Newspaper Page Text
‘ r * sir : ' “
cloud and smoke cloud,
Blood-rixT with sunset’s angry flush,
You hcerd the gun-shot’s rattle,
And, ’mid hooi-trarnp and rush,
The shrieks of women S’x ared.
For it rza* Rush ant Turkoman—
No quarter asked or given;
A whirl of foenziad hate and death
Across the desert driven!
Look! the half-naked horde gives way.
Fleeing frantic without breath.
Or hope, or will; and on behind
The trooper's storm, in blood-thirst blind,
While, like a dreadful fountain-play,
The swords flash up, and fall, and slay—
Wives, grandsires, baby brows and gray,
Groan after groan, yell upon yell—
Are men but fiends, and is earth hell?
Nay, for out of the flight, and fear
Spurs a. Russian cuirassier;
lu his arms a child he itears,
Herlitt’* foot bleeds; stern she stares
Back at tne ruin of her race.
The small hurt creature sheds no tear,
Nor utteir cry; but clinging still
Te this one arm that does not kill
Shestares back with her baby face.
Apart, fen?ed round with ruined gear,
The hurrying horseman finds a space,
Where, wflh face crouched upon her knee,
A woman eowers. You see him stoop
Aud reach the child down tenderly,
Then dash away to join his troop.
How came one pulse of pity there—
One heart, that would not slay, but save—
lu ail that Christ-forgotten sight?
Was there, far North by Neva's wave,
Homo Russian girl in sleep-rol>es white,
Making la.r jteaceful evening prayer,
That flea • en'a great mercy ’neath its care
Would keep and cover him to-night*
- Anthony Morehead, inthe Century.
The Way of the World.
A TAM TOLD BY A POSTAU K-PT AMI*.
Primarily lam a postage-stamp; just a
common everyday two-cent stamp, pos
. sensing oiily such attributes as arc pecul
iar to my class. Indeed, if 1 were placed
among uthousand of mybrethern I doubt
if the keenest observer would be able to
point nir uuf as being in any way distin
guished., A vague gloom enshrouds
that, per 4 •< n of my life proceeding its de
velopment into one of the government
agents (if 1 may so call myself); and I
indistinctly remember of having been
connect*/ in some way with a copy of an
English comic paper which drifted as an
exchange into an American newspaper
office, ami thence quickly into a huge
waste-basket. From that time until ar
riving ai my present state* I passed
through the.hands of paper dealers, pa
per mmii'factiirers, and divers clerks and
careless people, my last distinct impres
sion being received front an engraver’s
press.
I can scarcely he called a conceited
person, still lam led to believe that my
. missiov hi the world is an important one.
lam kind hearted, of agreeable dispo
aition, and well satisfied with my lot. I
frequently congratulate myself upon the
spod5 pod for'ane which made me what I am.
low much better to be. perelmuec, the
bearer of some kind letter, a perfumed
biliot-dmix, if you please, than a vulgar
revenue .‘tamp, fit only to adorn a box of
ill-smelling cigars or grace a barrel of in
ferior liquor.
A mm hurriedly places a postage
stamp upon a letter, which he drops into
a. < onvranent letter-box. mid entirely for
- gets th* ircumstanee. It humbly serves
uis purpose; beyond that he does not
cart*. Hut. think for a moment of the
trawls ot that same stump, of the persons
it niecte, of the message it bears, and say
it is notsentient being!
After my birth I was carefully ae
< ounted tor to various commonplace offi
cials, iimi. after some delay, sent to the
postoffire at a certain Eastern city. I
was pur* hased soon afterward by Mr.
Afdubald Warnick, who tore me rudely
front my friends. amL after carrying me
about, in uis p<»eketb<mk for a day or two,
vast me into a certain dark drawer of his
desk.
This al". VVarrack was about twenty
five, UH, graceful, and altogether a very
gentlemanly-appearing person. lie
dressed neatly and tastefully. but with
no suggestion of foppishness. To be
trank, . admired him from the beginning
of OUT iu quaintiim e. Regarding |ua so
vial am: tHinm iul status, he was a gentle
man ot artistic tastes one of the grand
army dilettanti- possessing an ample
bank « ’ >unt and :i pedigtei which was
never questioned.
The tusk. intoji druwt ruf which I was
so igneu ’iiously thrust, stood in a sunny
shove separated from .Mr. Wtu rack's
studio I. . a heavy porlivro This little
apwrtm« n> was a very pleasant place, an 1
Air. Warrack <]*ct>t considerably mo c
time ili ounging there than he did in
workinc ,u the groat. Imre room :idjoin
ing. Art was a hobby of mine, ami it
was with much .satisfaction that I found
myself y i.uod in such a congenial atoms
pheie.
S*x:a after being transferred to the
drawer I have before alluded tn I dis.
covered that my quarters were shared by
a number of other (x-rstms of ihy own
kind who were reposing on dainty per
fumed ecvrlopes. They wore, however,
black s . t;s upon their escutcheons,
which khowtsl them to boforev* r ruined.
I made bold to introduce myself to one
of thtwe. • arred veterans, and. after a few
preliminary remarks concerning the
wtathv.* politic*. and soon, said-
"From yout look# (date of eunreling)
f Infer icat y<'U have been dwelling with
this M» Harrack for s«u»e time, and.
'M*ing n -■ »anger t I shall esteem it a favor
if you will tell W such things as vou
feel at Kb* rty to speak of concerning his
private hUlOty.”
m»1 rase,” saitl my friend, with
.» doßp *gh lie looked haggard and
worn, m»i w#a appanenlly in great dis
s res*,
"Ilow s-wR'” I inquiml. <yiuj»*lhetiv
“V- , .
"A tnai en*o,” hr continued without
ireding my itiJcrntpfion "Lr«« than
mx moettis ago I was the earner of a h-t -
ter written by a young lady named Bari
irn M u Helen Bari* Im Mr. WAr
tach, th* e« ii(lvmaa seqtMmtanc«
vou haw swently made This letter wav
ant let m scply to cur from him in which
lie exhausted al! the available adjectives
of the English language in the sincerest
avowals o(‘ love, closing withan olfcr of
his heart and hand.”
“And. the letter of which you were the
bearer contained ”
“Her acceptance,” he said, completing
my sentence. “Helen Rariden is a beau
tiful woman, gifted, wealthy, and of ex«
ccllent family. At th? time I parted from
her, or rather at the time she parted
with me, she loved this—fellow with all
her pure soul—loved him as man was
never love 1 before, and he doubtless
cared for her —then..” r
The emphasis of this last word was de
stroyed by a pitiful sob, and for a few
moments my friend was so moved that
he could not speak. I waited patiently
until he again began;
“Shortly after the engagement, which
naturally followed, Helen (I take the lib
erty of so calling her) was compelled to
accompany her mother to Europe on a
trip undertaken in the hope of benefiting
that lady’s health. The parting of this
Mr. Warrack with his promised bride
was tender and touching; I was present
at the time in the gentleman’s left-hand
coat-pocket, and felt the beating of
Helen's heart with distinctness for a few
moments. I admit that it was an embar
rassing position for me to occupy, but I
could not well withdraw, as I was then
very much attached to this letter, as I am
now.”
I smiled at this bit of pleasantry, Irit
my neighbor pressed a convenient pen
wiper to his misty eyes and resumed his
narrative.
“After Helen went abroad Warrack
was morose and melancholy for a while;
he began several pictures with which to
occupy his mind gloomy conceptions to
correspond wil h his state of feelings. He
first began what he called ‘Arthur and
Guinev*«re’—the parting scene, you know.
He sketched and daubed at it for a week
or so, but kicked it off the easel one day
in a tit of impatience. When Helen’s
first letters came to him (they are in the
next drawer below, embellished with
cold, haughty foreign stamps), he replied
promptly and at great length—tender,
loving messages. Oh, how true he
was'?”
The stamp smiled bitterly.
“But he soon became neglectful! and
would toss Helen’s notes into a corner of
the desk and not even open them. Os
course, under these circumstances. Helen
did not write so often, and I soon began
to notice a change in AVarrack’s manner.
He became cheerful and planned some
joyous pictures; oueof them, a ‘Spring’
landscape, is on his easel now. and he has
ordered the canvas primed for a contem
plated work to be called ‘The Lifting of
the Clouds.’”
“And what is the aausc of this sudden
change?” I aaked.
“He is interested in another direction.”
was the reply.
“And what of H elen?” I inquired.
“She is still true,” answered my friend
in a. tone of conviction.
This ended our conversation for the
time being. My fellow-lodger drew back
into n dark corner and remained silent
for several days.
Tn the meantime Mr. Warrack seemed
happy: he spent much time in singing
and whistling snatches of tunes, chiefly
from light operas. He painted a little
when in the right mood, and T observed
through the keyhole of the drawer that
the “Lifting of the Clouds” was progress
ing finely. It was with pain that I
thought there might be some connection
between the titlv of the picture and tha
grow ing coldness in the manner of the
young people toward one another, judg
ing from the dwindling of their corre
spond* nee.
A few days after my conversation with
the elderly -tamp Mr. Warrick opened
our draw and threw in an unopened let
ter which he had just received. As soon
as he went out mv friend examined it
eagerly. The envelope bore the card of
a Vejietian hotel and a canceled )a>stage
stmnp whose language we did not know.
“From Helen?” I said, interrogatively.
“Yes.” was the mournful reply.
Time wore on. It is a fashion time
has, even in the life of lowly postage
stamps. Spring came tripping down her
bright, flowor-malle*! path, and the dark
ness of our habitation we felt the stir
ring of reawakened life. , Mr. AVarrack
did not enter hi* studio for dav« at »
time. When 1 spoke of these long ab
sences I** my chum he only answered in
the language of Tennyson :
In the spring n livelier iris changes on th*
burnished dove;
Th the spring a vouuk man's fancy lightly
turn* to thoughts of love.
“Turtrs to thoughts <*f hi’ new love
while he forgets the old.” I suggrsttsl.
“Poor Helen'.” he said. "Oh.woman,
you alone are long-suffering nnd true.”
Spring, summer, and full.
One bright .iiitunin day. as my friend
and I were « nnversing in our quarters.
Mr. Watraek. a l«> was sitting in the al
| cove reading ;i m*w-jatper. cut from its
! so* iet\ eohunns two items which had
j through the instrumentality *»f Fate and
I the tyi»ogrnphi*'al "make up,” luam
• printed in Ibis order;
j “t’ard* have lu’cn issued for the wed
! ding *>f Mr. Archibald Warrack, the ris
ing young artist, ami Mi« Florence
‘ Springer, daughter of Ja\ Wintet
i Springer, the poet.
j "Oh. the perfidy of man.” said my pom
• stamp friend when I had finished reading.
I The<»thef item read:
"A < üblegnun from A’enh'e announce*
: the marriage at that place of Miss Helei
I Rariden. who has been Mijonming
! abroad fnr some time past, to Sir Arthm
’ of London.”
‘•The deuce!” gasped my frienc
i (hruugh the <iu't which covered him.
"Not the »lcuve. but the wax of tht
i world,'' said I. Chiffiyo Trih
Dldnt Wait to Wrestle.
Rculku IhM'littk' was well known a.
! the strongest man in < 'onuorlieut and t
! remarkable wrestler. Men came fron
I *l?stam es to throw him. but all faihri
Once a stranger arrived at Hesdwn’s ot
th»B errand. Ueulwn asked him to stay
all night, promising to wn-stlc in thr
m«»rning Both were up betimw. ano
the stranger was invited io g»<>ul to th-
Itam and haw a drink of eider. At th?
barn Reuben sowed a larg laurel of vide*
and, with apparent ease, lifted it anc
drauk from th* bung h de. "Now.” saw
! he. aa be put the barrel down and wipec
' his inoulli. "we ll Imw some breakfast.
! ami then we'll wrestle.” The string?
' decided Iwha l other b*idmgssth» e “
peavent the match.
WOMAN’S WORLD.
PLEASANT LITERATURE FOR
FEMININE READERS.
Only Once.
You ask me. love, how many time*
I think of you a day,
I frankly answer, “Only once,”
Aud mean just what 1 say.
You seem displeased aud somewhat hurt,
! Bat wait aud hoar the rhyme.
Pray, how can one do more than once
• W hat one does all the time f
Washington “Teas.”
“A tea” and a “high tea” in Washing
s ton have a significance according to the
I loft in society to which either is applied.
■ “A tea” simply is in the afternoon and is
J generally attended by married ladies and
1 young maidens, with a slight sprinkling
; of society young men decorated with their
i first perceptible moustache. The refresh
. ments of an ordinary “tea” consist of tea,
■ coffee, gossip, ices, cake, more tea and
: more gossip. The hours are usually
I from 3to 5 o’clock. “A high tea” is a
m&ch more extensive entertainment than a
simple “tea,” and is attended by society
people generally. «
The Newest Limp.
The fashionable woman this season
goes with a limp. Her gate is a cross
b’tw’een that of the gay and festive
dromedary and a horse with the string
halt. This picturesque evidence of blue
blood and eighteen-earat breeding is aw -
fully English, you know, and a direct
lineal Lawrence-Townley descendant of
royalty itself. In the sweet erstwhile
i some time ago the Princess of AV tiles
! sprained her ankle, and before the lini
i ment was fairly dry all fashionable
I women in New York and Boston when
I on the move looked as though somebody
i had struck them with a club. It doesn’t
; matter, however, which leg is in fashion
i as long as something goes with a limp.
' —Detroit Journal.
I
Making-a Home.
At a reception in Washington lately, a
; woman, famous in the last generation,
fell under the discussion of a coterie of
her old friends, one of whom spoke of
her wit and power of repartee, another
of her broad, generous charity, a third
of her keen instinct in reading character.
“To rue,” said General P —, “she was
most remarkable for her ability to make
a home. Put her (as I have seen done in
the West) in a log cabin with nothing
but son e wooden chairs, a piece of mus
lin, an open fire, and the odds and ends
which she had stored in her trunk, and
she would turn it in a few hours into a
charming dwelling place. Os all her
I gifts, that was to me the most attractive
aud womanly.”
An American who saw in his youth an
I Englishwoman pre-eminent at that time
for her learning and genius, was ques-
I tinned as to his impression of her. “She
! overwhelmed me with her knowledge;
; her broad, liberal views aud her philan-
■ thropy opened a new world to me. Yet
the most distinct recollection 1 have of
i the visit is the torn and dirty table cloth,
i the greasy carpet, and the ashes strewn
half wav across the floor ”
i Carlyle, who had been used to cosr.se
surroundings in his early home, was
deeply impressed by the, refinement, 4ie
firetty “bits of plenishing,” the gentle
lood, in the home of the woman he «f!Mr
i ward married; anil the most pathetic
part of his wife’s history is her heroic ef
j fort to give this dainty charm to the
■ rough dwellings in which he placed her.
There is no trail in the Englishman
st ronger than his love of home, and hence
he is apt to value in woman the quality
of “making a home” above all others.
The sailor's wife “makes the hearth
• clean,” to show het joy at his return. It
i is the "household motions” of Wurds
; worth’s ideal women that are “light and
' free,” and all Shakespeare's lovable hero
ines are domestic women.
: “Let mu see your home, and I will tell
! you what you are,” the Russian Paulo
j vitch says to his countrywomen. Our
I American girls, in their zeal for music,
art, or it may be authorship, are some
times apt to forget this. They leave the
oversight and the details of housekeeping
!to servants, forgetting that th? soiled
tablecloth and greasy carpet tell talcs of
' character as loudly and emphatically as
do neatness and taste.
They forget, too, that while their pic
ture or song or story may prove a failure.
, a dainty, cheerful home is a poem which
any woman may give to the world, and
one which all men can understand aud
will certainly take to heart. TeMtA’s
Companimt.
Love and Buttons.
The maidens who an 1 members of the
• New Century Guild are in the full en
joyment of a liitle romance, which lias
sprung from rhe advertisement which,the
guild recently iusi rtcl in Ihe pajiers to
inform the great’ army of “bachelors aud
other unfortunates” that buttons would
be strongly sewed on, find the various
garments of the masculine portion of the
community repaired and kept in good
order fora very trifling fee The charge
for memla rship in the guild beipg so low
and the attractions of the. homelike es
tablUhment so numerous, a great many
women ami girts have taken advantage
of th? opportunity to enjoy the pleasure
aud instruction to b' found there, and
among the number is Miss Matilda .1.
Ridley, of Salem. N. J. Abost two
weeks ago, ns she leaving to go
home, shortly after 9 o'clock, she met on
the step a yonng man carryings small
parcel. He was good looking and well
dressed, and touching his hat, asked with
?. blush if it was the plact wherehecould
have some buttons sewed on his vest.
Miss Ridley replie 1 that he hud come to
j the right address, and that she would lie
drlightcil to serxe him, vest buttons be
ing her particular branch of the business.
So they went iuto the reception room,
and Miss Ridley quickly’ procured a
work basket, and, wated before the
cheery open fireplace, they chatted as she
dextrousty seweit on seven buttons and
repaired a little break in the binding.
Once the matron looked in. but judging
them to ho old friend*, did not intrude.
When the vest was quite itself again and
• had been once more tied up in its brown
! paprr wrapper, the young man arose to
go, and enquired the cost of the repairs.
••Twenty-five cents if you please,”
was Miss Ridley’s smiling reply.
Tiwee tea-cent pieces were produced,
j but the young lady had no cirange.
“Wait a moment and I will get it for
you.” she said, starting the door.
“Oh, please don’t bother ; let me have
this for change,” remarked the young
man, picking up the spool of cotton
which had been used in sewing on the
buttons.
Miss Ridley laughingly agreed, and he
went away.
The verv nex? evening the same young
man returned with another vest, ®n
there wat not the vestige of a but
ton, and enquit ed for the young lady
who had so skillfully served him on the
previous night. After a moment’s in
quiry in the library, where a group of
girls were reading, the matron reappeared
with Miss Ridley, and the young man
modestly requested her to again under
take the rebuttoning of his vest. She
did so, and used the same spool of cotton
which had done duty before, the young
j man producing it from the left breast
i pocket of his coat.
| When he went away he said he had
I still another vest to be furnished with
| new buttons, would she do it for him the
! next evening?
“Certainly, with pleasure.'’
From that time on it was as good as
settled, for the young man fell deeper
and deeper in lovte. Miss Ridley recipro
cated his affection, aud three days ago
he told her of his position and prospects,
proposed and was accepted.—Philadel
phia Record.
Fashion Notes.
; Bonnets are small and hats high.
Red everywhere and in everything. >
Cats’ eyes figure largely in new fringes.
All the new cotton dress goods are
i thin.
j Black crape is used to cover crimson
| satin.
I Plusj Jontinues the favorite fabric for
■ mantle,
Hom, jpun comes in great variety and
is popular.
Now is the time to buy and make up
wash goods.
Gold and silver tinsel is seen in all the
new ruchings. ,
Skirts are either plain or laid in per
pendicular pleats.
Puffs and pads around the armholes ar®
things of the past.
.Amber is much'used for necklaces,
combs and hairpins.
More artificial hair is worn than has
been the case for some time.
Blouse dresses are still the most popu
lar style for young children.
During the summer hair will continue
to be worn high on the head.
Many dresses are made with long
waists pointed front and back.
Garnet hair ornaments and jewelry in
many new devices arc ag’ain in high
vogue.
The brims of spring hate are neither
wide nor eccentric. They are narrower'
in the back than in front.
Borders for entire skirts for side and
back panels and for parts of frocks are
the feature in spring styles.
The only article of wearing apparel
which “knows no shadow of turning”
this season is black hoisery.
Hats in two shades of brown are be
comingly trimme<l with gold beads in
beads in pale and deep tones.
Smoked pearl ornaments are seen,
mixed with dull lend and steel beads,
making a novel arrangement.
Brown is the most used of any color,
and “studies in brown” are occupying
the attention of even the tailors.
Caps for elderly ladies covering the
top of the head, aud without strings or
tabs, are made of full ruchings of illusion
lace.
Black bonnets are most favored far
evening wear, and jet is the faoorite gar
niture, lighted up by a tet of color, red,
yellow or blue.
Some of the new buttons which are be
ing used as garniture for costumes make
so much noise one would suppose the
“Campbells are coming.”
The original jerseys have gone out, and
the present ones are so -fine, with their
fancy collars, cuffs, epaulettes, beading,
etc., th M a new name is now in order.
Taw® T bonnets are worn with yellcw.
If the ff perdress be of yellow it should be
in plus! , and if the brown is used for
the ove-.dre'ts tbe yellow petticoat should
be in satin.
Jerseys are now made in a variety of
ways. Some of them have plaited chem
isettes of velvet with cuffs to correspond,
others are laced over full plastrons of
contrasting or harmonizing surah, and
still others are covered with braid so
that but little of the original material is
! seen.
Hancock and the Militiamen/
An army officer told me an anecdote of
> General Hancock ab rut his love of dig-
I nity and discipline.
He was in command of the train which
brought General Grant’s remains from
Mount McGregor to New York. General
Hancock and his staff were in the coach
next to the last. In the rear car was a
party c' Pennsylvania militia officers, who
were ; »pping an occassional bottle, of
champ gue and smoking quite sociably.
Genera t Hancock saw from his car what
was go: ng on in the rear. It did not
; «>mport with his ideas of the proprieties
I of so solemn an occasion, and, calling the
j conductor, he said :
j “Will you present my compliments to
| those gentlemen, with the request that
‘ they cease smoking?”
In a few moments the conductor re
turned with the announcement that the
ennvival officers returned their compli
ments with a peremptory declination to
relmquish their cigars.
I “Where is the next switchf’ asked
i Hancock.
j “About five miles below.” replied the
| conduetot.
“When y®a reach it, if the smoking in
j that car has not ceased, swiitch it on a
side track and leave it. Aon may tell
' the gentlemen what I have said.”
I two minutes there was not 3 cigar
t« in the appending coach. Its
pants knew that Hancock meant just
i wc*S he said.— Atlanta CoHetitutior».
p Buffalo debating s<3ciety has re
! cently discussed the question: “Resolved,
. That a city man in the country is greener
i than a countryman in the city.” That
I depend* on whether the game is “bunko”
| or a “ho<s trade.”— Batten Pal.
JOHNSON ANODYNE
;>LINIMENLS%r
aar CtrSBS -Diphtheria. Croup, Aathraa. BronehiUe. Weur*l*ia, Bhetorattßrn. Bleeding at the X>*ui«b.
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812 Broadway, New York.
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AND DOUBLE YOUR CROP!
The little, cheap, light-running BLUKGBAssScr.-
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amusement. Co&uotbc set wrong or got.en out of
order. Can be driven by anybody, a boy, a girl, or a
cripple. Bottoms 8, 10 or 12 well cut for two
mules. Bottoms 14 or 10 inch cut for three
mules. Ask your merchant to order one on
trial if he does nothavoit tn stock. Writefor De
scriptive Circular aud Brices.
TSOS. MEIKLE & CO., MTrs es flows & Cnltivatai
LOUISVILI.K, K.Y.
LEFFEL’S
IMPROVED
IDflll
IKUN JESZMrlxie.
/ W1 f p ■
I
ALL THE PARTS MADE OF
MALLZABLE & WWG2T BON
Nt. Shrinking, Swotting or Warpinp.
Tur LtoHTrsT RrNxrro. STROwoe-rrand EAsnwr |
RnciOi.xTKO Wisp Eksuk* in the WORLD. Th» i
BEST is CHEAPEST. Send for Circulars to the
SPRINGFIELD MICNINE CO.
=* Springfield. Ohio.
.. . ■ ' 'J'.'.'.'lL j
Highest Honor
X 1 rwm TMfc
J Exposition, ’
* ***
bUUUmivn commercial COLLEGE
Kentucky University, Lexington. Ky.
Students cao begin asy week-day <!uncg the ytar.
So vacation Time :■> th. ieU Dip Um.
Cwne »t*wt W w**u. Average total cost, nt a4i»r Tai
dw. s-t •( K»ci i. a tMMiy. t3O. THegraphy.
Phonography a.4 Type Writing .prri.;.,-. I.tterury
Coarse free. Cadies receive*. O-»' 8000 SeooeMfui
Grodnat4M. Ovtr ieo yrar t.-'-aa te-to »rar* »*
a*.. Ova* T‘. Mabn. laruuettaa ’•« praeai.-ai'-r ao* tadntdvaHy
irasam* Sv 10 Special eoarac fcr fneher. and Sed-
sawMea. Univerally D'ploina pvwwwwi to Is. w»<i>=aira.
taaaatitui rtt. i» a«Krt iw it. .nd a-xivty. »U‘l
Uoa aatSivn; -wlrmda.
Tit Text-Book the »>«**-« a»ws w (he !
World's Xxpoartton a* U< KvtMMire. FrwO<-»(, «ol <iaa- t
8.e.-e. KWatwrn. is used oaiy at thia |
College U H tbe itiqnl rWle«* “OS tha !
smbS, aa* gaaranaee. Mew» inbartaaa. <« be‘ irrnis '
avv. fwr »M f-t* < v*.r* - -(» S*r—des - I
TXI.WVB *L 3MTTE textag-ou. K;.
E B
g IN
'A'beOld Ifplkible aud Rest OneSnoon
ktakiiig. Fonder Made.
*One Teaeixwaful to a quart «>f Flour.)
Ou the market, for 10 years and rvcnnnneuded
by prominent physicians as healthful.
Warranteft to lie free from Ammonia
and all -iujurioua ingrrdient* and toglve ih>t
fect mtltfuctiou.
Ask your grocer for a fraa sample for trial.
MADE ONLY BY
CHARM MANUFACTURING CO.,
JUao manufacturers of Quaker Table Sauce. Jel
lies, Preserves, Maple Syrups. Flavor
ing Extracts, etc., etc.
ST. LOUIS, MO.
BEWARE
OF IMITATIONS.
ZStarPasteX
Wei YORK-yr
The Housekeeper’s Friend
ASK FOB,
AND TAKE NO OTHER.
Sold by the Grocery Trade generally.
dNLYS2OT”
PHILADELPHIA
SINGER
is the BEST BUILT,
FINEST FINISHED,
EASIEST RUNNING
SINGER MACHINE ever offered the public.
The aiovc cut lepresents the m<>st popular style fur
the |ms>i>lc übieh we otfor you for the tety low price
of sx<>. Reniembcr. we do not ask you td pay until you
haw seen ihe tuacbicr. After having examined it.
il it i< not all we ruprewnt, return it to us nt our
expeu-e. *‘(Hi«ult your interevts and order at once. <»»
ssud tor ctrculei* xml testlmonmls. AtMress
CHARLES A WOOD A O,
Xo 17 X Tenth Pliifad.lpliix, I's.
Favorite Carriage Co.,
CINCINNATI, OHIO,
WHOLBSAI.K NAXUrkCTVKKas OF FOOS
BUGGIES, SURREYS,
PHAETONS, CARRIAGES.
Best in the world at the price. Ask your
dealer for them. If not handled in your
?>lace, write us direct. Will send vala
ogue and Lithographs.
/Ki /Cqi \ Jf
SCALE CQ
- TOA W«GO, M'll.t, SOT. * UIJ. »Mt.
4'for. *MM»„ Iteaiu K.u IncluK
rs COTT*>*» BEAM A FRAME, 545.
. e'k. I h* "i.Utln Detect ve/ 7 b crz. to ZS lb. Ft
zw> OTHKB MZMI t ea»rM* Pitt* W LtST FEW
FOESES. TOOLS, &c.
*rs’ rono« jhdic for lmht w*ma, ft
I »< Ib A.ivli nud Hit of Vl*
I 1 >a*wn ow ,Mts aad SMeey JcSv.
J Blowers. >nrit«. Vice- 1 ♦ Other Article
v at ummprtit ks. wtivranu. a kmiau.
HEADS
•tadai; BiiOJOSCOM?L*iisTS:>r<■ relieved bvtaking
WRIGHTS IHDI AM VEPETABLE PILLS
Psrthf Tc-:Ut:t; ijx ASsru»m
3