TO KEEr BOYS ON THE FAHM. When a farmer who owns 200 acres of land is continually grumbling that he cannot make anything at the business, -although his three or four boys work for their board and clothing, has he a right to grumble because the boys want to leave the farm? Possibly if he were to divide his land and his ready money with the boys, and then each one tried to do his best upon his share of the farm, all would get better results than they do now, and all would stay upon the farm, unless they had decided tastes and talents for some other pursuit.— Chicago Times. GOOD AND BAD BUTTER. The average creamery butter is called better than the average farm dairy but ter, and the same is true of cheese, but there are some private dairies that make better goods and get better prices than the factories can. Such ones should hesitate before pooling their products along with the shiftless, careless ones who never could make good butter, mainly because they had not learned how to make good milk to begin with. Pos sibly a saving of labor in the household may pay for a little loss in price, but the separator seems likely to make much reduction, of the labor of butter makiDg, and it is said they can be used profitably where there are a dozen cows.—Ameri can Dairyman. SEED CORN. Tn all manner ot farming it is most im portant that good seed, fully matured an 4 kept in the safest way should be sectored. A wise farmer will raise and keep in safety as many of his own seeds as may be necessary. The present is perhaps the best time of the year to save seed corn of every sort. Select eats that are well filled out at each end and such as show no mixture. Corn will mix from forty to eighty rods apart. While husk ing corn throw out every extra good ear and from these again make a selection of the best. Let a few husks remain on the ear and.then trace them up by dozens and hang them up where no rodents can get at them; but not in a granary where wheat and oats are stored, as the emana tions from these will destroy the germ inating principle. Secure at least twice as much as you expect to use. Some sluggard will pay $2 per bushel for it St. Louis liepublic t POULTRY TOPICS. It is much better to divide the flock at night, permitting a small number to roost together. Crowding results fre quently in disease?. Grind up the bones from the meat you use for the table, leaving some of the mtfat on the bones, both being essential at intervals. liens lay better if thus ; fed twice or three times a week. The earthen drinking fountain is the | cleanest and most convenient wheu water must be carried to a flock of fowls. The i water remains cool longer in earthen- I ware than in tin. A running stream is , best of all. The Silky fowl is a toy, yet many ad- ] mire it for its odd appearance. Tho hens lay weil, but their eggs are not largo. Their featheis are like hair, standing up straight. Their wattles and combs are a bluish red color. Keep the poultry in a house especially provided for them. Do not permit the manger in the horse or cow stable to be contaminated with tho droppings, mak ing the food distasteful to the horse, or cow, that occupies the stall.—American Agriculturist. l . ——— J INSECTS IN OBEENBOUSES. • Florists are now having a busy season, preparing plants and greenhouses for the winter supply of flowers, writes Margaret Dale. Let me suggest to thoso who may not be already aware of tho fact that a liberal supply of tobacco stems spread thickly over the walks will prevent the development of insects, the pest of ama teur as well as professional florists. I have been assured by florists of experi ence that fresh supplies of stems are all that they find necessary to keep their greenhouses in perfect condition regard ing insects. Throughout the winter the items must be renewed every few weeks, and, though this may seem a troublesome operation, I am convinced that many ; persons will consider it an improvement on the old method of fumigating, by whicb the florist effectually smoked him self with sulphur or tobacco, while vainly endeavoring to destroy the flies and j aphides that were luxuriating on his choicest carnations and rosos. After being used in the greenhouses the stems can be utilized as a mulch about the June roses of thegardeu, where they prAve an effective remedy for the •lug—New York Independent. * SPREADING ASHES IN WINTER. | i' At the Rhode Island Station a portion \ of an old sheep pasture was plowed and j seeded with a mixture of timothy and red top in 1890. In the following winter and spring it was fertilized with Canada ashes for the purpose of making • comparison between winter and spring ' applications of ashes to newly seeded j meadows, and to dctermiue whether any ' less would result from washing while j the ground was frozen. The soil is a light sandy loam, and the aslics were j hauled directly from the car and spread from the cart upon the field when the ground was frozen and covered with four inches of snow. Tho field is very level, and two plots of one-fifth acre osc.h were selected and staked out side by side. Upon the west plot on January 6 half a ton of ashes was spread upou the snow as evenly as possible, and n corresponding h-.lf a ton of ashes placed in barrels in a dry store house for application to the east plot iu the spring. The spring application was made April 10, the ground being free from frost, but 6oft from the spring rain*, and to prevent cuttiu ,• up the field the ashes had to be applied by hand from baskets. The very dry weather of May and June shortened the crop materially, but | the grass was cut June 10, nnd the weight of well-cured hay upon tho two plots determined as follows; West plot, |dd of field-cured hay per acre from | spring application, 1908 pounds; east plot, yield of field-cured hay per acre from apring application, 1497 pounds, showing a gain of 409 pounds per acre or twenty-seven ptr cent, in favor of the winter application, to which can well be added the economy of labor in doing the work while the ground is froien aud other work ia not pressing.— New York World. CABB OF DAIHY CALVES. Professor Robertson, of Ontario, Can ada, is regarded as good authority in dairy matters. Speaking of the calf that is reared for the dairy he saysi Breed and feed are to a cow like two wings to a bird—one alone is of little use. In selecting a calf for dairy sire, choose one from a lank, rough cow, and never from a smooth, fat, handsome one. Study the calf's antecedents and see that he is backed by good producers on both sides. This course will enable one to breed up the milk and buttei qualities. The calf born between September 1 and December 1 is the best to raise. It gets a good start before winter, winters well, and in the spring grows finely. A cow should lick a calf for at least half an hour when it is first dropped; this will set the heart to working prop erly, start digestion and put the whole system in proper operation. A calf, either bull or hoifer, should show a good escutcheon. In a cow other points may be seen from which to judge; the teats should be set wide apart and stand out like four legs on a properly made stool. The shape of a calf may be largely changed by feeding. If kept fat it will develop a rounded body, while if fed so as to keep healthy and growing it may be molded into the desired form for a dairy animal. It should have its mother's milk the first three or four days, as it is designed by nature to set the calf's system in proper condition. After it is a week old it should have sweet, skimmed milk, and be fed dry ground oats. Eating the ground oata dry produces saliva to aid digestion, en sures a healthy system and stimulates growth and good habits. After it is from one to three months old it may be fed to develop its digestive organs. It should then have plenty of very digestible food of a kind that will aid in forming bone and muscle and add to its general growth, but not of a kind that will develop fat. Thus a large deep belly will be developed, a desirable feature for a dairy cow.—Farm, Field and Stockman. FARM AND GARDEN NOTES. Give ducks as much liberty as pos- J sible. The fall is a good time to apply manure to asparagus beds. j New oats arc too laxative for horses which do hard work. I With nearly all kinds of fowls the i final fattening is on corn. The fall is the time to sell off all birds that have passed their prime. Peach buds can be protected by bend ing the trees over to the ground and covering with some light material. For early spring flowering sow migno nette seed in light, rich soil and keep in a warm place. No class of business presents a reason - able chance for success unless due at* j tention is paid to the details. When prices are low, loss can often be | made to give place to profit by an in | creased rate of production per acre. The average farm horse would feel proud if he received but a small part of the care which is bestowed on a race horse. A ewe that raises two lambs and fur nishes in addition a good fleece of wool will pay 200 per cent, on the money in vested. When sheep are to be iattened for market they should be separated from the stock sheep so that they can be fed by themselves. If the yards and pens are not naturally draiued, let them be drained artifically. : Stagnant water is often the beginning of : serious and fatal diseases among poul- I tr y* Do not wait until winter before clean j ing out the hen house. You may have | been neglecting that "chore" during the "busy seasou" of harvesting. Neglect it no longer. In shipping poultry do not crowd the coops too full. Besides the suffering caused the fowls, the death of two or three will take off the oxpected profits and cause disappointment. A dairyman said the other day that I the best herd of dairy eows he ever had | were the ones which he had bred and raised himself. There is enough in this short statement to cause some dairyman to ponder. Now that the moulting season is here, see that the fowls have some fresh meat ! in addition to their grain ration if they j are yarded, or if their range is not ex - j tended enough to give them a good sup- I ply of insects. If you have plenty of apples give some lof them to the cows. There are plenty | of rotten and gnarled fruit which can be thus profitably disposed of. The result will be shown in the increased quantity of milk and butter. Ziuc or galvanized iron should never under any circumstances be used for stol ing honey. Stone jars, tin tanks, or wooden barrels may be used, but some wood will taint tho honey. Care should he taken not to have this kind. The Guadaloupe bees are interesting. They store their honey, not in combs, but in bladders of wax about the sfee of a pigeon's egg. The honey is of an oily consistency and does not harden, while the bees are black and of small size. How to control swarms is the great | unsolved problem in beekeeping. Auto- I matic swarraers give some hope, though they fall far short of perfection. A* yet uo ono can tell whether they will de velop into a complete success or prove an utter failure, ' HOUSEHOLD AFFAIBS. TIKBLY TTBKBY BBCTPBS. The standard holiday dish ia roast turkey with oyster stuffing, which is first put inside the turkey, and afterwards put inside those who gather at the dinner table. The turkey is drawn and roasted as usual. For the stuffing take bread at least one day old, grated fine, and one-fifth of the bulk of the bread in oysters. Add, for an ordinary sized fowl, two onions chopped fine, four onnces of melted butter, pepper, salt, thyme and sage according to taste, and a little of the fluid of the oysters. Baste the turkey until it is roasted to a light brown. Make a gravy out of the giblets, heart and liver, thicken with flour and add a dash of Worcestershire sauce, a lump of butter, pepper and salt. With this dish should be served the old-fash ioned cranberry sauce, made of equal weights cranberries and brown sugar, to which are added two ounces of butter and a dash of cinnamon. Let the whole simmer until the skin of the cranber ries is tender. Set to cool on ice for three hours before serving, which will make the sauce like a jelly. For a roast turkey with chestnut stuf fing the same recipe applies, except that boiled chestnuts, grated or mashed very fine, are substituted for the oysters. The large Italian chestnuts are best. For an onion stuffing, considering the turkoy weighs fourteen pounds,chop five onions very fine and substitute for oys ters, with sufficient bread crumbs, but ter,, pepper, sslt, sage and thyme. If one should want fried turkey a la Creole for a change, which is a favorite Southern way of serving the bird, it should be disjointed. Then make a batter of equal parts of milk and eggs, well beaten, to which a little salt is add ed. Dip the sections of turkey into cracker dust, then iito the batter, and then into the cracker dint again, after which fry in equal parts of butter and lard. For this dish the sauce is made o 1 three ounces of butter and two heaping tablespoonfuls of flour, melted together, to which add a pint of milk and a dash of salt. Serve with small boiled potato balls, sprinkled with chopped parsley. For the ordinary fried turkey, dip in baiter as before and serve on diamond shaped pieces of toast, with cranberry sauce. This kind of sause is made of one quart of cranberries, two ounces of butter and eight ounces of light brown sugar. Allow to simmer until cooked, and then either pour over each portion or allow each guest to serve himself. In serving fried turkey with apple sauce, prepare the turkey as before. For the sauce, peel two quarts ot sour apples, take out cores and add one and a half pounds of light brown sugar and two ounces of butter. Boil together with one peeled lemon, and sot to cool until ready to serve. In serving boiled turkey with oysters the turkey is stuffed with bread crumbs, moistened with oyster liquid, and oysters to the amount of one-fourth the bread crumbs. To the stuffing is added three ounces of butter; pepper and salt to taste. The turkey should be tied in a linen cloth, as before. Serve with white sauce, made with four ounces of butter and three tablespoonfuls of flour melted together, to which is added a little salt and a quart of milk. If a housewife builds her Thanksgiv ing dinner on any of these recipes, she will be very happy, and her husband will be very proud of her, besides being very well fed. Mr. Geo. W. Turner SIMPLY AWFUL Worst Case of Scrofula the Doctors Ever Saw Completely Cured by HOOD'S SAR SAPARILLA. "When I was 4 or 5 years old I had a scroful ous sore on tho middle finger of my left hand, which got so bad that the doctors cut the lin ger off, and later took off more than half my hand. Then the wire broke out on my arm, came out on my neck ami face on both sides, nearly destroying the sight of one eye, also on my right arm. Doctors said it was the Worst Case of Scrofula they ever saw. It was simply awful! Five years ago I ltegnn to tako Hood's Harsaparilla. Gradually I f.iund that the gores were liegln ning to heal.l kept on till I had taken ten bot tles, ten do lars! Just think what a return 1 got for that investment! A thousand Rer cent ? Yes, many thousands, lor tho ist 4 years i have had no sores. 1 Work all the Time. Before, I could do no WOfk. I know not what to say strong enough to express my grat itude to Hood's Sarsaparilla for my perfect cure." G. W. Turnkk, Farmer,(xalwny, N. Y. Hood's Pills do not weaken, but aid digestion and tone the stomach. Try them. 25c. __ NIN IT—4O - nn ki LM ER*S «***»* KIDNEY.LIVERS Bl « Biliousness, Headache, foul breath, sour stomach, heart burn or dyspepsia, constipation. Poor Digestion, Distress after eating, pain and bloating In the stomach, shortness of breath, pains In the heart. Loss of Appetite, A splendid feeling today and a depressed one to-morrow, nothing seems to taste good, tired, sleepless and all unstrung, weakness, debility. Searsnteo-tK! contents of One Bottle, If not be* anted. Druggist! win refuad you the price paid. At Druggists, 50c. Stse, SI.OO Size. ■ 'lnvalid!' Guide to Healtli" free—Consultation free, ' Dr. Kilmer * Qq„ Pjnobamton, N. T. SThe last year has been the most prosperous of the Sixty-five years of THE COMPANION'S history. It has now over 550,000 subscribers. This support enables it to provide more lavishly than ever for 1893. Only a partial list of Authors, Stories and Articles can be given here. JJn Prize Serial Stories. J® The Prizes offered for the Serial Competition of 1892 were the Largest ever given by any periodical. /ytt! First Prize, sa,ooo. Larry; "Aunt Mat's" Investment and its Reward; by . Miss Amanda M. Douglas. l(c Ml Second Prize, SI,OOO. Armajo; How a very hard Lesson was bravely Learned; by Charles W. Clarke. y®fl Third Prize, si,ooo. Cherrycroft; The Old House and its Tenant; by Miss Edith E. Stowe (Pauline Wesley). I Fourth Prise, SI,OOO. Sam; A of Brotherly Love and Self-Sacrifice; by Miss M. Q. McClelland. If SEVEN OTHER SERIAL STORIES, during the year, by C. A. Stephens, Homer Greene and others. jl The Bravest Deed I Ever Saw, Great Men at Home. I will be described in graphic language by Officers of the United States Army How Mr. Otadstone Works; by his daughter, Mrs. Drew. If and by famous War Correspondents. Qen. Sherman In his Home; by Mrs. Minnie Sherman Fitch. tl Oeneral John Qlbbon. Oeneral Wesley Merritt. Gen. McCiellan; by his son, George B. McClellan. II Captain Charles King. Archibald Forbes. President Garfield; by his daughter, Mrs. Molly Qarfleld Brown. I Your Work in Life. What are you going to do? These and other similar articles may offer you some suggestions. i Journalism as a Profession. By the Editor-in-Chief of the New York Times, Charles R. Miller. II , (Why not be a Veterinary Surgeon ?An opportunity for Boys; by Dr. Austin Peters. il\V In What Trades and Professions is there most Room ? by Hon. R. P. Porter. Shipbuilders Wanted. Chats with great shipbuilders on this Subject jby Alexander Wainwright. p Admission to West Point; by the Supt. of U. S. Academy, Col. John M. Wilson. II Admission to the Naval Academy; by Lieut. W. F. Low, U.S. N. \\ Young Government Clerks at Washington. By the Chief Clerks of Six Departments. \\ Things to Know. Over the Water. \? What Is a Patent? by The Hon. Carroll D. Wright. How to See St. Paul's Cathedral; by The Dean of St. Paul. \\ A Chat With Schoolgirls; by Amelia E. Barr. Windsor Castle. A picturesque description by The Marquis of Lome. \\ Naval Courts-Martial; by Admiral S. B. Luce. A Glimpse of Belgium. The American Minister at Brussels. \\ Patents Granted Young Inventors; by U. S. Cam. of Patents. A Glimpse of Russia; by The Hon. Charles Emory Smith. \ The Weather Bureau; by Jean Gordon Mattill. Adventures in London Fogs; by Charles Dickens. I Newly-Married in New York. What will SI,OOO a year do? London Cabs. "Cabbies;" their "hansoms." Charles Dickens, Jr. \ Answered by Mrs. Henry Ward Beecher and Marion Harland. A Boy's Club in East London. Frances Wynne- I Short Stories and Adventures. I More than One Hundred Short Stories and Adventure Sketches will be given in the volume for 1893. A Jl Knittin' Susan. An Able Mariner. Quality's Temptation. In the Death Circle. Uncle Dan'l's Will. A Bad Night in a Yacht. A Mountainvllle Feud. On the hadramaut Sands. Leon Kestrell: Reporter. Mrs. Parshley's First Voyage. An April First Experience. Uncle Sim's Clairvoyance. Bain McTickel's "Vast Doog." Riddling Jimmy, and other stories. How I Won my Chevrons. The Cats of Cedar Swamp. A Hoy's Proof that he was not a Coward; by W. J. Baker. .Strong "Medicine." The amusing effect of a brass instrument on a host jle Indian; by Capt. D. C. Kingman, U.S.A. "Ilow I WROTH BEN llim," by Gen. Lew Wallace, opens a series, "Behind the Scenes of Famous Stories." Sir Edwin Arnold •writes three fascinating articles on India. Rudyard Kipling tells the "Story of My Boyhood." A series of practical articles, "At the Woiid's Fair," by Director-General Davis and Mrs. Potter Palmer, will be full of valuable hints to those who go. "Odd House keeping in Queer Places" is the subject of half a dozen bright and amusing descriptions by Mrs. Lew Wallace, Lady Blake, and others. All the well-known features of THF. COMPANION will be maintained and improved. The Editorials will be impartial explanations of current events at home and abroad. The Illustrated Supplements, adding nearly one-half to site of the paper, will be continued. Send This Slip with $1.75. . . . To any New Subscriber who will rat oat and Hnil u» this slip with name and address IT§■l ?I 7 >nd ai.75, we will Mod The Companion Free to Jan. 1, 1803. and for a Full Year from w I - * * 1 W ■ M New Year's, Faster and Fourth or July. The Souvenir of The Companion illustrated «a color t, 42 pages, describing the A 'etc Building, icith all it* lit departments, will be sent on receipt of six cents, ———— Cor free to anp one rei/uestinri it trho sends a subscription for otfe tinir. *8 on application. "" THE YOUTH'S COMPANION, Boston, Mass. | Military Ballooning. Most people will remember the un lucky fate of M. Eugene Turpin, the well-known French scientific man who invented melinite—that terrible explo sive—and who about twelve months ago was sentenced by a military court to five years' imprisonment, in connection with the trials for treason instituted by the Ministry of War. Turpin accepted his fate uncomplain ingly and it appears that he has been at work, so far as the prison regulations would allow, since his conviction. He is at present in a house of detention at Etampes, where he is allowed pretty large, liberty for studying military science and aeronautics. He is even allowed to write to the papers, and a recent journal expresses a regret that valuable discov eries such as Turpin claims to have made should be dated from between prison walls. Among other things, he professes to have at last solved the difficult prob lem of aerial navigation by the construc tion of a balloon which can be guided ac cording to the will of the occupant. He hopes to attain a speed of _forty kilome tres an hour. In atother field of aerostatics—namely, military ballooning—the imprisoned en gineer has been studying an apparatus for making pure hydrogen gas, which will lequire only one-ninth part of the machinery now in use—an important consideration when on the march. A new fuse for shells when used at sea, which prevents the projectiles from oXpleding from ricochets on the watar, is also among the inventions to which Turpin has devoted much time.—New York Journal. Gooseberry Rats. ' G. Reade, in the Zoologist, says that the ripe gooseberries in his gardea were disappearing very rapidly this year, and he supposed that the mischief was being done by blackbirds. However, hi* at tention was called to a large rat taking the berries off with his mouth and drop ping them to other rata below. Pres ently another climbed the tree and helped to gather the berries. In a little time both came down each with a berry in its mouth, having a curious appear ance. Mr. Reade saw the performance several times repeated. Then he placed a wire cage under the tree, and in three days caught nine of the intruders. Cats Are Independent Animals. The cat's spirit of independence, in- < deed, is the most distinct characteristic i of her nature. As Mine, de Custine i rightly said, the cat's great difference < from, and, according to her sentiments, superiority to, the dog lies in her calm insistence on selection which invariably accompanies her apparent-docility. To the dog proprietorship is mastership; he knows his home, and he recognizes with out question the man who has paid for, feeds and, on occasions, kicks him with all the easy familiarity of ownership. He follows that man uudoubting and un noticed, grateful for a word, even thank ful for an oath. But the cat is a crea ture of a very different stamp. She will not even stoop to conquer, nor be tempted out of her nature by offers of reward. She absolutely declines in struction; nay, even persuasion is lost upon her for any permanent effect it may be designed to have. You may be the legal possessor of a cat, but you cannot govern her affections.—Henriette Bon ner. Russia Appreciates the Sunflower. The sunflower could not have been first cultivated in Russia or other coun tries of Europe, for it is a native of America and uuknown to the eastern world. It is quite probable,however,that the sunflower was cultivated here for its seeds thousands of years before the al -of European*,for this plant is found widely distributed over North and South America. While the cultivation of the sunflower is being neglected in this country, it is on the increase in many European countries, well as in China. The seeds are highly valued for feeding pigs, poultry, sheep and cattle. The oil expressed from the seed is equal to. olive oil for almost any purpose. In Russia the seeds are sold in the streets as pea nuts are sold here.—New York Sun. Coals or Fire on Hit Head. A surgeon being sent to bleed a lady belonging to the nobility, did the opera tion in such a bungling manner that he cut an artery, of which miscut the lady subsequently died. In her will she left him an annuity of $l6O "as a balm to his troubled conscience, and that by having a competence he may not be ob liged to cause others to run the same risk which has resulted in my death."— Argonaut, The ainline factories at Eastport, Me., consuicefc 8000 barrels of cottonseed oil in a season in the process of turning small herring into imported French sar dines. The first cast iron plow was made n 1797. In Olden Time. People overlooked tho importance of pent'a nently beneficial effects and were satisfied with translen' action, but now that it is gen erally known I hat Syrup of Figs will perma nently cure habitual constipation, well-in formed people will not buy other laxatives, which act for a lime, but finally injure the system. Ir you are constipated, bilious or troubled with sick healache, Heecham's I'ills afford immediate relief. Of dmggista. Vt cent!-. Rev. H. P. Carson, Scotland, Dak., says: "Two bottle* of Hall's Catarrh '-re completely cured my little girl." Sold b> D igglsts, 75c. If afflicted with lore eyes use Dr.lsaao i'homp aop'aEro-water. Drmririsf tea u «o.par bottle "August Flower" Bight doctors treated me for Heart Disease and one for Rheumatism, but did me no good. I could not speak aloud. Every thing that I took into the Stomrch distressed me. I could not sleep. I had taken all kinds ©f medicines. Through a neighbor I got one of your books. 1 procured a bottle of Green's Aug ust Flower and took it. lam to-day stout, hearty and strong and enjoy the best of health. August Flower saved my life and gave me my health. Mrs. Sarah J Cox, Defiance, O. • WORN iHCHT AND DAY! Bold* the worst rap- L ' tare with mm on 5 r 11*! n|| dir all clrcumatucos. M B (AMVsraurr. O | &■*». fe Ph. Improveaiaat Jg W llJtiatratod CatTand rulaa 2 %_ M forM>lf- W W 112 cuxalr toaled. U They all Testify a. To th« Efficacy World-Rertowna* M'niWM' Specific. TI a I iW® Tlio old-time itmpto I J | a vljyM remedy from tbo Georgia II In V B swamps and fields has V I lv-M pono forth to tho autfi-odes,. r- '"® astonishing the skeptical and V HnBJI confounding tho theorlea of 1 thoso who depend aololy on the "4jß • physician's still. There Is no blood '••, a ( n t which it docs not Immediately eradicate. Poisons outwardly absorbed or tho result of rile diseases from within all yield to this potent but simple remedy. It Ii an uncxiualod, tonic, bnlldsnpthe old and feeble, cures all dlacoaaa arising from impure blood or weakenod vitality. Send for a treatise. Examiuo the proof. Dooka on " Blood and Sitln* jOUM " nr.lied [Wo. lyruggists Sell It. SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Drawer 3, Atlanta, Qa. the hnuds, iu)nre the Iron, and ourn oil. _ , I The ItlalnK Sun Stove Polish is Brilliant, Odor-1 less. Durable and the consumer pays lor Do tin I or glass package with every purcnoM. J CnrMConsumption, Concha,Croup,Bora . Throat. Sold by all Pnig«i«t» on a. Guarantee SAMPLE FREE IM. Uf AB i W Mit to een our Catalogue of fast gelling WBIV UI lOU Patented Noveltlea. Write for It and we will send with It, a sample of a money maker. EIRE K A MAKrFACTITWHO CO.. Box 831» l.wt'r«ww>> Wta«« U. 8. A. OPIUiBiSSmSH ■ Plan's Remedy for Catarrh la tho ■■ y»irfe»t to Vs.. and Cheapest. M | Ctc. K. T- Basel line. Warren, Flu SB
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers