Republican News Item. ,THURSDAY, OCT. 24, 1901. / StlK Insect Remedies. using Insect remedies keep in /w that the bordeavx mixture should a resorted to against fungus diseases, /he kerosene emulsion lor insects that suck juices (such as plant lice), and Paria green for those that gnaw or bite (potato beetle). Kerosene emul sion -will injure some plants, however, unless well diluted. Storage of I-aiin Product*. When harvesting the beets, carrots and turnips this fail care should be given their storage. When put into pits or mounds the frost sometimes seals them up until spring. Some pack in bins, in dry earth or sand, but it lias been found that one of the best methods is to pack in large bins and filing in with oats, whicn keep tne roots at an even temperature, an;l makes them convenient for use, while the oats are not injured. Dlaposlnt; or Animals. The bodios of uead animals are con verted into fertilizer by some farmers, but something depends upon circum stances as to the advisability of so do ing. If an animal dies of some con tagious disease, and is buried, the earthworms will bring to the surface the germs of the disease. This fact waa demonstrated by Pasteur, the fa mous French chemist, who made tests in that direction. Disease was communicated to animals that ate grass which grew over the body of a buried animal. The better plan is to consume the bodies of diseased ani mals, or subject them to a bath of sulphuric acid, after death, in order to destyoy the germs of disease. Favus In Poultry. Favus is a disease produced by a ninute parasitic fungus and attacks he comb, wattles and neck, causing he feathers of the latter to fall out. It is very destructive in poultry yards in England, and being highly conta gious spreads with groat rapidity. A single diseased bird soon contamin ates the whole flock and several out breaks have been traced to the intro duction of a new bird from an affected yard. Unless treated properly, is usually ends fatally. The feathers become erect, dry and fall out, leaving the skin covered with dull yellowish gray crusts. The English board of agricul ture in a recent leaflet recommend.} bathing the affected parts with warm water and castle soap, then applying some ointment to destroy the fungus. Nitrate of soda and lard is useful. Red oxide of. mercury has also proved an excellent remedy. Sorgliuin as Feed. Many farmers are looking for a oetter fodder plant than Indian corn, j and our individual experiences as well as observation leads us to believe that for a good part of our country no bet ter plant has been found than sorg hum. It is easily raised, and if sown broadcast it may be cut with a mow ing machine and dried about as pond \ grass, and fed out at any time. If j sown in this way it should be sown as early as possible, so as to have hot i weather in which to cure it. Or it 1 may be planted in drill rows and har- , vested as is com. If a litle care is exercised in bring- j ing up stock to a full feed, there need ! be no danger of colic. In feeding to cows and other stock that are to have i young we have always taken the seed j off, as it seemingly is productive of ! premature birth. I have tried almost ! every forage plant in a small way. and j am anchored on sorghum as the flesh- j building and retaining fodder for cat tie, horses and shoep, and the best j winter fodder to aid in a good flow of sweet, pure milk from much tows. The sugar in the stalks is a great fat produncer in winter. D. T. Stephen eon in the Epitomist. Kfl'pcl of I umigation on Grain. Owing to the fact that many millers fumigate their storehouses, bins and buildings in which grain is stored by means of hydrocyanic acid gas, with out removing such grain, the question has arisen whether or not his fumi gating has injured the grain either for food or planting. The Maryland ex periment station has made a number of tests along tnese lines. In tne test as to the effect on the germinating quality of the seeds it was found that dry seeds are suffi ciently resistant to the influence of the gas to stand a treatment of several weeks of an atmosphere saturated with hydrocyanic acid gas without destroying their vitality. If the seeds are damp, however, they are much more susceptible to the influences of the gas. and should not remain rnoro than two or three hours in gas of sufficient strength to destroy animal life. Only a few tests were made along the line of the effect of gas on the seeds for food, but it was found by feeding the treated seeds to mice that there appears no danger in the use of them for foods. The general conclu sions arrived at showed that stored grains and other seeds may be fu migated with hydrocyanic acid gas of required strength, and for sufficient time to insure the destriction of in geet pests without injury to the germ inating quality of the seeds and wit.h rendering them injurious as foods. Wheat, for Animals. The almost unprecedented drouth, which bade fair to cut tne torn crop ■ I j r—v { {Jonestown. | Mr. an d Mrs. B. G. Welch are vis iting in Philadelphia. Prof. Chas, Warren entertained /J-W .father and son, Saturday and tions must: lie /• » / »v ... iOe .... nels being much smaller than those of corn, there is much more danger ol their escaping mastication and passing out undigested. Many farmers whe regarded it as unprofitable to feed wheat whole found on '-rushing oi grinding it that all d ilty disap peared. It is espec». necessary when fed to steers or mil. cows. In animals with smaller mouths, there is less waste than with cattle, and some have observed a pjsitive advan | tage with sheep in feeding it whole. This was due. however, to the great er consumption of whole grain than ground. Ground wheat has an impor tant disadvantage in feeding, in that it is apt to form a gummy mass, which adheres to the teeth, making it difficult and disagreeable to handle by the animal. This fault has been the source of some of the pcor results in feeding it, and is best obviated by feeding it mixed with some other grain, as corn, oats, or Kafir corn. An imals fed upon a mixture are less lia ble to become cloyed than when fed upon wheat alone. In brief, the nu tritive value of wheat, as shown by its composition, is greater than that of corn. It can be best utilized by feeding it ground or crushed, and mixed to a certain extent with oats, corn or Kaffir-corn; it may be fed ad vantageously to horses, cattle, hogs, sheep or poultry. In discussing the feeding value of wheat, the grain only has thus far been in mind. In this year of extreme scarcity of roughage, it may not be amiss to inject a word of suggestion that wheat straw is much better than nothing, and that in all probability the farmer? of the wheat belt can contribute to the needs of their less fortunate fellow citizens, and add to their own profits by pre serving. bailing and marketing their straw, instead of burning it as usual. —J. T. Willard of the Kansas Experi ment station in the Country Gentle man. Growing Market Potatoes. Almost any kind of soil that will raise a crop at' corn will produce gooi potatoes if properly prepared. It is very essential that the ground be loose ! and fine before the seed potatoes are J planted, if the land has been plowed j in the fall, disk or harrow till it is loose and fine to a depth of three inches, then plow again. This will give a good seed bed of six or seven inches of fine loose earth. If vou wish to plant in hills they sbou< be about three and a half feet axiart ch way, to allow of free cul tivation I mark with a corn marker one way. and then use a four-shovel sulky cultivator to open up the fur row the other way, taking off the two inside shovels and fastening the other two the desired distance apart. The next thing of importance is to ! have good seed of some popular sal able variety. Cut to one or two eyes and place only one piece in a hill. | Place your foot on each piece so as to I press it down into the loose dirt as deep as possible. This will make cov | ering easier and will also prevent dry j ing out. Cover with a hoe, putting I one hoeful of dirt on each piece of , potato. The marks made by the sulky j cultivator will remain so as to be easily seen across the field. Never jpi nt scabby potatoes if it can be I avi (ded. but if you must plant them, : soa in corrosive sublimate solution, one part of sublimate to 1000 parts water, for two hours before planting. After planting it will not be neces j sary to do anything more to the po ' tato patch for two weeks. By that time pigeon grass and other weed i seeds will have commenced to grow j by the thousands, but the potatoes j will not be above the ground. Now j take the sulky cultivator and turn the inside shovels a little, so that when you follow the cultivator marks it will leave the ground as level as 1 ossible. This will kill all the weeds, and by the time they start up again the potatoes will be out of the ground. They can then be easily cultivated. Some advise dragging the potato field after planting to kill weeds. I never do it, for if the soil is very loose the drag is sure to break off many sprouts and sometimes remove the seed piece out of its place. The cultivating should be kept up as long as the vines will permit, and the soil should never be allowed to bake after a heavy rain or ugly, deformed, bunchy potatoes will result. A good plan is to cultivate one a week wheth er there are any weeds in the patch or not, for if dry weather prevails the loose dirt will hold the moisture bet ter. If rainfall is excessive, the ground cannot bake if the cultivator is kept going. The hiller should be used the last two or three times. It will not disturb the small potatoes, which will set before the vines are large enough to stop the cultivation. If potato bugs bother the vines much, spray with paris green. A spraying pump for that purpose can be bought for 50 cents at most hard ware stores, but if one cannot be ob tained, mix paris green, one teaspoon ful to three gallons water, and lor a sprinkler use a bunch of ...motny heads, and when you are through us ing. put it into the stove. It is only the work of a minute to get another when needed. If the potatoes are to be shipped as soon as harvested, they should not be dug until the middle of October. They can be dug in the forenoon, left to diy a lew hours in the sun. then ".oaded into wagons and hauled di rectly to the cars. —John Lye, in American Agriculturist. Scoutens's Herald has very m to say about saving money to tax payers, and therein th' When Porch Chair* Are l>uMy. It does not take long for the wicker and rattan chairs on the porch to have the crevices filled with dust un less they receive frequent attention. If tinted the willow furniture should be washed only in clear water, using a brush in the crevices and drying in the shade; but willow or rattai) fur niture in natural color may be thor oughly scrubbed with a stia brush, warm water and white soap. During KflTectti in Furnishing. "In my country cottage," said a woman to a New York Evening Post writer, "I try all sorts of daring effects In furnishings. Those that are pleas ing after use I often transplant with success to my city home. For ex ample, two or three summers ago we rented a cottage in which the dining room was dull and dark. I got a pot of white paint together with the own er's consent, and painted the wood work, the chairs and table white, with the effect that the room became per ceptibly brighter. If I could have changed the wall it would have been lighter My city dining room had long distressed me because of its want of light, and that autumn I boldly transformed it. The walls I had papered in a striped white paper, painted the woodwork white, and put a white linoleum on the floor. The furniture was too hadnsome to tam per with, for it is mahogany, in a simple colonial design, but the white oacKground efficiently did the work of brigntening the room to the most de lightfully cheerful point." To Make I'm* I.ook I.ikn New. When furs become worn or soiled at the neck they may be renovated by gently rubbing with cotton batting saturated with gasoline, which should not be used in a room that has arti ficial heat or light. Axle grease, tar, paint and pitch may be removed by rubbing first with oil of turpentine and then with ether. Dark furs may be cleaned with fine cedar or mahog any sawdust which has been heated in an oven. Alaska sable, seal, elec tric seal, fox, etc., should be beaten with a switch until free from dust, then laid with the fur side up, and the hot sawdust rubbed in. Be lavish with the sawdust and vigorous with the rubbing. After this place the garment upon feather pillows with the furry side down, and beat well un til all traces of the sawdust have dis appeared. Then hang out in a shady place. White furs may be cleaned in the same way, using white corn meal instead of the sawdust, or if only slightly soiled, by rubbing well with magnesia in cakes. Wet furs should never be dried near the fire, but shaken and hung away in a cold loom, then brushed. —Ladies' Home Journal. Beeksteak with broiled green peppers —Beefsteak as a dinner course is deli cious served with broiled green pep pers. Half a dozen young green pep pers should be cut into quarters, and the seeds removed. Broil over a very hot fire until the edges curl. Put a tiny bit of butter and a dash of salt on each piece, and serve on the steak. Brazil pepper balls —To one cup white bread crumbs add half cup Bra zil nuts chopped fine, scant half tea spoon of cinnamon and saltspoon nut meg. Mix well and add one egg well beaten, saltspoon of salt and table spoon orange juice. Take up by tea spoonfuls, form into balls and cook to delicate brown in hot fat. Roll in granulated sugar and sprinkle with chopped Brazil nuts and serve hot or cold. Corn creams—Grate the corn from the ears, and for each cupful mix in the unbeaten whites of three eggs one small teaspoonful of salt, one .<;altspoonful of white pepper and halt a cup of sweet cream whipped slight ly. Dust buttered gem pans very thickly with chopped parsley, fill with the corn mixture and cook in the oven 25 minutes. On a round platter place a nest of parsley, and around it lay the corn creams. Conbination of fruit and savory salad —A satisfactory combination ol fruit and savory salad is made with pineapple, celery and a bit of sweet red pepper. A small ripe pineapple is peeled and shredded, and a cup o( finely chopped celery and diced red pepper mixed with it. Marinate this with a little French dressing, and set on ice for 15 minutes; then toss through it with a silver fork a little mayonnaise first, and afterward a cup of stilily whipped cream. Arrange on lettuce hearts. Cheese custard —Cut crust from half a loaf of bread, cut into very thin slices, and then into inch squares. Cut half pound cheese as thin as wafer. Tut layer on bread in buttered baking dish, then layer of cheese sprinkled with salt and very little paprika. Use one-half teaspoon of salt in all. When dish is full of alternate layers of bread and cheese beat two eggs slightly, add pint of milk and pour over all. Bake half hour in moderate over. When done the cheese will look deli cate and wavy between the spongy bread. I The Bad Man. "In all hia violent deeds," writes E. Hough in his vivid story of a "Bad Man"in Frank Leslie's Popular Monthly. "Harrison had never been known to resort to the use of weap ons. He fought simply with the tools that nature had given him, and able, indeed, at rough and tumble must be the man who would oppose liim. Un der the creed of the country he was commonly met at his own terms, and ns commonly he was victorious. Once upon a time it occurred to one of his former victims that, though the cra nium of William Harrison might be impervious to the human list in so far is such fist was possessed by himself, this same cranium might none the less bo susceptible to the impact of a well itimed brickbat. Accordingly, he stepped up behind William Harrison one fall day at the county fair and tried the effect of his flieory in regard to the brickbat and the skull. Mr. Har rison. smitten to the earth for the first time in his career, fell heavily for ward, and for some moments remained quite unconscious. His tearful wife, 'Min,' apppeared upon the scene, led him to the nearest pump, and for some time bathed his wounds. The expression of the champion's counte nance was one of mingled surprise, rage and determinatiou. to his wife tiiat he would'-whale the Ufa out of .Tim Babcock the next time he met him. He did so." Fortunate Finding*. Or.e of the romances of mcney-r.iak ing is the story of a man who found a newspaper in side a shark when fish ing in Australia in IS7O, and who learned the news of the Franco-Ger man war in this way early enough to make a fortune cut of it. The story may be true or not; everybody in Aus tralia knows it. Another after the same kind is that of the Hilford Ha ven trawler, which, while fishing off Carlingfcrd Lough a year or two ag>, caught up in the net a packet of pa pers, tied together with red tape and carefully sealed. The skipper of the boat handed the documents to a law yer, and it was found that they pro vided a missing link which stood be tween a woman and her fortune. They proved tjie right of a Miss Maedonald to certain estates in Ireland, which she had claimed ten years before, but which she had failed to win becav.se the will could not be produced. It was this will which was brorght" up from the sea.—Philadelphia Telegraph. Defenseless America. America has an army of less than I 100,000 men, with a short supply of officers, and no reserves either of sol diers or of material, says Brooks Adams in the Atlantic. At the mere rumor of war 100.000 men would have to leave the country to garrison Cuba, Porto Rico, the canal, the Philippines, and Hawaii. More ought togo, if more could be obtained. But to send 100,000 men abroad would strip the Union bare. Even the ports would be defended by militia, and no reinforce ments would be at hand to supply tile waste in the tropics. Such garri sons could hardly stand against the overwhelming mass of troops which could be concentrated against them. The navy is even feebler in propor tion to the task which would be re quired of it. The United States has 520,000 tons of warships built or build ing. France and Germany have 1,- 1*1",000, and France, Germany and liussia have 1,731,(»00. Stockholm'* ltat-Tall Bounty. Last February the Municipal Coun cil of Stockholm passed nn ordinance offering to pay three centa for every rat-tail that was brouglu to the Police Headquarters. Rats had become so numerous as to imperil the health as well as the comfort of the population, and sanitary officials attributed to them the spread of contagious dis eases. Therefore a war of extermina tion was decided upon, a bounty was offered, and up to July 31 more tliau 100,000 tails have been O'-ought i'j by the rat catchers. Several men went into thi Ludnesa and advertised in the newspaper* offering to id premises that were atfiivted by the nuisance for a nominal fee. Tiuu thej doubled tht turnings, and made a profitable things, of it. The war Is still going on, but the bounty has been reduced to a cent and a half per rat. Even at that price th" rat catchers can make a good living.—Chicago Kecord-Herald. Farting the Hnir. Xearly all men who have hair to part and part it, part it on the left side. Why? Because most men arc right handed?—New York Press. 'File Abtdicv of It. If there is any truth in the saying that hap piness in the absence of all pain, mental and physical, the enjoyment of it cun only be found in heaven. Hut so far as the physical is concerned, it is within easy reach ; at least measurably so, as far us euro will go. The sum of hurnun misery in this line is made up of greater or less degrees of physical suffering. The minor aches and pains which afflict man- Kind are easy to reach and us easily cured. There are none in the whole category, which, if taken in time, cannot be cured. They must in some form afflict the nerves, the bones, the muscles and joints of the human body. They are all more or Icm hurtful and wasteful to the system. (St. Jacobs Oil is made to euro them, to search cut hidden pain spots, and to cure promptly in a irue remedial and lasting way. Very, very many have not known hup jinesg for years till tliey used it, and very nanj are putting off cure and happiness be ;ause they don't use it. When a woman gets mad she always wishes she were a man and could swear. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup forchildrsn ;eething, soiten the gums, reduces inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colio. 25c a bottle What Ins the weather done that it should be talked about so much? Tramps Are Pampered Pets. There ought to be places in every community where all tramps, good and bad, can give an earnest of their wil lingness to work—a sort of test house where a man can prove that he is a seeker of labor and not a professional vagabond, writes Josiah Flynt in Good Housekeeping. Such institutions once established, a law should be passed making It a misdemeanor for man or woman to feed beggars Indiscriminate ly. If such a plan were honestly and persistently carried out, neither the housewife nor her husband nor her neighbors would be much troubled by the knights of the road. The over whelming majority of these knights in this country are men perfectly able to work, and yet they prefer to roam and beg. The only way to cure them of their vagrant habits and desires is to punish them after they have once refused employment. Feeding them gratis aid allowing them to ride on the railroads as they now do, merely confirms them in the belief that they arj the pampered pets of the nation. An Incomplete House. We rnn wild over thefumishingsof a house; its furniture, carpets, hangings, pictures and muiic and always forget or neglect the most important requisite. Something there should be always on the shelf to provide against sud den casualties or attacks of pain. Such come like a thief in the night; a sprain, Btrain, judden backache, toothache or neuralgic at tack. There is nothing easier to get than a bottle of St. Jacobs Oil, and nothing surer to cure quickly any form of pain. The house is Incomplete without it. Complete it with a good supply. Some girls would like to be rich just to see how much ice cream soda they could consume at one sitting. A man in Calaveras County, Cal., is hatching pheasants in incubators. PUTXAM FADELESS PYES do not stain the hands oi spot the kettle. Sold by all drug gists. Do not despise humble occupations. Even the hod carrier clir.ibs to the top of the ladder. During the preserving season there is no such word as can't. Can is the word. *IOO Reward. *IOO. The readers of this paper will be pleated to learn that there is at least one dreaded dis ease that science has been able to cure in al! its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Curo is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con stitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken inter nally, acting directly upon the blood and mu cous surfaces of the system, thereby destrov- I ing th 3 foundation of the disease, and givins; the patient strength by building up the con stitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have go much faith in its curative powers that they offer One Hun dred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address F. J. CHF.NEY & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. You can come pretty near judging peo ple by their clothes when you see the fam ily wash out on the line. Hest For llic lloneli. No matter what ails you, headache to a cancer, you will nevor get well until your bowels are put right. CASCARETS help nature, curo you without a gripe or pain, produce eusy natural movements, cost you just 10 cents to start getting your health back. CAS CARETS Candy Cathartic, the genuine, put up in metal boxes, every tablet has C. C. C. stamped on it. Beware of imitations. Sugar exists not only in the cane, beet root and maple, but in the sap of 187 other plants and trees. FITS permanently cured. No titsornervons ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Bestorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free Dr. B. 11. KLINE, Ltd.. <l3l Arch St.. Phila. Pa. Unpleasant remarks are by no means remarkable. I am sure Piso's Cure for Consumption saved my life three years ago.— MRS. THOMAS ROB BINS, Maple St., Norwich, N.Y., Feb. 17, 1900. Automobiling may be dangerous, but it doesn't seem to be as much so as walking. ASTHMA-HAY FEVER CURED BY feiasE Id FREE TRIAL BOTTLE j ADDRESS DR.TAFT. 79 E.:30- ST.: N.Y CITV J <iOwnThis Book!> * IT SHOULD 6E IN EVERY HOUSEHOLD AS IT MAY * % BE NEEDED ANY MINUTE. * A Slight Illness Treated at Once Will Frequently Prevent a + * * Long Sickness, With Its iieavy Expenses and Anxieties. * % EVERY MANIIS OWN DOCTOR > ltj J. HAMILTON ATEKS, A. M„ JI. D. * ■fc This is a mo9t Valuable Book for the Household, teaching as it does the •)! easily-distinguished Symptoms of diJerent Diseases, the Causes and Means Jt of Preventing such Diseases, and thj Simplest .Remedies which will alleviate £ or cure. C9B Pages, Profusely Illustrated. * + IT* This Book is written in plain * • erery-day English, and is free from * ■k * \V 'aj9 most doctor books so valueless to the generality of readers. This * Book is intended to be of Service . "fc A Jm jr* in the Family, and is so worded as * * t0 readily "Bderatood by »"■ > cts. Po ¥' oia .** * w xWI- nvlSr'llf ipfeflj' EfUflll The low price only being made 4- * 9 <a)Sff \ M/Mp/ q flf'possible by the immense edition j<- ■* ' \BPf Ji printed. Not only does this Book J rivfcfcf*' contain so much information Rela- + * I Ifi l|„ tive to Diseases, but very properly * »—gives a Complete Analysis of every- ' * thing pertaining to Courtship, Mar ■lt riage and the Production and Rear- * ♦c fvC' .ing of Healthy Families: together * -|C "" """ « with Valuable Recipes and Prescrip- *• ♦t tions. Explanations of Botanies! Practice. Correct Use of Ordinary Herbs. * 4c New Edition. Revised and Enlarged with Complete Index. With this *- |c Book in the house there is no excuse for not knowing what to do in an eui- Jf ergency. * w Don't wait until vou have illn ess in vour family before von order, but *. send at once for this valuable Tolume. o>. LY 60 CENTS POST-PAID. ~ Send postal notes or postage stamps of any denomination not larger than * 5 cents. * BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE 134 Leonard St., N.Y. » * ****************** * + + + + + + + + + + * + + ****★* Poorly? " For two years I suffered ter ribly from dyspepsia, with great depression, and was always feeling poorly. I then tried Ayer's Sarsa parilla, and in one week I was a new man."—John McDonald, Philadelphia, Pa. Don't forget that it's "Ayer's" Sarsaparilla that will make you strong and hopeful. Don't waste your time and money by trying some other kind. Use the old, tested, tried, and true Ayer's Sarsapa rilla. I.M a bottle. All drnfflsts. I Ask your doctor what he think* of Ayar's Sarsaparilla. He known nil about this grand old family medicine. Follow his adrico and we will be satisfied. J. C. ayer Co., Lowell, Mass. Constipation Does your head ache ? Pain back of your eyes? Bad taste in your mouth? It's your liver! Ayer's Pills are liver pills. They cure consti pation, headache, dyspepsia. 25c. All druggists. Want your moustache or beard a beautiful brown or rich black? Then use BUCKINGHAM'S DYElttrs 60 CTS. or OwupqiSTS. OH R. P. HALL 4 CO., N«9NU*. N.H. _ LIBBY'S EXTRACTf 1 BEEF j I r UEe t ' ie est ' can "** I beef, get all the essence J | X from it, and concentrate it to .{. 3* the uttermost. In an our.ee of our Ex- •{• ! 112 tract there is all the nutrition of many t j J pounds of beef. To get more nutriment .j, i to the ounce is impossible. •{> J Libby's Atlas of the World, with 3: + J new maps, size Bxn inches, sent any- J X where for 10 cts. in stamps. Our Book- X let, "How to Make Good Things to + i T Eat," mailed free. T j t Libby, McNeill & Libby, 112 | t CHICAGO. t j S9UO TO SISOO A YEAK We want intelligent Men and Women as Traveling Representatives cr Local Managers; talary sqco to SISOO a year and all expanses, according to experience and ability. \Ne also want local representatives - salary $g to a week and commission, depending: upon the time devoted. Send stamp for full particulars and late position prefered. Address, Dept. B. Till; BKLX COMPANY. Philadelphia. Ta. §9 Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Cbc M I CTARK I PAY Weekly j w' STARk BROS, Louisiana.Mo.;HyoUvnie" Au"e£ ADVERTISING gfifygg *Tlie Sauce that mailt* We«t l*aint lauioui.' McILHENNY S TABASCO. nDADCY NEW DISCOVERY; »It.. aw w I ■ quick relief and oures worst 1 eases- Book of te»tiraunials aud 10 daya' treat man I | ATree. Dr. H. H. «SEXH S SOHB. Boa B. Atlanta, Ba. 1 lijff Thompson's Eye Wat&r
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers