{ title: 'Milford tidings. (Milford, Otsego County, N.Y.) 1889-1897, December 20, 1889, Page 4, Image 4', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn90066008/1889-12-20/ed-1/seq-4/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn90066008/1889-12-20/ed-1/seq-4.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn90066008/1889-12-20/ed-1/seq-4/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn90066008/1889-12-20/ed-1/seq-4/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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sl cura l ooc oe e oe eny ian Pei - - RELIGIOUS READING.] Tik wonb was aon. With God He was, was very God, fore the skies were arched fibre-ml Beforethe stare wore on-highy- <-- 'Tosyllable His mojesty; Ere earth had her foundations lnid, Or out of dust was-mortal made; With God 4fe was, was very God, _ He who for us the winopress trod. The world His cothing waited long, ~ The theme of prophecy and song: Yearn Unsatisfled her one desire: Audall breation groaned afre«, _ To see Gut manifes jinffesh;. ~ To see earth's tribes, seattered abrond, _ Gathered In\ Om‘ the ons of God. -> \When Timo mu rive. of woman born, . ate\ turnes apon Him lo the r son; ~ A Man ofsorrows and of grief. Invain He sought o 1 earth relief; ~ Homwless by (Jis, at nlght no bed, °, *+ Nor pléfaw for 41is weary head For Him no respite cauld there be; - Til Anlibed was His ministry. | profitableness, | years lins been made by those who bred | winter lambs for the carly 'market than | in any other branch of sheep husbandry. up to God, through blood and fire, i dost, -American Cu tieciar,' 1 upon nre in order. . FOR FARM AM) --> HIIEEI‘ Full A\D woot. ARDEN, f {others of similar charneter, can, if tak. I vu in tims, before allowel to thaw; be yaite saved, nod [I havo had AUI certmn that with low prices for } plats come through the ordeal with wool thase who | grow sheep without reference to their value for the butcher must conduct a businefs of doubtful More - money - of 15m: It demands more cure on the part of the shepherd, but it is always the work that requires skill and caro that pays 180 itoos, As the nngual bog-kitling sznson poiats touching there- Speaking of freili- is drawing nigh, L ties for this work, a writer prges that comparatively little injury. The frost must bo extracted grad ually, and with the mpplichtion of as littlo \Bent as pos- sib'e. Keep thom away from the light and warmth for two or threo. days. If the tops wilt after the frost has beon extracted you may feel quite suro that the wilted portion eannot hr saved, so cut it off nt once, and be sure. to cut be- low that part whichAnptjears affected by the frost, If some of the frosted part is left on, very often decay sots in which extends to tho - stalks below, Should'the whole. top scom killed, it does not follow that the roots have not vitality cnough left to send up new ' shoots, s7 do not throw them cu! till QUAINT AND-CCHIOUS. * A Texas man of 85 years has Just had a 21st son born to him. The total number of whippings in the Pittsbutg public schools | during October was 249. In a 1111qu of clover plucked in his yard, 'Ed ward Koakiter of Bethloficm‘ Ponu., found 50 four-leaf stalks. An casters Ohio man has been mar- ried three times. Each timo there was opposition, and he had to clope' with theigirl. In Clearwater harbor, Fla,, there is a spring \of delicious drinking water, bubbling through tho mass of salt water which envelopes it. Lorenzo D. Tote and Gertrude B. Marp, students of the Dis Moines Economical Use of Inaugural Souvgnirs. **In Paris nothing is wasted,\ says an observant visitor to the French Capital, 'struck by tho. frugnlity afd economy of the prudent housewffe, who makes the, nma? is of yesterday's roast up into a' nice and highly delectable dish for to- day, to-morrow and next day, as has nothing but bleached bones to cast away a Phnmnkur of Phoflv brtes. , But tho- American is a wasteful ema- ture, and a World reporter, commenting in a party of ladies on the pretty an unique red dresses which are so proval ent among the school children this win- ter, was a bit astonished ab. the roply which it invited. The | lndles | cast . curious, quizzical glunces nt each other and then 086 of thera, who has the right to thus address the scribe, eJuculated: R 'Why, you.goose! don't you know!, Those gowns aro souvenirs of the Wush: ington Contennial, Everybody decked hiestoro.or houso-front ‘_mfatns He walked beneath thecireling sun, : but the word, nad it was done; Rebukm] the waterain their might, «Gave to the blind their longed for sight; He spake, the deaf were I\ ick to, hear, The rmml tamb confowed Tim near, * Bo gracious He ta glide an t teach, The common people loved Mis sweet: . The shiv'ring rocks were rent {n twain, And earth herself felt thrues of pain The sun for shame, in his high plice, Hid from the s is very. face; The s artled to: E their «It-1d When this Man bowed} ad, Who mm! death for fou and me, Alone that day on Calvary -Turn J. E. Raskia, LL. Dda server, (het \ hons ain init. The Lond woul 1 have are weak and that he alone is strong. IC may cost us many stmiggles before we sav comprehend this fut. Ambition sours and | strives, and falls. doiman ty plans ands struggles on ( but when inan Somes at last fute the presence of his Maker, and casts hims-lf unreservedly then lays hold npon cternal strength. How easy it is fur the Lord To- Abaso our I; rids cto humble: our to ring to nought our fondest plans and most upon the wir hopes, he can lay broader foundivions, and build for us better than all our plin', add show us that He is ~ a tender and a gracious (God, sue me in power, boundless in wisdom and cherishod poirp ses, and then. wreck and rugs uf al move.—]lnc Christian. mr CnERRPCL “You find yourself refreshed by the pres- ~ence af chécrful people; why not muke easure on find half the battle is gained\ If you never atlow yourself to say We were recently im- earnest efforts to confer that others» You will anything gloomy. presso! bv the : a nos rtune season. bemoanipy the «nd cond tion cf offaire. Nothing was right in thechurth or out of it. ove wholesome remark at The crops were failing; the tinancut 01100311! the of the country was mest uupropitious; we ther was m st unfavorable to health; and as he spoke bis tery face refl cred a vontin- ual prophecy of ill an mental disturbance. The worst feature of all was that at the very mcmt'nl that he indulged these feelings he stood be ure an unbelieving world as the representative nrn religion that seeks to fill the rout with glory.\ He not culy \rendered highest good. In whatever: light we view such conduct, we must see how utterly ot variance it is with the Christian state. Snns of (iod! Heirs to an eternal mansion! Let us cultivate cheerfilness. Verily, it is the way to show our kinship with the saints in light.-OChr'stian Advocate, txstexiricaxt won. Big men do bis things, but how many big ° things are brr fulures. The biggest ship 1 that ever was built was no profit to anybody, tili it was sold and hrokekfip for old jank. Many a little ship during: the same time had made good voyages and brought profit to its owher. .A mun writes a big book, He Is a great man, but few people ever read his book, yet it is learned and bulky, and per- petuater the man's fame through gener- tions. Another man writes a litt'e letter, a pamphlet, an erhtlo, which can bamread in an bour, carried In the pocket. copied In a little Wlulc sent through the fuails, or printed on a few pages, and that little ram phiet is. translated into hundreds: of «languages, scattered by millions in cvery quarter of the globe. Panl, cbained to a soldier in his hired house at Home. wrote no l? dozen pages wou'd contmn the largast tren- tise hecver wrote,and yet the thoughts there' embodied, and the triths there declared, live through all the ages and to the, onds of the ea A sged is a little thing, but in it there is the promise of wnving lmrve? through ail the years to come. firm monument is a great thing, but it advancement, no promise, no erowth. Tet the man who does little things wait on God, who can make little things great, can five a bl ssing to weakness. and accomplish 1s own purposes of grare Ld toodn working wonders by means of the feebles: instruments through Hismatchiss wi d im and His powerful love, . Tue meen wav. t need is bronght befork God e may answer that Fawn by q the need or removing It: jost as we may balance a pair of scales with a heavier weight m one scale than the other, by adding sufficient to the light scale to counté {a the weight lnr Azy so reducing a t t mum? undam- Iles od erémhe nbuzdmwmch he Tell um he bod not strengt! mak- asked burden it“? Godaflexed Ibcdrgyu inadequacy of his strengt has m was-concerned, not by tak- mn ‘°\m” sete be infer Phas that he o t y. us, that iad heen the mtg; of sorrow and regngnow became the occasion of tefolcing - and triomph. Ind {his really a better answer to was PA 's prayer than the mere removing of hi (ho would have been? Thu)? the coursewcmld bave left him came; awed-{$569 mnd forever de- new; ble when the next but Mfifi’opebhcn, «xd the perfection the phosogragh becomes fihfe’fvmfcmfiszgmu assured. a thom erowned | howled in and out upon tho scraping .F. Ob- | us know that wo upon Him, le A Christian was \Joy nnspenkable and full of himself yoiserable by fruitess repinings, but he caused others to stumble through his gloomy.. forebodings, insterd of ministering to their | sparingly to all horses excepting those saliva before _it__can be _ awallowed. { -down to aro. Therefore be sure to through these inlets. ] the oid way of seal ling in a burn-l is a very pour one, aud suggests the use of a Tong trough made out 'of [flunk for the accasion, to hinve a The trough shou'd be furnished with an frou rack, upon which the hog is laid, and b; mumi'nf a rope and. pulleys is ready| (nblci By the u e of thé rack the ani- mal can be readily turned from one side;] to the other; CREE: \|\t-~ Fol “TOFk Shrunken and ims unluro whent has 'little value for making flour, and many pessons suppose that its food vale is of a lower order. But young gintus.are richer in nitrogen compounds than the ful'-ripened aod pluip- berry. The is not to be measured by their fl ur- pro- Whent re cenings are worth more: fer stock food than the somme weight of plump wheat The value of such materials when. ground and fitted for miting with contse ma- terials like strmw, etc., is obvious to | the intelligent stock-feeder. The mi- should ground to kill ail sce is of weeds as well as to eegure complete lingo toa, A still better Evidence of great nutritive value 'of \the seron- ings is the fact that feeders of sheep buy their animals, feed wheat screenings almost. exclusively, sell the fatted sheep for mutton, hire all work done, pay rent for stables or sheds, and make money in the opera- tion, | It is little short of crime for farmers to give nitay (heir screenings, which are so valuable when. appliances for cleaning whant so effectively and rapilly are so cheap. -PFurm, Stock and 114mm. Trkgvrsnn ron nonsrs. Corn or corn meal shou.d be fed very ducing quality. for market useds for slow, heavy work. Cora should be eneked and fed dry, if given wi h whole hay. When given with cut feed the corn may bo ground into fine meal, and mixed with the cut feed after the latter bas been wet. When finely ground, corn meal nlone is masticated by a horse, -it beccmés saturated with saliva, and (nkes the form of a plastic, adbesive mass, in which form it finds its way to the horse's stomach, the J muscular movements of which can only roll it about without (loosening or separating its particles sufficiently. to admit the mais being thoroughly per- meated by the gastric juice secreted by the glands of the with out whch digestion cannot be produced. \Jt is for this reason,\ says Stewart, in his work on \Feed: jng Auimals,\ ''that whole corn or that crarsely ground many be fed alone to a horse with loss danger of colic or other disenses ind :ced by a fevered stomach, because in the form of cracked kernols it cannot adhere into such a solid, plas- Aic mass. When fioely grougd corn meal is fed to a horse, it is more dan- erous to wet it before feeding than to give it to the animal dry, because the wet meal may bo swallowed with but little mastication, while that fed dry must be chewed wotil saturated by When fine corn meal must be given to horses fed upon uncut hay, it will be much safer to moisten the hay sufficient- ly for the meal to adhere to it, and sprinkle the meal cver the hay, and let the animal tako the meal with the hay It is believed that a greater number of cases of colic in horses ate due to corn meal than fo all other kinds of food combined.\ KEEPING PLANTS Ix wixtEr. Doors opening into the room in which you keep flowers should have strip: of lating tacked about them in such a way as to cost all cracks through which the wind can enter. A strong wind wil blow more co'd into a room in moderate weather than will be likely to penstrate in still nights when the thernsometer is fortify agminst the aimission of air It is a good plan to take a day for doing this work, and beghdone corne; of the room, and go over i: ther mainstay, finishing up each part és you go- flung. By systematiz-] dng the work fa thirwsy, you are sure to have it tendons, but Jf you stop a crick,hets sad thers, and now and then, as it Wu! to be discovered, you pretty sure to hive a poor oS of it taken a} a whole., Kym: plants should freéfe, ®s soon «Wiggins: what es beek doze pur mh'zdczMwmm with sheot-fron bottom, -f so sot 'un bench orstone us ~**~*~I'Hire under it to heats it. value of such grains for stock feeding k; yofr havo given them a trial, -Ladies Home Journal, > ram ayp caiipex xores. > Cédar and: locust ench maks posts of \ grutxt durability, when set in the ground. Every stzaw stack that is not properly capped. and well made is liable to inju- ry before the winter is. over. Cut cabbage is oxcellent for lambs, and in early winter is found to be supe- rior to turnips by the English shepherd. The rich black liqnd that flows off the barn yard contains the wenlth of the firm. Uso absorbent inaterial nod save it. - As the cows \c 'ma in\ open ac- count with each one, and bs able nest year to throw out those which do not pay for their kvsping! . an If the farmer has a root cellar, turnips and rutabagas muy be plaged in i; but they keep Pes busfed in the ground, aad not too many in one pit, Ditching may be carried forward in winter if a foat or more be excuvated before leaving tha spme: to be fillel by snow as a projection freezing. Be rious~ results often M1113?) from keeping bees too near the highway. No per on should keep his beos where they are liable to aftack toums that aro pass- ing. © « Cut down all kinds wee ls anl burn them, an I thus destroy their sceds of while getting rid of a nuisance. It will lessen the recurring nulsancs next year. Wheat bran gives us the best resu'ts when mixed with out feed. I.. is one of the cheipest foods that ean be pur- chased for stock, both for its feeding | gad manuriat value. In the case of incoming cows, care should be taken to nvoid the chnnees of exposurs to a cJInl'rnin—whxcfi,‘from itd chilling effect, may cum aa nitrck of milk fever. Cows nre. crentuces of habit. To reap tho fullest benefit from their milk plold, we must nceustom ourselves to their cecentricitios, and not haodle them merely as convenionce dictated. You can over feed as well under teed n colt, do neither, feo. just right Give good nourishing fool from the start, but do not force them, they are neither hogs mor steers, and the carly maturity business may . be overdone if you try to forea them. as © Pigs aro largo consumers of fo@l as compared with their weight, but when ponued u}; for fattening they, expend only a small proportion of it in keep- ing up animal heat,\ consequently thoy Increase rapidly in flesh and fat and nro considered cepnomical moat producers, Splitting a Diamond. The dismond has g grain of cleavare plane, the samo af\ thost minefal or erystalline substances, and hence «it is possible to split.or divide one into two or more parts. Sometimes n large piéco isremoved.at once from agem by splitfinv but it is a process atteaded with much risk. To accomplish this matter the slona is carefully studied and its line of cleavage ascertained; it is piatel in | J hardened cement, ,in the proper posi- tion, and the sharp odge of &stcel chisel, resembling a razor, ii carefully adjusted so that the division will be nt the points desire!, and a sharp Yap with a hammer is given it. Perhaps no more costly blow may be struck in any me- chanical work than this, for in manipu- lating a large diamond, If it is unskii}- fully given, a gem of several thousaad dollars' value may be spoiled. Fire Dogs A contribution to a recent number of Nature suggests: the- practicability of training dogs to be used as compaaions tonight watchmea. Their keenness of scent would enable-them to detect fire sooner tima any human being: could. The writer says: \I hgve recently heard of a lax-tuner two or threes years old, who goes for fire with as much zeal as most of_ his mee display in pursuit of rats When a newspaper $boroughly ablaze is thrown down, he stamps upon it with frequeni short rashes till it is extinguished, and. thes worries the scorched remain b> fore asking for a fresh Spportuaity. H+ gets excited on being shown a crampd newspaper or a match- bor.\ His Afficflog -~ Weal of us have spme affliction or other,\ said 'the Isndlady.\ Comd, tel m, Nr Slime®, whst it pours!\ _ \My {harm «sid Xz 57mm, as be gite a wistful glanca af The freagrs ; s tien is a good appetite,\ vafifixméxw [moat fiattern of wall paper, (Town) co' legp, Imvu bean ex pelted be- cause lboY‘ve‘och and got married; Benjamin Harrison was in a police colirt iit Washington for an assault, dnd Levi Morton the sama'day was found to bo insane. They wero both colored mon, A woman residing pear Tubes Hil} N. Y., has a pet sunke. \. The reptile is with the bat, with which it is- on the best_of termi. The Lancaster (Penn.) police, unable acter nrrgstod thore, bought a ratlrond «ticket with tho money fouid on him and shipped him out of town, Neat Silverton, Oregon, is a quarry of what is. callel \fire- place stone.\ It is soft when minel, nod can bo sawed or dropped in roy desired shape, mnd when subj:eted to intense heat does not seem: to be affected. A few dugs igo workmen at Morris- | villo, NJ J., unearthed a floe paleolith of nrgii‘lilc, ten feet below the-surfuce, which is _pronoun&&l a relic of a pregla- cial man. dcntlr‘lmviug _lizen _ ‘mhionod for a weapon., An English scichtist 5115's that if we the duys and nights a fortnight in | length, and if wa survived the seorch- ing during the day we should certainly | be frozon to death during the ensuing , | night,\ 1 Thres men being unable to drive or . drag a 400-pound pig from its pen at ! Reinho'd, Penn., thi; , eallod in the as- sistance of John Berkley, a glont in ' s'tength. He deliberately picked the ; kicking porker up and carried it out | unaided. | Georgo Jennings of New Portage, O., | was fishing Ju Crook and had set a ling and “mffurthcr up the stream. ¥ with the pole and lins. 'H: followod it up and captwed it. This'is a now way to get ducks. onty-five mires from Jacksonville, Ore- | gon, is to be fouil the Great Bunken Lake, the deepest Inke in the world. j1 It is said to nverage 2000 feet down to | the water on all silos, Tne depth of the water is unknown. It is about fil- | teen imiles long by four and a ball . wide, A sign that is attracting hundreds of people to were it laags, on n carpenter shop, io Patterson, N. J., reads: Coffins madg, and 'repaired. > Exira | atrong ones for country people.\ - The i ohl man who owns the establishment hns his owa coffin on hand. It is made of pine wood, and 18 covered with a While remadoling a chimney (in an old homestead in Cherryfield, Me., for the purpese of attaching a hot air fur- nace, an inceresting relic in the form of a litte brown jog of unusual shape was found in an acl of the chimney, which certainly had not seen the light for 100 yen}, It was omp'y, but amellcd of other days. Millions of gallons of rich brine, de- rived from tho action of the infiltrated rainfall on the fuck-salt beneath, rug“ to waste in Tragsylvatin and Wallachia, | because prices are too low to reader the manufacture profitable. Yet the salt is so pure that, merely crushed into pow- ; der, it is fit for aso without undergoing | any refining process. I Curfosities of the Postage Stamp. } There are about €000 varieties of } postage stamps now in use by the different nations of tha world. The museum of the Berlina postoffice alone | contains a colloctitin of between 4000 t and 5000 specimens, half of which are I Europeso, ard the remainder divided between the America, Asin, Africa and 1 Australia. i The emblems upon the stamps of na- | tions are legion; the eartli, ths sea and | the vaulted tanopy above us have been | ransacked for curious and meaningless devices sud legeais. The entire miJ mal kingdom, the stars and the moon' in oll its phases, besides legendary em- | biems by the thousands ste known to; the collectors of stamps, who pride' thermeives upon being \plufatelist«.\ ' | Upon the printed faces of these litle; squares of paper may be found the eff.) gres of five emperors, eighteen kings, three queess, ore grasd dake, inferior tifle«d raiem and many presi' dents. M. Phillippe de Ferrari, per haps has the largest 'snd most valcable colection of stamps in the world,\ amounting to something like B53, aso, | within the present pear sold. ome - sizgle THis to z‘flw‘wr'rn Pans for i P very tame, and «ponds hours in playing | to fix any erim: on a suspicious char- | It had a jagged elge, ovi- |. were to visit the moon we stoull find ; , When he rgturned he found 4 duck hal ' swallow to minnow and swam nway | mak ms! In the Ciseado Mountains, about sev; ; ] The Large Bottles aro 500. and $1. those cute little gowns are made of the bunting of the first of your country's col- ors. 'The blue will dome later; the white has served a littlo already dunng the summer,\ . Tho reporter roJolned with heartiness that the New York. mother was gofting wise, and was evincing a laudable desire | to econsmize.-New York World. _ -----attlitin An Apple-lovlnpllenr Comes to Grief. In a cooper shop at Blakeley, Penn., the other evening, Ezta Hubbard re- lated his experience with a bear last fall. \The night was so warm that they had to- leave the windows up, and the moon was shining brightly> Mr. Hubbard said he was aroused some time in tho night by a noise in his orchard, and when he looked out he saw a bear shukmg apples from his best pound sweet tree. The tree stood ~on a steep hillside, ind the big apples rolled down against the fence as fast as the. bear shook them off. As soon as the bear had shaken off all thefruit he wanted, he slid down the tree, waddled to the fence nnd began to devour the apples greedily. Then Mr. Hubbard pulled-on . his frousers anid boots, loaded his rifle, climbed out of the window and stole along.to a spot where he could geta good shot at tho thief, Ho said that helet the behr take a pretty big jag of apples bee fore he fired, ond then he blazed Away and sent a bulict into the, bear's head, just below his'teft ear. 'The animal flounced and tumbled against the fence for a minute, but he soon kicked his-last, He weighed 383 pounds. Themext morn- ing, Mr. Hubbard said, he nécertained that the bear had climbed} the fence at I the upper side of the orchard and pissed seven tons of winter apples to get at the pound sweet tree.-New York Tribune. A Chinaman crosses a muddy street without soiling his shoes, an American is sure to splash the mud over his feet. The former walks on his heels, tho latter ou his toes. Just this difference gives clean or muddy shoes. Siberia is commonly regarded as a ro- gion of ice and éold; but in summer time it is about as hot a country as there is on the face of Mobs. ! t News About Town. It is tho current report about town that ! Komp's Balsam forthe Throat and LungaJs Ing some remaikable cures with people who aro troubled with Coughs, Bore Throat, Astama, Bronchitis and Consumption. Any druggist. will give you n trial bottle free of It is gunranteed to rellove and cure. Tne Emperor of Gormanv's now crown welghs three pounds and has a framo of solld | gold. There Is more Catarch in this section of the country than ail othor diseasos put together, and until the last few years wnesupposed to be Incurable, Forngreat many years dootors pro- nounced it a local disease, and prescribed lo- { eal remedics, and by constantly failing to cure . with local treatment, pronounce it incurable, Eelence has proven catarzh to be a constitu- tlonal disense, and thorefore requires constitu- Honal trentimont.> Hall's Catarrh Cure, manu- Uy F. J. (anfitv & Co., Toledo, Ohin, is the only constftutlonul care on the market. It is taken Internally In doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful, It acts directly upon the blood and mucous surfnces of thosystem, They offer one hundred dollars for any case ft falls to cure. kend for ciroulars and testimonials. Address, .J. (mum! 6; Co., Toledo, 0. t Sold by y Drugg pulntlnn of Montana [lint 10400, and the Indians number about 15, I Oregon, the Paradise of Farmers. Mild, equable chnu' certain and abundant crops, Best fruit, i grass and stook coun- try In the world. hll information (mm Ad: 4 dress Oreenn Im! Roard, Portland. 0m, ~ Tho old smokers dsllgho—‘Tnsuxu Punch“ Amgrica's finest bc. Last Wmter r Iwas troubled so bediy with rbeamatism in my right shoulder and folnts of my legas not to be able to walk. I took Hood's Earrapariila, and now I don't feel any aches or pains anywhere, 1 sell newepapers right in the middlo of the street every day in the year, and bave been doing so for five | years, and standing on the cold stones ain't no plenic, I can tell you. | And If Hood's Sarsapartiia eared me It certainly ought to be good for thoss = people who don't stand on the cold stones, Tcan d - DeRKAI-Avenoet-Wiuiuot How aro, Brooklyn, N. ¥. N. B. sure to gop Hood's Sarsaparilla fold by all druggista. #1; etx for §5. Preparedonly by C. 1 HOOD & C0, Apothocaries, Lowell, Mass. 100 Doses One Dollar for all domestic fo more Bi lrznled pron: &e - if your grocer \sends you anythmg in place\ of SAPOLIO. sead i jost what you ordered. . SAPOLIO always gives fated work it acts like a charm. # For scouring pats, pass gig 3533333 upon floors, tables and their sherpa to help eround the f a low to understand that, in order to than ordinary m proporlins. Br. Plum hdruLglm under n pom it will benefit or . ure or e roturned. In all. bloo seasos, and for all serofulo on! aflocu medi nine «Bolda nmamnus with each Bome, FoR BERKS and SCALDS. 'A Baby nun-n ed hor hand flhba‘f'cbm Of orie: ~A L_A___-___- by: the proprictors of i mefigmcfiy lorpnu ingurable! e iSG tho last eightcon months the Rus anvormgunt baguxpe lod $500 Hebrows r. baby on n hot nova an Ar Dnuci—ux-n-s—AN—n-fintmg 3h8 onagtes a, VOOELER G0., Baltimore, Jd. mnmmmaiar ham * Brown sonps are [7 E unlbpgm nce 0 tee \In dnp Ie d and unscented. n bolting wis an nnclent po ”RAP“;l bul it was prohibited. ___ leted with sore 6yes use Dr. feaac Thom £23? 5:5.“ ater. Druggiste soll JtJmpll‘ bottle 3 tnd a free storm ot cutuog siset which ainkes wwe like a thousand needles. W our, .You say a posure? No, he couldn - clothing And Jinn. flm in the * Full Brand led gtorm-proof, waterproof, 8 7 of xhcm. you areas Bun Mahmud throng ou 0 has bnce tried one Q ten times its cost. Both the method and results when Byrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant! apd refree ing to the taste, and acta romptly on the Kidneys, owels, cleanses th tem effectually, dispels colds, head- aches and fevers and cures habitual accept ferior coat “a: é’l‘lc‘kfl\ dzhvemd without um cost, . Particulars andllustrated A. d. TOWER. Boston, Masse | WWW” ~ L Paynblotoymmeu, 19, 13, 20 years from now, able in your family, a h e ltlx’tlnnflv Iny' person 311 YoU (MN PROVIDE SUCH MONEY 1. MOHE CGBTAINL G 2. MORE BASILY, 3. FOR A SMALLER OUTMY. By menna of a Policy or Bond, in the Naw ank Life_ Insurance so. (Aesnots nhaur $100,0 constipation, Byrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever duced, pleasing to the taste and crept-able to the stomach, at; action and truly beneficial ects, prepared on healthy and agreea its many exe to. your estate, to a\ fromthe most le substances, ent qualities com» mend it to all and have made it the most J) ular remedy known. £0 igs is for sale in 5M and gm ttlesb all leading drug» gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro- ' cure it promptly, for any one who wishes to try it. Do not accept any substitute. Miro/WA Fig. srauP co. - 841! mammal). OAL NEW YORK WV © 0,00 bu” light; omor, ! m ew Yor s o at ngnrgznlfirm a? yourawhhun, and the you can Invest antl be sont for: your consideration, ; and. figures sil eua mention this ' Automatic | REVOLVER. ‘ Unequalled for Symmetry, Reanty, Ma« etish and Wang-\51mg * yhe hufnu ty to thro open ew Patent. 88 calibre, “lines. rtrldg‘e. Do not buy until yorhave ou buy n gunman Donblo-Actlon Hevolver, you are mm rfoct a Platol as Ehw Qweume'akm “RH Good: fri.. numb-m- AXLE. Iohn P. Lovell Arms Co. \FRAZER GREASE phum>> - Oe. omco 5m Whitcball 8° ms, Bo Warten. BB. New York. JOHNF STRATTON & SON [8 and 40 Welkor 8 i euLO URE ln m World. AFTER ALL OTHERS FAIL GOHSUL\ rters and Molt-lam Belle\ In MUSICAL MERCHANDISE, Barnum. Accordeons, Har klndml lelnxn otc. bic. manna\. am OPIUM HABIT. A. Valuable Treatise Olvln full information of an Easy and Speody cure 1m the afioted. Dx. J. C, Horyatax Jefferson,Wisconsin. CROC COPA EOC OOL __ “a l, AUTflMATIG STEAM Luau pest Bani—hr, 32\ North gB‘lfn: Nervous complaints, Brig dive Impotenay and kindred dl Jong standing or from FW Ton days! medicines furnished by nun bend for Book on SPEULA 1. Dincnaes. r pram» ang “with; dorse Big G as Ro Ionic urn-Incur- t* Buesa, Shtures ~ nom‘mo‘hw Wa have sold Big G for many y‘gr- and (I It you want your pension Ivnhoru > me 381.00. dehmnm’ HESTER H ENGLIS 95“an 148, meine tham, Pensions: NEY, lmuTuN. , t. CHEAP HOMES“°“ cent guaranteod on Investments xp Commisions, Stuttgart, Ark STUDY, Book-keeping, Business Formt Purim-lump, Arithmetic, Short-hand, eto ghly taught by MAH Ctroulazs llmux‘n College, 4587 Hain St., Buffalo, N, Y> Aesnts Bonaors, Hllre Cham wire, Laremoie. fu, Wy Push Fal the Handle and tha Screw goes In.» mM-q'hkn. ay retwre Chichasiee Chen't Mlmmnnfih, Stean Cooker: Kice ' @ Uo, Boston, Hae, mum: 5mm. semi omvm J, 3 Br Meee im “mum is., . It your unrdmndwlzrkm i it zend rorsample, ~ ¢ M Cough Medicine. Becommunded by Pb swims. fails, Ploasant and agrees; o to the ' Cures where all elso Children take it without objection. B: DH. KOBfll.Bu s FAYORITE COL1C MIXTURE animais, will care #9 out of every mu casos of ulentor spasmodic. | Isarety more than i or 2 necessary, “mtg, rather acts as a sazative and tummy harmless. um m anaem- ‘mn is worth som Axpend a wh saute-led, ma whlflhfltflhn / “OAKLEEK: Cl).v Bethickem, Pa. «Favorite Wecheerfully recommend Iwimmhlwmmrm Ta \Favorite Colle Mixture.\ Wowkt not be . unmanaqwdk-hclhmzwm without it as long JsA4C MOSES 4 FRO, Sale and Exchange Stables, Easton, Ta colle, whether BAD J ONES emu-m you h-regmon hand, ready Borse. If notatyourdragglat'sen- fae, o Tro. or’? RellamTor, | BINGHAMTON, k. ¥, Kew York. beck dad after tt, and even the children del & “\mmm sxs Co, fry YOREe: _ t in ustag it in