The Corner Stone, Volume 5, Number 8, College Corner, Union County, 23 February 1876 — Page 4

WAI2M A.X& FlJtESIOE. Stabling Cattle. A letter frem Samuel Fuller, of Grand Rapids, the other day sent the editor of the Detroit Free Press on a tour of investigation. This was the essence of the communication : "I am a banker, but have been a farmer, and a pretty good one. I have visited some of the "best farmers in this country and New England, and have taken a particular interest in the management of cattle in stables. I have not seen so satisfactory an arrangement as has been shown me to-day ; it beats everything, including the Agricultural College, and yet it is the simplest thing in the world.

Come and see it. It is worth your while." While in Grand Rapids the other day the Free Press correspondent called upon Mr. Fuller and visited the stables of O. Van Buren, near the western limits of the city. Mr. Van Buren has sixty fine cows, which he cares for in a basement stable of good height and ventilation. He hitches them in rows by ropes, which gives them some freedom of movement. There are no stalls, but each animal is allowed about four feet and a half of space. The animals are allowed to run out in yards for a time each forenoon, the length varying with the severity of the weather. While out they are fed with a few cornstalks scattered evenly over a considerable surface of ground. At one o'clock they come in to feed upon straw, which is deliberately provided for them in the boxes, and a portion of bran and meal mixed, or sweet malt. The straw they pick over, and what is left goes under them for bedding. While milking, each cow is fed separately so as to eat while the milk is being drawn from the udder. We were assured that the amount of this feed was gauged according to the demand for milk. Mr. Van Buren claimed that he could by judicious feeding any time increase his laily supplyjsixty quarts. His cows all knew their places perfectly well, and under his system it only required the work of two men to milk and perform all the work necessary in connection with this herd of sixty cows. This was very well, but nothing extraordinary. The thing to elicit remarks and wonderment was, that in this large stable of cattle there was no odor of manure, everything was neat and clean. There was no excrementious matter upon the haunches and sides of the cattle, and the " smell of the barn," as it is often called which almost universally accompanies the milk of winter, was not to be detected in the milk from this dairy. And this was all due to his method of managing the manure, which to many nice farmers would seem the height of shiftlessness. All the manure from this herd of cattle for the entire winter lies under them. Abundance of straw is furnished and the manure is covered and packed down by the cattle into a hard mass. Then there is no chance for " fire fang" from over fermentation, but every bit is perfectly preserved for future use in the best possible condition. Mr. Van Buren said he should clean his stables once this winter, then they would last till spring. He should draw it directly upon the land where it was needed, thus saving the cost of handling so many times. This method commended itself for many reasons its cheapness, neatness, preservation of manure and healthfulness to the stock. There may be some drawbacks. Scientific men may not think this the best way to handle the manure, but considering the value of labor we wish the system might be more generally followed. Possibilities of Wheat Culture. Although the average yield of this cereal for the last few years has not probably exceeded fifteen bushels per acre, there is really no valid excuse for a rate of production so ridiculously low. While some farmers in nearly every section of the country seem to find a difficulty in getting even as high as fifteen bushels per acre, it is a well known fact that others, even in the same localities, succeed in getting from twenty to thirty bushels, and a few as high as forty or fifty bushels. These facts clearly prove that there is a possibility in wheat culture that some farmers know how to reach, and others do not. It is stated by H. S. B., in the Country Gentleman, that fifty bushels of wheat per acre is a crop possible for all farmers. This 13 unquestionably claiming too much. But there is no reason to doubt, and it would not be difficult to show, that a yield of thirty bushels is fairly within reach of the average farmer. The writer above cited informs us that a neighbor of his recently obtained fifty-five bushels. It is his opinion that it pays well to cultivate wheat in drills, at an extra cost four to six dollars per acre. The other items of cost he estimates at eighteen dollars and fifty cents, which, with the extra cultivation charged at six dollars, makes twenty-four dollars and fifty cents. The manure is not included in this estimate, but is offset by the value of the straw. This, on a yield of fifty bushels, brings the cost per bushel down to fifty cents, which, at a market price of one dollar and twenty-five cents, leaves a margin of seventy-five cents per bushel. The Way to Capture Hawks and Owls. Most hawks, especially such as prey upon fowls of any sort, usually light

on the top of some bare pole, post, or dry tree. A farmer writes that he has succeeded in taking about twenty hen hawks in a steel trap, by setting the trap on the upper end of a square pole some twenty feet high, with the butt end firmly planted in the ground. Edward Gaylord, of Iowa, writes in relation to capturing owls : When I suspect the owls are about to commence their mischief I get a stick suitable for the place, and fasten a small steel trap flat on the top, and set up some three or four feet above. If an owl comes anywhere near he will be very sure to settle down in the trap with as much calm and as graceful an air as an owl is capable of putting on. This is a trait in the owl quite peculiar to himself. He

seldom pounces on his victim the first thing, like other birds of prey ; but first comes slowly along, and settles down on some conspicuous site near the victims and takes a very calm and cool survey of all the surroundings, As soon as all things appear to him to be favorable, he quietly lets himself down amang the fowls, hoping to induce some one of their number to fly off or drop down from their roosts, when he, quick as thought, embraces the opportunity to swoop down and carry off the fowl. I sometimes fasten the trap with a staple, firm on top of the stick ; but I find this gives them a much better chance to tear themselves out of the trap. Now I fasten it slightly on top and firmly in the stick, some two feet below the trap, with a chain or cord. Household. Helps. Raised Cake. Two cups of light dough, one cup of butter, two cups of sugar, three eggs, beaten light, mix all well together ; add fruit and spice as you wish. It is good without either, but better with plently of both. Put in a pan and let it stand until light ; bake as any other cake. Nice Cookies Without Eggs. One teacupful of butter, or of the drippings of salt pork ; two cupfuls of sugar ; one cupful of sweet milk ; two teaspoonfuls of cream tartar; one teaspoon ful of soda ; add flour to make a dough ; roll thin and bake in a quick oven, but not scorch. In the absence of sweet milk, a teacupful f cold water will do very well. Washington Tie. One-half cup of butter, two of sugar, three eggs well beaten (butter with the yelks and whites beaten separately), one cup of sour milk, one teaspoonful of soda, four cups of flour. If prepared flour is used, then soda need not be added. Bake in jellycake pans. When done, pile two or three layers of the cake one above the other, spreading jelly or jam between each cake. Corn-Starch Pudding. Four tablespoonfuls of corn-starch to one quart of milk; dissolve the corn-starch in some of the milk ; heat the remainder of the milk to near boiling, after putting in a little salt; then add the corn starch; boil three minutes, stirring it briskly ; allow it to cool, and then thoroughly mix with it two or three eggs, well beaten, with four tablespoonfuls of sugar ; flavr to taste, and bake half an hour. Useful Information. By abstaining from drink and liquid food of any kind for as long a period as possible, the internal congestion which is. in fact, the condition generally known as " a cold" becomes reduced. The cause of congestion is the excess of blood contained in the overcharged mem branes, and this is removed when the general bulk of blood has been diminished by withholding the usual supply of fluid ; by keeping the supply of drink for a day or two down to a point at which some degree of thirst is yet experienced, a complete cure maybe effected. In arranging furniture about the room bear in mind that it is not necessary to push every article primly out to the sides, so that sofas and chairs look as if they were glued to the wall. Pull them out; put a sofa across one corner ; stand the big ea3y-chair in the light, with a little table close by, handy for sewing or books ; leave a chair or two in front of the sola ; and in general so dispose of the articles that the room shall not appear as if its owners never entered it save on ceremonial occasions. Whether a room is pleasing and cozy or not does not depend upon the elegance or costliness of its fittings. The simplest furniture, if tastefully arranged as regards color and position, often looks better than the handsomest products of the cabinetmaker's skill. The Chairman of the Direct Cable Company has made an extraordinary statement in a letter to the London Times, about the successire ruptures which have taken place in the cable of that company since it was successfully laid. Mr. Lushington declares that stock operations have been made in London on the faith of these ruptures, " not hours, but some days before they happened." He adds that the " ruptured cable was in each case sound and perfect up to the very moment when the communication ceased, and that the ruptured ends wrhich have been brought home prove beyond all doubt that the rupture was by violent means in a depth not exceeding that of dragging anchors under ordinary circumstances. The Timet, of Janesville, Wisconsin, has the following political news: Miss Edwards, the accomplished and efficient postmistress of Oconomowoc, has just been removed for the crime of being a female, and her place filled by a wire pulling, avaricious old pill ia breeches.

Exporting Beef, The London Daily Standard says that j an invention has now been tested to an j

extent which leaves no doubt that fresh beef can be, as it has been, imported from Canada and the United States, and be sold and eaten in England without the consumer knowing he has not been enjoying a cut from a prime "Scot." Refrigeration, though the meat is not actually frozen, best describes the process, which ha3 the merit of extreme simplicity, and of leaving the meat absolutely unaltered, both in flavor and appearance. The cattle intended for shipment are killed a day or two before the vessel starts, great care being taken to extract all the blood. After the carcass is cut up, the quarters are sewn up in canvas, and conveyed to a compartment ih hold of the only line of vessels Guion's steamers as vet fitted for the purpose. Here the quarters of meat are slung so as to swing clear and allow a free passage of air all around them. Tanks around the compartments are filled with ice sufficient to keep the temperatare of the air down to thirty-seven degrees during the passage, and a constant motion and circulation is maintained by the action of a large fan worked by steam. The eflect of keeping meat in this dry atmosphere for ten or twelve days is so to harden and solidify the surface that, at the end of the passage, it is more marketable than when first killed. Some forty tons, sent as a first experiment, were forwarded by social train direct from Liverpool to the Central Meat Market at Smithfield, and found a ready sale at top prices. As matter of experiment sheep and pigs have been sent in a similar way, with a result eminently satisfactory to those who are looking forward to the development of a large trade. Ail the meat has reached market in splendid condition, cool, dry, firm, and free from the slightest taint, and it has been hard to convince experienced butchers and salesmen who saw it for the first time what they were inspecting. Hon. Hcvertlu Johnson. The telegraph brings intelligence of the sudden death of Hon. Reverdy Johnson, who was found by his servant, lying dead in the grounds of the Executive Mansion in Annapolis, Maryland. Mr. Johnson was the son of Hon. John Johnson, Chief Judge of the First Judicial District of Maryland from 1811 till 1821, and subsequently Chancellor of the State. He was born in Annapolis, on the 21st of May, 1796, studied law with his father, and entered upon the practice in his native city. His legal career was one of marked success, and secured for him the leadership of the Maryland bar, which distinction he enjoyed when he withdrew from practice in 1S45, having meanwhile served in the State Senate from 1821 to 1825. In 1845 he was elected to the Senate of the United States, and remained in that body until 1S49, when he submitted his resignation, in order to accept the office of Attorney-General of the United States, tendered him by President Tyler. He performed the duties of that office until the death of President Tyler, and then devoted himself to the practice of law before the bar of the Supreme Court of the United States. In 1801 he was a delegate to the Peace Congress, and in the following year was again sent to the United States Senate by the Legislature of Maryland, for the term commencing in 18G3 and ending March 4, 1SG9. Before the expiration of his last term in the Senate, in 186S, he was called upon by President Johnson to accept the ap pointment of Minister to the Court of St James. This was at that time a very difficult position to fill, owing to the feeling existing between our country and England on the Alabama and other vexatious questions, and Mr. Johnson's course soon gave rise to a deal of dissatis faction, which finally resulted in his recall. Since his return he has taken no active part in public affairs. IIouj Scandal Grotrs ami Travels. That Morrisville (Pa.) clerical scandal is explained, and is a first-rate illustra tion of how scandal can travel and magnify from a very small and innocent matter. The young, unmarried, brilliant pastor, the Rev. Mr. Shields, was room mate, it seems, of the dry goods storekeeper, and naturally was very frequently in his friend's store, sometimes helping him. A few days ago he bought fortysix cents worth of goods, leaned over the counter, dropped a two dollar bill into the money drawer, and took out the change. Some customers saw him, guessed he was stealing, and circulated the story in the village. And from this speedily grew the tale that the young pastor was a veteran till-tapper, and had raided on nearly every money drawer in town. But the church and the pastor went straightway to work and 'traced the Eeandal back to its starting-point. The storekeeper and his two clerks explained the circumstances, a vote of confidence was unanimously passed, and the little village is quiet once more. Wolves. The wolves of Wisconsin are unusually bold this, season. They even come into the villages and attack men. Lately a pack of the beasts attacked a citizen of Parkins, Clark county, on the road half a mile from town, and manifested a most determined disposition to make a meal of him. He succeeded in fighting them off and reached home a much frightened man. Children are carefully housed after nightfall in town and country. The vicieus brutes often invade villages and serenade the inhabitants with the music of their howls.

The Title of Emigration to the Xeie Eldorado Setting In. Already, says the Omaha Herald, the

mass ha3 begun to move toward the ! Blaci Hills. Recently a big party left this city bound thither, and many more will leave within the next four weeks. All of those going from here go by the way of Cheyenne, which is considered the quickest and best route at this time of the year on account of the difficulty of crossing the Platte on the Sidney route, which would be otherwise the best way to go. A Herald reporter interviewed a man just from Cheyenne who fays that town is perfectly alive with people going to the Hills, and that all kiods of business there are consequently brisk. He says that the p'ace is active day and night, and that the note of preparation rings all through what have heretofore been silent watches. Everybody who has anything in shape of a team is fitting it up to carry out the people who are pouring in from all quarters, and the prospects are that by the first of May there will be more people in the Black Hills than in Omaha to-day. Mr. Ward, who married a daughter of Mr. Hayrod, the proprietor of the Atlantic House, in this city, left Cheyenne for the Black Hills with a saw-mill, and many other persons are on the way with everything that can be needed to help the miners to make themselves comfortable. Our reporter also met Mr. Edward Parker, who is well known in this city. He is just from the hills, having left the diggings a week ago. He says there is plenty of gold there, but that he proposes to dig the same metal out of Nebraska soil, and says that he knows right where to find it. He proposes to go back towards the Black Hills in a few dajs by way of Sidney, but will stop this side of the hills, in Nebraska, where he says there is " good medicine" of the kind that goldseekers want. President s. The following table, prepared for reference, shows the political sentiments and the date of the inauguration of each President, the length of time he lived after that event, and his age at the time of his death : 1. George Washington. Independent, in augurated 17S9; lived ten years; age 68. 2. John Adams Independent, inaugurated 1797; lived 20 years; age 90. 3. Thomas Jefferson, Democrat, inaugura ted 1801; lived 23 years ; age 83. 4. James Madison, Democrat, inaugurated 1809 ; lived 27 years ; age So. 5. James Monroe, Democrat, inaugurated 181" ; lived 14 years; age 73. C. Joln Q. Adams, Whig, inaugurated 1825; lived 23 years; age 81. 7. Andrew Jackson, Democrat-, inaugurated 1829; lived 10 years; age 7S. S. Martin Van Buren, Democrat, inaugurated 1837; lived 25 years: age 80. 9. W. II. Harrison, Whig, inaugurated 1S41 ; lived i month ; age OS. 10. John Tyler, V. P., Independent, inaugurated 1841; lived 21 years; age 72. 11. James K. Polk, Democrat, inaugurated 1845; lived 4 years; age 54. 12. Zachary Taylor, Whig, inaugurated 1849; lived 16 mouths ; age tit). 13. Millard Fillmore, V. P., Independent, inaugurated 1S50; lived 24 years; age 74. 14. Frankliu Pierce, Democrat, inaugurated 1833; lived 16 years ; age C5. 15. James Buchanan, Democrat, inaugurated 1857; lived 11 years; age 77. 16. Abraham Lincoln, Republican, inaugurated 1861; lived 4 years and l)i months; age 50. 17. Andrew Johnson, V. P., Independent, inaugurated 18t5; lived 16 years; age 67. 18. General Grant, Republican, inaugurated 1869. Tylor and Fillmore were elected Vice Presidents as Whigs, and Johnson as a Republican. Their "independence" followed their inauguration as Presidents. There is a maiden of eighty-two at Taunton, Mass., who has never seen a train of cars, dresses in centennial fashion, reads her Bible by tallow dips, keeps warm by the side of a monster fireplace, and has not called on her neighbor in five years. She is going to the Centennial, however. Ix the hemp hackling room of the Kentucky penitentiary from three hundred to five hundred men work in adust which is described as thicker than the thickest fog, and which invariably produces blindness or consumption. Facta an Stubborn Tiling.'" Thousands of human beings are yearly borne on the swift current of disease'down to the grave, just because they do not possess a sufficient knowledge of themselves. A man meets his neighbor, and the first salutation is, " How are you?" or " How is your health?" The reply frequently is, " Oh, I am well, with the exception of a cold." Most persons lightly regard a cold. Reader, do you know that a cold is one of the most dangerous of maladies? A cold not only clogs up the pores of the entire system, and retards circulation, but it is productive of Catarrh, which is quite apt to lead to consumption. " Oh," you say, " it is nothing but a cold in my head." True; but that e old is really a mild form of Catarrh, and if not arrested in its course will become chronic. Catarrh is one of the most disagreeable, offensive affections in the catalogue of diseases. The passage to the nose is obstructed, the sense of smell impaired, and there is a disagreeable sensation of pressure in the head. In the more advanced stages, there is a discharge having an offensive odor. If the disease be allowed to continue in its course, thick, hard incrustations will form in the head, the bones of which sometimes become softened and break away in pieces. Why will persons continue to suffer from 6uch an annoying, disgusting disease when they can just as well be. cured of it? Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy will cure the worst forms of Catarrh ; in fact, it is the onlysureaudsufe remedy wh'cli has yet been offered to the public. Many htrsh, irritating preparations may, for a time, relieve the urgency of the symptoms, but they do not cure the disease. Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy is eoothing and healing in its effects, and when used with Dr. Tierce's Nasal Douche, according to directions, does not fail to effect a cure. Sold by all Druggists,

CHAFPE0 hands, face, pimples, rice-worm, altrheum and other cutaneous iieeeti-ins

cured, and rough skia made soft nod smooth, j hv rising Juniper Tar Soa. II rrf 1 ! eet only that made by Caswell, Hazard & Co., Jew 1 rK, as It. ere arc m.-.uy imitations made with common tar, aa vi which are worthless. PFR.5n.VAL. .. II". An&'cy: "It bus broken tip several cases of !on nul in Chill $d Fevers, and I find SIMMONS' LIVER Ri;j. L LAlUi; to be a great reiueuy m xMpt'f8ia and Liver Complaints.' j Here and there the sin of naming new babies " Centennial," is committed. V TON OF XIIIS. In a single Any :,"' pound ol TT. Titt's Liver Pills were l,:p, l tr m the p rt of w rK. A 11 illustration of the procreM of oar country Is worthy if record in ti.e Centennial Jr. this i j j CpsnrsniTrp, Tah Stick. Every mnment rf delay make your cure mor hopis. a.rv) much v!epcnd on the judiclitu choice f t r mt-Xr. T!iamount of testimony in ftvpr of Pr. Sc!i"nck' Pulmonic Syrup, aa a cure fur connn:p;ion, fir xrd all that can be uronsht to npp-rt th pretentions of any othr tncdiciao. S. Dr. Schenck'a Almanac, containing th certificate of many fr-n of the Itightat respectability, wtioittt a rt r ! to health, after Win prortrr.nre.1 inti.rai'- I piiyticians of a knowlei'eei abiiity. f!;f?.t Piiiuonsc Syrup alcm- ha cure i aivtiy. a t V' e. 1 1 '. , w'll thowj tut the cart is often promc'tcl br J ampltyniiot of two ether reme lies a hi. ti It S. eurl provides for the purp- . These addhioaal rvr-ie ' e reSchenck' Jea Wwi Tonic and Mandrake Pis:. By the timely nit of the nsr ii'ine, according tc directions, Pr. clienrk cert:?5r that nn ! .i:y c of Consumption may be cure I. Dr.Schenck ia professionally at hit rr- pi5:Tle. Corner Sixth and Arch atrectt, Phi!.It3;iu, eccrj Monday, truer all letter for adtics mutt Wal dresaed. A pair e-f hoe ill ct yon only tv ?! o" " Mi a :t tii . on than without, ant it Will a.ld tn the cost of the!iL to t io'ir vn -;,r nt e aHi-. Alo try W ire ymited Sole. Tar service nnd comfort wear i Cable screw wi?lE ISrM't ami Shoes. Tt"f "t ami Also try Wire tiiltl S'-i-.-i. S- ff ti tim jwr rmTUh l.iAit t. AtM" NVw IUU Kiiiiaihi IVj a. k-Uuii"-, U.K-h. -t. r.N.i . i12 dnr r,ns (r nt fanm. A rnt wt. . t'ntflt nil . A.: )! 1 1: r. J. Co.. A r. --, .!, Mw. S10;S25 t. 2rVr.tl fir hromtUee- .?. li. lirrtutv't :. i..:oa. aim $n COD t ' honiA. fvtmpif wonti II nt J IU vtU)r,u STiMt-i A Co.. Irtin4. -Ma. Rrttim-Jwpcis ri-joic". AorsTK tfce m r-r with our 5 sew articles. Cri: i lu A t'w., Clu-slarv, v t. TF.O Atil'AVt. ,.-,,: rvi omi lru.'At -. than Hold. A. COL LTKli k CO.. Ciiics"-:.. 3ky Pretty Iltrnlcomnni? wish intrii-tio!i Mm JrH.-r ri ii, .;!!" t -i" !"-.. p- r A-i ir--tiE. W. Hi. .MB A Co., P'll liscf St., rUii.vU'lpniiPKR WKKK r.KANTKKD to AK 'Siti, Miile ri-.i Fenin'.'. i th"T rvru iK-ftr.tf. Terras .n 1 ('I TKIT FI1KK. A .rP. O. VH KKKY A CO.. Asiiuili, it .ir.t. $f I" f A Month Ascdiii wm1 ptriysr'Lr. baW W I'urticKlnm .-!it frt-. Ad4r.WOKTU A CO., St. L.iais. Mo. MflN'FY iVtoV rapiAXi with St'i !! Krv ( Iwf t Itiwitk I (ii,u;H I nTtoen4 so ! fall rrticnir FKKK. S. M.ipr.M-i:B.SI?Va,!iiatoa M., t"5 F5 f - Jtnnth.-AsrcTin i VlOJUi,!1 '.. .,t -1 fr . Ad.l: l;ltS1. at i -t i" i.mrJe i ' I ' i. I 'i tr. 3 rr.-l,-f , (.. , .ti O hn.J I ilLCo.'rmii 1 1 l,n''cT.IioiiJ..'jJlU wri&Ca, t"ii" - i -i if i u.jJirtowi, Ubm. $1233 winch win make yon 15. I.ackii-1 A t o., t iu'u. I flTTlTfTin A" wa"t it tlnniMint rf lirr ml A I H hi V t:iiUitr. c( prtr-rty tvtl l y it frHITP.ll I 11 tum- i::'iewith it purticnUm .'r. AaUXJH X U c. M. Limngtox A Uao., Xt lor mi l Chicago. REVOLVERS $3.00 Ckigru imJOL. AS4rm e..7i.Ki tl i T-a, i-J, rtl:l t H Itri)lTKI. 1. -1 Q-lshl; Hi I ii ! I I. 1 I ' I i - i! irltri r , M.r. 1 H - IV Till; t .l .r!a km knm.vi. vr.vif. rilA. M. KV..v, Munut'r. 1"? W,.t r oitih mw-i, i iK.-iimnii, Fuuith aui SlatriM,., I..j;!nii,., Ky. Per cent profit X Aper-.t. Tor. tra'ts. c, drwn b 1! acnlnr rr. For f Till rsrticuiart tliri SmuhOir;liilfto, tt,Losiu,iix jt" " f r f i i WTWTf.n AUtVSTH in every ritr an.i town. 3 toH di.llun it)' eiiiirmiipr i. A rt u-if . y rh'-p an-l V. S"uii f a :i . p f- r c t--:. , r. M. ll.nini V -. S. E. Cur. Fourth ami t t-ulrn! or ciMit iir jifiiiir; Avr., CincieiiHli, . FRANK LESL!E"S T TXJ I.V It .MXTfll.Y. Ai ts m&kt" M1HI -.-k .t hv rnnvasstutr fur it; 12 rsep. 0 ; . -s -r -r 1 1 . . ik2.."iO yonriy, with pli"-nt ciirnmo, S -nJ 3(1 n-nti for copy and terms t Frank Leslik, New York. A lien's Flanet Jr. Silver Medal ?C Ha sit. InuiJA Mi t U h' ifi-.wi. Thkii n w " V ? ft-s, T.'ii'v t. rm I-e a char." an I b---asiV". and rix f:"t t rr than in b!u.i he. S. h. A LI. T.N Ct.. UirWIBK OR.XUK. FIKI.l) A O UAKI1FX HiKKDV S ho.-.il' i. n-tnil. J. ?I. J1H I tLOtUU A SOS, 136Vnlaut t., Cincinunti, O. fjpTfnTODTATETf7 rl I 4ZI more roune men to l!rn Ti-1(- vf I f erxnhy. Gooti AitUKtiong Eiiinoi!i. ft I A'i'iross. with utauip, i-npriiin-iiiifiit pi w w Union Telegraph Co., Otrtin. uliio. aa SlrTtJnKtniti F!nt Cfttaloru for 17S is now ready. ITiee 10 Cent. letMt tlian b!f the cou Wiluam K. Bo-WDircn,t45 Wsrrea St, Boston, iim&. VJiWTVJ A fp"r intelligent I.adien and G-Dtlem?n HililiijiJ to Bolicit .r.i r for Cpt. tilrir' n-w work, " Ilrtttln for thr I Bton." Jnt the Inv.k for Conieaniul times. AH expene ndvancel. K. lerfiires rt-.Hirei, PI sTI Ji , (ilLMAS A CO., Hartford, Conn.; Chicago, 111.; Cincinnati. Ohio. SE THE BEST! I'OLMW .t- ltent "I I 'XX'C? t'AKir.CASTAH-.KL .1 JLiVj VV K?. Jrwii -criprion ami jpn.vn i A(lure8 4II.IJI .V 1 11.. 212.VTATCB MKitr, Jvr.w York, jiali'i:ht'S Business College, at Jfmtot, ftuarmtffex xitwUi-mi to all her amtiunix. K3" Wnri fnr ;arttcvti?r&. A Farm of Your Own IS Ilia E:st Remcay lor EM Tz:i : AMI IMS Host and Cheapest Railroad Ijind Ar. on tSo Lit;e of tin. Union Pacific Railroad IN lNI'lHKASK A. NKCUHB A. I I ; ,w. Kn'l into mation nt yKr.K to -,;( ,- fu, ot t I, Ad. !. t 1 j , y j LauJ Com'r V. T. B. B., Owaha, Neb.

I I

-..- : til

t

CLARK'S BOOK KEEPING rVT

trtr (tt.OO pot-paiJ. f-r. 1 sor CTcu'.ar. W. .. (UhH . l'.r. V2 Flo so ttice-t, Cii.rin'Batl. . ito.. J.V .J6'im Strrrt, Cincinnati, V -.IUSQN, SV.TB L jOHSSCN ,i t tw sr t,-t t (! nr-:r r'iT'lei i Ircz i uvincsTonE AlitATSWtrH ,.,.,rVm'l ( w'U'",. .-- I tiX rs- ool HAAi. Hnwr. t.v fM-tA.au i r i iiiii tUn'rat !: ;t.. thai -,t tu !. an 'ih-r t V. . W r:ie as or-ce : or, if :a I at I a -rfc, 1 t f-T fii .tt U r it aii-i ..,-- LlVl ,T'.Mt 11 J1L1-KJ EH. C5-;x IT1, O. . n.i. -i t'V 1 --. June. !.' )-arua at-i rt ui.oa rwei t tT:Ttt'T trice. .jrt ' ' 7 ' -r. ivi. 1 ..-. - r t t , , 611 ' -!(- 'o.:j t-.f hixirvt. N . V. Week IT f. Jnm. l'.. lTOtv.eta 'it i o .e :' I ' i ' r -'' ' e : - rr,:,i." A VeaVi-.-w A URU tSH t;1-SS':i f u war rh.,ir.-r m.iit tth ny en- i, A. t iki CENTS ""' f 3 O Cilman Co.."" LANE k BODLEY, John and Water Sis.. Cincinnati, Portable and M-ationarj Meant HI JSJ Gr X 1ST 23 23, Fr'-m two t t- fctin-!r4 Hon fewer. &eui tr TH agists WANTED for the -HISTORY orTHE U. S. Thr rrfnt i:itr- in t!n' thri'.'.'.r.e hlnry err rntirj nkt tt-.i IW f. irt i.u. l-m-s -vr rmlm. 1 .3., I. Jt c.'i I , a . t -rt v t li.r r t i1-- 3 cu ll z rracl C-ia. DtiiJl .:: -:i. C'allot.-! !. ItKvntr'-'' t ri!Tt:t 1c wort mr l-r-t --rtu:tt; t'.at .-.r- k j-oo Jm - nU;i, 4 12 t iio l.ncnii iir aJ Si-c J f -r circ-.!..r an4xtr tcrre toAt'H. A4", JiATl''XAL rLIMlt(i Co . C'i SH.I-UH. Oijl. TV. f s PTTRE COD jLIVEE kOIL A1TD LIIIE. XT -VIIMr'mf-n1 tltrrOll MJ Llnif.-T! ' rr-st p..fn:I.,fitvrf i !:! m'-nsi'l '"" ! winnswi ml .nrtt!tiitM irtrit.-sc " rt S:. l a tucoi f ('..atfcs f. I in. Att.. 1-r.ir.t:.::. V vcf'S C.t.cIi. .-'-r-!t:-.vu ii!:t.vor. ni .l ti'" U9 a- i-j..m. it i no ntri- t. i( f)ai- lr .wsre tine rst t -v nt rt ..r.i -t i :. whn n c-nt 1 1. . Rt t.n-t WS.H-M l.1l.i!'Mir. 1 iLe c ..t-t. L-.iu.- r T: '--.t -i:friij r- i on I l-y A. B. W ILBOii. IVteitt, BOTi:-S. MrnrTTb r g aTjc o Boston, Mass. Tfiese Standartf Intitrumrtitm J Sold by Music Dz&ten Every her agetts inu 3 etui t:ti, So! J tJ.ronc'.ou: tbe FtitM S;:s o:a uui !';TlT.rU fUi; Tl.t It, oa a 5ytesi of Monthly p&ycjccti. Pnrci'.ari thottl 1 k for the Snitb American C-r-cao. Cataloc-.- and full particular n rr'jctia. it r A CEVI7.C iMIACHIHES. i:.ic;.-.-es ci every d-.s-enruoa. "DOMESTIC" PAPER FASHIONS. The Det Fatters maJe. SoJ Seta, for Clac-pa. 1!. Ac r.vrs Wastes. "Ci AlUIV YOHK. B J'or Sale by alt Druggists. J. S. BUKDSAL & CO., &u rr .,;..;. CIIC"CIK"JTATI. OHIO. ! AND v a....b Pjxxth'.y cured DR. I'm'K'S onlv knmra an4 furv i;i-nii-ly. M) (HtKtii: Lt trtuati.t uuiil cuntl." Call ca or tl(im t r 1' r :.. ..s 0r I I I P m Ha Hit tnrH ml Homei. Mllli i No I' i.l licilv . Time tnort. term 1 I VJ ill moderate. !.'"' ttimenil. .! year of anraralieled tm. , 1 M-riKi case. AJ !r.-. I'r V- F- Mari-h. vnir-cy, Mif h. "t3ST-'-'"-or .oul Chrminf.' f H-w nil., r . !. fa- ,!.! f" - ' - ' Jt - 1 . I A 1 i---1KIW !H white or lintea nr.noi. ar-jrwi.. i i. 4 . n s r - , i-f ai rr-ir on tie., . c ls t,nr f t r f.vt i f r-tnr n nut'l on 1 in ha. Ite.tof work. W . . k,rn!,l i.D. J. -jt - 1, F l - """ t ri rr.r. f'iwautlo AN N i . 4':i Kr.Ti.lld M. 1 I ' "i i .1.41 ti) Yonr Same F-trcarttlr Print1 rn ' mriii: i t o ft - . i, r'-t -''-e t hfi l I'. .-i-t tr : rii. V X and aj ..-irrbin! ast . ci . t Ta i a int. ; v t .i r'rr.-ir i-J. ton. 1-i i i'ini:tvn n - t r t s - , . tiiraio. 1,1 A.N. V. fo. -rrrltE WftlTIwi to ADTraTwrav

EN Yi ('"LLMiE- lntrnctiniE-ruer.. 1 xpnn hhi. Ai'w Kf.E.CB-iia.ifck!T.U.

J"11'1 l Lk A ' inrf

PI

tc I I'

ll I

LJ

-

!. '!! ' ' " ' r-f T v V 1 v. ' u -

" . ;, - j s - l .- IT' '5TTt V v . q V c . - 2ixt5 I B 1 III

IP IS J