THE FARM AND GAKDEH. CHOKED CATTLE. / Tt Is dangerous to try to force or push the obstruction down. Animals have been killed by this process. Some dairy men keep a limber stick with a knob on tho end to punch the obstruction down, but this method is also a dangerous one. A better method is to draw tho animal's head, while in a stanchion, up with a stout rope, and fasten to the top; then, having previously malted one-half pint of lard, place it in a bottlo while warm, pour it down tho cow's throat; sho will struggle, and the more violent the bet ter, as the melted grease will make the throat slippery, and then you can easily work tho obstruction up with tho hand. Sometimes they will cough it up. COOKED FOOD FOB POULTRY. Having heard much said about the ef ficacy of cooked food in producing eggs I have tried it, writes a New Jersey far mer, with, I think, considerable success. I boil potato parings and other stuil from the kitchen and thicken it with wheat bran. 1 commonly give it to tho hens cold, though many say feed warm food, but 1 have not discovered that to make any difference. lam quite certain that feeding much corn is bad 'for laying liens —it will make fat but not eggs. For quite a whilo I gave my hens no grain at all, but always some wheat bran with their boiled food, and this was the time when I got the most eggs.— Hew York World. TAR-WATER FOR CABBAGE WORMS. According to no less an authority than Mr. A. S. Fuller, tar-water is an effective kill-cure for tho cabbage worm. It is stated that Mr. Fuller's early cabbages were being rapidly destroyed by these worms, but "one sprinkling with tar water, applied with a watering-pot, de stroyed every worm and egg." The tar water is prepared by placiug a quart or two of coal-tar in a tub or barrel, and filling up with water. In about forty eight hours the water will smell strongly of tar, when it may be applied to the plants with a syringe or common water ing-pet. If tar-water destroys the eggs, as affirmed, and does not injure the growth nor the quality of the cabbage, frequent seasonable applications of it, thus destroying the eggs, would seem to be all that is required as a complete and practical cabbage-worm remedy.— 2?eio York Witnm. LIVING FROM A GARDEN. It is no exaggeration to say that a good garden well cared for will furnish a large family with much of the food they eat and nearly everything except bread,meat and butter from early in June until frosts cut off the supplies. If the garden bo what it should be it will give far more than half of the money value of what is consumed from the farmer's table. It is by making most of the advantages that farmers possess that they can stem the prevailing tide from country to the city. It ought to be stemmed; but what ad vantage can the city resident see,if when he visits his farmer friends he finds somo of the family posted off In haste to tho city to get vegetables, often canned, which a little care and labor on the farmer's part would enable him to supply from his own garden. It is true the farmer says ho cannot spare the time. Why can not he? Simply because ho devotes so much of his labor to growing crops, which after selling do not leave him enough to pay his hired help. That alone ought to satisfy him that a change in the programme is needed. Suppose next year he concludes to grow less to sell, to hire less holp and devote more of his own time to the garden. It is, or ought to be, the richest spot on his farm, and will pay better than any other for the labor bestowed upon it.— Boston Cultivator. FEED DOTO TIIE MEADOWS. It lins been generally taught by our j best farmers that it was wrong to pasture meadows in the fall and that the best re sults could only be attained by allowing the aftergrowth togo down to protect the roots in winter and to enrich the soil for future production, says 8. E. Rice in New England Ilomentead. Assenting to that theory without bringing it to the test of experiment was the greatest mistake that I ever made in farming. To-day I assert that it is only theory, and that actual experiment on many farms will prove it a false theory. Twenty years ago, while keeping a diury of fifty to sixty cows, my practice was strictly in accordance with this theory and no pas turing of meadows in the fall was al lowed. A friend of mine, one of the best farmers of my acquaintance, told me that my practice was wrong and took me to one of bis fields to show an ex periment, proving that the removal of the second growth was no detriment to the succeeding crop. He bad moved ard removed the second growth from a part j of the field the fall before, leaving a part uncut. Tho fall growth <vas not so heavy as to smother or kill the grass, and if the above theory were true, tho succeeding crop should have been much the best ou the uncut portion of the field. Exactly the opposite of this was true, and when I saw the field just before haying the ; boundary between the two parts was plain enough to attract the attention of anyone passing by. The part from which the fall growth had been removed I judged to be twenty-five per cent, better thau the other. ESSENTIALS IN GItAFB GROWING. Mildew and rot aro the great obstacles In the way of profitable grape culture in this country, and while a knowledge of the remedies and preventives that have in many cases saved valuable crops is important to any one who would engage in grape-growing, it is even more im portant that the climatic conditions for success should also be understood. The mildew which attacks the under surface Is encouraged by dull, cloudy weather, with occasional showers, or when heavy dews are deposited where tho moisture cannot be readily evaporated. The best grape climato or location! appears to b« where dews are light or | altogether ab ' sent. Instances are given where grapei on a trellis under cover t have- escaped mildew and rot, while'thowtnear by, but without protection, haveiM-iffercd. Per sons who train vines up <side of • house under the eaves of a projecting roof, find the most perfect! fruit at th« highest point, where it • is«'lcast exposed to rain and dew. The favorable locations I for / grape<cul ture will usually be foundieither.sur rounded by large bodies ot 'water that modify the climatic conditions, of theii islands and the shore districts of thcmain lands, or on hillsides at certain eleva tions. As stated in a Government re port, where hills and valleys , are. closely and distinctly defined there exists at cer tain elevations on the hillsido \a . zono 01 belt where dews are light ori unknown and where frosts are modi filed.. This zone exists in all countries tliat . are trav ersed by high mountains and Idoep val leys. In a paper read before the Horticultural Society on "Horticulture in the Mountain Regions of'tha South," it is said there are as many of tfaose belts as there are ridges on hills, or knobs reaching two or three hundredifeet above the level of the adjacent vakleys, and where localities are foundXrauging from 200 to 1000 feet abovo tho, general sur face of the country, there is greater or less immunity from spring frosts. Fur thermore, the mountains ano less, subject to heavy dews than tho lower grounds, and for this reason better adapted to tho growth of the vines. For any extensive culturetof the grape the importance of selecting a location favored by nature cannot l»o overesti mated. Where mildew and. rot prevail successful grape culture cannot be attained without constant and expensive vigilance in the application of preventives, which even under good management do not always fully protect.—New York World. FARM AND OARDEN NOTES. Farm for profit. Keep up tho fertility. Good crops reduce the* cost. The best asters are ♦ the transplanted ones. The daphne iudica requires good drainage. Feed economically but not at •the>ex pense of growth. The cost of the various crops\wilHvary almost every year. No one season can be taken.as a true guide for tho next. Sell stock whenever they are fully ready, irrespective of price. In threshing take pnins to seetthat all the straw is stacked carefully. Lat.ania borbonica palms are widely used for decorative purposes. Summer pruning is the best if fol lowed up properly every year. With lioga n quick growth and early maturity determines the profit. After all the crops aro all harvested is a good time to haul out manuro. Tie up roses and chrysanthetmims and carnations before they bend and break. Very comfortablo quarters must be provided if pigs are wintered over with profit. Allowing fruit togo to waste is to lose part of the farm profits that should bo saved. In a majority of cases it will be better to buy whatever brau is needed early in the fall. Pinching the ends of fuofoias not only improves shape,but gives abundance of flowers. The new abutilon eclipse not only has fine foliage but retains its blossoms and blooms freely. Uran can be fed to the milk cows nearly every day in the year with profit if milk is an item. While there is time see that plenty of shelter is provided for all the stock that is to be wintered over. If you want to get swamp muck the dry summer time is the best to do it in. The muck is lighter when dry. After the stables and sheds aro thor oughly cleaned out a good coat of white wash will make them healthier. The quality of fodder for feeding is often considerably lessened by allowing it to get too ripe before cutting. A cheap hog and poultry house can readily be made to return a good profit, have water, dry and convenient. If you have nothing better lay in a good supply of dry earth to use as an ab sorbent in your stables when needed. Apply lime whitewash in your stables, your hen house, your pig pen and every where that insects can lay their nits. During the cool weather in the early fall is the best time for fattening hogs, and they should be pushed as rapidly as ; possible. Two items are importaut in draining. One is to secure a good outlet and the other is to provide a regular descent for the water. Cut oats as soon as the meat in the i kernel gets doughy. Tho straw will ■ then be bright and about as good to feed J as timothy hay. | Cornnieal is excellent for fatteuiug pigs, but it needs to have fed with it something more nitrogenous to make muscle and promote growth. Always leave a strip for mowing be tween your growing crop and the pasture fenco. It will prevent cattle from reach i ing over and breaking the fence. Do not be afraid to furnish your cows a shade for fear they will not feed enough. They make milk when chewing the cub and not when filling the stomach. An iron spindle topped by a barjel is to be erected by the Light House De partinent on Rhode Island Ledge. The people of Laurenceburg, Tcnn., are trying to raise funds for a monument | to Davy Crockett. HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. CTTKRUY SOUP. ~ Cherry soup is nice served cold. Use one and a half quarts of nice ripe cherries and three pints of water. Boil one quart of tho cherries until they beaotne pulpy, iwccten to taste and strain. Stone the one-half quart of cherries left, and with one-half of a teacupful of sago put into the soup, and boil until the sago is clear, not dissolved.— Brooklyn Citizen. STEWED CUCUMBERS. 'Stewed cucumbers may be an unknown 3ish to some cooks. They are a novelty, however-, in the vegetable line, and this Is tho way to prepare them: Peel and cut cucumbers in quarters; take out the iceds, and lay them on a cloth to drain, [{oil tho pieces in flour when dry and fry in butter. The butter must bo hot be fore tho cucumber is put on the pan. When they are a light brown remove them from the fire and place them on a ileve to drain. Fry some onions in the tame butter, and when brown put them, with the cucumbers, into a saucepan and sover with gravy. Stew slowly until they ire tender; then take out the cucum bers, thicken the gravy with flour, let it boil up once, then season with salt aud pepper. Putin the cucumbers and as soon as they are warm serve. FAMOUS MACCAItONI PIE. A celebrated chef, whose niaccaroni pie has added considerably to his fame, Buys his recipe reads as follows: Take a piece of gravy beef, cut in small pieces, put it into a saucepan with an onion sliced and a piece of butter, toss it on the firo until the onion and pieces of meat are browned, a bouquet of sweet herbs, a carrot cut in pieces, spices, pepper and salt to taste, a few mushrooms and a fair allowance of tomato sauce. Let the whole simmer for a couple of hours, then strain and skiin o£E the superfluous fat. Put tho boiled niaccaroni into a saucepan with a piece of butter, plenty of grated Parmesan cheese, and as much of the sauce or gravy as it will absorb; toss it on the firo for a few minutes, and put it by until wanted. Make a nico pie paste, line with it a tin mould previously but tered, uniting the joints carefully with tho wliito of eggs. Have ready some very small fillets ot breast of chicken just cooked with butter in a covered tin in tho oven, sonio cooked ham or ox tonguo cut in dice, some truffles and mushrooms cut in convenient pieces and cooked in the gravy used to dress tho niaccaroni. Fill the lined mould with all these things in judicious proportions, letting the niaccaroni predominate, and adding during the process a little more sauco or gravy and a duo allowance of Parmesan cheose; cover up tho mould with a disk of paste, unite the edges carefully and bake in a moderate oven for about an hour. Turn out of tho mould carefully and serve. HOUSEHOLD niNTS. Silver that is not iti constant use can be kept bright by packing it iu oatmeal. To keep silver from tarnishing apply with a soft brush a coating of collodion dissolved in alcohol. Steel knives that are slightly oiled, then wrapped in tissue-paper, will keep an indefinite time without rusting. An uncovered soap-dish is the best kind to use. The air dries the water and prevents the soap from getting soft. Old people and young children need the sun. The more they bask in its light the better their chauces are for life and health. Just before sealing the bottles of to mato catsup add a teaspooufnl of brandy to each ono. Besides preserving the cat sup it improves the flavor. Stove zincs can i»c kept bright and nice by rubbing them with either kero sene or lard. After a few minutes take H soft, dry cloth :»ud remove all traces of the oil or grease. Pretty iron-holders are made of brown linen bound with red braid. A loop to hang up by should always bo sewn in one corner. These covers should be made to slip off easily so that they can bo washed when necessary. t If a dose of castor oil is prescribed, have the druggist prepare it after tho following formula: Oil, ricini, one dram; glycerine, ono drain; tinct. au ranti, twenty drops; tinct. senecre, flvo diops; uq. cinnuiu, to maiio half aa ounce. Flat-irons that are rusty may bo cleaned very quirkly with beeswax and salt. Ilcat the iron then rub the wax over it. Have a paper or cloth near cov ered with salt and scour tho irons with it. This will not only remove the rust, but make the irons as smooth as glass. Honeycomb counterpanes that have become worn in spots and are of no use for bed-coverings should be «ut up for towels and wash-rags. The irregular surface of the material makes it a very good substitute for Turkish towels. Neatly hemmed they will last a long time. The saucepans, pans, etc., that arc used in cooking should always bo placed after they are cleaned on the rango or in the sun to become thoroughly dry. When put away damp the rust soon eats holes in tliem. See that the tins are dried properly and your stock will not need replenishing quite so often. To cltan glass jars and remove any odors till the jars witli hot water, then stir in a teaspoouful of baking soda. I Shake well, then pour out the water, i Should any of the odor remain, fill the jar again with the water and soda. Let it remain in the jar a few minutes, then pour out and rinse the jar in cold water. Uornx, a laundress says, is a valuable addition to the raw starch for collars and cuffs. Too much should not be used, as it has a tendency to make linen yellow. Lump borax may be dissolved in boiling water and bottled for future use. Per fectly clear gum arabic water can also be used for the same purpose. Heat, fric tion and pressure are absolutely neces sary to produce a polish ou collars and culls. In a French Slaughter House. A long while ago, the barbarous man ner of slaughtering that still rules in sonic parts of rural France was renounced in Paris. The men then employed a deadly instrument called a "merlin," something nfter the style of a directory cane, and heavily loaded with lead. With this they would strike a bullock on tho head, in the place where a majority of horned nnimals have a star, a single stroke sufficing to perforate the frontal bone and fell tho animal to the ground. Hut it often happened that the man missed his blow, the animal, scared by the brandishing of the merlin, abruptly pullcil back its head, the weapon did not carry, and the bullock, half killed only, fled in agony. A butcher sought for and found means of shortening useless suffering, and the apparatus which, from his name, is called the "masque Bruneau," has been imposed on slaughterers by the municipalities of sev eral largo cities in France, Germany and Belgium. 11. Bruneau masks the animal in the cow stable, taking caro to fasten the leather strap that is fixed behind the cars of the beast in such a manner that tho plate fies perfectly on the frontal. Just over the brain this mask is pierced with a hole sufficiently large to permit of a bolt being introduced that is hardly bigger or longer than one's forefinger. The slaughterer's assistant puts the ani mal's head into position by a chain fast ened to the floor, then the slaughterer places the bolt in the hole of the mask, and with a single blow with a heavy mal let he drives it into the skull. The ox falls, a boy rushes up, and into the small hole that the bolt has just pierced he pushes a long and bloody cane, and hard ly has it touched the spinal marrow than the convulsive movement ceases, the ani mal being killed as quickly as from a stroke of lightning.— Chicago Herald. A Perpetual Fire. In the peninsula of Abelieron, In the province of Schirwau, formerly belong ing to Persia, but now a part of Kussia, there is found a perpetual, or what the natives call an eternal fire, which is known to have been burning over two thousand years. It rises with a constant flame from an irregular orifice of about twelve feet in depth and 120 feet in width. The flame rises to a licigth of six or eight feet, unattended with smoke or disagreeable smell, waving back and forth with the wind, like a field of golden grain.— St. Louis Republic. The French Government has made the manufacture of gun-cotton cartridges a State monopoly. >l. L. Thompson & Co., Druggists, Couders port, I'a., say Hall's Catarrh Cure Is the best mid only surf run* for catarrh they evor sola. Druggists *''ll "> Tueuk are thirty-one trust companies In the .Statu of New York. Money Invested inctiotce one nandred dol lar building lota in suburbsof Kansas City will pay from live hundred to one thousand per cent, the next few years under our plan. s2i cash and $5 per month without Interest con trols a desirable lot. 1 'articular# on application. J. 11. liauerleln A Co.. Kansas City. Mo. Judicial!* Speculation. Money Invested in sums of from ?l to s■'» weekly or mouthly will make you a fortune. Write for Inf rniatlon. ItcnJ. Lewis A: Co., Se curity Building. Kansas City. Mo. Woman, her diseases and their treatment. 72 panes, illustrated; price 80c. Sent upon re ceipt of ioc., cost of mnillng.ctc. Address Prof. R. 11. Km mc, M.1).,H Arch Pa. Guaranteed live year eight per cent. First Mortgages on Kansas City property. Interest payable every six months; principal and Inter est collected when due and remitted without expense to lender. For sale by J. 11. Hauerleiu Co., Kansas City. Mo. Write tor particulars Leo Wa's Chinese Headache Cure. Harm less in effect, quick and positive in action. Sent prepaid on receipt of £1 per bottle. Adeier Co„s£! Wyandotte st.,kansasClty,Mc Timber. Mineral, harm Lands and Ranches In Missouri, Kansas, Texas and Arkansas, boußlitaii'l sold. Tyler A- Co.. Kans— City. Mo. Oklahoma Guide Hook and Man sent any wbero on receipt of Silcts.Ty lor & Co., Kansas City, Mo. Distress After Eating Indigestion And Dyspepsia Aro Cured by Hood's Sarsaparilla NYN U—3o 'CONDITION POWDER Hlflrhly concentrated. Po*i? small. In qunntity cost* ljs than ono-tcnth rent a day per hen. Trcvonta ajid SfrUkll Aim-*** If you OJUl't get lt.y, I "' ,, l < l n hl i r , i 1 «w>ut tmhi ()ii«j nack. »ip. Five Si. 2 1-4 In. can ji.z", KEulsKiprorauald. l>«tlmonl2ii ftw. Hynd «tamp*or Karm. n,' lWtry Uulde(price S.tc.>free wltllfcl.O* orders or mom. I. s. JollNSnS & Co.. tiiwton. "»TERNNV Instantly Stop Pain I fyf.. AIIOIPSIOUYCUHt Atl A representation 01 tno engraving on oar imppcra.- lUUWAI * 00. SEW VOHIU Do your clothee last as they used to? If notJ Sou must be using_a »oap or vxitMno povxfe* iat rota them. Try the good nUI-fashi- Dobblns's Electric Soap, ptr/ccUy pure to-dayl as in 1865. OTTAWA, the Canadian Capital, Is to hare a monastery. Its Excellent Qnalltle* Commend to publio approval the California; liquid fruit remedy Byrup of Figs. It is pleas ing to the eye, and to the taste and by gently: acting on the kidneys, liver and bowels, it; cleanses the system effectually, thereby pro moting the health and comfort of all who: use it. _ Beecham's Pills act like maglo on a Weak Etomacti. 1 Cop^lgh^i MMi ' " A departure from ordinary methods has long been adopted by the makers of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. They know what it can do—and they guarantee it. Your money is promptly returned, if it fails to benefit or cure in all diseases arising from torpid liver or impure blood. No better terms could be asked for. No better remedy can be had. Nothing else that claims to be a blood-purifier is sold in this way — because nothing else is like the "G. M. D." So positively certain is it in its curative effects as to warrant its makers in selling it, as they are do ing; through druggists, on triall It's especially potent in curing Tetter, Salt-rheum, Eczema, Ery sipelas, Boils, Carbuncles, Sore Eyes, Goitre, or Thick Neck, and Enlarged Glands, Tumors and Swellings. Great Eating Ulcers rapidly heal under its benign in fluence. World's Dispensary Med ical Association, 603 Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y. JK3MMBBMI KL.Y BKOTHKRS. 68 warren St.. New York- Prlco 60 otw. -l "Jhmay beh*ue wh&t-some men say, 11-m&un be hrueySwh&t-a! men say" PtfBUCJ|©PIHtON S&polio.— * Ihis a.solid so&p— For many years SAPOLIO has stood as the finest and best article of this kind in the world. It knows no equal, and, although it costs a trifle more its durability makes it outlast two cakes of cheap makes. It is therefore the cheapest in the end. Any grocer will supply it at' a ''easonable price. ARB THI OLDEST FiMILY STANDARD. A Purely Vegetable Compound, without mercury or other injurious mineral. Saft and sure always. For sale by all Druggist*. Full printed directions tor using with each package. Dr. Schenck's new book on The Lungs, Liver and Stomach sent free. Ad» tress Dr. J. H. Schenck k Son, Philadelphia^ WM. FITCH & CO., 10!i Corcoran Building, Washington. D. C. PENSION ATTORNEYS of over '.l*l years' experience. Successfully prose ente pensions and claim* of nil kinds In shortest possible time. gJTNo FEB tmuuw SUCCESSFUL. ERAZER^I m FOLKS^Um CO tswatio T nan. - Sirrwwu »y—syai.ol— ■§ A ■ B A A ■ Thousands entitle I D t mm ClllklG under the New Act. rtwoiuwor^^ plication. Employ the old reliable Arm, J. B. CKAI.L.E i CO.. Washington, D. O. HI ill l ntllOlvll WaahtnKton, U. ■ 3 vrs In laat war, 15 abjudicating claims, atty sino* nriIAIAIIA OIJD CLAI.UH SKTTLEJ PFNXmNX tNDKII NEW LAW. . I LIIUIUIIU soldiers. Widows, Parents, sut for blank applications and information. PATBIO.C U'Karkkix, Pension Agent, Washington, P. O. ■ IflßiC STUDY, Hook-keeping, Bualaess Fbrm*, lIUIIIC. Penmanship, Arithmetics, Short-Mad, etc., II thoroughly taught oy MAIL. Circulars tree. llrjrnnt*s College, 437 Main St.. taunalo, X. V. Shorthand Telegraphy I.BADINO BCUOOL BOITIT. Otalonw free. COUCH & I.I'UKNIIKKI.. Sennla, »«. MONEY IN CHIC KENS. For 'i3r. In ntuipo we send a 100- ]\# PAOE BOOK giving theexperlence lif yV ot » practical Poultry Halmr- not /Ml 112 an amateur, but a man working / / * for dollani and cento—during 112 % years. It teackee how to Detect. < Jand euro DUwaees; Feed for F.ggs. j alai for Fattening: which Fowls to I P Hare for Breeding; everything re quisite for profitable Poultr} ral»- tng. RO(ia PITIH.IHIIINU •"Ur4 Street, New Yark. N Y N u-W HO ONE NEED SUFFER. Dr. Tobias' Celebrated Venetian Liniment acts like a charm for Cholera Morbus, Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Colic, Cramps, Nausea, Sick Headache, &c. Wan* perfectly harmless. (See OATH AC COMPAMjISG eactt bottle, also directions FOll USE.) Its SOOTHING and PENETRATING itlm are felt Immediately. Try It and bo con vinced. Price 28 and 50 cents, sold by all druu plsts. Depot, 4u Murray St., N. Y. DIGGING Weill for water by the old Pick and Shovel method will answer very well where you are satisfied with small pay and great risk to life and health, and where your employer is satisfied to nse water from a "dug well," which is nothing at the best but a receptacle for fllth, such as toads, bugs and worms and aeeplngs from outhouses and cesspools. If jrou will send two stamps FOR pur catalogues, fully describing our famous Ma jhinery for iloring and Drilling Wells by the latest, i&fest and most approved methods, we will mail J.iom to you, and you can see what we have to say tbout this certain and easy way of making MONEY (noro rapidly than you mnkeit in anv other business nnth ten tim*s the* capital invested. At the samo time tho Wells vou make will furnish nothing but I pure water, all surface seepings being shut oat ! permanently. This advertisement will appear but once. Cut ■>ut and preserve our address. LOOMIS & NYMAN, TIFFIN, OHIO. (IIIITIAkI VV. 1.. I»«iugln* Sliocn lire WH<* I I (Mi mirrunled, nnd every pnir hue bla uutuu nnd price atampcu on bottom A S S3SHOE CENTLEMEN, PTSend address on postal for valuable Information. \V. lis OOtULArt, Brockton, illaw, Ethi *onoe«ful ÜBURGA CH Ai R.l^a FURNITURE . - A.tota.ue Ilrtk. Vo tctail at the lotcett 0 a all rDCC vhoUMIt factory pr*cct f ff\T /r nr r and sb'p goods to be (HI rHAlli Eid for on delivery. \ry| Itt/7Tyll to MIBK. nd stamp for Cats- \y l/V©BriClAL rill no, Jfame good* desired. LCIIUBO MFG. CO., 145 It. tS(b Bt-, fi. nruoinu new lawclaims. r 111 oIU n " p t p o ly Milo B. Stevens & a i., Attorney.. 14ll» V «».. \V«»hlngt«u, U. C llranrh OUrra. ( ie*eland. Hetrolt.Chicago. mm . .MT Church Fairs, dealers In EL Im CuAlv I Holiday Goods A Souvenli for Tourists. C irsend NnVELTIES stamp for Catalogue. Mm w V fc »- ■ OWYEK A COLD WELL, Cornwall-on-Hudwon, N. Y. iAriITA Proof SIOO month made selling A|!|» A] I V our now Tnlinnge Hook, also nUbli I U Mother, Home nnd lleiiven,by T. 1. Curler, 'Vi.7,l, 10,000 (urloaltlew oi iho lilble. 9'i. B. TREAT, ruhllsher. Now York. AGENT!*, send for circulars, Ac., of new book. \'on* other Hke it. Rare <utjx>rtunity. Address («eo. W. France, 7 New Chambers St.. New V«*»» M 1 presmno nnd folly en. dorse Big <3 as the only Gars# In specific for the certain euro TO 6 Of thlc disease. , „ _ <flp>trut«cd not lev Q. H. INUHAIIAM,M. HTfM.3tflM.re. ■ imaterdam, N. Y PM *r«.oiybyt*a have aoltl ills « lot Vk f.wtlon. ohiow Jrth u. r. i>ycHK k co., 1 Chicago, 1)R
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers