Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 36, Number 38, Jasper, Dubois County, 1 June 1894 — Page 7

AGRICULTURAL HINTS. SENSIBLE FARM BARN.

Arrant;"' K, at to Snvo Ilia Full Vuluo nl Mauuri. One of the chief "secrets" of tfood farming Is thu providing of plenty of plimt food for the land tit n minimum of cost. l)HTi;rorit farmers have different ways of lolng this each orte varying his mutltods to suit Ills Individual clroinnstanees. It Is ulso true, unfortunately, that there Is a much larger class of furmers who may be said to

have different ways of wasting plant fertility ways that, though differing, all lead to disastrous results. With the great majority of farmers who waste valuable plant food it is the old ttory of allowing stahlo manure to deteriorate before its application to the soil. In ninny cases it is thrown out of doors, to 1 leeched of its most valuable qualities by every rain and shower, or to be more or less completely destroyed by heating. 'Ihe majority of farm barns üo not have, and in many cases cannot have, cellars under them, in which manure can be kept without losing any of its value. A plan that may bo serviceable to such as are thu; situated is presented in the illustration ami the diagram accompanying this.

go aJ rsr

CATTLE STALLS ' i i i i i i i i

FEEDING FLOOR

MAY'M0W8

The ordinary barn to be seen throughout the country is figured here, with a cheaply-made addition that solves the problem of how to preserve the full value of stable dressing. This manure shed has a cement or tamped clay floor. The latter .vill answer if the location is dry. A car that dumps easily, or even a wheelbarrow, is run along the walle behind the row of cat

tle and the manure taken up, plenty o

litter having been used to take up all the liquid, and the whole is wheeled to

the manure shed an d piled there daily

or, what is better, it is spread out dailv

over the lloor of the shed arid covere

with sulllcient litter to keep the sur

face dry, ami upon this young stock is allowed to run, being fed in the shed from the main feeding' iloor. Colts

could also be allowed to run loose here, The manure will become hard-packet:

under the continued tramping, and will be in no danger of overheating. A big door may be arranged at both ends of

the shed, so Mutt a team can be driven

right through, or the team could be

backed in through a single door.-

Webb Donneil, in X. Y. Tribune. PARSIMONY IN FEEDING.

There I Such n Tiling at Shoddy lit Fo4

no Well h In Cloth.

The first cscntial thing in stock raising is tö provide an abundance of

lirst-class foods of sutllccnt variety, and

the next thing in importance is a judicious use of it Animals may be in

jured by overfeeding us well as by

starving, loo much food is especially

dangerous if the animals are contlued

too strictly to a bingle articleof diet or

a one-sided food. An nrticle like com

is almost wholly composed of starch or

carbon and .mother product may con

tain too large a proportion of nitrogen

or phosphate, while a proper comblna

tion of these would prove) profitable as a balanced ration, requiring a less

amount of product to secure the same

result. A dairyman of experience says: Par simony is one, and a very mean thing,

and economy is another, most excel

lent thing. They are widely different, yet it is common for them to be confounded and mistaken for one another. Not infrequently, men who think thev

arc practicing the virtue, economy, am really guilty of the vice, parsimony. This mistake occurs in all various walks of

life, bui I am to-day only interested In fcomo forms of it In dairy practice. There is much talk in the papers ami from the platform, by writers and lecturers, as to the necessity for cheapening production. Now, I am painfully aware of the vise-like grip of competition on prices, and the consequent extreme ditlleulty of making both ends meet, but I am quite sure that the cheapening may be overdone that in trying to cheapen production one may injure the product and seriously impair the producer. In trying to reduce the cost of cow food one may spoil the quality of the butter ana injure the cows. There is such a thing ns shoddy in food as well as in cloth. Western Kural IN THE POULTRY YARD.

Don't begin with too many breeds. Reluct the one which best suits your Mirreundings and stick to it. Hy careful selection you can then build up a drain that will be satisfactory to yourself and patrons. A roui.TnvMAN wants to know how tc get rid of the hawks without the use ol the shotgun. IloVho has used traps on high poles, and with what success? Again, what effect has Unirs on high flnjt MulTs? Who can answer? Do not neglect the water fountains. Keep them filled with fresh, sweet, clean water. In rainy weather keep the yards drained so that no Impure water will be where the fowls may drink it, says a good authority. 0.x r, kind of fowlü on the farm look? better. No one driving by stops tc look at a lot of mongrels, but If all are f one kind they command attention! ml if well bred It Is bo troblo to sell Atting of eggs, and get a dollar pei cttinjf.

BEEKEEPING PAYS, A rientiint Indu-try rr Winnen w'hm Arm Tumi or .Nu In re. As nn outdoor pursuit, or better as Kti outdoor interest for busy women, bees are better than poultry, for to many their curious ways prove an nlsorbing study; then, too, they do not require continuous or daily care, and once prepared for winter they need Utile or no attention during the winter months; which is a great consideration. The profits arc largo in i.ropjrtion to thu labor and time. HlveSj frames, sections, honey crates, etc., tire, Iti.c.v, pensive, und may be bought rvutly for use, or tho hives may be luadu ttt home, buying the material cut to the right dimensions ready to nail together, They are cheaper made in large quantities by machinery than they can be made tit home.if one's time is taken into account. Then, too. they are more likely to bo of exactly the same dimensions, as. of course, they should bc so that frames, upper stories, covers, honey crates, etc., may be interchangeable. This is a great advantage at all time, but it Is especially nccet-snry at swarming time, when one wishes to give a new colony a frame of uncapped brood, from some other hive, to keep them from swarming out of the new home, if it is not quite to their liking; and in the autumn to build up a weak colony that is to be kept over; also when preparing them for winter. The hive that is the simplest, least complicated in construction, should be chosen. Experience with several hives has taught me that for northern and northwestern states the double-walled chaff hive is thu best ull-purpose hive. It protects the bees from all dampness excessive heat of the sun in summer, which sometimes causes the combs to breakdown, and from the cold of winter. With two colonies standing sido by side, one in a chaff hive, the other in a hive the walls of which were made of one thickness of inch lumber and one of half-Inch, with building paper between, the difference year after year after was always in fax or of the bees in the chaff hive. They began brood raising strller in the sjiring and continued later in the fall, came through the winters better sind were stronger and healthier in spring; they stored more surplus honey and sent out earlier swurms. Minneapolis Housekeeper. MODEL POULTRY HOUSE.

All the Material Kt-qutrMI ( nn Ita Atougtu for 1'irty DollMr. Anyone wishing to build a houso to accommodate 15 or 20 hens can find a good model on .the Hatch experimental station grounds at Amherst, Mass. These houses, six in number, are each 12 by IS feet, divided into a roosting room It) xlti and a shed Sxl'-. The walls are 8 feet high in front and fi; feet in rear,

IS f,

SHEDMB

w 3i PLATFORM : l jrwjrj

CUC 9W -..?:

11 JUSTfT'A

covered with boards, pinned on the inside, resin-sired paper and shingles.

Thu roof is a single slope covered with

boards. .Ncpouset paper and steel roof

ing. Tho shed portion can be closed

stormy days by two large doors with

a window set in each. The roosting

room has a cement lloor. Könning

from 2 feet above the roof to this lloor

Is a ventilator fl inches square inside, with a door at the top and bottom of the room. Two roosts made of J inch boards like a letter T, with the stem 2 Inches long and the top l inches, extend across the rear part of the room.

Under the roosts is a platform 3 feet

3 EAST END 11

CFCiS SK

wide. Directly under the platform tiro the nests, six in one box, 12 by 15

inches. The hen enters these from tho rear while the attendant may enter by a door in front for eggs. These houses are quite warm and free from drafts

and will be very durable. There is not glass enough to get the great range of

temperature between day and night

noticeable in some houses. The shed allows the hen to get out of doom thes wintry days without having to stand

on the snow. All the material in such

a house above tho foundation and floors

ought not to cost over fifty dollars.

I-arm and Home.

How to 3Iearn liny. The kind of hay has much to do with

the weight in the stack. Timothy, being

heavy, takes about 5!)0 cubic feet for the ton, mixed hay about dOO feet,clover 700 to 7.10 feet, and red top hay as much ns S00 feet To get the cubic feet In a round stack, take one-third of tho girth, which will give the diameter, square this that is multiply tho figures by

themselves take three-quarters of thu

product, and multiply this by the average height, all in feet Then divide by the weight of a ton as given. Tills modo

of estimating is for old hay, put up lat Hummer.

(Irciiftc Ihn limit of Hlttct. When the turkeys or hens desire to

sit, they should be anointed on the heads once a week with some kind of

oil, such as sweet oil, linseed oil or lnrd oil. This will kill thu lartre lice and

prevent thu chicks from being destroyed

during tho first days of their existence, tlrease Is repugnant to-poultry of till kinds.hcnce but little oil should bo used Apply It lightly on the heads, combs,

faces and necks, rubbing ic well into

the skin. It will render tho hon more

comf ible, nnd prevent her leaving

the nest frequently for relief from torture, nnd will also save the chicks fron being attacked. Farm and Flreslda

A MAN WITH A HISTORY.

Tho Torrlblo Exporlonco That B foil John W. Thomas, of Thota, Tonnoeaoo.

Afflicted Willi a l'crullar Ilrs-HIi Hody Covort-il wllh I.uuip-Couhl Sot Kat ami Thought II yn doing

io iry rp-HU Kcrovery the Marvel of Tvmieisce. (From tho Nashville, Tenri., Ilanncr J Mr. John W. Thomas, Jr., of Thcta, Tearis u man with a most interesting history. At present ho is interested in blooded horses for which Maury County is famous. "Few people, I talto it,'1 said Mr. Tlionas ton reporter who had asked him for tho story of his life, "have passed throughns remarkable a chain of events as I have and remained alive to tell tho story. "It was nlong in 1SS4, when I was working In the silver mines of New Mc:dco, that my troubles began; at first I suffered with Indigestion, and so acute did tho pains bo come that I wentto California for mv health, but the trip did mo littlo good, and fully impressed with tho idea that my last day had nearly dawned upon me, I hurried back hero to my old home to die. "From simple indigestion my malady developed Into ii chronic inability to take any substantial food, I was barely ablo to creep about, and at times I was prostrated by spells of heart palpitation. This condition continued until one year ago. "On tho 11th of April, 1S93, I suddcnlv collapsed, and for days I was unconscious, in fact I was not fully myself until Julv, My condition on September 1st, was simpiy horrible, 1 weighed but seventy pounds, whereas my normal weight is 105 pounds. All over my body there were lumps from the size of a grano to tho sbe of a walnut, my lingers were cramped so thatl could not more than half titmightcn them. I bad entirely lost control of my lower limbs and my band trembled so that I could nut drink without spilling tho liquid. Nothing would remain on my stomach, and it seemed that I must dry up before many moro days had passed. "I mado another round of the physicians, calling in one after tho othor, and by the aid of morphine and other medicines they gave me, 1 managed to livo though barely through tho fail." Hero Mr. Thomas displayed his arms, and just above tho elbow of each there was a largo irregular stain us largo as tho palm of tho hand nnd of a purple color, the spaco covered by tho marl: was sunken nearlv to tho bone. "That," said Mr. Thoinas," "Is what tho doctors did by putting morphine, into inc. "On tho 11th of December, lsa', just eight months after I took permanently to bed I shall never forget tho date my'cousiu, .loo Foster, of Carters' Creek, called on mo nnd gave mo a box of Dr. Williams' Pink Tills for Palo IjYople, saying they bad cured him of partial paralysis, with which I knew ho had all out died. I followed his directions and began taking tho medicine, as a result I stand before you to-day the most surprised man on earth. Look ut my hand, it, is ns steady as yours; my face has a healthy look about it; I have been attending to my duties for a month. Sineo I began taking tho pills I have pained 30 pounds, und I am still gaining. All tho knots havo disappeared from my body except this littlo kernel hero in my palm. 1 have a good appetite and 1 am almost as strong as 1 ever was. "Yesterday I rode thirty-seven miles on horseback. 1 feel tired to-day but not ick. 1 used to have from two to four spells of heart palpitation every night, since I bt pan tho use of ttie pills 1 havo hud but four spells altogether.

"I know positively that I was cured by

i;r. miliums' i'inK rms, ami i ocnevc nrmly that it is tho most wonderful remedy in existence to-day, and every fact I have pre

sented to you is Known io my neighbors ns well as to myfclf, and tlioy will certify to

mo irutn oi my remarKauio cure." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale Peoplo are not a patent medicine in the senso that name implies. They wero first compounded

as a prescription turn uscu ns sucuin general practice by an eminent physician. So great

was their efficacy that it was deemed wise

to place them within tho reach of all. They uro now manufactured by the Dr.

Williams' Medicine Company, behenectady, X. Y., and are sold in boxes (never in loos, form by tho dozen or hundred, nnd the public are cautioned against numerous im

itations sold in this shape) ntM) cents a box.

or six noxes lor r-'.rvi, ami may bo had or aij

uruggws or uirect oy mau lrom Dr. vu-

Hard to Undcmtanil.

'There's one thing about me that I

don't understand," said Jointny,

thoughtfully, "nnd that's why It is

that making marks on wall-paper Is such lots of fun. and making 'em in

copy-books in school is such hard work." Hurpei's Young People. So Itadiful.

Mistress How is it one never hears a found in the kitchen when your

sweetheart Is with you of an evening? Servant Girl Please, ma'am, the poor fellow is so bashful yet; for the present he does nothing but eatl Lustige lllaetter. Milp Thüt Vsxtn In the Nicht. They were wedded In Washington, I). C. And each soon considered the other K. O.; Whereat stio fled to Sioux li'.K X I)., While he took his ilight out to Guthrie. O. T., And now they arc once again happy nnd Ireo. Harpcr'b Young People. A llUtlnrtlon. llavcrley Do you ever give your eeat to a lady in a crowded car? Austen Never. Haverley Why, now I think of It, I Raw you do so last night. Austen She wasn't a lady. Sho never even thanked me. N. Y. World. A Frlhtrael llrldr. llridcsmnld You poor, frightened darling. You looked scared to death at the altar. Jlrldc -Yes. George trembled so I was dreadfully afraid he'd lose courage and run away. X. Y. Weekly. An I'yo to itimiiifM. Coachman (driving Mr. Stingimanl The horses nre running away, sir, and I can't stop them. Mr. Stlnglman You can't? Well, bo

caiefnl nnd run Into .something cheap.

Philadelphia Kecord. Modrrn Newrpapors. Wife We ought to 1 'ivc n newspaper

rnck for the sittlng-ro.mi.

Ilusbnnd (openingou. a Sunday news

paper) Can't afford it while there's a

tariff on lumber. X. Y. Weekly.

fin ihn Way. "In my article In the soup?" Inquired

tho good-natured litterateur.

"Not yet," replied the editor, "but

I'm going to boil It down pretty soon." Washington Star. I

ITEMS OF INTEREST. Cuttixo the huir Is a sign of moursIng in Persia. A Kwoitn-nsii the size of a herring can terrify a sturgeon, which is the most timid of ull fish. A ma hum; statue with natural eyelashes adorns the Yntlcan tit Home. It represents Ariadne asleep, at tho moment she was deserted by Theseus. Tin; land on which tho Metropolitan club of New York city hits its home, at the corner of Tifth avenue and Sixtieth street, is 100x200 feet, and cost tho enormous sum of SISO.000. Thu building eost 1,000,000. I.v the Western Pacific ocean nre sevr oral Island that appear and disappear ut irregular intervals. They couio up, suddenly, to warm their brows in tho Kunshlue, and then, ufter a few days' or week1, as suddenly disappear. Am. the money that Huron De Hirsch, who owns several speedy horses, wius on the race track, he gives to tho London hospitals. This has been his custom for years. Last season ho won 7,500, and this year he doubled tho usual donation to the hospitals, giving them 15,000. A .man in Atchison has a disease of the eyes which prevents him from correctly estimating distances. When he bees an acquaintance approaching, ho cannot tell whether he is one foot or two hundred feet away, and often stretches out his arm to shake hands with a man a block distant.

ABOUT THE WOMEN. Laiiv HitooKn has about twenty small Japanese spaniels, worth three hundred dollars each. Wiu:.v thu late Jane Austin was burled at .Mount Auburn cemetery, women as well as men noted ns pa 11 -boa re rs. Lady IIkmcv Somkuskt demands that the queen shall bestow titles upon women the same as she does upon men. Miw. A.v.NiK S, Ai stin, who was elected" mayor of Pleasanton, Kan., in January, snys that her husband voted against her. Tm: queen of Portugal, the youngest queen-consoi-t in Ihirope, is a brave and graceful hor.-ewomun. She was tho favorite daughter of tho Com to do Pnris. Miss Ed.va Di:an Pnorroit, poetess.' wautH to be known as the apostle of maize as the national fiower. She considers Indian corn as being the most distinctively American product. Am. of the students of the violoncello at present nt the royal academy of music in England are women. Women violin-players have Increased greatly In numbers in Europe of late years.

Rtats or Ohio. Cur or Toixno, Li cas Cor.vrr. '' ThankJ. Cheney makes oath that bo I', tho senior pnrtnerof thefirmof F. J.CnnsEV cvCo., doing business in the City of Toledo County und Btato aforesaid und that said firm will pay tho sum of one hvnduei voir la its for each nndevery caso of Catarrh that cnnnotbccurcdbytbousoof Hall's Cataihiii Cche. Fuank J. Cheney. Sworn to before mo and 8iibscriled in my presence, thlsüth day of December, A.D. ISio. . A IV 111 Pimv

ilfihf Xotarv Public.

Hall's Catnrrh Curo Is taken internally and acts directly on tho blood and mucous sur

races oi tno system, henu 1 or testimonials,

iree. f . d. unnsnr ioicao, u. C3rBold by Druggists, 7oc Hall's Family Pills. ic Ballt Oat "What a cunning little fel Inti'Mv f '.illt.w.-- I. IM II. .11.. kj...in .!.-....

... , .'4, . V .,. F n i ijvu .mm . u 1 1 ningl Why. ho Is dreadfully bow-legged." Sally Gay "Yes, but that gives him such

u mwu iura, j uu tujuw. uuer uccuu.

THE MARKETS.

New YoitH, May Sfl, PATTLH Native Steers I 15 cy.

',vi a ... Cf. to u 13 OO fc

('(I'lTnvMi.iitiin..

FLOlMt -Winter Wheat WHKAT-No. Ked fOKN-No. a Hed ... OATS-Western Mixed I'OHIv New Mes ST. LOUIS. COTTON-MIddllng 1IKKYKS-Shipping Steers. .. Medium IIOOS-Knlr to Select SHHKP-Kittr to Choice KLOl'K- Patents Fancy to Kxtnulo.. WHKAT-No. ' Ked Winter... COK.V -No. Mixed OATS- Nc.S

KYH No. 2 Nl TOHACCO-Lu;r 4 tat Leaf Hurl??. 7 Ol HAY -Clear Timothy t ( 1IPTTKK -Choice Dairy 10 KiiOS -Kresh , s i J'OKK Standard Mess (new).. 13 37H 1IACON Clear Kit. ... ttj, LAlfJJ 1'rlme Steam Clt.'CAUO.

CA TTLK Shipping 2 ft

iiin..-i ruirio inoice i 70 SHU KP l'air to Choice 30 FLOUK-Winter Patents ü hi Spring Patents 3 10 WHKAT-No. .spring v.. w. ..1

cokn-xo. ;;;; "ATS -No POKIf-Mess (new) li'Jc

KANSAS CITY.

CA TTLK Shipping Steers ... 3 15

in nt.-v .n i.rnues .m WHEAT-No lfi-il

oats-no." ;

COKN-No. J 3.

NKW OKLKANS

FLOUit-IHuh !r:ul..

COKN-No.

OATS Western

HAY Choice PORK - Ni-w M.-ss

HACON -Sides COTTON-MIddllng

LOl'ISVILLK

WHP.AT-No Hod

COK.V -No. Mlxetl

OA''s No." Mixed POKIC- New Mess HACO.V -t'Umr If II.

COTVOV-Mlddllttg ' .

J HI

Hi U)

7!

ran 41', 'l

OF SPECIAL VALUE in breaking tin mid.

den attacks of colds, chills, fevers, and InflammationDoctor

Fierce h Pleasant Pellota. TI10V t'firrv riff

wmj uuuuim 11. tuo

Bvaru jua 11 you would only keep Tourself in TwrtHr

condition with them

1 tho liver active

and tho system reg-

UU1 , UU U HH'I yoa couldn't tako dfoascs easily.

uk mi-, Bugar-coaica "renew" ut the most perfectly ntttraf In their action no crlnlnjr, no violence Take them for In 1 ami rviln In Om lrrol. ..it.

diu in. They absolutely and permanently etirf Conatipation, Indlgeation, Biliousness. Jaundlcn. Klolr nr RiUr.it Ua,la.l.. -.. I

very Liver, Btomach and Dowel disorder.

PIERCE ä CURE

r MtMy Mil ffr

You want the Best

Royal Baking Powder never disappoints; never makes sour, soggy, or husky food; never spoils good materials ; never leaves lumps of alkali in the biscuit or cake ; while all these things do happen with the best of cooks who cling to the old-fashioned methods, or who use other baking powders. If you want the best food, ROYAL Baking Powder is indispensable.

1 ' 1 1 1 1 I

0

4-'-'-'

ItOrU BAKINO POWCt CO., 1H WUl ST., KtW-Y0.

Oltlr Itloixl 11 nd Olrl Urtblrn. A curious nnd interesting; fuct tflvcn by tlie rctflstrnr-gcnornl in bis stntistics for 1S'.I3 is that in tlie Celtic portions of the United Idnydoui the proportion of the female births is much hilifjer than it is in tlie non-Celtic portions. The hiirliest proportions are found in Cumberland, Cornwall and north Wales, while south Wales Is only n little way down in tlie list, nnd has a proportion considerably above the average for the whole country. Tlie proportion of female births is higher In Ireland and Scotland than in Kurland Westminster Gazette.

There Is more power in the influence of a boy than there is in all the steam in a locomotive boiler. Kant's Horn.

J. 1. Cimo T. M. Co. Users of Threshing Machines, Engines nnd Sawmills have long lieon fnmilinr with tho name of tlie linn heading this notice. Its career has been consistent und honorable in an exceptional degree. During' tho past wintern largo part of its mammoth works have been remodeled nnd rebuilt, and ti.o plant is uowprobably tho mostcompleto or its kind extant. Careful buyers nre learning tho lesson thnt It pays to deal with reliable llrms, and anyone- contemplating tho purchase of threshing machinery of nny kind, sawmills et, should writo Jor Illustrated Catalogue issued hy the J. I. Case T. M. Co.. Kacitie, Wis., which Is mulled free to any address.

'It's a lucky thing," said the sad-eved humorist, 'tiat the mngarino editor didn't nccept my verse." "Why?" "Uecauso common decency would then havo compelled me to let up on sarcastic remarks about his not knowing good poetry when he saw It." Washington Star.

Sue "You profess to think n great tlcnl of me. That is all right so long as everything is going pleasantly. But wnuld yon mako any great sacrillco for my sakel" Ho "You know I would. Haven't I offered to innrry you?" Boston Transcript. I.llco tlie Ocntle Diiw From Heaven Comes blissful pcaco to a turbulent, unruly liver brought into subjection nnd disciplined with that grand regulator, Ilostettcr'a Stomach Bitters, a boon of priceless worth, not only to tho bilious, but nlso to tho malarious, the rheumatic, tho nervous, tho feeble, tho constipated, and thoso whoso kidneys and bladder aro inactive. Tho liver is always chiefly involved in malarial complaints, for which tho Bitters is a specific. Tommt "I'nw, what docs vlco versa mean?'' Mr. Kigg -"Why cr horso nud horse."- Indianapolis Journal. Weitem Amor I enn Scenery. Tho Chicago. Milwaukee & St. Paul R'y has now ready f ordistribution a sixteen pago portfolio of scenes nlong its line, half tones, of tho sire of tho World's Fair portfolios lately issued. They aro only ten t ents each, nnd can bo obtained without delay by remitting tho amount to Gi:o. H. IIkaffoiw, General Pass. Agent, Chicago, 111. Cappt "Say. Bronson, I havo an idea."' Bronsou "You'd hotter get it insured" Whi-ti Travollnjf Whether on pleasure bent, or business, takeon every trip n bottlo of Syrup of Figs, as it acts most pleasantly and effectively on tho kidneys, liver and bowels, preventingfovors, headaches and other forms of sickness. For sale in M) cents und SI bottles by all leading druggists. Most remedies for prejudice- seem to bo fatal. Galveston News. Fitr.siiNT.ss nnd purity aro Imparted to tho complexion by Glenn's Sulphur Soap. Hill's Huir und Whisker bye, 60c. Trie post -c; the present!; tho future 1 Puck.

CURES PROMPTLY

LAMENESS,

SWELLINGS, BACK-ACHE, SORENESS.

SOOTHES, SUBDUES, CURES. THE POT INSULTED THE KETTLE BECAUSE THE COOK HAD NOT USED SAPOLIO GOOD COOKING DEMANDS CLEANLINESS. SAPOLIO SHOULD be used in every KITCHEN, "5HE KN0W5 WHAT5 WHAT

.ur

G

LA1RETTE SOAP

MOUSE Iß TK BEST. PUREST 5 MOST ECONOMICAL

StLl (VERVWMU THE N K FAIRBAMK GOMPAHY. ST.LotT5.

Mm

out t:

FRANK LESLIE'S

Scenes and Portraits

AJVD GUT

CIVIL WAR

. . OP THE . . ,

PICTURES OF STIRRING BATTLE &GFNF& I

GRAND GflVflLRy GHflRGFS f

AND PORTRAITS OF THE LEAMfl GENERALS ON I0TN SIDES.

To b! published In thlrtV wrckl V tn-irtC Ench nart.eontntnln HiIkkii ntetnr wllh

impropriate, descriptive readiiig matter an handsome cover. Mdilcd to any address on receipt of

i WCLVC VCflTl TOK EACH FAKT. W m FART ONE READY APRIL 15th.

And each week tuiothrr part liiucd until tho Kerles ts complete Krmlt 93.80 at

in nnu r-r-io inn fmrxm wePKiy or Meaa ivc. at m lima lor each part. 'PoBlaue ulnmpi accepted. Addrc;a

LEON PUBLISHING CO., Exclusive General Wesrern Aunts.

I03O Caxton Building. : : CHICAGO. ILL.

yiWCE 0 CENTS, AU.PWMCIST

ws$m

A, N. K., H.

1501.

trVKir WBIT1NO T ATKTWrK PLKM rtatetkat jia tw U ACjwHtmmi la ihU I HIM