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THE TOOTHSOME SALMON,
CANNING AN IMPORTANT FOOD
FISH ON THE PACIFIC COAST.
Preparing the Fish for the Cans—
Cooking the Raw .Salmon After
It Has Been Canned.
The salmon canning industry of the
Pacific coast is one of great importance
and this city, says a Seattle (Washington)
letter to the New York World, is well
represented in that line of business. The
canneries not only furnish employment
to those who are actually engaged in the
work of canning the fish, but it also
brings a harvest to the numerous fisher¬
men and Indians who are located here.
The fishermen bring the fish to the dock,
where they unload them.
After leaving the hands of the white
fishermen, when they are piled on the
wharf, they are handled entirely by
Chinamen. The method of moving them
about is very simple. The mover is pro¬
vided with a stick in the end of which is
fastened a sharp spike, and this is thrust
into the head of the fish and a sharp jerk
is given which lands another him several feet
away, and perhaps on pile. The
fish weigh all the way from five to forty
pounds each.
When the men are ready to commence
operations the fish are placed on a long
bench side by side and heads all pointed
in the one direction. When the bench
is filled, the man who has charge of that
portion of the work takes his knife and
/gives it a rub on his steel, and then cuts
j off is the then heads turned and the front another fins. The
i fish over to man,
j and the makes head is thrown to sleight-of-hand one side. This
man one or two
movements with his knife and the fish is
of its other fins and the tail.
Another motion cuts the fish open and
another removes the entrails and throws
them into a receptacle prepared for them.
After the removal into of large jjthe entrails the fish
are thrown a vessel of water,
where they are rinsed. They' are re¬
moved from here and each fish is given
a scraping both outside and in. I may
as well state that the salmon has no
scales and hence the work of removing
them is dispensed with.
The man who scrapes them makes
just two twists of his well-trained wrist
and the work is done, and they are
thrown into the water again, where they
are thoroughly rinsed and every trace of
blood removed. From this place the
fish go to the chopper, where they are
cut into convenient sizes for the cans.
The chopper is made as follows: There
is a table which, at a distance of two
inches apart, across the whole width,
has slots cut through. By the action of
a lever curved knives are brought down¬
ward through the slots. The fish are
laid lengthwise across the tabic, and
when the knives are forced downward
with a quick jerk the fish are neatly di¬
vided into cross sections.
These cross sections are then split into
smaller sizes. This is done by hand.
The meat is now ready for the cans,
which are made in the cannery by Chi¬
namen. The first operation of the can
ning process is the salting. This is done
in a very simple manner. A table or
board one inch in thickness is bored full
of auger holes. I think there are twen
ty-four of these holes. A thin board
slides under the one which contains the
holes, thus making a bottom. Salt is
poured on the board, and after the holes
are filled it is scraped off. Two dozen
cans are placed in a tray and the tray is
shoved under the table, so that a can is
under each hole. The board is then re¬
moved and the salt falls through into the
can. Each can receives something like
a teaspoonful of salt.
The chopped fish is piled on tables,
and the cans are taken to these tables as
fast as they are ready. Here they are
filled with the raw salmon. The pieces
are put in and then packed down until
the man cannot force in another ounce.
Sometimes there will b8 some sticking
over the top of the can, and this is re¬
moved with a knife. They are now
ready to be topped and sealed. The tops
are put on, and then the cans are run
through a soldering machine and the
work is completed with the exception of
soldering the small hole in the top of the
can. That is done by hand, but it is
done very rapidly. The canning is now
over, provided there are no flaws to be
found. From the time the can is filled
until the labels are pasted on they are
being continually tested, in order that
there may be no chance of an imperfect
one being sent out.
The cooking is the next thing on the
list. The cans are placed in a large
square iron tray, which holds about a
hundred. The tray is lifted by a rope
which runs over a pulley and then low¬
ered into a big vat of boiling water,
where they are allowed to remain two
hours. When the trays are removed they
are placed on a table, and a man comes
alt >g Witfi 'a maUet and strikes each can
I I order to see. if they are sound. When
finds one that is faulty be takes it out,
tirows it to one side to be patched up.
ho sound of the blow on the can tells
itn which is perfect and which iB not,
Ld he will go over them so rapidly that
|u can scarcely keep track of the blows,
iter pallet he is gone another man comes with
which contains a small awl. lie
■kes each can, tints making a small
■e, .jetimes through which the gas escapes,
I the gas and fluid will .spurt
Ifjard ' r^ to the height k® of escaped three feet. they are
er 8
j In ijteing i made air-tight by the little punc
* soldered and then placed in
J retort. This is kept at a steady heat,
Inty-eight degrees above the boiling
pint. |ore, Here they are kept for two hours
and when they are taken out they
ie sufficiently cooked. After being
Istcd |pm. they are removed to the cooling
After cooling they are again
Bsted and then they are laquered or var
Id Jshed. nibbed The cans with arc taken brush one dipped by one
Ito over a
| brown varnish and they are placed
tra; w, which stand over large' iron pans,
lie jn, j icquer runs off and drops into the
aid it thon runs out into a pail,
Jus taking a saying which in time
Jtom t* to -quite a sum. They are
^orderiof The Ul ^r W nii to hav^Lf to
dry. After they are thoroughly dried
they are tested, then labeled, and last of
all they are placed in cases which con¬
tain four dozen cans each. These cases
are shipped to all parts of the world.
WISE WORDS.
The shortest way to do many things is
to do only one thing at once.
No one is satisfied with his fortune
nor dissatisfied with his own wit.
It is wiser to prevent a quarrel before¬
hand than to revenge it afterward.
He who waits to do a great good at
once will seldom do any good at all.
There will always be romance in the
world as long as there are young hearts
in it.
The qualities we possess never make
us so ridiculous as those we pretend to
have.
Books, like proverbs, receive their
chief value from the stamp and esteem of
ages through which they have passed.
Discretion is more necessary to women
than eloquence, because they have less
trouble to speak well than to speak
little.
Only the refined and delicate pleasures
that spring from research and education
can build up barriers between different
ranks.
Every day is a leaf in life. When the
day dawns it is a blank. There is in¬
scribed thereon our thoughts, words and
actions.
One of the most effectual ways of
pleasing and of making one’s self loved is
to be cheerful. Joy softens more hearts
than tears.
Ninety-nine per cent, of ambition to
try, and one per cent, of talent, is all
that is necessary to success in whatever
we undertake.
It is very pleasant to follow one’s in¬
clinations, but, unfortunately, we cannot
follow them all; they are like the teeth
sown by Cadmus, they spring up, get in
each other’s way and fight.
Whereas men have many reasons to
persuade, to use them all at once weak
eneth them. For it argueth a neediness
in every one of the reasons, as if one did
not trust to any of them, but fled from
one to another.
Character Revealed by the Eye.
A detective, who had been very suc¬
cessful in discovering and arresting crim¬
inals under every guise, said, lately;
“I have but one rule to guide me. I ob¬
tain a picture of the man and examine
his eye. Then I search for that eye.
Every other feature of his face, together
with his height, his size, his dress, he
can alter. But his eye he cannot change.
That tells the story.”
A gentleman who has long made a
study of amateur photography asserts
that its chief interest to him lies in the
unconscious revelation of character in a
photographed face. “If a man have any
noble or mean trait latent in his nature,
unknown to the world, it comes out in
his photograph.”
Hawthorne declared that dominant
family traits and likenesses were always
revealed in these sun-drawn pictures,
even though they might not be visible on
the real faces of the sitters.
These assertions, if correct, only illus¬
trate a truth which is as old as mankind:
that, as years go by, the character of a
man writes itself indelibly upon his face.
Not only the action, whether mean or
noble, but the secret thoughts which are
never put into deeds—the sensual imag¬
the cruel purpose, the lofty hope,
the kind feeling, all these record them¬
selves upon the features, oi at some un¬
expected moment peep out at the world
from behind the
The sin which we welcomed as a pleas¬
ant guest in youth may be hateful to us
in middle age, but we can never again
make it a stranger to us. Some look or
mark in our faces betrays to a keen ob¬
server that we were once familiar with it.
Among the superstitious legends of the
Scotch there are many stories of an un¬
clean, wicked little fairy, who obtains
entrance to a house, and lives thereafter
in the cellars and coal-bins, taking a
mischievous part in the family life. His
persecutions became so intolerable to one
household, we are told, that they hired a
new dwelling, and at great loss “flitted”
from their, old house, going secretly by
night, to escape their tormentor. But
when the cart with their moveables en¬
tered the gate of the new home, the
shrill, hateful voice of the wicked fairy
was heard from among them, crying,
“Here we are!”
The legend hints at a terrible truth,
How many men have rushed from one
occupation to another, from home to
home, from country to country, to escape
some vice or habit which had grown,
loathsome to them! Alas, they’could
not travel away from themselves, It is
in youth that we must shut the door if
we would keep that inner chamber unr
defiled.— Youth’* Companion.
_ ’
A curio^H^^^kthrown CunM^^fendoo Notions, the rural
Be^^^^^Bmntents on
life of of a paper
reprinted Botnl^^^H|^&logieal annual report of
the Cal^^^^^^HFrom (Society,
says the this paper
we arc told Shot^^^^^^Kte among other
things: driv^^^HIHkes. of the king
of birds drN^Kayg|iosts, (Shouting
Ram, Iiam, Cholera
that attacks on Mmiday or Saturday ends
fatally, but no cholera that attacks on
Thursday, The flowering fanning, of bambpos
augurs famine. In if the fan
strikes the body it should be thrice
knocked against the ground. When giv.
jng alms the giver and receiver should
not be standing on different sides of the
threshold. It is bad to pick one’s teeth
with one's nails. If a snake is killed it
should foe burned, for it is a Brahman
At should night the be words “snake ’ and “ tiger'’
not used; .call them creepers
and insects. Do not .wake up a sleeping
physician . A morning dream without always
comes to pass. Devotion head
gear is -wrong, Irop is a .charm against
ghosts, A Wsck cat with a,white face is
#qry aujqnrious.
HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS.
how to conquer dost.
- That dust is unavoidable w a truism as
thoroughlv settled in the belief of most
housekeepers as that it is disagreeable;
and that it is disagreeable is to be scien¬
tifically known from the very different
sensations one experiences in a room be¬
fore and after it has been swept and
cleansed, in the lightness and buoyancy
and pleasant scent of the air there.
Every room iu modern houses has more
or less coal dust, more or less wood dust,
dust from the surfaces of wall-paper and
ceilings, dust from the wear and tear of
carpets and rugs, a certain amount of
fine, almost imperceptible earth dust,
and a vast amount of half-decomposed
vegetable dust from the roadways, from
flower-boxes, from gardens, from cloth¬
ing, from everywhere.
At all times unwholesome, when damp¬
ness gets hold of this dust it ferments,
decays and becomes positively poisonous;
and this must needs happen on any rainy
day, on foggy mornings, on dewy nights
and at that season of the year when the
dampness seems to penetrate the. house
and it is not yet time to light the fires
that might dry it out or hinder it.
The rooms of a dwelling-house, then,
cannot be kept too thoroughly well
swept and dusted off, in order that the
least possible deposit of dust may be left
in them. The usual sweeping of a room
with closed doors and windows, so that
the rest of the house shall not be dis¬
turbed, is not so effective as it is desired
to be. The broom cannot reach much of
the dust; a powerful draught of air must
help it out by loosening and carrying
away a great deal of it that is beyond the
broom, such as that about the walls, the
shelves, the mirrors, that dust which is
the finest and the lightest, which rises
while the heavier mineral dust sinks, and
so proclaims itself the dust of organic
decay, and infinitely more injurious to the
lungs and other vital organs than any
other dust.
Many wives think that the less the dust
is stirred in sweeping the better the work
is done, and tea-leaves and wet grass and
moistened meal are thrown about the
floor in order to gather the dust and pre¬
vent it from rising. But people giving
the matter philosophical attention have
come to the conclusion that precisely the
opposite course is the fit and proper one;
that a good stirring up and then a good
blowing out is what the dust needs, and
that with blowing unobstructedlvthrough
the room as thoroughly as a wind can be
made to blow, so that it is doubtful if at
some time a huge patent bellows shall not
be invented, to be applied every time the
broom goes to work, and scatter all the
slumbering dust to the four winds of out¬
side.
But till this is done, or something like
it, it becomes the interest of the indwel¬
lers of a house to see that, after the sweep¬
ing is over, the dusting shall be suf¬
ficiently thorough to remove so much of
the dust as is left, and not merely to send
it flying and let it settle again. The
feather duster may have its use before
sweeping in wiping down the walls and
dislodging the all but invisible particles
behind pictures and bookcases and in
inaccessible corners, and setting that dust
so free that the draught may sweep it out
of the room farther than the broom can.
But when the broom is laid aside, then
clean cloth dusters should come into re¬
quisition, and they, frequently and re¬
motely shaken, are the only things that
by any possibility remove dust so as to
make the removal satisfactory until the
time when moie dust shall have accumu¬
lated.
RECIPES.
Indian Sandwiches—These may be
made from a mixture of veal or chicken,
mixed with chopped ham or tongue.
After the two are rubbed together, to
each half pint may be added a table¬
spoonful of stock, a teaspoonful of es¬
sence of an chovy or a little lemon juice.
Cut thin slices of bread from the loaf,
then with a round biscuit cutter cut out
the sandwiches, butter each lightly, and
toast until a golden brown. Spread over
them while hot a thin layer of the mix¬
ture, and press together.
Pickled Chicken—Clean and boil until
tender a nice young chicken, when done
remove the meat, rejecting the bones and
skin. Cut the meat into neat pieces and
put them in a glass jar. Take sufficient
broth to half fill the jar and adclan equal
quantity of good cider vinegar, twelve
whole cloves, same of allspice, a blade of
a bay leaf and a slice of onion.
to boiling point and pour while hot
the chicken, stand aside, uncovered,
cool. When cold, cover. It will be
to use in twenty-four hours.
Peach Chips—Peaches are nice to use
winter in place of raisins, for pud¬
Peel and slice the peaches thin.
a syrup of half a pound of sugar
a pound of the fruit, and water
to dissolve the sugar. Boil the
until it becomes very thick; put in
peaches and scald well; then remove
with the skimmer and dry in the
After they are dry, pack closely in
sprinkling powdered sugar between
The syrup left, I bottle for use
pudding sauces, blanc manges, etc.
Fruit Pics—In making fruit pies, mix
the fruit, sugar and flour in a bowl be¬
fore putting them over the crust, if usu¬
ally annoyed by the pie bursting and
its goodness. For rhubarb and
cherry pies the proportions of ingredients
one pint of fruit, five tablespoonfuls of
one tablespoonful of flour. For
blackberries and blueberries,
tablespoonfuls of sugar will be suf¬
unless the fruit is very tart. In
and effectually closing fruit pies,
the two edges between the first fin¬
and and thumb, and thus pinch to¬
the whole circumference; then fold
the edges about a quarter of an inch
again make the circle, this time with
fork 'or print. Then if apertures for
escape of steam have been provided
may defy the liquids getting away.
The annual report of the Scotch lunacy
‘ ’ shows that lunacy isi in
went
id.
The Color of Plants.
A Frencn scientific agriculturist, after
* lmo ? t thirt y years of assiduous re
searches on the experimental farm at
Vincennes, has made a remarkable and
important discovery of a relation existing
between the color of plants and the rich¬
ness of sfils in fertilizing agents. He
finds that the color of the leaves of
plants undergoes marked change when¬
ever the soil is lacking in phosphate pot¬
ash, lime or nitrogren. The color re¬
mains light green or turns to yellow
when the soil is deficient in any of these
ingredients. When none of the fertiliz¬
ing elements are wantiug the color is
dark green. By his experiments he
furnishes agriculturists with positive in¬
dications by which they can determine
with the greatest facility what kind of
fertilizer the soil needs most or in what
elements of fertility it abounds, enabling
them to “make two blades of grass grow
where now grows one.”
Utilization of Sawdust.
Why doesn’t some one invent a cheap
and easy method of utilizing sawdust?
In Canada, a mill owner was recently
fined for allowing the sawdust from his
mills to to be deposited iu the river,thus
violating the law regulating such mat¬
ters. In rendering judgment, the magis¬
trate said that the evidence showed that
large quantities of sawdust escaped from
the defendant’s mill into the river,which
contained valuable fish and was naviga¬
ble for steamers. It was well known, he
said, that the mill refuse for the past
forty years had been freely emptied into
the river, and that for twenty miles be¬
low the town the banks were lined with
accumulations of sawdust, and that at
the detreaehment into the lake the
mouth was almost entirely closed. It is
understood that the government has in¬
structed its inspectors to rigidly enforce
the sawdust regulations in future.
Alive with Wires.
The house of one of Edison’s chiefs is
absolutely alive with wires. As one ap¬
proaches the front gate it swings open
and shuts automatically. The visitor’s
foot on the porch rings a bell in the
kitchen and also one in the master’s
study. By touching a button he opens
the front door before the stranger has
time to knock. An electrical music box
plays during dinner. When the guest
retires to his bed-room the folding bed
unfolds by electricity. When he puts
out the gtiS a strange, mocking display
of skeletons, gravestones, owls and
other hideous phantasmagoria dunce
about on the wall at his feet.
American Enterprise.
Although it has been asserted that
sealskins cannot be properly dressed and
dyed in America, several firms in New
York annually turn out thousands of
skins prepared in their own esta alish
ment by American workmen; so large is
the demand for their goods that they
cannot wholly meet it. An encouraging
outlook, this, for home industries.
There is nothing of which men are
more liberal than their good advice, be
their stock of it ever so small; because
it seems to carry in it an intimation of
their own influence, importance or great
worth.
The nobler a man truly is, the stronger and
is his desire to live a yet richer
worthier life; the more valuable his
work the more earnestly does he long to
improve upon it.
“O to be dead and done with the trouble
That tills each day with a dreary pain,”
This is the moan ot many a woman
Who thinks she can never be well again. others
“It were better for mo and better lor
If I were dead,” and their tears fall fast.
Not so, not so, O wives and mothers,
There’s a bow of hope in the sky at hast,
and it tells you that the ........ storm of diseti disease
which UIUU lias Ha.*l spretid opiottu its Joo ouauuno shadows over you, wi ^ 1
give way to the sunshine of renewed health.
If you are wise, and try Dr. Pierce’s Favorite
Prescription. It can and will effectually cur**
all female weaknesses and derangements, and
no woman who has not tried it need despair,
for a trial will convince her that it is the very
thing she needs to restore her to the health
she fears forever lost.
To cleanse the stomach, liver, and 25 system
generally, use Dr. Pierce’s Pellets. cents.
The propensity to evil or dishonorable
c ourses is much more to be deplored than the
gets which come of it.
85000 for a Wife.
One of the greatest stories in (founded on fact)
ever published, commences the December
(X-mas) number of Godey’s Lady’s Book,
should published read at it. Ready Philadelphia. Noy. 15. All Every Newsdealers. woman
S5E2EHS58
Danger from Catarrh
Catarrh is an exceedingly disagreeable disease,
Its varied symptoms—discharge at the nose, bad
breath, pain between the eyes, coughing, choking
sensation, ringing noises in the ears, etc.—being
not only troublesome to the sufferer, but offensive
to others. Catarrh is also dangerous, because it
may lead to bronchitis or consumption. Being a
blood disease, the true method of cure is to purify
the blood by taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla.
“For several years I had been troubled with a
kind of asthma or catarrh in my throat. My wife
wanted me to try a bottle of Hood’s Sarsaparilla. I
must say I was very much benefited bv using it and
would recommend It very highly.”— £uas P. Dev¬
ries, Omaha, Nob.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
by OL HoSd i*co!; Ap^hlcLTef
IOO Doses One Dollar
H SJi 3 ISUR and WHISKEY HAB
■ I*IS 1 Hnfl ITScured at. home wiih
BI 1 UUP Rf I ont Honiara p»in. liookof oar
J LZ 11. M. WOOLLEY, sent FREE. D '
M.
ATLANTA. Ga. Office 6634 Whitehall St.
Id
y
Comes Stories | ft BjJprnents Science’ 1 '^ r
Charming| ' $T«k
every Read in BYTOE 1000 f Travel AND b weekly 1
Week 430.000 Homes Jest authors] AND ure .Natural. history! IChiidreNSjwlemeni p*ge r
Family
See the large advertisement in a previous issue of this paper. Send for Colored Announcement and Specimen Copies, i
THIS FREE TO JAN. t, 1890.
To any Now Subscriber who will cut out and send us this slip, with name and Post
Office address and 81.VS, we will send The Youth’s Companion FREE to .Tan. 1.
IB and for a full year m that date. This offer Include* the FOUR DOGBEE
DAY NUMBERS, M Mm g£ IEI.C SXRATED WEEKLY SUPPLEMENTS.
Addrrnm YOUTH’S COMPANION, Boston, Mass.
isTA'CE orOnra.ClTT OF lOLE.JO, I
Lucas County, s. b.
Frank J. Cheney makes oath t hat he te the
senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney &
Co., County doinK business in the City of Toledo,
firm and .State aforesaid, and that said
Will pay the sum ot ONE HUNDRED
DOLLARS for each and every case of Ca¬
tarrh that cannot bs cured by the use of
Haul’s Catarrh Cure.
FRANK J. CHENEY.
Sworn to before me and subscribed in my
presence, this 6th day of December, A. D. ’86.
A. W. GLEASON,
: seal : Notary Public.
Hail’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally and
acts faces directly the upon the blood and testimonials, mucus sur¬
of sytem. Send for
free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists, 73 cents.
“Lney tlmton.”
Hark ! the sound of many voices,
Jubilant in gladdest song,
And full many a heart rejoices
As the chorus floats along:
“Hail the Queen of all Tobaccos:”
How the happy voic ts blend,
“Finest and purc't among her fellows—
Mans staunch and true friend.”
Oregon, tlie l'aradiss ot Partners.
Mild, equable climate, certain and abundant
crops. the Best world. fruit, grain, Full information grass and stock free. coun¬
try in Ad¬
dress Ureg. Jm’igra’tn Board, Portland, Ore.
If afflicted with sore eyespse Dr. Isaac Thomp¬
son’s Eye-Water. Druggists sell at 25c per bottle
.A lansili’s pocket cigar-case free to smokers of
Punch” 5c. Cigar.
^OTHERS
scan' in S JK^Tchild sster?*
BRABFIELD REGULATOR DO ATIAHTAm
SOLO BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
JtVfNTEEH tjvcNTy.
m.
SMITH’S BILE BEANS
Act on the liver and bile; clear the complexion;
cure malaria biliousness, and all liver sic£ and headache, stomach costiveness, disorders.
We are now making small size Bile Beans,
especially small adapted and for children Price and women—
very easy to take. of either
size 25c per bottle.
A panel size PHOTO-GRAVURE of the
above picture, “Kissing at 7-17-70,’’ mailed on
receipt of 2c stamp. Address the makers of the
great 4. Anli-Bile Remedy—"Bile Louis, Beans."
f. SMITH & CO., St. Nlo.
Wanted!
LIVING LEADERS i | A work
OF Malchlesa Interest,
phies of the WOR Men and LDJ Women Comprising of Greatest. eoiphio Eminence, biogra¬
Wealth and Power, who are leading the rail, ions oi man¬
kind and shaping the destiny of Nations. Pr^pnrad by
such distinguished author* u«Gkv. LEW WALLACE.
Hon. S. S. COX. Mae. FRANK LESLIE, JOEL
CHANDLER HARRIS, and others. The most valuable
nnd popular Book published in twenty years. A rare
chance for Agwrits to mike big money. Liberal Terms
and exclusive t erritory. Wr.to at once for agency. Ad¬
dress It. C, HU EH*INS & CO., Atlanta, Ga.
Ely’s Cream Balm
GIVES RELIEF AT ONCE FOR
COLD IN HEAD.
-CURES
CATARRH.
Apply Balm into each nostril.
ELY BROS.,58 Warren St.. N. Y.
CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH
PENNYROYAL PILLS
s CROSS DIAMOND BRAND.
> i/ “‘ e * u .d alwayn for Diamond reliable. Ludlea. A
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fo pasteboard no other. All pills
VVu dangerous boxes, pink wrappers, are V
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V Chichester SR&gssswss Chetn'l Co., ■adiaoo
Sq., I’hila.. I*fc
SOUTHERN PRiNTcRS’ SUPPLY CO.
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Type, Cases, Stands, Presses,
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AND EVERYTHING USED IN A PRINTING OR
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Os Clocks,
* S JJiAumas, Tfcrpsff - _ -
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VyJiPF Co.12^20LieEirrygi^yoflu
LADIES
Amenagogue Pills
For Irregularities. Safa and certain. Should not be
taken it enoiente. Price per box of 100 pille, &I.OD
Dft. W. C. ASHER, Marietta St., Atlanta, Ga.
A OPIUM Valuable HABIT.
Treatise Glvlna
full information of an Kaay aud Speedy cure fret, to
tbe afflicted. I>b. J. C. HoSTUiN,Jefferson, Wisconsin.
piSO’S A to use. REMEDY Cheapest. FOP. Relief CATARRII.—Best, is immediate. A Easiest is
certain. For Cold in the has cure
Head it no equal.
CATA R R H
It is an Ointment, of which a small particle is applied
to the nostrils. Price, 60c. Sold by druggists or sent
by mail. Address, E. T. Hazbltihk, Warren, Pa.
BRYANT & STRATTON Business College
BookKee Write for »&&&^SSWSSSSSiSS: LOUISVILLE. KY.
TEAMSTERS.
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You work in all weather. You want an “all
weather” coat. In fact, the best waterproof coat
in the world. No frail rubber affair that will
before the week is out. Rubber costs more,
lasts but a short time. Four teamsters out of
five wear the “ Fish Brand ” waterproof clothing.
They are the only teamsters* waterproof coats that
are light, little, strong, and last durable, long and time. cheap. They They cost
sticky very or peel off. The a buttons wire-fastened, never get
are
and never come off. They are absolutely water¬
proof and know wind-proof. the Until you own one you will
never comfort of a rainy day. Beware of
worthless imitations, every garment stamped 'with
the ‘‘Fish Brand” Trade Mark. Don’t accept
any inferior coat when you can have the “ Hsh
Brand Slicker" delivered without extra cost. Par¬
ticulars and illustrated catalogue free.
A. J. TOWER, Boston, Mass.
SEND
FOR A COPT Ot
The Best and Cheapest
of the Lady’s-Books.
It is without a rival In the excellence of Its stories
and novelets, the beauty of its illustrations, the
completeness of Its fashion and work-table depart¬
ments, and the helpfulness of Its many miscella¬
neous articles! It numbers among its contributors
some of our best-known authors.
Eight novelets, nearly one hundred short stories,
sketches of travel, history, biography, etc., articles
on home dressmaking, the care of the sick, and
household management, numerous designs for nee¬
dlework, embroidery, knitting, painting, etc., will
be given during 1890, making a volume of nearly
1200 pages.
Terms: Two Dollars per year, with great reduc¬
tions to clubs and fine premiums for getting up clubs.
Sample copy free, to get up a club with.
Address
Peterson’s Magazine,
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
Bmd F YOU WISH A
GOOD I at rw t
REVOLVER
brated purchase SMITH one of the WESSON cele¬
k
arms. The finest small arra3
ever manufactured and the
fiTst choice of all experts.
Manufactured in calibres 32, 38 and 44-110. Sin¬
gle Target or double models. action, Constructed Safetv Haiumerless and
ity wrought carefully entirely of bent qual¬
steel, icepected for work
mansh p nnd etock. they are unrivaled for flninh.
tl u r n bi li t y nnd nocurn cy. Do not be deceived by
cheap often mntlcnble rant-iron imitation* which
are sold for the genuine article amt are not
t but RAuxBronn The SMITH It
WESSON Revolvers are all stamped noon the bar¬
rels with firm’s name, address and dates of patents
and are guaranteed perfect in i very detail. In¬
sist upon having the genuine article, and if your
dealer cannot supply you an order s^nt to addreaa
Descrptiveoatalovue b?'.ow will receive prompt and careful attention.
a*i \ prices furnished upon an.
Beaton. SMITH & WESSON,
fcV'Mention this paper. Xprsngfield, Na
$7 FORA Double Breerti-Lwdir
Bre**h.Loa4«r«, $4 to $5®.
ggS***^ Wfaebeiltr 15-hot fUSw, $11 1« tit.
^ Breeeh-ioaAlng Rlfict, $2.35 to $18.0$.
' Self-flMkltg Borolvpr*, Nlekvl-ft'atod. $2.00*
Send 2c. stamp for 50-page Catalogue and safe 25 per ecat*
GRIFFITH & SEMPLE, 512 W. Main, Louisville, Xy.
AFTER ALL OTHERS FAIL CONSULT
DR. LOBB
Nervous Complaints, Bright’s * ease, strictures,
Impote&cy long and kindred diseases, uo matter off how
£JT~Teii standing or from what cause originating.
Send for days’ medicines furnished by mall fnri! rllKX.
Book on SPECIAL. Diseases.
JONES
HJEJ
PAYS THE FREIGHT.
5 Tt ii Wagon Scales,
Iron Levers. Steel Bearing, Bram
Tare Beam and Beam Box for
Every, Scale. SGO.
meat SI re For free price list
A ;ion rhis paper ami address
‘ JONES OF BINGHAMTON
bixghamtoa, n. y. ’
H? h llwS 8 th II' L sBh S^ C Bag»”
B r y ant’* Co I true, 457 Main St..
OPIUM Sk World. BS
I prescribe and folly en¬
dorse Big as the only
ri TO Onroa 6 DAYS.1 In specific of this disease. for the certain care
Ba&r&oteod not to G. H. INGRAHAM.M. D.,
flftato fltrictux*. Amsterdam, N. Y.
Mfd only by tho W© have sold Big G for
IruiOsBletlOe. many years, and It haa
mfiriven ■ faction. the best ef satis
Ohio. D. R. DYCHE&CO..
Tn*» 61.00. Chicago, 111.
8old by Druggists,
-
A- N. U........... ’89.