el’” thab sowerful ervation trength. enter of asy asin’ ng table his mon~- esenting 1 in gold Britain, all nar owed Tor ling for r capita a run by t.. The ngemen ¢ pressure e wheel ounds. iam and. 1atter of ob oF $2,500.- rgest yet ompany. has left UND he Ten- d by a VS: 3. commit- all our ob- ne of any ividual or obey your city where your ser- seit by all ire world, into the ver secret racked or ed. rather abor com: f muta ly ce, risking ir of mid- Nn ‘you are 6 year un- ‘62 to keep the event 11 heaven h's solemn leaven re- 0 satisfy ound the or's hand he leader Impres- in as the 8 eoven- ct Jointly ach other, death, to rid, and if ow jim * he may n him by e accursed wheat in it 924,000 last Mon- polis and zrease of .. Record avators of shels, or a companies of ‘before the nse TENNESSEE TROOPS CALLED OUT To Quell the Disturbances Severe Fightingiat Cove Creek. A Militia Captain Held as a Hostage. At 3 o'clock Tuesday morning a mob of 700 miners made an attack on the conwict mine stockade at Oliver Springs, Tenn. It was defended by 40 guards Before a flag of truce was shown two guards were fatally in- jured gud eight niiners shot. The miners were finally repulsed. Governor Buchanan ordered the Third Regiment out and they have left for the scene of action. The repulse of the miners at Oliver Springs was brought about by the timely arrival of 50 picked men as reinforce- ments to the guards, Tuere are about 150 convicts at Oliver Springs. : FFICIALS IN LEAGUE WITH MINERS, A remarkable change has taken place in the sentiment of the people in the. region of the Inman outrages. Judge Moon's charge to the grand jury had the effect of produc- ing 20 indictments against rioters. = These de endants will be arrested at once, and severely dealt with, The rioters declare thatarmed resistance will be ‘made to any effort to arres' the miners. © It has develop- ed that the sheriff of Marion county is a member of the Miners’ League, and may be impeached. ; ‘Anarchy reins supreme in the mining regions north of Knoxville, Teun. Excite- ment there is intense, and is heightened by the lack of definite information from the scene of the trouble, the wires having been cui. The mob is in actual possession of property of the East Tennessee Railroad, in the neighborhood of Coal creek and Olivers. They have cut the wires in numerous places, torn up the tracks in every direction and captured every locomotive in the mining region. : * ta late hour Tuesday night over a ‘thousand miners captured three locomotives and several empty coal cars at Coal Creek, and forced the engineers to take them to Oliver Springs, where about 95 convicts were employed in the mines of the Cumber- land Y They arrived at ind 1. Company. ‘Olivers about 4 o'clock next morning and at once planned an attack on the stockade where the convicts were confined. : . “About 7 o'clock they assaulted the stock- ade, and a lively battle proceeded. The stockade was defended by 50 picked guards and a company of 38 militiamen. Two $ ational guards, enroute from Chattanooga via Harriman, were compelled “to take the side track a few miles from Oli- vers on account of displaced rails. Hundreds of shots were exchanged, but strange to say Moone was injured, - Guards and militia “seeing that it was useless to combat a force of 1,000 infuriated and determined men, quietly surrendered. . he convicts, guards and soldiers were loaded on a train of flat cars, and the engi- neer at the point of a Winchester rifle wag compelled to pull the train out in the direc- tion of Knoxville. The stockade was then ‘burned to the ground. Arriving at Clinton, permission was obtained from the railway officials to bring the ‘convicts to this city. ‘The train which was the only one in or out for 24 hours, arrived in Knoxville about 3 o'clock, and was surrounded by an immense throng of the curious. > Bulietins posted in the leading buildings of Chattanooga, Tenn., told the following story “Tennessee to Arms.” “Will allow your State to be disgraced?’ miners have captured soldiers, let volunteers come at once.” ‘‘Lieutenant Royster is in the armory ready to receive volunteers.” “Bring any kind of weapon you have.” A thousand people stood in the drizzling rain reading these bulletins. Terror was added when Colonel Woolford wired from Harriman that the 30 Knoxville soldiers ‘had been captured en route to Oliver Springs. Wires were cut and no one could say what fate they would meet. It is intimated that fully 3,000 armed miners are in the field in East Tennessee, and the fight against the troops is uneven to say the least. vou “The Citizens are very indignant at the course | of Governor Buchanan, and loud threats of lynching him are freely made on the streets. Some of the citizens are forming companies to leave for the scene of trouble, and all kinds of weapons are being gathered for use in the fight, which is sure to come. - "A BATTLE IN PROGRESS. The telegraph wires to Coal Creek have been cut. A battle is raging between troops and miners. Cannonading can be heard in the distance. - The streets at Knoxville are crowded with a howling mob, and the greatest excitement Pproyails: + Five nows apers correspondents who went to Coal Creek have been captured by the miners and are held prisoners. Late Wednesday night Governor Buchan- an was forced to call out the entire State nard. ; = Sovernor Buchanan refused to call out the entire State militia to quell the riot, solely to boost his independent canvass for re-election. e appeals to the rioters for voters and declined until the last moment to call out the troops against them. The few at presenit in the field are without or- ders or leadership and have no fixed pur- £ They are simply spectators of the miners’ wild work. x THE GOVERNOR CALLS FOR VOLUNTEERS. The Sheriffs of Knox, Shelby, Hamilton and Davidson have been ordered to summon 1,000 men each and go on a special train to thescene. The Governor clailas to be able to have 8,000 men on the ground by Thurs- «day morning. A private message from Clinton, Tenn., says: ‘A courier arrived here at 9:15 p. M., from Coal Creek. He says fighting has been going on all the afternoon. Four soldiers were ki Jed and their gatling gun is out of order. The Knoxville volunteers and sold- iers who left here by special train will never reach Coal Creek, as the track is loaded with dynamite.” Captain Keller Anderson, who for nearly a year has held the convicts at Coal Creek, isin the hands of the miners at last. The latest reports, which are reliable, say that the battle at Camp Anderson was commen- ced as early as 10 o'clock Thursday morniug. For several hours the firing was not general. About 2 o'clock the miners, to the number of 1,000, made an organized assault on the fort and were successfully repulsed. The second assault was also easily repulsed. The third attempt resulted in a regular Jitched battle and the gatling guns got in eir work, but to what extent is not known, Several of the assailants were wounded and some of them were probably killed, but no one knows for certain. CAPTAIN ANDERSON CAPTURED. Between the first and second assault on the fort three miners were captured. The strik- ers sent up a flag of truce to Captain Ander- son to ask for their release. He was expect- ing such a message and met the men on equal grounds. He was seized by several of them and rushed down. the hill and finally taken to ohe of the hotels in the village, where he is guarded by Robert Lindsay, a Deputy United States Marshal, and a num- ber of friends. They are holding him as a hestage, and will not agree to give him up until troops and convicts are withdrawn from the valley. Captain Anderson has been taken from the hotel, where he was guarded, and spirit- ed away. Governor’ Buchanan is confined to his honse at Nashville completely Prostrated by the Sxeifeinent and worry of the past few days. His physician says he cannot leave his room for a week to come. His work is being carried on by Adjutant General Nor an, WILT, GIVE UP THE CONVICTS. KNoxviLre, TesN., Aug. 18—The Knox ville Iron Company, lessees of the branch Penitentiary at Coal Creek, have given the vernor 20 days’ notice that they will give up their lease and turn the convicts over to State authorities. This decision, if laid ‘miners b : will bly put an end Wo the whole trouble, pre a! 3 M Seo is no friction betw: 0 BR Hemp to Toduce wages and its € ssembly now. The State win da 1 3 ate not relieve us and com t 5 0 annually for the labor of 1,000 on PA ti not take them off our hands, all w be protected in their use io. long xe a 3 has Pay eir labor. This Protect on the State of Tennes- see does not seem able to afford us. ALL TROOPS ORDERED OUT.- At Nashville, Tenn.. late Thursday night, after consultation with Adjutant General Norman and his attorneys, Governor Bu- chanan ordered all the organized. militia in the State to the scene of trouble in the min: ing region. He then made requisitions on the sheriffs of Davidson, Hamiltom and Knnx counties for posses of 1,000 men each, and on the sheriffs of Anderson, Roane, Morgan and Marion for 500 men, or more if thev can raise them, The penalty for any sheriff refusing to obey this orderis a term of imprisonment and a fine of $100. : THE MINERS DEFEATED. Friday night a special train bearing the two volunteers who were killed in the bat- tle Jat Coal Creek, three men who were wounded and 125 volunteers who went to the front, rolled into the depot at Knoxville, Tenn. 3,000 people wsre gathered about the station and the excitement was higher than at any time since the trouble began. Not until the arrival of the train was it possible to get a correct statement of the attle, and the exciting incidents leading up to it. Five men were killed in all. The dead militiamen are: John T. Walt hall, of Knoxville; Bruce Givens, of Knox Co.; Militiaman of the Second Regiment, name unknown, aad supposed to be from ( hattanooga; George ' iller, of Coal Creek, miner; George Neill, of Oneida, miner. The wounded on the side of the military are: Thomas L. Cartny, of Knoxville; Samuel G. Heiskell, John Milton, John Wilson, a miner; J. M. Gaut, Knoxville;and one of the volunteers was badly injured by falling over a ledge of rocks. AN ACCOUNT OF THE BATTLE. The battle commenced at 7:30 Friday morning and lasted nearly half an hour. The volunteers ax¥® 100 soldiers of the Sec: ond Regiment reached Offutts, a small vil- lage within four miles of Coal Creek, about 11 o'clock Thursday night. They left Offutts about 2 o'clock and went across Walden’s Ridge by a circuitious route, so as to reach Fort Anderson from a points farthest removed from the village of oal Creck. The might was dark as pitch, and the loneliness of the road was depress- ing. The sides of Walden Ridge are very steep, and are covered with hugh boulders, and ledges of sandstone. Over these ob- structions the brave fellows many of whom had never been in th: mountains before, climbed and then descended. Their cloth- ing was torn and their hands and faces were scratched by the brambles. Just after the started down the mountain onthe nort side toward Fort Anderson, the men were divided into three squads under command of Captain W. L. gerwood, General D. D. Anderson and Colonel 8. L. Woolferd. respectively. DECOYED INTO AN AMBUSCADE. Soon afterward three men, all uniformed, and claiming to be friendly to the soldiers, appeared and offered to pilot the regiment down the mountain. Without suspicion the troops followed them into a well planned ambuscade. Ledgerwood’s men were in front. Ata point within a quarter of a mile of Fort Anderson the firing commenced from behind the great ledges of sandstone on a spur of ridge overlooking the valley where the men were marching. The stars and stripes at Fort Anderson were in full view and the men were feeling relieved at the near approach of fortifications and were : joking with each other when bullets began whistling about their ears. Ledgerwood's command had passed the ambuscade before the firing commenced and they received a yolley of bullets in the back. Sazty: Walthall. Givens and Heis- kell were all in this party. The other com: panies faced about at once and opened fire on the ambuscade. As the firing became general, men seemed to rise up from behind every stump and stone in sight. They were all well armed and greatly outnumbered the military. Major arpenter, seeing that the odds were greatly against him, ordered all three companies to retreat, andthe long march over the mountain to Offutts was commenced again. The dead and wounded of both sides were left on the field of battle The regiment reached Offutts on their re treat, about 10 o'clock thoroughly exhausted. They notified General Carnes that they were at his service if needed, and many plucky young fellows thoroughly stirred up over the loss of three of their comrades, wanted to go to Coal Creek anyway. General Carnes wired them he could manage Coal Creek with his regiment, and they started around the.country among farm houses und ate their first meal in 24 hours. A squad of picked men returned to the battlefield, and rought the dead and wounded into Coal Creek under a flag of truce. . Se GENERAL CARNES AT COAL CREEK. When General Carnes arrived at Coal Creek with his regiment the telegraph office: and in fact the entire village surrendered withont opposition. The march was then taken up in the dircetion of Camp Ander- son, a mile distant. On the way the soldiers were attacked by a large body of miners, possibly 300. The fire was returned, and considerable shooting was done for about 10 minutes. The minerssentup a flag of ce and surrendered. ‘The miners’ attack on Fort Anderson started about two o'clock Thursday after noon. The miners numbered about 3,000, and were armed with ali sorts of weapons, The return fire was ordered by Anderson, and a blaze of fire from every side of the fort belched out. Some were killed out. right, and many wounded. At the stockade they stopped, and the men clambered over the walls to release tha convicts. The fort is some distance from the stockade, and higher up. The doors and entrances were rown open and the miners were at last in possession. They began to order the coun- victs to leave, and had them all captured when Anderson assembled all his soldiers at the side the miners were on and, moving ihe howitzer to that side, began to bombard em. . The miners stopped in the work of releas- ing the convicts and turned to get out of the way of the heavy fusilade of rifle bullets. Again and again their leaders begged them to fight, but they rushed down the hill to es cape the furious onslaught of the soldiers ith never a balt and’ never a. rally they reached the bottom of the hill, bearing 12 dead and more than 20 wounded miners with them. They hurried far out of the sight and reach of the guns. It was after this that Captain Anderson was decoyed outside by a flag of truce and captured. ; CAPTAIN ANDERSON RELEASED, Soon after his arrival at Coal Creek, Gen- eral Carnes demanded the release of Captain Anderson,and gave the miners until 1 o’clock to produce him. One o'clock came; 2 and 3 o'clock passed by and the miners had not turned over the captive. Carnes then order- ed his men to arrest ail suspicions looking men. They went around the village and ar- rested men promiscuously until 100 men had been taken into camp. He addressed them as follows: **You promised to release Captain Anderson at 1 o'clock. ~ You have broken faith with me. You shall produce him in one hour or I will proceed to burn every house in town, and will shoot every one of you down.” In less than an hour a committee sent out forthe purpose, marched into samp and surrendered the prisoner. He imme: ately, ‘orders... The troops from Knoxville reached Eo Dh Sonal 1h le ao howe 08 : een cealed ; farm house o the outskirts of th dokunis CALL FOR VOLUNTEERS. GOV. BUCHANAN EXPLAINS THE SITUATION. The following adres to the public was issued by Gov. Buchanan on Sdturday: “To the people of Tennessee: That there is an insurrection in the mining districts of the state is a fact well known to the public. As many wild rumors and sensational re- ports have gained circulation, I deem it wise at present to make the following statements in brief to the public: “A complete and detailed account accord- ing to the records on file at this office of these troubles will hereafter be made public. Information was received at this office GENERAL CARNES, THE SOLDIER IN COMMAND. August 13 that Tracy City branch prison had surrendered to the miners an the stockade was burned. On Sunday, August 14. the superintendent of prisons ordered an RATE eal ra and guards to reinforce the Inman stockade. On Monday, August 15, reliable information was received that the stockade at Inman was threatened with attack. The sheriff of the county of Marion was ordered to summon a posse and protect the stockade, but failed to execute the or- der and the stockade was captured by the miners. The sheriff failed to obey the Cliver Springs; the troops from Chatanooga were intercepted. The stockade was attack- ed by the miners, who were repulsed, but it finally capitulated to an overpowering force. ‘Fearing a smilar outbreak at Oliver Springs, without waiting for official inform- ation. I at once telegraphed the sheriff of Morgan county to summon a large posse and protect the stockade. The nearest militar forces, the Chattanooga and Knoxville counties, were ordered to go at onceto the scene of action. I ordered the sheriffs of Hamilton and Knox counties to supple- ment the regular troops by 500 men each, and the sheriffs of Shelby and Davidson jo furnish 1,050 men each, and the sheriffs of other counties to furnish their respective quota. I ordered Gen. Carnes, with the forces at his disposal, to proceed, as rapidly as possible to Coal Creek and disperse the niob. “I have entire confidence in the skill and bravery of Gen. Kellar Anderson, who isin command of the state forces at Coal Creek, and occupies a strongly fortified position. The last official reports were that Gen. Carnes, with a strong force, had reached within a few miles of Coal Creek. «On Wednesday, August 17, having ob- tained reliable information of the strength of the miners and their purpose to attack the state troops at Coal Creek, I ordered the entire military forces of the state to con- centrate at Knoxville under the command of Gen. S.T. Carnes, brigadier-general N. G. S.T. Ihaveevery reason to believe that the insurrection will be quelled. To render this result certain additional forces are being sent as reinforcements as rapidly as they can be assembled and transported. Some Sheriffs and’ citizens have gallantly made voluntary offers of assistance and have been gladly received. 2 ' “It is the purpose of the executive de- partment to use every power conferred on it by the Constitution and thelaws to restore order and preserve the maintenance of the law. I therefore call on every patriotic citizen to hold himself in readiness in case his services should be needed by the state.” Sunday was a day of quiet spectancy a Coal Creek. 'Oceasional arrests by scouting arties were the only events, All the Ps in the vicinity have been searched. Generali Carnes has now nearly 300 prison- ers confined under guard in the church at Coal Creek, having captured about 30 men, either miners or their allies on Sunday. TWENTY-SEVEY DEAD RIOTERS FOUND. Three more dead bodies of miners were found in the mountains, one of them badly mortified and worms had eaten the face. This makes in all the bodies of 27 miners found since Thursday’s skirmish. A num- ber of wounded were carried away by their comrades. 2 Fifteen guns were captured in the moun- tain, and beside each was a miner’s cap and lamp. General Carnes thinks the trouble is about over, but others believe the miners are playing ‘possum in the hills and will concentrate to give him battle and attempt the release of the prioners. The Tennessee State Board of Priscn In- spectors on Saturday resolved that, in ac cordance wish the contract with the Tennes- see Coal, Tron and Railroad Company, all convicts in excess of 400, and women and hospital inmates, must be removed from the penitentiary, in which there are now 1,070. The Board ‘agrees to furnish guards for safe keeping of the convicts wherever the com- pany may desire to locate them. —— es tires Retaliation on Canada. In accordance with the recent act of Con- gress President Harrison on Saturday issued a proclamation imposing a tax of 20 cents a ton on all freight of whatever kind passing through the Sault Ste. Marie canal. . This tax will be continued until the Canadian government makes the tolls for the Welland canal the same on American as upon Cana- dian freight. The Canadian government had decided that the rebate of 18 cents a ton shall be repaid on Canadtan freight un- til the end of the season. . The Lengae Record. The following table shows the standing of the various base ball clubs: Won. Cleveland........ 22 New York Philadelphia.... Brooklyn........ 1 Pittsburgh....... Boston...... en Baltimore... Louisville, Cincinnati Chicago. 8¢t. Louis. Washington. Two Killed, 20 Injured. Two persons were killed and 20 injured by an accident on the Annapolis & Balti: more short line railroad near Baltimore Md. The passenger car rolled over an em: bankment 30 feet high. The persons kille were a colored man and woman, who were standing on an embankment. Post- Per Lost. poned. Cent. A YOUNG Thicago ‘merchant while fn San Francisco had his pocket, picged of $20. He pounced on the thieves, demanded his money back, and got it. Then he insisted on $10 extra to pay him for his trouble, and got that also. . The incident will afford esteemed Eastern contempor The Modern Tooth. ¥resh from his recent revelations as to the inevitable results of higher education on the woman of the future, Sir James Crichton Browne, who presided yesterday over a meet- ing of the British Dental Associa- tion, has felt it his painful duty to call attention to the lamentable con- dition of the tooth of the present. The picture he draws is truly deso- lating, and it is all the more so in that it is founded on the relentless basis of actual investigation. Out of 1,861 children under 12; recently examined, the proportion of those blest with normal or perfect teeth, in need of neither extracting nor filling, was only one in eighteen. Even more alarming are the dental statistics of Leeds, where 90 per cent. of the teeth of the population re bad. Furthermore. Sir James tated that no fewer than 10,000,000 of artificial teeth are used in En- gland annually. Of the three causes to which Sir James Crichton Browne attributed the present parlous condi- tion of the human tooth-—soft food, high pressure and vitiated atmos- phere—the first, at least; is by no means an inevitable condition of [atter-day life. On the other hand, the nervous tension of modern ex- fstence and the :growth of large towns are factors which cannot. be eliminated from ‘the great dental problem, and are bound to exert an increasingly destructive influence on the type of the coming man. We are rapidly tending toward an era of total baldness, and this, it seems, is to be further aggravated by tooth- lessness. There is an ancient Greek legend of the daughters of Phorcys, who had only one eye and one tooth among them. This, we take it, must have been a prophetic view of the results of culture and civiliza- tion on the woman of the future.— London Globe. The Reason Why. I have often heard the question asked why eight-day clocks are com- mon, and why clocks intended to run about a week without winding are not made to run seven days exactly. There is an excellent reason for this. The only way to keep a clock going steadily that does not require wind- ing every day is to select one day in the week to wind it, and hence an eight-day clock is wound up every seventh day with considerable regu- larity, the experience proving that it is impossible to remember to do it exactly on the eighth day. As a re- sult, the spring is seldom allowed to run down, and the point where it is the weakest is protected. Exactly the same principle can be found in a watch, the spring of which is con- structed to run about thirty hours. The man who winds up his watch about the same time every evening seldom has any difficulty with it, while the man who winds up his wateh when he feels like it and fre- quently lets it run down at night is liable to disconcert the most valuable timekeeper he can purchase. Many office men, in order to insure regu- larity, wind up their watches the first thing after opening their desk in the morning, and on the whole this seems a much more common-sense arrangement than the old-fashioned and more orthodox plan of winding up at night.—St. Louis Globe-Demo- erat. Klectricity in the Home. For the World’s Fair at Chicago is promised a miniature electric house which will illustrate the application of electricity to various economic uses. The apartments will be warmed by electric radiators, and ventilated and cooled by a system of electric fans. : The cooking for the family will*he conducted upon an electric range in the kitchen at the top of the house and the food lowered to the dining room upon an €lectrically propelled dumb-waiter. The dishes wiil be washed by an electric dish-washer, on which a child can wash ten thousand pieces a day. The washing, ironing, the scrubbing of the floors and wood- work, the cleaning of the silver and knives, and even the washing of the windows, will be done by electricity. The offal debris will be destroyed by an electric current. = In the parlor will be a musical telegraph, with at. tachment for diffusing the music to an audience; a phonograph and cylin. der containing celebrated songs by celebrated women. and celebrated speeches by celebrated men. 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Nothing is so beneficial in assisting nature as Swift's Specific (S. S. 35 : 12 7s a simple vegetable compound. Is harmless to the most delicate child, yet 1£ forces the poison to the surface and eizminares il from the blood. ni ed = seve: = i nl one me for a flood poised few bottles of Swift’s Specific (S. S. S.) cured me. J. C. Jongs, City Marshal, Treation,on Flood ant Sh es gi real on B and Skin i free. SwirT Sexciric Co, ee nailed 93 PNU34 onstipation, ; Eo , Heartburn, Breath, eadache, “0000008 OOO every sym or 280 $blood, or a failure by the stomach, Seer or in oe eto perform their proper functions. person en'to y ¢ over-eatingare benefited g after e each meal. Price, bv mail, 1 21 1bottleise. Ad- Gress THE RIPANS CHEMICAL GO. 108pruce St... 7.8 Agents Wanted; EIGHTY per cent profit. FRAZERGAXSS: GREASE BEST IN THE WORLD, 2 Its wearing qualities are unsurpassed, act outlasting three boxes of any other proud, Nok affected by heat. GET THE GENUINE. FOR SALE BY DEALERS GENERALLY. ne Piso’'s Remedy for Catarrh is the |B Best, Easiest to Use, and Cheapest. Sold by druggists or sent by mail. 60c. E.T. Hazeitine, Warren, Pa. Institute of Shorthand, No. 104 Fifth avenue, Pittsburg, Pa. G ham and Pitman systems. Private and mail instructions, Special speed classes for all write ers. Good positions for competent students. ANTED — AGENTS — For the WATCH CASE SELF-LIGHTING POCKET LAMP, £25 oe 4 week guaranteed. Particulars for stamp. TOLE LAMP COMPANY, Box 431, ToLEDO, OHIO. ATENTS ! PENSIONS !—Send for Invent or’s Guide or How to Obtain a Patent. Send foe igest of PENSION and BOUNTY LAWS, ATRICK O'FARREL. WASHINGTON, D.C. MEN AND BOYS! Want to learn all about a Horse ? How to Pick Outa Good One? Know imperfec- tions and so Guard against Fraud ?- Detect Disease and Effect a Cure when same is possible ? Tell the age by the Teeth ? What to call the Different Parts of the Animal? How to Shoe a Horse Properly : All this and other Valuable Information can be obtained by reading our 100-PAGE ILLUSTRATED HORSE BOOK, which we will forward, post paid, on receipt of only 25 cents in stamps. BOOK PUB. HOUSE, Ne w York City 134 Leonard St., IF YOU OWN CHICKENS IEP AY i WAY even if you merely keep them as a diversion. In or der to handle Fowls udieiously, you must know something about them. a Eagour s To meet this want we ars selling a iving the experience of a practical poultry raiser for (Only 28¢. twenty: : all his mind, and time, and money to making a suc- cess of Chickenraising—notasa e, but as a business—and if you will profit by his twenty-five years’ work, you can save many Chicks annually, ¢t Raising Chickens.” and make your Fowls earn dollars for you. The point is, that you must be able to detect trouble in the Poultry as soon as it appears, and know how to remedy it. This book will teach you. 1t tells how to detect and cure disease; to feed for eggs and alse for fattening; which fowls to save ror breeding purposes; and everything, indeed, you should know on this subject to make it profitadle. Sent postpaid for twenty-five cents in Ic. cr 2a PSs. ~ Book Publishing House, . 135 LeoNary ST. N. ¥Y, ulty, £ Ww money pretences. ; exslustve sale to shoe FTA : Wo L. DOU 2293 uals custom-made shoes : he only $3.00 Shoe made wit soles, securely sewed n which gives double the wear of cheap welt shoes sold at the AES same price, for such sasily rip, having only one sola se to a narrow strip of leather ‘worn through are worthle. The two solesofthe W, when worn through can GLAS FOR GENTLEMEN, ennine sewed shoe that will net rip 3 fin ooth inside, flexible, more tale styllah than any other Shoe ever sold at the price. n| m 3 two complete at the outside edge (ns show: Touts, on the edge, and when once » DOUGLAS $3.00 Shos asthe i avery papas JRARY Simos ig : Purchase: O! wear {ng to bs -five years. It was written by aman who put -