*%&**<• «/ • ' '•#•*<• * **••• «*v •' "IB! idUfi Milwaukee, or St. Loots to market? reportaP By no devioe »ta<rtuit bfe #4oSl to om or Miiiikatote, and yet these faba te here six them Is ao CLOUS, I tUft^St unit mine, of sharing tools It was Dr. Manr rick. litfVeiaaM ATJtiimil «, one good* a pride In hear equal ID six hi !--IW wts 5» Hi *3»S 'fift k*n__- for dead time p^S?^«rfed «h« k<f* for »loos Mmo'ln the odder; also assert that cows milked thrice a day produce more and better milk than il they were milked xraiytwtce tL day. To MUD T|sx> KETTXJS. --Take a piece of ctij&or, tfeaA? *8d»hbt, shape it to fit Jtho hole, and rivet It with a hammer on fbotfc4fdee: If It gets cold before you get St ^ght, heat agaiu and pound till <cla»ed.--Exchange. I --Os* ciipfai of better* fwt*1 tof sugar, one of milk, six of floor, half ntafexteg, one teaspoonful of soda; roll them out, cut with a tin cutter, brush them over with the white of egg and Sift granulated sugar on before baking. To KKEP THE HANDS SMOOTH. ---Take glycerine and ammonia, equal parts; -Wash the hands clean, and, without wiping, pour a little in one hand and frub- 'JTCU all overtuiu dry; worth a good ideal of money to one who has as bad trough hands as I had--Cor. Chicago •:4f'nter-Occan. COOKIES.--One cup butter, one cop ugar, one-half cup cream or sour milk; avor with anything you like; one-half teaspoonful soda, enough flour to roll easily, roll thin; bake with moderate re. They are done when they can be ted from the tin on a case-knife with out breaking. ROCK-WORK should be introduced only ia the wilder and more irregular jaortibns of the grounds, and never on f* smooth and finished lawn. It should never resemble a heap of stones, but - appear like natural rocks projecting from steep or sloping banks.--Iowa State Register. THE following is highly recommended "*ms a home-made court-plaster: One Ounce of French isinglass; one pint of warm water; stir till it dissolves; add Ion-cents' worth of pure glycerine and five-cents' worth of tincture of arnica; lay a piece of white or black silk oil a board and paint it over with the mix ture. MOLASSES FRUIT CAKE.--One large Cup sugar, one of molasses, one small Cup sour milk, one teaspoonful soda Issolved in the milk, one-half pound utter, three eggs, one and a half pounds raisins and currants, one-quar- jpound citron, one notmeg, one table- •poonful cloves. CURE FOR SICK HEADACHE.--If you get up in the morning with a sick head ache take one third teaspoonful soda (baking), bathe the feet in water as hot lis can be borne, or otherwise warm them, and keep quiet, and in two hours, If relief is not obtained, take a grain of quinine every |iouratill three are taken. "--Exchange, M» recipe for eocoanut candy is this: Urate very fine a sound, ripe cocoanut; ipread on plates and let dry naturally tor three days | use one pound of white lugar to four ounces of the nut; boil |he sugar down thick and white, then *io not stop stirring until done; keep the gas a little above the fire to keep from burning.--Cor. Inter-Ocean. CORN STARCH BLANC MANGE.-- Kearly boil one quart of sweet skimmed fnilk and add five tablespoonfuls of corn Starch, wet smooth in a little cold milk #nd a^ little pinch of salt; stir till it thick^Ss! Serve cold, with quince or Other jellv, or, if it is to be eaten with lugajj and cream, add one teaspoonful of t mooh ie condition, I old system of plowing oat, the soil, and hilling up, for the follow* ' reason: Whereonoh soils, are 4a*- ther will become the rains and by the atmosphere, *6 that they beoome impermeable to the influence of rain and ̂ --two valuable elements of growth--consequently the sfase of the potato jĵ ftmlnhfcodr quality impaired* its of twaessentifels Ireland. wfHtfoOB ?moi saline briieaes of the seen tefi potato-growing; and her stalwart sons who come to America are uniformly successful in its culture here, and often raise fine cr^ps oi potatoes owfor nw^ unfavorable circumstances. What their practice may be in other localities, I am not informed; but _ form a numerous olhss, A1 practice is to hill largely, or if they plant in drills, to bring the earth .into ridges along the growing orog>, and their crops are large. . . •; > • .{ °> Just when to form the hill is an im portant consideration in securing a crop, and is better done after a rain . . .. .. " fot se cured to counteract the effect o{, 4ry weather.--"Cor. Country Oentlcma ̂ ̂ than when the ground is very drv; by hoeing in moisture, a supply is cured to counteract the effect of. * Vam^gt, when taken from the fire. THE following is a simple method of Snaking a freezing mixture: Pulverize finely chloride of ammonia and nitrate iOf potash, five parts of each, and mix with sixteen parts of water. The tem- terature of the mixture will be re-uced so low that if a test-tube with a little yvater in it be used to stir it, the Water in the tube will be converted into Ice. APPLE TRIFLE.--Scald as many ap- Jlesas, when pulped, will cover the ish you design to use, to the depth of two or three inches. Before you place them in the dish add to them the rind jcald over the lire, keeping it Stirling, it boil; add a little *nd do not let .' sugar, and let it one stand till cold, then iver -the apples, and finish with m whip. Hilling Potatoes. f ; -: •• LsTM OH hejB been published within a ears on the subject of hilling pota- and |y some the flat-culture sys- be#n highly recommended. At i)i|. tips arguments brought out in (?©!_ Wesreao clear that I experi- ' ot the and the result a verf lean harvest of small pote» I havenoaoubfcs however, of the ity of |tioto who recommend that of culture, which probably has beefitsuccessful under the circumstances by 1 fhich they were favored. But in fan tfog* & in medicine, there are no fixe i aml jositive rules of practice. In •mep^i|^,|he constitution, habits and juliarities are to be under- I unorder to apply safe and effi- s. remedies. So. in farming, the re and quality of soil, and other itions, must be understood in order to ifipnre successful practice. When the pot to rot first appeared in this country, thii ||r«iive years ago, it was soon dis- co\wfd thai the vines were first at- tacf am >v roa uau m© vines were nrst at- c bd cm Jow grounds, subject to fogs, IC phnt tie disease was worse on stiff, clai j&ijiy soils, enriched by fermenting ma feres. This induced farmers to pla (t.QQ lands high and dry (if the soil wai J«cy saUdy, so much the better), and to i is manures cooling in their nature. Th| result was a saving of the crop un der- such management; while where the ? older system of- planting lower of more compact soil, and feeding -.heating manures was continued, a e from rot was the general oonse- ice.. • [ere was a happy variation of re sults brought about by a variation of culture, and we have no reason to sup- posfc but that a flat culture of potatoes, un<£gr some circumstances, maybe sue- ces|to. Admitting this to be so, we 6houm select sandy or very porous land as the Add on which to try this mode of culture; while on a tenacious, clay ey soil, or a atiM, loamy one, that re- The Borrowing Sitsuee. THE greatest nuisance that the fann- er has to contend with, and one which entails on him a not inconsiderable amount of loss, in time and cash, is the borrowing nuisance. Neighbor A may be a very nice man in many ways; he is sociable, chatty and agreeable. He sends over to our place and politely asks us to loan him our spade. We do not like to loan him our old, weak- backed affair, so we let him have our new one, Mr A. promising to return it the next evening, sure, as we want to use it the following day. Our plans are all laid out for work, in which the spade is to play a prominent part, and yet there is no spade to be found. One of the men is dispatched to bring the missing spade, while our other hands potter around until this and other tools are brought back. In the course of an hour the man returns minus the spade, not being able to find either the spade or • Mr. A, the latter having gone to some remote part of his farm to,work. We then nave to alter our plans for that day's work and go to work at something else, after los ing considerable time for the accommo dation of Mr. A. The following morn ing, on going to the shed where we keep our tools, the spade is found, fall of dirt and grime. We start Out to work with it, only to find that some of neigh bor A'8 men have been using it as a pry and have broken its back. We swallow the loss as best we can, and buy another spade. A nice, new briar scythe is borrowed to help in clearing a piece of new ground ana get it ready for the plow, in the carelessness ana hurry the scythe snathe gets badly charred In the fires of brush, while the temper in the blade is entirely de stroyed. This is returned, with great sorrow being expressed that the thing has happened as it has; but never a word is said about replacing it with a new one. Our clean, sound carriage is bor rowed. It is brought back after sun down with a bolt or two missing, per haps a spoke broken, and the whole covered with a generous sprinkling of mud. The horse-rake goes the rounds of the neighborhood and finds its way home with one or two teeth broken. A sharp saw and sharp chisels are bor rowed, and the saw is brought into contact with nails, which does not im prove either the set or the sharpness of the teeth, while the chisels usually have several auspicious nicks in them winch plainly show they have been borrowed. As with the tools and implements, so ft is with books, periodicals, etel A valuable book from oor Hbrarv is bor rowed and taken to the borrower's home, where the children, usually with unclean. hands, thumb oinar it t|!l it looks like anything bat its former S«lf, while there may be several leaves mis^ ing, having been taken to supply the •place of less convenient paper. "Peri odicals ar© bori'c'.vcd, and S i^iumed at all, are in a sadly dilapidated condi tion. Many and many a valuable book have we lost, by loaning, while the broken files of our papers show that we have loaned them, too. Happily there are a few borrowers who take good care of what they borrow, and try to return it in as good order as they re ceived it* in default of which they re place it. To such persons we take pleasure In lending, and always shall.. We think our readers have had some experience with these nuisances-*-bor rowers-- and can testify to whst We have written above as not one whit overdrawn , for we could cttemwy other incidents similar, and, no doul|t, oould they.--Practical Farmer. ,One man tills he has a thousand of whbat, when he has not half that amonnt. This is done to perpet uate his credit. A mercnant in a town writes east that there are millions of uusiiels «£ wheat in the farmers' hands in his county, awn as it comes to market he engagements to meet his _ east. And in this way the mweh»it: is deceived--he deceives other% and the World indeluded. and the faftner talfei* all the consequences in fie low price of his wheat. The story will be repeated ever}' year, and every year the farmers will swindled by thej» lying pretended gatherers of stati8ti/M.W«i0a SUUt R&mter, ' * • * » »n f JM U An Extraordinary Point of Uw. THE Manchester Guardian is respofi Bible for a very laughable account of a lawsuit which* was decided last week before the jvqe de pah- of a village »eftr Toulouse. As narrated by our contem porary the Acts would seem tp be these: Aoertain peasant in the ticin- ity of Toulouse bought a cow from one of his neighbors for the sum of £20. The bargain having been marfe the two speculators repaired to a quiet nook to complete the transaction--the one to give the money and reobive the cow, the other to give the cow and re ceive the money. The buyer, with an amount of caution which wonld argue Scottish descent, held his new purchase Tl* truths of science sad pwmiilw Why is It thai hrencts dovruf1*!* Vbfwatto of prejL or rfemaiD forever unknown. - pk aw so ratacteat to receive directly to the phenomena of t«uee! Astronomer* upon dis.VI r, aaalfft it s place aionee, and it ti Jed. The rule by which a matbc pfoblem is onee solved becomes forever an lorn; but no matter how clearly tba ptinai] "which govern health and aiekneii be denwoh strsied, soms refuse to believe. Dr VMmilf Medicine*, which am BOW SO a bank note of 100 fran/fts. At this pomttht cow, being of an enterprising and speculative turn of mind, suddenly Interfered in the matter, and, to use a diplomatic phrase a good deal used of late, 44 altered the situation" by mak ing a totally unexpected "dive" at the stump and swallowing the bank note. Naturally a row at onee got up between buyer and seller, the dne maintaining that he had paid for the oow, and the other as stoutly asserting that he had not received the price of her, clinching his argument witn tke crushing state ment that as the cow now belonged to the buyer and had in her way, the si still In possessioi The unfortunate J/ appealed has ask the matter out, aiid the Grordian kno keted the note d document was of the purchaser. Ige to whom they lor time to think do his best to cut As our contempo rary remarks, the learned Judge will find ft even mak*e difficult to decide than the dialecticians of the Middle Ages--or, as a gentleman of our ac quaintance was once heard to call them, the middle-aged dialecticians found the celebrateddispute of porcut et saccus. Tlie question was this: A sack containing a pig was carried to market by a peasant, and it was sought to know whether the sack or the man carried the pig. For fifty years, at least, the scholastics wrote numerous folios on tftetmbject without being able to settle the problem. And yet that' was a trifling matter compared with the present cow and bank-note case.-- N. T. Ofjaphic. outrivaled the much riilas, his pellets are in genera! use in vlaesoi coarse, huge, drastic pills formerly, so :h employed, while the sales of his fir. or where there we scrofulous swellings fections, a few bottles of his Golden ] Discovery will effect an entire cure. . If feeld^drows ̂OebUlUted, have sallow ti bwly, frequent headache or ** in month. Internal heat or chills alternated with hot noshes, low spirits and gloomy fore bodings, irregular appetite, and tonjpeeeat* iff; fP* ia Pttblie and Meaniuc" not wn spots on fact or diuiness, bad taste ed, you are suffering from Torpid Lkmr. "BuioutHet*." In many cases of or 'om- ptaiMn only part of these symptoms are expe rienced. As a remedy for ail such cases. JJr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery has no equal, as It effects perfect cares, leaving the livsr strengthened and healthy. Debilitated females who have undergone ail the tortures of caustic and the knife, and yet suffer with those peculiar htufginff-doten sensations and weaknesses, can have guaranteed to them prompt and positive relief by usiag Dr, Pierce's Favorite Prescription; while constipation and torpid liver, or "biliousness," are promptly re lieved by the Pleasant Purgative Pellets. Sold by all druggists Wagon's ANTI-FEKIOBIC OR FSVKB AKD Aocn TONIC.--This invaluable and standard family medicine Is now a household wofdahCi maintains its reputation unimpaired. It Is in dorsed by the medical profession, and pre scribed daily in Hospital service. IVhy? Be cause, after years of trial in the worst malari al districts of the United States, It has proved itself a positive antidote for all diseases caused by malarial poisoning ot the blood. WHBBI* ocx, PwtAi" & Co.,Proprietors, New Oitealoa* FOat Mil! BIT AT,I, DeUQOISTS. ^OIMI the "Parler." fiwnoii If heat Crop. THE time has commenoed. Svery year there goes out a great blow about the prospective crop. This is done for a dishonest and selfish purpose at the great wheat marts. It has already commenced for this year's crop. The word is sent out from Chicago, April 12th, by the Associated Press dispatches that44 the whole Northwestern spring wheat region shoWs an acreage of 50 per cent, greater than last year,11 and that 20'per cent, of last year's crop is. still in the farmers' hands. What is the object and result of this false and in jurious statement? It is to injure the sale of what little wheat is on hand, which is less than 10 per cent., instead of 20. Nor is the area of wheat grpatly increased over last year. A few local editors, with the object of glorifying their neighborhoods, and cheering the spirits of their merchants and mechanics with the prospects of the future, have unwisely made ex travagant statements of the amount of wheat sown. There is always a dis position to publish cases of larger crops of grain, the sale of large hogs and cattle, but no notice is tsfeen of cases of less crops, or of the sale of poor hogs or scrub cattle. The rose colors are prominent, but the dark unnoticed. And we wish some statistician who blowed so much about the forty millions of a surplus wheat crop in Minnesota 'flTf fr" to sail, and fifty millions in '• WHA* horrible associations crowd Into our mind when the word "parlor" is mentioned. We immediately pictr ure hi our imagination the terrible op pressiveness of that best room, where the sun is never allowed to shine for fear of fading carpet and furniture, where the cnairs have all a stately, polished and stiff look about them, where the children are never allowed to enter, where what little air there is may never be allowed to change, and ?Wliere..t)ie ^amoil is something akin to that. o{ ft family fco?nh. : This Is the best room,%i» for- the <usO' of the. family* and is oulv kept for purposes of ceremony and for the con venience of those people for whom we do not care a rash. People whom we like and with whom wo are on familiar terms, com® right into the living room and have & good chat in a pleasant way}: but the ceremonious visitor, whose de parture gives us relief, is ushered into the 44 parlor." i The principle upon which this room, is founded is all wrong. Let us have nO such room in our house. Open the shot# tens and windows. Admit the sunlight and sir.' If the carpets and furniture fade, let us enjoy their use in that con dition. JUft a* hwro any tomb in our house, where all should be cheerful ness and brightness. Abolish the "par lor" agui enjoy the honie.--:JSural JSew York#* | ierletl Experlencef. lU gof the New York Postofiice and its methods of testing the fitness of applicants, says: The swarm of applicants for places in the office are tested by examinations also, but these look more to their ̂ en eral intelligence. I was permitted to see some of the very - original answers, on the examination papers. One ques tion, 44 What has been your clerical ex perience?" is a veritable pons amino- rum to the applicants, and many are the donkeys who are lost here. Most of them take clerical in its ecclesiasti cal sense. One man answers that Ms clerical experience has been "Catholic," and so through all the denominations. One man responds by saying, 44 Have taught. in ..Sunday-school.*"- Another man has not had any occasion to deaf with clergymen, for, in answering the question qs to his "clerical experience," he breaks out, 44 Well, I was never sick a day in my life." There are others who give the term a wider sense. One answers, 44 Compoaitor;" Another, 44 Working as porter in a store;" while a third hits it exactly when he says, 4 4 Making horse-collars." » Do HOT stupefy your baby wfth Opfauii or Morphia mixtures, but use Dr. Bull's Baby Syrup, which is always safe and reliable AM* ditMfoifil... 35c. Perfection tn Cookery. The nearest approach to perfection in arti cle* designed for kitchen use Is Pooi.mv's YEAST POWDER. With very little experience the housewife or cook Is always sure of de licious biscuits, rolls, bread, cake, etc., every time. ' 3. H. ZKILIN A (JO., the enterprising propri etor* of Simmons' Liver Regulator, believe In EX in addition to the large amount of newspaper advertising thsy are doing. Let counterfeiters beware. Mothers, llloihtrs, Mother*. Don't Ml to procure Has. Wnrabow's SOOTH- IKO SVRUP for ail diseases of teething in chil dren. It relieves the child from pain, OORS oolic, regulates the towels, aid, by gi*hfe l and health to the child, gives zest to the mother. War of 1813 Soldier* aud Widow* Pensionsd f<Jr 14 days' service. Write COL. L. BISGHAM & Co., Atto&eys for Pensions, Patents, Land Titles, Washington. D. C. FOB economy, let the lover of good smoking TO> baooo try Nigger Head or Bull1* Eye cut caven dish. Tfaey are equal fc> double the amount of common goods and far superior in quality. Have your dealer keep them. ntrtM ' «-«** M ifv '£«|l ; (in. PBLVERMACHER'ft, ; , ' •i:v\ hte' ?«> iiatatMis*. ,i w|R iW WIlMipi WJNVJVCI [iVERMAC£ ELECTRIC Ar a*y appWufiLis 4e ang pari if the mett every requirement* . TM mmi leshiei ph$sidzxg swi ie&i 'M» *>f Europe and this country indtrm thUi galo of W< of any Published by Q.*Q.uaua, as great as that • *0 »i^ i jti* w RCAtER, MS: :Y0U AFRJCTED t teeorer the sam ̂ defies of of ynwupu meet; vq«v Ion T Are you suffering trom ItSSf™ Award of M«ritiOr KedM* ApCIUncj-s at great World's Kxhibltl -.fturla, Philadelphia, and ^sewnMe-T have been-found the most valuable, i simple, anil efficient known treatment' the cure of tiiaeatse. , . • 1 and Wlttk m health iiaeased odn If V ill-health In any of its many and muftlfari feel nervous, debilitated, fret/uj, *tlnM4. sad. lack the power of will and action ? Are fin subject to km of ttieaaory, have spells of IMat- ditionr Do you. Mm AeuMtim. neuralgia or aches and paius? .Have you bee* indteereet irt eany yMjtM'Siiiyow* self harassed with a inhltitude of gloomy symptoms 1 Ale yon timid. Bertooi, and forgetfnh and yoor nahtd eonltao^jN^-, ing on the subject f Have you lost eonndeaoe in yoaiasir suoo eaetiy toliiiSMfWlltfWt !3sSSSr dissiness in the head, dimness i>f sight, pim ̂ R«. iVti M BEST III THE WHIP. MlMEJUBlUnilTC, lty. tbateMii ot fem^ea, too, are, down in health and spirits from i, peculiar to their aet, and who, from pli^iea^d^Ul- , wai« «-»*«•» pirita from ductive of Is at hand omen and ricTtMUXS: OUv(lsa«)M#r«tti It. ftw#, 8»md/or Cirimiar, et& SA11D OIL AMD BL'K'G CO. 8oaaettilna New In Oonrtiyr Plctares. AmtswaatM. SenStorctaolsr. OAinA».Oa,14S MM^ChMMo. roiVERMAfiHER'S BILTS ANO mm cure thsas various diseased oonditlona, after all other means fail, and we oJfter the moa oonvlnetng testimony dlraet fnm .the a& ftipted themselves, who have been restored to JMEMTil, STREHfiTH, Alltf ENERGY, after drugging in vain for mouths and y«»re. • Bend Mow is* 'DstcaCra^a FA*r*tJrr and ad»si!ffsjrss5!sr : PULVIRMACHER tAUANIC CO ̂ Car. Kfhtk ud Vltt 8t&, OmSOIHAn b • , 1 Avoid bogus appliances claiming sfcp- . Our Pamphlet explains (w> fo dittinguiMb the genuine from the ftpurUnu ̂ trie qualities. HAIURfc-S Rtlffcgg TEG THE Caw itoop ftmtnea. Bbetook IHWfliMMttt ^©3Sc4Sn® Xa Sold b all ttiefMter •MeeotfoUr, T. r. TRICK. £.51 »KgS5jte8ab ATtUissssaaeCthevearths hoaaa sfsMn is liable t3 tscomedlaardp Mfiem^elnsiiaamtsaortief U» Srcr to dfechsBgerth# eaast ai bila if utare is not swtoted In kv eflwts. serere MUous attack*, «r srastratlng fsvsrs *ea--s»Mi fcllew,«--slagsreatsof- WrtnjrandCTMiaaaaL.Amtl»t!2ieirj*al»atian, bow- «nr, wUlprweutaU Uils,aiMl mar befoundtatliatta- TOrtte wnmm nat% wawr xiw IUBOO- U KJw-«r KegiOator has base I* ass firkalf aesetesv aalflietels notooe slosle IBSTSBSS e* rseaef where lltas AM t» SMI S tore wtiSntaken tatiiD«,aoccr4tnKtotbeSI»aaou. %towlMppaiMbt the srealest liver ••dletae In the worta; is per fsctly harmless, MM earefoUj compounded from RA^A nets and hsrtia eantabdag no nMiearr er any lojmtoaa mlMtetsnea Rtakes the place of qniniae and Ml. and has superseded these medtdnes hi _ wther have keietufuie been eattenshelr need. Pre. alMtOeatoaeefnainNirdnmlst, do *st isl«{ gtn tt a tafcr trial, and yoa will be MM tban satMled ettttfesnnlteMalasd. u?1; ; C A U T I O N , t 4s then are a number Of nntta- t-*' Hens offered to tbe pubUo, we ^ WouMcautloq theoommunltjr to liny ne Pewden or riipMBd •UaMOMS' laviffi BB00IA- pfWOSt, -US1M la oar easraved Ivranper, witis Trade - Mark, Ksmp sod Slgnrtare unbroken. Mane other to goaulne. OBItKNAL AND GENWm JTUIVNORVUD MLT si J. H. ZSILIN * CO.. PHILAD E tJPHIA, PA. Prf, •l.OO. : Jfow ky AM Praggls^ ftoecta. it'MA Is all done en get yew 'Ozsvuseit Jfiaam&Sk* TWNL 9. XKLBO&. OraouH I CURE FITS If ni Tilnkm-ittelui WemelMlelael v»m vmm rALMmrn MMjBCTMMC MM. lets sent nee. PAUCSSBSLT oa, 191 & Clsik-et, isspsart file JPeeyle'e JBeme<fv, /«r Jlttferaol Msisymmt Vsm* E&l ItiUMlM oKl taumbuc. "It lias nnfedttwnssnile."asnurieSotnj, AddieasaJtlMBSUrxaeartst.iaaaS^SM^t The Best in the World Ready wr, Use iPACToam: CEMvmuuim. CHIOAfie, nr. Mffn % 7-Shot revolver, with ANY SHAM A MOUTH. fAvrsD evei LAUOMION. mrmm «» CWUMI, KRVJI tfu.Z j InH&M Tm-*' StTnf® EOT to Send for NOf£LTr fctftfeak Improvtr It wUl posltlTelr make tbe est steak tender. Itlsapertsetsuc-esse. Our tasttmoolals Iran ear nstav tt would 101 a volume, f taken w-ageocf tro,n X. Ww, of Chl«a«o, lie can no mlppli tbe Improver. Bei . . BIG 2Jp8 S«m™ef an^WiPt,:r- ^amplcf free. Copying Oa. WO W. M.Kiisoii-sL i iurairft. Gi c 0W'U\ /yL, *A O R CU aUUUOL PioildeaeMt L with hkw rmj^arogesp .'THWs Ifiied Cards, Biiowilak sHke.wtthnaae.10e. J.~ KFashlonaMe Cards, no 3 alike, wlttiwsaia ies^»eS»si*.Oaai.aJiM>aOOLll>iwaal^C^ ,1^5'. A. M. K» 08. OQ3-6.». : ' | WMmx wsiTf.v6 rm A»rmKTfMKMt, pUen*m tey yww mmm f*« OS tee Untmp»»*«•. A+m*+*****> I*»e to S uaas e«d taetr jMwirMwweiile r