by thn PM) and I,(MM).
A year's subscription to oim of six pap irs given to
fird 50c order from each county and to first order
tuvntlonlng tills paper.
11. BLKDMOK,
313 .Un I n Nt reel, Fort \V<»tlb, Tea us, ~
No Rope to Cut Off Horses’ Manos kV
Oleum si ‘KULIIMK’ HILTKIt
and Hill l> LK Combined, cannot
be mH mad by any horse. Simple
Halter to any part of IJ. H. free, on
recclptof sl. Sol I t*y allSivldlory, JhmM
H ird ware and Harness Dealers.
Hprcial discount to the Irada. \w
Bi nd for I’rloo Lht
J. (). LIGHTHOUSE, W*” J
Itocliretcr, N. V. w
r zi jy*T WILSON’S
f CHAMPION SPARK ARRESTER
st.-. 1 I Beat open <lrnlight nrreater In
\ / lhe world. No more gin house*
k) / burned Irom engine spnrks. Kohl
If I‘lJ on gunmnlee. IVrhe lor <hrrii»
"[JJ* I iur. T. T. VMND.MGR dk < <»., N-s
25 A ‘M. WMyneht., AlHh ilgcvlllr,4>u.
K Wltaanonsible Agents wsntwl for sal»» of Arrester.
CONSUMPTION.
I have a positive ruincdj for theahovndisease; by
•■w. thousands of of ths worst kind nnd of long
standi nu have been cured. I i»dse<l,»o strong Is n> v faith
in Its efficacy, tbnt I will send TWO IltmiKl FKM,
togelbur with a VS LU AfII.KTItKATIHK on this disuMM
t» any sufferer, (live ex press and P <>. riddr »e
pu. T. A. ULOCUM, ill Psarlkt., Mew York.
FACE, HANDS, FEET,
Mn,< *’* iispsHseUWMt Including Fads),
** ST Dsvelopsmsat, BupsrfliMrus Hair, fJlrtfi Marks,
War *®» Moth, Freebies, Nosa, Amt,
bliwk HmSs. Rffsrs, Pllllntr snd tlr»*r
Or. JOHN H. WOOnoURy,
B7 I. PaarlfiL Albasy,l. f, Esi'bM 1170. firnd t<)s. Itrbeek.
fe ASTHMA CURSi D!|
finriuttn A nth mu 4Jurc never /.<>/• u» giveH
WC ® la onmrdiHta rille/ In the wori't « >•««•« lii.uims oom-H
Wfort'/lli; sleep; effects rurce when; all others fsll AH
Htx'd rovuHr»"» Osn moel shfptiral. Price OO ele MtdH
! E’i'l -UO, of f>rti«l«ts or by mall H«npk« trllKF. for®
| gstamp. Dll. 11. Milll FFM AV, Ml, I'nul, Minn.g
Dlllo Grcal En ßl-hG<rot»nd
Kiail S FillS, Rheumatic Remedy.
Ovul Koji tol.OOi round, 30 cig,
Wro 18 u <lhv. Rampies worth SLIT? KKKIv
Lincs not und-r the horse s feci.. Address
HRk WHTgK’aB*FKrY Rtiv Hoi.PKw, llolly.Mich.
A GENTH WANT I I) In every town. ff> per cent
dim.omit all wr-d Tm)ore preferred. Arldresa
JOHN F DAV ILK, «,Kn.lh Ht , Br/mklyn, N. Y.
nAHT£TIM HP Q Ohtaing< Bead stamp rot
&JA I C>ri I iiiuwt.yuiuhk L. Big*
I ham. Patent lawyer, b. C.
WEbK4:ril lC BELT tor Kidneye, Pain. Nervous 4k
weak. Booh iree. Fi.rtc Hf.H A Oo ,’ .loveiand, O.
«<J nse ia/ oi i i,o lead fa
the sales of that > last es
rsmsdrer., and has gives
aimest eaiversal Mfiilu
■Mh
MURPHY »FO%
Pans, Tew
Gliss wen ike laves of
the p<d/li« an ) new ranks
arnoog the leading Med*-
Lines of ti e o DHrrf.
A. L. SMlTtf
Htt'ift. i pg.
Sold by Dowgista.
f'n e if I 00.
flfi J’loo’n Remedy for Catarrh Is the
B*-sl. Eunical to Uec, and Cheapen. K/ji
■ A lw> soon for (V>>4 In th. IfMwf, M
Ilwohu ho,Hay Fever,4c. Wcnnta.
I A. N. I Tl.irty-a.-vru, 'nd