The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, August 06, 1884, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    AGR ICULTURE.
cultivates even a small farm
learn the art of budding trees. To
learn to set a bud is a work so easily ao-
complished that avy boy 10 years old,
with ordinary eapacity for learning,
may in fifteen nnoutes learn to set a
bud so it will liye, and any man of com-
mon intelligence can
and deseriptions given in
fruits, with a very little praetice,
mechanical labor of setting
does not require the practice and judg-
ment it Joes to decide oh the best buds
to select from and at the right time to
set them. A bud to be in just the right
state to work wall should be well ma-
tured; aud yet the twig from which it is
books on
stopped flowing, Careful observation
which are the best twigs to cut for buds,
right state to bud is even more difficult
tree has stopped growing it is difficult to
if the flow of sap has stopped.
grows too much after it has been budded
the string cuts the tree badly and the
bud is left sunk too deep in the tree, If
one could know when a tree would stop
growing,
before, it would be about right, Trees
to bud well, ozght not to be more than
from three to five-eighths of an inch in
diameter; and it is best to bud them
so near the ground that when the reset
roots may come from the budded por-
tion of the tree. Peach and cherry trees
should be budded on the north or north-
west side, The best string we have
ever found 1s the old cotton wicking,
which at the present time is difficult to
buy, Most of nursery men use matting
for strings, but it is hard and not so
yielding as wicking, If the trees grow
much an unyielding string must be re-
tied to lousen it, but wicking will yield
enough so as not to injure the tree, un-
less it makes a very large growth,
Praster —Land plaster, or gypsum
is sulphate of lime, One hundred
pounds of gypsum coneists of 40 pounds
of sulphuric acid, 36 pounds of lime and
and twenty-one pounds of water. It is
ground fine and thus applied to land or
crops. Wheaitis heated to re
water 18 driven off and the residue is
easily reduced to a very fiue powder,
and 18 known as the plaster of Paris used
by masons, The theory of the Lenefi
cial action of land plaster upon the
crops has long been, and still 18, a sub-
ject of dispute. That it suppl
and sulphuric acid to plants to se
extent is probably true, but itis now
generally admitted we believe, that gy p-
sum 18 chiefly useful by its powder of
solidifying and retaining hte ammoniacal
glasses of the earth and air, For wheat
and corn it has not proved satisfactory,
but on clover, sanfoin and leguminous
plants generally its useful effacts are not
questioned,
Take four teaspoonfuis grate
chocolate, one pint of boiling water; let
it simmer for a few minutes,
Iness the
ies lime
3173
OAS
of
of corn
SUZAT,
boil
starch, six 1ablespooniuls of
Stir this mixturo together and
until thick, like boile xl custard
(snd, by the way, cook it in the same
way, by setting the dish In boiling
water, 80 as to avoid all danger of bur-
ning). Make a crust as tor lemon pie,
bake it and then put it in the cooked
chocolate, Beat the whites of the two
to a stiff froth, be
spoonful of pulverized sagar;
on the top of the pie and
oven to brown, Se rve cold,
at all difficult to make and ought to | be
a perfect success,
Tux Kausas Fas
working of growing
It tears away that are needed to
hurry the growth of the corn, and it
tends to hs 1 evaporation, If ground
is well prepared for planting, the shal-
lowest working which will keep the sur-
I destre ¥Y
eggs ating
sel
thinks deep
corn is not good.
roots
ise]
face loose an the weeds, 18 the
best. It is a mistake to run the
or away down Where the roots
ought to enjoy absolute freedom.
teeth
shov =
tools cover the part to be
hi a thin coating of tallow or
Ihen, with a sharp ijustru-
write the name in the tallow, cut-
ting clearly into it, Then fill in the
letters with nitric acid, let it remain
from one to ten minutes, Then dip in
water and run off and yon will leave the
mark etched,
To mark
marked wit
beeswax,
mens,
ALL manures deposited by nature are
left on or near the surface, The whole
sndency of manure is to go down into
the soil rather than to rise from it
There is probably very little if any loss
of nitrogen from evaporation of manure,
unless it is put in piles so as to ferment.
Buns and dews return to the soil as
much ammonia in .a year as is carried
off in the atmosphere,
Ir yon do not bank up your celery
you can plant ia closer rows, Try some
of it this way, aud when the time for
blanching comes tie up each plant
closely in old newspapers, It is said
the stalks will bleach under this treat.
ment in from ten to twonty days,
Wrst a good cow to “begin with, fed
very liberally and given the best of care,
a “one-acre farmer”
pounds of butter per year, leaving a
snug margin of profit. He admits that
il she were an inferior animal he could
not afford to keep her,
of the hen set up in the garden. From
raids upon the bugs and beetles,
A Max with a sharp- toothed rake or a
hoe can go over four times as much land
now in an hour as he can after the
weeds are grown, The best time to kill
weeds is before ® they sre born,
A Frexon authority states that carrots
give horses new blood, which seems to
restore them, and they may be justly
claimed as the regenerator of wornont
horses,
A nusaer of spples will make from
ora ed rut
DOMESTIC,
A veny important thing in the pre-
latter of the proper strength. Sugar,
we know, ferments readily, but only
when dissolved in a sufficient quantity
of water. When the quantity 1s
i just sufficient to render it a strong
| syrup 1t will not ferment at all. The
serving of fruits, so that there may be
neither fermentation nor orystalliza.
tion, may be obtained by
double refined sugar in water in the
proportion of two parts of sugar to one
of water and boiling it a little, The
degree thus obtained, which is the
| proper one for the preserving of fruits,
is technically known as smooth, In
that this syrup should penetrate every
| portion of it; therefore, to aid this, the
fruit should "first be blanched beforo it
| i8 boiled in the syrup.
Blue Grass Broeders,
Mr. RB. 8. Withers of Fairlawn Stock
| Farm, Lexington, Ky,,writea: ‘‘I have
such confidence in St. Jacobs Oil, the
great pain-cure, that I use it on every-
thing: myself, my horse, my negroes.
| Everybody and every horse,
kinds of aches and pains,
sovereignty as a cure,’
cme AP.
CABBAGE SALAD, —One small head of
knife. Chopping bruises salads of the
green kinds. One-half cup of boiling
milk; one tablespoonful of butter;
beaten egg; one wablespoonful of ‘white
sugar; pepper and salt to taste. Beald
the milk in one saucepan, the vinegar
in another, Put into the latter, when
hot, the butter, sugar, pepper and salt,
boil up once and stir in the shred cab-
bage, Cover closely and draw to the
i side of the stove where it will scald,
but not boil, Pour the hot milk
the beaten egg. Return to the fire and
gtir until it begins to thicken. Turn
the cabbage into a bowl, pour the hot
{ milk-and-egg upon it and mix thor-
oughly with a fork. Cever the bowl
while the contents are hot, and
away where it will ccol suddenly. Est
cold,
on
net
a——————
ttonith Is We alith,
Itis worth more than riches, for
out it riches cannot be enjoyed,
people are without
might regain it by using Kudne
upon the Live:
Kidneys, cl and
to henlt hy action,
disorders of the
purifies the
general health,
See adv.
— i ——
Orex Frurr: T
mould about
short paste, ‘U'ake some st
ries, sliced peaches, apricots,
and gooseberries; stir well
wit powdered sugar;
the mould and bake in a
Crack the apricot stones,
kernels and garnish
If the fruit seems too dry pour a
clarified sugar over it before
of the oven,
with -
How
alth who
v- Wort.
and
ulating
ull
Diy
It acts
Musing
them
mportant orgaus,
the
11 1 "ie 4 ,
all Araggisis,
bloc a. aud promotes
Sol 1 by
ART. Line a
three
plain
deep with
med
nectarines
in a bowl
pour into
quick oven.
blanch the
the tart with them,
little
taking out
inches
clier
h some
five Per Cant. Stronger than
Other Batter Color.
Burrixaron, Vr., May 3d. 1882
hereby certify that I have
Batter Color prepared
ichardson & Co., and that
s from alkali or any other
injurious to health; that I
it with & of the
ther Butter Colors in
d it to be more
t. stronger 1
Is.
Twenty any
examin
by Wi
the same 1s
gnbsian
have
beat of the
the marke
than twenty-fi
in color than tho ld
com-
me
£ and
Yi per
rat Of
othe
I am satisfied that it is not liable to
become rancid, or in any to injure
butter. I have examined it after two
nths free exposure to the air in
place liable to large changes of temper
ature, no trace of rancidity
while other kinds similarly exp
became rancid, A. H. Sanix
Prof. Chemistry, University of Vermont,
————
This is good
Jat some hard-boiled
the yolk
way
and found
ORE
Srurrep Evos, also a
breakfast dish, (
n half ; take out
mash it smoothly with an eq isl guan-
tity of grated ham, a little chopped
parsley, pepper and salt to taste,
a small lump of fresh butter, Fill the
cup-litke whites of the eggs with this
mixtare, pour over them a little melted
butter and heat in the oven. Serve
with each half-egg placed on a neat
sqoare of bread nicely fried in butter.
somes
Life Vreserver.
osing your grip on life, try “We
Henewer."” GO } WERK spota.
ges 1 and
and
If you are
Heafty yes direct t
stant — p——————
The French Minister of Education
and the Fine Arts has proposed plac-
ing a large Government domain, located
at Willenenveatang, at the disposal of
Mons, Pasteur, for the prosecution of
his scientifie inveat gations,
se ——
wy” Diamond Dyes will Color
thug any color, and never fail, The
easiest and best way to economize
100, at all druggists, Wells, Richard.
ron & Co, Burlington, Vt. Sample
Card, #2 colors, and book of directions
for 2 cent stamp,
eat li tessa
A Bwiss OMELETTE. Grate 2
Parmesan cheese, melt 2 oz. of
and add to the cheese also i oz, of
| finely chopped parsley, 1 oz. of bread
erumbs, finely grated, a quarter of a
| pint of new milk and four eggs well
| beaten; fry in the usual way, with a
i little butter in the pan, which must be
properly heated before the mixture is
poured in,
Auy-
of
butter,
OB,
emtimmi
A natural oil, cleanly, one that will
| not become rancid, one that 1s peve
trating, one that combines all these
qualities is Carbolive, the most elegant
| hair-dresser and restorer, Tey it,
for the small cans of beef essence
ANSWEr Overy purpose,
teaspoonfals of fluid beet make rich
stock,
“Roagh on Toothaeohe,”
Ask for “Rough ca Toothache.”
rs
Layer Wicks, If lamp wicks are
i sonked in vinegar before putt ng in a
lamp 1t will prevent the chimney be
wiming Vlackened by the flame
| ache. 15 ke.
HU MOR( YUS.
’
A GENTLEMAN ON East Fourth street
ragged tramp sitting on his
front steps eating his lunch,
“‘Here! What are you doing there?”
he shouted,
“Partaking of a slight lunch, Will
sponded.
“No, I don’t want any of your villa-
“That's so; it is pretty tough kind
of fodder, I just got it out of your
kitchen. Your wife must be doing her
“What's that, you infernal hound?”
man, starting
on the step.
“Don't get excited, Think a minute.
‘No I'm not, and I'll—"
“But, my, dear sir, you are mistaken.
and muttering some-
him to finish
1 POrLAnt.
When you visit or leave New York City, save
Baggage Expr and Carriage Hire, and stop
atine Grand Unlon Hetel, opposite Grand Cen-
tral Depot,
Elegant rooms,
pilllon dollars, reduced ww $1
Elevator,
Horse cars,
eRsage
fitted ug ost of one
UPpWArds per
Hestaurant
stages and
lepota, Families can live
better fo i" at t Grand Union Hote
than at Any other HOLL {
——— -
Oxe of the Auburn School Committee
visited the school in the Darker Mill
The scholars were
closing
“What is the holi-
day to-morrow?” was asked. ‘‘Decor-
ation day,” was the reply, in a shout,
‘““What do they have Decoration day
for?” **To decorate the soldiers’
graves,” sald several. “Why should
they decorate the soldiers’ graves any
more than yours or mine?” There was
One little fellow finally
stuck up a Lend in the further eorner
room, The visitor asked him to
The boy Baia; “1g you pi
it 18 bx they are
answering a few
from the visitors,
; 1
“ long Bleue,
of the
3
pPeax,
Canse ad
-
roof Poeamonia.
A Sax Fras
tising a troupe of
will sen
how to walk
piicher
over
800 showman is
educated flies,
m here to teach oth
around the edge of a milk
without { he will gain
riasting fame
i one ars
falling in,
—
Hay
Ng Ped
Fevenisa t
uliar pt
fi A 11
membrane
anid throat,
erid mucus |
i8 BOO
by an i
pa
watery
a remedy fo
osis of th
Balm is
iiagn
suded upon "of
18 disease and
a Bin &1
feathere songaters.
I'd make a
(Fti06s pe
et the
law
ple
birds
3 :
ladies do withou
against
wouldu't
aiono,
“Oh, that's an
when
shooting
stifle
iy yb
srent thing, OF ex
actual
YA rd
for
must
All necessity the
lear creatures
eelings, you
one
one's
{ know,”
«A —
PFretly Women.
} iain freshneas
wer,
-_
Dip it ever occur to you why a law-
Jor in conducting a disputed will case
t Itke a trapeze performer? well, it is
because he thies through the heir with
the greatest of fees,
in— -
RLINEs Greal Nerve Hesiorer 4
{ the age for all netve diseases
Vg 1 free. Bend to (%1 Arch
adeiphia, Ma
" tl inns
One would suppose that the coining
of pennies by the government would
hardly pay, as it takes ten mills to
make one cent,
co m—
Piso's Remedy for Catarrh 15 a
ure for
certain
that very obnoxious disease.
“Dr. MoCost 1s celebrated for
tiem, and the best of it is he is
conscious of it, He has a broad
and the habit of
the joint of the thumb
thinking. Some years
lecturing before the senior class in
Princeton Ce He had been dis
cussing Letbnitz’s view of the reason
of evil to the effect that mankind was
put upon the earth because there was
elsewhere, One of
the seniors inquired: “Well, Doctor
why was evil introduced into the world?
“Ab,” smd the doctor, holding up
both hands, ye have asked the hardest
eqo~
never
Scoteh
gnawing at
when busily
ago he was
ancent,
lege,
tried to answer it and failed; Plato
Kahnt attempt.
Leib
question, as I've been tellin’ ye; and 1
(inawing at
“I countess |
kunokle) don’t know.
“Hough on toh,"
“Rough nn toh”
AAI II 5 5
Now is the time of wear when the
newly fledged graduate bezfistes be
ween becoming an editor right off of
PETE He 4 Wwattar fn A «itr ar note
"
conduc.
of the
“Ah,
“Trokers,
tor, as the
please,” said the
train pulled ont
said a young
“caused by a most
of eircumstances,
Indy passenger,
uaforiunate chain
quite unnecessary to
with
if I were
*Not—not
gasped the frightened con-
““Bu-—but in this case I will
it so. Your fare to Doston,
is £0.’ ”
A orrizex who applied
Marshal the other day for
train. Would it be conformable
ductor
a building
the
After
round
erection
spouting
terms, he
of such a struelure,
indignation in
added:
“I wouldn’t be found dead in such a
“As for that,” slowly replied
“it won't make much
were you die, You'll probably
come within the fire limits anyhow,”
-
‘““Herrol Johnny,
Giiier.
where ve
asked one
you been
urchin of
room during the afternoon session
“Been fishin.” was tue rejoinder,
* Ketoh anything'?” **Yes—a lickin
and the second in
stood up,
’
class geography
Nor as bright as might be: They tell
a good story about a kind-hearted old
soul who used to have charge of a
station pretty well on toward the
southern terminus of the Delaware
Railiroad, “I've got eneugh of that
white oil,” he wrote to the superintend-
“send me red oil for my
danger signal,
—————
No difficult job: “1 hate to
man hesitate a half hour before making
Fishton; *‘it
me half iinute to make
mind." houldn’t supp
ee. BOMOG
ens, IO
don't
up my
it would
was Fogg's
Be
-
Ax
i
vO BIDOKe 8
€ICUA vauis
BAX:
riven skies?
nquir price
r
ries of ger
ries of gentle
¢ Lhe
1 1
Sonees,
za to partially ward off
hat may be
“rs oO
11
I clothes
too boisterous
can be mis
covering each part with matt
y the
To
y
£1 HI
er
can be tacked
or
ui
are
of i
that the prodad
COMER 8 quivering, transiucent mass,
cons nee of neither
To make a
of Pe riec
eos
with sugar
ft when cold
18t¢ whica Is
solid or liguid.
jelly speak now
regard to its transparency and
APPEATancs clarified sugar
oe used, but the best grade of
SURAT will answer every pur-
the household, and produce
resulta quite gratifying to the eye as
well as the palate,
of mustard pl
not gener rally known, The
make one is to mix one part
meal flour with two parte of
aud wet sufficiently to make moist,
Mix well together and spread on a
piece of muslin, cover with a square of
lawn or swiss and hold before the fire
Wi
refine
pose Of
asters is
way
of corn
mustard,
Tur eflicacy
pain in the face or any part of the
body is helped by a mustard plasier,
and also toothache, rheumatism
pain in the chest or side,
'*St. Bernard
The be ir for LI® ER ab i BIL,
JOUS com admits, COSTIVEN ESS,
HEADACHE and DISPEFPSIA
Prioe, 6 conte, at Draggisis, of ¥
a“ t FRESE Ailrons
I. BERNARD VEGETABLE PILL MAKERS,
“Moroes Street, New York
VARICOCELE
rt Wormy Veing of the Ser a Obes the unm
sted cause of LOBE qnhog Debility ul:
quiekly and padniese!y rareod od 23 e¥ flaatic (phie
nh a lors. fitthma roular Pree,
Sl SERRE Oi aiier 160 Fees or Hur Tork,
CURES ALL
PIMBASES OF THR
KIDNEYS
xavEm, nL. ADDER,
URINARY “Snax,
DRO!
GRAVEL, DIABETES,
BRIO HTS DISBASE,
PAINS IN THE
BA
LOTS OR BIDE,
NER
YOUR
DISEASES,
By the use of this REMEDY, the
and Dowels speedily regain
purified. #e ; j A
te the ONLY CURE for all kinds of * .dney Diesasas,
It in purely i ere mr other Mot
eines fail, Over 100 Pho lols ws §
ony peso LoetAry in i
* ¥ vag LF
Advertising Cheats!!!
“It has becom:
article, in an ele
“Then run it into
that . il
“A
BG common
gant, interes
'
BOTOG RAY rt
egin an
wll such,
And yea
of He 1 Ditwers in as plal
po ible,
“To induce
“To give them on
attention fo the
honest
merits
n, terms as
people
which ws
never us
trial,
they will
thing els: i -
“The REMEDY 80 favorably no
pepe re,
Keligioun and recular, is
“Haviog a large sale,
ticed
and is all
ruppianting
Hop
aye
*
here is no denying
nriete
pt
shown great shrewdness and ability
“In compounding 4 medicine whose viriues are
80 palpab.o 10 every one's observation,
Did 8he Die?
“Xo!
“She lingered and suffered
away all the time for years,’
“Ihe doctors doing her no good ;"’
“And at last by this
along, pining
was cured
Bitters the papers say se manch about,”
“Indeed ! Ine 4g
“How thankful
medicine,”’
A Daughter's Misery.
Hop
jee
we should be for that
“Eleven years our dau suffered
a bed of
“Fre
rhe
ghter on
misery,
m a complicati liver,
matic t ity,
Under th
Who
“Bat
‘And y
health
, that
ping iL." —THE PAREN]
Father is Getting Well,
“My daught
4a
“How mucl
ters
: 18 getting wel
om a disease
d we are
Hale’s Honey
Eorchouncl ancl Tar
50¢.
ike's Toothache Broun nre im one min.
nie, «
a . rw
LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S . .
VEGETABLE COMPOUND
DR. LINDSEY'S
BLOOD SEARCHER p
R. E. SELLERS & CO. Prop's,
PITTSBURG PA,
EVE HN Tn ¥ COLLAR CO.
Fay ¥ oLaMen ih. Mas
Phoaniz Pectoral will enre Four sough
Price 8 ots
ETS re R-
* -
* EW
glish
¥en A
n
American
DICTIONARY.
Pages
GeTMAR,
hreniamin fl COLEMAN & OO
TELEGRAPH
WRITING HER) sit
Address Vaieutite Bros,
ations Jur
daneevilin, Wis
KIDDER'S PASTILLES. CIR
ni
FOR WOMEN, 82 by
rundi,
TZE & OO. U1 Girsrd or
Dr. Latse treats female dissanes
Advion free at office of vw letter
UTE 3 oN LOHR
WEN, I
To handle ®
PILLOW sam
MOoOLBER n
Hemanerative en ploy went for ladies Ome
Fut our Holder upon
Fy 1 wells itmelf, Send for Cirenlsr and
gs
4. 0H HENRY, Gex's, Aor, “yracuse, N ¥
nnd Priors foo small ~ loot on of Empty
Parham Tobhneos Bags, 1 ton oe Tres,
Thomp on re 257 Main Ni. Cincinnati ©
trial
$ 1 tary Tain,
2h Fe
EADWAY’S
READY
¢ RELIEF,
IWEnty IMINULeR net
with one t H
patie ho Violent of exaas
the } i et, 3 ridden, Int
Nervous, urs Ww prostrate i
Irani ge
fer, RADWAY'S READY
funy suf
came
BOWEL COMPLAINTS,
DYSENTERY, DIARRVCGES, CROLL.
ERA mnORBUS,
iH, ina few ming taken scoording
Ons, CUR ¢ Hour Blomach,
h 1hurn, MMER COM-
LAINT, Disry Wind in
s Bowes, snd
fraveiers should always carr ie of RAD-
WAYS READY RELIEF wilh them A few
drops in water will
change of waler., lis
or Bitters ae a stimulant
-RRI
In from
rel ve
ane
PAIR
Rick
Noea,
all Inter
yah
THE TR UE RELIEF
BEADWAY'S HEADY
Feinx
It
only
sin,
. J : ue,
Mey £ Or
Bervousness and . its fh, lo.
a wins and skpess in the back, spine or
pais round ! ing
wud
i af
{ we fore
ay 8 eff
LARIA 'N 11
YEVER
is not a i
ire Fever and Ague
FUR, Biliona Boariet, Trypho
fevers (aided i
y a8 RADWAY
ceniR. Sold by
~ FORMS,
Al
if work
of
A vp ’ i /
ABO0WALY 8 APATIIAn Nesoivel
The Creat Blood Purifier,
Bad
vont,
i © Aizag-
rify,
Radway’ s Sarsaparillian Res
remedy « posed «
L
Perfect, Purgative, Boothing, Ape
ent, Act without Pain
Reliable and Natur
their Operation:
A VEGETABLE SUBS
CALOAMI
AL SE AND TRUE."
To the Fublic,
a HN BRADWAY'R, 81
PWAY BOD Wis
isn joy Forever.
ANSkin of Hesuily
Cream, or Magic
Oriental Beant: fier.
« o Tuas
Purifies as well
Beant:
o it.
, will d
Thomas FP. Simpeon, W
FATENT L AW YER.
tents. fnventars” Gaide.
AGENTS WANTED
among OUR WILD INDIANS
TO. 600 3
Throw
Tr
oe
Thirty.
160%
® ate. «
HN ORTHINGTON & Of. Hartford. Conn
LADY AGENTS 7==icen
sat ale on
rE Qs seen « Hy haa
mt ek ing Rupporiers ele, Sore
A v8 Soren
A.D
a
SHE; on
Ni ty Boor « ———
GOOD NEWS
0 LADIES!
“Creston induoemerts aver of
fered. Now's pour Lane Lo
seeders for our owiebr. lad Pon
tad Coffe Aldus i » beaut
I Goid Band or Moss ios OU)
Teale, pe Ll ea Pecnnd
var fot, or (roid Bagh A Romy
Deostated Teilet a.
(1
PERL ERAY SEIT.
In the b an body ERADICATED bry using
CLARK'S WORM WORM SYRUP!
INFALLIBLE
An old-time remedy. Rafe no Rafe nnd cect.
Price 26 cents » bottle,
wl in ite notion,
Ba FOR SALE BY DRUGEINTS. “Ne
3 FREE
Insane Person Rertored
Dr. KLINE 8 GREAT
Neave Rest ORER
For wil Barn & TE Dag ad np
Fan, Epp,
or Noe Fete afver
Walnut pent Hime Restorer,
mmmedintely free the how from al) Annd rofl, rerio
Badr to He natural colon, and prodoce a new gr
where it has fallen off, ft does mot affect the henith,
whieh sulphor, suger of Tend ind nitrate of 8 ver propa.
stone have done, 11 will Change Tight on faded hair ima
fow days 10 » bonntifn! ghomy brows, Ask your
for I. Ewch botile is warranted, Smith, 3 ne &
Wholesale Agta, Plulse. Pa. snd ON. Onttenton,
rr 2 ET ot 1 Lam a »
AGENTS W ANTED ne ove tr
ipod, authentic Dmgertisl
pees BEBO, Ned nr re on - Ds to Ea
end fen Larvae Toren, ar. Ee
wrilord, €
Lo