Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 16, Number 12, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 12 September 1885 — Page 7
The Strongest Hone In tbe World. Our farm pet pla will be interested In freeing a picture c-f what in claimed to be the most powerful horse living. The illustration is an exact representation of him in little. He looks as if the power of a railway engine was in his tremendous neck. Verily it might indeed be "clothed with thunder." The powerful legs, hoofs and shoulders seem as *!iough this magnificent specimen of animal strength could pull a tree out by the roots.
We have never had a horse like this in America, although »ome very large ones have been imported. He was reared in Belgium, by a common peasant.
4,
4
BIO HORSE.
lib height can be seen by observing how far his head rises above that of tbe groom who holds him. Ho is six foot high, and weighs 1,800 pounds. But he has a snub .nose aud a very small, flat head, you will observe, as though he had not much brains, Xor all his aizx He may not hatfe much licrrso sense.
Belgian and Flemish horses have always been distinguished for their great size and strength. An average number of 25,000 are reared and exported annually from fat little Belgium. They ar» not raised by large aud "wealthy stock-breeders, either, but the small farmers here aud ther.j in a neighborhood. The hujje animal in the illustration was sold .into Germany, where, be now belongs.
Cold Frames.
We have mentioned thai the middle of September is the time to sow cabbage, lettucc, cauliflower aud greena for early spring inc. In tbe st uth those may be oasily wintered ever and bo ready to start up ths 1-it •of February by simply covering them lightly with loaves or straw. They will do well without that, but will bo iu a more forward state if thus covered during the coldejt weather. The south is the early vojotablo garden for t.ho Unitod States. The more the people there understand this, and act accordingly, tlioy will be able to add to thoir Incom inun'ju-ely.
Farmers and garJenors in the north who want the vofotnblfu wo have named very £.oi ly must rosort to the cold frame.
HOW TO MACK A COLD FRAME. You have only to set a box of boards upon tho ground, fusionlng tho siileJ sccurely to posts, ho they will stand up. The back board shou be ton or twelve inches hi^h, the front one nevon or olght inches S3 that the sash which is laid upon tho box shall slopo and shed rain. Ill box should be of the propor sissi to allow the glasa sash to vet upon it. The sash is threj by six feet. Along bed of boards can bi mada, on which tho sashes can bo laid s.dj by sido. Fill tho space imido with fertile soil, diggin in three itichoi of well-rottod manure. You will thou have a vegetable garden in a box under glns-i. Tbe sash beds mu.4 faca to tho scufcb and onst. Where tho winters are cold and tho winds bleak, aboard fence six feet high should protect tho frames to the iio"th aud northwest.
The gardenjr may have as niany of thesj SHHI.CS as ho can afford. About a month iiftrr tho sowing oC the seeds naino.1, say tin middle of October, transplant them from the* opan ground into the cold framo. Sot them down to the flrst loaf. Henderson inmu'ta lhat each sash will hold 500 plants cabbage or cauliflower, and 70 to 800 (Otiueos. Tho plant* mu.*t be thoroughly »iired and sunuod throughout the winter. Kvory day when the therinometor runs not luwer than twenty degrees in toe shade, of i.i.Kl, sunny days, tho sachai may bo liftod a altogether, taking care to replace them 'lit. ihut is the treatment through the winter. 1 sHt plain that you can't mistake. Now, l.nve a munbor of spare, empty cold frames, .a (.11 tvs poets like those described. FUl the •uil in them with straw and leaves, so that 4 will not fr&>M. From the middle of Fobtuny to the 1st of March transfor lettuca anU to the spare cold frames, fifty to each
wh. Have the earth enriched and well inuveriznd. Those are the frames in which your lettuca is to grow till it Is marketed. il.Vt.' the plants an abundance of air, and lot th»in have a thorough soaking whenever there is a warm rain. If you let them re tnain shut up in tbe sashes und a bright sun, without air, recollect they will ba cookcd. Do not noglect them for a ugle day. They need air. sun' and mo sture to make a rapid growth. In six weeks from tho time they wore last transplant© I your lottuce will be ready to sell A good many tiandy littlo dollars can be picked up in this way in tbe months of April and May, in suitable localities. At an average of five cents per hand for early lettuce, with a small number of frames the returns would uot bain considerable. Moreover, women and children can do this work.
From the 1st of March to the rniddls of April, According to locality, take up tho cabbage and cauliflower from the cold frame* and set them ont in the OQOII groun 1. When full grown, in good mar|g& regions, thcaa will make return at the rat* of 1,000 an acne. The cabbages will be, perfected and tuold off at the latest by the -middle of July. Early cabbage and cauliflower should be sot in row* about twenty-fire inches apart, with a distance of sixteen inches between the plants. At the same time they are set cut lettuce plants may be put in th* space between the rows, twelve inches apart. The heads will mature early and be cut off before they are in the way of the cabbage. By this method the ground may be doubly utilised, with its large requirements of manure and labor.
Th* Amerleaa Fortstry Congress Meets in IksUw, as you are aware, beginning 8ept Si it will be held under tbe ati'pices of tbe Massachusetts Hortcultural »*riety,in conjunction with the New England Agricultural society, the Massachusetts Board of Agriculture, aw) tbe Society tor tbe Promotion of Agriculture. Tbe hotel headquarters erf tbe association will be tbe Adams house. Specially low rates will be made for those who come to attend. Some of tbe best and wisest beads in North America will be them, from Canada to Alabama, from New York to California. By all mxu» attend tbe meeting if ym can. The forestry movement has been taken up with enthusiasm, and tile coming nr^'ing will be tbe mmt important and inte in* snr.H* &eld. Below are son* papers aad speeches that will be presented: "Tbe Needs of a National Forest Policy," by Hon. Warner Miller, chairman United States smate committee
cn
Culture," by Hon. H. B» Low, chainatn N?w York senate committee on forestry "Purest Eoonomy in Canada," by Hon. H. 3. Joly, Quebec "WalnutCulture in Northern Latitudes," by Hon. H. G. Joly, Qusbec "S ata of Forest Legislation in the United States," by N. H. Eggleston, Washington, D. C. "Trees as Educators," by Professor Edward North, Hamilton coOega, N. Y. ''Relation of Forests to Floods," by Thomas P. Roberts, Pittsburg, Pa. "Relation of the Charcoal interests to the Maintenance of Forests.' by John Birkinbine, Philadelphia, Pa. "Lumbering Interests, Their Dependence on Systematic Forestry," by John & Hobb.-, North Berwick, Me. "Forestry of the Lower Southern States, and Their Probable Rss urces," by Dr. Charles Mohr, Mobile, Ala. "What are the Requisites of an Effective Fire Legislation," by S. W. Powell, Brooklyn, £«. 1. "What Have the Different States Done in Regard to Their Forest," by John Hicks, Roslyn, R. "Tho Work of Experiment Stations," by Ad. Leue, Cincinnati, O. "Profits of Forest Culture," by Ben: Berley Poore, Massachusetts "Arbor Day Celebrations in Schools," by John B. Peasley, Ph. D., Cincinnati, O. "Seacoast Planting, its Importance, Practicability. Methods," by W. C. Strong, Newton Highlands, Mass. "August Planting of Erergrejni," by W. C. Strong, Newton Highland?, M«.« "The Osier Willow and Rel Cedar," by Edmund Hersey, Hingham, Mass. "Spark Arresters for Locomotives," J. N. Lauder, Boston, Mass. "Lumberman's Waste as a Fertilizer," B. E. Feruow, New York.
To Find the Queen Best [Beekeeper's Magazine.]
Anew and simple way of securing any queen that you wish to remove from a hive was reported to us last year. We trie! it several time? with success. Some who find tbe search for a queen tedious and difficult ma}' be glad to know it
Put ov..*r a hole in the top of any hive a surplus honey box with one or mora glass side.: have co other box on smoke the bees in the hive slightly at the entrance* then commence drumming on the hive smartly, as when driving bees out. Watch the box on top and you will see among the first beo3 to go up into it the queen.
The friend who recommended this way asserts that hs has never failed to see the queen go up within a few seconds of the time when he began to drum the hire. We think, however, that this would not always be the case. Where common box hives are in U3e this would probably be the easiest method of finding the queen.
One of our former partners, Mr. Walker, also discovered the above method when Italianizing black bee3 in the country. He removed a great number of queens, and prefers this method to any other, even in moveable comb hives.
To Can Siberian Crabs.
WI
The Farmer
utture and
isrostry "Growth of Forestry Nehratfca and tbe Weft.'1 by Boa. J. Sterling Mortoa, ax-governor of Nebraska "Profits
v£
Forssl
1
procured stone Jars holding a gallon, small at the top with a flange to hold the covor. I use a granite iron saucepan, having a cover, for cooking fruita. Into this I put a sufficient number of crab apples to fill one jar, with as little watar as would suffice to cook the fruit tender. As soon as they could be merced by a broom straw I filled tbe warm jar nearly full of fruit the sugar syrup being previously prepared and boiling liot, was poured over the fruit till the jar w.:s filled, the cover placed on and the jar sealed up by tying over it a pap9r dipped in the white of an egg, and over this two or three thicknesios of paper. Thp syrup was made as you would make sugar syrup for eating on griddle cakes. The fruit kept beautifully, was tart and of line flavor. Ths water in which the apples were cooked was strained, mixod with an equal measure of granulated syrup and boiled for a short time, making a flue jelly."
The Pesky Little Tigs.
Feed and pasture in abundance are what make fine fat hegs and healthy pork. The littlo pigs are ofton troublesome, and the fanner snuts them up in a close pen, just to keop them out of mischief, and consequently they are deprived of grass and green food at tho very time when it is most important that they should havo this kind of feed. To avoid tbe mischief which little pigs may do by running wherever they please, and at the same time allowing them the advantages of pasture, every farmer should have a lot of amph sieo so fcncad that tho smallest pig cannot escape from it, and then turn them loose iu it and let them have undisputed liberty.
BOM
Tor One*.
[Rufus Hatch iu N. Y. Sua
Fortbe first time since It81 the farmer is to-day the master of tho situation, and it is his own fault if ho does not makj the imnt of it If he will hold his wheat at $! at the station he will get his price, anl by selling half as much as he did las£ year he will receive more money for his sal-s and still have some wheat left to carry over to another, year.
Muff Coch In owls.
The London Live Stock Journal thinks a certain Asiatic hen important enough to give a picture of in its columns. We reproduce the illustration hers:
'Vo5c'&
Bi rr OOCHW HEX. I
"Whata potfnll sbe would make, wouldn't, sbef says a ladv who likes country cream chicken stow*. So «ay w» all of us.
Tbe Buff Cochins are favorites in Great Britain They are of immense siss,
the
roosters sometimes weighing fifteen pounds. They get growth young, are vary healthy and hardy, and good-natured stay at hornets.
The French GuiHotino.
New York city boasts a show which rivals in many respects tbe famous Mme. Tussaud's wax works in London. Ths New York wax works is called the Eden Mosea It has its crypt and chamber of horrors, for which there is extra charge. If you enjoy thesensation of having your hair stand on end, you must pay for it One of the horrors of this dread crypt is an arrangement showing tha mode of execution of criminals in all nations. At least, it is a row of arrangements. Prom the victim of Judge Lynch, who "stands upon nothing, looking up a rope,' in the limb of a* tree, to the Turkish criminal, whose head is struck off with one blow of a scimitar, all are there in ghastly array. They are so realistic, that boys aud girls who go the round of them take it as a great credit to themselves when they can come out and say unmoved: "Oh, pshaw 1 That didn't scare ma."
I -4
THE FRENCH GUILLOTXRE/S[
But the French guillotine is perhaps ths most terror-striking of alL If a terrible mode of execution would curdle the blood of the wicked and tend to prevent crime then tbe guillotine ought to be the approved method. At the same time it is as speedy and painless as any. It is very simple, as you observe. There are two heavy upright timbers held together by a cross-beam at the top. Heavy Umbers below fix them to the ground and steady them. The uprights are grooved on the inside, and the groove is smoothed and oiled to give it the minimum of friction. A very heavy knife, placed obliquely, is what severs the head. It appears at the top of the machine. The table, the ring, opening in the middle for the head, the ghastly bucket or basket, all tell their own story. The head is severed from the body at one stroke of the knife, and falls into the vessel below. To make the scene more terrible, the coffin of the condemned is placed beside the guillotine upon the ground. From the guillotine comes the expression so well known about this time in American political circles, "His head has rolled in the basket"
AN EXECUTION.
Th) tab'.e on whicii tho criminal
1
They are, moreover, exo?Ujnt winter layers. They an? probably nearer tbe much lookedfor «U-purpose fowl than almost any other. Tbe only draw lack, apparently, is that they are not remarkably prolific layer*. They produce an average number of eggs and chickens. The hen in tbe picture is a 8-year old, and has taken a number of prizes.
Thing* t» Da aad to Know. An ancient farmer says that tbe wbe&t crop is good in tbe even years and poor in tbe oddy*ar-.
Leo Wilt*, a wv cap able Ohio nurseryman traveling in Europe, has been authorised by tbe eoamlnkmr of agriculture to li'ea collection of ids of tbe bardie** .i*r, fruit aad oro__ tital trees of Russia. It will ba of great Talus to us in tuna. A
To cere *1laek knot" upoa plum and Cherry tree#: Cot out tbe excraKsoce aad fcive ths wound a coating of tarpastiaev wa«h with a strong ^ulfaa of cataWl ©t liar*
This test August Paris witansed a sosaa which wa» a surprise era fir bar. There wa* a double execution.
Two murderers in am
TEKRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL.
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*•*&*&
brought to the Place de la Bouquette, out* ride the prison of the condemned, and guillotined. In Rails it is said that criminal! an kept in ignorance, of the day aid hour ol execution till the moment itself arrives. Hie execution takes place between midnight and daylight.
The hole into which the condemned man's head is fastened is called the lunette or little moon. A striking account of tbe recent executions is given in The London Telegraph. It shows that even tha French guillotine bungles quite as much as our hangman's rope, occasionally: Gaspard was the first of the felons led to death. Tall and muscular, he walked firmly between two priests, whose ministrations he had rejected until the acproach of his term.
His faca was pale, and fab features contracted convulsively as he neared the guillotine. Hare In stooped toward the prison chaplain, the Abbe Faure, and embraced first ths priest, and then a crucifix held by the latter in his hand. He was now seized by the executioners, his head was placed in the lunette, and after an awkward pause, "during which Diebler seemed to have lost momentary control of his instrument, the knife descended, and the headless trunk of the criminal fell away from the bascule. Tbe head was then put into the basket.
The guillotine was now washed, and everything set in order for the n9xt execution. After an interval of seventeen minutes, during which the clamorous crowd seemed to have lost its grotesque gayety, tha doors of the prison again opened, and Marchandon, looking like a pale boy of 17, tottered feebly out, supported by the Abbe Faure, and the other priest who had assisted Gaspard.
The criminal was evidently more dead than aliva He still wore the patent leather boots with pointed toe caps which he had on when arrested in his country housa at Compiegne. After having convulsively embraced the priests he was caught sharply by Diebler and thrust into the lunette. The knife again refused to work, and nearly four seconds elapsed before it feli ou the criminal's neck. When it did so a double jot of blood spurted out for nearly two yards, and sprinkled the adjacent ground.
Rain, Thunder and Lightning. An advanced thinker hits a very fine theory as to the cause of the above phenomena. Electricity explains all. Briefly: Hydrogen is the lightest of all known gases. It must therefore constitute the top layer of our atmosphere. Hydrogen is being continually generated by decomposition, and is constantly passing up through the atmosphere. The union of hydrogen and oxygen produces an explosion, of which the result is water. Electrical disturbance, produced by the friction of the earth's rovolution or otherwiso, causes explosion between the layers of hydrogen and oxygen, and their union and descent as hail, rain, or snow. There you have it
Contagions Connnmption.
No person should b9 permitted to sleep in a room wherain a consumptive patient is, or has recently bean. No consumptive person should ever kiss or fondle a healthy one, especially a child and sound members of a iamily should not, without adopcing more and better precautions for the preservation of their owa health, attend consumptive patients. Above all, no person suspected of having pulmonary consumption should be allowed to visit family after family, infecting napkins, bedding and rooms, caressing tender children, and in other ways sowing germs that may cause suffering and death.
„,. New Dress Material* 'si
1
(Harper's Bazar.] WOOL LACS DRESSES.
Wool laces are very largely imported for autumn use, and are shown in flounces a yard deep to cover tbe entire dresa slcirt as far as it is visible. Theje lacas are now made of the durable mohair, which is firmer than the soft wool woven into such lace3 last season tho patterns are small and new, or else they reproduce those of antique guipure lace a small scalloped design finishes one edge, which is to serve as th3 foot of the skirt. These flounces are sold in four-yard lengths for tue entire skirt, and are to be mado up over silk, wool or satin in a plain round skirt. Such flounces cost from $4 to 15 a yard, and are also sold in shorter ioigths of one yard, or else a yard and a half, to cover merely the front anl part of the
s:d
IVJS
is
not a plain board, tui rises, ridge-like, in the middle. Upon this ridge tho murderer lies. His neck and back are thu? somewhat thrown up. He h'es upon his face his jet hang over tho o3go cf tho tablo and are bound.
The executioner turns a lever in tbo side of one of the posts. The ponderous ka ifo, or cutter, suspend-sd by a cord, is thus liberate^, and falls along the grooves upon tho coudemned neck. The head does not always drop instantaneously, however. A few seconds elapse sometimes, long enough for the bystanders to hear tbe cutting. An American editor witnessed one of thear guillotine executions in Paris, in tbe shivering dawn of a gray morning. Ho wrote that the cnttor, as it severed tho doom el head, sounded like a "dull knife crunching through tough meat" It is a sufficiently tremendous metaphor.
This terrible instrument of executions was not invented :by the man whose came it bears. He was merely the member of tha French constitutional assembly in 1789 who first proposed that this be made die mode of official execution. His name was taken up and affixed to tbe machine in a satirical song by a royalist newspaper of the tima. The name has clung to it ever since. Dr. Guillotine lived till 1814 As a matter of fact, a mode of execution similar to this has been known and used since before Ue middle ages. It is supposed to bo of oriental and a Persian invention. ire is a third chapter in tbe dispatching of a criminal by public execution in Prance, which cannot be very well illustrated. After the bead falls into the basket tbe law requires that it and the body shall be put together and buried. That means a mock boriaL Tbe form is gone through merely, and tbe bodies are instantly returned to the Paris school of medicine for experimental purposes. But tbe doctors are anxious to get bold of tbe bodies at tbe earliest possible moment, they will be as near to life as possible. There is a good deal of hustling about tbe burying so that tbe return to tbe dissecting tables of that medical school takes place sometimes before the bodies are cold. Such form of law is very absurd. It would be best to hand over tbe subjects directly to tbe doctors. Queer stories are told of tbe medical experimenting*. The hftfa are stuck upon tbe bodies ere yet tbey are cold, and tbe whole is electrified into a ghastly semblance of life. For years tbe learned bare been trying whether it is not possible really to bring a dead man back to ifft» Science, alas! can only learn the secrets of Ufe from tbe bodies of the dead.
of the pkirt in combination with fine w( ols for tho back and drapery, such ai Thibet cloth, Henrietta cloth or the diagonal serges. Sti.l other wool laces are imported in set pieces for the front of the skirt, representing many rows, of insertion, while others come in borders to b) set in a) insorcion around panels of the dres3 gcodi. Pointed plastrons quite wide at the top accompany these skirt trimming Every color is represented in mohair laces, and many show two contrasting colprj. The wool lace3 for trimming plain wool corsages are about four inches wide, and will cost fifty to seventy-fire cents a yard. There are also piece laces, of which mantlas are to ba made over satin and combine with velvet both small mantles and large wraps will be worn of this lace, trimmed with fur, passementerie and frills of the scalloped lace.
DOUBLE LACK CLOTHS.
A novel fabric invented to please tlio prevailing taste for lace goods is a warm wool cloth, with its surface covered all over with netting in web-like lace patterns. Guipure ftftgigno of intricate patterns show tbe perfection of weaving when thrown in light threads of one or two colors on a doth back of some bright contrasting color that shows through the netting, such as black on crimfon, blue on poppy red, gray on blue, or Irown on blue.
Than
Plain velvets are to largely imported that of themselves tbey would constitute a 'Velvet season," but to these are aided striped and figured velvets, and the beaded and embroidered velvets that are to form the combinations with plain velvet or with uncut rel vet costumes. Aplomb or lead-colored costume, with the front beaded with lead handg, will be a stylish choice for autumn and winter, but the still larger importations of brown velvets both for dresns and bonnets point to these warmer browns as a man certain choice for a winter toilet The use of carved wood beads in brown on brown velvet is a novelty for tbe front breadth, the plastron, collar and cuff* of brown velvet dresses. There are also many brown wool laces for such dresses, and tbe velvet bonnets to accompany such toifeto bave wooden beads farming the coronet rr edging tbe brim, while many tinsel threads are employed in embroidering tbe crown. WhSa brown remains a leading color, gilt will not be entirely banished,
the best dealers import
yet
it
sparingly, giving
ths preference to tinsel threads of many •hades. Tbe shaded plushes are shown in brown aad gray tints, some of which are called tiger plashes, and others merely ombre, but these are shaded hi stripes cr is tkwe patterns instead of all the way
warm
tram selvedge to selvedge as tbey formerly
Were. Next the beaded velvet fronts there are applique velvets that have the effect of transparents when put on wool or silk of contrasting color thess come in side panels or in a single front breadth, or a foot border, and with the neoessary garniture for tbe basque.
Uy .J
Winter Wraps.
5
Wrappings thfe winter will be eiuwr very long or very short—no intermediate lengths. The former will be worn about on foot, tha latter for dres3 occasions. But between now and that distant day when protection against cold will be needed, for the first cool autumn days numbers of small mantles of various shapes will be Worn. Those mado with plastrons or vests were so well received that almost all tho new small wraps In pelerine or short mantle shapes are made with a plastron at the front that is repeated at the back, unless a hood is placed on the back instead. Many short jackets of all kinds are in preparation for the winter, among the number some richly embroidered in gold, below which a wide sash of soft silk will be worn. "t
Fashionable Female Employment. The fashionable amusement this season ta to be knitting silk stockings—men's half hose, girls. The days of macrame lace are in the past. The crazy quilt has fulfilled its mission and gone but knitting—beautiful, useful and gracious employment—is just tho toniest thing out. It ha3 a practical side which 'appeals to tbg grosser instincts of men. Hand-knitted stockings are the very acme of elegance. Neither the Princa of Wales nor yet Barry Wall can have anything more truly refined and dainty than hand-knit stockings. But they cost from $4 to |6 a pair. The raw material, however, for a pair only costs $1, and if the charming fingers of a lovely woman supply the 18.25 worth of labor, they are only that much more valuable. •. .• j-t
I Sets of Jewelry. 4
Leading New York retail houses consider the growing demand for sets in jewelry as a fact full of significance to the jewelry trade. It has been along time since ladies have desired a neck pin with earrings to match, but the beautiful short pins of irregular forms, 10 fashionable of late, appear to have created disposition for earrings that harmonize in pattern or finish. These sets, it must be Understood, are as unlike the prosaic and elutnsy brooch and earrings of twenty years ago as are the bracelets to-day worn unlike the broad, massive styles of old times. Occasionally ball earrings and the ball worn at the end of a Queen chain show similar finish and decoration, such as a rough surface with gems embedded.
Mew Dresses for Fall and Winter. In this number we present our lady readers with two of Redfern's latest designs for fall and winter costumes. They are very elegant and stylish.
BSD FERN DOUBLE-BRKASTKD OOWW. This beautiful costume is of plain cloth. large braided pattern of fern spray conventionalized, adorns the right side, and the cuffs. The rest is elegant simplicity. There is no draping at all in the back, and only some folds in front. This handsome costume can be made all in one piece. The double-breasted cut, tapering narrow towards the waist line gives an exceedingly graceful effect,
'is
there ars stripes of
this lace work alternating with stripes of wool to form part of tbe dress in combination with tbe smaller-figured laoe-cloth.
V1CLVKT8 AND FLUSH.
RXDFERJT COSTUME WITH VEST TOO NT. This is a suit somewhat more elaborate io design, but the cffect is still that of elegant simplicity. It is made of cloth or woolen goods of any kind. It may be either of two kinds of cloth, plain and striped, or the same appearance can be produced by broad trimming velvet. Tbe effect of the wide bands, passing around the lower skirt at the back and sides, and diagonally down tbe left side, tbe stripe? meeting also in long points upon tbe vest front, is altogether stylish. The very high collars are still in vogue. The costumes in the illustrations are of the kind called tailor gowns. Among the new goods shown for the fall, combination suiting* appsar again. There are costumes of plain goods and stripes, figures and polka dots. There are also queer crasy quilt designs, called mosaic*
FA8HIONLET&
Tbe gold jewelry worn by ladies nowaday! owes its popularity to the fact of its being an art production.
Qn?cn Victoria is addressed by her household aad members of the aristocracy as »fanply "BM'am."
Chamois leather
gldvet
THE BEST
OBAT HAIR WHISKERS
GLOSSY BLACKor
this
DYE.
A A roar
aft ewx»dfngly
popular. Tbey are useful in warding off tan, and durable, as a little ammonia wat?r will cleanse them effectively. Tbey must be washed and dried upon the tands,
Yw v-:,'
boon ever bestowed upon man is perfect health, and the true way to insure health.. is to purify your blood with AVer's S&rsa* parilla. Mrs. Eliza A. Clough, 84 Arlington St., Lowell, Mass., writes: "Every winter and spring my family, including myself, use several bottles of Aycr's Sapsaparilln. Experience has convinced me that, as a powerful
Blood
Hi
Sarsaparilla
&
purifier, it is very much superior to any other preparation of Snrsaparilla. All persons of scrofulous or consumptive tendencies, and especially delicate children* are sure to bo greatly benefited by its use." J. "W. Starr, Laconia, Iowa, writes:
For years I was troubled with Scrofulous complaints. I tried several different preparations, which did me little, if any* good. Two bottles of Aycr's Saraaparilla effected a complete cure. It is my opinion thi»t this medicine is tho best blood
Purifier
of tho day." C. E. Upton, Nashua, N.H., writes: For a number of years I was troubled with a bumor in my eyes, and unable to obtain relief until I commenced using Averts Sorsaparilla. I have. taken several bottles, am greatly benefited, and believe it to be the best of blood purifiers." R. Harris, Creel City, Ramsey Co., Dakota, writes: I have been an intense sufferer,-with Dyspepsia, for tha past three years. Six lAonths ago I began. to use
It has effected an entire curc, and I am now as well as ever." Sold by all Druggists.
1
TPrice $1 Six bottles, $5.,^ Prepared by Dr. J. C. Aver & Co., Lowell,
fK
Mass., U. S. A.
TUTT'S PILLS
25 YEARS IN USE, The Greatest MedioalTriumph of the Ago! SYMPTOMS OP A
TORPID LIVER.
L«M
of appetite. Dowels coatlve, Pain In tlio hemd, with a dnll sensation In tho back part, Pain noder the shoulderblade, Fnllnoss after eating, with a disinclination to exertion of body or mind. Irritability of temper. Low spirits, with a feeling of having neglocted some dntr. Weariness, Dizziness, Fluttering at tha Heart, Dots before the eyes, Headache over the rlsht ere. Restlessness, with fltflil dreams, Hiahly colored Urine, and
CONSTIPATION.
TUTT'S FlIXS aro especially adapted to such cases, 0110 doso effects suoh a change of feeling as to astonish tho sufferer.
They Increase the Appetite,andcause tbn body to Take ou Kle»li,ttui* tho aritem Is noarlshed.and by their Tonle Aetlon on the Digestive Organs,Itesnlar Stools sre
produccd^PrlceSj8c^4^Murr*J^Jtjj£5j2»
TUTTS HAIR DYE.
A
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changed to a
by a single application of
It imparts a natural color, acts
instantaneously. Sold by Druggists, or sent by express on receipt of 91. Office, 44 Murray St., New York.
HQLERA is rapidly moving westward and will soon appear in this country. Ia order to prevent disastrous effects from its ravages every preventive should be cm^ployed, and the system should be in perfect condition. At this season of the year the system is in a weak state and easily susceptible to dangerous disease. Pain in the back, weariness, lassitude, headache, dyspepsia, indigestion, kidney and liver complaints are but the result of neglect. During the last visitation of cholera to this country no medicine was found equal to Mishler's
Herb Bitters, both as a preventive and cure, and it has been equally successful in all the diseases above men--tioned. It renews and int. vigorates the blood, restoring to health and strength, and thus shielding the system from disease.
dnuncfet for
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tbey will shrink. A vesry pretty wall ornament may be rrnxto by taking three fans, with picture and bright eolors upon them, spreading them ant and tacking them upon the wall with tbsir centers together. Tbey will tbsa form a circle. Where the centers come together a bow of ribbon or other device may be fastened to conoaal the ends. 1
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If ha aom not Cwp It do •ead postal eard to Wnori.r*•ti/thiosBZTTKSSbateiM.KBRHtokonot Co.. KS Ooomerc* Strwt, PbU*d*3pbi&.
I OTTO
CMCinif Pmutar* Dooay, D»bUit», I«H Msnhood, Ac.,b*rln« »n#d in rata «*«sry koowa mocdy.hM diaooviired a niwpU m«»nsof wli-canL whbb he wilt tmnA KREK to bi» follow-waffsrwim. AddnM,J.HJtEKVKS,43CluMitamSt.JIs«rYOTfc.
A Clear Skin,
is only a part of beluty^ but it is apart Every lady may have it at least, what looks like it. Magnolia. Balm both freshens and beautifies.
