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1 -r i MOTHLR'S .SON. My Hon is (Tf-at. is Rood and wise. He has both hind and gold 1 walk In shinies of love and joy A woman now grown old Ileiwity was mire- of form and far«, Ftillness of Joy untl grict The rlicwm! love of my dear son Is life's one garnered ^heaf. O! he Is tall, ami .:i of strength, Has won him i» f.iir wife, Children about him fairer still ltrinp joy and care to life: Not on-' can crowd mo from his heart Nor push me to the wall Hi!* smile still says: "Of all the loves Mother's wan tlrst of all." Never forgotten in power aor care. Nor love In days of yore llrought to mv In-art such love and proln», No votive offering: mure. 11" comes each nmrn when duty calls- Turns from them all for this— Give me a morning greeting, dear, Yours is the lucky lass!" I live in dr"nms of nil that's past Habyhood's «lc«ful life Iloyisi. blunders, ambii ion s -in Manhood's stirring a trt'i Closer and closer Ills dear arms fold A:? life seems almost done. Sacred words 1 say in his ear: "Mother's 1 n i 1 son." -Burt- IIlll. in Detroit Free 1're s. A DANGEROUS ISfOT. Black Sam at Closo Quarters with a Boa-Conetrictor. i MONO all tho West Indian ls- V a n s e e a e few tnoro beauti ftil than Trini dad, which lies so closo to the northwest coast u b'ilie.j'V-'. Amer- lca "riat' °n a clear day you can see the mainland quite plainly.* Yon mightnot think it such a nie« place on a hot summer night, with the inosijuitoes buzzing all round you, and not a breath of air stirring nor would yon enjoy it much in the heatand glare of noon, with the sun roasting you black and tho dust peppering you all over. But if you were to get up very early, an 1 walk out to the CJovernor'a garden (which lies about a tnilo from Port-of Spain, the eupitol of tho island), and sit down on the smooth grass in tho shade of some giant tree, with palma a hun dred feet high towering on- every side, ami bt ight-pluniaged humming-birds hovoring over tho great bell-flowers all round you, and tho fresh morning breeze coming in from the sea, and the first rays of sunlight streaming through the purple shadows of tho groat mount ains overhead, you would soon make up your mind that Trinidad was not such an unpleasant place after all. There is one part of tho island, how ever, which is.not an agreeable placo at any time, and where, even in the cool of the morning, you arc pretty certain not to meet too many visitors. Between Port-of-Spain and tho little seaport of San Fernado, somewhat farth er down the western coast of the island, lies a wido belt of swamp, as gloomy and dangerous as any in Florida. Under tho dismal shadow ol the huge dark trees, around which unwholesome creepers twist themselves liko coiling snakes, lurk black, foul pools, around which tho leathery mangroves grow thick and rank, while tho hideous cry of tho bullfrog, half croak and half bel low, echoes incessantly through the ghostly silence. Muddy creeks and channels cross each other in every direction and con the upper ground —what little there is of it— is so oozy and spongy that any one who had ventured into this frightful morass would have left his footprints in the treacherous soil as plainly as in tho sand of tho seashore. AH the inhabitants of the country around tho "Hig ltayou," a3 this dreary placo was called, knew and dreaded it. In tho brightest and clearest weather it always looked gloomy and grim. Tho mulattoes who lived on tho hills above it, when they glanced down into it at nightfall and saw tho white fever mist rising from tho rank, oozy soil liko Steam from a kettle, shook their heads and muttered to each other that they 1» i:3 •'II Is "HA! see dere." were lucky to be high up out of the way of all that. No canoe ever ventured into that hor rible maze of black, slimy, tideless water-channels, where the huge saw toothed alligators lay watching for their prey. If now and then a native hunter dared to risk the passage of tho l.ayou, ho kept looking sharply to right and left at every step, lest sonio wild beast Sho\ild pounce down upon him.from tho interlaced boughs overhead, or some venomous serpent dart out upon him from tho long grass in which ho stood waist-deep nor did to over feel quite saio till ho had left the last thickct a good way behind. Altogether, the I$ig Bayou was not at all tho Kind of place where one would have expected to meet any ono who had anywhere else to go and still less could one have thought that a brisk young officer of the British naw, aet- ting foot on shore lor tho first tiro# after a two months' cruise, would turn his back upon the breezy hills and beautiful plantations to march straight off into this dreary swamp. This, however, was just what Lieu tenant Alfred Marsden. of the liritannia, had done and hero he was, tramping through tho gloomiest part of the morass with his double-barreled rifle on his shoulder, and "lllack Sam," tho boldest and mo«st skillful among the negro hunters of t-io island, following close at his heels. "This looks a likely place for big snakes, Sam," said Marsden, glancing keenly round him. "I hope we shan't Biect with any of them." "Me hope meet dein berry mnch, sar," replied Sam, with a broad grin. "Why. are you so fond of snakes then? I hate them like poison." "No fond of snake, sar, but berry fond ob do tuibberment reward for ebbery big snake killed. Five pound big lump money for poor black man. Ha! seeuero:" Tho last words were spoken In a whis per, while Sam, steppinp in front of the Lieutenant, made a sign to him to re main perfectly still. For some distance ahead of them the long grass wan crushed down into the earth, as if some ono had been dragging a log or a coil of ropo through it ani this kind of trail seemed to lead into a thick bed of tall reeds on tho edge of one of the deepest and gloomiest pools. "Snake, sar!" whispered Sam, with a face as bright as if ho had just mot his oldest and dearest friend. Marsdon cocked his rifie, but tb* ne gro waved him back, saying "No shoot, sar. S'poso you no kill snake fust shot? nebber see him again. Mo gib him settlor wid dis" (and he flourished the lonu, heavy club which he carried in his brawny hand). "S'poso he too strong for mo—don you make shoot." So saying, he went forward into the reeds, stepping as cautiously as if iread ing on eggs, with his club uplifted to strike. All at once he stopped short, and Marsdon, peering from behind his houldcr, saw on the ground a huge WiM n'' ^51 TUB TERRIBLE COILS WEItE AROl'XD HIS BODY. speckled mass, very much like a thick rope coiled round and round. But a second glance showed Marsden, right in the center of all tho successive rings, tho flat, shining, lozengo-shapod head of the great "python" snake! "Olo fallow asleep," chuckled Sam. "Me wako him little bit." Down came his club on tho serpent's head with a thump like tho thrasher's flail but in his oagerness ho struck somewhat aside, and instead of killing tho snake outright, only gave it a very severe bruise Instantly tho vast bulk reared itself up with a sharp, angry his3, and, before poor Sam could draw back, tho terrible coils were around his body But tho snake, half stunned by the blow, had not the full command of its strength, and before it could crush Sam in its folds, .Marsden fired both barrels into the scaly body. The coil relaxed and instantly Sam's club (which ho bad never let go) camo crashing down upon tho hideous head onc« more. This time the blow was mortal. Tho snake writhed for a moment, and then lay dead. "Mo hab do five pound now," cried Sam, grinning. "And I'll have the snake," said Liou tenant Marsden. And he kept his word fjr tho stuffed skin, fully seventeen foet in length, adorned his little cabin aboard the Britannia for many a day after —David Ker, in (Jol den Days. A HINDOO GOD S TOOTH. ReDublic. the One of the Oueer Kelien Kept In Teiupin at YaUadiiuii. Japan. The temple at Yakadama, Japan, contains two rare and sacred relics, one the imprint of a foot of gigantic size, tho other a tooth of tho person who made tho track, one of the early cols of tho Hindoos. According to Indian my thology the foot-print was tho last made by tho god when ho started for Heaven, and tho tooth ono which the same god pulled from his jaw to kill an immense cobra with when tho irreverent serpent made an attack at a time when no other weapon was at hand. In tho latter part of tho last century Europeans capt ured tho Yakadama temple and de stroyed the sacred relics all except the foot-print, which was overlooked in the excitement. Tho tooth, which had been worshipped by tho pagans for centuries, was ground to a powder ani thrown in tho river. But tho particles came together, so tho priests say, and again formed themselves into a perfect tooth, which was found after tho siege quietly reposing in tho bed of tho river. The temple has been rebuilt, and the tooth, more revered than ever since its destruction, again enshrined as an ob ject of adoration. It is kept in a gold box wrapped in films from the sacred white spider's web, the box itself bo lng enclosed in eight others of the samo precious metal. Tho foot-print is in solid stono and is over twenty inches in length. Non-boliovers in the power of tho magic tooth say that it ia one of tho grinders of an elephant or some other gigantic animal.—St ixuii rAKMixi wurli.-. nui FARM SUPREMACY. Some Itfiinon* Why tl»« F»riu Hoy Gen erally C'ome» Out All Kieht. I wish to compare, says a writer in tho Country Gentleman, the city bov with the farm boy. The average boy in town is bright, keen and self-asserting. He is fl-et. of hand and eye. He is of ready answer. His look taken an air of self-defense, graceful and evasive. His life is in tho passing hour, heedless of things gone, ready for things to come. Of the farm boy I hardly know what to s iy. I know him too well. The glint of the wind is on his cheek. He has the air of ono who could do chores, work and bey. Nor is he dapper, nimble, flip pant. impertinent, unplucky. While he reflects upon the past his face is toward the future. In starting then, the quick perception of tho city youth is matched .gain-t th.- tir. reflection "f tue ountvy Who ma-.C» the bfttiT fight-' ... Mark how uneven the start, l-.quipp-d for the city boy stnnd the primary, th rrammar and the hign-school. Withu: his reach are, public libraries, new.- per-:, museums and theaters. He may visit churches, courts, political ha! iml clubs. He may study the forms ol banking, merchandising, manufacturing and shipping. He is in touch with the active, progressive world, knowing men of eminence, whose daily walk points out the pathway of success. Hie farm boy looks out from between the plow handles, dejec.tod by the re pose and silence and loneliness of his daily toil. Slim the chance for him to acquire a lazy, temporizing, yielding, quack view of life. The great blue sky. whose beauty has never been told, teaches him to reflect. He acts in the open field where the air and earth aro built intc grain, and then into a power which ptuls his plow, and then into a higher one which holds its course to the furrow, and to him these become the finger-boards to a still higher whose very mystery inclines his thought to truth and honor- two things alone need ful to keep he boy aright. History gives a straugo reckoning for these boys. Over against one city hoy who reaches like places, ten country hoys go to Congress twelve go on the bench: ten become governors of Stales ten rome to the head of great business enterprises. !No1 a single city-bred boy has yet been elected President of this Republic. This, to me, makes the farm ipreme. In legislation, either State federal, it may strike1 blow for blow, and one better, l'.ut tl«e knowing of its might should muke it serene. In deed, he who is conscious of a iust cause and an udequute force, inclines to be generous. 1 now wish to illustrate wherein I think a good may be done farm bov. Three years ugo I had two companion Transcendent crab trees growing in the clay which came from my well, 'l'hey wi-re not so thrifty as my other trees. The leaves were light-colored and small the trunks marked with sun scald. In July I stimulated the one further back with a strong mulch. Its leaves widened and darkened it'made magnificent growth. I was proud of that tree. The next July it began to blight I cut awav the dead limbs, but the poison settled, and I pruned until the trunk and tender branches were cut to the ground. The other tree bore fruit last year. If,' as a school boy, I had studied the geogtaphy of Persia a little les.-, and apple-trees a little more, both trees would have fruited last year. Indeed I think farm boys ought to be taught something of root-grafting, buddin pruning and top-working—a little some thing about kinds of trees and berries which will stand the winters and then bear fruit. Many an orchard in tho country has plenty of trees but little fruit. Tt will pay to raise a bed of Crescent Seedlings and Captain Jacks. It may pay to raise a few others it will not pay to raise still others. This knowledge is worth more to a boy in a State than tho foul yarns of old-time Oreece. *-%7P The boy who can tell you something about breeds of fine stock, their relative merits, their history, their owners, the fairs and fat stock shows who can tell wherein and why an Aberdeen Polled Angus differs from a Galloway is equipped better than he w ho can tell about the war elephants of Hannibal or the white camels of Allah. In matters of taste, too, that boy who loves a tree and a lawn and a garden and a field, has in him that which is better than tropes and semi-quavers. These things go to tho very core of supremacy. A Handy Hog Fence. I enclose a drawing of a handy hog fence, tlet boards one inch thick, four 'nches wide and fourteen fe.et long. Make them into panels as shown in the cut. and lap the ends of the panels against the post. Take a piece of smooth fence wire, wrap it around the poet and A I i N 1 o(. KK .M ends of the pa v. els. twi-,t the ends tight ly together. Put wire above tho boards, »r, if you wish, make the panels four boards high and you will need no wire. By putting wires at the top of the fence you can turn in horses and cattle. This makes a good fence, and one that is nasHy moved without any splitting of boards and wasting of nails.—Farm and Fireside. (jAt.iin Wu.son says in the New York Tribune that nature places long hair on the legs of some horses for wise pur poses and that it should never be re moved. Nature does every thing for a wise purpose, and yet it is often found necessary to modify nature. But if an attempt at modification is found to act injuriously, it must be abandoned. The man who breeds cattle that can get into market before bis neighbor's cattle mature, will make more money than his neighbor will. HALTER PUl-LERS. Hun an Iowa Man l'tayed See-Saw Wlfk His Horse. "l{ tick eye," writes to the Orange Jmld Farmer as follows: S-eing ographlc arrangement' your paper to prevent horses pulling at the halter, reminds me of how I broke a ten-year-old horse of that habit, years ago." I tried every thing 1 could find recommended for the trouble, including the one you illustrated, but all to no avail. I then .set my own wits to work and devised the following I first bored a hole through the partition in front of the stall, about six feet from the ground. Running a strong rope through this I tied the end to a heavy stone, of per haps two hundred pounds weight, on the opposite side from the stall, then hitched the horse to the other end of the aivl 1 the "Tail- in March 15 of PKYH'K Foil 11 ALII.Ii 1M U.I 1^ But I had not long to wait before the battle began. It took a pretty hard pull to raise the stone, but he did it, and hacked up until his rump came against the back part of the barn. Then camo the test of endurance between horso and stone, which of course could have but one ending. When the former would relax his "grip" in the least tho stone would draw him forward, then ha would back up again. This game of see-saw was played for perhaps Jivo minutes, when the horse gave it up. Once more I prevailed on him to try it that ended the battle, and while I owned him (two years) he could never again be coaxed or driven to pull at his halter. Would suggest letting the rope run over a piece of projecting hoard in the par tition so as to let the weight swing clea:-. DAIRY DOTS. A s item gn.ng he !o'.:t-U .s.y« t! far:: -r v.. t.-,-., hi.i.og, ver-e ehui ra, but will starve his cow i.-t! way into the straw stack, just as if t: o cow would not give him a far more v uablo return than the i .: tor thei given her. Such is .-lotii of i farm, ays the Dairy: where :i one can see jus' r..-w much meat hog is laying 011. be thought to tlgui'' doing with lite food si fact remains, lioweve product is put to a ir more valuable than the It. require.-, s what the cow consumes. 1 that when per use it is flesh of the t-: "tt'i: till two acres for the fruit: of We feed two cows for the produi one." Yes. that is true, says the A• .• icun Dairyman, and probably will re main true for a long time to come, lsi tho first place it is extremely hard to tell just when the cow is "throwing oif" on us. The very best of them have their weak years, as many a breeder haa found out to his cost, while there are so many good and bad points about cow a that one hardly knows which to accept. At the same time every ono should spare no pains in testing the cows in or der to find out as far as he can whether she is profitable or not. An old farmer's remedy for a kicking cow is to strap a surcingle tightly about the cow's body just forward of the ud der. Whether it is the feeling of re straint that it gives, or some efffctol the pressure at the upper extremity of the udder, or the constriction of the muscles that draw the leg forward, it is difficult to say, but the plan is often successful. There are. too, appliances for drawing back the leg and holding it clamps to screw on the joint, etc. But half the battle will be ours if the confi dence and goodwill of the animal can be won by kind treatment and ste-h con ciliatory advances as rubbing her neck and the offer of a handful of meal. Ailvlee About Young Sown. I know that it is common (in fact, the prevailing practice) to breed swine I when little past six months of age but "hog cholera'' also prevails. An imma ture animal, an animal that has not yet reached the full of its development and vigor, can not get or bear young as strong and vigorous as can the mature animal and when immature animals are bred generation after generation, their weakness and lack of constitutional vigor is accumulated, until we have ani mals predisposed to and an easy prey of disease. There can be no n a»onable denial that the offspring of immature animals are the more subject to disease it is in accord with a plain law of nat ure, recognized in our laws respecting marriages—like produces like, and im mature animals produce weakly oif spring. Considering the prevailing practice in breeding swine, it is not strange that ten per cent, of tho swine of the country succumb annually to dis ease. Swine can be raised and fat tened on an extensive scale without disease. I have demonstrated this fot twenty years, and so has my brother-in law. But only mature animals must be bred.—Country (Jen11 eman. Karly Onions. Perhaps nothing else is more appetis ing in early spring. Usually they aro wanted earlier than out door planting of seed will secure them. The earliest can be had by setting out small onions in the fall two or three inches beneath the surface do this as early as September, and the root will make a strong growth to sustain the life through the winter, and the top in spring will grow very rapidly soon as the weather permits in four weeks of settled weather they v il] make growth enough to be edible. As soon as the ground ia settled, onion sets are planted, and these make the jCIENCL AND INDUSTRY. ti English inventor fT rs a system bN wn.'h coal gas compress* 1 to one eight its natural bulk can be eaicied about and utilized as an ilium maul when desired. It iias been found by a scientist that red sealing-wax looked red in gaslight and a dirty white color in the light of a spirit lamp. This opens a wide field for the study of colors. —A Sydney, Australia, paper says that one of the wool companies there has a burring machine, recently im ported from America, which effectually removes all burrs and other foreign mat ter from sheep skins. The council of hygiene in Paris, it is said, is about to take steps to suppress the use of old magazines and newspapers for wrapping up food. Tim Austrian government has prohibited tho use of such papers and also of colored papers to inclose articles intended to he eaten. American inventions have cheap ened and faciliated canal construction, both as to excavation and locks, to such an extent that the Nicaragua Canal will e completed in half the time and at half the tl.at *'ie work have d( u a!.i-d tlf y years ago. Inven tive Age. next crop in order, coming in about six weeks from the time of planting and theso are followed by onions grown from seed. The Philadelphia svs are considered best in the Must: and the white ones arn preferred to either yellow or red. as they ue a better looking onion wlied buuclu'd. Prof. .Mosso, of Turin, finds that the blood of eels is poisonous when in iccted into the veins of dogs and other animals, ami that an eel weighing fne pounds contains poison enough to kill ten men. The blood of tho eel is inert, however, when taken uro tic »t! .e-!i. and the poisonous |.:-..p.-rtie- are de stroyed by heat. Experiments made by Dr. VisilU-ff, of St. Petersburg, show that the boiling of milk is not w itht .it its dis,idvantagi s. The experiments'were conduete-d tin six young men, three of whom received boiled and three natural milk. Dr. VasilieiT's conclusion was that, as re gards nutritiousness. boid miik repre sents a decidedly inferior dieteti-J arti cle as compared with raw mi'ik. i At a recent meeting of the Geologi cal Institute at V ienna, a report wa -n ad on the remarkable fall of meteorites ob served in December last at Jr-lica, in ot Servia. The meteorites fell over an area of elliptical form, spreading from the Jclica Mountains toward the river river Moraw i. 1-tsing several villages. The n-.-a i. :.v miles long and about thr- r.h, and there fe" :Mn it !:,e e. i ::!lg in a' i |. ...m:-. 1' is now ie.,rs.,"iv: r' i NEWSPAPER ETIQUETTE. How V'JU Can Make Vonriteir Solid with th« JrJriitor. It very frequently happens that visi tors to a printing office do things calcu la ted to annoy some of th© employes, tor trie bene lit of those we print a few rules: When you enter a printing office di not handle the type in a case. If yui, want uj handle it, say so to tho printer, and he will be glad to leave his work and empty the type upon the editor'-: table, where you can sit in his easy chai: and examine it. at your leisure. Never mind putting back the type—the printer can do that after you have finished, Don read the proof sheets, clippings or manuscript. If you wish to know what is going to appear in the next is sue of the paper, ask the editor to read it. aloud to you. He has plenty of tiun and will be grateful to vou for thechanc. to quit his work and entertain you. If you want to look over the cash book have the editor go and get it for you. Your int."rest will please him. 1 Never ask for a single copy. Discover^ where they are kepi, and help your^el! Just help yourself to the exchanges. If any are still in their w-rappers takr them out, by all means. They contaii later news than the others. Before going, make some pleasant re mark to the editor about how easy it i^ to run a paper, and express your sur prise that he does not do it bettor. Yoi would leave an aching void in his heart Should you forget to do so. If jou are interested in seeing how things look in type, have the printer set up your name in the nicest typo in the office, and then take it home with you for a curiosity. The editor like* you 10 have a memento of him. Othei people's forgetfulness is the bane of hit existence, Ar.k the editor, if you are a perfect stranger to him, to supply you with a duplicate key to his' post-office box s you .-an get his papers regularly If h' be ii gentleman ht will give you the kc. without asking but some "editors an not gentlemen. Chicago Tvoe-Founder AHe PROMPTLY CUREu •"Uj Au ml JL 1 hey are prepared from the est materials and put up with' greatest care bv Flem'in" B Pittsburgh, Pa," Be sure you' lhe genuine. Counterfeit* made in St. Lwuis. For Fifty :\St Siig mooti tiio! icn Fal'• i:i A.. m.scion' •.rested '-e t. i.ty t-ha may a.e: ,: eai oct matter benea: e as it arts in i .. external ocean .f wa:. r. lb- ie ^in siders that the reali' t.f .en .vtum is proven, and that the is si verely strained and :r.o .• warped and broken a: th» times tho theory would imli'-ate. is during tho period of greatest s'r.«m resulting from the moon's attraction that earthquakes ap pear tube most likelv to occur, and that asos seem to be fori-oil into coal mines i st.eh an extent a greatly to increase he o plosion -. A London pl.y .sieian and surgeon re cently analyzed a man and gave the re sults to his class in chemistry. The body operated upon weighed 1M..1 pounds. The lecturer exhibited upor. the platform ti.'i. 1 pounds of carbon, 'J.'. pounds of lime, 'iv!.: ounces of phos phorus and about one ounce each ot sodium, iron, potassium, magnesiutr and silicon. Besides this solid residue Dr. Lancaster estimated that there were 5,-VJo cubic feet of oxygen, weighing 101 pounds: 105,!100 cubic feet ot hydrogen, weighing 15.4 pounds, and iSEt-L I i hot* W. L. DOUCLAi $9SHOE SH Hitler I loons of night which rota vat tion w i Oil the jieral to the 1 pcai. ed Stati i"Uii in a, !"fs faut'ii'. me St. JarnUsij mir, ii,, return 1 KMMOX Carlisle, pn„ F.-hniarrii ill the left i.ir. I was hurt in the' left eral physii-inns w-irhoiirobtanuueVi? a half bottle of si Jiic(,t,„ than [AZINE Weakness, I .. •, ,, Headache, I n adva origins Mu»"" rial ho cently a man sts work int use of tlx a riiystf solve. ie hon )f cloth was fot v I'ilc.k Appetite, Constipai J1 indicate that you needY doses ot the genuine strength pin ,m South (w days i[ers set I art of 1 In one arujthc i of tlio tl hut i'4 will -all n ^nviikii 'ann lies Year the Standard Blood-purifier and Tonic, lUiiktoi |t*r. Oiieru. kMLn. of pjf ttierchn |gta aceoui prity for tin Ml Hit of t! toinnicni Ayers Sarsaparili* k Lowell, Mass. Q. 'a t'aui Tripp has no equal if* as a Spring kit Modi cine. Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & CcFt AND $2 FOH GENTLEIi And Olh**r A«tv A re the lift rtlaed fcpee! cat In th« I'l nn to KV Y s\ K. tiot IM-1 i' i v "11 I- -f ,t f. 'i ti Mi f* "V ,« h-. 11 W, I*. IIr THIS 2 Ak'KK «*«ry t.u,« j- «t ubii fee: of nitrogen in the man's Imdy. All o! these elements combined in the follow lng: One hundred and twentv-ni pounds of water, ]t'i.5 pounds gelatine 1-W pounds fat, s.8 pounds fibrin ami albumen and 7.7 pounds of phosphate o: i lime and other minerals. I'litodt Mdii IF YOU HAVE HIM OR MOt III: I» nr. IH'MR Ti r, itou i s, »»«n ii s i on u IlKlrlllMi: if your looU .1 ..«•« w« slniilaio mud you U»\e no wj.|.ftit«, Tutt's Pil will cur© (Ik-hp IrouMew. 'I'rv you lint e not lilng lo l»»«-. Vlgiriiu« bmh I'rle«. -."ie. |e' SOLI* i:vi:itvwni fW/Jfc ri n' IM' .Hippos sl: ii:* Ml I BILE BEAN! I'm? the SMA1.T. SIZK -10 little bean tin). Th'kv art* tho nnmt •«'iiv•«»»* 101 it 1 l'rice-'f elthei size, '.:T cents per buttle KISSINf* 7. 17, 70: I'tr I\lw0lll\j p.mel size oi this i"i tu cents ei- btamps). J. K. SMITH Makfrsof ft. J. I. CASE T. M. nAcitvi-:, xv is- 1 to as many as you want, Above all things do not offend the editor by ten dering payment for them. It flatter him to think you want to read it and it is cruel to end his satisfying day-dream by the mention of so worldly a thing as money. Besides, he only publishes it for the glory there is in it. iirvt 'I Portni'lo. Stat AltA IOIC*. i W Ml I.I. Ma HAS- SI, (tTAiniii •JrNAME rim I'AI'Ul ...-T TREATED FREE I VKI.V 1 It I II iiopi'lHMH i»v the h«»at ptiyM- d«»e pymuu.tiH rapidly dif» w«'*r. mm ,n r'.' two thirds of 111! hvnil»tj-m ftr« fj.rHUKK hM»K of t..M »m« »n.. U inlraru. '«-j( TVn dnvs treatinrnt fuin^h'-il ft** OfvU' in utmii)'* I III II II. (.1(1 A MO.Nh. A1I.AA'*' I 4.V1E THIH I-Ai'Ki T1 jou writo. AGENTS WANTED! I in.! Inl. ti't UNCLE DICK StRIMTIVE RTOKY ffnm-nt Ht ,,(i w.'iTit i» rul fiityi m'wootto* i he famous p|. .. «.f liV "Ml chow-. k CO 'iiliin s.i'li irnntlv illuM al« ll 1 Kxti i indurt'iuwitH t» "rw It'rulerv, adfirtV* 260Clark Street. Chicag°i you wnt« Pu^'iibors «.v NAME TtiiM I'Al'tH U i I A K e y o u w n Fs'yrn IENSION^r^K^y urcessfwily PROSECUTES }»t I fist war. i Adjti'Uralinar WKA1U TSUI P4PEB vttrj tte* ym