Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 40, Number 1, Jasper, Dubois County, 10 September 1897 — Page 3
HUMOROUS.
Entitled to Hut Name. "Why
gnlt tftlM M umus. in m
ie
"Boca mm who
i. I. I, fnti f i r lh lii'iililc
u."- bii ani lli'toru. .pjit.' So ,ou don't like the hul iuBt iu (roll ol al Haa ould yon hn. it triauaadr He (MTfly "With u luvvn üimf Tit-Hit. An BxOtptMB. utrsbv "All tli s,.rll love a lover." Hawkins (just refected)- "AH iul Mm fid lhe ! lovt'." I'hikuU-lphiu North Aiiuriiai.. "Hit urn -r uiifawrlinit fack," t-;iil L'ik l- EbtBt "dAt da MOV reason a man hul) foh indignation lf less comfort lie'e fwlttMt gH at of WubiactM btar. --The First Fire "And now. children. an ftm wU in' aa tin- hlaiiiif su,,nl get tli.rc? Vou may answer, AVillie." Tlease, ma'am, 1 fttMl it caught w li. -i Adam ffot lirt 1." . leveluni Plata Jealer. "That llflhkMlj )tdgMtM aid the victim of the bi.vHe thief, ' was the finest on the market" "Stop!" cried the Judff "I'll hne you live pouiuls for MDtempt. This court rxl.-s the tin cot whel n the market." Ti t-Iiits. A lUdtad View. "Physician. a rule, are bitterly down on tli' hard times." "For what special rcasou'.'" Tlicv say DOOfdC have had to cat such lain food that they :.rc too halthjr to ! interefctinj,'."- Detroit Free Press. Iii Hetort. "Tlie aparel oft prclaims the man." k1i- init'd. "The lack of it UM woman." he adled; an! as ha happened to be in bell gown at the time she naturally considered the remark personal. Chicago BeaalBf Tost. In ChieegO. Insurance Apvnt You want the policy male mit in favor of y our wife? Jler nanie. please?" The Vtettaa Poa't you think we'd better h ave tin- nam.- ..ut? It will Mil bo much trouble from timoto time. you know." BoatM Transcript. -Finl'ly "Did you hear of the terrible accident that happened toDnnbyl His injuries were k s- rious that hin most intimate friends are unable to reeojrnize him." Dinlily "Terrible acctdent? Railroad collision ? Fall of an elevator?" Fuddy "Worse. He has lost all his money." Host on Transcript,
AGRICULTURAL HINTS HANDY DAIRY WELL. Dor rlpllun of au I. -! I rot t'ooltrr faa si,, nil llnlrj mi ll. A well for keepiiif lairy prtxhiet and Bleu fresh meats is a drmdcrutuiu on many tftMBI fot ordinal use th well hould lie dug 4 by ß feet, with u gutter or groove, down one side, 1 inches square. It should contain 2 or 3 fret of standing water. It should be ia easy reacli of the ki tehee, anil attuched to the house if possible. The curbing should be no larger than the well. A platform, wliieh IDs inside the well, Slides up and down between two timbers, which rest on the bottom of the well and are long enough to reooh up three inches above the curb. These two timbers should be planed. Tlit frumework of the platform has a board nuiled on each side of it, forming S groove which tits on the Upright timbers at each end of the wall. Tint makes it rigid and keeps it level. Tbl
THE OOST DIVIDED.
RAILROAD 30 MILES LONG.
it
l)rll"! the Mnl- of ierln a i.l tli Itnllruittl iiiiiiilltr tlrtler.
There is an obdurate little railroad In (Jeorgia which has not only show n a j disposition to tight all the rest, of the state, but which seems serenely conti- i dent that it will win. It is only 'M miles 00( and runs irom Dublin In Tennille, Its name is the Wrightsville & Tennille j railroad, and is espe ially -distinguished for its proserity and its pugnacious qunlities. Last year the cotton grow- j crs along the line of this roal wer I compelled to ship their cotton over the I tieorgia (Vntral bc ause the road refuscl to issue through bills of laHng over any other line. Some of the growers wanted to ship their cotton over the Augusta Southern, but the Wrightsrillt fr Tennille refused to give them , through Lille over that line, and made i no pretense to disguise their preferences. The result was that theticorgia
Central got marly all the cotton and the Augusta Southern got left. The matter was carrie! In-fore the nulroud mmission and that body handed down a decision ordering the Wlightef Ule fr Tennille railroa! to issue through bills of lading over all railroals and not to play any favorites. The commission a's ordered the attorney-general of the state to begin proceedings for damages against the recalcitrant railroad and to try the Isuiie iuxidved before the state courts. Attorney - ieneral Terrell hns prepared his case and w ill g down to Dublin to try it before iTodge Hart. The defense will he represented by former BOWOtOT A. I. Only, of Wrightsville. Not only Is the rieht of the stute to manage its railroads invnl.ed in the trial of the case, but the interstate commerce commission is interested as well. The line of the Georgia Central runs entirely through the stale, while the Augusta Southern line- the destination of both being Savannah carries the freight north to Hamburg and t hen sout h ov er the port Royal route thronge. South t'arolina. This brings up the interstate 'oinmercr commission question, nnd not only the railroad peoplo of Georgia but the cotton growers as well are deeply interested in the result of the legal contest. Atlanta Constitution.
I leplinnta Miu r Hath. The elephant, in a w ild state, is a nocturnnl animal, randy if rver stirring In the daylight from his haunts In the shady forest, ami, when h niesti r.ted and compelled to work or IfeOtl in the lay time, h is enormous sie nnd lark color eaejpOB him to ! a great sufferer from heat. To relieve him, the animal h;is contracted a habit of withdrawing from his stonia h a quantity of water by means of his t runk, which he then sijuirta over his hack ami sil-s In order, by it.s ev a porat im. to cool his skin. As this pKMSOM is repentetl on an nverng of om e in every five minutes, and as the etepha&t'fl nim is DO! girsl, his efTorts to keep cd 'nii.e considerable ineonvrnieiiee to his rideTS. who ore fn-ipiently sprinkled by the water, though the flubl is n i r lenr and has ni offensive odor. The habit is a--qu'renl in domestication. fr it is not known to le practird by eiephaatt in the wild state, nnl La altogether one of the most tinffiilar In natural his'rv, St. Ionis (dolie-Deaaoerar.. Wlij Thry tiara It t p. Mrs. Dredish I thought rou w ere croing t,i sjion, the summer In your ttac- imi ,, (he lake chore? M 1 Wot '! v We iid Intend to do eo. hol we're hod t give it up. "Why. i it tapootlbta for your hu.v baml to attend to business nnd go so ar out ft ery blghl "' "Oh, no. he eoaM do it all right: bet an hired girl's leau cant'-fierelaed Leader
HANDY COOI.KU FOP. HAIHVMKN. Circular black spots on the platform represent Openings fir vessels. The piece that holds the wheel, over w hieh the rope passes to the windlass, ia prolonged so that when the platform ia just even with the top of the curb, in iron pin ia inserted through it and tl.e top bar of the platform frame, and holds it there. There is another rope anil two wheels. This rope has s heavy weight attached, to assist In raising the platform from the bottom of the well with heavy londa. These weights go down inside a box formed of four wide planks which occupy the gutter or groove. One lid opens up against the weight box, mid fastens with a thumb bottom. The other ia
hinged so as to hang do-vn beside the curb when open. Farm and Home. ABOUT MILK FEVER. tlovr to rrevrnt a lllseaae That IIa Killed TlioasaiKla of OSMi Milk fever ia a lisease to be dreaded by the man who has tirst class dairy cows, and w ho feeds nnd cares for them In su h a manner as to make them lare producers. The man with acrub cows, that have to rustle for themselves during the winter round the straw stack, never suffera from loss by milk fever When hia cowa come in in the spring. It ia true he gets no profit out of hia cows, nnd he rarely gets product enough from them to pay for the little feed ami care they do have. Hut he can nnd does console himself by saying he never has milk fever with his cowa like thoae men do who "stuff and pamper and baby their cow s." We have los, w ithin the paat II years, several valuable cows with this disease. We think we now know how to prevent. A heifer w ith her first calf never baa it nnd very rarely with the second half. A cow that is milked continuously, right up to calving, ia not liable to bOVO milk fever, at least, we have never kftOWfl one to. We hesitated to write that last sentence for fear SOHBC one would license us of advocating continuous milking. That we do not. but still feel bound to state that fact. A cow tha (s starved, or fed just enough to liveon, will never have milk fever. Our way is to dry the cow up six or right weeks before she is due to cnlve (unless she is sm-h a persistent milker is ti make that impracticable); at the nine time reduce her feed, by taking nearly if not quite all the grain Trum h r. Her bowels should be kept loose. If the cow is in Hush pasture, and she i one yea have reason to believe likely
to have milk fever, the only safe way to rto would be to keep her upon ilry feed. Ik know it is hard for the mnn w ho has beOV in the habit of "babying'' nnd peltint his cows anil feeding them to theii full capacity to refuse them nil thev want to eat, but it is the only safe way to do with some of them. After a COM lias had milk fever once she is more liable than other cows to have it again and if she does have it a secoml 1im she will be nlwnys most sure to die. Uuard's Dairyman.
Cow Jtrrser'" HoaC laapro ratrat I. a is Is Just aa Fair. The farmers of the country sre gradually going over to the belhrf that food reads ice 'or their pereoael beuedt and there is a decided change of si'ii'.lnient ilniig the line in many of the states. )ne of the chief obstn. ! a to the reform has been the fear if the fanners thut hl cost of highway improv ementa WOttM fall chiefly on them und as they ltd that they are already junli ned tieuvtly enough they resist the passage if good-roads laws with their loal influence nnd their Mites often to the defeat of these wurthy projects, New Jtraey has a law now in force, however, that illustrates how properly this burin i ran be divided between the individual and the community so that it falls lightly upon the farmer. This law apportions the cost of ull road improveu fiits aa follows: One-third is paid bv thr state, one-tenth by the individual beneficiary of the improvement, th ovv tier of the abutting property, and the remainder by the county in which the Improvement ooenra. deduced to a Stale of thirtieths the state pays teu pnrts, the Individual three parts nnd th county seventeen parts. Stated in still another way the various burdena ate Bore easily appreciated. The aerBgf cost of repairing a road with a meeedam finish is about $3.000 n mile. Of this sum the county would pay $1,Too. the state $1,000 and the individun.' $300. it is to be remembered that the t';1"1 In this case is usually divided among several persons, as few proper ties in this section of the country extend for much more than a quarter of half a mile along a highway, and the tax is assessed on the owners on each aile of the roal. Thus it will frefjuently oceaf that the individual will pay dinctly for a first-class road in front of h. property and fr a mile adjacent such a small sum as $40 or flu. To be sure he pays ns well his share of tin county tnx nnd in less proportion his part of the state tax. but these burdens arc comparatively light and easily borne. These improvements in New Jersey are undertaken on the petition of the owners of the abutting property. Bach law as this, if copied in othet states, would probably result iu an immediate betterment of the country roads in every section, an improvement
Of untold benefit to millions of people. Washington Star,
CURING HICCOUGHS.
nor taeenoeaoe law oa. gngpgatgaaf 1st thr Slor. "Why don't you atop that hiccoi'irhina; said on' baiUMSS man to another na tue) met st the turner uf Fourth and V111 Streets st the noon hour. 'I he msn sddreivsed was ull but 111 convulsions. "Stop nothing!" aaid h- "Fveheentry ing every old remedy 1 ever In aid of and every new one that every fool inend wui kind enough to BSMBMt. I've held my nrnii over my heml for lä minutes and extended them like a Kign board until they ached. I held my breath until 1 was all but ready to drop from apapleiy, I've drunk ahwewal lows of wate r tune times over. I guess, and twe or three cliumpi have tried to ware nie, Slid did it, too, but to 110 good. Then an other enthusiastic amateur phy sician lot me in the Buddie of the back when 1 wasn't looking ami Steeped before 1 could land on him. I would not have done s thing to him if 1 had caught In in Itut the hucoughs sfe here, and to stay, 1 fear." "Set 'em Up if I 01 e you" " ill I? i ll set 'em up for a month nnd hlou- in s lag u!d 'bot' besides ll you -U1V en." Then they adjourned to a moistening es taMiabmeat. and the good Samaritan said to Dsn: "Dan. tits Ibis imtlsnun a lease, of white augar. ' He took a nnd dissolved it in his mouth, Slid the htaCOaghC went as if Ly magic, probably because their stay was over any now, ami not on account of the retueily, hut it cost the cold bottle just the same and some drinks besides. Still, he thinks he got out of it cheap enough. Cincinnati Tribuue. it Worth m I. Chief Justice Peters, of sfsittC, hns a reputation for telling witty stories. At the re cent eonunencement i the Umversity of Maine he told this one: "I knew a young man who was seven year getting through another college. Then he weal into the ministry, bseSUSS he didn't have tenet enough to praetn jaw. He went into the Episcopal niaisterbseaacehe didn't have to make prayers ami could steal hut sermons. Then he went out and got the degree of I). I) it mil a university. One would have done just as well, anil such a degree isn't worth eutch." N. V. Herald. A geeh Chnreh. They di-dicated a church in a certain New York village a few days ago, and shortly after the 1111 ident the daughter of a citiai n living over the way was heard to say to her mother: "1 wonder what's the mutter with that church. Ma. do vm know ':" "No," replied t lie mother. "Whv do mm think there is anv thing the matter v. :th it?" " 'Cause," auswerft) the child. "I heard 'era say it was medicated " -Huston C ourier, It Was TitfB Awheel. Mrs. Tenspiit I am so g ad that you arn engaged to Harold Willoughby. Waa it a lung ueartslijpf Miss Skid mo re Sei very .h loms
tsr tegwtercd aUmt Too unlit .Imlire
Earaaraslag Btatlatlcs. Ths Bcltlawte snd Ohio otb iale rs very
mm ii pleased uith certain klafifttica that
have reti ntly been prepared ot tie per-
formaiite a freight tnuna n the Second
division, which handle all the east snd
weat bound tiathc helwt-cn Ifaltimore an I ( 'uml.eraiiid. H fore the new fre ght en
ginea were purchased, ami the impi venients
made in the tr.uk 111 tlie way 01 utraigiiicn
um curves und iluciiig urades, theav. iag.-
number of cara to the train waa 28 1-2. Now, with mom posrerfel and inlerri mtitivi(tower and a better trai s, the sverage is 40
ars ier train, an l t i n-asa ot 41 pci c-nt
I he sveragi' east bound movement per day
for th- grst ten la f August waa LIZ!
oadcil cars. On the Third division, ( uni
berlaiid ti draft on. where tin ! are grades
of IJ.") feet to the lime, the engines used tu
haul It 1 I loads to tlie train. Now the
averag" is .'ä J :i loans per train, an increase
t Jl ier cent. It woulil certainly Sppesr bat tne money spent m LnproveesenW on
t no It mi. () is hems' niim v mstitictl. anil
thai the cost ol openUoa ia being very ma
terially reduced.
RURAL EXISTENCE. BniidiBB of eleei Beade win stak It llellshtful Indeed. Wherever experiment sin rural mail deli' ery have been made it has been found to work most successfully - during clear weather when the roads were all right. Which indicates how indissolubly linked together are the problems of good roads and the uplift of the social lit of the farm. The time has come when the American fanner must sit down to think out th ir question of good roads and how tc jrei them. It is not nn exaggeration tc a that to the future of American agriculture few things bear so Important a relationship ns does the question ol good roads, lnde-d, if the generstion now growing up on the farm is to be kept on the farm, better social advantages will be found absolutely necessary, snd what single thing could contribute so much as good roads to the elevation of life upon the farm? But the whole question is being diacussed in a desultory nnd intleterminate way, which promises nothing for the fiture. Organized effort, In which the wheelmen of the town and the former of the country should stand shoulder to shoulder, must be put forth if substantial advance is to be made. With the hnrvests out of the way, there should be let on foot a movement looking to thil fid With good roads farm life will have all the delights of rural existence, to Which will be added the advantages of the town, of a daily mail, of social intercourse with neighbors, of miisicales and lectures brought near. Oood roads will transform the farm, which so many now desert for the city, into the most sttractiveof homes, and give once more to agriculture first place among the professions and occupations of life. r unsere Voice,
Nervousness and Insomnia.
A Prominent Farmer of Kansas
Kinds a Cure.
From ths Capltsl, St Juhn, Kansau.
Hearing that J, 11. Detwiler, s prosperous farmer w ho reaides about three miles east of St. John, Kansas, had bet a using Dr. W 1 1 -hams' 1'ink I'll lav with marvelous beneficial results, a reporter of the hanaaa City fctar called upon nun for an interview regarding the matter. We found Mr. Detwiler a tall,
snd ai'Dsxently well preserved man of
seventy yeara. L'pon our interrogating him
concerning hia use of 1'ink 1'illahe gnve un the following, snd with hia entire consent to
, ita putiliestion:
"I bad been troubled for several years
with extreme nervousness. At tirst it ditl
I not nrevent me from attending to BIT farn
I duties. About three years ago, however, I J hegan to grow rapidly worse, then inv nndita became sleetileas. and 1 could not
, !een two hours in an entire night. I be
rame terribly sffecteil too with indigestion T lippame alurmed at mv condition, and con
suited s phraicisn. One doctor told me the
trouble was insomnia, and I took Inn medi eine for that, but without relief. Another told me it was nervous nroit ration, but his
medicine had no more effect than the same amount of water. Finally, seeing Dr. Williama' Pink Pills advertised, snd noticing
particularly the teaimony of a person who had been cured by them of a very similiar
diaease to mine, 1 determined to try tnem I culled iiiion our local druggist. Mr. .1
Stivers sna procured s supply. I began takinir them, and in a very abort time mv
nervousness was lesa severe. After I had
given them a thorough trial, I fount! myself
entirely cured. I can now ne oown m biibi
and go to sleep without the slightest trouble Furthermore the cure has been permanent
and I can recommend 1'ink Pilla to all who are afflicted aa I was, for their equal cannot be found. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pair. People
are now given to tlie puMio as a.i u ltaiim blood builder and nerve restorer, curing a!
forms of WeskneSI arising from a watery eondition of the Wood or shattered nerves. The pills arc sold by all dealers, or will lie arnt noat paid on receipt of once, 50 cent I
hov. or six boxes for W. afl I thev arc never
aold in bulk or bv the 1001. bv addressing Dr
Williams' Medicine Go., Schenectady, N.
üorahnnt for the Silo. While no kind of grain as feed cansu persede corn in cheapness and value, sorghum is a formidable rival to it foi fodder, especially when put up In the ilo. It stands drought better, which ii likely to make it popular in the and portions of the west, where corn often fails. The sorghum hns too tough a talk to feed green, but when cut ami put in the silo there is enough fermentation to soften the stalks so that they enn be eaten. The sweetness of the sorghum furnishes carbonaceous nutriment just ns does the starch of oora grain, and in even more palatable formWherever cane sugar is made in the south the workmen who attend the grinding always grow fst from the augar they eat. Clesn postures, with good, clean water and proper care, is the surest preventive of bitter milk. Weeds, especially ragweed, cause bitter milk. Ventilate the cellar in which you art to store fruit.
;rnln heaprr Minn Mm It Is undoubtedly a serious loss tt have so much of the hay crop injured b eaoeoelco rains, as has bOOl the case, the present year. Vet this may be in i part made an advantage to farmers il it turns their nttcntion to grain ui a cheaper source of nutrition than even the lest hay can be. More thai this, if given with enough bay or straw or cornstalks to distend the stomach, grain isbettei food because mo re easily digested. In the coarser fodder so muck , of the nutrition goes to sustain animal heat or the processes of digestion : that comparatively little is left tc make flesh or milk or fats. The knowl : etlge that some grain vith hay miikei theo HCT nutrition is not half so widelj 1 extended as it ought to he. If it wert I there would be n better demand foi grain and it would sell at better priese ! American Cultivator.
Gridkiin "Did you nitie how Prnbrool
gratis sll the Kood things there are going
Houston l hat s lie aiie h h an opt must lie believe that everything is for tin- best Slid BCtaraH be thinks he is the best.' aattea rmaaecäa
'a
Allen's Foot Ease, s powder for the fe
It rurea paint ul, swollen, smarting feet
instantly takes the sting out of corns
humous. It's the greatest comfort discovery
of the All -iB l-iiot I isc makes tight or new shoes feel easv. It is s t riam cur for sweating, callous, not, tued, aching feet. Try it to jay. Sold by all druggists and show stores, 2ftc. Trial package, KKKE. W rits te Allen a. Obaetei, LeBoj . N. V. When a Women hau more than she es hold m her hand she puts it in her mouth. Washington I ' nmt rat.
A Hefneck Hill
mi '
Strongarm Jake
ligion already.
Ol Unit the business, hasher "He a.w i wanted to enen a safe with
prayer." Cincinnati Imjuuer.
Mild Attack. W ot 's come of your pard-
I shook 'im. He got re-
CHEAP EXCURSION RATES WEST
The busy httle bootblack never fails to ir prove cat h little shining hour.- Chicago Us ord.
Tla llurlliisjllnston RimU. One fare plus t'i 0U for the round trip to
Nebraska Kansaa, St I'mil, Minneapolis, Black Hill, certain portions of Iowa, Col-
oruilo uml I 'tah September 7th, 31st Oeto
ber 5th uml l'.uh AU your ticket agent for aililit huihI information. L W. Wakki.bv,
tieuural 1 u---i.,..'i Ageut, tit. Louis, Mu.
hat organ shall J buy? Why not buy the one which holds the world's record for largest sales the ESTEY
Write f r llluitratci! Catalogue with prices, to Efttcy Uran Company, ltrattlcboro. Vi.
If a man makes a success in life, he likes 0 tell hm he started with nothing. Wash ngton Democrat. For Whoonine Cough. Piso'a Cure ia a
successful remedy M. P. Dieter. 07 Throop Ave., Brooklyn, N, V., Nov. Is, 'W.
If it were not for funerals a great many
men vvouhl never hear a sermon.- W ashington Dciiioii.it.
Hall's l msrrli ( urt
Is taken internally. Price 75c.
Some neonle are better when thev are sick
than at any other time. Clin ago Keeord.
$12 to $35
Can tie made working
torus. I'srt irt jin r.rrofl ha run l-Iii- th'-ir w Uole tun. ta
I'liK WflKK. Ii. I.!, -iii. Hr hours, though may bs prolttably aiployect. O.mmI op.ninjff) rortovnaiut elti wort as II country dutrlrta, J K Oll 1. illli llili and Mam str.it. hit llMoMi. V
Weeks Scale Works
STOC K, COAL.
AND COTTON
Is
HDUCATIONAL.
I MM I A 1 III"! niskesth-innii
Wj viunii' A.I I'rm C l.ocabarl. l'ü
Arts. Scti nnfa.Hlbttk
II .tsulun.M
UADn v?LUIKI ADY t"H iiu s-t.t rot m YYAnU oCmiriAni .,.. ovum sshstss 33d Yusj Bf Sn-i t patronairts from to ISatsa lifllrlitrul rinnst and lorstiosk r l lis -tJ.- Ii-! II !'-. hi PUS iif rltjr aS aniaifi' and tin- Cantcnnlal RiposltlSS Tor rata loa" audieoa J I) Bl.AN TON, I'raa . N sli lila. TalUa.
FT THI t.r.M INK AatTtCLBI
Walter Baker & Co.'s
Breakfast COCOA Pure Delicious Nutritious.
Costa hcaa than i ttM CENT a cnp. Be sure that the package bears our Trade-Mark.
(Established 1780.)
Trade Mark
Walter Baker & Co. Limited.
Dorchester. Mosa
ATT A äT PP Hail with delight the coming of the most mm sUstsassf WJI aw) wonderfuU meritorious preparation that will lighten the ills of humanity and will do away with the taking of obnoxious, violent purges, inconvenient liquids, and pills that tear your life out. Simple, because in
CATHARTIC
You find just what you want, convenient in form, pleasant of tiite (just like candy), and of never-failing remedial action. Although made of the most costly ingredients, they are sold at a price within the reach of .Hi aw.
From Baby to Dear Old Grandpa.
ALL DRUCiai.STS ioc., age, 50c.
WE GUARANTEE
I Hr. MAHKLIS.
Beptetnber 1. it
1 n
til 2.-1
11 I . '-' ."." 7 TW :i 7a J ,. 1 f. .1 .1
Water will oftn sstc a djltxg Tine.
Waldorf Kralt Kalad. Take liulf a pound of rhfrries, ths Sticks nnd etones hnvlnfr been removed, some fresh strawberries and rnspber ties, with a few Hees of pinrnpple, onequarter pound of white anil red currants. Sprinkle over the fruit plenty ol p wdereti white nufjur. four tabbupuonfult of brandy nnd two tnblcspooufult of nuiraachino; shake nnd stir the fruit about lightly until the sufrnr is dls-
: solved, then add the utrtrinril juice of
two oran?es. Take a thin clnua basin, which hns been placed in ice, peat In yruir fruit, nnd allow it to become cooL then serve. The fruits that compose sm b a snlad of course vary with the season, but the method of treatment for sriy mixture of fruits is substantially the same. Boston (Hobe. Trees for planting can never ba bought chesiper ibao thai oaa tkls fnU.
N'l W VoltK DATTH Native Kteses
O0TT(N Mliidllns PN lUll v lau 1 vTkeeA Will. A I NO I l''l COHN No. t
Oats So.1 Pt IKK Hi S Vl'" UOUIS. 00TTPON MkMllnfl MKstVKn Mors i has sad Itolfees, CALvaa u'i tu'ifi) Hi I . I .III to s,..,., l
SHr.KP rail to Cbolue
VlAMU I'lUcnt 1 ilsar asxJ m raHtM . THR AT Ne.1 tied VViuior. . OKN Nu i Mtaai OATS No. S KYNo.S 1 1 01 i 1 1 1 Unas L'iif Itur v HAY - CISSI TlHsalhy Ill I'TI-.U koKM U.nry KUUM l-'resh I'i iKK HUHatard (iiBWi UAt UN 1 lesr Hib La k 1 Prtae Ml uHicaoa 0 ATT LB Nutiv BMtM lit sin raif to Onelee mi i'.i-.r Kim to ( I holes r'LOUK Wlster Pstsnts sin ins i'.ii 'Hin Will-. AT Nu iniiK Nu z Hm (ti'wi DORN -No S OATS Not PtMtU MrSS (newi K ss s rtTY CATTI.I'. Native Steers H m;s -AllOradet Will. a I' No I 11 mi UA IS Ntl .'White
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EVERY SHOE STAMPED
MADE
t. 1,0111 FOR ----
MEN, WOMEN and CHILDREN. :?"Ask Your Dealer for Them.
"GOOD WIVES CROW FAIR IN THE LIGHT OF THEIR WORKS." ESPECIALLY IF THEY USE SAPOLIO
Ladies
KB Tit AT THIS NAME IS STAMPED OH Every Pair
OF 8HOIS VOU BUY. it ib a muri ivc ui iraktii Or SI I'I HIOKI 1 1
Ask Your Dealer for Them.
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SCHUH'S HOME-MADE PILLS - vj,,, mi ,.,ti, us tks Ml LB T r.mols sll I'NHIII.IHT ForLiTer,StomaOn,( M A I I KM rrtta iasawaik K innate will so aor.fs4 ihasi . SO dossa ... ctüM UtU U' Pills For sals ay sll Snsctsla. WHaJ y id ssssy t aenl Mtll wW, S mm tHt OBI. to, talra, Uk
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STOPPED FREE. PERMANENTLY CURED Inumty Pr.antrt by Off Kt INE'S CREAT NERVE RESTORER
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fpnimi on.! .sf flfa. X" n ' . '" aArtr.i ',. , .... Trastia. anil fltrlal rottl. rrs. kritpti.n. Ift.r M,ln -t.-ii rh.i mi, l -n tin nh LISI. 11 " - ' 1 nut. .f Mattitiiii., t.t: "K Wmtm, f"" "' f'- r-
NOTICE
AGENTS
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TO SB La,
I. KM KAI HIIKK PIBT Hi N IVW MWS,
CAMPAIGNING WITH GRANT. A 8TJPPI.KMKNT to (JEW 0EANT I MEH0IRB Rpl.BtllrtlT llln.trat.cl A flr.t rla book. BAST TO 1 I I. K. lull.. UTrlti-ry l.lb.ral dl.rounl. AildrvSS THK CENTMtY I ) . 83 l.sat 1Mb SIra.t. Nsw Tork.
OPIUM
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A, N. K.-H
1672
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