The Elk County advocate. (Ridgway, Pa.) 1868-1883, May 13, 1875, Image 4

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    FARM, GARDEN AND HOUSEHOLD.
Farm Hints.
TTnrmors in tho West are niraing to get
a bottor Rtook of eattlo ami liogs, till loss
lnml and do it bettor, buy fewer goods
nnd pny cnsli.
A lurge number of grange co-onerntive
stores, mills nnd elevators Lave been es
tablished in various sections of tho West
nnd South.
The ox-eye daisy is n wee 1, is to be
treated ns n weed and may be killed like
nny other weed with good cultivation if
cut when in bloom. Stock like it nnd
thrive upon it.
Lima beans have brought good prices
tho last two or three yoars, and thoso who
raised them have mndo it pay.
Sour milk nnd buttermilk are excel
lent food for nil kinds of poultry, and are
greatly renlishod by them. Earthen
dishes are the best vessels to feed them
in, as wooden ones soon become pour.
When thickened with bran or meal, it
is a very nourishing diet for young fowls,
nnd is good to make hens Iny.
An Ohioan, who has three-fourths of
mi acre of quince orchard, from which
last year ho sold three hundred bushels
of iirst-cluss fruit, spndes the ground
in siiring, nnd scatters n peck of coal
nshes around each tree, applying nt tho
same time a quart of salt nnd another
quart when the quinces are half grown.
Wo would give no meal to cows for a
month before calving, nor for ten or
twelve days after. A little mess of wheat
bran, fed daily, would be better and
safer, ns it is not as heating in its ten
dency. Much judgment is needed in
feeding cows.
If it could be avoided, ground to be
cultivated should never be carted over
in the spring, or be plowed or harrowed
when too damp to crumble by working.
A method which will break the most
vicious cow from kicking, nnd which
sir mid supersede the cruel practice of
beating and whipping, nnd is the work
of but a few minutes, is t.s follows :
Tike a strap the size of a common
bridle-rein nnd buckle tightly around
the cow (while milking), just forward of
the bag. This practiced a lew days, will
h:ive tho desired result, ns we nro nware
from actual experience.
Docs Wheat Growing Pay t
James Adams says : My experience
of twenty years in the production of
wheat in a wheat-growing section of
Monroe count v, N. 1'., is that n bushel
of wheat, on the average, costs the pro
ducer a sum equivalent to the cost of
one day's labor, or more, besides inter
est on the money invested in the soil
upon which it was produced, nnd a
bushel of wheat produced on the nver
ngo at a less expense than the "cost of a
day's labor has been at some expense to
the soil; or, in other words, the soil is
not in as good condition for future crop
ns when the last crop was removed prior
to sowing the wheat. A crop of wheat
sown upon laud niter barley or other
spring crops that liad been previously
manured, may have cost less per bushel
than the cost of a day's labor, so far as
tho cost of fitting of tho soil, seed, har
vesting, etc., of that crop, because part
of the expense chargeable to that crop
had been previously applied. Labor
that cost 84 per month nnd board for
eight or ten months would average not
less than $1.25 per day for the entire
season, board included. Estimating the
crop at twenty-live bushels per acre
(which is above, rather than below, tho
average), laud at $80 per acre, $1 for
taxes per acre, and charging the crop
with interest and .taxes for one year
only, we have found that our crop has
cost us above $1.50 per bushel. The
nnnnol decrease of the area sown to
wheat in the State of New York is suf
ficient proof that my estimato of the
cost per bushel is low rather than high.
I find bv my jonrnal that th j average
price received for wheat for the past
twenty years has been above $1.80 per
bushel. If there was a profit of $1, or
even lifty cents, the area sown would
largely iucrease instead of decreasing.
Household Hints.
Liquid Glue. Melt half n pound of
tho best Flanders glue in n pint of vine
gar, and add four ounces of brandy.
Potato Cakks. Take mashed pota
toes, ilour, a little salt, and melted butter
(to make them sweet, add a little pow
dered loaf sugar), mix with just enough
milk to make the paste stiff enough to
roll, make it the size and thickness of n
muffin, and bake quickly.
Spice Cake. One and one-half cups
butter, two cups sugar, two eggs, ono
teaspoonful of soda dissolved in one cup
cold water, four ui.d one-half cups flour,
ono tablespoonful each of cinnamon and
nutmeg, three-quarters spoonful cloves,
as that is a strong spice. Fruit is a great
improvement.
Gkavy for Veal or Chicken. Put n
tablespoonful of butter in a hot frying
pan. When it begins to brown dust a
tablespoonful of flour into it, stirring
constantly with a spoon ; add salt nnd
pepper ; then pour in one pint of milk
cream, if you have it ; let it boil live
minutes and pom- over the dish of meat.
German Apple Pudding. Take n
deep tin pudding dish and cover it with
a layer ol tho best pie crust. Have some
good tender apples cut fine, nnd spread
over the paste a layer of apples, with
sufficient sugar for sweetening, and cin
namon and nutmeg to taste ; again a
layer of apples, etc. , until your dish is
tilled, when you pour over it a teacupful
of cream, add your cover nnd bake to a
light brown.
Two Farmcis.
There nre two of my brother farmers
of whom I think a great deal, that nre
uniformly successful in business. They
nre both intelligent, honest, sensible
men. Their farms join, and although
they nro equally respected in our com
munity, still strangers often speak of the
one as shiftless, while the other is praised
for his thrift. We who live neighbors
to them know that this is a false classifi
cation. The foundation of this mistake
lies just here : The one keeps his fence
corners scrupulously clean, and never
allows a weed to grow whore there is no
crop, any more than on the cultivated
fields, while the other pays every ntten
tion to his crops, and never clears his
fence corners. There is a good deal in
working nn occasional day for appear
ance sake it saves vile imputations
sometimes. I have never dared tell my
neighbor of this, but if he reads it per
liaps he will not think unkindly of the
reminder if I call no names. There are
a good many people who would have a
better reputation if their, fence corners
were clean.
NEWS OF THE DAY.
Item ol Interna trout Home nnd Abrnml.
A discharged soldier wits murdered In Ban
Two States have yet to hold elections
for Congressmen. California chooses
four members in September, and Missis
sippi six members in November. Six
vacancies have been caused by death.
After this year elections for members of
the Lower House will be held in all the
States on the Tuesday after the first
Monday in November,
Dingo by a companion who administered mor
phine to him, and robbed him of (700 The
Now York Seventh regiment will attend the
ftiiyker Hill centennial In Boston. . . .Hampton
won tho metropolitan stakes at Epsom, Eng
land, beating the favorite and eight other com
petitors Among one day's crimes reported
are the following: David Mandlove, while
drunk, shot and killed bis father in St. Fanl,
Iud.; Patrick Ilewitt, of New York, Brack at
Ills wife hut hit and killed hislittlo boy, and
Martin Ililbcrt, of Williamshurgh, struck his
wife and when she ran set a bloodhound upon
her, e animal biting her and severely injuring
the poor woman Ton natives of Ixtacaleo,
Mexico, are on trial for a horrible outrage.
Thr.y are charged with burying three men
alive, leaving only thoir heads above ground,
and then dispatching them with hatchets and
knivos, aftor prolonged torture Miss Alice
A. Early, of Rockford, Illinois, has gained
suit for libel against Wilbur F. Storey, editor
of the Chicago Times, with 25,000 damages,
Oscar Green, a farmer, in alighting
from a passenger train at OtiBville, N. Y., was
run over hya parsing coal train and killed. .
Kimwoll C. Smith, author of tho widely known
Smith s grammars, anthmotics, and geop-
raphies for schools, died in Hartford lately,
aged seventy-eight years Charles Smith,
a boat boy, aged sixtcou years, died at Tort
Jervis from the effects of coal gas that burst
out of a stove into bin face while he was light
ing a Are. Ho was at fust overcome by the
gas, then partially recovered aud survived two
days.
The Mormon apostles laboring in London,
Out., are making numerous converts to their
creeds. ... It is said that the iuterprovincial
exhibition at Montreal will prove a failure for
want of funds Donaldson, the balloonist,
had a narrow escape at Philadelphia. He cut
away his car and with it fell forty-five feet,
being picked up insensible, but soon after
recoverod The Southern railroads are fol
lowing the Northern lines in reducing their
rates of faro On the West Jersey railroad,
near Millville, the body of a man was found,
bis head having been smashed in with a club.
A lot of boys in Orange, N. J., were tor
menting a blind man who was picking his way
along, when the man in a fit of anger swung
his cane, striking one of tho boys in the bead
aud fracturing the skull Chas. E. Lewis,
one of the oldest and formerly a very wealthy
merchant of New Y'ork, lost his wealth and
committed suicide at the Windsor House by
shooting himself through the head.
A destructive conflagration occurred in New
Orleans, three steamers being burned j one of
them had an excursion party on board. A
number of lives were lost Capt. St. John,
a venerable and well known North river steam
boat captain, shot himself. He wag very
wealthy and was no doubt temporarily insane
from care and anxiety Seven cases of
fatal suicide were reported in one day in the
papers. They took place in all parts of the
United States. The suicide mania is raging
terribly A man in St. Louis cut his throat
and walked a whole blink before he died
Fred Klenen, tho dafaulting secretary of the
Hoboken Savings ISank, was sentenced to ten
years' imprisonment at hard labor in the State
prison A new and dangerous counterfeit
recently made its appearance at the national
bank redemption agency in the i5 notes of the
first National Bank of Paxton, 111. It is evi
dently altered from the plate on which the
counterfeit f 5 notes of tho Traders National
Bank of Chicago wore printed The police
authorities of Poeen have notified all the
Crsuline Sisters in that district w.ho are not
natives of Germany that they must leave the
country within two mouths Charles Hill,
a prominent citizen of Saco, Me., and a leading
politician of York county, hanged himself in
his sleeping room. Ho was sixty years of age.
Joe Cobnrn has accepted the challenge
of Steve Taylor, of Jorsoy City, to fight at
catch weight for 2,500 a side The direc
tors of the Northern Pacific railroad report
that work will soon bo resumed on the line. . . .
Robert W. Batting was sentenced to Sing Sing
for life for the murder of John Tomkius at
New Tlatz on the twenty-first of October
The Postmaster-General of the United States
discovered a fraudulent bid among those for
mail routes iu Louisiana. About six clerks
have already been discharged for complicity in
the frauds, and it is understood that at least a
dozen more are implicated.
A severe gale at Norfolk, Va., upset two
oyster sloops near Craney Island. The crews
wero seen clinging to the bottoms of the boats.
Efforts to reach them with tugs fai.ed. Several
pcrsous were drowned Johnson, the mur
derer, who was to have been hanged at Clove
land Ohio, has had his sentence commuted by
Governor Allen to imprisonment for life
Several thousand ticket holders in the Ken
tucky State library lottery have placed their
coupons in the hands of Colonel Blantou Dun
can, with instructions to bring suit against the
lottery managers for breach of contract and to
recover their money. It is believed that the
contract of the last djawing was such as to
make the managers liable The Louisiana
Legislature adjourned Bine die without piss
ing any of the reform measures The col
liery owners of South Wales have agreed to
throw open their pits to miners at a reduction
of fifteeu per cent in wages The rtrike of
the cotton operatives at Blackburn, England,
has ended Lieut. Henely of the Sixth
United States cavalry makes the following
official report: Attacked at daybreak on North
Fork, Sapper creek, a party of sixty Cheyenne,
whom I believe to be some of those who have
been at the agency. I cut off twenty-seven from
their ponies and demanded their surrender.
My demand was answered by a volley. After
a desperate resistance they were all killed.
Nineteen warriors, including two chiefs and a
medicine man, were among the dead. I cap
tured 125 ponies. I burned their camp, con
sisting of twelve lodges, aud all their effects.
Sergeant Papier and private Tieros of my com
mand were killed.
The Court of Claims has decided that the
title to the Hot Springs reservation in Arkansas
is vested In the United States A collision
occurred on the Baltimore and Potomac rail
road, near Washington. Ten persons were
severely injured and four cars were completely
destroyed United States Secretary Delano
has decided to postpone his resignation in
definitely. . . . A revolution broke out in Bolivia,
but was quickly suppressed by the military,
who attacked the rebels in Le Paz and killed
fifty-eight of them Many of the Brooklyn
hod carriers who had refused to work mora
than eight hours a day were taken back, aud
the bricklayers who work with them receive
3.20 for ten hours In a dispute about
shoeing a horse iu New York, a coachman was
instantly killed by a red hot shoe thrown at
him by the blacksmith Cornelius Deery
was sentenced to death in the Court of Queen's
Bench at Montreal recently for assaulting Con
stable Baignet on the thirtieth of July
During a fire at Charlestown, Mass , Mrs.
Ellen Murray, an aged woman, the sole occu
pant of a building, was burned to death, the
moke preventing her escape.
Tho total vote for Governor in Conneotiout
waa 10(J.'J83. Gov. Ineersoll's majority is
6,521. Tb majoiity in th State on Congress'
oira it 1,857, on hsriffs 2,799, and en Ituator
2,249 ..... .The ceremony of Imposing the b ar
ret ta upon Cardinal MoCloskey took place with
great pomp at St. Patrick's Cathedral, New
York. Tho cathedral wag handsomely de
corated. Thero Were many priests present
from all sections of the oountry Resolu
tions were adopted by the ex-Confederate
soldiers at Memphis Inviting everybody, re
gardless of past differences, to participate In
the decoration of the graves of the Confederate
dead Planters in Tennessee are complain
ing greatly of an unprecedented doetruction of
mules, horses, and cattle by the buffalo gnats.
It is estimated that within ten days flOOJHX)
worth of srock was killed by them within a radius
of a hundred miles, taking Menjpuis city as the
center of the circle A party of strikers at
Lowell, Mass., encountered a number of "nob
sticks," and an altercation ensned, ending in a
row. A number of pistol shots were fired, and
one striker was wounded, but not seriously.
Two of the strikers were arrested by the police.
By the explosion of a coal-oil lamp the
house of Mrs. Rachel Haley below Mount Car
bon, Ta., was destroyed by fire. Mrs. Haley's
body was found in a corner of a room burned
to a crisp.
The Printer's
Says the Cairo (111.)
Devil.
Gazette: Tho
printing office devil of twenty years ago
what has become of him? Every
body knew him as the sooty-faced, dirty
handed little imp who swept out, built the
firep, blacked the boss' boots, and with
them every accessible patch of his own
uncovered' hide ; who, to get rid of nurs
ing baby, made a most fiendish use of
puis; who, for divers reasons (and tur
pentine), could never beguile the house
dog beyond the dooryard ; who outraged
the confidence of his playmates by sell
ing them roller composition for jujube
paste; who, with a gracious show of lib
erality, would give the "country boy "
all the red ink he could carry in the
pocket of his new pantaloons, and who
could, with more certainty than any
other animal living, dodge a boot-jack
this devil is, alas 1 a thing of the post.
Ink-besmcnrcd. rollickinsred. gluttonous,
one-snsnendered. no-shoestring little
wretrdi. ho was. with all his faults, pa
tient under the stress of cuffed ears and
cold victuals, aud, by almost every
printing office of the land, believed to
be an absolute necessity. But alas 1 with
the march of events, he has been swept
away with tho sickle, the flail and the
shovel plow, he is only of the past, and
like them is a thing only of memory.
The editor of the Gazette knew him, has
seen him emerge from his estate of dirt
nnd ensseduess to the excellence of
honored manhood, or to sink to the still
lower plane of vice aud debauchery. We
-. . . i i t fin 1
know the moral ana pnysicai nine wrig
gler, and reach out now over an inter
veiling chasm of twenty years or more to
. ,1 -,- Viil- 7 11. -Al
ioiti me airiv nine uevu w uiu mcuuu
bosom, and to bless him for the charac
teristics through which he won nnd de-
lightedly maintained his appropriate
appellation.
Cattle on the Cars.
In shipping cattle in cars, says a
drover, it is absolutely necessary that
the animals should be Kept upou their
feet. The cattle will lie down at times;
one steer gets cast upon the top of an
other, and unless the underneath one
is quickly extricated he will die of suf
focation. The labor is to get half suffo
cated steers on to their feet. This is
done by prodding them with spiked
poles, twisting their tails, and, in very
extreme cases, in other ways, such as
gouging them, putting tobacco in their
eyes, etc. Jlut exhibitions of brutality
on the part of shippers are not so com
mon ns is generally supposed, nud I
noticed that the railroad men quickly
rebuke anything of the kind. A sulky
bullock is certainly a most exasperating
animal, and it is only in such cases and
when their tempers are sorely tried that
shippers display brutality. As to the
use of the pole and twisting the tail
ingniy objectionable as tuey nnaonoteii
ly are I do not see how the handling
of cattle could be carried on without
it. It is a momentary pain, nnd, by
causing the cattle to get up, it certainly
saves them from the slow tortures of
gradual suffocation.
T?TmNitTT'a Ooooainb is the best and
cheapest hair dressing in the world. Com.
"IMTY MK, AND I'M. no YOIT OOOI.
Of all th. tnnilw of rlrtdlna the n.iman e"lln
tins of Impnritlss of the blood, dspsnsls. torpid
and in klndn-d nlm-asos, nona in o iociwwful as ttjs use
of Dr. l,Mil,KVS IUIOT AMI IIIKB
BITTKKS. Th ant M a potont tonlo and (entl.
aperient, are mild In their operations, safe onrtnr an?
circumstances, and thonssnds have home testimony to
the benelita the;
thn safest I
discovered.
tin derived from their naa. The? are
and best spring and summer medicine rat
. Kamlljr phtnlplana reRularlr presoribo
OKO. O. OOOJJW1N A CO., Boston,
Hie Markets.
MEW TORI.
Beef Cattle Prima to Extra Bullocks
Common to Good Tfixau.
Mil'bOtnn
Iloga Live
Dressed
Sheep
Jjamba
Cotton Middling
Flour Extra Western.
State Extra....
Wbeat Ked, Western.,
No. 2 Spring.,
Rye Stain
Barley Htato
Barley Malt
Oata Mixed Western.
Corn Mixed Western
Hay. per cwt
Straw, per cwt
nopa. .....
Pork Mess
11 9 19 V
10 a 11
60 00 (470 00
oasc tax
, 09( 10
, OS A 07
i 8 60 (S 7 6')
16, lJi
, 6 10 9 S 40
, 6 05 (f 80
, l so am
, 1 18( 1 18
. 1 US (4 I 09
. 1 Wi 1 MX
. 1 20 1 SO
. 7eXl 711)4-
. sax n
. bo ia 1 oo
65 BO
. .T4a, 85(340 olds 08 (3 15
it m wi t m
Lard 16i 16'
riBh Mackerel No. 1, new 15 00 14 00
No. a, now iu uu (410 50
There could scarcely be better evi
dence of the extraordinary excellence of
the Mason & Hamlin (Jabmet Organs
than the fact that they nre so largely ex-1
ported to Em-ope, where they are so
highly appreciated ns to find large sales
iu competition with instruments made
there by labor which does not cost half
as much. These are the only American
organs largely exported.
A Mammoth Hennery.
Two brothers named Gaff have estab
lished a mammoth hennery in Colorado,
ten miles from Denver. It covers about
four acres, which is laid out like a vil
lage, with streets nnd avenues, along
which nre built long rows of houses of
various designs. Regular families of
nens nro assigned to tnese nouses, and
it is found that they quickly domesticate
themselves without'troubling their neigh
bors. The population of the village is
about 2,000, divided closely into social
cliques of Brahmas, Cochins, Shang
haes, and Dorkiugs, nnd the chief pro
ducts are eggs and spring chickens.
Sundays included, the industrious ma
trons of the village turn out daily from
forty to fifty dozens of eggs, which are
sold in Denver for from thirty to fifty
cents a dozen. The brothers Gaff ex
press but a single regret, aud that is
that they did not found their colony fif
teen years ago, when eggs brought five
dollars a dozen, and a spring chicken
was worth a pennyweight of gold dust.
We trust the time will come when
every one will use Dobbins' electric sonp
(made by Crngin & Co., Philadelphia).
Its sale is daily increasing, as is always
the case with articles of merit. Try it.
Dry Cod, per cwt. 6 00
HcrrtnR, Scaled, per box; 85
Petroleum 'Irodo 6 J( (-'
Wool California Fleece
Texafl 11 ..... Jii
Australian "
Bntter Ktate ST
Western Dairy 30
Western Yellow, 15
Wi Ktera Ordinary 13
Pennsylvania Fine 86
Cheese State Factory 16($
' Shimmed 05 9
Western 13 (4
Eggs State 18 S
AI.H1NT.
Wheat 1 85
lire Htato..... 1 10
Corn Mixed 90
Darlev State 1 80
Oats State 74
BUFFALO.
Flour 25
Wheat No. 1 Spring 1 16
Corn Mixed t 84
Oata 70
live 1 07
FOR
25 Cts.
Ws will sand FlT beantlfnl 8 P
Sonas and Five harmlna Instrumen
tal pieces. All bf popular flmposera,
and int ptibllnhed. B. W, Rlc nAnPsoK
A Co., M ualo Publishers, Uoson,MaM.
N. F. BURNHAMS
TURBINK
Water Wheel
XVnn pclflrtril, 4 yimrt mo, ind pnt
to woik in the Patent OftiM, Wah.
ln(rfMn, I). U., and Iim proved o
the brut. 10 siz made. Frlrffi
lower than any other flrat-claie
Wheel. FhnmphM fron.
N. F. BURN HAM. Yonic, PA.
ATTENTION,
WHISKERS
OWN Kits OF 1IORKKM.
Ak yoTir HnM MrVpt for
the ,IM nllnr I'AIK
They are warranted to cure
any sore nck on bnre or
mull, nr mntifi refnnrtftd.lf
minted rifrpcllnnaiir follow.
ed. Hnnd 7o. for aauiple.
Ztno Collar Fad Co.. Sola
Man ii i ft ra,Hnchanan,Mich.
The only Preparation that
ffta prfct aatiafactlon t
those wish Inn to raise Heard
Vtxrnrine " nrepared only
KaMi V,rtn warranted and sent by niatl on
De Ijaseps '
or Muiache.
Neossoary as
Boston.
A GKNTS. Chan Ohann sells at iW W
A soap. Samples 35o. Uham t)nan M'f jUo.
K 4 9n PKll lAYat boras. Teimsfres. Ad
J! 3 9Ci Areas OKO. BTIMBOH A Co.. Portland. M
m . - - -a.
ft 60
a 40
Refined. 18
88 3 83X
27 82
0 3s, Vi
2T O 38
20 (4
0 18d.
9 It
li7
17
11
14
15
IMtll TAI.IMn
I.
,K INFOIOIATION sddrss.
Hnt nlJIIl. Hwnn. 1.1
Barloy
BALTIMOUB.
Cottou Low Mldilliugs
Flour Extra
Wheat Med Western..,,
Bye. ..........
Corn xellow .
Oats Mixed
Petroleum
f DILAlieLl'UlA
Flour Ferjusylvauia Extra
Wheat Western Bd
llyo...,
Corn Yellow
Mixed
Oats Mixed
Petroleum Crude. trj,
I 40
1 85
(4 1 10
& 1 8'J
9 75
7 00
fi 1 16
G 84
9 70
3 1 07
9 1 40
TEA
M HARRIS,
AGKNTS WANTKD KVPRYWHKKK.-l be
choicest In the worin-imporwra 1
st Company in A roerica staple art1
n rices lar-
iDanr in A roerica staple mrocie imww
1 1.. 1 - in...ir hsai indnrnmonii
-don't want time-sand for Wreo'w R0,BjyLT
WKU.8. 43 Vesey Street, New York. P. O. Box 1 87.
1W 15)J
8 00 (4 8 00
1 84 Ml 35
1 l'i (4 1 15
'jo (4 ao
OH (4 69
0GX4 W.
t 25
1 81
1 H8
90
Hi
71
9 00
(4 1 85
04 1 08
(4 00
(4 90
(4 72
Reflned, 3H
A Plague of Rats.
A Rnngoon correspondent of tlio Lou
don Ttmcs wntea to that lournal ns
follows : While Bengal Las lately strug
gled through n famine crisis, the Kurens
couutry, lying on tue counties of iiur
niah j.roper, has narrowly escaped a
crisis of the same kind, but in this in
stance rats, and not drought, were the
cause of the scarcity. It appears that
certain parts of Burmah are periodically
visited by a plague of rats. Hosts of
them march across county, and attack
the roots of the crops and the grain iu
the villages, aud actually drive out the
people, and cause whole villages to be
deserted by their depredations. Such a
plague had appeared near Tonnghoo,
and some suffering had arisen in conse
quence, but the government appear to
have provided food for those in want of
it, and all fear of famine is how averted.
A forester, but a few weeks si ice, as he
was going to visit the teak forests rented
by a large firm in Bombay, witnessed
the passage of an army of rats ns they
crossed the Sittang. Ho was at that
time gliding down stream in his boat,
and the boatman called his attention to
a large black moss swarming down the
nigh banks. They turned out to be rats,
nnd as they swam across tho river they
kept a kind of military formation. He
represents their numbers to have been
myraids. They passed close to the
boat, and wero large field rats. The
late Dr. Mason, in his book on Buhmah,
mentions the plague they were to the
couutry, but until their depredations
had spread to such a large extent as they
did lost year their presence was ignored.
It appears that they generally keep near
hilly couutry, and scour the plains at
seasons when tho nut3 or fruits in the
hills fail them.
A Good Thiinr.
To prevent the numerous accidents to
which railroad trains are liable from one
car jumping the track, it is proposed to
apply to cars a kind of shoe, consisting
01 a clamp-like arrangement which is af
fixed between tho wheels of each truck.
This runs about two inches about the
rail, and if anything happens to throw
the wheels from the track, tho clamp nt
once grasps the rails, holds tho car on
the track, nnd brings the train to n
speely halt, buch a shoe will, it is
claimed, prove a groat saving of railroad
rolling stock, and will add one-third to
the strength of the truck, it being con
structed of iron and weighing nbout five
hundred pounds. It is found, by ex
periments made with cars provided with
this device, that the arrangement insures
perfect security against the class of acci
dents it is deigned to meet; and it is
also estimated that, on account of the
additional strength which such nn at
tachment must necessarily supply, a car
must last twice as long, on an nverage,
with as without it.
The Japanese Magnetic Fish.
The most curious thlnie In the world. The source of
endless amusement to old and young;. Tulls dispositions,
lempernmem, etc. went nnnt-pjiia lor . cts. Aaoiess,
( ll( IMIII .All! 1.1.1
V 1 11., t oni ord, N. II
WAXTHII AJKN'TS everywhere to canvas for
Tl our pre.it I llieilllllll ISmiK, worthy Iht jm(iaf
vn'iet of esoerienced admit, tor pnrticnlara addr
tho publisher, B. 11. RU.SSKT.t,, Boston. Mass.
THK BUST tn Mm World,
It Gives Universal Satisfaction.
WONKKKITI, l:-mio!iiy,
40 Mi more Kmnd to 1M. Kinur.
SAY KM MII.K, E(i4iS, Arc,
HO Voir t 8:LVillKH Will l)UV a COW.
NO MOItU Ml!ll llltlCAK.
Whiter, Ltuhter. Sweeter, Richer.
I'll IIVIIODV I'rnlHPN It.
The Ladies sre alt in Love with it.
SI l.l.M l.lk HOT CAKKS.
Cf"Send nt once for Circular to
uv.n. K. JANTZ CO..
17(1 Ounne St., New York.
In Actual Use :
MORE THAN
55,000
tey Organs!
MANUFACTURED BY
u ESTEY & CO.,
BHATlXEIIOltO, VT.
' iEl TOIL Iu.UBTRATEII C AT A !.Wi r R.
Dr. J. Walker's IWiloriiia tin
egar Hitters nro a purely Vegetable
preparation, mado chiefly from tho na
tive herbs found on tho lower rnniecs of
the Sierra Nevada mountains of Califor
nia, tho medicinal proporties of which
aro extracted therefrom without the uso
of Alcohol. Tho question is almost
daily asked, "What is tho cause of tho
unparalleled success of Vikf.gar Bix
TEKSt" Our answer is, that they remove
tho cause of disease, and tho patient re
covers his health. They nro tlio groat
blood pin fier and a lito-giving principle,
a pence Renovator nnd Invigorator
of tho 1 stem. Never beforo iu the.
history o tho world lias ft meiiicine -y
componn. )d possessing tlio .j!!
qualities f Vi.nkoar Hitters in neflllII$
sick 01 e cry uiseu muu " ,- . -are
a eo tie Purgative as well ns a Ionic,
relieving Congestion or Inanimation !
tho Liver and Visceral Organs in Bihotw
Diseases ,
The pioperties of Dr. valkers
Tinkoar 13ITTKRS are Aperient, Diophoretio,
Carminative, Nutritious, Laxative, Dnreo,
Sedative Counter-irritant Sudontic, Altera
tive, au'i Auti-Iiilious.
1.. II. McDOHAltD A CO..
.ruistsandGon. A eta.. Sun Fmnclson. CallfomJ,
icJ cor. nf Waahiriirton anil Charlton Su.. N. Y.
Sold by all n.-uggists ami Dealer.
The Ways
of Women,
ay Prof. J. V. C. 8MlTH,M.lBofth mat ronftrtabl booVt
var tuned from Amtrieo prM. Dr. IUU
J a itu M ic twt or inroftftUTlo!. Th lS'w York
World rt,' It i a book rttL or noun nwrnmrtom ru
torn ift-xita. Dr. Mtb,tbelbrtod Frofh pbyalclan,
'KrmrMoi ! wmiT, TWicit-rr ! itiaic A rniod lp
por'tmity fr writ. Umknior,7t WHY SIT STILL, com.
pldfnlrteofhftr'l tl-rMt ThU b'-ok will Mil. 8ri(! for elrcolwt
J-.T whw. IirSTIV, OILMAN CO., lUrtfofd, Conn.
N. Y. N. U.-No. 19
INKS
The best. All Colors. One Wafer
makes .i ounces. atnil and Circu
Inn, mailed for IO cents snd stamp
DKKIAMCK NKKIH.K CO.. ' np.ndwar. N. V .
WASTED
5
NEEDLES
FOB ALL
can b obtntned at
about one-half tho
asual rates bj order-
Ins (iintct. Miier ,
40 eta. twr dot.; Wheelnr k Wilton, lid cte.: Howe's,
50 ct. ; Orover A Bkr. fiO cU. ; and nt hn in propor
tion. IndoBBtbe amount and Needles will be returned
bT tint mull. Address,
' IIEKUM K NFKDI.K TO.,
Hnt Broadway. .'i..v Vnrli.
A DAY. AKonta wanted, male and female.
Address Kureka M'fg Uo.. Buchanan, Mloh
$22
$200
month to aa-ents eTerrwhera. Address
KXUKLSIOR M'FG OO.. Bnohanan.MlcH
RDDsict re ici-uit.
horse power t and 6
bales either hay or
cotton without tramp-
Thirty bales of hay
per hour. Twenty
bales or cotton
per hour.
i RK.DEDERICK &CO
1 ALBANV.N.V
HAT
Sl-nd fnr
FXiUKOSe
Dunham & Sons, Manufacturers,
Wa Grooms, 18 EastUth Street,
Established 1834.) NSW YOUR.
E
7VKUV KA3III.Y WANT!
hold hy Aicents.
ev I
Address M. W. LOVBLL, Krie.Pa.
K.DEOEhICK
ftRrEIUaUAlUIB PIES1
' VOR AGENTS In our ten New
Novelties. Just out. Needed In
ivery bouse, nnmpie aou ciruu-
lara free bj mail. 11. U. WH1TK A CU ftewara, R. J.
$ MONEYS
Established 185S.
1T. LaNCCLL'i NEW ASTHMA
nsTliiv aHniKirltMl twenty yi btwen life and
r iiieaUti witii ASTHMA, I Xpert raD ted by emu
l i o until n root! fttnl herbi and tDbkllnc loo mad
! lei ne. 1 fortuoately discovered a wonderful I
i reciedT and cure cur for Asthma and Cat arrn.
I Warranted to relieve tnatantly to the patient can I
He down to reet and eleen comfortably. Drue- I
JHeta are supplied with sample packages for rmem I
distribution. Call and get one, or address
IB. LAiGFLL. A units CmcIi. Oh Is.
room oj urafgistB. uu-e.M A-acaaf o, 07 atku, aao
tmt.i Ac;s:vrs
witth. ?PB"S fl
i5a "r Nt. Ftrahnuw of Salt Lave city, tcr -gjf'a
vi-ars tin lie of a Slormon lliph Priest 1
troducttoo bj Mi htowc. 'Inis story of .4
..Oman's experience lay. rare tno "niiwtfn ujc-
if mysteries, secret fifin. ew;. 01 ins ,'iitrmi'ii. a
S"tctde-awaJx woman we. taem." llngnt. rtire
VJ anil Good, it i. tin Srl new ono em, eciuauy
evrr-luuino with sood tlnni;. lor all. It l popular j-'crr
wLers with everybodT. anj outiella all ether book. tnm.'..
tots, iiliniitcrs tar " (.'' ' -' Lmlncnt wotr.a
.r.uorw i!. Everybody snt itt and esents arc reum
lr.ru 10 to SO a day I S.'.th (.V-wm noic m pr:nl V.
atr.t.V10 so. trii.tr aecnu V-m. tl otmiM- f HA
we will mail Outnt f'n-e to ttice who will canyuM. UA
Mmr.hlrU with lull O.rUCular., term., etc. m :i( Irt J
Adiiitua A. 1. WoarmaoToN a- Co.. llaruord Conr
JUST
BOOK
YOU
CAN
SELL
MONEY IN IT Sl'KE! Joatcot
Cuetul, lJundwiiTie, Cheap, beuseveiy
w iere. A rare chance. Also,
Nc-V IViAfS, CH4RiJ. Etc.
Our new chart. CHRISTIAN
tJKAi'K.is a splendid sicceas. Cin
cinnati prices same as New York. Set.4
fortennstoK.O. BRIIXiMAN.S bare
lay St..N.V A ITU W. 4th St.,;ln0.
AGKNTS WANTED ft,.
cheapMSt and fasten selllnn Hible evr pultliahed.
lor our extra if rins io K-ni. n
NATIONAL PUBLISH) t CO.. PhllndplpMa. Pa.
Send
fnr Mnnlpv1! CVlebrai-
ti hut in th world.
T2 mairniflwnt aaraplfB to win wnrk with Bent for 25
cts. Address 11. C. MANLKV, Fushlonable fcupiw,
3IO Washlnffton Street, Boston, Maas.
$10 PER DAY
ed Vlsitlna snd Business tiards.tbe
at21 i to S'5 I'KIt It V-Send for "OhroBiri
JJiU catalimue. J. II. llUKr OHII'M SDNS. Hosttas
$250
A MOVm Agents wsnted timf
where. Business honorable and first
class. Particulars sent free. Addrea
W OKTIt t;0., St. Ixinls. Mo.
'I'liis new Truss Is worn
wltb pel rent 0 O m f r. r
llltbt end day. Adapt
iselt t't every motinu ol
the body, retaining Htip
ture under tho linrdi'St
ererclse or sevoi est strain
until nonnanently oured.
Sold cheap by th
Elastic Truss Co.,
No. 683 Broadway, N. V. City,
and sent by mall. Oalloraend tor Olrmlar. snd be onreol
i K PER ItA V Oommlsslon, or SSO a woelt ai
fj ary and Kxpensns. We offer It and will liny
Apply now. 6. WKBBK R A CO.. Marion. O.
About Labor.
John Walter, M. P., principal
Mr.
proprietor of tho Loudon Time, in a re
cent address, calls the " gospel " of
many bad workmen in various parts of
the world the adage that " good work is
bad for trade." Iu other words, thor
oughly and honestly manufactured ar
ticles " last too long. J. he tendency ol
competition is cheapness rather than ex
cellence: but those who follow this idea
forget that the reputation of the work
man is found iu the durability of his
work, and that when an article breaks or
falls in the hands of the purchaser, the
character of the maker breaks or falls
with it. The discipline of labor is to
teach conscientious thoroughness. The
workman fbould take pride in his work,
or, to use a significant expression, " put
his character into it." The sentences
with which the address concludes are:
No station is bo high as to be exen.pt
from this duty; none so low as not to be
dignified by the faithful discharge of it.
The works themselves upon which all
this labor is bestowed must, of neces
sity, perish: but the qualities which
have been gained by the faithful aud
honest discharge of the daily duties of
life will endure forever, and hud scope
for their exercise in a higher and nobler
sphere.
Antidote
When any
Or remedy for any particular class of
disease obtains a wide-ppreading noto
riety, it is but reasonable to suppose that
it must merit the popularity it receives.
It is within our province to mention that
Dr. J. Walker's California Vinegar Bit
ters, so long and favorably known as the
safest and most reliable remedial agent
for the cure of liver, kidney, bladder,
and glandular diseases, mental and
physical debility, and all complaints
emanating from a corrupt state of the
blood, etc., are in great demand. o
satisfied are we of the intrinsio worth of
this medicine, that we do not hesitate to
notice it in our oolumns. It is well to
mention that this medicine is compound
ed of roots, herbs, and flowers of Cali
fornia, and has no fiery material or al
cohol used in its preparation. We can
add no better eulogium than the fact
that we use it constantly iu our own
family, and each member thereof par
takes of it, when necessary, according
to direonoua.
The "Housekeeper" of our Health.
The liver is the (neat depurating or blood
cleansing organ of the HVHtom. Set the groat
houHtkeeper of our health at work, and the
foul cormptioDH wbich gender in the Wood and
rot out, as it wero, tho machinery of life, are
gradually expelled from the HTBteiq, For thin
purpose Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Dieeovcry,
with small daily doncfl of Dr. Pierce's rieasaiit
Purgative Pellets are pre-eminently the articles
needed. They cure every kind of humor from
the woi'rt scrofula tn the common pimple,
blotch or eruption. Great eating ulcers kindly
lieal under tlieir mighty curative influence.
Virulent blood poisons that lurk iu the Byxtom
are by tbem robbed of tlieir terrors, and by
their persevering and somewhat protracted ime
the most tainted system may be completely
renovated and built up anew. Enlarged glands,
tumors aud swellings dwindle- away aud disap
pear under the influence of their great resol
vents. Bold by all dealers in medicines. CYmi.
As Buoad as Civilization. The agent
of the Wilson sewing machine company will, in
a few days, sail from Ban Francisco for Chili in
South America, where lie will open a brunch
house aud exhibit the woi ld-reuowned Wilson
shuttle sewing machine at the grand exposition
to be held at Santiago, under the auspices of
that government. I3v this step the Wilson
sowing machine company will complete the cir
cuit of the globe. They have already immense
agencies iu China, Japan, llritish Indies, Eng
land, France, and throughout Boutli America.
Supreme in its superiority over all other sewing
machines, the Wilson goes on widening its
field year after year, carrying the blessing of a I
cheap, capable and perfect sewing machine to
tho remotest haunts of civilization. Machines
will bo delivered at any railroad station in this
countv, free of trUBiortation charges, if or
dored through the company's branch bouse at
827 and H29 Broadway. Now York. They send
an elegant catalogiie'and chromo circular free
on application. This company want a few more
good agents. Com.
Pomeroy 4 Co. make the best Elastic; Truss
ever invented. Address 741 Broadway, N. Y.
Com.
Davis' Pain Killer. This article
needs no comments from us, but the real worth
of so valuable a compound compels us to give
publicity to it. The Pain Killer we keep con
stantly at hand, and have done so f or a number
of years, and have administered it for ails of
all descriptions, botu external sua internal,
and have ever found it to be the best remedy
extant. We well recollect its first introduction
fur nublie natron a eo : It was then Bold in a few
shops iu the citv : look at it now the world
are Its patrons. Bom everywuere. wn.
T.ll,HO I II KAIt.WS nt Cost of Improvements.
Kaw Indiim ltevrve I.nnd. at four annual Davnmnts.
Address. Kllll KRTS A 1, 1S.KK, Council Urore, Kans,
One Hollar's Worth
of ropular nooks, or
cliolce Music, sent tree.
Inclose stamp for l!ata-
InRUe. Aflaro'S r-Mll.a.
N. Y. PIJHI.ISlllNfl
CO., IU!) South Seventh
Ntreet, t'ullnitelplila, r-a.
BOOKS
FREE!!
rBACB HARK, F1TKKTKD.
The best and cheapest Paint In the
World for Iron, Tiu. or Wood. For sale
by Dealers everywhere. PRINCES' METALLIC
PAHS'T CO.. Mnnnft'rein, 90 Cedar St., Now York.
fi-C A.XJTIOJV. Purchasers will please
see that our name ar.d trade mark are on each and
every package, fieud for a Circular.
I Geo, P. Rowell & Co.
lyrKBHASKA CHllAlt STONH. An Infallible
11 Moth Preventive, mora effective than Camphor,
SnufT, etc., and fies from any ohjBCtionslile odnr.
Pries g. cts, ffBI.SH A tM., Hon TO, Brooklyn. NY.
5
w.
Of lite lrilliHl l'nrlM tuu ftvtr Kfiw
with )our uume buudtmmely printed on
thum. sent. DOSt-DHhi. unon ronMiit ttt i
cents. Your frieudi will all want them
WIlHn iiiptf aufi VOUl-4. AiHlrnM
O. CANNON. -tO koeeland Stiwf, BtwUin, Maw
The Croton Crape.
Two flue two-year-old Vines of this ejrcelleut White
Grape sunt ly mini, print-paid, for One Dollar
K. . lilU.KlUl.li, ummn ii.tna.nK r. u., n. i.
Continued nr Snntlnnai Htories In the
ii:oi'i,r.H m;i(;i:.c, h lawe pi.ses
fcVdry week. 5 V (Cirsoid. Sunt on trinl 3
months for only .IO cents. A Special Agent wanted for
I oauh tt'wn, to whom ne furnish Advertising facilities an
Knot! pay, n. IV. " I .-HHIIwnwr. H'mm. .'.nr.-.
ETDII CDCV or FITS oured bythause of Robb
CrlLLlO I Ki'ii.KPTic Kkmediks. Trial Fack-
BBKiBBBBBNSBBSBnsi age.rc. for circulars, evidence 01
uu.;eb!1uu;...iduiew llUiSS ltUUiS.. Kluhmond, lnd.
POnTATH.'B
SODA FODNTAISS
$40, $50, $75, & $100.
GOOD, DURABI.K, AND OliftAP
bhiuped Keady for Use.
Manufartnred liy CIIAP.HAN
CO., .IIiuMhuii, lllll.
X" Send for a t'atr.loitue.
OK IIAIttiH, a Trescrlptlun thataij
1 Di uiwist will i-.it up, tliat la a Positive Cure tu
Ouiuin Katiiiic and DruiikeiiiieHS. Address,
Pkof. J. 1'. W HililS. Charlestown, Mass.
A -- 'I.TVT'w! oil bur sei ; steady work at home
AljJ jil I n Valualil snmpli's and terms, K
oimta. SIMPSON A SMITH. Orlluniit Street, N. .
We should not hosituto to recommprid
to any friend of onre, Parson' Purqaliw J'tlls.
They are scientifically prepared, and are adapt
ed to all Uie purposes of good purgative
medicine. torn.
Decidedly the bestremoiiy that has
ever been discovered for rheumatism, swollen
or stiff joints, flesh wounds, eprainn, bruises,
cuts and burns, is Johnson's Anodyne Lini
ment. We use it and always looommeua it to
our friends. Com,
' Holden's Book on Birds," 128 rages,
tbirty-two engravings of birds, twenty-eight of
cages, etc., tilled with useful information, aud
should be iu the possession 01 every one wuu
has or ever means to have a feathered pet. It
is the only book of the kind, and one that will
nrava a ral Vileaninor to birds. Price 25 cents.
For sale by all newsdealers or by mail. Address
V. If. Holaeu, V ilowaoiu square, uusuuu, jubob.
Com,
Dvsnfnsia is a hvdra-headed monster,
from which oriirinate nearly all "the ills the
human flexh u heir tn." The Peruvian Svrup,
a protected solution of the protoxide of iron, is
a Ions-tried and well-established remedy for
this dutreeelnfc complaint. It has oured thou
sands when eUisr isms diss havs fd. Com
The Improved Fsuccesa Wnaliiim Mnrhlna.
j i iu.iiimi worth in 3 years-
..uu Kira univer.al sulitiao
timi. It washes all sizes of
elothlnK, IneludinK Ked
Snre.ids.or Lace tjollara.nltli.
out injury. Hulf dozen aliirU
are oleaned in 8 minutes, in.
cludiiiK soiled wristbands.
Power Machines for Laun-
driea tn oraor. Kor descrip-
iih r.-inipiiiHi aonress
YOUR ,lK; ..
Y ork. Pn.
LJSl and expenses a month to ssrents. Address
tJ.IHI A. STOllDAKI). Jnnesville, Mich.
sts? A VI KK. Aaenta wanted evenrwhapa. Foi
O 4 O outht loc. KlllTi-H A WaLKKR. Dayton, Ohio
PXUBff1
Habit Cured
A certain and sure cute, without Inconvenience,
ici a', home An antldot'j that stands purely on lu
t7a :nt?rlta. Send for uif quarterly mapulne (.It
rn'4 you :wthtng couts inlng ccrtlllcates of hundreds
uiKSlia va been permanently cured. I claim to navs
tli0373rad and produced the fihst, obioihal ad
LT trSB CUBE FOB OPIUM KAT1NO.
UM. S. II. t O-LIKS, Lit Porte, lnd..
Oii "IS. "
OPPOKTl'MTY foi
ala bnatictal specula
tion. ISIOU aometimea
brings MIO.OOO. Send
cents for Book KiTlna- the secrets and .splaining
tha liest pain i uvestiucnt of ths day. Address Hoi
luILj, New York.
Free ! Free ! ! Free ! 1 !
The Pioneer.
A handsoma Illustrated nawapapar eontalnlns Infor
mation for ovoiybody. 'K-lla how and when, to socura a
homk ihaap. bt.M rate to all i-auis or iu
Wiiui.u. ,in.,...n..Tiu,,vn tiv.
It eontawaine Kr.w n..tn.y -
wita other interesllug mailer iouuu ouiy iu ut papa..
Send for it at Once I
It will only cost you a Postal Card.
New number lor April just out.
Addr O. F. AVIS.
l.nnd Commissioner IT. P. K. U.
Qui nil a, Neb.
OOYOUR OWN PRINTINCl
Jai printing press.
For rrofeaslonui ana Amaieiir
Printers, fck-linuls, Murletlea, Man.
utllf-turers, Mrc-banta, and others ills
the BEST ever invented. 1U.OOO In use.
,Ten atyles, Prieea from $5.00 to $160.00
BENJ.O. WOODS & CO. ManuTrsan'e
I dealers in all kioi Prlntlna Material.
beud stamp lor catalofnie.! v x suerai ofc. bwwi
kill
&
. rn A A t" - - J . Ti rr VI
fw I
loaoAcaa oo. rHiL
p AQUIOIVISf Smith's Illustrated Pattern Bazaar
I r El I KsW IVWl Th. nl. Ma-azlne that IMPORTS STYLES
and 8ELLS Patterns of them. Only tl.lO a year, with premium. eeoeiow:i
Saitli'i Instant Dress Eieyator."
Jf Tlii. Ct'T .how. th.
asm
stint; -"ii
L;i-kJ
w llli.arratA tha atvlas of the
praaeot day la the height of
xasnion m fans sail
New-York. Oet our
Magazine and see
(or yourself.
tSeo below.)
SMITH ORGAN GO.
Bostoii, 3VX.s.
Then Standard Mnttt rutnenta
Sold by Music Dealers Everywhere.
Agents Wanted in Every Town.
Bold throughout ths United Slataa on ths
INSTALLMENT PLAN
Thai la, OS s System of Monthly Payments.
Pwchuera should ask for the Smith Amebicam OsoasT,
Vatsionues aaa iuu parueuiers ee ayuucaiion.
tLfcv k present day la tho height or 1" X
zTZs.' S". fashion in Paris and r"!'TSrV
6' . 4v
' DoDer Fart of
the Skirt (.wrong
aiu ouii, win.
tlii eelor"
fixed Id. U kttpt
I tbn skirt from tlis
1 flit It. it oops
tba tklrt m
Taatef 1 "
Faataionable
iiauuer. U d.w nil tiw fullnes
ITlhs b.ck. tuklnr
front. M Ii 8vo mow than Tea
from One DreM to1.?6,
lAdft will nna m
. i . -Anv-niinoe. but a
BavtDfT. whtn n.ed in tlilr OOm
xnoa liot'a drBea.
1 hry mtt chxap snouirb
m hsv oris la each
die.t. Piics, only 45
Cent a, mailed. Ba
Fremium below.
340B.
TABLIER WAIST-Isbotl. neitsiid
. ii. . . . . .1 ...... ...... ... .Amiss.
dun wltli alkliiit uklrt, It Is one or the
mn.t .lailraltle ilPHltrilM IliruilJ kvwu. mm
luomlni lor etllier the. tont or slight
lisure, anu tne issj " "7 , ,
All slisi, Pattern, tvim ciosia iubum,
60 t elite, maiieti
" riiv.Tpcrf-l CLOTH WODBL wilh .v.r, psiura,
-!,ul. ,U. W bo. i.. ..t tl.-r.'k V,!Sm A
cut 1 tit. I'slLra. iwy."f.w ww.
Aar aUr i I'll. ir- -vll.1 an Mt af prlss.
.7 ... ....... a r..r the i resent stvle. It will keep Its place and produce
n srrareful and eleicant effect, without trouble of tying back., l'utleru, wltU
cloth model. 5U stents, lnalled. KEG PllEMlUM.
I WILL 01 VL the PATTERNS
and ODELS of BOTJ of the
above Illustrations, ana tvyu or me ntYHmna -
(See Cut), f REE AS PREMIUM to the person who sends mo
OWE DOLLAR AND TEW CENTS for OWE YFAR'S subscription
to "Smith's Illustrated Pattern Bazaar," before my
t-ALL POST;PA.D.t BURDETTE SMITH,
p. O. Box 6055 914 Broadway. WowYork City.
AY
LING SKIRT
The above walk
ing: skirt Is the very best pat
My Last Offer!
NOTE. uM
Thos. who sr. alr.adr Subscribers, to " SMITH'SPATT
: ill ..uu iu. anu i nstrs . t ..n. - 'j-
Vlssss aissa vmi rm III
thalr Subsoripiloa
SB PREMIUM.