The San Saba News. (San Saba, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 47, Ed. 1, Friday, September 3, 1886 Page: 3 of 4
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Mar
< 3
TABU AM GiltDEX
Beginners In rArmin
X A tafe ad nee to beginners and one
hat any agricultural juncr could afford
o keep always printed in special type
rates correspondent of the Country
fruilena would be in bubstance
Go hIow Do not buy any new lm
dement if you can get good second
iand ones
I > o not buy nn vthmg more than your
iu Iibur a sell repportinjr farmer uses
Do not do anything differently from
what hi dues And after copying tira
ind liLfnays say for three years begin
to spend any money you hare made m
jirrym out your ideas of improvement
if you ore any left
I vrrte fcdiagljr on this subject for
hare bcn arming now for fire years
and looKinfjback regret that I could
not haefolIowcd such a course
It tat es MTeral years for a person to
luiow his own farm It takes a beginner
several years to know how to roid
wasting moncv He may think he knows
but he trill find be does not About the
only thing he can aafcly do at first is to
haul manure to the fpots that need it
mos And after one or two seasons
trial bo will begin to understand these
apj irently simpla things How much
time it takes how mueh ground it cov-
ers what increase yield in crop and
c ms quently vhat ho can afford tospend
in making his manure
Beau es lrhat answers in one locality
roay be disxstrous or unprofitable in an-
other r
Poultry Votes
I It it s mistake to place the roosting
I leaat different heights rising from the
root because all wili stare to get on
tbehi itsfcone and the weaker oucs are
and frequently fall to the
Ercuasi gaily to repeat the process or if
n t tr remain on the ground all
tngn jnisfo all thx poles at the same
JJiSidl natch UA late in the season for
the youg birds wSl not have sufficient
time to ilevetopfully before the approach
of cold weather Very many of our best
breedcra do not set any of their hens later
than tint middle of June and they al
wat ha o well grown and fine birds for
pale in the carlv fall when buyers first
come to the front for their suppbes of
fresh stoO
Yhen fowls aro confined in limited
quarters construct the nests so that they
may be 1 darkness or at least in twi-
light This is acknowledged to be a pre
Tcntive of rg eating Locate the nests
as far from the windows as possible and
compel the hens to approach them
through a long low covered passage
which turns one or two ab upt corners to
that out toe light
Kerosene oil applied to the roosts in
small quantities will kill parasites
TlasUr of Pans scattered over the floors
of tho fowl houses is a purifying absorb
cnt preventing the smell which arises
from the dropping The nests must be
orcasionaiy renewed and kept clean
Straw is better than bay Tobacco Stems
covered with straw are an excellent pre-
ventive of insect breeding especially
when thahens arc sitting
fco breed ever came into existence to
gain in so short a time such high favor
as the Plymouth Rock It is adapted to
the wants of the mas cs It is tho farm
cra breed The largest returns from or
dinary careliavc been realized from fowls
of Otfo breed owin to the fact perhaps
Ihafelhcy are able to a great extent to
V oirc of themselves As layers they
fuTftkb a great number of cejr > i bc
ib oJithey are erly < mature an J can
psi m furpaased for thx plump car
Caw and palatable flcsli
1th the rise of movable poultry quar-
ters acme poultry can be kept in confine
racist in small grounds to as good ad van
tagaaljonwta when they have a free run
on a farm For a dozen hens make a
ttructurc ten feet long and six feet wide
Four feet of one end hould be Voarded
up roofed and fitted with floor feeding
and other convcni nct a tho remainder
jlwrtiU be only two feet high and made
jif lath or narrow boards for a yard but
Tvuhoatafloox This structure may be
Urcamed by two men or it might be
fittoito move on rollers It should be
fofcated on a gassy patch and moved
every day or two
Farm and Garden Sctcs
As soon as currant worms appear pow
der the plants carefully with whits helle
bore
It is poor economy not to keep build
Ingfl well painted for the moisture that
punt would stop soon causes rotten
boards and timbers
A mulch of two Inches of short manure
on the warfare around spring planted
trees will help them more than anything
eleto withstand the drouths of summer
Hnall chickens should never be kept or
fed with old ones They are apt to be in-
jured Uare Uo or three yards and sep
arate them according to size and
fctrrogth
The ircease of clover seed andkeep ng
of farm stock enables farmers to mam
tun land jo good ton Jit ion for ordinary
cropping witfcrut purchasing commer-
cial manures
Root crops should be tarly gone over
thinning thoi out where standing too
clow and fctum ia some of the spare
plant where vacancies oecti This
should bo done in a moist time if pos
sable
femall fruit culturcwill always be most
successful on the intense plan Plant
ocrr a smlllrea at a time and give that
th best culture jtoe Mc Better raise
200 bushels on one acre than that
amount on fire or six
Apjde trw should cot be trimmed to
a crutch nh two < jmore limbs It u
ail right arhile the trees arc voung but
vhen apple ire begin to bear tho
crotch fpIiUend the tree is mined Train
ioa t tvfc D raight d the tranches
JSratMs wfltbetflsylikely to break off
mhtn Icactd
9 S ° horw medicine take a long
pitrjvel bottle ram the horses head
Ffliust th bottle into his mouth and
win c tlwi brjutd is running into the
throat rul the nose t the bottle vigor
ourfy agftHsi the roof of the mouth pretty
wtU back This done mos horses will
swallow nicely
Whenever rhubarb throws out a great
maay Jcstcs and the atalLs re small and
worthless the roots should be dug up
and
traa p2 nte < L tlindiogthem so that
enly one thrifty bud is left to each piece
of root Ihu shwTd be done early in
tbeprmg as soon as tho newly formeU
buds are read to push threogh the soiL
Kiepmg down the weeds will not be
the only gain xo corns from ttorough hoc
g liy hartag a layer of finely pulver
t sou at the surface evaporation of
mostisr Wla i prtcut l durng the
d wtiitt atMoq t on whl go on through
the night Aft r every heavy ram the
toil of the j rden shoud be gone over
with boe or rake to prevent < rusting
A w nU t ia tiatdctung JUtUratid says
that one of thesmiPe taBd lest methods
lo destrovmg asaton lawm is an occa
sweat < Jre ng of freshly laked lone
Mixed with a small quaatit ct soot its
hJtenes will not beeome
conspicuous
and offisudve Both shood bo rifted
through a fine sieve It is app icd just
before rainfalls in autumn winter or
Jiprmg
There is no way to increase fertility
niore > erjT than by sowing clover and
gra se J it n d wn farm ill usually
be found to luve uffen d Trora nrglect
of sufficient Bei
ug It u by KTowtn
lien letting it decay on
re restore fertility in
grau land tho crop
vcd
y > as tho dOd
t of the growth
and the part most important as a fer-
tilizer
It is impossible to sow beets so that
they will not need thinning This how-
ever Is little loss if the work is done in
time Toung bepts make excellent
greens for the table using leaves and
roots Later on they make the best of
feed for sows with pig They are just
as good to make an abundant flow of
milk in the sow as every one knows they
tre when fed to milch cows There is
probably no root crop that pays through
a longer season better than a patch of
beets
It is to the small rose of China that we
owe the most marked advance toward
the modern standard The tea rose had
the habit of blooming not annually alone
as did all known in hurope before its in-
troduction but continuously or at least
in monthly crops This habit of the
China rose was taken advantage of
and was artificially hybridized with
other Iarccr growing forts with damask
and Proence ro ca old favorites of the
girden with the single yellow and the
Persian roses and from the progeny
thus obtained with infinite ingenuity and
pains have come such triumphs of the
gardeners art as Marcchal Niel La France
and Catbcrino Mermet All of theso
have some of the properties of the tea
rose they have ato Bome of the marks
of the various quartering of their pedi-
gree and one may say that for their pro-
duction strains have been introduced
from every quarter of tho Northern hemi-
sphere
Watching Eggs Hatch
It was Oscar IWIde wasn t itff re-
marked yesterday a gentleman who had
jnst returned from Europe who said of
a dead girl in one of his poems that she
can hear the daisies growl Well you
need at call that a flight of poetic fancy
any longer I can trump it in real life
IIow sot
By seeing an egg hatch
Oh come off
No it a a fact I don t mean looking
at the egg as it lies in the nest and just
seeing the shell but I mean seeing the
inside of it and watching the gradual
development of the chick Irom a globule
of egg yolk to a lively downv chirping
fowl ready to go out and forage for
worms It was over at Tubingen Lm
vcrsity Germany that I saw it Great
feilows for research tho6e German pro-
fessors This one was Dr Gcrlach who
seems to have given himself up to inves-
tigating tho growth of life And now
he s sitting up nights watching eggs turn
into chickens How docs he do it Ill
tell you
1 He takes a fresh egg and cuts a bit of
shell out of the little end He chooses
that end eo as not to disturb the air bub-
ble at the big end The bit of shell he
cuts out is as big as a nickel and he
takes it out just as a surgeon would tre-
pan a cracked tkulL Then ho can sec
the inside of the egg as plain as can be
He takes a little of the white out just
enough to turn the yolk around so the
germ is where he can seo it Then he
puts the white back very gently and seals
it up He has a little glass saucer very
thin big over as your thumb nail and
cuned just like the bit of shell he cut-
out He puts thisjvcr the hole being
careful to let no air remain under it and
seals it on tight with collodion And
there you are ou can sec everything
inbidc the eggshell as plain as in a tea-
cup Put it in an incubator with a glass
Mae and you can watch the whole pro-
cess of the grow th of the chick until ho
puks his way out of the shell ou can
takaltoufenf lwmintT Tbr itow toJ then
n t examnc it ai co elras you please
nd I b lievcDr Gcrlach is now pre
paring a set of photographs of the into
nor of the eggr one taken every hour
from the placing of the egg in the mc i
bator to tho hopping out of the hatched
chick Now talk about hearing daisies
growf Xev > Tori Tnbunt
Wounds
It is remarkable what number of
wounds deemed fatal failed to cause
death ilany of these aie narrated in
the Surgical History of tho War The
following are among them
Among the many interesting cases de-
tailed in this voluminous record is that
of Private B S Sheridan mth Masa
chusetts He was wounded at Malvern
Hill July 118u > by a musket ball wInch
entered the right side between the ninth
and tenth ribs pawing diagonally
through the abdominal cavity and thrnce
out of the body Three days later with
a portion of the lung protruding from
the wound he walked a mile and a half
to the James River in the hope of getting
on board a gunboat He was disap-
pointed and was taken prisoner and
conveyed to Richmond Three weeks
elapsed during which his woind
received very little care Then he was
exchanged and entered tho hospital at
Chester Pcnn The wound was a fright
fulone that in probably nine cases out
of ten would hae proved fatal but he
recovered and was at his own request
returned to duty in about tour months
He continued to serve with his regiment
during the war showing a tidehty and
pluck not often equaled ftcr the
war lus wound caused a loss of health
and in a few years he became wholly dis-
abled
Another similar case to the above was
that of Peter Fcro Hornby near Corning
X Y He was shot through from side
to aide and a silk handkerchief was
pa scd through the wound by the aid of
a ramrod lie u yet alive and able to
w ork his farm
Dryn Law Umbrellas
A well known barkeeper said yestcr
day l dont think that there a dozen
barkeepers in Atlanta that will attempt
to evade tho Law There will be such at
empts but they will be made by men
wluv are not now engaged in selling
liquors For instance a man told me to
dav that he had a scheme which he in-
tended to work and that it was one
which the law could not break up He
said he was going to open an umbrella
store I am not going to sell umbrellas
he explained Tm going to rent em
Tm going to have cm made with big
hollow handles of different sizes Soma
of the baddies will hold a pint and some
a quart of whxky and theyll be made
so that they can be unscrewed from the
stick Ill rent a pint sue for seventy
five cents and a quart size for 2 What a
the law got to do with what I put in the
handle of anbrellas IrentP I asked the
man how long he would allow an umbrella
to bo retained by the renter Oh he
said Ill rent myumbrellas by the hour
People that want cm can rerent cm
every hour if they want to do so Tva
got a fortune in the business and dont
you forget it Atlanta Gonttautwru
1 Central American Moan lain Path
The path is very steep and gains its
way with loops backward and forward
ou the face of the cliff says a correspon-
dent in a letter from Guatemala At the
head of many of the turns the ee looks
down sheer depths over which the head
of your mule hangs with a sleepy mdif
fcrence quite sufficient to shake ones
nerves
Coming up the path are Indians with
heavy packs of vegetables earthware and
other goods their almost naked bodies
streaming with sweat the beat of their
hearts almort audible The poor fellows
bear their toil meekly and take good
care to bf out of the way of descending
riders They say the reason Indians ride
so little on horseback is an old decree of
the Spaniards which made it a capital
ottfnee for one to do so and the fear
lingers in their rmud though the edict
has long since b en revoked But it is
rare to km a mounted Indun on toe high-
way though he often drives before Jum
pack mules or horses j
AT THE PEAKL FISHERIES
AWOHDEarcTIINDUSTBT DTWOir
DERFtTL WATEES
Searching for the Genu at Queens-
land Primitive Methods or the
Divers The iradin Fleet
A Thursday Island Queensland let
ter to the New i ork Sun describes the
pearl fisheries of that regiou Says the
writer
It is a strange place for any industry
the strangest for the finding of the beau-
tiful and ever mysterious gem which the
natives believe are cloud born and which
unlike all other gems require no aid of
art to bring out their beauty Innumer-
able islands crowd the dangerous straits
a thousand reefs and shoals scattered
among them and the shores of New
Guinea and Australia breaking the green-
ish waters with a gray of rock and the
brown of ragged bush The islands
desolate as the desert and and as an
alkali plain repel all attempts at agricul-
ture The scanty grass is poisonous to
cattle neither shrub nor tree is found
and attempts to cultivate grain and vege-
tables have not met with any success
The inhabitants are few but they are
almost wholly dependent upon the pro-
visions which they secure from abroad
and know no other occupation than the
fisheries Port Kennedy is the only
town a town w ith a population of per-
haps 200 people and having a Post
Olhce two inns a customs station a
Court House and a jail The harbor is
formed by four islands Goode Ham-
mond Friday and Thursday Islands al
most entirely landlocking it Here the
tidal currents aro rapid the eddies fluct
uating the reefs and shoals many and
dangerous But here tho pearl shell ves
sels be a fleet of nearly 200 having
1500 employes and floating 1000 boats
Some of the larger vesscls have a burden
of fifteen to eighteen tons but most of
the fleet is composed of small craft vary-
ing from three to eight tons
The islanders who have fished for
years and years are fishing still in their
own good old way payingno care to the
overfishing of the white men They know
a pearl oyster as the farmer does a potato
or an appleand knowing it so wcllthey
are peculiarly adept at finding bivalt cs
that contain pearls choosing such by
some fancied rule of thumb founded on
the grounds of age form aud color
Men women and children all dive like
sea fowl and the women aro the most
expert Three or four women arc well
known m the trade and arc noted not
only for having plunged again and agnn
into twenty five fathoms of water but as
well for having done this in tho icry
teeth of tho sharks and for having re-
mained under vater as long as three
whole minutes The native knows no
industry Eave pearl fishing aid it is al-
most as natural for a child to dive as it 1
for a young duck or penguin They enter
upon the service of fishing about as soon
as they enter their teens and unless
something happens they continue to dive
until they aro old and infirm But some-
thing is apt to happen and that some-
thing may be a red mouthed shark a
paralysis a hemmorrhagc or some other
accident of physical failure The shark
is always at homo in these seas and his
number is legion It is no rare thing for
a bold diver to come up minus a foot or-
an armand many go down never to come
up again at all Too many plunges in a
day bring on hemmorrhage or congestion
and especially is this the case early in the
fishing season which for the natives is a
fieriod of four months be yming So No
vtmbcr Too long continued occupation
cau < cs paralysis and headache deafness
and fadurc of sight occur very com
monly
The diving is very primitive Some
traders have introduced the diving bells
but the natives decline to work in them
alleging that ther cause early paralysis
and certain deafness The common
practice is to go out on the water with a
light wooden pipe ten inches squam and
two feet long glazed at one end l ith
this tube a ready prospecting is done
the glass end which is put under water
terving the purpose of suppressing the
surface ripple TThen oysters arc discov-
ered the diver belts himself with even
or euht pounds of ballast and hiving
bandaged his mouth and protected his
eyes and ears with oiled cotton he at-
taches a weight to his feet and goes de-
liberately and boldly down with a rope
Ju t before plunging he or she i lraws
three or four full and rapid breath and
his the lung full of air as he dreps to
the bottom om six to 1C0 feet below
Lach dive occupies from sixty to ninety
seconds and occasionally a diver his rt
mained under for two or three minutes
assisting himself to the surface by means
of the rope
The divers hardly ever bring up more
than one oyster though they are always
on the lookout for a loo e or shed
pearl which if found they quickly
conceal by swallowing
While the natives are eking out their
precarious living in the old fashioned
way the boats from the trading fleet are
engaged m a more systematic and mod
ernmethodof fishing Each well equipped
vessel is suppled with the necessary
apparatus and professional divers The
apparatus is the best and most complete
that can be procured and the divers who
use it are under three years contract at a
wage of from 2 to fj a day and an in-
terest in the catch Each diver has four
tenders whose pay is from 10 to 20 a
month and who arc generally natives or
Chinese
The method of fishing is for several
vessels to go out together and fish on the
same ground for a fortnight Reaching
a place where the water is forty or fifty
feet deep the diver enters his boat
dresses and jumps overboard Lpon
reaching the bottom he leisurely walks
along until he comes to a bed of shells
where he proceeds to fill the sack that he
carries As aoon as he has a sackful he
signals and the sack is lifted up emp-
tied and sent down again Th diver
remains underwater for hours sometimes
from 3 o clock in the morning until 5 in
the afternoon The shells as they he in
bed are wide open and if touched in the
wrong way the divers hand is apt to be
caught and held fast as m a vise
While the native islander can fish only
for a limited season the divers using ap
paratus can fish all the year roundexecpt
in very rough weather and during the
severe monsoons The average catch
for each Tessel is about one ton a month
for unlike the fisheries of Ceylon and
the Persian Gnlf there is little difficulty
in removing the shell which lies loose
on the ground and can be picked up
readily These fisheries produce the true
pearl oyster for the shell of which there
is great demand both in America and
Europe It is especially prized for the
choice inlaid cabinet a ork that comes
from artistic hands but is used pnnci
pally for knife handles buttons and
ornamental work
Each day when the boats run m to the
stations the men open the oysters take-
out the pearls if there are any and
throw the fish overboard The shells
accurately count d we cleaned and
packed in cases of about S00 pounds
each Tho fishermen think more of ob-
taining shell than pearls while the island-
ers care nothing for shell and solely
seek the pearls The best pearls are
found when tho oyster is four years old
and theshellat that age is alsoat its best
The pearl of an oyster of this age is ex
ccedngly transparent and pare while
that of the young oyster is of a yellow-
ish color and that of the older of a
pinkish hue Sometimes it is found of
all colors such as white silver brown
steel gray blue and even a perfect yt
black bevcral specimens haVe been
found aa largo as a hazel nut and some
oyatera are caught which are filled with
as many as 100 small pearlettesfthe seed
oearln fthe artist Last ear there
i
wa found at Nickel Bay a mass of oys-
ters in the form of a cross each contain
mg a pearl of about the size of a pea and
without a flaw of form or color
The Great Seal of England
The mere holding of the great seal of
England entitles the fortunate custodian
to some 00000 a year to immense
patronage in Church and State to be
bpeaker in the House of Lords a Privy
Counselor and the head of all the judicial
authority in the kingdom of Great Britain
and keeper of the roval conscience and
to rank next to the royal family the
second subiect in the realm It is very
difficult if not impossible to say when
England first had a great seal beas
were not much used by our Anglo Saxon
ancestors but came largely into fashion
during the Gorman reigns The gilt
crosses or marks of Edward the Con
fesior and other baxon Kings can scarcely
be called seals and partook more tho
character of signatures of an llltterat
age but a grand and perfect seal of
William tho conqueror exists having
the monarch crowned and throned on
the one side and mounted on horseback on
tho other attitudes which have been in-
variably obsert ed to the present day One
remarkable circumstance connected with
the great seal is its progressive growth
in sue as time advanced Originally
200 years ago not larger than the top of
an ordinary modern teacup it has been
gradually enlarged from age to age till
it offers now the size and appearance of
a muffin and requires to be inclosed in a
tin box for protection Indeed so
cumbrous and unwieldy had the great
seal become that some three or foul
years since an act of Parliament passed
containing very extraordinary provisions
directing that all the minor and many
even of the more important documents
passing under it fhould for the future
be authenticated by a paper wafer of
moderate size which should be gummed
on the instrument aud be deemed and
taken to be the great seal itself
The great seal has only three time
been lost twice temporarily and once
permanently James II on leaving the
kingdom on his abdication threw the
6cal into the Thames whence howcvir
it was next morning fished up and
brought to the AMiitehalL Lord Eldon
buried it in his garden in Queen Square
during the night when his house caught
fire and he thought in the confusion it
might bo stolen And writes the
ChanceHor in his diary when the fire
was extinguished I quite forgot in the
morning where I had buried it and
while the carriage waited to take me to
court my lady and I and all the house-
hold were digging with pieces of stick
till we luckily found it Lord Thur
low who always held it during the night
in his bedroom had it actually cirned
off by burglirs from whom it w as never
recovered V privy council was called
the next day a new seal was rapidly
made and duung tho remainder of his
continuance in ofiice Lord Thurlow in-
variably deposited it of a night under
his pillow
Down to 1817 the great seal it elf was
made of copper since then silver has
been the metal employed It is in two
halves somewhat like two very thick
bright tin saucepan lids Jltting closely
together their inner surface deeply
sculptured with the royal dewecs in-
tended to be formed on the wax when
squeezed between them Instruments
having a limited duration arc scaled with
yellow wax Others supposed to eiit
in perpetuity such as patents of peerage
etc are exemplified under green wax
and in the case of some letters patent
lAelr to be exposed to a good deal of
knocking about orjourucjtng from j late
to place the wax seal was stamped after
being ingeniously inclosed in cream
colored leather Acw Yorl Observer
Horseback Tobogganing
Turkish riders are very daring and
their horses are well trained Captain
Burnaby tells of an adventure he met
with m riding through the mountains of
Armenia which is certainly novel With
his guide and servants he came to a
glacier down which they must go The
frozen surface extended for at least one
hundred yards The incline he say
wai steeper than thereof of an average
English house One of the servants cast
an inquiring glance at the guide Tho
latter gave a grunt
ft hat do jou think of it Moham
medj I asked
Effendi we shall go down very fast
If the Lord wills it we shall not break
our bones
4 If we do not take this route said
the guide we mast make a detour for
at least two hours I think the horses
can manage it effendi
cry well I said you can try
The guide rode his horse to the glacier
The poor animal trembled when he
reached the brink
Haidc get on cried Mohammed
from behind and striking the quadruped
on his flanks the animal stretched his
forelegs over the declivity almost touch
mg the slippery surface with his girth
Another crack with the whip away went
the guide and hose down the glacier
For the fir t fiftj yards tho man succeed
edm keeping his steeds head straight
V slight inequality n the ice gave the
animals foot a twist In another direction
horse and rider went round in mazy cir-
cles They had nearly attained the veloc
lty of an express tram whea thev were
suddenly brought up by a snow drift
There was not much damage done and
now I prepared to make the descent I
was not an agreeable seniation I was
on the edge of the precipice The yell
mg Mohammed was castigating my am
mal from behind I would haire gladly
given him five shillings or a new coat to
desist from the flagellating process
However the die was cast My follow-
ers were looking on hat the guide
had done it was very clear that an Eng
b hman ought to do I committed my
self to Providence Away we went
A as I on my hor e or was I not Now
vc were waltzing madly down the slip
pery surface and then my boots were
touching the ice itself owing to my am
mal s position A second later we were
buned as the guide had been ia six feet
of snow
Xcxtcamc the turn of mv followers
Their descent was a fearful thing to wit-
ness but fortunately not half so dan
gcrous as it appeared ith the excep
tion of some damage to tho luggage and
saddlery there was little harm done
I never thought as how a horse could
skate sir before remarked an Fnglish
servant as he slowly cxtracatcd hinnclf
from the snow drift Jt was more than
sliding that l was a cutting of figures
of ci ht all down the roof of a hou e-
nd then I was buried alive to fini h up
with
V Good Little Boy
YeV said Mrs Hcndncks to tl e
minister who was dining with the fam
lly Bobby says his prayers every night
like a good little toy
Ah indeed replied the minister
very much plevcd and do you pravfoi
papa and mamma Bobby
Oh yes for both of cm although
Tve often heard ma tell pa that he is past
praying for Aw lorl Timet
TUcrc Files are Plentiful
I think fiies must bo more numerous
on the baseball ground than they are id
our kitchen remarked Mrs Snsggs
What makes you think that asked
her husband
Why I see by the paper that one of
the clubs has a fly catcher but I should
think it would be hard to catch them 10
the open air PUtiburq Vhr < miele Trie
ffrttj k
Atmosphere charged with dust and
smoke can be instantly cleared by an
electrical discharge v
THE RUSSIAN PEASANTRY
IilFE OF THE COTJHTBY PEOPLE IH
THE CZJLHS DOMINIONS
Constant StrncIo for Existence
Their Superstition Dally Lire In
Their HutsTavern lalfc
I have lived among th Ru aian peas-
ants for over twelve year during which
time I had a favorable opportunity of
studying their life in all its phases sajs
a writer in the Philadelphia 2 tmes The
Kussian peasant although hardened by
lus circumstances is naturally kind 2o
stranger has as yet met with a refusal of
hospitality be it to the extent of a dry
p ecs of bread or a nights lodging in a
little hut We must divide what we
possess says a simple Russian proverb
which be it said to the credit of the
majority of the population is strictly
adherd to
The life of the Russian peasant is full
of misery and wretchedness The con-
stant care and hard struggle for his daily
existence the heavy taxes that he is
burdened with and which he is bouna
to pav under any circumstances all this
is sufficient to deprive him of all the en
terpnse and ambition that are peculiar
to the more ci lined and consequently
more happy nations Total darkness
and blind superstition arc the mam feat-
ures of his character The belief in the
evil spirit as a mighty power having a
great deal to do in the fate of every in-
dividual has taken deep root in his mind
and no reason seems able to extricate it
Any tale of the supernatural is taken
as a matter of fact and any matter of
fact is looked upon rather skcpti
cally I can recall facts of shocking
superstition that will to a certain
extent illustrate the character of the
> casant One happened in a small vil
1 age ia the vicinity of Kief On one
dark lainy autumn night a poverty
stneken old man threw an infant into
the river or as he said handed it over
to the devil in exchange for a purse of
gold that he supposed was hidden in a
certain secluded place and that could
not be found unless some innocent hu-
man being were sacrificed In another
village a sick woman was choked to
death by her kind neighbors in their
desperate efforts to squeeze the devil
out of her throat lurthcrmore an old
woman a supposed witch was beaten
to death by the villagers for bringing a
pestilence upon the cattle through the
aid ind influence of the evil one The e
are a few of the incidents that occur
daily in the peasants life
Tne American reader can hardly
imagine anything more miserable more
w retched than the little hut in which a
family atcragingsixorseven members
is often found living Imagine a little
cabin of 5xi half of which is cut off by
a primit ivc large stove dark and gloomy
and thit will be the sweet home of
the Russian peasant Lvery inch of
epacc is inhabited so that as a matter
of course the air is made poisonous and
intolerable and this explains the fre-
quent fatal diseases prevailing among the
Russian pcisintry Their daily habits
and methods of life are of the simplest
character I ivc o clock in the morning
in all pcasons is generally the hour at
whirh a family rrcs The woman im
mod lately begins to prepare breekfast
which generally consists of a mixture of
sourkrout beets and potntoes called
borehtch and coarse rye bread A
large trunk the only piece of furniture
to be seen in a peasant a liut w hich at
tho fame time tcr cs as a table is
spread w ith a coarso cover and after say-
ing pracr tho head of the family fol-
lowed l y the rest of the members occu
pics his sent After the borshtch pot
ia emptied every one goes out to his
work If it is winter time the men arc
engaged in feeding the cattle and the
women in spinning their flax Every
oncbashis hands full At 12 oclock
dinner is announced Again borshtch
on the trunk table followed bya potful
of boiled potitocs and plenty of coarse
rye bread Supper consists of the rem-
nants of dinner Onfoundays however
or days of festival an epicurein piece of
salt pork or mutton and fresh rye bread
which the peasant still more his bet-
ter half is very fond of adorn the table
White bread tea or coffee arc looked
upon as luxury beyond the reach of the
peasantry It is only ou very rate occa-
sions if fcr example any one in the
family is sick that such a luxury finds
place in the peasants home
After a daj s work is over the peasant
goes out for recreation The tavern
which is tie only place of attraction
for him is generally crowded in the
evenings The most burning topics of
the day are discussed there What
strikes a stnuger who is present at one
of such meetings is the absolute confu
sioa which characterizes its proceedings
All speak at once no one listens and tho
debates are scenes of wild disorder But
there is no rule without an exception an
ontor may Fometimes command general
attention In such ei es utter silence
prevails and those who interrupt aro
ordered to hut up As a general
thing howevtr everybody is arguing
at the top of his voice a wild uproar goes
on which oftentimes ends in a fight
Conferring the Order of Knighthood
The ceremony of conferring the Order
of Knighthood at the hinds of the Queen
is not imposing It is not in fact a
public ceremonial and only those arc
permitted to witness it who by their
official connection with the Queens
household maj attend her The loyal
subject upon whom such dftmguishcd
honor may be conferred may not even
invite his best man nor the members
of his pergonal circle of relatives or
friends to be present Arrayed in what-
ever uniform aa may be entitled to wear
or whatever dress court etiquete and
the time of daj makes proper if he be a
civilian the subject presents himself be-
fore his sovereign ana kneels at her royal
feet Rented upon the throne chair the
Queen lays the chining blade of a sword
across the fhouldcr of the kneeling but
exalted bcnehciary and says using the
title which she is about to confer
An e Sir So and So Plain 3Ir
Cheltenham Brown is thus by a single
stroke of her Majestys sword transformed
into fcir knight bo and So and he is
permitted perchance to kiss his Bovcr
cigns finger tips in graceful acknowledg-
ment of the distinguished honor
In other ca cs than this of a plain
knighthood and when the title carries
with it a decoration the Queen with
her own royal hands pins the glittering
and coveted bauble upon the coat of het
elevated subject This is all but to the
rccq icnt it is a great deal Sew Tori
Stin
The Diet Too Thin
Some eight years ago a community was
started at J orth Anaheim the leading
tenets of which were lo hold all property
in common and to confine their diet to
fruit vegetables and gam in their raw
state The experiment has ben con-
ducted with the utmost zeal and good
faith but whatever may be the financial
result concernLij which we have no
data it has proved a gastronomic disaster
The Los Angeles Herald says that one
after another has left the society by
resignation or rtarvatian until only a few
are left hinging on tho verge of life
The end of the experiment is now not far
off The spiritual adviser of the societv
Walter LockwoodThayer is stated to be
so nearly starved to death that he is too
weak to leave his bed and Mrs Hinde
the wife of the founder of the commu-
nity is in the l t stagej of inanition for
want of nourishment San Franeisea
Gill
Japan has WQ mile of railroad
operation Thn Japs make their
Fitx John Porters Balloon Bide
I suppose you never heard of Fitz
John Foicr s balloon ride said an old
army o iccr the other day to a corre-
spondent of the Atlanta Comtitution
ell he continued l4itwas one of the
most romantic events in the life of that
gallant oldier He was with McCIellan
in the Peninsular campaign and was dis
tmguished for his intelligent activity
Porter conceited the idea that balloons
could be made very useful in reconnoit
pnng and at his request General McClel
Ian ob tuned the necessary equipment for
Ihu service The balloons and the
apparatus for the manufacture of
the gas were procured without
much difficulty but an aeronaut
wai not so easy to obtain Some of the
officers of the Engineer Corps agreed to
make the fir t trip in the balloon which
was to afford a view of the Confederate
pprationi Porter watched their prepa
turns with keen interest Just as the
had everything ready he stepped into
the basket of the clumsy gas bag to se
thit everything hid been properly pre-
pared hile he was examining tht
machine it slipped from the grip of tht
men who held it and shot like an arrow
up into the a r carrying Porter as its
lone passenger He had never been in a
balloon before and knew nothing what-
ever ab s managing one A stiff breeze
w a blowing and the great bulb flew
like a bird away from the astomshtd
camp until it became a mere speck
in the sky and then faded com
plctcly from sight Not a man
who watched it disappe ir expected
that he woud ever sec Porter alive
again He started on his wild flight at
7 o clock in tnc morning The day vore
away with tht camp in a state of great
commotion over the probable death of
its favorite officer A hen night came
and nothing had been seen of the bil
loon it was the general conviction that
Porter had either been killed by a fall
from his baloon or had been captured by
the Confederates About daybreak next
morning a Ticket challenged a man
coming towards the Federal line and a
moment later recognized General Porter
His ba looa had carried him clean over
the Confederate Army He was hred at
a dozen times by the Confederate artil-
lery t night tho wind changed and
brought him back and when he = aw tint
he w as o er his own army he let out tl e
gas gradually nnd safely descended
nftcr being twenty hours ia the air with
the virion of a horrible death constantly
before him
Samuel Driscoll who was a fireman on
the Monitor says that it li not g neratly
known that the Monitor was disabled
immediately after her fight with the Mcr
nmac by the breaking down of a portion
of her machinery and that she lay for
two weeks entirely at the mercy of the
Confederate ram but by keeping up
steam all the time deceived the enemy
regarding her crippled condition
Bowen t Bu Igrt Fort Plain N 1 for March
1G rajs In the mu tlplfcitr of medicines
placed upon th market it Is Bometimes dlfll
call tit distinguish between the meritorious and
the worthless Tiereareat least two cx < el
lent remedies widely used the efficiency of
which are unquestioned We refer to fct Ja-
cobs Od and Red Star Cough Cure
A Chicago jeweler has inrenteda self wind-
Ing watch By an arrangement something like
the carefully balanced lever of a pedometer the
natch U wound by tho motion of the wearer
whenwalLinff Awalkof eeven minnteswill
wind the watch toco forforty two hours
Solicitor of PatenU F O McCIeary of
ashinetoa D CL Bays the only thinj that
did Mm any coodvrben safTerms with a set ere
cough of several weeks fctandinc v as Red
fctar Couch Cure which is purely vegetable
and free from opiates and polaon
The average London Inhabitant eats thirtr
two times as ninth rlsb as tho Berlin person
and Paris with a population of 2AQ UJO o ea
more flh than all Uennany with a population
of 47JUQU0UU
Where re Von Going
If you have pain In the back pale and sallow
complexion bilious or f > ick headache eruptloi s-
on the ekln coated tongue sloggish circula-
tion or a backing cough jou aro going into
yourgrare if yuu do not take steps to cure
yourself If you are wlsoTou will do this by
the oso of Dr Pierces Golden Medical Dis-
cover compounded of the most efficacious
Ingrmients known to medical science for gir
ing health and strength to the system through
the medium of tho liver and blood
Owing to the drought the corn crop ol Lou
buan w ill be fllty per cent less than last year
and the oat crop eenty fivo per cent less
life seems hardly worth tho living today to
manva tired unhappy discouraged womai
who is suffering from chronic female weak
nes for which she has been able to find no re
ief Bat there is a certain cure for ail the
painful complaints to which the weaker sex Is
lablii We refer to Dr Pierces favorite
PreMTfptfon to the virtues of which thou
iand1 of women can testify As a tonic and
nervine It is unsurpassed AH druggists
A msTORiAT of California sum up the qual
Itles of that country as All in all It U a land
of sodd realities and glittering frauds
Sick and bilious headache and all derange-
ments of rtomach and bo els cured by Dr
Pierce s Pellets or antl b lions granules
25 ents aviaL No cheap boxes to allow waote
of virtues By druggists
A polltax of 5jO a head Is imposed on all
Chinamen entering South Australia
Nothing Like It
IsO medicine has ever been known so effec-
tual in the cure of all those diseases arWn
from an impure condition of the blood as Sco
VILLtlbAIteAFtniLLA OH BLOOD JLXD LlVCK
Srncr tLe unitcrsal remedy for the cure of
Scrofula W hite bwelling Rheumatism Tim
pies Blotches Eruptions enereal Sore1 anl
Di eafiC9Consumption Groitrc BollsCaJiccrs
and all kindred disaes There Is no belt r
means of securing a beautiful complexion than
byusing ainixs feARSApARiix oit Elo d
atd Ltvca bVRLP which cleanses the blood
and gives permanent beauty to tbe skin
FoaDTPPErsiArDiOEsnov depression of
general debilitytu tbeir larina form
Bints a pre entire against rev er and ague anl
other intermittent feerstheFerroI hmihor
ated Elixir of alixaya made bj Caswell Haz-
ard Ac Co New ork an 1 sold by all Druggists
Is the best tonic and for pitfents recmtrin
from fever or other sickness it has no equak
tloptTlbrral Oder
Tiie OLTAlC BiXT Co Marshall MIcIl
offer 10 scud their Celebrated oltaic Belt
and Hectric Appliances on thirty days triil
to any in in afl lcled with Nervous Debility
Loss of Vitality Manhood Ac Illustrated
pamphlet In tealed envUupe with full partitu
fars mailed free W rile them at once
No lady shoal I lire in pentual feir nn I
sufTerfn m the more serioni troubles thU
r ften appctr when Dr Kilratrs Cohpletf
r cm ale ilFwrnr is certain to prevent and cure
Tumor an 1 Cancer there
THCJIUEKEftw
NEW YORK
B etcattle gootltopnmel w 7S tfi
< ah e com n to i rime veals 4 > 4 t
bheep 4 <
Ho lave 4l4ft
I > re > scil city 5
Flour FxbtKool to fancy 1 10
W et goid to choice 4 M
Wbnt No A lal
Kte fetit
B irlejr t our rowed btate
Corn Ungrad Mixed
Oats W hite State
Mixed Western
Hay Med to pr Timothy
btraw No I Rye
Lanl City St un I
Butter State Creamery
Dairy
W est Im Creamery
Factorv
Cheese h te Factory
Skims
W estem
kSS > State and Penn
BUFFALO
foheep Good to Choice
Lambs W st < rn
WheatNo 2
Kre State
Corn State YeUow
Oats Mixed
cars and build their own lines bridges Batter Creamery Extra Ta
and
tunnels CbeeseN Y Full Cream
SK
5 i
J > a
t 5 HI
00 A
if
174
1Li
Steer A extern ISf < > r O W
I Iori Good to Choice Yorks 4 1 > 4 M
h lour Cv groun i n process a > r l >
heat a 1 lUnl Dulutb it M i
Com No J Mixed New t
Oats > a 2 Mixed Western S r
Barley Tvrorowed fatata < j
BObTOV
J > ef Ex plate anl famly 10 50 ml W
Hogs Live 5 yd > L4
Jtorthern Dressex 5 < l
Tork Er Prime per btl 12 73 0
Flour IVinter beat pat s 5 20 5 i >
CoraHigh Mixe1 4 > 5 > H
OauExtra iVhite IH >
Rye State TO 5 75
WATERTOWV KASS CATTLE MARKET
Beet Extra quality 5 50 4 O 00
Sheen Live weight 4J < 5
Lambs T tJ 7 > <
Hoss Northern d w < 5K
rrnLADELPiUA
Flour I enn er family good 3 73 3 4 Ol
Ited
AsabaIrdre9mgIIaUsHalrRne er has
no equal sk your druggi t for It
The only warranted cure for chills and leTer
UAyers gneCnre
Caa Cutan lUi be Cvred f
We bit so often seen fatal resu ts follow
thsdeclara louthat it can be cured that w
hve unconsciously settled down iathebellet
that this disease must n ce rily prove f atat
It is true that occasionally acommunity has
witnessed aa Iso ated case of what may ap-
propriately bo termed spontaneous recovery
but to what combination of favorable circum-
stances this result was due none have hitherto
been found able to determine
We have now the gratlfring fact to announce
that the process by which nature effects this
wonderful change Is no longer a mystery to
the medical profession and that the changes
brought about in the system under favorablt
circumstances by Intrinsic causes may be made
as certainty and more expeditiously by the ns
of the proper remedy In other words nature
is imitated and assisted
Tuberculous matter Is nothing more or lesi
than nourishment Imperfectly organized
> > ow If we can procure the organization of
this food material eo that through the process
of elective affinity It may take it placo In the
system we can cere the dlseasa This la Just
what Plao Cure for Consumption does It
arrests at once the progress of the disease b j
preventing the further supply of tuberculous
matter for while the system is under Its in
fijencealt nourishment Is organised and as-
similated It thus oontrol cough expectora-
tion nightsweats hectic fever and all other
characteristic symptoms of Consumption
Many physicians are now using this medi-
cine an tail write that It conies fully tipto its
recommen tations and makes ton imptlon one
of the diseases they can readily rure
The formim sta e of a disease Is alwars the
most auspicious for treatment ThH fact hnald
indaeepvrsonsloresorttotheuse fl M > sCure
when tht cough is first not ed i ether it h
a consumptive diathesis for Its an or not
for this remedy cures sU kin Is of roughs wiih
unequalled fse hty ant promptness In coup ha
from a simple cold two or three docs of the
medit ine bare been found sufficient to remove
tbe trouble o in all di eaesef the throat
and lungs with svmptoms simulating those
of Consumi tion Ifc o s Cure is the only Infal
llble remedy
The fo lowing letter recommending Tisoi
Cure for Consumption ft a fair sample of the
certifica es received dallby the proprietor of
this med cine
ALMOIN Y Dec25 l O
I had a terrible Cough and two physicians
iald I would never get x elL I thei went to a
drugstore and asked for a good cough medic ine
The druggist gave me Pisoa Cure and it has
done me more good than any thngl ever used
Idonotbelievel coul 1 live with ulit
LION OR A LRMILTE K
Ton get more comfort for 23 cts In Lyons
Heel gtlffenera than in any other article
Best easiest to use and cheapest IMsoa
Remedy for Catarrh By druggists
No Words of Ours
Can te 1 you the bent flt ycu wlil derive Trom Hood s
SaruparllUlt you are In nee lot a co d roe Heine
It will train all Imiurltlis from tho bkol rme
theloritltlter invlg rate the dIffetlTeorgaistut
impart daw tle to every fumtlon of the Lody v > e
t nly ak joa to try a tingle tattle to prove tbe pit
tite merits i f Hood a Saruparllla aa an honest and
rellalle medicine
My daughter received much benefit from the use
of Hoo1 s arsaparll a as an excellent ion to afh r a
protracted attack ot bronchial pneumonia 1L
ADiifc New Hartford Conn
l cannot Cn 1 words utrt n encugh to eirresx my
feeling In Taror of Hoods Sarvapirtil i It hat do e
eerjthfn for ine coring me or dy p psa wl h
which 1 had sJiTered for many jean Mas S 3L
1 eepe Marld heaJ l > asa
Iha euslIIood aSanajiarUla for a blood purl
tier la my family seTeral years and cannot speak
too highly of U J E CoujM Ilqua O
Hoods Sarsaparilla
Sold by aU druggists tl six for tX rrepared only
IjCt HOOD 4 CO Apothecaries Lowell Mas
lOO Dosos One Dollar
ASK FOR THE
W L DOUGLAS
B t material perfect fit equals any 5 or 6 shoe
erery p ir warranted Take nooc aniens stamped
W X DoDfla JAW Mioe W rrant d Coogre
rtatton and Ur I toy ask
Tor th Yf I Xhiugla
Ik 2 OO Shoe fame stj Its as
Uie liOUbtiee If yon cannot
get these shoes from deal-
ers send addressoapostal
eard to V L IKiaglas
Brockton Mm > iO
No Ropo to Cut Off Horses Manes
C lje fl FOI IPF IIMVTEU
and IIItlDLLCombined cannot
tin all ced by any bor e Sample
Halter to any part of V S f ree o
reeeiitofeL s11 byaUSaddlery
Hirdwareaal Ilarnea Dealer
Sjmial d wount to tho Trade
Sund for rrieeLI t
J C I KHTHOITSE
Itochenter N V
WtNTMi
P lure
AGENTS male
to sell prettiest
this century
DICIIDMRiS
021 PAGES
FOR ONE DOLLAR
A flntcla Dictionary Kitten oat at amall
3 price to encourage the stud j of the Oerntau
LaniruMe It gives Lnjcllah word with tht
German equivalents and German words wilh Knells
HOOK AGENTS 1VATEn for
PLATFORM ECHOES
er LIVING THCTII9 FOU HEAD ASD HEAKT
Bij JointB Goitgh
TEa last u > dero eBi > ufs ork brim foil of thriluae Intee
nt humor and ptho IJnfhl pure aad food full ot
UarMnnd trwa ItHttiiitiUMtJL To It t sdrfrd
tha Lite and Dtainef Mr Gonch v lEev I YUAN AH
UOTT lititu Areola WatiL Hraaal Woom CIOO
totVOOa month mad C3 Wj > anaVaua u l
riva rttm Trrmm and Pwrriekts Wnta ten rural te-
A 1 VYOIETIIIAUTO X lO llartfara C aaw
5TOI
WAGON SCALES
Ifa Lawn SimI BaHaf Bnas
> aa4 Ih V
t mpforllii llotrhkln Farm A Ezchanse
n v BlNncMTt N Mention this paper
Pensions
HAH AU j craanlngtoa IX C
Blairs Pills GLEsslGouU
Oval tin N
Rheumatic Remedy
it round 31 eta
f Liars not nndar th horae s feet Adureaa
fc > Battwaraaa StfETT Rami Houhk IIoUjJf kb
npVH ZiUn Qincxswrracy rna i
s Ul U Baok aa Dm liaklBf ha Dalaaa aao MaaUa
NCaUiSK lbAtauaaUIOaaar rrataOOOTOaalaaaU0
WRITE
Inclosing
Stamp ron
RaWs
Ready
Relief
In from en to twenty mine tea nerer fails te re
lie PAIN withoa thorough application onat
ter how violent or ex crucial tnc in pain the Rbaa
matte Beilrklden Infirm t Yip pint Nfrnrai Nea
ralKh oepr atrald w th dl > mar aanVr RAD
IX A S IttAlA ttiUEy will afford tnitanm
BOWEL COMPLAINTS
DYSENTERY
Diarrhtea Cholera Morbus
It will Inn few minutes when taka Internally
acrardlo tuitwtJon rure trimi Spa mv foat
Stomach I If art burn W k liradMh el MStH
l M1LAIXT DUrrhcra fiiwntery cullcUind la-
the lionets ami all internal pain
THE TRUE RELIEF
RADWIVS RX4DVRELIEFis theonlv remedial
stilt or nervous Toothache Neora jrla er ou wa
ant Merpleianesa KheuawttMn Lumlaen lalaa
and U eatnf m In th Ha < fc S > tnr or k rinrys P Uns
around the LI er W urlfT writing of Ue J ilnt
Sprain Bruif 1J te rf Insei la and Pa as ef all
alnlKADlVAlSKEAl > YKlUL wtU Tord tm
mod ate ease and Ita continued use for a tew days
elect a pcrment cure
MALARIA IH ITS VARIOUS FORMS
FEVER ANO AGUE
There is not a remedial agent In tbe world that win
eure > eerand Acue and all other M larioitmi
Iraii Varlet and ttnrrrevt rtlaldel bv RDU Ak 9
ULLMao luick aa RA1Ha S K AD hEUKF
Trice tifiytent br DmccUta
DR RADWAYS
Tbe Only rnnlne
SARSAPARILIM RESOLVENT
The Great Blood Pnnfler
rorcorenf all chronle rtlteafet Vrofula BIo J
Taint byphUlticLMmplalnt Consumption Guns
ular I tfttane I kera Chronic IlneumatUm Eryalp
tUv Mlnvy Llautfrr and LUer complaints 17
pli Affectionor the l inrs and Throat portOes
E
ood ret tor Ine health and vioa
TI113 Slvir < f
After a few nar nse of tb cartaparllllan beenm s
clearan I beautiful Plmplra itloubea 1 lack Spot
and vkin Fruptxn arerpniore < I horea an I llcer
soon cured 1 era ns taflcrtnc from Scrofula Erup-
tive l > l eaitcs or tbe eje mouth ears ler throat
and elands that ha > o accumulated anil spread
either from uncured diseases or mercury mar rely
upon a cure If the sarsararllllan la continued a
SuClclcnt time to make Its Impression on th sjltem
loldby JlruciUta St er Ilettle
DR RADWAYS PILLS
The Great Liver and Soiush Rermdr
Apt tit Iteadafh Coativenes In IlmHon B 1
lousneea lever InflAinmaUon ol II Boweb Piles
and all deranseinents of the Internal t iscera Pure-
ly vectabln containioc no mercury minerals or
deVt nona drac
Trice Jt > cents per box SoMbr all drucclsta
VSend a letter stamp tollK It UlVt A i
C > 1 Warren ftreet New i ark tor
Falsa and Irua
HE SURF TO ETlEtinsAV
HIS U37
cts BUYS A HORSE
Book tellnr you bo to DETECT aa4
CURf DIKA < lK In th s Yslnable nal
maL Do sot run the risk of toclnr yonr Horse for
want of knowledjE to car him w Ik n 13c will pa T
for a Treatise Huy one and lnf rm yonrMlI
Remedies for all florae Diseaaea Plates thawing
bow to Tell the Ac of Horses Pent postpaid tot
U cents In stamps
stampsX T nORSK BOOK CO
Leonard M N Y City
154
BOILERS
or au sizes
Write for circular 1
Full Particulars
and tell n wbai jon
want BTT PAlMw A bONSl > rawep ISii EtmaM
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Clakkb 8l COw Boston Ia Our patented Vertlo
Holler will not prime No danger ot burn Ins Bass
LauIIea Thrwedull
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peak volumes 1 Tu > s
Itemed j corrects aU con
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be LcCeroftnmilry nmnrprvd
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OF ALLOTHERS
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lower prices
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t led I lit e sweethearts sire tx
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Salary and Expenses
Mrinx rtiRiiBLirouErtar ltpjuoutunwash
vagwu window etc apnnkW lawtut aUvMa aaidcna
ki a buss mwta In plant vine trw bails out boata
wtitrwubea hen bouse Throws water W let 12rallona
a mu utr f Mull frfce p To Introduce It will aend
f i lfcETt WAiriD on mUrv and vxpensva 5aro >
pi nttoainua X 1 SrUltd North IMjuiharo Slajne
CIVEN AWA1M
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The San Saba News. (San Saba, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 47, Ed. 1, Friday, September 3, 1886, newspaper, September 3, 1886; San Saba, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth110581/m1/3/: accessed May 21, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .