Pike County Democrat, Volume 28, Number 16, Petersburg, Pike County, 27 August 1897 — Page 7

WIT AND WISDOM. —Jack—“She used to be an old flamo of jours, did she not?** Arthur—“Yes; but that was when I had money to burn."—Puck. —*Tm sure 1*11 never be able to waJk up the aisle with papa." “Viby not. my child?" "Papa » so awfully low geared."—Cleveland Plain Dealer. —“Do you suppose scorching is the cause of all these bicycle faces we see?" “Shucks, no! In nine cases out of ten it’s the installment plan."—Truth. —She—"I am quite sure you had too much champagne when you called on \ me yesterday afternoon.” He—“Yea; I thought I’d just look around to-day to see if I was engaged to you."—Punch. —“I am told your wife would rathar cook than eat.” The other glanced nervously over his shoulder. They-were alone. “What she cooks—yes.” he replied, in a hoarse whisper.—Detroit Journal. —“Cruelty in this institution!" said the superintendent of the prison; “no, siree. The inmates here know me too well to attempt any monkey business that might lead to cruelty."—Philadelphia North American. —‘The British government,"said the Turkish minister, *swould not consent to the permanent occupation of Thessaly.” “That’s all right," said the sultan; "we intended merely a temporary occupation, similar to that of Egypt." —Puck. —“It is getting.” said the pessimistic man. “that a Cnited States senator can't preserve his self-respect.” “Oh. I dunno.” said the optimist; “there are chances for him to clear enough to make him have a pretty good opinion of himself.”—Indianapolis Journal. —lie lifted his mackinaw from his glowii g brow and nervously dabbed his handkerchief at his moistened hair. “Heaven help me.” he murmured, “this is fnv last resort!” Then he added, in a constrained tone: “All the other landlords know me!”—-Cleveland Plain Dealer.

GENIUS AND STATURE. The larurrrel Belief That \onrly All (ireat Mrti Are Little*. We may stiffly conclude from the figures that- the faith cherished by many that nearly ail great u:en art* little—a very venerable faith, as indicated by the ancient saying* collected in Ilurton's “Anatomy of Melancholy” concerning great wits with little bodies— is absolutely incorrect. Some deduction must doubtless be made in view of the fact that our medium is made oa the balls of the general population, while the majority of men of genius belong to the educated classes. This deduction would tend to equalize the two extremes, but that itAvould cot destroy the slight preeminence of the tall men of ability is perhaps indicated by the fact, shown by the anthropometric committee, that the stature of t»8 fellows of the Royal society (who from the present point of view nray be counted as men of genius) was nearly half an inch above that of the professional class to which they usually belong. At the same time it is clear that the belief in the small size of great men is not absolutely groundless. There is an abnormally large proportion of small "great men.” It is mediocrity alone that genius seems to Abhor. While among the ordinary population the vast nf&Jority of 6S per cent* was of middle height, among men 6f genius, so far as the present investigation goes, they are only 22 per cent., the tall being 41 per cent., instead of 16, and the short 37, instead of 16. The final result is, therefore, cot that persons of extraordinary mental ability tend either to be taller or shorter than the average population, but rather that they tend to exhibit an unusual tendency to variation. Even inphysical structure turn of genius present a characteristic which on other grounds we may take to be fumkimental In them; they are manifestations of the variational tendency of a physical and psychic variational diathesis. There are certainly at least two types of short men of genius;, the slight, frail, but fairly symmetrical type (approaching what is* called the true

dwarf), and the type of the stunted plant (a type also to be found among dwarfs proper). The former are fair* ly symmetrical, but fragile; generally with little 'physical vigor or health, all their energy bring concentrated in the brain. Kant was of this type. The stunted giants are usually more vigorous, but lacking? in symmetry. Far from being delicately diminutive persons, they suggest tal! persons who have bees cut short below; in such the brain and viscera seem to flourish at the expense of the limbs, and while abnormal they often have the good fortune to be robust both In mind end body. Lord Chesterfield was a man of this type, short for his size, thick set. “with s head big enough for & Polyphemus;** Hartley Coleridge carriedtbe same type to the verge of caricature, possessing a large head, a sturdy and ample form, with ridiculously small arms and legs, so that he vyas said to be “indescribably elfish and grotesque.** Dryden—“Poet Squab”—was again of this type, as was William Goodwin; in Keats the abnormally short legs coexisted with a small head. The typical stunted giant has a large, head; and such stunting of the body has. indeed a special tendency to produce large heads, and therefore doubtless those large brains which are usually associated with extraordinary Intellectual power.—Havelock Ellis, in Nineteenth Century. Arctic Pont Ottce. The most northern post office In the world has recently been established be the Norwegian government on the Is* ‘land of Spitzbergen. off the north coast of Norway. There are practically no Inhabitants in the vicinity, but the office la established for the convenience of excursionists who go there during the summer months.—Cincinnati Ba

THE FARMING WORLD. FATTENING FOWLS. They Should Be Separated and Pat h» Themeelres. Place six or eight together in a close .•oop'without a roost, an^just sufficiently large to allow their moving about without crowding each other. The front of the coop or box only needs to be lathed open work,' and should be arranged so as to make it nearly dark as soon as they arc done feeding, since during the balance of their existence the more quietly they can be kept the more they will improve. They need no exercise. It must be borne in mind-that j fat only is added by this process, the | Iqan or flesh must be made before, and | unless the fowl has attained the proper standard in this respect it is almost use- ! less to try to fatten it. Now give them I plenty of fresh water and all they will eat for,two or three weeks in this kind of coop, and at the end of that period they will be better fit for the butcher than they will ever be after that period. 1 The manner of feedingund keeping the j fowls in this confinement is a very simple affair, ami we have found it effiI carious as \\ ell as feasible. Cooked food, ! and all they will devour morning ami i night, with cracked corn ami i wheat at uoon. will fatten healthy ! poultry in less time than any pother feed that we have ever ex- | perimeuted with. The mash should be S composed of good corn meal two parts i and boiled potatoes one part. Into a i pailful of this meal and vegetable food. J well mixed, while hot. drop one pound of lard, tallow or pork scraps* and mix this/ fat substance through the mass. Feed this while warm, aud give only what the fowls will eat up clear at a meal.—Western Plowman. HANDY ARRANGEMENT. brncrlptlon of a I'omlitnrd t'hlcWe* Coup and l*en. The coop and pen illustrated below have been in use on my farm several years. The coop is made perfectly tight I except at one end. The lower two-thirds j of this end is slatted ami contains a slat rd'oor. This coop is intended for the hen aud her brood at night or during wet days. A pen which will allow the hen c-msidcrable exercise and sunshine on pleasant days is shown adjoining the coop. The three pieces running horizontally are three feet loug aud two

CHICKEN COOP AND PEN.

inches square. It is slatted with common lath placed far enough apart to allow the chicks to get out of the pen. Only one end of the pen is closed, the other being placed over the door of the larger coop. The pen and coop are fastened together by means of small chains. Set the coop upon wide boards and have it so situated that the pen will cover a nice grass plot. A number 'of these pens will be fouud handy, as they can be joined to almost any small coop.—Marie A. Rigg, in Farm and Uome. A FEW DOMESTIC HINTS. Soiue t Rcful SDBKratloaa fur the iluunrnltr. For prickly heat make water slightly dippery with soda and bathe in it. AH cold vegetables Ifcft over should be saved for future use in soups and salads. Silver gilt spoons w ith flow erbandies enameled in natural colors make a pretty show. .The one thing for which lace paper may be used and be considered good for m, on a table is for cheese. Wrap your fruit jars in newspaper and set in a cool, dark place. The wrapping will prevent the fruit from bleaching. Pretty fireproof china dishes in their •liver wire mountings testify to the jMipuiurity attained of late by casseroles. Si uflies, etc., on our menus. The candelabarum is to the fore as u dinner table decoration. The lights, softened by colored shades, enhance the beauty of the shining silver and glitterlug glass. For tired-feet put a handful of common salt in four quarts of hot water, i’lace the feet in the water while it is a- hot as can be borne. Then rub the feet dry with a rough towel.—-American Queen..

How tv Caruurazr tbr Bo.ti. Evtrj boy on the farm should b* given a young animal to raise for himself. he to attend to it and be induced to take an interest in its progress. He will thus early become fond of animals and of farming, and will be more recon- ! riled to farm life when he is grown. The boy who leaves me farm for the : city is the one who has rever had any opportunities and looks upon farmiug as drudgery. Labor becomes a pleasure when there is something to strive for, and the early education of the boy on the farm should be by giving him an interest in something. All children love I young stock and pet them. t>e Oaly Level The old-time step-ladder roost, with are round four or five feet from the floor and the others lower until the low- ' est is near the floor, takes up a large j share of space in the poultry-house, and is unserviceable, as the bens will instinctively go upon the high roosts in preference to the lower ones, some of the fowls being forced down white others are injured by jumping off in the morning. It is to high roosts that bumble-foot and lameness may jbe attributed. and it is cheaper to have low roosts, all on the satne level, than to doctor fowls for lameness.—Farm and I i reside. Keeping fowls on a hard floor wilt ; IraquenUy cause swollen feet and legs.

! CLEAN FEED FOR HOGS. 4a A«|aataUc Rack Which Accost* pitches Its Parpow. The old notion that a hog prefers to irallow In the mire is a great mistake. The hog prefers clean water and food the same as any animal, but his style of getting it is at fault. This difficulty is easily remedied by some such plan as illustrated below, where an adjustable rack can be fixed for any sized pig or hog so it cannot get into the feed trough. The trough is made of twoinch plank, one plank seven inches the other nine inches, and instead of being nailed at right angles they are 1*4 inch- ! - :

ADJUSTABLE HOG TROUGH.

rs or so oft the square. At each end, after the main ends of the trough are uailed in place, another pieee of plank, a, is nailed to it with a slot, cut in it for a 3x4-inch scantling, c, or a round straight pole four inches through. This pole or scantling should have a hole bored in each end so a. pin may slide through it and the upright plank, a. to keep the pole, c, in place. The pole can then be raised or lowered to suit the size of a hog. In the poie five-eighths- ! inch holes should be bored 7, 10 and I!1/* inches apart, in which is placed a i one-half-inch iron rod (d), two feet long, pointed and driven slightly in the plank on ti ' front side of the trough. | These rods never become loose in my trough, but when they are to be shifted. as the hog's size requires, two or three slight taps with a hammer loosen them and they can be driven into the next width of place. .Mv trough is 16 feet long. About 30 inches of one end is partitioned off and kept filled with water, but has the roils in front so the hogs cannot pet into it in hot weather. The rods are driven into the trough about one inch from the edge as at e and are pointed from 1% inches back. The front edge of the trough, f, is robnded so that it will not chafe the hogs.— Marsden Smith, in Farm and Home.

RATIONS FOR HORSES. Starvation Always Spoils the Shape of a (ironing Animal. We talk about the loss of the horse business from one cause or another, but the most mischief comes from the want of proper food, says an exchange. This means loss to the horse and greater loss to the farmer. A good per cent, of the horses seen on the streets of any town show insufficient or uu* j balanced food supply. Horses that have l*een ill-fed when young are al- | most invariably small, long-legged, i light-carcassed and narrow-chested. I Some of them have a great deal of ' energy, but all are soon exhausted, uni lit for protracted exertion. Urown-up ; horses, when much reduced by defiI cient nourishment, require more food to put them into working order than would have kept them for two or three months in the condition they require to possess when going into work. When a horse is starved, besides losiug strength and flesh, bis bowels get full | of worms and his skiu covered with | lice. Very often he takes mange, and | sometimes he does not moult, or the | hair falls out suddenly and entirely | off. leaving the skin nearly bald for a ! long time. The skin of an ill-fed horse is always rigid, sticking to the ribs, and their hair dull, staring, soft, dead- | like. If not famished to death they re-' I cover strength and animation with good and sufficient feeding, but starvation always spoils the shape of a : growing horse. | v -- POINTS FOR STOCKMEN.

Don't keep more horses than you need. The offspring from a mature sow is , stronger than from a young one. Swine need bulk in their feed. Don't feed on concentrated foods alone. Dork is one of the very best of meats if swine are properly fed and eared [ for The selection a tub steady use of the best of even common scrub stock will j lead to improvement. Sows eat their pigs because their systems are out of condition, the result of improper feeding and bad management. It is dangerous to inbreed swine. If i there are family defects they will ap1 pear iu the offspring in an exaggerated 1 form. L- | On the whoie, the horses would be | better off. and so would the owner, if ■ the whip-making industry were abol- | ished. There is too much talk and not enough [ action in the mutter of reviving inj terest in the Morgan horse. The Mor- | gan will* revive itself if given half a j chance. . Sell half the scrub herd, if necessary, and buy a thoroughbred bulk If cattle must rough it take the Hereford. Polled Angus or Galloway. If well cared for the shorthorn is a prise.—Western Plowman. Wet tkddtaa Kill* Pin*. One of the most frequent causes for jDortality among pigs which are thrifty at birth, but die after a few | days, in a wet bed. It will kill them nearly every time. Many cases which have puzzled the owner to ascribe a cause for. might have been traced to this. Rather no bed at all than a pile of damp straw to lie on. Dry, fine straw or chaff is best, bat do not neglect to change it frequently, or your pigs will dwindle away, and one after another be found dead, until tLe lank la gonn.— Dakota Held and Farm.

BASEBALL BREVITIES. Ths New York club has tried a dozen men In left field since it let Eddie Burke r>George Tebeau, brother of the famed Patsy, is playing a star game at first base for the Columbus (0.) team. MIt looks as if Jim Callahan could have a job in the outfield when his pitching days are over,” says the Sporting News. Tim Murnane says that at the present pitching distance no pitcher can be at his best who works more than two games a week. Fred Tenney, the ex-collegian who guards first base for the Beaneaters, is a regular contributor of baseball articles to eastern magazines. Chris Von der Ahe says he’ll buy every one of his players a new suit of clothes if they get out of last place, and der poss bresident has pledged his word that they won’t be hand-me-downs. either. Mark Baldwin, the old ex-league twirler, is now pitching for the Carnegie A. C. team of Pittsburgh. It is said that the once famous twirler still retains mucb of his speed and ability to i fool the best of the batters. This year has been marked by the ! success of many of the young twirlers in the league. Lewis, Corbett, Powell, Callahan and Dunn have all done remarkably well, and their good work has done much to knock out the theory that a club must have seasoned twirlers in order to be successful.

FADS OF FASHION. This is a matching season, and leather belts can be bought in almost every color of the rainbow. A new cult flares over the hand in ripples. Many sleeves without cuffs are lkiished in Venetian style. The old-fashioned yoke nightgown is a thing of the past. The full sack style of the French underwear is the thing now. Feather stitching is a prominent feature as a trimming in lingerie: wherever a band is found it is sure to be feather stitched. The new sailor hats to be worn with outing dresses are highly crowned and broad-brimmed, with a ribbon band tied at the left side of the crown in a flat bow with ends. The standing military collar is the most worn of the linen collars, with tue very narrow turned-over one second. The wide turned-over one of last \ear has fallen into innocuous desuetude. Plaid stockings are now as correct adjuncts of dressy attire as they hare heretofore been of the sporting costume. For dress use they are of silk or lisle, and are worn with slippers or ties. Kiehelieu ribbed hosiery is not nearly so much in evidence this summer as it was last- The preferred kind now is gauze lisle, very thin, or silk plain, and most always plain black for ordinary wear.

TALKS TO GIRLS. While wearing crape it would be in bad taste to wear either finger rings ect with bright stones, or diamond earrings. An Evening Escort.—Etiquette demands that when y<fS\go out to spend an evening you do nobdepend upon a friend to bring you home, but that you should be accompanied either by a member of your own family or a maid. “At Home” Cards.—When “at home” cards are received no notice need be t taken of them until at least the very day before the affair. Then, if you conclude you are not going, you must post your visiting-card, with nothing written on it, inclosed in a small envelope and addressed to your hostess. It should arrive on the day of the “at home.” Rings and Dresses.—Good taste does not permit a widow in deep mourning to wear any other ring than the plain gold band that tells of her marriage. An ostrich feather boa or feather of any kind should not be worn until mourning is taken off, and what la known as black is worn. A costume of black silk and crape might be worn in the house when the deepest mourning has been laid aside.—Ladies* Home JourtnL

THE. MARKETS. Stw York. Augisst 3. iw. CATTLE—Native Steer*..* »»»i 20 COTTON-ALutUitHf.. FLOCK— Winter Wheat. 3 55 8 WUfcAT-Nu- 3 Red CUltN-.NV 3... .... OATS—No. 2 ... POKK—NewAtevs. 9 75 ■<* ST UH IS COTTON-MUMlin.'. TV* BEEVES-Steer*..'.. 3 25 <* Co >»si ami Uniters... JW) k& CALVES— iter head).♦.... ti« ^ HOUS—Fair to Seiect........... 3 <40 ‘tA StiCRF—Fair toCitotee..—. 3 75- w FLoCit-FaU-tiM... 4 T3 <*& Clear and Slranfat.. 3 !o WHEAt-No-i H«1 Wmwr... 97 «C CORN—No. 2 Slued. <* OATS-No. 2.-. UIE-Su.2..... *» I lUUACCO—LujC*..--. 3 (*» *(Aj Leaf liurter. 4 W HAY—CtearTimotliy.. 7 W ■& BCTTk.lt -Choree Datry. 12 <* EUtiS— kVcsk... FORK—Standard (uew>....... BAiON—Clear Rib...... LArU>—Prune Steam.. CHIC AC a CATTLE—Natiwe Steer*.. 3 85 9 HOtiS—Fair to Choke... 3 *> <5 StiEKF—Fair to Ounce.. JW <£ FLOCK— Winter Fateat*-.... 4 <W it Soring Fateuta. 4 75 ft§ W liEAT— No. 2 Spring.. OSS# No. 2 Ked tuew). **S<3 CORN-No. 8. ® OATS—No. 2. £ PORK-Mean (tie*; . 8 » <* KANSAS CITY. CATTLE—Native Steer*..- 3 75 Q HOUS— AIHinide*... AM % WHEAT—No.2 Hard.. 9BVd OATS—No. SWSaee—. .. I» %■ COEN—No. 2. 23S*3 NEW ORLEANS FLOUR—High tirade.. 4 50 3 C-*KN—No. .. ^ OATS—Western. (I t»A Y —Choice. MW «* »«• FORK—Old Ale**........ tt * ** BACON-Sule*.. — - • CO ITON—JJ >duli ng.. • ® *S LOC IS VILLE. WHEAT—No. 2 Red.. ft.# CORN-No 8 Milted... »*», OATS-No-8 Mixed-.-.. » « P*iKJC—New Me«. *» ® BACON—Clear Rib. COTTON—.. • ** *S

FATHERLY ASSURANCE. Tke 014 Geatleaiu Was Ifo LlngaUrt ■at He Katw Lite. Hr. Cumrox's son 'was studying his Latin lesson. There was a tremolo of discouragement in his voice as he remarked: “1 don’t seem to get along with this lesson verv well, father.” “Can't you say any of it?” “Yes; I can say ‘amo, a mas, amat;* and then 1 always forget what comes next.” “What does those words mean, Johnny?” asked Mr. Cumrox, who deserves credit for being always ready to add to a somewhat deficient early education. “They mean ‘1 love, thou lovest, he loves.'* “It does seem too bad to see you starting in so soon,” the old gentleman mused, “with the difficulties that nave always surrounded that verb. But you might as well commence young to learn that them words in one way or another cause two-thirds of the botheration that occurs in this life.” “Please, can I quit school, then?” “No; it wouldn’t be any use. You couldn't dodge ’em, and you might as -well go right along and get as familiar with them as possible. You 11 find that learnin’ ’em ain’t half the worry that handlin’ 'em is after ve know ’em. Cheer up, Johnny, and remember that most of your trouble is still ahead of you.” —Washington Star. Is the White Moantalm. Landlord—Did they discover the identity of that petrified body which was found in the valley yesterday? New-Yorker—I don’t know: but I think it was a man from whom one of your waiters refused to take a tip.—Judge. Venom Inhaled with the Air, And imbibed with the water of a malarious locality, has still a certain antidote. Experience sanctions confidence in Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters as a preventive oi this scourge. All over this continent and in the tropics it Las proved itself a certain means of defense, and an eradieant of intermittent and remittent fevers, and othei forms of miasma-bom disease. Nor is it less effective for kidney troubles, constipation, rheumatism and nervousness. Why He Didn't Know It. Barber—You say you have shaved here before? I don’t remember your face. + Customer—Probably not. It has healed up since.—N. Y. World. / Unit's Catarrh Core la a Constitutional Cure. Price ?5c. . Nobody is too worthless to think he needs a summer’s auting.—Washington Democrat.

Try Alim's Foot-Bc A powder to be shaken into the shoes, this season your feet feel swollen and * and get tired easily. If you have anal feet or tight shoes, try Allen's Foot-l__ It cools toe feet and makes walking easy. Cures and prevents swollen and sweating feet, glisters and callous spots. Kehww corns and bunions of all pain and gives and comfort. Try it to-day. Sold by druggists and shoe stores for 5Sc. package FREE. Address, Allen S.< Le Roy, N. Y. A Doubtful Compliment.—The Count—* “Ah, Mees Jones, how beautiful1 yon are!** Miss Jones — ou forget, count, that beauty is but skin deep/ The Count— “Mon Dieu! what a thick skin you must have!"—Truth. CHEAP EXCURSION RATES WEST Via Rurllngtlngton Root*. One fare plus $2.00 for the round trip t* Nebraska. Kansas, St. Paul, Minneapolis, Black Hills, certain portions of Iowa, Colorado and Utah. September 7th, 21st. October 5th and 19th. Ask your ticket agent fog additional information. L. W. Wiuur, General Passenger Agent, St. Louis, Mo* They were talking of golf, and she grew enthusiastic. “Ah, she said, “I infer that you play.” “Oh, yes,” she replied, “I plau the game, but I must confess that I don't speak the language very fluently yet.”—Chi* cago Eveniug Post. Quick Sale* Keep Stock Fresh Judge & Dylph Pharmaceutical Co. of SlL Louis buy in large quantities for cash, sell] quick, and one can always depend npo« getting fresh goods in placing orders with them. ‘ Read their ad. on this page* Not the Popular Shape.—“Is vour board* ing house up with the times?” “No; when we have watermelon they cut it in strips in* stead of in wheels.”—Chicago Record. - Fits stopped free and permanently curedi No fits after first day’s use of Dr. Kline'* Great Nerve Restorer. Free $2 trial bottle d treatise. Dr. Kline, 933 Arch st., Phila., Pfc Aunt—“Well, Bobby, what do you wanl to be when you grow up?” Bobby (suffer iug from parental discipline)—“An orphan**1 —Tit-Bus. - I cannot speak too highly of Piso’s Cun for Consumption.—Mrs. Frank Mobbs, 21j W. 22d 5*t., New York, Oct. 29,1S94. Reporter—“Arc you willing to tell 191 your story?” Convict—“Yes; bnt I’m nol at liberty.”—Truth.

Pistols and Pestles. The duelling pistol now occupies its proper place, in the museum of the collector of relics of barbarism. The pistol ought to have beside it the pestle that turned out pills like bullets, to be shot like. bullets at the target of the liver. But the pestle is still in evidence, and will be, probably, until everybody has tested the virtue of Ayer’s sugar coated pills. They treat the liver as a friend, not as an enemy. Instead of driving it, they coax it. They are compounded on the theory that the liver does its work thoroughly and faithfully under obstructing conditions, and if the obstructions are removed, the liver will do its daily duty. When your liver wants help, get “the pill that will.’* •" -v ■ : . Ayer’s Cathartic Pills.

BAD BLOOD PIMPLES, ERUPTIONS, BLOTCHES, SCALES, ULCERS, SORES, ECZEMA, *nd CHRONIC SWELLINGS. ARE WONDER WORKERS 2n the cure of any disease caused by bad or i pure blood. They eliminate all poisons, build up and enrich the blood, enabling it to make new, Wealthy PURE 3LOOD MEANS PERFECT ______ HEALTH, and if you will use CASCARCTS | they will give you GOOD HEALTH and a PURE, CLEAN SKIN, free from i pimples and blotches. I To TRY CASCARETS is to like them. For never before has there been produced in the history cf the world so perfect and so harmless a BLOOD PURIFIER, OVER and STOMACH REGULATOR. To tm them regularly for a little while means - | ^ Pure Blood and Perfect Health.

“EAST, WEST, HOME IS BEST," IF KEPT CLEAN WITH SAPOLIO

GUT PRICES ON POTENT MEDICINE! Pills, Powders, ETC. ORDERS PILt-EO 9A DAY RECEIVED hy mail or Ufim DON'T NEGLECl k**l> * bottle or box of roar FitOKITE REMEDIES on baud. Sriwl tor Catalogue of Cut J NUlunrfU*. JUDCrAl dP OOXiPbd PEEAJH.. GO., tad JLucuk 8M-, I

I I

SLICKER WELL KEEP YOU DRY.

Don’t be footed with a mackintosh or rujtber coat. If you want a coat that *ii» keep ydu dry in the hardest storm buy the Fish Brand Sticker. If not for sale in your

nDADCV HEW DISCO TEE Y; rites W itkkitMudnmsoni tun. 8oo<l for book of tcstlmokioU and lb dam* frte. —■.«. M.«kk»r»W»M. Mtaoi^to.

^ENDUM* NAME ON A POSTAL QVtD D WE WILL SEND YOC OLTL B* Rise ILLDSTmD CATALOG** FREE VtoiGfBTK Repeating Arms1 WOWtwcwOTrt v*fcr. New Ham. On*. EDUCATIONAL. gDCCATIOS «»ak®? the rnm. Arta. i . Krw C. Lockhart. Pk. D.l tVtt toltklah awl WAKU StMIRANf_ 33d Twr. ber 14 Select from SO Slates. Delightful ellatta Fupil* eujfov best appointments, hontl esntajres. and the Centennial Kxpoaitl lo,fUr aadreaa J. U. BUXTON, Pr«a.. «< A N. K.-B 1671 .itiEh WMTIXO TO A»T1 ■1—0 State that jsn aaw ■teat to Utla pap no