m days after, I lave 'HEW “1180K. ms against the Born. 32“"? ““2 m“ ' e re 0130 W. pricURRY, [GEN McCREA. VEB, ‘W PRICE W8, Lindsay: Item on the 11th Sept. for the amount 0! my lONTGOMERY. ’dlIl. Counties. ‘TRBET. INS. GD. E STOCK :ngihéé, for sale HIGHEST {3 Wm u I have (03910“, cred us dasfl‘bb , ' hm me at Ma"8 a that 10" sick headache. L condiï¬on °1 the are the moat 30' m by, cx's . mt; AS ,Samuel C. Bradbum, wag-9W use «All!!! the 4â€" “-60 of Ayer’s Pills 101. ï¬ne and famzlv. POISON IVY. Like mosquitoes, the poison ivy is found pretty nearly everywhere. You brush it as you steal along the Canadian stream, tempt- ingthe trout to rise. You touch it when yousib in the shade of the hedge back of thehotcl in the mountains. X on ï¬nd it. growing in the ï¬elds and woods from ocean foocmn, and you suffer from its sting dur- lngyour winter among the orange irons of theSonth. Eternal vigilance is t e only prise of exemption from its touch. ,7) -..VV..l_ -. 7-- ii The 1x 2' «rows even in large towns, and mtimes Bout-£31m; 1n the public parks of @ties‘m corners overlooked by the gar- _ Tye most exaspemting thing about poison Nyxsits resemblance to the harmless and beautiful womlbinc or Virginia creeper. Ngarly everybody is on the lookout for 9.038011 if}: and it is probable that, but fog ibis unfortunate resemblance, there Would 30" be ten mad half the usual harvest of “eh ‘Pgï¬ngers 1nd swelled faces. _ "0"" â€".n. u" v..."- .wâ€". It is no easy matter for the nninstructed “distinguish kctween these two gmqeful vines. 'l‘he'u- leaves are very “1311““ They boflx seek stumps and fences and 10" . cs for their nmhraces, and haunt clear- lupin the thlg_ They both bear tiny flowers and berries. There are, however. Dyers] marked ditferenccs by which. the gym ivv may be rvmlily and warms? mguislwd. The Mcnmpun ' gpictnl'fll levcry similar. vet, differ. Tarpmlon ivy El three leaves in ('m'h cluster. whfla the ' ivy or even to run against it, you btless recall how your hand, where you mched the flat, grew red and swollen; low it itche till you rubbed off the skin brain scratching; how it burned until the km: spread all over your body, how little at! spots came out on your skin; how your path and throat w hot and parched, no how your _who e body became strollen ,,_AJ mast? ï¬', while rheumatic pains danced trough you. If you have never fallen a. victim to that of the woods and ï¬elds, the poison , and this and take warning. She is a. less creature, this woodland temptress, “by her beauty will lure you to your ï¬ery. She attracts with offerings of ping leafy sprays of apparently innocent ; with pretty pale flowers, suggestive fragrance; and in the fall with foliage of Blight color. But there is fever in her leaves. Her touch is poison and her h is blighting. If it has been your misfortune to pick the 1 [every similar. ,vct, differ. - T59 poxaon ivy 5- Nine 19".ch m cnvh cluster, whfla tho Virginia. vrcqK-r has ï¬ve. If there were no ‘ er ditfcrmm this wmnhl be sufï¬cient. If vine‘n leaves um clustered in ï¬ve. you y handk- it with impunity. If only Oh". "I spring to'cthcr from each Item. {‘0 â€um (\ppl‘nfuï¬l it. far sometimes it W111 by it. breath. no not loud; the â€I trunk nrmmd which the vine chmbl, hill-21mg ‘misnn you. and if another of "9 11'! um lnnuhed the iv do not M K;- lgllhl. .\ ï¬nal“ hunMYI’nnAa hm! HE most economic, and at the same ,time' the most eflectual stomachic Inï¬dtodigestion. â€WWW W â€25 centspackage is suï¬cient to make â€age bottlesotthebeatBittau. Eb: llEaitahian 33mm M: urty' 1m: lnn'clwd tho iv d0 “0" ï¬lth: hand. A single ivy-p0 ' “0‘1 boy gm known to 3pm»). the irritation 0"" "ï¬lm Iclxmnl. \ glance at the picture Ihovn that “I0 “uduulcnvea of the toilet: ivy cloudy Wilde those of the 'ir'inis creo . ts“! they are sex-mun or note ed .Uovnh. The stoma of the poison my '5 hve many tendrils, which tightly .‘h object, round which it trailu. ‘ “I0 trug of Jthe Vitgilliu creeper3 . (I .L:_ LTNDSAY, FRIDAY, NOV. 13, 1891. flan the claims made for them." ,w. A. esflall, M. D., V. P. Austin x. W. Railway Co., Bumet, Texas. a s Pills are J31w beggmboedicinl: wanna for reg' ating e we “a for all diseases caused by a dis- md stomach and liver. I snfl'ered Agog-over three years from headachedn- digestion. and constipation. I had no .ppedte and was weak and nervous of the time. By using three boxes .41 Ayer’s Pills. and at the same time dating myself, I was completely cured.†-Philip Lockwood, Topeka, Kansas. "I was troubled for years with indi- Mon, constipation, and headache. A 191' boxes of Ayer’s Pills, used in small ‘ doses, restored me to health. 6311 negate rom tand eiective.â€â€" .H. snout. eadv e, Pa. yr. J. c. Ayer 00.. Lowell. Mass. «2W 1w Ayer’s Pills, an?! . â€msa inhthatthe man 1“! I; lawman liver guanine-- . .4-.. .n the claims made 191' thank†-..- ._... «up... I this vine the tenï¬rils . expan ’Mer-like disks. The homes 3110 I!“ ea31y way of distinction. Inahape ‘ name: they are mam i1; diéw are enmeslgagg}; liver the . ti and a - â€" W 9?. way round it?“ v“, u“â€" Stamplaint from 'm J M“ alliew are eat-1! entree. mm , _ 31ml: liver. ‘1†mmm rand MW ' 9‘ that come for nine- Em comes, bo‘mi'; chit all the inhes and dust are removed from the furnace. First, how. ever, cover «ch register with a new to prevenLthq dust from getting into the ,,_ I‘.__L-_JI-A Lâ€"n‘n‘n- sud comfiï¬Ã©ad‘ be explored a sweet and clap; thgregore, \yhen Work to be Done In the Cellar. These bright full dnye are busy onee. Full cleaning mad sewing, preserving and cunnln , claim the housekeeper’l nttention. lveu i the huuee had It thorough cleaning in the Iprin there will still be e certain amount of c caning required in the It ll assumed that In the upring the furnace was cleaned out, to be ready in case a ï¬re should unexpectedly be needed in eummer. end that the 6611M was thoroughly cleaned end whitewashed. But inno part of the house is it more important glut .eveq neg]: TERRACE ADORNED WITH TREES. wu thus converted into a. barrier, separat- ing the pasture lands from the grounds about the house in an invisible, but. moat. oï¬'octivo manner. bl’e wood, set in the grou‘nd on the line. 011 places, where it is desirable to keep the home grounds safe from intrusion by ani- mals at pasture, a sunken fence, like that shown In ï¬gure I, may be often employed. We have in mind a place, in which a ravine In layin out grounds it should be the object of t e landscape architect to make the area. he has in hand appear as large as possible. One method of doing this is, to open vistas, through which a. glimpse may be had of Whatever may be beyond,whether of mountain, the sea, or rural life. Another method of making;' a. place appear larger is, by removing all visible boundaries. It frequently ha. pens that the boundary wall may be place quite out of sight. \Vhere neighbors agree to dispense with bound- ary fences, each can enjoy the view of the other’s place. If desired to mark the bound- ary between the two places, it may be done by means of stones, or low posts of. d‘uran grass, {Hay have its ordinary blankness re- ieved by planting here and there some of .the many ornamental shrubs, suitable for the purpose. A strxxrzx FENCE. trees are still in full leaf, to judge of the natural features of a place, and what changes may be necessary in improving it. A garden upon a hill-side ofl'ers opportuni- ties for embellishment, not presented by a level surface. Sucha. garden may be laid out as a. succession of terraces and slopes, each of which presents opportunities for ornamentation. Being highly artiï¬cial, they allow the use of steps, from a. higher to a. lower revel. Mr. Elias A. Long, in his “Ornamental Gardening,†gives the follow- ing method of treating terraces and slopes, which removes much of their ordinary for- mal appearance. In ï¬gure 2 the regular outlines of the steps are relieved by the trees at the top of the slopes and there may be introduced a. line of showy plants, to be seen from below. The slope, instead of being, as usual an unbroken surface of Hints About the Management or Irregular Grounds, Those about to la. out new places, or to remodel old ones, ould, in making their plans, take into ac- count the natural ad.~ van es of the ,33, groan , so far as //†ssible. Therein no etter time than the present, while the ps- fever, you can treat yourself. Dr. S.'A. Brown, a. naval oï¬cer, recommends ten or twenty grains of bromine dissolved ina quart of olive oil. This is to be 3p lied to the poisoned surface four times a. y, and twice a day the poisoned parts must be washed with water and Castile soap. An- other simple remedy is a. wash of hyposul- phite of soda. dissolved in water, and ap- plied every two hours. If you are poisoned while in the woods you need not lack remedies. The Indians father boneset and crush the tops and eaves to a pulp. This often drives away the poison very quickly when rubbed on the flesh. Common oak tree bark boiled in water until it gets the consistency of tar is also a. good application. These simple remedies are recommended by good physi- cians. a foot of it to become painfully nfl'ected. It is much more poisonous toward evening and at night than during the day. So rank do my people consider it that itisbe- lieved in some parts of the country thst it kills the trees round which it was. its arms. There isno ground for this lief, which probably arose from the fact that it seems to seek dead trees and stumps to slumber over. Some persons are poisoned so badly by the ivy that the skin becomes covered by a. crust, and, if the face is stung, the features are almost obliterated by swell- ing. The poison itself never ‘causes death. ;As to remedies, 1011 may take your choice If you are serious poison- 0d,v it erywoulif be better to call ap ysician. If your ufl’ection amounts 0111; to itching and irritation with 5 little rag a_nd Eliglit VIRGINIA mm. in known as the mercury vine. It: Latin name is Rhus toxicodendron. Poison ivy has acousin, which country folks often call poison dogwood or poison elder. It is more correctly known as the poison _suma.ch, although that name might m_ __.‘- -l i110 apply. -_-â€"'_, ~-_v __,, r.“- hr 7 W" 7 V duos I tothe isoni . The mice! threespgnfi ï¬ves ho d3 3003? here too. The poison munch, like the poison ivy, has three leaves in a. cluster, while the harmless eunuch, like the Virginia. creeper, clusters its leaves in ï¬ves. One of the curioxis things about poison ivy is the diï¬'erent ways in which it aï¬â€˜ects difl‘erent people. Some can bundle it with impunity: _ Othors have oply to go lyithi‘n There are lqng-hnndle<_1 brakes LANDSCAPE GARDENING- sweepin‘é out thg the flue; and 4m: in full hinour 3W1; When in full bloBm 1i"".hou1d b. plowed under and the ground tilled in any. crop duired, But due mu? popl- ln: use made ofzit Qt, .13!me who.“ of lime, it “n ,_ :_ 2.-“ I. Of late years scarlet clover bu become 3 great favorite with the farmers, and there are now perhaps ten acres wwn for one s few years 0. The use: to which in: up- n , ,M_ -:_.JI_ n“.-- 9:“; -_.I Inn-O, plied are principally ythree. First and mt rmnt an a. rtllizer, eepecnlly on light 00: land where the common red clover won d not do well. On such 1and,whenac- companied with a. small application of Input- Let me shSw you-what all this means, practically in Dairy Farmin . The man who farms successfuuy ans skilfull in Dairy Farming will always have abun ance of plant food in his soil, and therefore he will keep the sun working for him by giving the sun the raw material out of which to build plants. If the sun be deprived of that he does not intendâ€"min the word ï¬gurativelyâ€"to work; he ‘ not nuke bricks for any man without clay. There are men who are all the while running coun- ter to these old foundation laws that were made for agriculturists. One man thinks that it makes no diï¬â€˜erence how much sun- shine he has or how little. It makes all the diï¬'erence in the world, and that is why in Canada. we have the best chance in all the world for making farmin pay, because we havemore sunshine than t e have anywhere with an equally favorable c imate in other respectsâ€"From an address by Prof. Rob- m cmvn, roman m mom The spring in my watch is merely what the plant food is in the soil. The spring is a oontrivanco into which I store my own strength; the plant food is a convenience into which the sun can store his strength, his energy. And then, when a horse eats abundle of hay, he is merely transferring into horse-power, .the power which the sun rolled into that peculiar plant-s ring. In that way the sun is doing al the work of the world. A long time ago the sun was shinin down on the earth, hotly, viï¬orously an continuously. He was re 'ng himself up, year by year and cen- tury by century into plants- lants that stored his strength With avi ity. Then there came great changes in Nature and those big trees and lants, full of the sun’s ener , were buri away down deep in the bow of the earth; but still they held the sun’s strength. Men open mines, they dig up concrete sunshine and energy, in the form of coal; the furnace is ï¬lled; the m 'c libert9.torâ€"iir~eâ€"1'uI applied ; and as as; mighty engine moves, wheels are turned to- day with the ener which the sun wound up in the vegeta e kingdom of the earth ages and ages ago. The man who furnishes in the soil no plantvfood for the <young plant, keeps the sun idling on his ï¬el all the day long. So a man ought to make it his pleasure, as it is his privile e to harness the old sun every day in his arm work, and make it do his will by making it roll its strength into such plants as he wants for his servxce. Now, a man could never aï¬'ord to hire half a dozen men ona farm and have them “loaf†all day long, while he is wearing himself out with working. But the man who wears himself out with working and keeps the sun idling all day long, is doing a far more foolish thing. So a man should recognize that he has the rightâ€"that he has the werâ€"to control the sun’s working, make 1t work upon his ï¬elds and thus save himself from the reproach of leaving the best working wer in the world idling on his place. The rmer requires skill, he needs knowledge, he must have above all things good ju - ment in order that he may ï¬tly control and exercise the power placed at_his pornmand. far as practicable in order that the hit may circulate freely and the sun shine in brightly, that the plants may get from the air the food it contains for them. This is one reason why it does not pay a man to growa crop of broadcast com; the stalks are so close together that there is not enough dr- eulation, the plants have lees vigor and the soil becomes exhauswd. " * ' The air is the other store-house of pleat food. Between 92 md 98 per cent. of all the substances of plants comes from the sir. The mm who farms well, will have his plants grow}: tau-itable distahce‘ apert, as thought was harmless after his horns had been sawed of, but that this was a mistake is demonstrated by the doctor’s account of the afl‘aifjin the Jersey Bulletin. He says : “I dehogned him last fall. He seemed oom- gletely subdued, as gentle as a cow, but a ew days .ago I presumed upon too close ac- uaintanee, when he sent me about twenty eet dowii a hillside with a single thrust of his’hornless head. His supreme contempt toran adyersary so easily knocked out of time, eyed him to desist from following up his vantage, and that is why I am new writing instead of eoqueting with the an els. I am fully persuaded that a mule bullmnkillamanas easil as a horn one, the only advantage in is favor being that he will not so badly disï¬gure the bychillanddnnrpneu Ifthewmteryscod was not stored in the summer,.hs.ve it at in before the eeflnris cleaned. Sag-n that the bins ere free from ï¬ne dust. Have the coal getgeforgt is put in, as that will prevent e net 1!: mg' ' and ï¬lling' your cellar and house. If you have cold or store closets in the cellar, have them there y brushed out and then have the sh vee washed and wiped dry. Be psrticnlnr to see tht the drains are in good condition. Have the cellar windows thoroughly brushed and washed; remembering thst it will bemany months before this can be done again. When it is possible, kee one or two barrels of charcoal in the c or. It helps to make the air are and is the great- est comfort imsginab e when one’s ï¬re gets low and there is no need to revive it in n Dr. Voyles of Cmdall, Ind., has had a tussle with his dehorngd bull, which he An Opinion of Hornlou Bulb. The Air and Sun in Fanning. Scarlet Clover. First and ï¬lm-t Secret telephones are mule in Fame. The consist, of a. null microphone, which enables. pox-Ion in 5 building to listen to the oonveuttion going on in "other room. ifCâ€"l‘lï¬xéimd-blut'préém was lawfully employed in the vacant. cleaning oftho marble front of 9594-.†0690 in Nay, york. The ï¬rst electric nilwiy in must. with (ï¬erheed conductore ie being contacted et en. A recent electricel invention is e device for giving notice of the beeting of the beer- inge on mecbiner . I Be id in beta nude with the Hugs-a £315 tunnel. 1,575 of the 6,580 feet bnvmg beeneieeedy contracted. Plump)". Passenger steamer: will be employed on Hencheeter Ship Cunl. Terminal improvement. a Sydney, I". 8. W.. ere to con. 8l0,000,000. The electric reilwey for Liverpool will be contracted on the trolley eyeum. nun 11!... Tom In 5 row Sum-av. new“. .. v. .. ,0...“ -- -... n-.. ____ lat er and heavier eno 'nea will be needed, an the stoke-hole en engine-room will be placed nmidehips. Twinscrews will he need- edâ€"pouihgv three be used. But on the whole the 'fl'erence between a. cargo whale- beck and a passenger whnlehack will not be so very great. The hull will lie low iii the enter, The turrets and pillars will_riee up et intervals, leaving such wide. spam that even the heaviest lee sweeping along will Est-{over the hull practically unimpeded. o the pueenger Inning over the nil it would seem as if he were on a. platform standing on stilt: thin out of the see, u Reunion of life not who y novel, for light- oum are built on steel piles, through noulum Duuy uu awn puw, ml which the nu wash hsrmleul , whil; keeper lives in comfort on a plum of the soundness of the principle she was en- tirely successful. In a etem-inibeBey of Biscay she is said to heve heeled at an angle of less than ï¬ve degrees In Pnorosxn rmcn cmul'r. Natunlluome changes will be made in the whale k cargo :hi besides thou noted. F101: a meager a 'p very m‘uc‘h 03083 SECHON OPWKALEBACK PASSESGEB m Unlike the whalebnck she had a solid trunk rising from her curved sides, the deck being supported b stanchions on either hen The princip e of her construction was that, instead of being pushed over by a wave rising on one side and exerting its force in one direction entirely, she divxded the wave, so that the water that rolled up- on her side would exert a pressure down- ward equal to that which tended to lift her upward, as in the old form of null. HEELED A'l' AN ANGLE or FIVE Drum The Livadin. was soon shown to be a. fail- ure, on account of structural weakness, and she lies in the harbor ef Sebastopol to- day, discarded end useless. . But as proof . ere soil their eettle it is y and for purpose. Many feed it to . sndsomevetennu-isnsuythlhtil Inex- oellent forngï¬for driving 1191'â€. II it doe. noteeonr. ethird use?!» witfor seedformsrket. Whenthuul e nirn it should not be cut till mgture, sud thenesrlyinthe morning 01'!le theevsn- lag,†the seed shakes out easily by handling, end much willbe lost if bundled when very dry. The ume care must ‘be used titer- wu'd when curing to be thrashed. The yield of seed is usual! about £1! bushels acre, and the mer st price About ï¬ve ollnrs s bushel. Although clover will do well on poor ground it will respond to generous treet- mentmdmnkeemuchlsrger growth in a. richer soil. I have measured stalks over forty inches in length, and I have no doubt thst it can be grown’ much taller and so rank that plowmg it under hetgomes a. seri- ous teak. When in bloom It is e .brillinnt and beautiful sight, and very strikin to the eye. It is sometimes son 1;! the end rows, and mnkes a very handsome border. [Flower and seed spikes, and foliage are seen in the 'engrevrng, an avenge-sued leaf being shown in outline. ]â€"Amer1ca.u Agri- 5 5‘3 cultirist. co through the Straits of Magellan. The Livadin. was 80 feet. broad and about 240 feet long. Her cross section, roughly sketch- ed, was like this: The ï¬rst whalebeck of importance was really the Emperor Alexander of Russia’s yacht Livadian She was designed by Ad- mira1_PqRoï¬'_'upop the theory exemgliï¬gd According to the New Yqu Sun thou who are dzrectly inter-wad In whalebacln propose to buildï¬ â€œ'{aftlebgck passe'ngcr ski}: l'_‘l'"' ’ to te with the famous Liverpoé] packets kc the City of Paris, the Maj estic end the Teutonic, between New YorkJ md Isï¬i'aluagle by. the wheat simmer C. W. Wetmoretnow onmherAway to $9.11 Fransis- Liverme A Pmenger Whalebnckâ€"Xovel Cr“: {0 Sea Service Shortly to be Builtâ€"Th1 nvadln was so root Broad and About SCENEE'AND PROGRESS, INTERESTING PARAGRAPHS CULLED FROM VARIOUS FIELDS. ft above. 240 Feet Long. Ila nggthodâ€"‘ilï¬gi-I to be not «Ply PROGRESS JOTTINGS. THE FIRST WHALESACK. THE LIVADIA. '.,‘ mnmr, NOVEMBER 18,1891. :vi'trazwinï¬Ti drum-n ovczvhm-Pm a: Go . Klan-ton. pn-pflom-m I. ACm {or Col-noun»! Ind Iouuho Dr. Sllu we. whin- lntho Rocky ll memo. “nova-M a too: am; when mused numb MM! mm makuumufllammm mostly-don. In. lathe tam of d m and slow- um know: u IMF“! medicine: It yin gum-(ox Mall. and It the w “A. -L- L: AA II__ __A Tendcr com. puma com. um oom- bludhc oomr. M com. com of 3') kinds and of .11 “3% no I‘m round In a I... a.†M the In. of Putnam'u Palm. (m humour. Nonl- ml- " cum nova . am. not». o c vat lava drop upon an u- m “any!†mu the M11»! flu-cunt." Gin Paul-arc P4... 1-- Oory 323m c '1' 04%|. Dunn of «but - ‘__‘__ A._ -“nâ€"Lm W ILA-.â€" wm' 47m. Professor Cooké declares that there is plways n. logs when (farm of diï¬â€™erent do- , _A_-_-.I £.-_L L-£._ Is on hone: conferred upon only A tented few. But every My or the loud any hove my nece- to the Queen of Remediesâ€" . Pier-rec Favorite Prescrintiou Once known. okay. 5 volusd friend. It promiees to positively cure every form of weekness peculia- to women...“ conï¬rms this promise by n written gust-ores ct sodsfoctlcn. announced in once or money returned. This 80on Ben y lo eurefulq prepared for women only. end its eflclency is vouched for by countless heppy homes no countless thousands of manned-ls. A u-w will couvlme you that it Is Invelnohle In correcting on lrregnlsrlt'es end wakes-es tor which it as designedâ€"791. Ithu hoen dlwovondwum. music come- out of u bum! man In navel. 1: mm 'â€" M UooDr.0uInnlm mm It mam m u .mmmm 't mun Ugo . Cm- m Bum mumb- use coon-1M1. Bâ€"Throe quarterâ€"1!!â€"! No. 7â€" The ï¬nish. No. 8â€"Let me layhands on (ht bloke !â€"Farm and Home. Winks numolyonreldeltm? 140111. know, I: mama. No. lâ€"I’ve got do: tip, see! No. 2-â€" Dat’l a 60 (the start). No. 3â€"Quu'taer pole. N ._4_-â€"Half pole. N915?! !‘!_--! !_! .110. He was given a. tip by a friend about. the horses at the fair, and the picture showa‘ the results:â€" “My wife in a. singularly ingenious woman,†remarked the married man. “In- deed!†uid the bachelor, with a. languid ef- fort at interest. “Indeed, I assure you. It. was only yestsrdsy that. she found a new place to hide my slippers. "â€"Texu Siftingt Mothers should be very'careful of their words before their little ones. The best way is to have one’a heart so pure that no- thingémpmper will ï¬nd its way to the 1i 3. realizing that "out of the abundance of t e heart the mouth epeaketh.â€â€"The House- keeper. , 7 What, kind of an influence does such an example exert over a. child? Does not the child feel it has been wronged? and that as eoonuitcanhnveiteownwillitwill also partake? If the mother had only abstain- ed, nnd carefully explained to the child the injury resuiting from eatin improper food, the would have obtained a. ting influence over it for good. _ Many tiï¬u a. child will say something beforea. caller, for which it is re raved, and in extenuatin its conduct. w' say: “Why! mmma! heard you If}: so._†pe'mng the child t5 abstain, while they psmke, afterwards remarking in the prel- ence of the child: “I ate too much of tint rich food, but I could not leave it alone, it “.190 sand-3 . . - . anlt, how can a. child be expected to? Mothers often cut their little ones ct the table which contain: food injgrous _to boy}: put-cat md child 09m- AWor-d to Pare-b. One of the stnngsst thin nts ever do, is to punish their ' mar what they have not strength or chsrscter to over- come in themselves. Fathers have been known to severely punish their little ones :11); profanity, wlien “dime tune' they ostun ' y-in ' init,sa' : “I have mmwmed to mufï¬n expressions, snd cannot shstsin, but I in- tend my children shall form no such bad llsblts as I have.†0h, “consistency, thou art a jewel!†Dothey not realize that the whole list of the little one’s doing is an imitation of its elders? If the elder, with his reasoning Iscnlties matured, and with the full force. of will power their own. cannot overcome a mam-muck.†avenue-work mumummmmm mmmmmmwm mmmmmwpwmm The coal um: mania: mm on community. cup-she nir- Ehnxnber in'ntuched to e piece 0 pipe, which an be coupled. et both endewinhthe pipe tobe rotected. The eir dumber is eepore'ted m the voter flowing through the pipe by mean: of 3 rubber dinphngm. In one the water in the pi freezes, the upon-ion of the we“: hem-sect ï¬nding an outlet by hunting the pipe, simply forcee the diaphragm to ya“, the: oompreuing the nix cuehlon wit-hm the nfewweekn The KingofSiun' coodedinahï¬ocnt theï¬nt 6"me ï¬ntnilwny tint will bobniltin Sim The lino as intended to connect Exam with the month of tho river, and b0 nonoï¬ftunmiluinlength. .To_prev_'ent_ pips:- lgmting by {guyâ€"A A inton- ' and impoang' togkï¬ onuid‘me city-Wills of Hugh)! @ï¬mplohdm has been invented, Md.â€ndfbdki:ob hau‘ndsurmonn b akaob Mdth hnottouchingit. An doo- flicmtutoitsmndo when the [nib]: Inch! touches the stud, than giving the dam. ‘ thinothcr'ii; m’npndbutchunr upon ' 1|in- ‘mminitisl 'yotmou foot Kit lecond;givuontuo ' a common bhckpow- SEE 9E AmSwodilh mokqlglgpowder.“ An Introduction to the Our of ripoizeu m mixed just baton 3â€"3723 AND ram. A Proto’sor’l chtnm. Speeding in the Ring. Clou- 30R ANTON iGBAL BLACKSMITHS’ COAL. NERVOUS PROSTRATIUN Delivered 5: Lowest Pdcee. MoLBNNAN 66 CO. CONSUMPTION Brooklyn-1m N. Y.. mums. I can may momma-Adm Seedllmhion II hciplul :othnnlicl Ind ponibl them: of “Hang. BronchmmdNu-vouAfl ndnwodmo oulmich ylicddehizi: ’h Joux’i. FTALMAGE. up. GENERAL DEBILI‘I’Y, WASTING DISEASES And RHEUMATISM. unhtl’nlumhnnummmh Wbyuemklmm Sold by was. Price 05; m. FLAX-SEED EMULSION 00. “M 8%.. law You. â€"m an I! 1. IIIGIRBO‘I’“ ‘ ... Llnmy. Sign of Mill Saw, South Side Kent-st. Dick’s Blood Puriï¬effor Horsesg Cattle me: a: co. no. Box 482. mom-sun 74-32. ‘ BRONCHITIS PuREsT.s1'Roucl-:sr. BEST. Band to I tlt .Formafl scrunch 'mmmmm 2-. â€new“ 3““ men. Aunequmwpounm nag-“E350“ D WOOD BRICKYABD.â€"I have a ‘1ng ct nut-clan hack on Mod. 1'. sun syn-mum. wipes. _ leo‘gq HIT-711' EM" w" "m‘" " ($31373: he'mmflnenoonm elsewhere. CHARLES THOIAS. Oskwood. Juno lot. lsoLâ€"as an. Win? ï¬e??? III/IMIJ â€(sail/195Aâ€! 5044 /J' fllflfVIMVU/dld/V I'll/VAR!†â€017 0 Id Ill}: mm: mr: mum. â€#1040â€: 87A“ mace/mt 1/? a: do): 7258 ï¬lm can I’M! £01013; RICK FOR SALE AT THE OAK- woon mommaâ€"x hue a m â€MI-av. April 8 "amâ€"4s. Flax-Seed Emulsion Co. For sale It Undo†drug atomâ€"78. Wit. menu? Wholesale and Retail Agents GOFFINS, GASKETS AND SHROUD ALWAYS IN STOCK. b‘ amass mounts, ‘W’. â€A lat-71 l! New Advertisements. Sold by All Grocer- nld Fm McLennan cf: 0'0- YH- E TML iron m mm m m GRADES Ol' EMULSION COMPOUND will move oil also: 0! (ever. and consequently prevent my disease um m-y he gains: shout from 'oldnz I. ï¬rm hold on their constitution. will be found .nflnitelv aunt-riot to my Condition Powder now used, on it loosens the hide. embling the mind to out. it: but, end in also on unhillnz endicsbor of Ban ond Worms. For ale everywhere 50c. DICK'S BLISTER. for sp-vin- ï¬nzbonulec .50c. DICK’S OINTIVEN‘IA', tor sci-en; samba. nus!» men‘s LINianr iu SEED nonhuman-ad mummum AND†tom Thai-.1:- m â€mm. â€mm 13. 8. B. wooden. No.11“. mm 2% "*5 fl 0 mm mociA-rxox. guï¬â€™fuwm'muufumgw‘ï¬.‘ 3a no n mm 36.1% a. 13:: no. u. '3' on; I; __ _ _ a“ ï¬t‘sgmâ€;°;$°m Mm...†““2""? m, I Vacuum Tm mm new mutate Iflm In tho 80.: mâ€" Ju 8. SELâ€"SS-l’. UNION CREDIT 8: PBflTECTIflI FOR SALE. BOOOUOREDBRICK. GENTS WANTEDâ€"On "Jay (I commissionâ€"to sou Singer Sewing m- ohlnea and collectA in the Counties ot VIM wd Hwhumn. 991, to Jon Bonn. an“ agent. (oflcetn Adam's Block) undoâ€. July ï¬lmâ€"631". 'FHE OLD RELIABLE BRICK handgun hmï¬am.w'3: utyotn’ WM! fluidly!“ moot be banana. JOHN WM. (h.- Manon. Doc. 8. 1887â€"761â€. 'n e, MIprmN, .' him at m BRIAN Gunman. U You-kw Had-s venues-mm It sent by Emma empties return It 19w 3t 9353. per â€than: “Egg-plop: an , 1.7,, , ,A‘ â€Muzak:- an: Foriileb: mailman-um not-W Victoria». Ana: mâ€"lï¬-lyr. ‘ GEORGE DOUGLASS, x on. mum mun. “Lucia-......†3: ï¬wmgog~un ...... ...._ I SI W 3-19! XML-18??? OBI-'74 It m ruthenium“ m sandman-mm mun- DUNN’S BAKING POWDER MINERAL WATER. THE cm‘x's BEST FRIEND mum. l“ -â€"|$l!. JOHN BLOW mm mm M u. mâ€"a. mm «that’s-add! Monummm-m an: Rhona. P11... 090.. mm II HE LIVERPOOL AND 1.0m mama: mammal comm nmammumu WWII-14 330.000 “WRCDC- “Minimum“ wmmwm a... m mmmudn mamas-mm mmormm { s. PORTER, ISSUER 0P HARRIAEE LIUEISBI. W«W manner:- 3!†mumâ€"n. $519533 LIFER! 1315‘.“ .u,, ,‘ -L IOHARD BRANDON. r unu- u tam-go m Eudo Mineral Water. SOLD BY ALL DEALERS. A arm: AND-WEI MY,“ J-_ L930; Gowzomâ€"Ismar 0! new Licenses. â€EUDO†FIRE AN D 15m. BARTHOLOEEW Miscellaneous. 7.09... O. I. WUJNB. M Wm. 38mm. (hi