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About The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911 | View Entire Issue (June 11, 1890)
str TSTFTRT? A RTT A FAMILY : JOURNAL. A Weekly Newspaper issued every Wednesday. 32 Columns ef reading natter, cei sistiag of Nebraska State News Items, Selected Stories aid Miscellany. ? copies cent free to any ddreaa.'BI -,-jsu. f worth $ Briltf - - Subscription price, SI a ytar, in Mvatict. Address: M. K. TtTKNEB & CCs Columbus, Platte Co., Nebr A 3DTJSSELL, -DEALatB IS CO Ul PUMPS REPAIRED ON SHORT NOTICE. Olive St.. nearly opposite Post-office. 6jnne89-j LOUIS SCHREIBEB. AH kinds of Repairing done on Short Notice. Buggies, Wag ons, etc., made to order, and all work Guar anteed. Abo sell the world-famous Walter A. Wood Mowers, Reapers, Combin ed Machines, Harvesters, and Self-binders the best made. HTShop opposite the "Tattersall," on Olive St.. COLUMBUS. 26-in Judicious Advertising Creates man' a new business, Knlnrgcs many an old business, Revives many a dull business, Kescues many a lost business, Saves many a failing business, Preserves many a large business. Secures success in any business. Bo eays a man of bnine$. and tv add that jndicions advertising, for thie section of country, includes THE JOURNAL A one of the medinma. becane it is read by the bet-t iieople. those who know what they want and pay for v. hat they Ret. Wo challenge comparison with any country pore in the world in this re spect -twenty years paulis-hing by the fame management, and never one dnn to fnlicrilier8 published in The JounNAtu This, better than an thins else, f-hows tiie class of people who read The Journal every week. tf GOSHEN FENCE MACHINE1 CHEAP, ONLY $15. WoTen wire and slate, cnt willowti, plit board or anthinc of the sort, nsed; after posts are set, fence can lie made and stretched on the cround, in the winter, by a boy or ordinary farm hand, 10 to 40 rods a day. and can work it orer any Ground. The man who has one of these ma chines can build a fence that is more durable and Mfs than any other, and make it at lem cost. The machine and a sample of ita work can b seen in the city on llth Mreot at Ernst & Schwarz liaraware store. Willecll rachine?. or territory, or contract to put np fences. Hcaj tf J. R. MATHEWSON. "Newspaper Abookonoopage J f UWrnrft xhe best book loraa KnimitMnitt S'livriljcr to cor It contains li-;soI newpapcis and estimate of the cost or iidvertisiiiK-lbe advertiser who wants to spend one dollar, flnrta in It the In formation hcrcqiilrcs, while foi him who will Invest one hundred thousand dollar in ad vertising, n scheme Is indicated which will meet hi every requirement, or eon be made to do to by tNgh t chanpet ta$Uy arrireii at by ?r Ttspondtnce, 149 editions have been issued. Sent, post-paid, to any address for 10 cents. "Write tc JEO. 1. ROIVELL ft CO., XEWSPAPEU ADVERTISING BURKAU. :isDraoaSt.PrinUDgUouseS;.). Sew York. PATENTS Caveats and Trade Marks obtained, and all Pat. ent business conducted for MODERATE FEES. OTJK OFFICE IS OPPOSITE D. S. PATENT OFFICE. We have no sub-agencies, all bneinees direct, hence we can transact patent business in less time and at LESS COST than those remote from Washington. Send tnodel, drawing, or rhoto, with descrip tion. We advise if paten tab! o or not, free of charge. Oar fee not due till patent is secured. A book. "How to Obtain Patents." with refer ences to Actual clients in your state, county or town, sent free. Address C. A. SHOW & CO. Opposite Patent Ofiica. Washington. D. C E HSIOAMY J ! 3F" Agents Wanted I T Circclim Fin. 1.00) Brmttrt Safety Beta Bolder 6 Ivan away to introduce tbem. Every rs owner fcuyi from I to O. Liars never under borat' feet. (enl SS casta forfclckal Fiatae SasBUtaat MMatartl .ufctMeur, BlanksmilD ana Wagon Maker H Bnl lniBsnnnwBBB' shhb1v 4 .P.Hkssssl TOPICS OF THE TBIES. A Choice Selection of Inter esting Itema. - Hackmfn in Baltimore, wantign to discourage Sunday funerals, have ad vanced rates for this day"50 cents. Chinese pheasants, unknown in Ore gon ten years ago, are now so numerous there as to bo a nuisance, and farmers arc shooting them. The national debt of Germany, which is much smaller than that of any other great country in the world, is, in round ligures, $192,000,000. A woman in Xcw Hampshire has been married seventy years, aud eaten sixty-nine Thanksgiving dinners with her husband in tin same room in their house. One of the relics placed in the corner stone of the Confederate Soldiers' Home at Atlanta is a spur sent by Gen. Longstreet. It was made from a Union cannon captured at the first battle of Bull Bun. and was worn by G;neral Longstreet throughout the war. A r.H(iK sewer in Portland, Oregon, had to be reopened recently as it was badly choked up. When the workmen dug it open tlmy found the roots of a .shade tree had forced a passage through the walls and formod a solid mass for fifty feat. The top of the sewer win ten feet below the surface. A ruiiK-coKE floating-rope has been invented. The inventor claims that his floating-rope of ono inch thickness will .stand a strain of more than one thou sand pounds. It can be used in life line;, on life rafts and as a heaving litic to tie heavy hawsers to. At a life-saving station such a rope would be very valuable. The colored brethren of the Balti more Conference are much exercised over the death rate among the members of their race in cities. Too little slecp and too much church fair are conjointly held to be responsible, and the elect are warned to walk in the narrow path of hygiene and in the htraight road of "earl- to bed and early to rise" customs. A s?uoe factory at New Canaan, Conn., has just made a pair of shoe3 for a Charlotte, X. C man. They are the biggest ones ever made. The size is Xo. 32. Each fchoc is twenty inches long and eight inches wide. The man who is to wear them is a clergyman, six feet and ten inches tall, and weighs 410 pounds, and the county in which Le dwells is a voonry one. Hem: are some interesting criminal statistics : In the last ten years 072 persons were committed for trial in England and Wales for the crime of willful murder. Of these 299 were sentenced to death, 231 acquitted, and 142 adjudged insane. Of the 299 con demned to death 151 were executed and 145 had commutations of sentence ; of the 299 fifty were women, of whom nine were hauged. An attempt has been made in the Chinese province of Hupch to stir up the people against the missionaries and foreigners generally. Iurlamniatorv handbills were posted about the capital city, grossly caricaturiug Christianity and demanding the extermination of foreigners. Tho matter was vigorously taken in hand by the French, English aud American consuls, and at last ac counts the excitement had subsided. The Kaiser Wilhelm "the younger," as he is eoming to be styled, has de manded from Prince Bismarck certain manuscripts in his own handwriting, written by him when crown prince, and the ex-Chancellor has both refused to give them up and contemplates their publication. The Freisinnige Zei tung understands that they related to the question of the appoiutment of a regency during the illness of the late Emperor Frederick. A ci'RE for squinting, which is not so unsightly as the method at present gen erally adopted black goggles with a hole in tho center is highly recom mended. Let the person afflicted take any pair of spectacles that suit his sight, or even plain glass, and in the center of one lens let him gum a small blue or black wafer, about the size of a 10-ccnt piece. The result is that the double image, vanishes, and the eye. without fatigue or heat, is forced to look straight, and with time and imtionce is cured. In the northeastern part of Yellow stone Park is what is called "Death Gulch." It contains evidences of former hot springs ia geyser-like de posits, while copious gaseous emana tions arises from a creek flowing through it. The odor of sulphur is strong. Bcar3 and other wild animals pf the region are often killed by the gases. Dead bears are found in all I stages, from skeletons to freshly killed, and with them lemainsof elk, squirrels, rock hares, etc., many dead butterflies, and other insects. Thk Germautown Itejntblwan thus describes the hard lot of the country editor: "He riseth in the morning and knoeveth not wliat a dav mav brin" forth. If he telleth all the news he runneth a great ri-.k of having a tin ear put on him, and if he telleth not the news the people s:iy he i X. G., and there is no joy in it. The crafty man calleth him into giving a tifty-cent puff for a five-cent cigar, and fond mothers frown on him if he fails to flatter their freckled-faced broods. And all his ways are ways of woe, and his days are j iuii oi sorrow, ine me insurance man setteth snares for him, and on the whole he hath a deuce of a time." A widow or divorcee, no matter how youthful, should never be married in a white trowu, says Mrs. Jenness-Miller. The white gown is symbolical of origi nal purity, and twice donned loses its bigniricance, as does also the wreath of J orange buds and the flowers which are properly the prerogative of the girl bride. A traveling dress is considered iwrl fnpun lnf. ctrnA rrnArwra nvAfk a i ' , , T. , , . . rich gown of heliotrope brocade, pale bine satin, duchesse, or in fact, any thing that appeal to the individual fancy. Widows are sometimes embar- i rassed to know what disposition to make , of the first wedding ring. It should j be removed as soon as the lady has plighted her troth, for no man likes to be continually reminded of his prede cessor. The government printing office, a dispatch from Washington says, has just finished the largest single job ever un dertaken, in printing for the census bu reau 20,000,000 enumeration blanks. The paper required to print this num ber of blanks amounted to 11,458 reams, each sheet measuring 22x30 inches. When printed and cut these made 10,000.000 sheets, 18,000,000 of which were 11x15 inches and 2,000,000 of which were 15x22 inches in size. The thickness of each ream was one and seven-eighths inches; therefore if it was possible to stack all these blanks they would make a pile of 0,510 feet high, cqnal to one and one-quarter miles. This would make a solid column of paper over eleven time3 as high as the Washington monument. If laid to ends these blanks would form a continuous line of paper 4,955 miles in length, or as far as from San Francisco, Cal., to Xew York city, and from there to Xew Orleans. The paper would cover 25, 208,333 bquare feel. Its total weight was 458,33(5 pounds, or over 290 tons. Whethek a writer has the right to use his or her own name, when publish ing a book, if that name phauce to be identical with that of an author of dis tinction, is a question now before pub lishers. Mrs. Mary J. Holmes, wife of a citizen of Ausonia, Conn., has written a society novel which a New York pub lisher has offered to publish, but not until he is satisfied on the legal point involved as above. For, as everybody knows, there is a Mrs. Mary J. Holmes who has been writing novels for the last thirty-six years, and has made a great deal of money aud some fame thereby. The publisher of the original Mary J. declares that he will bring suit if the first novel of the new Mary J., is issued under her name. Lawyers give opin ions both ways. There 13 no doubt that Mrs. Holmes number one has a property in her name as against a forger of it.but whether she has property in it as a trademark, or whether it is a part of her copyright, like the title of a book, so that Mrs. Holme3 number two cannot use her own lawful name on her title page, is a question. But a slight varia tion ought to let her out of the diffi culty. The author of ''Tempest and Sunshine" is Mary Jane; now if the author of "Ashes" were Mary Josephine, would not that serve? ODD, QUEER AND CURIOUS. In a churchyard, not far from Daw son, Ga., is a thorny rose bush which was ill anted in 1800. There is said to be a tree at Monti cello, Flu., which bears three kinds of fruit quinces, pears, and apples. A London genius has invented a hot water apparatus to warm piano keys, so that dainty fingers may not be chilled. Some scientific person has discovered that woman, in the not very remote fu ture, will not only be a brunette, but her descendants, both male and female, will be black. A thoughtful suicide in Paris, wish ing to avoid giving his friends unneces sary trouble in removing his remains, closed his career on tho door-sill of the Morgue. The elder Dumas, being asked what kind of a lime he had at a reception the night before, replied very seriously, "I would have had a dreadfully dull time if I hadn't been there myself." Miss. Harriet E. Wrujht of Oneida, X. Y., is the proud possessor of abutter ladle belonging to her great-grandmother. This ladle is 140 years old, and is a rare curiosity. A nineteen-year-old girl of Min nesota has one hundred and forty-five Marts on her right hand and thirty on Lor left hand. All attempts to remove them have been utterly useless. Mrs. G. W. McGinnis, of Alphar jetta, Ga., has a breed of chickens that she says will eat only six months in the year, they fast the other .six, and are as fat at the end of their fast as they were befote. A rooni.Y aimed bullet, from one of the new English army rifles used at Aldershot Camp, some days ago, went very wide of the mark. It traveled over two miles before it stopped. On this account, practice at Aldershot had to be suspended. Here is a name worn by a colored girl in Western Tennessee. It is pro nounced in a sing song way, according to the division of the different names; Carry-Ann Happy-Ann Ann-Eliza-Scales Blow-the Bellows Potters-Field Bosa-Ann-Thomas. The singular spectacle of a man walk ing along the street eating greenbacks was presented in Duluth, Minn., the other afternoon. He swallowed $48 in lives two-, and one-, when he was caught by the police and taken to the station hoiuc. A search revealed $607 between his inside shirt and skin. Ho suffers from the hallucination that peo ple arc trying to steal his money. - Tur parish icgistriesof England con tain some queer names. Among them may be mentioned Foot Bath, Paschal Lamb. Kivcr Jordan, Morning Dew, Offspring Deer, and Smith Follows. One Too Many and Xot Wanted James were the names given to the last two children in a large family. Edward Bing Tally-Ho Forward Jewett appears iu one record, and.from six to ten bap tismal name 4 are frequently found, A great secret has just been im parted by the French Government to the Government of Russia. It is the secret in regard to the manufacture of emokeles powder. The Russians are abcut to begin the manufacture of it upon a large scale, using imported workmen, aud bpiug careful to exclude Germans from the factories. The basis of the powder is said to be sulphuric ether. Honesty Rewarded. "I'd like to get trusted fur about two dollars' wuth of stuff," f aid a colored man to a grocer on Beaubien street the other day. "Yon ! Why, I don't know you," was the reply. "But my name is Thompson." "Ye:?, but being Thompson is not enough." "Hu! Den I'll fotch ye ober fo'teen people to prove dat Pze gwine to move away to Saginaw next week !" The grocer gave him a pound of cod fish for his honesty. Detroit Free Pressa. Their Occupation Gone. Mrs. Brown was called down-stairs tn u an cldorlv wnman nf nnnfiuil in. Fearance who had some hand-made trimming to sell. Mrs. B. declined purchasing, when with great earnest- ?esS sne saii: My dear madam, do - SVuit buy some of it. the times are so hard and there is so little employment now. My young men did used to make a liv ing, but since the law passed to sup press gambling they have nothing to do lmt stand on tlie stieet corners. Patient waiting is often the highest way of doing God's will . . . - RURAL TOPICS. INFORMATION FOR THE HUSBAND MAN AND HOUSEWIFE. gomn Practical Suggestions Tor the Farmer, Stock-Breeder. Poedterer, Karserriaaa, and HoBtekecper. THE FARM. rig la Clover. PiRB raised on clover are becoming verv profitable, forpeopleare beginning to appreciate the tttfferenco between the meat of pigs raised on a diet of corn, and those which are fed clover and grasses. Where the swine arc raised unona large scale for the pork factories, it" doesn't matter mnch what their diet is, so long as they grow rapidly and increase in weight. It is quantity and not quality that takes. The creat farms of the West, devoted to raising pork for the market, are largely to blame for bringing pork into disfavor. Many people won't cat pork, for they think it is unclean, and liable to contain the germs of some disease. One cannot wonder that this impression hns goue abroad, when slops anddirty dish-watr, with corn added, are supposed to be tb diet of the pigs, whoso time, when uot eatiux this filthy compound, is spent in wallowing in dirt. In order to raise piss for profit, it is necessary to feed them food that will improve the quality of the pork, as well as increase the quantity. In the sprinc of the year tho question of raising more swine on the farm comes up nuuw. mid new methods of treatment of them should also enter into consideration. The farmer that tfcts the name of r.iisiug pork of a superior quality, never lacks lor customers who are ready to pay good prices for it. There are those who are willing to pay fancy prices for a high grade article. In this age of deception and fraud, city consumers are never cer tain of what they are eating, unless thoy buy direct from some farmer. Many prefer to buy their eegs, butter, milk vegetables, fruits and meat, direct from the producers, for then they kuow that they are getting a genuine article. Farmers, living close to largo cities, can find nothing more profitable than estab lishing a name for raising nothing but the best, and then charging fair prices for all their products. It is only recently that a chanco and reform iu pig raising has generally been known by city people. They are begin ning to understand now that some of the pork is raised from clover, grains, and clean food. The ordinary swill com pound has been superseded by a diet of milk, clover, grasses and grains. Grass fed pigs produce superior pork, and they run less danger of sickness. There would be less mortality among the swine if they were given the rauge of fields, and allowed to root around in the clean soil. It will not always pay to enclose large pastures for swine. Lut some good sjstem of soiling should be adopted. They should have green food in summer, and roots, c lover-h:iy and silage, in winter. Corn is probably the cheapest ration for them, but the pork of such hogs is always fat, and lacking in the flavor that always charac terizes the clover-fed hog. The pen and house for the pigs should also receive Eomo consideration from the owner, for the filth of such places has much to do in breeding diseases, during the hot weather, and also in tainting the meat. Thoy shonld always have a decent pen or house, and plenty of fresh, clean water near them. Those who raise pigs in the best approval ways will inevitably find profit iu them, and will find that, in the course of time, as his pork becomes well known, the demand will exceed the supply. Cor. Practical Farmer. Agricultural Items. Alfalfa grows rapidly and should be cut as soon as the blue flowers appear. It thrives better when cut, and becomes thicker. It is fully the equal of red clover for stock, and contains a larger proportion of nutriment. Farmers should put in an experimental plot as soon as possible, in order to test it in this section. Study the silo; the process of ensil age; the best crops for it; the great economy of it; aud then go to work to make a silo and grow crops to fill it with. It makes one acre produce as much animal food as three acres can do with out it, and it solves the problem of how to keep one cow or one steer for every acre of the farm. The greatest need of agriculture, nt the present time, is to grow all crops now produced at one-half the cost. This is the true way to make profit, lesseu the cost of products. The tendency is everywhere to the increase of population, which, in the abseucc of destructive wars and deadly pestilence, is growing as never before. This tends to reduce the value of labor or the pro ceeds of it, because the production of food increases faster than the supply of labor. Hence it is necessary to increase the value of labor by making it more productive. THE DA1KV. Cottage Cltersn. C. R. M., Tiffin, Ohio, gives the fol lowing directions, in the Dairy Yorl(, for making cottage cheese: Creameries that are located near towns and cities, and have more buttermilk than they can dispose of, can realize something for it by the manufacture of cottage cheese. We find quite a de mand for it at ten cents a pound. We usually make it twice a week and are governed in quantity made by the orders taken abead. When drawing the buttermilk from the churn we fill into transportation cans whatever we may want to set aside until we are through work in the after noon, when we take a skimming pail and fill it with buttermilk, which we set iu a vat of boiling water (a tank we use for boiling water with which we wash and scald,) being careful to have jut enough water to come up even with the milk in tho pail. Drop a thermometer into the milk and let it set until the milk shows a temperature of from i:0 110 degrees (Fahrenheit,) stirring occa sionally to obtain a uniform temper ature throughout. When it reaches the desired point we take it out and empty it in muslin sacks (the ones we use are about 10x20 inches and stoutlv sewed,) when itis tied with a string and hung up to drain. The operation is repealed until we have the desired quantity; then we leave it to drain until next morning, when, if properly scalded and drained, tho curd will be quito dry. If scalded too much it will be watery. Now comes the mixing. It was thiB that discour aged us until we tried a Keystone Beater, when we cried Eureka! This little ma chine does the work to perfection. AVe use a Xo. 2. Place tho mixing vessel about one-half full of curd and pour on a small quantitv of cream or rich milk, then stir until it becomes somewhat smooth, put in more curd and more cream or milk, all the while MirrinL'. When you have the vessel two thirds full, stop putting in tl-- mi i.ml ion tiuue to -tir. adding r .in ..s u del to brni to tin- riyht i-ons st n cy, which, as vt- priput- it. it- j Lout the same as coon stifi butter, add si ery small quant ty oT s.ilt dnring the stirring. When whippc ! nut and smooth we turn into a !.ire earthi-i: i owl Irora which it is sold by weight. Thre is no speculation in this, but when the milk if going to waste, and thosv in the creamery have the time, it offers an opportunity to add a few hon tsl pennies to the cash account. To the consumer it offers a very wholesome and pahit-il'lc article of food, which manv use to lessen the butter account. I for got to say that the sacks should be care fully washed as -soon as emptied and bung np to dry." In the home dairy where the butter is sold to private families in cities this cottage cheese may be made to bring in quite an income, as much of it can be disposed of to the families you supply with batter and eggs and can be deliv. ered to them without additional expense of time. THK MOCK-KANCU. Livr-stock Itnms. Provide a clover pasture for the pigs: it :s tqtial to milk and corn to gtth.r. AViien a pig is nine or ten months old I its work is done; if it is not profitable I pork then it never will be, and it might as well be planted under an apple tree, to save further less in feeding. With good, wholesomo feeding; thor ough grooming of the skin; avoiding to givo water directly after eating, but al ways giving it previously to the feeding, no condition powders, medicines, or nostrums will ever be required for your horses. There is no need for the long hair on the legs at horses. It is not a i rotec tion; bnt directly contrariwise, for tho hair prevents the skin from drying, and causes irritation of the skin, cracking of it, and the resulting disease known as grease. Where tbero is plenty of absorbent litter, as leaves, straw, or dried swamp muck, horses, cows, and indeed all farm animals, in loose stalls or pens, may be liberally bedded, and the manure may remain until it is a foot deep. It will ho troddeu hard and absorb all the liquid; it will not ferment, so as to throw off noxious vapors, and the animals will he kept clean, while there will be a great saving of the manure. THE HOUSEHOLD. Unnecesnarr Hrtitlgcrr. Closet-room is no mere feminine fancv. but the good sense of the Rex. It j is as necessary to a housekeeper as a corn-bin is to a farmer or a tool-chest to a mechanic that she may have some where to put things so that they shall be out of tho way when ono wants to move, and in the way when ono wants to find them. It should bo limbic aud well distributed, so that she may not have to be endlcHsiy moving one thing to get another. If a farmer had his graiu in such shape that he had to shovel out a bushel ot corn- and then put the oats back again there would be souud of s.iw and hammer in that barn, and a new arrangement of things, if there was a tree left on his farm and a saw-mill within a hundred miles. Many labor-saving inventions arc yet I possible for tho household. There will I bo a machine to wash dishes, and such a cookiug stove as Mrs. Livermoro sug gests, to which no woman shall bend the kuce. They will come when do mestic work shall be held in such high honor as to enlist the best mechanical genius of tho age in its behalf. So long as the kitchen is cried down, like the jail, for those to keep out of who can and thoseto endure who must it will be liknlv in hr littln more invitiu" than the aforesaid jail. Let our women's rights advocates only begin at the right end combine all their argument, wit, learning, persuasion, and agitation for improved domestic fucilitics, and they can make American manhood do any thing they want done. The women's papers in farmers' nisti ntes arc even now working in this direction, of reform in dwellings and appliances. Why not have a Women's Domestic Congress that shall offer handsome premiums for im proved implement", plans ot dwellings, etc. Say $1,W( for the best model of a cooking stove ns high ;is a table, so that every culinary operation could be per formed without stooping, aud as efficient otherwise as those now in use. Then, bv publications and addresses at public j gatherings, and ku. table agencies from nouse to nouse, mane tneir improve ments known to all then sex. There is no reason, for instance, why anj' woman should now be lifting abont the old, unmerciful, iron kettles weigh ing some part of a ton, when she can have thoso of agate-iron ware, to be moved easly by the feeblest arm. As an immediate practical resource it is not much for a man. There is a merciless cruelty in many of our rural districts, which mission aries might well be sent to correct, in the name of Christianity and humanity. The farmer, besides all his costly im proved machiney, has his "hired men" for plowing and harrowing, forsheep shearing and mowing and repairing and feeding stock, and a solid, imported host to do bis threshing, aud his wife has then, too to cook for, to wash for, and make beds tor, and sweep for. Yet she cannot have one "hired girl" to help in all those heavy tasks and pay her as much per week as some of those men are paid per day. Xo wonder the increase of insanity is remarked among farmer's wives. When we see how things go in some districts,' we only wonder there are any sane ones left. CLurch going used to be their one outlet; but with the spread of infidelity in many rural dis tricts, this is now often denied them almost the year round, and instead of a ride in the fresh air and a chance at I least to sit down in the sanctuary and have thoughts of rest in Heaven, there is a great company to feed and Sunday is made the hardest day of the week. Home-Maker. IflntH to HonMkcfper. Wash oat oil stains on clothes in cold water; ink stains dipiu rnilk hams can oe Kepi wrappeu in paper j and packed in a barrel of ashes. A severe but sure cure for corns is said to be creosote. Wet the corns sev eral nights in succession. Dusting cloths must be washed of ten or they will carry more dirt into the rooms than the take out. Ammonia and whiting will clean nickel plating nicely. Make into a paste and apply; then rub until bright with another cloth. Fresh meats and game should always be kept iu a drj cool place, but not where milk aud butter are kept; the hitter, being rapid absorbeuts, will soon be injured in flavor if allowed to remain in the same small enclosure with meat or vegetables THE KITCHEN. Spic-l ltM-f. Five pounds of tho shank boiled five hours with celery seed; drain off the gelatine and then chop the meat very fine, and pepper aud salt to tiste, and put it Into a cloth on a platter. Cover with the cloth and press it. Plain Vraliant II re ail. Take twocupt'uls "sponge," two table spoonfuls brown sugar, one tablespoon iul salt and graham flour to make a soft dough. Mix together. Beat hard, and set to rise, proceeding as with white bread. Immediately before putting it in the oven, wash over the top of each loaf with infr. I:i1?? in n mntlpmtft nvpn about an hour. Make tbreo loaves. Cow's .Milk for In runts. One ounce of pearl barley is to be well washed in cold water. Put it in a vessel with half a pint of water and let it heat gently aud simmer for a few minutes over the fire; pour off this water, replace it by a pint and a half of water and boil it dowu to a pint. With this water dilute the cow's milk for in fants, thereby rendering it fur more nutritious than if diluted with clear water. Clam Soup. Open fifty small, round, raw clams; put the clams, without the black, into a chopping bowl and chop very fine; j nt them into a saucepan with the liqror and a cup of water; let them stew slow iy for an hour: let one quart of milk come to a boil, adding butter the size of an egg and pepper to taste; roll four crack ers and add to the clams a few minutes before taking up. Put the clams into a tureen, then add the milk before send ing to the table. Cocoanut in Blanc-Mange Cocoanut is a great addition to blanc mange. Soak one ounce of gelatine in a quart of milk for two hours; add a small cup of sugar and place over the fire; when the sugar and gelatine are mixed with the milk and the mixture is very hot, flavor to taste, and add one grated fresh cocoanut or a quarter of a pound of desiccated cocoanut. Stir while cooling, and when cool pour into a mould and set on ice. It may be eaten with or without sauce. Splendid Cake. One cup of sugar, one-fourth cup butter, two eggs; reserve the white of one; one-half cup sweet milk, one and three-quarters cups of flour, and one teaspoonful baking powder. "For the chocolate," one-fourth cup of powdered sugar, three tablespoonfuls of grated chocolate, the white of one egg well beaten and a little less than one-half a cup of milk. Boil all together, stirring constantly. When the cake is cold pour this mixture over it while in the pan and elo not move the cake or cut it until the next day. Cremaa EBgiaeers Scheme. Two German engineers propose to use thtte continuous platforms moving along tho stnets s de by side. The lowest of these platforms is four inches high and mores at a uniform speed of fivo feet per second. Any ordinary pedestrian can, they state, mount tt.is p'atform from the ground without difficulty, and from this ho can Tfith equal ease step on to a second platform, four inches higher than the first and moviDg twice as fast. The passeir thus acquires a speed of ten feet pci sto ord, and, stepping onto the thir plat form in tha fame way, he Fs carried at a speed of fifteen feet per secom1, or ten mdes a-t hour, to his destination, where he 6teps off in th9 reverse or Jer. Wh rerer Malaria EUt The bilious are Its certain prey. In intermit tent aud remittent fever, dumb ague, and ague enko the lier ia always eerioualy affected, aud tho Mood contaminated with bile. Ono oi the elder reasons why Uostetter'a Stomach Hitters is such a sure defease ugeinst chills aud fover and every form of malarial tliseaso i that it doca away with liability to tho disease, by re forming iiTofiiilari' v of tlio biliary organ in ai tance cf the arrival o! the season wli"ii the dis tnsei pri-mlenl. 'ITitra h no finer fortifying rrepMatiro for these about -visiting or iulKuit iiiB to i locality w here the uilasiiiii-tuiiit exists. 3 hi re i- no certain immunity from ilibeare in am iiduaic or epidemic form to bo secured by tlio mo if tbt nvcras0 tonici ami anti-epas-ii:o ic-i. lU:t -ttln'ic uuii.ine fails tho Hitters succeeds 1 oth in proven it and cuiiny. More over, it nmovtrt eviry ebtineof dyspepsia, and overcome coustia iin, rheini ntiHiii. inactivity of tho kidneys and bladder, and trnn'juillizes and BtrtiietlieiiB the nervous Bystem. A New Electrical Iiewcc. Another electrical device has been brought ftut to atlcnl communication fo twven tnrns in motion and to proveut ac cidents. RattriH and tho necessary con-uo.-tL'iis nre place I on tuch encine, a cen tral conductor being laid parallel with the r..iU Should two trains approach within a c rtai'i d stnnco of each other, nn alarm is sounded within each cub with nn eltctric gong itu.1 a st".tm whistle is tet blowing. Tlo engine driven can stop tho train and conimunicato by telephone. This com munication can be effected when tho trains an e ther running or still. Additional batteii" nro p'aced at the stations along tho road, and these work tho alarm should those place! on the engine become broken. Our Hannah Jane. On' Hannah Jane was thin and weak. And nshy white her lip aud cheek. Wo often thought and thought with pain, "We 60on must lose our Hunnnh Jane.' Willi chanco of dcetors. change ef air, -besought for hruliiiR everywhere. And. whin our hope, were ahnest past, "Favorite Prescription" tried at last. Itgavo i:s joy. itgaie in hope, Kh- ceased to pine, bho ceaed to mope, ll'iiTce's lemnlios aro sure and true Now Hannah Jane is good as new. Dr. Pierce's Favorite- Prescription is the only medicine for women, sold by druggists under a pof'tire gvaranlee from "the manu facturers, that it will give satisfaction In every case, or money will bo refunded. This'guaranteo has been printed on the bottle-wr.iprcr. and faithfully cariied out for many years. Drt. Tiehce's Pellets' cleanse and regu late tho stonnch. bowels, and system gen erally. One a dose: purely vegetable. A Remarkable Family. Within Eight of each other in Lnbck district, Wekt Virginia, lives five members of one family, whese combire 1 atjes is 3!K rears. They are tho Beckitus. Tho family consists of Barnes Beckwitb, aged 72; Q. A. Beckwitb, aged 71; Mrs. L. A. Beckwitb, who was a Beckwitb before mar riage, aged 74; Miss Jaoo Beckwith. aed 83, r.ndUncle Tom Beckwith, aged 9. All the members of tho romarkable family are yet hale and hearty. There has been discovert d in a convent at Ratenna, Italy, a painting by Giotto containing a portrait of D.mte, tha only really authentic portrait of him known. It is decidedly different from the accepted idea of the poet's looks. An anti-gtmbling leacue is announced as forming in F.ticlan I, the Ejrl of At er deeu to be the first president. The quali fication for membership will be an agree ment for the auuual payment of a shillii" and tha signing of a pledge "to abstain from belting." Free Trade vs. Protection. Uncle Z"b. an ardent free-trader and cross-ioads statesman, wa- denouncing p.ot ction with all the arguments ho could muster. "I II bet. Uncle Zob." interrupted one of the crowd, "that you arc a protectionist, af leral!." "I'll bef I ain't." shouted Iho old man warmly, "icme now. How am I a protec tionist?" "Wy. you protect your system from spring and summer complaints by taking Aycr's Sarsaparilla." When the laugh subsided. Uncie Zeb re plied, with a grin, "Well, yes: I'll allow, that to that extent I am a protectionist, because I believe Ayer's Harsaparilia K tho best blood medicine ever made, not only foi spring, but for all seasons." In the house of a shoplifter apprehended in Philadelphia the other day there were found 107 packae.es of coffe?, 28 dress pat ter.iw. 90 bonnets, innumerable hats, fine shaals, laces, tockttbooks, cai.s of jelly, kid gloves, curtaics, sache's and other ar ticles worth $3,000. A pocket mirrror free to smokers of "T.m siU' Punch" ac cigar. Tun days of grandeur hive departed from the titer steamboats. There are no longer throng-ng ciowds, gambling, dace ing, music aud all those things which made stoarcboatiug great a few yearn ao. Travelers have forsaken the easy pleasure of steamboat journeys for the more-rapid if less comfortable railroad trains. JVo Opium In Pfso's Cure for Consump tion. Cures where other remedies fuii. 25c. The United States is without a doubt a nation of coffee drinkers. The imports from South America amount to over 525, (1M.000 pounds annuilly, of which 60 per ceut. comes from Brazil. The second largest shipper to this mnrket is Venezu ela, 11 p-r cent. WnSN you think you1- children hnvo wnrm.3 ask your druggist for Dr. Buir Worm Dostroy-rs and do not tak any other. They taste good and are always sure. Tnr.TiP. in a man in southern Illinois I who laughs at the idea that marriage is a failure. lie has just married his sixth wire. Each successive spouse brought him a farm, and he is now one of the largest laud owners in that part of the country. IThcn Bby was s'ek. we save her Csstorta, When she was a Child. 6he cried for Cahtoria, When she b-'esmo Mifc". b chins to Castor When she ha CMldren. she gave them Caatoria. A. P. Gordon Cumming has discov ered a new species of violet on his place near Sykcsvilie, Md. It is a single iole. and the flower leaves are a soft white, 6trip-d or mottlod with liht and dark purple. Tho fragrance is very svwet. We will give SW0 rewaid for any cae of catarrh that cannot beenred with Hall s Catarrh Cure. Taken internnllv. F. J. CHENEY & "CO., TrorB., Toledo, O. A GOOt deal of excitement prevails iu the phosphate field-i of Florida i onseqaent upon word recciv, d from Washington that all phosphate lands will Le classed as min eral lands, and that those who have taken homesteads must give thrra up. A small at my has been in the field staking out min eral claims. PROMPTLY CURED BY May wood Kan?., Atifc 10..15S3. I suffered tv.o years with pain in ray ide: doe'ors faied to helo st. Jacobs Oil cured no return of pain. IXMMON, P. M. Cnr!:l. Pa . IVbniary 11. 15. I wm hurt in t!i" hit hip and tried -vv-eral phyirians without ol.tesnins rclie-f S.es than b half bottle of -t. Jacob oil eared me. JOIINL'.HKAFElt. li It lYi me; S 11 rae; rM p. TOfEA POET. To be a post? Tiato'ore The soal in nature that repoios ; The sun. Lovo's self, the fragrant roses. And all sweet things, below, above. To be a poet? Tistofeel Infinity within thy breast ; To suffer with tho world's opprefBW, Ani provo with deeds thy sorrow real. To be a poet I Tis to sigh With hops that lif- devote?, sublimes; To suffer death a thousand times, And tnon at last never to die ! George lforton. Marat Was Convicted. The proof that Marat, tho French revo lutionary leader, was really convicted of theft, has sat at rest a long standing con troversy. Marat was in England in 177C. was accused of a thoft of old coins, escaped to Ireland, was apprehended at an Irish assembly in the disguise of a Germa-i count and was brought from Dublin by habeas corpus for trid ii England. A contemporary let ter, describing the assizes of 177ii, at which it was thought that Mir.it would have been tried, is si'ent. The clerk of nssizo to ths Oxford circuit has nt last supplied the missiug link in tli9 evidenco by finding thit Marat was convicted at the asMzs which commenced at Ofoid on March 5 and ended on March 7, 1877. T':o delay in the proceedings is acconntrd for by tho ab goaco of Ihj accused in Ireland. Children Enjoy Tho pleasant llv.or. gentli action and soothing effects o' .syr ip of Fig. whon in mod of a hix-nvi and if th father or mother bo cost v. or 1 hou-.th-itiostgrati-fying ro3tilts follow its im. so i nit it is the best family remedy known and evoiy family should have a !ott!e Inb'iPitii!? .Nncriiucns UNcnvpred. A liomaii doctor has tu vore I in many of the bkut's in d ftVr i:t Etrusciu tombs, as well us in those deposite'd ui the various museums, iut- re-tn g spiciiLens of ancient dentistry woik and artificial teeth. Tho false t'eth were, in most cists, carved from t'-.O'SO cf some larg animal, mid in many instances wvro fast',ed to tho nat ural ores by go!d bands. Tue skulls ev amiiitd date as f.ir b ckas six: e'eutmies be fore Christ, which pioves that dentistry is not a modern art. 1'AliIFOKMA KIItt'fcY TEA Will positively cure Kidney troubles. Cali fornia Kidney Tea ha. been sold for many years, and ha cured thousands. California Kidney Tea will relieve and cure all Urinary diseases. California Kid ney Tea will cure liver and stomach troubles. California Kidnev Tea is not u vile mixture, but :: tea pleasant to drink. Try it. Price. 50 cent per pa-katie. Sold by all druggist?, or mailed on receipt ol price by California Kidney Ten Co.. Fuirlield. Iowa. Tnn decline of drinking is again attested by tho declaration in the London 7Vr ijraph that for oue club fifty years ngo London now has t-n, yet the drinking within them has steadily diminished. 8tzXorel$ Free, will ho sont by Cragln & Co.. Philada.. Pa., to an ono in tho U. S. or Canada, postage paid, upon receipt of 25 Dobbins" Electric Soap wrappers. See list of novels on circulars around each bar. Boap for eal'j bv nil grocers. Onh feituvo of the (iermau reichstag is the ecaiity riumb-r of medical men. i f whom there aro only four, whereas tho French chamber cf deputies swarms with doctors Creates An Appetite There iC nitblcs tor U'c!i we recommend EoodV Sarbapanlla th eiejter otituie-ce timi for lc (I appetite. indce-.tioi. tiii hesdach-!. and other troiil!ej r.f dvep-ptic n-tur.-. Ia the raofct natural wav this, medicine s nllv tone- Iho stomach. axsIntH (liseMien ind tusk,- one foel "real hungry " I.adi- in debt ate health, or very dainty and pait cula- at meals .titer lakina HoodV Sar-apanlU a lev days find t':ems lve lopcinc t r and eatinc the plain tt fooj with unexpected reltth tnd satisfaction Try it Hood' Sarsipartlla i. (.old l-v all dnicstt-t. $1 sit for5. Prepared bye l.IIOOO.VI'O, Lowell. Mi. I LIKE MY WIFE TO USE POZZQNI'S MEDICATED COMPLEXION POWDER, Because It Improves Her Looks ana is asrragranias vioiets. lOIdD JdVJdU: The Oldest Mtdicine in the World is trotably DR. ISAAC TIIO.TII'SON'.S CELEBRATED EYE-WATER. ThU artlcie t-iacaritiilly pteparei pn sloun s pre Kiiptiou, and has teen In constant ti-e for nearly a centurv. There are few- dtM-ascv to htch mankind are tul.ject more distressing than son ee. and Bone, perhaps, for which irore remedies, have teen tried without success Forall external Inflammation Of theeves it Is an Infallible remedy. IT the direc tions are fo'Towed It will neverfall Wepartle darly Invite the attention of phv-slelans to IU merit?. For SfebyalKlruesUts ioilS U THOMSON, SONS CO.. Troy. S. Y. tablbhcd VOX. THE ELKHART CARRIALE A HARNESS MFG.Ct. $14. Tight bottom and dash for ia Tr.rs have sM to r... uarrsal HHOI.ESAI.F rrl .. I fl.r Ike Ik' PKIF1IS prt. Skip AMinilFKr for riaaon.llftB b.rre ittlfl.z. Tar firlskt efcirres if at .tI.TKI.rT. Warrant.! f.r i .ears. Bud!?.. arr!.s. Sjirl.T VlifMta MiraMs Hl-naret ala- -" loj.e FKEi. a.tJrr.. K. It. ITtTT. Set'j, illhart. Indlaaa. OftRMCNTS GUanANTCeO TO FIT PERFECTWITMOUT TRVINCON. .. return mill full .! isrn III t VO .Veiil.irii f M00D7 8KEWTAIL- 01 SYSTEM CF DRES3 CCTTINR Any l. it i rdinary tntelli qence .in ea i.v aiol Uicfcly lenrii lix nt a ul make any car- tneiii. in ;nt ii luaui nieiis- ...a f..r I ..It r ell !1 Allitres! MOODViCO CINCINNATI.- ROAD CARTS ONLY $10 , I lie II. I una i.owe.t I'riie of any Curt Mnle. 115. !. .'0 Hit. I fib. I Top Itucfle only f.r.M. Illtirne 7S. nnd SIO.OO. l " S. " Iks, !-J . "'I ly h .. s . if a ..i.t.. S. - .ml sp c4 11 It taxi , CHICACO SCALE CO.. Mi.c... Illinois, t . e. A. T, WILCOX'S COMPOUND A1TSTT PXX.Z.SI ML (ti.?rbjBall. h.4 4r. for TrV.ifnanMare. Safe, Certain and EH; ..-.k.Ball. e.a4 41e. for ' :ctual. " wa." rr. 'V7::::x':C;e:i::Cc. rhtii. Vt. KIDDER S PASTILLLS.bym'ail btowell .VCo. rBistCiiarle.towa. Uaaa. TOM SCALES OF $60 BIN6HIMT0N) Beam Box Tare Beam ra N. Y. V -aLLnrzra A $ l sSK!flL?i.Ml2-i MHBJ ItW bbbbbVBSb'SsWVi jq lyA x- P ISO'S P.EliEOV rOIS (MTARKII.-P. Clie.iprst I.'eiief is immediate. A i Cold Ir. the Head it lias no c-jiwi. It It- nn afil Pl'mflfir rf tl hllVi nostMls. Iiccfiftc -oM by rlmtrirists orient by mail Address, K. T. IIazkltii: AVanen. Pa. The best is dye imit JOIO 1 oh5,nd substibubes forSMr V-aaTL .ak4v a 4 .aSTS.. A- . - -Ts-s." KMift&T-i'JBrZtZA POLIO V3a Z3fJ vT;i rllCm.c. C5.ke of scouring sodwp-Try il nf rl V? afZ'v' H in your nexr REAL ECONOMY. It is worse than nonsense to buy a cheap article with, which to damnire more valuable property. Scouring soa'ji" is at best only a trifling expense, but -with .a poor and. cherp article il is; likely to do considerable damage to fine marble or other property. . ' " To Restore Tone and Strength to the System when weakened by La Grippe or any other Illness, Ayer's Sarsaparilla is positively unequalled. Get the BEST. Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. ELY'S Catarrh Cleaiie"t llto Xaul lu:;e4, Allayt Fain and IiillaiiiHiution, Heal the Sore, ISe-!ore-i llix Senw fifTasto ami Smell. TRY THE CURE! HAY-FEVER A particle issmIh-il into ..! nostril ami 1 seres able. rriiSorHiimat IriiKisJ!tt.;bvruaiI.rKihtered, eoctx. tl. lSKirrni:is.5t; Warren btrcet.New York. It nir wish a- :ooi (simtnissoii RP.VOI.TER tmn,iia.t ana nf 4h AIm ' Lrated SMITH WESSON arms. ThflnntfmaU .rmi FTcr inautifccturid and tlia first rlioiro of all niHTta. Blan-iru-turetl tnr:ilil.r.-:r' mnrl 44.-KBL Bln- fflnnrffnuhlt, rtifn Kafi'tv llsmmi.rlraa mnil TarKt models. Cutructd catirrlyof btM uat It j wroniiat Mrci.cirrftilly irui--ctftt fcrvrorK-mannh-p ami stork, t hey ar unriTa!rl for lliil'k. durability cudnrraracT. PonottrunfivMby cheap tiiullrnttle ranc-trna laaltailoaa which a-cfU'n aol.l for tho vinuin articl ant ai not rnlv narrIi3'To. (hut damwroua. Tho SMITH Si WESSON Krvolvirs arc all. atauiprd upon theliar rrlH nlth firms name, addrrns and !ati- of p.-i'euta nd are canrausecd perfect in e-ery detail. In pistnpon hnvin thn penutno article, a:i'l if jour Sealer canuot supply you an order ih-nttoaddre below will rwvite prompt and careful attention. Descriptive catalogue ami price f unibdied upon Hr plvcation. UUITII &'. lYHMKOV. f tion thl paper .FtA Mm. w ww aavia a GERMAN MEDICATED rScr 1 1 ui-:t;i"? STOCK FOOD i -!-"' atf7jCfSys "-Zc cs SNGifcRWAtf: Nothing tiLe It TheTfKT liriT MtH'k IihmI ever fttViet A lon iml -mekfnl u t, temnn-vrtf th.it It will I'll." IM'.lI every .ii-en-e ih-t iuii;.:,i. etri. rons.i mm-. sum, ri)iLTi:r jnil MK nit nltli.t.-.l wit a. ' nillieHliloeil cm- liealthv ne tted te liver ami kidnev . an! ll fcteMion promote ;: neral I ealtli, iilhlv imiUrttrtl Kive; new life nit ivi'i tnl ie 1. irinln. Larcrc-ui f t 'it. Vtnr cheap in liolk .!. M'tirilrutrci-torili'a-ler for it T'tlenn Ulier. bemt for -Hovt t. e'ure I lotf Cholera." c.i:ii.iin nn:niciNE IHitmeupolis, Iftlan. Htn-YnirATfrn! t wi ' v vu n,. wrnrm w sorwt. ui. yijyjtj, SIOUX CITY. IOWA. Kesiilnr Cradnate in Medicine "O hmr3 If 'fttnl (. pnrnfo priiffire IO ; I fiidw ami AVie 1 rk K-t:ili!i-.lifd in Sinn. I'ilv Nino lc.tr. I:-Mill lrt:it;;i all Private, VerVllllH. f 'Itrimir. ?,,,.l v,i....l'l diseases, siic rm:i t or rliiea. eakiics-i iiii'fit Jo j.j. Impoteiicy Seminal viiiiiiitt t-.Kii-.'.- M.'fub .' jtj- iiiiimit'iifjr (I-jsi cf ff run' irr. ami nil IVin.tle Hhea.es Irnqitttiritif ' Cure irti.triintceil or iiiiiuey refund,-,! diaries fair. Term ci-ti. Apenml e vnerioniit are Important No In jurious mcili,-ip. used .V.i tiw J"if f roni work or Iiuini-'- P.-ti'nt :ii n (ht:inco tietited.liv mall ;ir"V: ntlon tins pnper L Ef IS' 98 i LYE! - pcxtziss Aits rssn;:!i3. irsrKSTLti i The :'.oiw.f and purest T.T in.tile Will wake tho HET l'tr'umed Hai:i Sjsp in twenty ill nti'fs wit-mtt lotliiKj It I the lio.t for disinfectitiK sink, cloaets, driiino, washing boltlo. b(irr-ls, paint-, etc. PEflNA. SALT KANUF'G. CO., Gen. AgtB.. Phila.. Pa. .i?CDr ikkvtkd rnri:. Positive!) Cured uith Vegetable Remediei. Have cureil man llionsanil ! ("ur patients rrouiitiiu id impel, s lir the tent phypwiaon From, tint doe fyin'itoniH rapid') disappear, nnd in tea (lavs at least tnitt'iirdsof all sv inpti.niit r removed. Seil lor free le ok ..( te t.im MialH of tuiracilloua curert. Ten il.ijw treatment furnished tree bv mall. If you order itnl. end li --nts in Ktamps to pay DObtage. 1)!C 1! Ii UICtfcN .V s'J'i. AUanta. O. YOU CAN LAY BY S500 TO 31500 ayearliy rkinifori!H lOiuan'tdoitln anv Mirer or simpler vvav no matter how wmtrv Wotiirn shell i'n! ! P.iv liberally those who workeltherwhol. orpart tun- - ti up not !eiuire(Uor aifcwer.Jnot Wnn.te-io.lt HI v jnllurt'tiftt.l'hieigo NORMA h SCIIOOLW;.1.'!!: HiiMnetv. Iepa'tni-nth. Trjt tmk F-tr rurni-heiJ rooms 'J cent i jer w ek boanl I tuition Z7Si p)r term Teachers pripand for Ftato eianiinu tion. 'o incidental evwnse For catalogue ad dress. ttuuBBiM. Nokmal. Woodbine, Iowa. CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH AS-k PPHYRnyfll PSIIX. Ij'J I'ed Cross Iliuinonil llruud. .S'j lakcater OaBtlcal Co.. itmdltuu tsu.. 1'hUacs. WANTED 'Hie a bin .s of all soldiers who fiiiriesteiided a less number I a ri s than VI and mad hnal irof t on Kime .f,i.l.- t I. t.'lfi.l's:iv SOLDIERS' IinMl.VTI.nV Dt.vni. Ilvlinu in ww. . 'BSDO PENS!ONS!eIS;. inlon.lM tranrt lln i -- level Ani.1v to M n 3. SUM 5 3 Lll . w vs mi. r .mu- .Uuil.IVtroit.C'hicago t?1C OCfl ", -4 MONTH can be maiSn ulU "0C U.,l','I,n-IO,'' i'erHonprn lerreif who ci. mniish a horseand ctvi their vhota tunc to 'lie business Spare moments mav be prof ltablveirplo I also A vacanries in towns and cities. P.F.Jo nst.u.VCo.U.'.MainStltlchruond.Va SOLDiERSi unl llr'rs write usfur oew Pension nws. ?eni i fr-e Deserters rll.T4. siirrn. or no fee. A.W. McCotnilckaEar.a.WaabtTigtan.D C a Cincinnati, 0. I PATENTSvPENSlONS "s. to ffet n Inn tf..l t. t Fend fordife-t nf pen.ioiLj"'! CgrnitT Iaw Sei.d for Invert-rs .Hide r Hu -i B Patent l'ATUlLS O'taBHru. A t-ifiiey at Iatw. V'.ca&uistwu. l C. -ss-j raj wanted to learn telegraphv- Plte IHiit'iMfi. Iiimiuh.il t.i rallrnail. YOUNG I I UU1t,U(.r'M l";,iifieico.-oJuehVilIe.WlB. PATENTS K. A. l.r.II.MA.VN, Wiisiiinictoii. I). ;. Ba"-ienil lorcirctdar. 0FHQinNCPJ.E"TS and .orernment claims ot all , I LltOIUlltJkin'l.pr. s-. tited by 1 no. Mi SHEtiiT. eorueyatl iw Ha-hiprfton. IM'.and 1'rcmcnt.O. ! OPIUM HaMt. Tneoniy earrUUa and eaay cur. l)r. J. L. tDhen. Lebanon Ohio. S. C. X. V. So. ui--.n Host. Iisiest 0 Ue. ure is ccrtuin. I-or KS r.r.eall ,n..n!A I . tl. .. n ll.i. Une cheepesK - Il - ise,soIi Y. house-cleaning. - liSLDiMVAel f j ys wvf Ptt? fc.- L "TB V j-v XsH .V-iI.ciih" wir rrtrinthfrr (ne rori ytre iitinfrruA. fjf MW' ,- r cite :iim s-ein! f..r ( (pinion :uil term. ;i oitsii a Vro-t'v i r-'ei nul. pt-Toon-nllv orhy lett..r r. 'tVOflll h.n the lar-rett 3ffdie:tt m.J '.net; tea I Institute ami Vft ami l-.:ir Inlirmarv in tin- e-t i eom for pittii nt- a r.-.r Kite. "fB.-mtii. to imi'tniiv cfiht HORy A ejino' ll.niennil JiJ -irf it ml sAu'I itHuiJnrin'7 rnWPi u '""' ' oiimnmrnl einl 4c. tont:l!?t for lilii.trMti-,1 IKIIIK 'toil MKDICAL .MM ti?. II ras.N Thexntil' r-IIJlM Mil fur !. NafM anJ it- l.ii't.rn. tmL XrraKElt far ti.e IH mntl flrnntf.ir. rrt r.ttllir?boi, wI4 Hh tine r.ttoa. '1 uLr nootbrr. No't4ab ftamp fr prt!ciilar .ul "KcllftW I.Mfllrsw in letter- mir Am 'air. Ir m. a daTiona aSK -VT 1 -1 r4 . Kj r .:- -5s-; SV .-" s