Newspaper Page Text
6
WOMAN S WOKLI).
•»LKA«*KT LITERATURE FOR
A’xIMININE READERS.
Love as a Diet.
tore in a cottage
Is all very nice,
With plenty of “pottago”
Your wants to suffice.
Bat love as a diet
Day out and day in
Make people who try
Amazingly thin.
And love as a fixture
Will turn out a cross,
Unless it has mixture’
With plenty of dross.
—Pittsburg Commercin'.
Stuffed Birds Won’t Sell.
A little while since it became the rage
to have bonnets and hats ornamented with
stuffed birds. The hunters had all they
could do to kill and prepare enough to
supply the demand. But a fatal day. for
the trade arrived. The news reached
this country that the Queen of England
had organized a plumage society, the ob
ject of which was to prevent the slaughter
of feathered songsters to gratify a caprice
of fashion.
“Os course, anything that is English
rakes here,' 1 said a milliner recently,
“ and the ladies, young and old, began
■crying out that it was a horrid shame. I
know of at least a score of plumage so
cieties in this country to-day, and all or
ganized within a short period. In sev-
large educational institutions at
tended by young ladies these societies
have been started, and here we are, left
with a big stock on hand, and no pros
pect of selling out except at a great sac
ntice. It’s cruelty to milliners; that’s
what it is, and the ladies ought to know
jt. ’ Tor# Mail and Express.
Art and Fashion.
r A New York letter to the Chicago
Herald says: Art and fashion arc in
vol.yed with each other now as they
never were before. Not only do the
designers of elaborate toilets reason
ably chain to exercise artistic taste, for
much originality and beauty is often put
into the work, but genuine painters are
empl yed to decorate dresses. Usage in
the most pretentious New York circles
authorizes the wearing of exceedingly
tine gowns at dinners, and the apparel
at the best balls hardly shows such unique
garments as are seen in dining-rooms on
occasions of fashionable eating and 1
drinking. The aim is to wear something !
unlike anybody elso’s garb, and to effect
this the silk or satin, of a dress is often
painted by hand in water colors or oil.
AnUhtist- atPqwaifttawce of mine, whose
works on canvas have fie picntly been
good enough to be admitted to the
Academy of Design, was bemoaning the
fact that American buyers prefer foreign 1
to native pictures, irrespective of merit.
‘‘When a man has to go painting live
women instead of his own creations,’’he
bitterly growled, “I think it is time for 1
him to throw down the brush and take
up a shovel.”
. that he had taken several
. Women’s dresses as a
xfp’ 1 ’ of -huMisteucc, ufcl.ttytt be was re-
**
• luush 0:1 fabric that at the time inclosed
tne owher. The belle had insisted that
tlirr figures painted on the waist of her
dress, though they looked well in them
solve< were not shaded so as to be ef
fective when she had it on, therefore she
wished the artist to come to her house
while it was on
on. That hr regarded as hu
miliating. He could paint a gown in
his studio, but professional pride for
b.idtddm to apply his budi to thhper on
of tho patron.
» ’ • ■ ' *• *
,< <Jci nmn
.Hcpiying to some wofds of adverse
criticism upon German cooking pub- i
* l>ah<sd in the Cofyfavihwi, Km ilia Custer !
aayejn Good ihntekeepinge “Now I should
like to know in what part of Germany I
the writer got all those queer things that
arc talked about- the vegetables floating i
ia grease, the roast beef which is first '
boiled,'-4hen baked, etc. I never met :
i with such* ibiugs in any Geitnan family j
vixited. The vegetables are
i jjencr Hy prep ired with a sauce of drawn
butter. Roast beef is not a German dish .
a at all; until lately it was verv little known I
f iu Ggrrnany: When they'do prepare a
! largo piece of beef it is generally as a i
, aavory pot-road or ns beef a fa ’mode.
That dreadful thing that is menti ned as
herring salad, is nothing more nor less
♦ 4 thatewW the English call Salmagundi, i
And ns to lhe hashed beefsteak, first of
all, they do not p: etend that it is the
genuine tiling, they call it either Ham- i
burger or Bresfauer beefsteak, and it is
very much called for in German restau- •
rant by others as well as Germans. By
the way, how often 1 have heard business *
men sp©»k of this or that dish that they
have eaten in these restaurants, and ask
their wives if they could not find out
bow it was cooked and have it at home. j
“I think a gn at many readers of G x>d \
Hmwktepwj will agree with me that it
would be a good thing if country board-!
ing housekeeper#, and some city ones,
too, (or that matter, would chop their
tough round steak that they give their
boarders, so th 4 one could get one’s teeth
through it and swallow it without being
ia danger of choking. Th* Californian
ffo** on to aay: 'The German fanrilv
tnble with its mysteriessand abomination's
U the severest trial which the American
h*a to undergo who submite himself to
. *tb£ 4 A s -’» lt;Knc the country.’
kaow from actual experience
that the German jieasant is a much bet
ter fed imlwfidual thou most of our far
inert, lie dpcs not have wish meat anv
often er, but whit Othci dishes he has
an- properly cooked. Tht-re is not a dav
but what he ba< some good nourishing
aoup of pets, b aits, or lentil*, and on
iwtnday a beef soup. with rice or barley,
or various deHvfan* dubapJings. Then
they are not afraid to use their eggs and
prepare them in every cxmeeivabfa way;
our farmers either allow them to
rut th the barn, er wherever the ben
ebooace to fay them, or they collect them,
keep out a tew for cake and scud the real
to market.”
Tt»aue Flower* and Partida. '
Tissue paper flowers are the feminine
craze now. Ihe show windows are re
splendent with tulips', rose*, daisies, pop
pies and violets made out of tissue paper,
and young ladies of society are devoting
hours to acquiring the art of their man
ufacture. It is a pastime particularly
interesting, and it is remarkable what
beautiful floral effects are produced with
colored paper, a little wire, a little glu?
and a pair of scissors. Au enterprising
manufacturing company has taken advan
tage of the craze, and has put up in boxes
an assortment of different colored tissue
paper, with a small coil of fine wire and
a few pieces of very fine soft rubber pipe,
to ba used for stems. These boxes, to
gether with a pamphlet of instructions,
are sold at a trifling sum by the thousand.
Young ladies, with no knowledge of the
manufacture of artificial flowers, it is
said, can, with the contents of one of
these boxes, and by the aid of the book
of instructions, produce the most natural
domestic flowers with a little practice.
“T ssue-paper parties” have already
become popular. The fashionable world
always eagerly welcomes any new enter
tainment which promises to be both
novel and amusing, and it has taken hold
of the tissue-paper mania. At these
quiet little assemblages not only striking
effects in flowers are produced, but
dresses are manufactured. The paper
used at these affairs is imported, and
comes in a most marvellous variety and
beauty of color. Some of the garments
made out of this flimsy material arc ex
ceedingly beautiful. As can be easily
imagined, the variety of colors, shades
and tints is almost inexhaustible, and
every kind of combination and effect are
possible. In the matter of trimming
there is scope for all sorts of imitations—
flowers, fringes, ruffs, and a hundred and
one furbelows which women only under
stand the name or the object of. There
must be a. great deal of satisfaction in a
lady making such a dress and then view
ing it with rapturous feminine delight,
but this satisfaction cannot, of course,
be compared to that of the master of a
house, who finds his relief in the fact
that it costs but a few cents.
But it is the manufacture of flowers
from this imported paper which has
turned the young feminine mind upside
down. In the wonderful craze for fancy
work these paper flowers- are much used
for ornamentation. Roses and poppies,
made much larger than nature, are used
for decorating lace curtains, pillow cases,
backs of plush sofas and chairs, and
easels. A very popular feature of the
parlor is a basket of these flowers. The
basket itself is made of dark-colored
paper, without a foundation, simply in
a ring, and the material is placed in
folds. The flowers themselves are then
laid on paper shavings, which fill out
and keep the basket in shape. The
handle,, wire, is covered with paper,
with sTvect pens or other clirhlffng flow
ers twined around it. Such a basket of
flowers can scarcely be distinguished
from wax. A skillful hand, however, is
needed in their manufacture.
“The prettiest thing I have seen made
of tissue paper is a mat representing a
water lily,” said a young lady the other
day, while in conversation with the
writer upon the subject. “The perfect
form of the beautiful flower was repro
duced. It was made upon a foundation <
rd this leaves
u» 6 saebuiU- , , •plucr’d," th® lower
M of
vttt S theantfitnxeSmte
, Icaver were nF gcaoTiat• “tints. -You
’have no idea what a happv effect was
produced.”— -New York Sun J
Fashion Notes.
French lace is much worn.
The topaz is in favor again.
Jonquil yellow is in favor.
Parasols in many case* match the bon-
-
dilute cashmere is mor# fashionable 1
than mere cash. ' [
Rembrandt brims arc seen on some of
the new straw hats. J
Bows of harmonizing colors are mftdc '
acco:ding to taste for dress taiinming. ,
Some homespuns come TB diagonals,
but the most of them come in country
wagons. j
Overdresses arc often lined with color
in harmony with or in contrast to tnc
i material of the dress.
The combination of Nile green Ind |
pink, in high favor years ago, has been ’
again brought out in soft silks.
Black straw hats, trimmed with so-1
liage, are worn with cream woollen cos
tumestlwt are trimmed with black.
Gold and silver hairpins in a variety
lof styles are worn, Some of them are
I exceed, ngly ornate, others plain.
Bungles, with Ufcir coneohjtatl of
sequins and coins, continue to
silver dues as much in demand as
j gold ones. ' '
j Embroidered hand-made linen is an
Irish novelty. It is ma te in white and
cream-color and the designs are worked
\ in polished flax th' cud,
1 ‘espite their jough
straw hats remain fashionable year after
year, and each season seems to add some
. thing to their popularity.
Some of th ■ new chamois-ooloncd hose
to wear with shoes or slippers of the
same shade have white soles and .
heels, the same as dark hosiery.
A very light quality in crepe is used
for summer dresses. Blocks, dote and
geometrical designs are shewn on thia,
and the Mikado patterns are also repre
sented.
F%wer£ar*so elvsrly in the ascend- ;
ency that some of the milliners even
makeao use of leather* uni-as ordered.
The bow of beautifully fabricated ribbon
has also a grand reign.
Somo of the new hosiery in lisle thread
is woven in vertical stripes of different
lengths over the instep and the front ot
th? stocking, while the luuk and lower
part, will bo aomc strongly contrasting
color. * w
Myrtle green and pink.violet and blue,
different shades of green, black and
brown, are some of the startihng combiaa-'
tions; the latter is quite a peculiarity ot
thw saasou. The melange of colors makej
dressing a thing of danger, unless the
mixture is perfect all Is ruined.
“Now. Miss,” coaelu.led a pompous
votmg Htebiigvr. “Tve given you a
bird * eye view of the whole subject
Havel notf’ “You have,” was the be
wildering mrontc; "a goes*'a-Kfl*
bevy ZteM&fce. I
BUDGET OF FUN.
HUMOROUS SKETCHES FROM
VARIOUS SOURCES.
The Penalty of Profanity—A Walk
ing Mystery—Commodore Van
derbilt Overreached—Not
Afraid of Burglars, Etc.
The average small boy of the present
day is seldom at a loss for something to
say, even in the most embarrassing situa
tions. Bobby, a precocious youth of six
summers, had been indulging in pro
fanity, and, in order to escape the pun
ishment for which his mother had made
preparations, he crawled under a barn
and remained there in a state of siege for
the greater part of tli3 afternoon. When
his father returned at night and learned
how matters stood he made his way, with
much difficulty, under the barn in search
of the boy. “Hello, pa,” said Bobby,
cheerfully, as his sire approaced, “you
been swearing, too?”— Boston Record.
A Walking Mystery.
A young lady belonging to one of the
first families of New York returned from
a walk. Her mother, who is very strict
■with her, asked:
“Where have you been?”
“I have just been taking a little fresh
air in Central Park. ”
“Alone?”
“Alone.”
“Arc you sure of it?”
“Os course I am. Why do you ask?”
“Oh, nothing at all, except when you
went out you took with you a parasol,
and you come home with a gentleman’s
cane in your hand.”
The young lady has taken the matter
under advisement and will bring in a
verdict at an early date. Texas Biflings.
The Commodore Overreached.
An amusing story is told of the way in
which William H. Vanderbilt overreached
his father, the Commodore. William
wanted manure from the Fourth avenue
car stables for his Staten Island farm,
and asked his father what he would
Charge for ten Joads. “What’ll you
give’f” asked the Cdmmodore. “It’s
worth four dollars a load to me,” said
the farmer. “Good enough; I’ll let you
have it for that,” answered the railroad
man, having a deckled impression that
the price was as at least tsvice as much
as the stuff was worth. Next day he
rfound his rustic son with a scow just
loaded for home,
“How many loads have you got on
that scow, Billy!” asked the commodore,
in excellent humor.
j “How many?” repeated the son, feign-
! ing surprise; “one, of course.”
! ?one J why there’s at least thirty,” the
ofcl gentleman exclaimed, inspecting it
curiously.
“No, father, I never put but one load
on a scow—one scow load! Cast off the
lines, Pat!”— Chicago Times.
Not Afraid of Burglars.
“It’s a joke on me, of course, but. I’ll
! give it to you fellows,” said a Cass farm
■ man to a little group in the city hall yes
terday. “I have a great fear of burglars..
When I go to to knaw. thatl
every door and window. seewwk -«-■
j careless about teddoors- g’ Wighrs. On
j two or three occasions I came down stairs'
i at midnight to find a window up or the
’ back door unlocked. I thew orc deter
! mined to put up a job on her. I got
! some false whiskers and an old rig, and
one night about 11 o’clock I crept up the
| back slaiis to her room. She was snor
, ihg away like a trooper, but the minute
- I struck a match she awplre, J expected
a great find screaming, but noth
. ing of the sort took place. She bounced
; out of bed with a 4 You villain!’ on her
l lips, seized a chair by the back, and bo
; fore I had made a move she knocked me
I to my knees. Before I could get out of
i the room she struck me RgdUb
was only after I had tumbled clowfi the
back stairs that she gave the alarm. Then
she went through to my room, yapped on
the door and qopUy announced;
“ ‘Mr. Blank, please get up. I’ve
L killed a burglar.’ ” — Detroit JErce Press.
Surprising Unanimity.
j “I see,” said the police reporter fast
i night, as he paused to sharpen a pencil,
“I see that Bob Burdette has given an
account of a strike he went qn, w hen a
schoolboy. I never was on a strike, but I
had a lively experience in another Hno.
On Friday afternoon when we were ex
pecting theSchpol Board to come around j
and see the school on dre-s parade, the '
boys agreed, with one accoru, to «peak I
; “The boy stood on the burning deck.” ]
Well, the Board came, and things were ]
looking as solemn as a funeral when the .
first boy walked cut and started off:
“ ‘The boy stood on the burning deck i
IVhence all but him hal fled:
The ilaiaai that bt the battle wreck
Rhone round him o'er the dead.’ i
“He went through the thing wifiiout a
smile, took his seat and the second boy ’
started off:
“ • The boy stood on the burning deck,' etc.
"The telpher's eyes opened wide, and
the School Board looked puzzled, Imt
the boys all look, d so solemn that the
uninitiated thought there was nothin'*
wrong. The second boy went through
the last line, took his seat and the third
boy arose. Tse silence was oppressive
until he began ;
“ ‘The boy stood on the burning deck
Whence all but he had fled;
The flame*— ‘
“But that was ail the further he got.
The teacher rose in his might, marched
the entire crowd oft to a burning deck
adjacent and thrashed the whole ca
boodte.”—Manta
Swift's Know Storm.
“Talking about the signal service and
its bad luck, in the weather "prophesying
business." „<id a station agent, “let me
tell yt»n a little story abort Swift, Super
intendent of Telegraph on th? Kock
Island. Some time last winter the Sig
nal Service people told Swift th<s would
furni-L him their bulletins if he would
undertake to send them out and have
them nested along the road. Sw'ff'ist**'
cepteu th* offer, and thought ft a big
thing, lie had instruction* sent out to
al! on r.rtor* rnneemi g posting of th
weathir bulletin*, *~d fe’.t s > prdud of
the new Sirtice that he went a.otud
bragg.ng what a good tiling It would
b?. In if”,few days the Signal Service
predicted a very heavy snow storm, and
Swift sent word to the Superin'endents,
suggesting th it they had better make
arrangements in advance to keep the
tracks clear of the unusual fall of snow
sure to come.
“ ‘Now, you see,’ he said, ‘how valu
able this service is to a ra'iroad. When
that snow comes we’ll be prepared for it,
and not a wheel will be stopped. ’
“Instructions were sent out to station
agents and section bosses, and in some
places gangs of extra laborers were hired
to shovel snow. But the snow storm
didn’t seem to be in a hurry, The day
passed as bright and clear as one could
ask for; the night following was equally
pleasant, and the next day started in as
clear as a morning in June, with no sign
of snow to be discerned.
“The boys couldn’t stand it any longer.
First one sent a messenger to Swift in
quiring ‘Where is that snow storm J’ and
then another took it up and sent in his
question. In a few hours Swift received
about five hundred messages from Illi
nois, lowa, Missouri and Minnesota, in
quiring where that snow storm was, and
when it might be expected to arrive at
the station of the inquirer. One of the
boys wanted his storm sent by express
and another asked what snow looked
like, anyway. In this way they kept it
up until poor Swift was ‘knocked out of
the box,’ as the baseball people say, and
after giving orders that the Signal Ser
vice reports should be fired from the road
he went home and stayed there for thirty
six hours.”— Chicago Herald.
No Fun in the Judge.
Two Dakota lawyers recently had some
trouble with, a new judge afid were dis
cussing the subject. Said one:
“You got thirty days or §lO3, did ■
you?”
“Pa$ T the fine?”
“No; couldn’t. Thought thirty days
in jail was good enough for me. What’d
he fine you ?”
“Fifty dollars.”
“Pay it?”
‘‘‘Yes, that is, my wife’s father did.”
“Os course—L didn’t suppose you raised
it yourself. What was it you called the
did judicial snoozer?”
“I was telling him that his counte
nance reminded me of a fre’.ght-car which
had been to a smash-up and that in his }
various rulings he leaped about from !
wrong ideas to untenable premises like 1
an insane jack rabbit—when he socked I
it onto me.”
“Yes. Now that’s the usual talk and
the old judge never objected. I put it a
little stronger an 1 told him that I could |
only explain the unheard-of rulings of the !
court by the supposition that they came
from a man with a spavined intellect and
then threw my coat and hat and yelled:
‘Come down, you ancient antiquity, and
I’ll whale enough sense into your shat- ;
tered mind so that you can hold a posi
tion at pounding sand with a ball club!
Lemmy get you and disfigure the fair j
face of nature by scattering your worth
less remains around this judicial district’’ j
He said it would be SIOO 6r thirty days ,
and then went on and decided the case
against me.”
reiritarfal bar .will ho ■
•ift jtiii.Tr this is the way they are going
to work it there don’t appear to be much
encouragement for a lawyer to take right 1
hold of a case in earnest and make Rome .
open her mouth clear back to her ears
and howl.”— Estelline {Dak.) Bell.
MM.
Earliest Methods of Measuring Time, ;
The story js Alfred hud no |
belter way to tell the time tklii Gy liUEn> ‘
ing twelve candles, each of which lasted '
two hours; and when all the twelve were |
gone, another day had passed. Long
before the time of Alfred, and long be- !
fore the time of Christ, the shadow of
the sun told the hour of the day, by means ,
of a sun-dial. The old Chaldeans so
placed a hollow hemisphere, with ahead •
in the center,that the shadow of the bead \
on the inner surface told the hour of the 1
day. Other ki«ds of dials were after
ward made with a tablet of wood or »
straight piece Os metal. On the tablets 1
were marked the different When ■
the shadow came to the mark IX., it was I
nine o’clock in the morning. The dial
xtas sometimes placed near the ground,
or in towers or building?. You see, in I
the picture, two sun-dials that rre in the I
Gray and Black Nunnery in Ottawa, the
capital of Canada The old clock on the
j eastern end of Faneuil Hall in Boston j
j was formerly a dial of this kind: and on |
J some of the old church-towers in England
j you may see them to-day. Aside from
j the kinds mentioned, the dials now in
[existence are intended more for orna- i
; ment than for use. In the days when [
j dials were used, each oae contained a I
; motto of some kind, like these: “Time
flies like the shadow,” or. “I tell no I
[ hours but those that are happy.”
| But the dial could be used only in the 1
daytime; and, even then, it was worthless j
when the sun Was covered with clouds. ,
In order to measure the hours of the [
night as well as the hours of the day. the
Greeks and Romans used the clepsydra,
whichmva&s. .“The water steals awav.” |
A fit led wi‘h a 1
holo wns made in the bo.tom through
wjiich the water could run. The glass,
in those days. Was not transparent. Ko J
one could see from the outside how much
water had escaped. So there w a<? made,
on the inside, certain mark* that told the
hours as the water ran out; or eise a stick 1
j with notches in the edge was dipped into |
the Water, and the depth of what was left
; showed the hour. Sometimes the water
, dropped into another jar in which a block
• of wood was floating, the block rising as
' the hours went on. Once in a while,
,some very rich man had a clepsydra that
1 sound a musical note at every hour.— i
Mantilj. . . :
Thunderstorm in a Clear Sky.
Captain Andrrs-n, of the British bark |
Siddartha, which lately arrived hi New .
York, repented a peculiar t hinder'torm ,
while on the the northern edge of the |
Gulf Stream. The sky wa quite clear
at the time and the sun shining brightly, I
** there anpftared to be a thin
. mist aiMMit the shin. Suddenly there a>-
‘ pcared a vivid ‘flush of lightning, ao I
eompanied by violent thued r. " The ■
compass was cm-e 1 to vibrate pc c-pti- ‘
bly fur a period of fifteen minutes.
AURANTII
Most of the diseases which afflict mankind are origin
ally caused by a disordered condition oftheLIVER.
For all complaints of this kind, such as Torpidity of
the Liver, Biliousness, Nervous Dyspepsia, Indiges
tion, Irregularity of the Bowels, Constipation. Flit'.' - |
lency. Eructations and Burning of the Stomach
(sometimes called Heartburn), Miasma, Malaria,
Bloody Flux, Chills and Fever, Breakbone Fever,
Exhaustion before or after Fevers, Chronic Diar
rhoea, Loss of Appetite, Headache, Foul Breath,
Irregularities incidental to Females. Bearing-dovgi ,
STADIGER'S fiUßfiNTil
is invaluable. It is not a panacea for all disease J ,
but | all diseases of the LIVER,
Will W U BN El STOMACH and BOWELS.
It changes the complexion from a waxy, yellow
tinge, to aru idy, healthy color. It entirely removes
low. gloomy spirits. It is one of the BEST AL
TERATIVES and PURIFIERS OF THE
BLOOD, and Is A VALUABLE TONIC. |
STADICER’S AURAOTSI j
For sale by all Druggists. Price $ 1.00 per bottle.
C. F. STADICER, Proprietor,
140 SO. FRONT ST., Philadelphia, Pa.
tews®
■ 1 i/ /7/wl■
‘■■si. l AferW
(W®' '7 ! /Ow«|
Fnr o r v nss “ Electric Lustre*
£ Starch. It is .1! prenapod t< r immediate
fa u.-O in i3>ic I’tt' koffcSi which
k go: sfai usr.vop'jtiudsol other Starch.
Ask yoLT Groce? for it.
| te' Eteiri'tesliG 7 starcli Co.
a 204 Franklin Mow York.
ESCtPE HIGH REfiTS MH) THE COST OF
HEATING & ROOM BT uSIHS
iSB Table Bed. ?
.. IL*' orex-yufi bed 3 ft. ? |n, long. > i
' A
FULL BED
- SINGLE BED KQB :
CHILD’S BED.JMB|
ASK YOUR FURNI- j
. TURK DEALER i j
FOR IT. " I
CLOSED-Wlth all bedding UmMa
FOREST CITY FURNITURE CO., I
WBOUHUIM TUBNITCBB MA»U»AOTDX». ! .
Roolcford* 111.
a’
i
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positive feed, no •prfngs. few parts, mlninmm
weight, no friction, no noise, no wear.nofatigue,
no “tantrum*,” capecity unlimited, always inor
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J>erfect»»ii«f*ction. Sen df or circulars. Address,
AVERY MACHINE CO.
• 812 Brodwsy, New York.
THE HARRIS IMPROVED DOW LAW
Cotton Seed Planter and Guano Distributor. I
This Planter has taken more ,
premiums than any planter I
ever invented. More of them f ~ \ fr/X
are in use and sHd every sea* sfefc AjjELME *'' 1 B
*• n thai. all <■ h»-; niakt-MCom- WpCy isl
Lined. This luvh.ne has H
cv; growers of the >S -.th . f p
!> y» »<1 ■ 91
O'- in P >p»:Hrity, and is ; Ll
the only planter that willgive jy~/. * 1 ' _
complete satisfaction to the
planter. ||s«g
w/guarantee- to be superior to worthing ever put upon the markef. Prices very gg
low. For information and prieea. address, * * | ■
B. F. AVBRF A SOWS. SouisviUe. Kv. ■;
■ • .
Nvaawpv •*t*nf»'»v<*Tr,-r. r , l . ) ... J .Ti rtrri -j- rnr j )W j .. . ■ r'r.>'
C H-! e AGO
QOTTAQE
OROAty'
ifas taSned a standard of excellence whl .'a
.di lit? of no ar.porior.
eo’ -.tains oVrry improvement that invent! z.
genius, drill and money cun produce.
T ’satCTXSsrsaciSß 3 cwurcuußSEfcciuwNO
OU2J E7LKY
ORGA2S
IS BANTED
• S-IVE
rXCSA. "STIABS.
"”™ ——
These Organs are cclebratod for volume,
quality of tone, quick response, nrtistio design,
beauty in finish,’perfeet construction, making
them t’.?c most desirable organs for homes,
schools, churches, lodges, societies, etc.
IfiST.ISSiLMaEED REPUTATION.
UJN FACIMTJES,
S££II.Z.ED> WORILMEN, ‘
BF.3T
COMBINED, HAKE ’SStIS
H-IK POPULAR ORGAN
Ir.atnssticH Oocks asti Plans Sieuls.
dialogues and Friso Lists, on fbeh.
CtiiGAGO GOHASE OBGAri GO.
xr. Ccnrtoiph and hr.n Cis., CHICAGO, is.-
The above Organ is represented in
Douglas C Italy by Chas, O Pfavy,
who will sell veu any kjnQ of organ
jon want, CIWAP!
Tilfftl 0 S i QU N for Che least uiouey
ever oliieretl to t>»« public. ”
For sale by all first-dlask Gun Dealers.
At Wholesale only by <sead tor Catalogue)'
S&HOVERLING, DALY & DALES,
84 & RS Chambers St., New York.
Wo Wan - S.Ocjp Morx, -4,-jentstc Sc|
f Th© Personal History oft
IL § a SifflTn
* w «
as q
1“ fha book embraces the General’s entire military,
* Civil service, and private career, and is the most
voinnlete and reliable blstoty of him extant, A i»rge
handsome octavo volume 0f630 pages, superbljJUlns
trated. With 88 full-page engravings, on wood and
steel; also numuroUß maps and antoHraph tettera.--->
of Grwit published. ”
I as ever can be
i written ."-NIT. TsißrNE. , a ~£3
I- •• The most correct and complete record of Geh.
Grant published.’’—Churck Varpw.
•• It covers the cuttro career of the great soldier.”
; Herald
will be glad to get Tius book. It sells to Mer
chants, Mechanics, Farmers, and the 2 __ _
VETERAN SOLDIERS OF THE LATE WAR.
Thus every Agent can pick out tiftT ob mors «
a toww to whom he can feel sure of selling it to.
gW*AafY person with this book can become a suo
osssiTTi. Agent. We give full instructions to new
beginners. Many of our Agents who never can
vassed before are earning from $25 to (30 per week.
We want one Agent tn every Grand Army Post and
in every township. Bend for full particulars and
SPECIALTERMBTO AGENTS, or secure territory
at onee by sending 80 eta. for outfit. [Mention thft
WINTER HATCH. Hartford, Lt.
I
# y™/ I
II |
|1 JL. ILL. K j
I« Robbie* * Backiche! No S>r« Fwgeril ■
Warranted not la Injury ties Clothes,
your C.toc-cr for It. Hhd cannot enp. H
piy you, one cake «i.l be maifed raw on receipt M
of Mx two cent stsinpe for postage. A beautiful
nine-colored “ Chromo” with three bar*. Deal. g|S
«r» and Grocers should write tat particulars.
C. A. SHOUDY & BON, ■
ROCKFOHD. mu.