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2 '^#gSS§®ii§^, Ijaapi . rtfcATMENT FOR COLIC. Thf* Rrmfdlpk of Our Graiidmnthers \rf of I.ittlp Isf Humorous allusions to "colicky babies” are never fully appreciate*' un til the condition is observed in ear •• in dividual's own offspring, and then somehow the humorous side is pone, for of all rest-disturbiup ailments, colic takes the lead. Overfeeding is a prolific cause, ai.-l very often by reducing tin I s o ply the ailment disappears of itself Hut some qualities of tiie milk will produce colic, so that it is as well to have a euro ready. It nearly always comes at m_;,t. but cannot be timed invariably, lor if the mother or nurse couut on a couple of hours of rest through the day. it is just as likely to arrive then “Total depravity" can he applied t> s •as well as other things. The syinpt ms are sudden, piercing cries and . ml ruction of the I -gs. Some attacks are v.n siwiv. " bile others are mild t'atnip t. a and paregoric, the reim- lie- of our grandmother'. are of the little use. for they only soothe without osp<-lling tlie wind which causes tin id'turbance Drops and cordials are useless for the same rea son. Peppermint was about the only thing toen used which removed the cause, and that was mr.he to stupefy by adding laudanum The remedy now in vogue with uni formly pood results is soda mint. The tabli is are sold extensively for indi gestion. but a liquid form is best for babies, bet a ten per cent, solution, and for a child up to a month old take one-half teaspoonful of mint to three of warm water, slightly sweetened. Increase- the dose with age. 1 he effect of this simple remedy in most eases is almost magical. The wind is thrown off in an incredibly short, time and tiie after effect is to soothe the nerves so that sleep comes swiftly in its train. There is nothing deleterious in Its composition, for the the sol - ingredients are carbonate ! soda, ammonia and pip. menthol. ! Enough water must be given to kill the taste of the soda, which is very dis agreeable. Hot applications to the stomach are of first importance iu this complaint. Flannel bands heated at t _> fire or wrung out of hot water, hot salt wrapped in flannel or a hot-water bottle next the sum all hel • a speedy cure Hut no mediciue is lasting. With attention to the diet the number and duration of attacks mav become shorter, but it will very likely be ' three months before they subside.— Ken net t Wood, in St. bonis fiepublic. NEAT SHAVING PAD. \ Pleasius; Pr.nl for h Mho Who l Ills Own' A shaving pad is always an accept able present to a man who is his own tonsorial artist. A pretty and inex pensive one is made by taking two pieces of chain.-is nine inches long and j four and a half incites in width. Dink j both loi: j - ides and one short side or vj? i / \ VkV-. 'L v U* v t \ VV > * v o $ £ \- j' 5 l 5 £ I ' & Af iltfS g it ntaftH wXJAJNArj'JTTULnAOAA*) both buck and front pieces. Place leaves of white tissue paper inside, a trifle smaller than the covering. Punch holes clear through paper and chamois, and lace with ribbon. Tie first in a hard knot, then in long loops so as to hang. On one side of the cover place an appropriate design. The one here shown is of tan-colored chamois, em broidered in blue forget-me-nots, with and brush done in outline with the same color. "Keep your mug clean" to be done tiie same way. l!lue ribbons are used for lacing. Designs may t>e painted instead of embroidered —Womankind. HOW TO SHOOT WELL Illnth for Women Who Would tlnndle K.tip or HrvoJvpr. There arc some secrets or rather points in regard to shooting a revolver that are worth while considering. Possibly, however, the tiger in the jangle and the bear in tne mountain as targets do not nllnre you; but you may have the misguided midnight burglar to contemplate. It may be well . just hero to remark, in parenthesis, that the efficacy of pistols in the jun gle is open to doubt, but the burglar is i always with ns, and we ought to know i the very best and most flu de sieole way J of shooting him. The following iiinls are given on the , authority ot a gentleman who is an ex pert shot. How to' stand and how to hold the weapon is< greatest importance The body musi t>c oalaneed equally on each foot (even il your burglar escapes meanwhile) slightly facing the target, and the arm held perfectly straight out. The arm should never be bent The hand grasps the revolver high on the butt, with the thumb well around to the inside and straight, and the ♦rigger finger entirely free. This throws the work of holding the revol ver wholly on the onter fingers The i r object of this position of the hand is to SS Os ( rVy V Vr*-. .. y - x , fe-ivn ’ * N ' 'i ‘ y- r --- ~/ ,i i _i • :-)! I I ;\ j ■"T. /'V‘x f- . A ■ * COKKFCI I’osi riu.x FOK SHOOTING get the barrel in exact line with the j arm when extended.bus bringing the ■ target. Dio sights and eye in one line, j This position also minimizes the effect of trembling and rotating the arm. j The weapon being properly aimed it j should he held t here, and the trigger very gently and sti i.dily pressed. The rain- should forget the possibility of , an >losion, and the whole attention j dei ed to holding the sights of the j revolver iu exacty the proper position j on the target. Above all things should the shooter j keep up steady pressure with the trig- • ger finger, and on no account yield to the temptation to add just a little more • • rce suddenly. The technical terms expressing these qualifications are “goodholder.”and "good trigger pull." The revolver is peculiarly an Amor j iean weapon. The Americans have made scores never approached by any other nation. Not only are they first ] but they occupy every position he- ; tween that and Ihe twentieth. The , . weapons in use arc the quick firing or I self-cocking and single action. What the ! self-cocker gains iu rapidity of action i is more than lost by lack of accuracy . ! Still there are records where one has been able to put five shots in a spaee <>f one foot square at a distance of thirty six feet in four-fifths of one second, i Such work is exceptional. There is a e< rt:ii:> class of individuals who cannot put three bricks in line on a table. Such of course can never learn to shoot. Further, the sight of a pistol may scud the cold shivers down your i back. In this ease also, you will have something to overcome before you can 1 become an expert shot. “1 always expect them to go off whether they an* loaded or not.” f overheard a young girl say recently, speaking of pistols. “1 am quite sure they can go off without regard to cartridges." CUSHION FOR PINS. Miitable Tor the Toilet Table An; Wonvin or Girl. Though this looks like a big, bright blossom, it is only a rosette made of a strip of soft bias satin folded over a roll of soft cotton. The satin strip is a yard long and three Inches wide; it is < 1 SllloN FOK PINs. folded double (over the cotton), gath ered ami sewed round and round, to a padded and covered circle of crinoline ; or thin canvas. The center is filled with knots and stitches in coarse yel- * low silk fioss. to resemble the center of a flower, and a narrow ribbon loop is j sewed to the back to hang it up by. It j Is pretty in any shade of pink, yellow, i wine, terracotta or old rose, and re sembles a rose, a little double holly hock or a zinnia blossom, according to color. It is a pretty ornament when stuck full of little fancy pins. Any woman or girl would like one for her toilet table.—American Agriculturist. 1 spiruuiu , lor to. ,ip*. Unlovely lips come from an unhealthy stomach. Bad digestion will often j assert itself in broken or chapped lips, j sores in the corner of the mouth, fever i blisters and a coated tongue. Chronic j sore mouths should be rubbed with j sweet oil or pure glycerine at night; in the morning wash with a solution of alum or borax—a teaspoonful in a j tumbler of water. ( amphor ice is both i healing and cleansing. flood cold I cream is not a bail salve. The receipt j is simple enough, but it doesn’t pay to i prepare it; all the druggists have sup- i plies and cheerfully dispense five-cent j quantities. Citron ointment is one of J . the old reliable lip salves kcptbyall ; I chemists. It is applied to the sore | with a soft linen cloth. When the | mouth is sore the diet should be changed to vegetable foods. Itrolling In frying i*mi. When one has no means of broiling over coals or under heat the next best j thing is broiling in a pan. For ex ample, have a steak cut about an inch j thick; after making the frying pan very j hot sprinkle in some fine salt and lay the steak in the pun. Cook for two ! minutes, then lift the steak up and j sprinkle the pan with salt; turn the | steak and cook for two minutes; cook the piece of meut ten minutes in all, turning it every two minutes; then put the meut on a hot dish and season with i salt and pepper ( FREDERICK CITIZEN. .- itM'AV MORN|'G JANUARY26.IB96. ELLEN OSBORN TALKS. About Multiple Photography Ap plied to Gowns. New In 'Evening; Wear—What the Furriers Are Doing to Make Fair Woman More Beautiful Novelties in Gloves, Combs and Sleeves. [COPYRIGHT, 1891.1 Some years ago a New York dress maker advertised her business by hiring a theater and appearing in her newest costumes on the stage; this winter an equally enterprising woman has -hit upon an equally ingenious if not equal ly spectacular device. Her brother is a photographer in the same building, and by arrangement with him, her cus tomers who spend money in pleasing amounts have the privilege, for a nom inal sum. of posing in their new gowns MULTIPLE PHOTOGRAPHY AS APPLIED TO GOWNS. for multiple photographs. Do you know inul! i-photogmphy? It appeals particularly to the wearers, of smart {Towns, llv a simple enough arrangement of lenses and mirrors you pcee once and are taken from three to eight times. You see the front ol your dress, the sides of it. the back, all upon one negative and in the same instant of time. You see yourself as a dozen peo pie see you from every comer and stand ing spot in tlie room. Y'ou get the im pressions of a whole evening party about yourself and know beforehand whether you are going to eonipier or make a fizzle. It's a great satisfaction, that is. if the dress—and your figure and your baek hair—will stand looking at all around. A young woman who tried it gave me one of tin* resulting photographs. It shows her in one of the most attrac tive evening dresses of the winter— black velvet with a dazzling display of shoulders. This young woman can frame herself and hang herself up in her boudoir and study herself every time she prepares to go out until she decides just which pose will suit best her designs on her favored admin r, full face, head a little to one side, or turned to give him the full benefit of THE LATEST IN KVIMM, W. V> the nape of her week and coil ot soft dusky hair. If the proper study of womankind is woman that girl is better equipped than most of us. Hut the gown. It's the sense of con trast. that gives the black velvet its vogue this winter. The law of contrast is the law of beauty. It is almost im perative now. even in a gown of shim- i mering lightness and transparency of : material, that there shall be somewhere upon skirt or bodice a brilliant note of j dark material. This is black usually You know that artists call black the ! strongest of ai! colors, though scien tists, wrong, as usual, say it isn't u color at all. Well, what do you say to an evening j corsage of most delicate pinks and j creams, in which a note of color is ia- j trodueed by jet black shouhlerstraps ! and an interweaving of black ribbon i across the corsage to show squares of J black? You would call it extremely : charming if you had the luck to see the example I have in mind. Rich and lustrous purple produces the same beautiful effect of emphasis, though it is really suitable only for older women. This is one of the secrets of the suc cess of French modistes. They art trained to introduce daring notes, ceil of discords in color to break up and en liven compositions that might other wise be too softly sweet and insipid. A discord is introduced occasionally in music for the same reason. The most beautiful evening costumes are con stantly designed out of very pale green and very pale pink, a discord which j would be glaring in darker tones, but. I in the lighter ones is simply piquing to j the curiosity. An up-to-date example of the point | discussed is pictured in one of the other evening dresses illustrated. It is a gracefully fashioned white gown trimmed with a band of black velvet round the skirt tioft white silk is in troduced into the bodice, on which the velvet again appears The huge sleeves with pointed cuffs are made piquant with velvet, and velvet fringe finishes the sash ribbons - A woman can be n three-tailed pasha In this country If not <n Egypt, for every thing in the fur way tnakeH day by day a more and more frank use of the pathetic ally bushy tsilsof pathetically small ani mals. The Eton jacket In fur very popular. It stops exactly at the waist, flts snugly and has usually wide lapels and collar, but its big sleeves are quite as often made of silk or velvet. A mode which is hovering on the thresh old is the utilization of the skins of baby leopards for light-fitting waist coats to be worn with seal jackets left flying open. The effect is not unlike that of a gold-embroidered vest, but is a deal costlier. The only real novelty in furs is the “Shouba,” of Russian model, worn by the dowager czarina and borrowed readily enough by Eng lish and French and American furriers It is not a circular, and yet is full enough to fall together in front, and the large sleeves have corresponding armholes. Ermine is going out as abruptly as 11 came in. Muffs arc getting mountainous. The newest coat and wraps have sloping shoulders—almost no shoulders ut all—as a natural reaction after the long period of built-up shoulders in garments of all sorts and descriptions. New in gloves: bong suedes ending just below the elbow anil with embroid ered cuffs edged with fur or gold uud velvet appliques. New for the hair: A comb which is high enough to show well in front uud which has a rosette of pink ribbon nt each end anil white roses between them. New in sleeves: Those which are quite small. Two of the most fushion anble trousseaux completed within the fortnight have set the example of re bellion against balloons. The bubble has been pricked and will collapse be fore spring. No woman who studies the art of dress undervalues the black gown. And yet how few wear it with discretion. Black becomes fair hair and a bright 1 complexion. The darker woman mots relieve it with touches of vivid color. A new model for for the handsome black gown which no gentleman’s lib rary, that is to say no woman’s ward robe. is supposed to be without, is of blnck velvet stiffened just a hit with crinoline. Inside the skirt, for beau ty s sake uni: thatsaoc t**v all ,ui- • i have in dainty underwear, there slum.d be a pinked out frill of black silk, ami the skirt itself should be wide enough :o have the season’s sweep of dignity. V>, don’t cling, you know, this winter: we stand on our dignity. There’s a subtle connection between wide skirts and tin progress of the woman movement, if you have eyes for effects and causes. The skirt should have no trimming but bows of satin ribbon with jet fringe in short lengths on the right siile. The fc;lt would best be a corselet of whJfb’fiilk embroidered with jet in quite an open pattern. For a bodice a blouse is very effective and may be of black and white or red and black checked silk or of a stripe of black and white or black and amber. To wear tips same velvet skirt of an evening you need only substitute a pink or white chiffon bodice with your fa vorite flowers. Eli.es Osborn. BIRTH MONTH BROOCH. The Uti'it Kink In Jewelry Is Really a rieaslng Novelty. Dave you a birth month brooch? Of course you have a natal stone ring, but the birth-month jewelry is different. There are no stones in it at all, it is of beautifully wrought gold. The brooches are made in twelve designs, introducing the signs of the zodiac, hieroglyphs and flowers allotted to each month, so that each tells the story of the birth month. January is represented by Aquarius, the water-man, sprinkling with his urn a wreath of snowdrops, the symbol of purity. February's wreath of prim roses surrounds the fishes. The head of Arias the Rain is framed by a circle of Mureh violets, denoting love. April is announced by Taurus, the Hull, looking out from a wreath of daisies, symbolic of innocence. A bower of hawthorn arches above May's twins, Gemini. June’s honeysuckle surrounds Cancer the Crab. Leo, the rampant, Lion of July, is wrought upon a shield bordered with water lilies. August is represented by a shell clasped in pop pies upon which reposes Virgo, the Virgin. September's balance of justice, Libra, is crowned with morn ing glories. October hops surround Scorpio the Scorpion. The archer Sagittarius bands his bow in aiied of November chrysanthemums. CapricomuH the Goat., signifying truth, vainly tries to reach his December wreath of holly.. The colors of the flowers introduced are simulated in enamel, with the rich ly finished gold in the back ground, making each piece a novelty which will probably be one of the gifts most high ly prized. “Cannot be Improved!” So MRS. F. E. BAKER, of Galveston, Tex., —BAT9 OF— ! Ayer’s Hair Vigor j • “Having used ® Ayer's Hair Vigor q for years, 1 find o that it keeps my ® scalp clean and 0 the hair in the best o condition. My ® mother, now sixty 0 years of age, has O as fine a head of ® hair as when she o 1 was forty, a fact o which she attrib- £ utes to the use of Ayer’s Hair Vigor. It o thickens the growth of the hair and o restores gray hair to Us original color. Q I cannot see how this preparation could o be improved.”—Mrs. F. E. Bakes, Gal- o veston, Texas. 0 Ayer’s Hair Vigor g PREPARED BY ® i DR. J. C. AYER & CO., LOWELL, MASS. ® O 0 0 O OOP p o op O 0 0 O 000000000 ' ; June Z 2 I.SIII. I rXHAMFION C . ! v k r N k i* FRKDKKIrK, MARYLAND. * ** ♦ ♦ ii. t\ ZACHAItI AS, Hiiupiiietok. I The suiiMTiifr'i resiHvtfiuij ii-’nini>nis frieixlsmih) Ur* |rulli< gtMii-j'Hih that t.e has iMitcha-etl me l \r> Stahl* >m I late Itohcrt (i. i.atiiar.aiai has ivamv to his new n*l i’ommodioi s stahlkh. on t'ie First .\ ry, heiweeii Kasl ■''econd and East I’hipl M\. F ettenek eity, McL. where all onh • . I > *l?iy or night, will receive prompt ami attention,ami 1 on tiie most reasonable tern>. His htock <*: HoKShs amt CAIUHAfaKs is I lit* largest in the city. Th horses are all sate, sound ami ir<ori travelers, w liili the vehicles are of every variety, and >: the lines! and lat< st styles and the most substantial chat ;<*tcr. K*:1;il parties served with th*- most stylish ana fash ionable turnouts, and sjVriai attention will be given to faneml corteges. (’Ait KlA<*Js FOK PAIiTIK.'s and ’Buses for picnics at very reasonable rates. Tlie drivers are all competent, reliable and obliging, and no pains nor ellorts will he spared to please all who ma\ favor me with their natronace. i, : 3§ : .-. HOAKMIMi FuH H'KSI> : * At reasonable rates, and ♦ very rare and attention given to horse* and ve hicles. <*i ve me a tri l. Z U HAIAS. H. ( . /ATMAIM AS ZAriIABiAH 1 Jlv \*tit.. A RARE CHANCE —To MY so.Mh- Good Brood Mares, -AMU WELL-BRED COLTS. i \yiU. Ski,l. AT THE I.i.WEsT mar K KT I’illCl.s, a n , irite r f well-hied Broth 1 Mar* s, a* alsn a lot ol ; well-bred Colts. i Tr.K.Ms -six month* unlit, on note with j gora security. Mncjuiie of ft I? H AEL KNILL, f ’N FAIiM OK | . V|i IOK B A (Till M AN, nov ;ktl. Near Frederick. Para Cliancs for Farmers. —PANIC PRICES. — | Breed-Only-to-the-Best. oFitteen Dollars tor the Season.?* I'HE (iISANi* YOl’Mi HORSE g'lsparTd , Out of a Producing Pam and by SEA KINS. IjtAKMKKH iiavims Hue lurw mures, solid colors, should breed to this miignjtlcciil ly , ! breil young hors* Fine largec-ach horses with | good breeding will always command the bes prices tor carriage. couj*e or heavy harries | horses. GAHPAKI> can Im* seen at the owner’s sta bles, near tills city. Terma—Fifteen dollars for the season, m able within the season Marcs proven not be in foal will have return privilege if horse I owned by present owner next season. MICHAEL KNILL, Manager for L. VICTOR BAUGHMAN. upl.Utf. lSflHmßjnciffi! KM ■ll CAV t A I o, I nmJt “ COPYRIGHTS. T* 1 OBTAIN A PATENT * For , leal and scientinc books sent tree. ecn “' 1 iitiMits taken through Alunn ft fin reontvo ! Jsr,ost -roulntloo of any scenttflc worlln tbS. *pie,;2s cents, fcvery number6onuJb??2 t l *>n plates, in colors, and photographs of n*w Crde W s!^s P & ~obl,, " L,,d, ' r " fo -SWS MUNN Ac:o„N l _ _ • WINKS. Isabella, tntuwbH, Bcuppernon, and lllsok bon'y Wines f I Clover Leal and Monticeiio Clareta. Also, Cantrell and Cocliruu’KOliiger Ale. India Pale A lo and Brown Stoul. ' J'y- s **- HKSANT & KNOTf. .... OEI.ECTifiJ) SPICER HELKCT’GO W'HOf,K A Nil PUHK UKUIINI.) HPICEP. GREEN GINGER. BEHANT * KNOTT. FRENCH ' John 0. Makkeli,. MARKELL & TRAIL | Dealers in the BEST GRADES ef Anthracite and. Bituminous ICIOI AILI.I .■ A BALTIMORE VEIN (White Aft), ■ LYKEN’S VALLEY (Kcd Ash), GEORGE’S CREEK, CUMBERLAND, % HKI.ECTEDiB THRESHING COAL! M.'e very respectfully solicit a share of patronage and promise polite and prompt a [9 Kn de'icl , A Md. YAK " _Carr ° U Street ’ ° pp< *' l,c " ,e S " !rt,n , *lurlng Mill of J umes „/■ MARKELL & TfiAlfl 1.1 * Sgi \ C. C. CARTY, - The heading furniture Dealjj •;.r. EAST PATRICK STREET,! ■ ! FREDERICK, MD. 1 I Sjhl Mill ii Sltii $| 10-(la\ mc begin our (ireat Annual Muslin ami Sheet ini' jj S;ilc. \\ o otter tint ini' .Jauntily SPEC IAL LOW PRICKS in bleached and unbleached Muslins ami Sheeting's, tVoin one J yard to two anti a-half yards wide. < f such relialde makes as ; i Androscoggin, Fruit of the Loom, Lonsdale, Wamsutta, Dwight Anchor, Pride of the West, Utica Mills, New York Mills, Davol, Mohawk Valley, > Lockwood air Cohasset. j All these makes we offer ai WHOLESALE PRICKS dm- I }# ,llif - '"°nth only. We have the lowest |.iice ever known in the history of llie country on Fruit of the Loom Muslin. PRICKS must make business; we can’t know any dull months. Here is an opportunity to lav in your smmlv ! "f Spring sowing and SAVE MONEV. RODOCK * NEIDK | [Successors to D. C. WINEBKENNER & CO 1 j an 11-tf. I) 1.. H ABU KTT AVi >. . L. HARGETT A- CO.. x si-1-;i) and : IMPLEMENT HOUSE, * & I .V ,c ‘“ tlln S O 'rdware, Woodenware, Paints Oils, Olass, Ar. often has it been said that j most people arc ungrateful. This hat not been I our experience altogether. Our gradually in • ‘‘reusing trade proves that our efforts to sell only the la-st goods upon the lowesi and fairest , basis are appreciated by our many iriends and i patrons. Our future gratitude shall consist of j promises not only made, but carried out. We will sell tlie best of everything in our line that money can buy, at the lowest living profits that a fallhtul economy will allow. Circulars, mailed on application, will give a more ex tended account of what we enumerate, as fol lows — gg BUFFALO PITTS jg f. Plain and Traction ~ ENGINES AND THRESHEfttL * s ■ ..I g; a. full line of Gum and Leather Halting, also Packing for Engines, Buckeye Engines and 1 hreshers. Tlie Evans Corn Planter, with and without Fertilizer Attachment, is the best; awarded the first premium ut Frederick county last agricultural fairs. OSBORNE SELF-BINDERS, REAPERS AND MOWERS, Drills and Cider Mills, which are sowell known and used in this county. Every farmer should call and examine our new Buckeye Oraln Drill, with gliiHH-lKittoni fertilizer attachment It Is a practical novelty, which all who have seen admire. Springfield Hay Tedders and Horse Rakes, tho lies! now in the market, and guaranteed to give satisfaction. The old relia ble, world-renowned Hebuttler Wagon has no i email and 8811 m ou its merit*. TURBINE WIND ENGINES AND BUCK EYE FORCE PUMPS. We are the headquarters for Btuder Twine for any and all mukes of Hindon*. and remeni* H ‘‘ ll "'<■ Cheapest, South Bend Chilled Plows, genuine Malta and 1 other Double Shovel Plows Patent Post Hole piggera, warranted,lfproperly used .todlgahole Teel deep In one and a-liair minutes. Riding and Walking Cultivators, Spring Tooth Hnr rows. Corn and Cob Crushers, Silver and Hem l* I *, Cutting Boxes, Hay Forks and Pulleys, rield and <Jardßn Heeds a specialty. Head* ; quarters for Barbed Wire, large quantities I , I '>“ kes always on hand. Automatic 1 Drive Oates and Iron Fencing for sale. WANTED. ,1,000 pounds of WOOL, for which we will pay i the highest cash price. ' 1 Respectfully. marlO'Mtf P. L. HARGETT * CO. - JUrmCE TO CREDITORS. No. flll-f EuOITV In the Circuit Court tor Frederick County, j t he creditors of Jacob Iturrler, deceased, are i hereby notified to tile their claims, properly proven, will, the Clerk of llie Circuit Court for I Frederick County, on or before the 2nd day of; hfth“d%rlb^i i loi hnrWlß< ‘ "‘ Cy ,n ' ly b ° h “ rred | JOHN C. MOTTER, loom* FRANK L. BTO kb, jau.lß Jt. Trustees. HOIWEY WHISkEY.-Purest and Beet. The standard for 2fi years. ALLEN ROHRBACK, Hole Agent. 1895. THE SUN! 18; BALTIMORE, Mil. Tim I’AI'EK OK TUB PEOPLE, FoK thk People AND WITH THK P*" Honest in Motive Fearless IN Exi-Ur. -lO.v SofTNI) IN FRINITPLK. The sun Publishes Ali thk Nkwsi Tti e Time, hut it does not allow its oolunic* he degraded by unclean, immoral or I'- scnsaiioual matter. Editorially, The Sun Is the consisteutj unchanging champiou and defender of jopj tights and interests. Independent Inailthll extreme in noue. By mail Fifty Cents u mouth, St* iDUij year Th* Baltimore Weekly Sun The Weekly sun publishes nil ihe "'1 each week, giving complete accounts events of Imeresl throughout He worlds an agricultural paper The Weekly Wj unsurpassed. Its market reports, irtiltiJj partinent and veterinary column lire I* 1 - larly valuable tocountry readers Evens contains stories, poems, household and H columns. One dollar a year. Indueemeiiis to 15^1 up of clubs for the Weekly Hun- Payments invariably In advance. Add's A. S. Abell Coml'AftTij Baltimore,* gCOURING IN ALL PI'S BRANCHES. OLD CIiOTHINO MADE TO LOOK? NEW. OO TO ZEIGLKR’H * '.TAILORING ANl> HCOURIN°* ESTABLISHMENT, West Patrick street, two Poors '"'*' 01 Bridge. I respect hilly call the attention of tlierjjj of Frederick to my Scouring and •! EHtahllshment, where 1 guarantee all trusted to my hands. All kindsol men* lug cleaned, pressed and made to new, on llie shortest notice and on r™* terras. Send In your clothing. JOHN H. ZEIOLBK. uwM W. i'ntrlck street, two doors east of l ,rl ™ octtßv rtOR PURE N. E. RUM, Apple Brand** P mell and Gin, we are the leaders. Montloello, Sherwood, Zelglerand KW* kej, ‘ F. V BTA<&, 188 North Market IN’