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FAMt AND ffOJfK
gteew* *■**—**.
Ccctmaa may drop tram the vine*
on account at too much moisture, or toe
maah a*p froxn * rank growth when
grown on too-noh soil. Bandy land io
boot tor them. To prevent too much
mowturo raise the hill, like a mound, eo
that the roots will bo above the level at
the surface, and will bo well drained.
Plaster io a good fertil isar and keeps off
insects.
80 lows as the Amertcaa propio prise
sugar swest-cakao, and the New Took
hotels consume 1,800,000 ohiokans and
poultry and 5,800,000 sggs every week,
the poultry buoinooo in this country will
remain a good one. Give your fowls
warm, clean boneea, and try, greasy
rnna, if you would have them nicer of
roup end canker. And feed them regu
larly with good, non rishi ng food, if you
would have them free from disease, lay
more egg* and be more profitable every
day.
A aoaaMrosDSirr of the New York
7><hune remarks : •' When* we know
what the future will require, it is wise
economy to provide for it. Ten years
hence not leas than 30,000,000 railroad
ties will bo needed annually. Fence
poets by the milhou will bo wanted;
while the Immense eonsumptaon of lum
ber of all kinds will bo largely increased.
The farmers should provide for this cos
tain demand of the future. When once
started, unlike moot other things, forest
trees will take oars of themselves. Hors
is an investment with a sure profit.
There are milliona of acres at rough
land, hillsidee, and untillabie spots,
which could bo clothed with forest trees
growing into money."
Fault Rwarr Goes —An intelligent
farmer eays: “I prefer the Minnesota to
any sweet sort I liave yet tned, lieoauao
the stalks grow about five feet high. It
to an almndant producer and the oars
are larger and have larger kernels on
them than any other of the earliest
kinds Ido not like the dwarf sorts,
the stalks of which scarcely grow above
three feet high. The ears of such are
so small aa to bo scarcely worth cooking,
ami if they come a few days earlier than
Minnesota, Concord ami others, thia
does not compensate mo for the diminu
tive aiae. In the opinion of the H'reAZy
Herald, the early Minnesota ia the beet
and greatest early coni. Perhaps it i*
no better tn quality than the Narragau
eett, but in our neighiiorhood it makes
a surer crop. It is a light, delicious
corn, and, of course, to market garden
ers who know all about it there is no use
of talking. Il is the beet early corn to
plank
Wiuvmn (Vu.TS. —A little skimmed
milk may bo given with advantage at
tbm |<erind, Mpocially if the coll is not
in gdod condition, but clean, aonnd oats,
ground or unground, o<maiituton the
beet of all grain foods for the colt. We
prefer to have them ground, and, aa cold
weather approaches, wo would add about
one fourth in weight of con meal,
which helps to lay on fat and keeps up
the animal heat. A little oil meal—say
a pint a day—may also profitably bo
given with the oats for a few months
after weaning. Don ibo afraid of feed
ing too liberally. Moro oolta are injured
the first six mouths after weaning by
too scanty an allowance of food than
from ths opposite extreme. By all
means see that the colt baa ample op
portunity to romp and play. If you
keep nim up in a dose box end feed him
highly you will ruin him; but 10l him
have a chance to rase through the fields
and pasture—and grass, by the way, is
the bool of all foods for oolta—and then
there will bo little danger of injury from
overfeeding. —National Live Stock Jour
nal.
To Pnanvn Mxat —Beorotary Gold
gave the following recipes at the Willi
mantic meeting of the State Board of
Agriculture ; " Beef should not be al
lowed to tr i roe. Baiting should bo de
ferred until the meat is ripe. The tat
of pock only should bo salted, the lean
should be used for sansago meat Pack
perk in olean barrels on the edge, first
scattering on the bottom a few handful*
of salt, then again upon every layer,
pecking very oloee, and whan all is
packed in pour on a brine made by di»-
eolvtngeah in hot water. Bo sure to
cover the pork and a board upon it,
and a weight upon the board
to keep all in place. When a
piece is removed bo sure that the
remainder is tightly proeeed down. For
curing hams he uses six gallons of wa
ter. nine pounds of salt, two pounds of
sugar, one quart of mnlassee, four ouneee
of saltpetre, two ounoro of aalerotna
for 100 pounds of meal He first cov
ered Um haaro with salt and les them be
a couple of day*, fieah side up; then ho
packed Stoma afoaa ta barrels aad poured
upon them the brine above deocribed.
For small hams thru weeks would bo
long enough to stay in the bnne. but if
large Steas, than toe would let them re
main dx weeks Ho then takes them
out, dnas them, but does net allow them
to treses. When property drained he
than motor them.
To Rsoacr or nm Boajx— W* glean
v 'oUewtag beat the amsHsme Ototo
r "Ma form deed to hounds f by,
pea a road. Ml nasally eatends to
ito nt Un roedw Ibero aro
atow raoopttoaal eaeea, but ordinarily
the format owns the soil of half the road
and may nee the grass, trees, stones,
gravel, send or anything ot value to
him, either on the land or beneath the
surface, subject only to the superior
rights at the public to travel over the
road and that of the highway surveyor
or other similar officer to use -such ma
torials for the repair of the road ; and
■hut materials bo may cart away and
neo •laewhor* on the road, yet ho has no
right to wee khein for bis own private
purposes No other man hao a right to
feed his cattle there or rut the graM or
trees, much leas to deposit his wood, old
carta, wagons or other things thereon.
The owner of a drove of cattle which
stope to feed in front of your land, or of
a drove of pigs which root up the soil,
to responsible to you by law aa much as
if they did the same things insula the
fence. No ouo hao a legal right to pick
up the apples under your trees, although
the seme stand wholly outalda the fence.
No traveler can hitch his horse to your
trees on the sidewalk, without being lia
ble, if ho gnaws the lurk or otherwise
injures them. Ton may untie the horse
and remove him to some place. If your
well stands partly on your land and
partly outside the fence, ue neighbor
can use it except by yoar permission.
No man has a right to stand in front ot
your land and whittle or deface your
fence, throw stones st your dog or insult
you with abuatv* language, without be
ing liable to you for treopasaing on your
land. He haa a right to ;>s*» and repose
in an orderly aad becoming manner—a
right to use the road, but not to abuse it. ”
a arnxrcar rottr,.
The Mexican hotel furnishes yon
lodging—that is all. You engage your
room by the day er month, and you get
your bed and toilet Os course we nag
for ioe- water, more Americano, and the
waiter brings us water without ice ; we
ask him if we can't get ioe, and are told
wo can. if wo send out aad buy it, B<-
fore going to bed my chum thinks of his
physic, and asks for watm water ; the
waiter can't got uo any warm water, be
cause the only place to get it is at the
bathing establishment, and that is dosed
at *:3O. Wo need a rpoon, and send the
boy for one; be returns and reports
that the rc-itaurant is closed, and the
case won’t trust him with a «f>oon. Igo
down to the case, when the proprietor,
every polite Frenchman, says: "I am
very sorry to give you the trouble to
come down stair* • I am very glad to
land you anything in my establishment,
but I hove lived too long in thia country
to take the word of one of these fellows
tor a spoon."— Leiter from Mexico.
THK HOKKK rttWKU Os THK WOHl.n
It ban boon estimated that, in 1878,
on the 270,000 mile* of railroad, there
were at work 105,000 locomotives, of an
aggregate 80,000,000 horse power, while
the total numbered euginee amounted to
46,000,000 borne power. Taking the
nomtual horse power at an effective force
equal to that of three horses, ami the
work of a horse aa equal to that of erven
mon. it will Ih> seen that the steam en
gines represent the force of nearly
1,000,000,000 men, which is more than
double the amount of workers on the
face of the globe. The steam engine,
which is fed by coal, baa, therefore,
tripled the productive power of man.—
Scientific American
We learn that Ellis A Uo , proprietor*
of Hailey Springs, are making i.reiiara
ttonv to entertain an unuoiallv large
numla-rof visitora this »ummer. They are
receiving communication* from nil over
the*->uth inquiring rate - and making con
tract* forboxrd. ITii* is o ily their due,
for not only arc they most successful
hotel keet er*, but their place is in every
way worthy of patronage. It ia one of
the Coolest, shiniest, br<waie«l places in
the South ; the locality and surround
ings aro delightful; the buildings aro
roomy, airy, and convenient'y arranged;
the accommodations, faro and attention
aro first clans, and Hhoal (’rock is the
most romantic stream and the beet fish
ing water you ever saw Add to this
the unrivalled power of the old Rock
Spring in the cure of dropsy, scrofula,
dyspepsia and diseaw * of the blood, skin
and kidneys, and the sum of attraction*
is irresistible If you have ever been
there you know this is all true. If you
have not, try it just once. Yon will
never regret it. Address Ellis A Co.,
Bailey Springs, Ala.
Nowoui ha* an ordinance by which
only l ight bootblacks are allowed to
work in the city, ami each of those has
has own diatnet.
Honored and Blest.
When aboard of ennucut phvsicisna and
chemists announced the discovery that by
combining eoiuv well known valuable rente
dies, the um>»l wonderful medicine was pro
duced, which would cure such a wide range
of diseases that most all slher remedies
coaid be disprnce.l with, many were skep
tical ; but pr<-ot of it* matita by actual trial
has diepeliad all doabl, aad to day the dis
coverera of that great wed>clue, Hop Bitter*,
are honored aad biassed by *tt as beasfac
tor*.—XksstocraL
A Bwkduui Invwntor (Lagarmanm is
aasd to barn dovisad a composing am!
dwtribwtang machine which stupaaami
all ckbsra. It ia compact in form, cheap
in price, does the work of four compoe
ttora, wvw ia dMrtbttiUig (so the story
ffoeek and ptaka «p aix different sum ot
kn*
tWetatas Itaowtestsa.
We know wharwnf w* sArrn wtaa wo say
that Warner's Kass Kataev sod lu»w Owe has
|*-rf.wmed mrev w. note hi I cores tliso an’ h
cme ever brought tatui* Um teems putdke.
curwM nntx
There are two kinds of ChteMS bads,
and both aro arranged fas’a complete
shutting in by mm ot hanging onr
teuw aad tapestry. The iryanaiui kind
is like a sort ot cage, havfngaiat wood
en root, just tbs rise of a bed proper,
supported at a height ot about eight
foot from the floor on four corner pools
and two intermediate ones. Then there
ia a sort of fneoe or on tall atari work
running around bocuantaUy, above and
l>eiow, eo that when you are in bed you
aro safely penned in a sort of cage, and
cannot poaetbiy tumble out. The carv
ing on these beads ia sometime* very
rich, and they cost much ; but the or
dinary and cheaper kind is made of two
frames ot wood shaped something like
the skeleton of an old-fashioned ' ‘ sete
tie," which aro stood up on the floor fac
ing each other. A mattree* l* placed on
the projecting parts of these frames,
and a couple of alight sticks across the
top ; then curtains or hanging* abut all
I in, and make it look aa pretty as the
taste and money of the owner aro able.
Inside, there ia a cotton quilt, laid on the
mattress frame. The occupant of the
bed baa on this, having a little roll of
stuff for the head, and for covering a
very thick cotton quilt.
Otrix A JtALIC.
A New England woman was the much*
disappointed wife of a Harvard University
geologist. Bbe was all poetry and im
agination ; he waa all paleontology and
geological roeearoh. Upon a certain oc
casion whan hi* scientific accomplish
ments wero being praised in the pres
ence of a stranger, the latter turned to
her and said :
"May I ask, madam, what your hus
band ur
■‘Certainly,’* she answered, frankly,
" he is a relic of the stone age.”
A vr.KT weak tenor in Dublin singing
feebly caused one of the god* to shout to
at> acquaintance acroee the gallery:
"Comey, what noise ia that?" “ Bo
dad," said Comey, " I believe it’s th*
ga* whistlin' in H l . O _
A Fool Onre More.
"For ten years my wife was confiuol io
her br>l with such a complication of ail
ment* Il at no doctor ooulif tell what was
thr matter or enrr her, and I used up ■ atnall
fortene in humbtut alufl. Hix month* ago I
»»w a I’. 6. H«g with Hop Bitter* on it, and
f thought I would he * fool once more. I
tried ii, but my folly proved to be wisdom
Two bottle* cured her. «hr tv now as writ
»nd atrniig ns any man’s wife, and it cost >*e
only two dollar*. Such folly pay*.—H. W 4
Detroit, Mich. —Free Pres*.
At< exchange tells of an editor who
ap|>eared at ths grave of a eubscrilier
who died delinquent, and, just before
the coffin waa closed for the last time,
considerately placed therein a palm-leaf
fan, a linen coat and a thermometer.
Every man, to be safe, should pay up all
un|»id subscription* to newspaper* be
fore " ahuMing off th* mortal cod."
Ku»kV-Wo*T is the anuniy of indi|;r*tioi>
aud bill.nwuiw*. it is suro to conquer tto tu.
Is proportion to population the taxa
tion 1* higher in France than in England.
In France it is 86.25 per head; tu En
gland, $4.85. The interest on the
French debt now exceeds that of the
English debt
riles aa* Mssawllss*
15c. box "Rough on Hals" keep* a bona* frs*
fruui flics, bed-bus*, roaches, rat*, mioa. Ac.
ixnisssnos, dyap*pMa, assvoa* peomrstwn
and all forma of nosral debility rsli*v*d by
taking Mr.vsMi* * Parroaiaxb Bxxr Toaic, th*
oalr preparation of b**f oouUlnlna Ito sntlr*
nutriUom preesrttaa It contain* blood-oak
tn*, f-rm pamirattna and Uf*-*uetelnln* prop*
art ire. is luvaluabl*ln all *af**U*l condition*,
whether th* result of exhaustion. n*r”-n* l-roe
trobon orrwwi, or seat* dtomec, rartionlarty
If reeolUn* from pulmonary complaint* Oss
-»U. iiaaard * Qn_ srosrtatarv. Mew lata
now ro *c< l ■*: UKthvii.
lit* tl-.-c. any 01 i a «nl| guff. 1 from dvilßgcMoU
ktvttght •> 1 b» impute wh*n BO9ADALK wtH
>«Ot* bv* ; t.v lit* physaml nt fgaag ttlfott. BCMADILUI
:» • *t|g>t rt .soring pIgMAUt U Utk*. Ml lfo« HKffT
I VKIFIKK rvgr gwriag
’Jj b if. I • 1»« *, WrakuHi o/’tb* K:<4afifs, Krtfiip**
ifos, Mt ail*, Nwrvottg <lisor4era, (totality, lilimm guga
H*ini« «turt ittekes* gs 1b« Bigad, Liver, Milatya*
M*i», gt«
B-lIU • PAIB MIAOU wm ta Mm m 4
nt ROOKR’B WORM 4TBDP iMMtlj Bitoriy
VORIM.
HOLLINS INSTITUTE
BOTETOURT SPRINGS. VA.
The <*lh annual cession el.vsed nn the 15th
of June, with nxwit sail*factory reau’t*.
Over seventy diplomas were awarded
iu Ecleetie, Literary, Scientific aad
Cbssioal course* of atudy. The
department of Music numbered
over one hundred napila. The
59th session will open on
the 14th of September,
with 18 officers and teach
ers. Fall particular* aad am
ple reterenc** (tree on applica
tion. The locality eajovs a mild
mountain climate, few from malt
ria. and the farther advantage* of min
eral water* and moat picfareeqo* mwun
tain scenery. CHAS. 8. COCKE, ttapt.
Kentucky Military Initituts,
At Fanndal* P. 0.. Franklin eanatv, Ken
tucky six mile* from Frankfort, ka* the
most healthful and beautiful localten ia the
St* e. A fall aud able College Faculty and
expense* a* moderate a* any brst claa* col
lege. Thirtv teventh year b«*>a* September
s<h. For Catalogues, ete., »ddr«-m*s above,
t'OL R. D AIABX. Hu pt.
P£LESgg|ig
PERRY DAVIS’
Pain-Killer
41 SAFE AND SU«E
■EMEDV KM
a, >
•dip'
Craaps,
Mra,
Dterrhoea
Spfttos
AND
Bruim,
Bums
AND
Scalds,
Toothache
AND
Headache.
FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
AMERICAN AND FONEION
PATENTS.
GEORQE E. LEMON, Atty at Law,
WASHIN4J r«M. I>. C.
<irg« t«M«*l Htwatf* ta Marly g*wyC< n»-
lyiathgU.B ladttal. R#nd akgtrk of
Kbßffgl tor gnawer to »hN pel*-firi*hilßF Ne cltor<« toss
MfVKM ÜBlggg a»9CBMI 11. Mtobllglte! IMX
SOUTHERN STANDARD
COTTON PREWN.
gPvOX Ki Ms*
...j
Over Fifteen Hundred in Use.
<’<a be oper»tr4 by han<l, horse,
waler power without allerslion Wm
■warden th*- flrut i«fetnitiiTi •* St Ixmis
Vgricnltural and Merlmnirsl AsMMdtiion,
And CrfpttAt Slab F*ir Assofiahon, Austin,
Texismi.
Price of Power Prea<, complete • 1110
“ 4t Hand power " - • * 100
“ “ Power Irons “ . . . .
M “ Hand Power Irons M ... 46
Send for circtiUrs. Artdreww
Southern Standard Press Co.,
MfRIOIAa. MIBV.
CIV - WAfiTl N gmm,
cTs ‘ -7XTTS7 (W
v I O' w y, t ., Its BYVgtetiTrirW and
l«Fh><>a»Ta *». RUM **■•*«»• *.. « to.
Wl fol M fom. tom* Bawww «f gM I——l
j / re. *■■«< •'<< ■ *
mßr Jr hr Mr mm prr./***e<'n /•» A
faiMlfflrf iiffl’" 1, .' ; —- J -f
ditWTUtMKW : I fotta MOwrtikff from «*n*ml ftabSlity »n M<b m «it«sl tfaM *y labor wMßffwdlngly bar
4»aso»a io m* A vgratkoa off BtooMb okdl ao* fStosg hm mMh raltof. bol wo th a eostrary. wm fallow*-! by
btorwfi—d profiUWon sod stable* chUU At thia Uma I bo—fi tba aw ot yo«r ? bow Tctxit. from which I rw
•Jtsad taasoßfi imuMbdiato »od woadarfnl rsoalu Tbaaid gesorgy returned aad ’ tnuod thU my astsral (orca
was oo« pßrmMnath ■bated, t bate wad Ikrw brtltoa of th* Teaic Hlaoa qtam u !>*«• * wtn> u '
bov IMA I svar did la tea bbsb« usob davtag my Uloobb. aod th* bom Wth tb* Uaoqail mwvb
Md vtonr of body. Em soBM also a Nlfisrasaa of Iboaffbt norat bofms aa>oy» 1 If the Took? baa 00l dtwsa tba
work* I koww aot wbaL 1 glva it bbarrafe? J. P W
Bfro**8 fro** Terete de tSBaSQpSSaBQE3K9HSVHVREfIK3BHfIHQKISSI
iref4an •/ »•- 1 I
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Ms<«n« It ear-wwe I fl jf fl Jf M M M V MKg-
F Msraw**M-Awv-*f
.4 <- 4tg M * ntaaeai
ITMU If Tit OR. MARTIN MBOICINI CO., U. »lt IMTX MAII STUtT. ST. I MU.
PETROLEUM
I Dad and approved by U» leading
| CIA!h of EUROPE and I gfll
The meet Valuable I
| Family Bfl ■
g———rtOMM Arttotea rrom
Tarouro—<mro m
S* l Wr W A MtaM* 1 Fmu.Tstatro,
iK W > A IF -1 Cr *»
jff VawHu Qaamtar las
fl ’ K cStl. muSx Taoagga.
errs duxask ukxvmatbw *"***"***»"> —■ ■■*>
****9 •• Hmt** Ms All NT fwißi fry^aZyieTtß
OBANB N»AI. AT va
wM-’M BMAfo AT -nap AM fill |fl| QUAATE B OLJL T
D' M [TOURS •
•‘HEADACHE
AMa-hmMthrorelMU.HUA.wiaMlfcvrtlm.fcT uewrn
rt* <wr t: Mtlu< te any *4ar*m oe rerotro «< eta* Hwew-roa* i.Cm
KMlta Bar rote by an dreaatete *A ”-**•
■■OWN CIXMICAL COMTAWT, ■nNtroor*. Md.
••••PtLLS
Bookwalter Engine
fff*cri*w. BaraMe and Ckoaa
f 'rem|rot. tatetaartta. ffiw>on.i.-s and t**,)* u *
| areroi to mroO w«U «ro ym,
KVKRY *L.Ate*rKa
£EMnt er- r bc ‘ •' l <”’> taul* h*ro *ro*
■>“> '■ ami Ctmsro ■“*
i Su >rit LOW > Ht'-KA.
4t Hor * Fo ’~ u * u *-
gj im
***** takga aa. a
jIOSTETniu
UiTteRS
r.eble Sickly PerMtns
fteeaver their vitality by puroaiug a couree
of fI.MU-Uer'* Stomach Bitter*, the moat
popular iprigoraot an i alterative medicine
in us*. General debility, fevvr anJ ague,
dyspepsia, constipation, rheumatism, ano
other maladies are completely removed by
it. Ask those who have used it what it
ha* done lot them
For sale by al Druggist and Dealer*
gerwrsllv.
JUST OCT! LIFE OF GUITEAI,
By hrißMlf. Md oibwr* Hi* rrrafkc os/rv-r. Fully
iiktg.l. Prtr* ••If I© r Mta. PnNk«h*4 bv MKW
IoRKj ILLWTAAT<r> TlM*©* 7 liAiktefi nuto,
RIBLE REVISION
U 00HTBASTED EDITIOHB.
« 'Mttoißlnf th* mH m 4 MW Ui gtakr«' lei r«l-
tana ns The l»*»t snd chwapwLd illutarattal elifiwn tbg
E*v a-tl T« *Urti*nf M 11.«».»* < f ar* waiting I<<t i».
Itovv.ri 4rr«n«4 >•» tl»* unfigv’gg<»l» <• pctidiober* of tato
rior etitUMi*. He* that the t « buyoMtain* fl»s
mngrsv.nf* on ateel *nd w>v*w| Tm* t*ih*e«lv large typs
rontrngUd eWtl-w** and Ajrnta are rawing an -nsy
selling -! ASBNTS WAMTfcU. Head for fin-tjlarg
and ettrs isrssa*
ArFlrem X*r>es*L Pvaiiaftfia Co., Atlant*. Ga.
uaMNMßWfoOiMiaMßßaMfonafi
An Open
Secret.
Thfi fact Is well understood
that the MEXICAN MUS
TANG LINIMENT L, by far
the best extents! known for
man or beast. The reason
why becomes an “open
secret ” when wo explain that
‘•Mustang” penetrates skin,
flesh and muscle to the very
(tone, removing all disease
and soreness. No other lini
ment does this, hence none
oilier is so largely usefl or
does such worlds ot good.
■IUM L NHM, IF LTH, KU.,
dir
$ & __
I Kk- IL j
'* B
8
LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S
VEGETABLE C0MP0U1I:
la a Poaßlve Cure
call Fil tel flaamta*m« ml
»» nmmew Umrta* rrmsle rroulMto.
It wUI cure aattretr te* woraa lena of I'maia .
plalsu. all crerta. troabtoe. la*amma»<n> aad TV.,,
Uos. rslitag rod faW'Troin* rodtoe crearqa..,
*pu>*l Waakwas, rod I* iwnwularty *n**M v> ts.
cbroa* st ur*
It vtU ituentr* rod nv*l tamer* rrom th* ut*rm i,
ro mrtr ro«v ot *»retoro«rt The im.i* ,t„
eerew* hum nr* there u ehreked rery npredUr h, m ro
It ivmove* talatrom, tetalnary, drororv*!! resrta,
for atUrolaM*. aad rrflrrve ww*Sen** oftoert.ro*
II wire* BMUa*. B**d*nh«*. Nerrm, Pnatrsii...
oronl tehUltj. aii*ple*rtiro. tut*«ro.u *M lad,
twUtn.
That taellng at bearing dawn, caawne **ta. «!*• I
aad beekache. hl alw*r* parmaneatly cure-1 k, iu ro
HMD M alltteeoaro roder allaroirotam ** ■ *,,
kaneoar th* l*e, that »orere the fanaala ro*--
For tk. rare «t XMaey ComttelM* ot rttoer an U ,
O*m*e*ad I* *urttr|ww*d
LT Bl* K. PIMUXMW VrcrTABLV. r*M
pwrxttu pre**red at t» and XU Waataca area,,
tyro. Uro )-rto* »1. totUref..r »t lent bym.
la IS* form of I*ll*, alao lathe form of lowa«re. ,
rerell* of prtee. *1 .ar hoi forrtther Mn. Hskhao.
freelraoae’-re all letter* oT loqulry Seed fee- pit;*
let. Addre** a* above. Brerum du, tagrr.
X. femur rhould he wfthoul I.TTUA X rtXXIUM*
UVI3I rtLUI They <mre cooatipauoa bUiouroa
aad of tlrelivar. Mooalaper bos.
aa- itete by all Orogateta. -fc*
MILL and FACTORY SUPPLIES
OF ALL KINDS. BELTING. HOSE
and PACKING. OILS, PUMPS ALL
KINDS. IRON PIPE, FITTINGS, BRASS
GOODS. STEAM GAUGES, ENGINE
GOVERNORS, &c. Send for Price
.itt. W. H. DILLINGHAM &CO .
143 Main Street, LOUISVILLE, KY.
15 Sr u:
iiusliu— **.**« ntAii
■ sneof hr tb<> vtrwin of YW .vernTl
■ y<«r dulktw fovoid b foe hi wort » ■ r»-u-
■ <UD4kffi‘ *n <1 use W tzu< »tar .' *« a. i
■ Mop Bitters, Bwswig, uto Hop 3.
Ts ym ar* yountr sr»4 ■ trtjff*rtng v m
■ dt*rnrtMrti or ■ lion .if } it m»r-
■ n*d or sin*->’ o|.| -,»r ■ ¥<»unv, mfT. ’u .-
■ piortaffillh < r Jr-g vn » I>-<1 us bi I
■ MW. rrly on
WWvwr ynnsrv, A Tb'wi.tnd'd.■» •*>
■ you f*wl n n Maliy
■ thsl y.tur avstrm rs Ml dney
■ - t OCA < V **■ * t l
W •>> ’
fl witbotttiN/ 'jrtrulfuff, IHr 1 by-- 1‘“•• * u * t
t»ke Hop JtXrf. ...\ Hop&tters
■“ ter *- «■■■■■
I-,...... Q L c
...
<t>... .-v. ■ unp li,'
to,-. . ...i M 111 jl' ■!>.- r “ " 1 '
"" ’ M * I
-A fi DlTirpC!-' w
Hop B-.tero ■ B ill PAt
irye-l*— *'<n- Wl “ I*-!lU|| Sah, ~r dn , r .
J never 1,--*..' 4 '
'iaroroi? I R II
life. It haa ■ lAILII
saved hurt- M g R**v-riro. e. t.
dred b. Air ■ t>--
bs'S-DaxSgjff
UAbßArrA* Mtata, H w, »*m kSafeT,
young men
eaeea ASdree* V AXBITTurB XkO* . ta**e*Ul*. »•
Cyclopedia War.
TSsgr*st IJbrmry Vr»lv«r*al
isw r<<spl*tod, Urr« lypwffdiMt. ~ netrlv tr j •
ewer* JepforUnsnl nihuuiau aK i.t r- r
larger than CWinbfore's fcscycloprwd**. !■' !•’ •"» i
iffiffgrr than Applsten’fi, » jwr o*nl wg*r than / bn* *,
SA a m«r« freotioa Mt lb«ir cost. Fifteen Iwg- ' ’ '• •
siDM, assfly ILOOD PM«», eoap'H* tn <l><n ;
|Ui it. bsifß'wU, fMi m f>«H library eh**p.
edgwa. S»A bp*cxal Urntstoclnto
SIO.OOO REWARD tb« »n«nth» rs Ji-1’ » •!* •
rß*ad quick foe apeHtneu i«aje» im.H f r '•
RMBBIfUII B&MC FX« HVf.t
iMI B. Hmm. Mkhtltr 754 Rr -tel-av Sr- a
CELLULOID Wk
*- Y F-CL ASSES. i
R*pre*eatinx th* elroirort aalectef Tortom
Cb*U aod Amber. The lightest, L*ni*om**l
«ud etrs3g*et known. Hold by Optician*
/•waters M*<<t by tb* SPENCER UHI tl
W FG CO . IS M*>-!•* U*< * N*« ’" rk
rMPORTANTW«
■■er r.m«l*a* CimirraUrf « < »llr«* •<
■ ■ate ■ reel FRKK Awlrie .. u
L-T"UkJkA. - _
Wox- Olxlllaß and
ANO ALL OISKASBB
Cbwmml Bry Malar IsU Patoealßff •< tk* !»»••*
iWARBAJiTED COBK
. • I .00. Vo. Ml* bv ta> n«’ffW*°
ra>b**ere- Cam, aumi*. Th.n.-re.
t A ROANOKE
_ COTTON PRESS
:Wtoaa> Tro •
jjMgfta 8 ui. ’ ""
k ,ro»J -reds to
V _.if )u oe< • >d»
yrHwr I - - " 1 " •'
/ ....
1 NWWwI / is... , •
i' *«. -***<*■ \
WARTDI.AdEffTS
>ouy b. oooßra asm- aro *-*. ~
SUNUONT and SHADOW
.;»?"*•* to. *q**« sa* -te -
Jokn B. Goufjh
•NtoHKfe-ro.