736 
THE BUBAL MEW-¥©BKi1R. 
MOV 3 
Hots of llje TlTwli. 
HOME NEWS. 
Saturday, October 27, 1888. 
At 1 p. M. last Saturday the fiftieth Con¬ 
gress ended, having passed through the long¬ 
est session in a century of Congresses. It 
lasted .321 days. The longest previous session 
was 302 days. The tariff will remain un¬ 
changed for another year at any rate. The 
session was remarkable for the enormous 
number of bills introduced in both Houses ... 
.In the Senate 3,641 bills and 116 joint 
i esolutions were presented; and in the House 
the record ran up to the unequaled figures of 
31,598 bills and 230 joint resolutions, making a 
grand total of 15,585 measures introduced in 
one session. In the Senate 2,394 measures 
were reported back from committees and 
placed on the calender, a much larger propor¬ 
tion than in the House, where 8,305 measures 
of the total number of 11,828 introduced still 
slumber in the committee rooms. 
The jute mills at Salem, Mass., shut down 
last Thursday, throwing 500 people out of 
employment. The annual production was 
I, 000 000 yards of jute cloth which was princi- 
>ally used for baling cotton. It is now be- 
ieved that Dine straw bagging has permanent¬ 
ly taken the place of jute. Cotton bales cov¬ 
ered with this ha\,e already reached the 
Charleston market and been accepted by 
buyers much to the jubilation of the people. 
It is made of the needles or leaves of the pine, 
which is the natural growth of the Southern 
forests. These needles can be made into cot¬ 
ton bagging at a cost which is bound to run 
jute bagging out of the United States. The 
green needles, it is claimed, \ ield oil enough 
to pay the cost of their treatment. 
Elizabeth Stuart Phelps, the authoress, was 
married on Saturday to the Rev. H. D. Wood, 
of New York, at Gloucester, Mass.. 
Tne Attorney-General of New York State is 
bringing suit'against another member of the 
Sugar Trust, to vacate its charter and annul 
its existence, 'on the ground that it has vio¬ 
lated the act under which it was incorporated, 
and has exercised privileges and franchises 
not conferred on it by law and so has forfeited 
its charter.Labor Commissioner Wright 
has been investigating divorces, and will soon 
have his report ready for Congress. There 
are 2,700 courts having divorce jurisdiction in 
the country.About 18 miles from 
Devil’s Lake Dakota is a settlement of 70 Jew¬ 
ish families, including 238 souls. It has been 
established two years. The first year the 
crops were good; this year a frost in the 
middle of August ruined the whaat, leaving 
only about as many potatoes as they bad 
planted and barely oats enough to winter their 
stock. Nearly all have had to mortgage their 
farms, paying two per'cent a month on chat¬ 
tels and 12 per cent per annum on real 
estate. They are now without credit, with¬ 
out fuel,without sufficient food, shivering 
and starving on the approach of win¬ 
ter. Relief is urgently needed. 
The Surgeon-General’s report on the health 
of the army shows an average of 1,010 con¬ 
stantly ineffective from sickness; discharges 
for sickness, 648; for disability, 714; for in¬ 
juries, 66; deaths from all causes, 214; ratio 
per 1,000, 8.12; total strength of the army, 
23,841, of which 21,601 are white and 2,240 
colored_It has been decided by the Treas¬ 
ury that Chinese laborers cannot land in the 
United States in transit to Cuba or any other 
country. The Chinese miners who have re¬ 
turned from Alaska, have been permitted to 
land, for although the American vessel on 
which they traveled entered British waters, 
they had not left the jurisdiction of the 
United States.The amalgamation of all 
the railroad employes in the United States 
with some of those in Canada and Mexico in¬ 
to one vast trades-union, appears to have been 
carried into effect in Richmond within the 
last few days .Mrs. Harriet Beecher 
Stowe is clinging to life with remarkable 
power. A week ago she seemed dying, but 
rallied. Feeble as she is, she may live for 
weeks yet.Thomas Ax worthy, City 
Treasurer of Cleveland, Ohio, has disappeared 
leaving a shortage of over $500,000 in the 
public funds in his charge. He was under 
bonds to the amount of $800,000, bis bondsmen 
being millionaire Senator H. B. Payne and 
J. II. Warde Jr., so that the city will lose 
nothing ultimately. Axworthy was a Demo¬ 
crat, bad been in office five years, and, of 
course, was highly esteemed by all.Judge 
Lawrence of the Supreme Court here, has de¬ 
cided that the will of Samuel J. Tilden which 
left several million dollars, (probably $5,000,- 
000) to found a great public library and read¬ 
ing-room, to be known as the Tilden Library, 
in this city, is valid. Tilden’.- nephew, George 
H. Tilden, has been trying to break the will, 
and will now take the esse to the Court of Ap¬ 
peals, whose decision will be final.J. V. 
Williamson, of Philadelphia, is about to build 
there an institution for the education of boys 
in all departments of mechanical labor, sim¬ 
ilar in many respects to Girard’s College. 
The cost is estimated at over $5,000,000. 
The people of Van Buren, Aroostook Co., 
Maine, are plagued with immense swarms of 
rats which have just descended on the place. 
They infest the houses and create havoc in 
stores of grain and provisions. Every effort 
to exterminate them has thus far failed. 
There were 19,912 patents issued last year, and 
of these but 1,083 were granted to Southern¬ 
ers. Texas led the Southern States, a patent 
being granted for every 6,006 Texans. Flor¬ 
ida came next. Mississippi’s ratio was one 
patent to every 25,146 of her population. 
Alabama, in spite of the recent great meeban- 
ical development of the State, was credited 
with but 54 inventions in the year. 
The negotiations between the Sioux and the 
Government for the opening of the Sioux 
reservation to settlement have come to noth¬ 
ing, as the Indians insisted on getting $1.25 
per acre, though a good deal of the land is 
“Herbrand” Fifth Wheel for Buggies .—Adv 
not worth 50 cents per acre. The chief reason 
why Secretary Vilas refused, however, was a 
belief that the possession of so much money 
would retard the progress of civilization 
among the Red Men. The Osages of the 
Indian Territory are the wealthiest Indians 
in the United States; for in addition to large 
farms the interest on their money in the U. S. 
Treasury is enough to give each family of five 
persons $800 a year. They get white men to 
do all the work for them and are lazy, shift¬ 
less and very backward in civilization. It is 
expected that Congress at its next session will 
provide for the opening of the immense Sioux 
reservation without attempting to get the 
consent of the Indians to whom a fair price 
will be paid for the land. Four hundred 
delegates of the Women’s Christian Temper¬ 
ance Union, representing every State and 
Territory, have been in session here during 
the week, and had quite a lively time. In 
the United States there 958 unions, with a 
membership of 164,213. There are 928 young 
ladies’unions, with a membership of 21,278; 
3,427 loyal legions, with 163,743 members, and 
433 coffee houses. The money received 
from the local unions amounted to $227,- 
948. There are now 21 States having pro- 
hibiiory laws in one shape or another .... 
The British American National Association is 
a new organization just formed at Chicago. 
Several Slate British-American Associations 
have already been organized, and others will 
be. “Any male person of good moral charac¬ 
ter who is already or who intends to become 
an American citizen being not less than 18 
years of age, of British birth or the son or 
grandson of such person, and who is prepared 
to subscribe to the declaration of the Nation¬ 
al British-American Association,'’ may be¬ 
come a member. Its object is to induce and 
aid resident English and Scotchman to become 
American citizens, and to secure for Britons 
and their descendants more weight in Nation¬ 
al, State and local government. It is likely 
to be especially directed against the great 
political influence now exercised by Irishman. 
The matter has been agitated in different 
parts of the country for over a year, and an 
unusually large number of English and 
Scotch subjects of Her Majestyjhave been nat¬ 
uralized since the agitation began. 
A Ulessed State ol Adairs. 
It is a blessed state of affairs when good 
becomes contagious. When the endeavor to 
achieve one object accomplishes many. 
Favorable results sometimes get into occult 
sympathy with an established instance of their 
kind and follow with that persistency which 
sometimes characterizes extremes of good and 
bad luck, and accounts fpr the expression, 
“It never rains but it pours.” For instance: 
Danville, Des Moines Co., Ia., July 11, ’88. 
Compound Oxygen saved my life by the bless¬ 
ing of God. Mrs. S. A, Swan. 
Hagerstown, Md., July 14, 1888. 
If it had not been for Compound Oxygen I 
would have been under the sod. 
C. H. Spangler. 
Gainesville, Ga., July 21, 1888. 
I fully believe that Compound Oxygen 
saved my son’s life. M. A. Turner. 
Suffolk, Va., July 10, 1888 
I have used your Compound Oxygen and 
have been greatly benefited thereby. 
L. S. Whaley. 
We publish a brochure of 200 pages, regard¬ 
ing the effect of Compound Oxygen on inva¬ 
lids suffering from consumption, asthma, bron¬ 
chitis, dyspepsia, catarrh, hay fever, headache, 
debility, rheumatism, neuralgia; all chronic 
and nervous disorders. It will be sent, free of 
cnarge, to any one addressing Drs. Starkey 
& Palen, 1529 Arch St., Philadelphia, Pa., or 
331 Montgomery St.,San Francisco, Cal. — Adv. 
AGRICULTURAL NEWS. 
Saturday, October, 27, 1888. 
Thursday was Tobacco Day at the greatex- 
position at Richmond, Va. Very high prices 
were obtained for leaf tobacco, one hogshead 
bringing $4,300. The exhibit was “the most 
complete ever seen anywhere.”.The 
Minnesota College of Agriculture connected 
with the University of Minneapolis has been 
burned. Insured in full: will be immediately 
rebuilt.The Farm School on the exper¬ 
imental farm, at St. Anthony’s Park, Minn¬ 
esota’s second school of agriculture, was 
opened Oct. 18. The Superintendent, W. 
W. Pendagast, expects many applications 
for admission to the two years’ course 
in practical agriculure, horticulture, dairy¬ 
ing, entomology, and botany. 
There’s a report that the Louisiana rice crop 
will be 35 per cent, short.The “Flour 
Trust” is said to have proved a virtual failure. 
Prices were to be uniform; but they are being 
cut on all sides. There were too many out¬ 
siders who were not bound by the “Trust” 
rules, and the members thought it necessary to 
“cut” also.There’s a growing trade in 
fast trotters in South America, especially 
Buenos Ayres. Sec’y Fasig of the Cleveland, 
Ohio, Driving Park, is to take a ship-load of 
trotting horses to the latter place, and after a 
four-days’ trotting meeting, put them up .at 
auction — .. Arthur Brigham, of Marl¬ 
borough, Mass., has been appointed Pro¬ 
fessor of Agriculture in a college in Japan .. 
Spinal meningitis is epidemic among New 
Bedford horses and many valuable animals 
have already died. Nettles are now be¬ 
ing cultivated in many parts of Europe, their 
fibre proving useful for a variety of textile 
fabrics. In Dresden a thread is produced from 
it so fine that a length of sixty miles weighs 
only 2% pounds.Professor N. W. Mc¬ 
Clain, of the Goverment Experiment Station 
at Hinsdale, Illinois, has been appointed Sup¬ 
erintendent of the apiary exhibit of the Paris 
Exposition, to be held in April, 1889 
Total exports of apples up to October 13 were 
24L,562 barrels, against 142.432 barrels in the 
same time last year. Several times the mar¬ 
kets of Great Britain have been glutted with 
fruit from this country and Canada, so that 
prices were merely nominal. 
Crop & ilUvvhrts. 
Saturday, October 27, 1888. 
The Statistician of the Department of Agri¬ 
culture at Washington states that the result 
this year shows that with a season only mod¬ 
erately favorable for the highest development, 
a large crop of potatoes has been made. Con¬ 
dition during the present year has run very 
much as it did in 1884, when the largest crop 
ever grown, with one exception, was made. 
The yield per acre was then 85.7 bushels, with 
total product of 191,000,000 bushels. Assum¬ 
ing that the very similar conditions of the 
present season will give about the same aver¬ 
age, this year’s product, with the increased 
acreage, will be not far from 210,000,000 
bushels, or the largest crop ever made. 
“The best thing yeti” That is the way a 
young man put it who made arrangements to 
work for B. F. Johnson & Co., of Richmond, 
Va. You can get further information by 
dropping them a card.— Adv. 
LATEST MARKETS. 
PRODUCE AND PROVISIONS. 
New York, Saturday, October 27, 1888. 
NEW YORK MARKETS. 
Cotton.— The quotations, according to the American 
classification, are as follows: 
New Orleans. 
Uplands. 
Ordinary.6 11-16 
Strict Ordinary. 7 8-16 
Good Ordinary.8)4 
Strict Good Ordinary.. 8% 
Low Middling .9 5-16 
Strict Low Middling... 9 9-16 
Middling . 9 13-16 
Good Middling.11% 
Strict Good Middling..J0% 
Middling Fair.10% 
Fair.11% 
and Gulf. 
6 13-16 
7 5-16 
8 % 
8% 
9 7-16 
9 11-16 
9 15-16 
1034 
10 % 
10 % 
11 % 
Texas. 
STAINED. 
Good Ordinary.6% I Low Middling. 8% 
Strict Good Ord.7 5-16 I Middling. 9% 
poultry-Livk-FowU. near-by. per tt,ll@H%c; fowls 
Western, per 16, ll@ll%c roosters, per It. 7c; tur¬ 
keys. per ft 9al2c: duexs. western, per pair, 60380c; 
geese, western, per pair, $1 25@1 65; chickens; spring, 
per lb. ll@12c. 
Poultry.—Drksskd— Turkeys, per t>, 6316c; Fowls, 
Philadelphia, — ; do western, 10@lle: squabs, 
white, per doz. $3 50; do dark, per doz, $2 25@2 50; 
chickens Philadelphia spring, 13318c; do western do, 
10@13c; ducks, spring, per lb, 9»20c; do, 9@llc. 
Game.— Woodcock, per i>air, $1: Partridges, per 
pair. 50c3$1 00; Wild Ducks, Canvas back, per pair, 
$2 753 $3 00; do, Red Head, do, 75c©$2 00; Grouse, do, 
6il®90c; Wildd Ducks, Mallard, do, 75®—; do, Teal, do, 
40@—C. 
Hops.— State, new, best, 28@—c: do do, prime, 20317c; 
do, low grades, 23324c; do do, 1887, hest 15@17 ; do do 
do, fair and good lots, I8@14c; do do, common, I2@19c; 
do do. old, —3—c; do, California, new, 24@28c; do do, 
best, old, 14@15c; do do, good, 12@13e; do do, common, 
8@lle. 
Hay and Straw.- Choice Timothy, 90395c; do good 
do, 75385c; do medium, 603 JOc ; shipping, 50@—c; do, 
Clover, mixed, 50@b0c. Straw.—No. 1, rye, 75380c; 
short do, 50@60; oat,45350. 
Beans.— Marrows, new,' $2 503—; new mediums, 
choice, $2 C03- : pea, $2®—; red kidneys, $2 40<*-; 
white kidneys, choice, —®—; foreign, mediums, $1 35 
@1 55; California Lima, $3 00®$3 05; green peas, new. 
$1 65. 
FRUIT AND VEGETABLE MARKETS. 
Vegetables.— Potatoes.—Long Island, per bbl,$175® 
—: New Jersey per bbl. $125381 40; State, per bbl, 
$12V«$165; Sweets, per bbl.$l 253 2 25. Onions, State, 
per bbl 2 0032 25: Orange Co, per bbl, $1 2531 50; 
Cabbages, Long Island, per 1(H). $2 503 3 50: tomatoes, 
per crate 30' 60c. Turnips, Russia. 50375c. Cauli¬ 
flower, per bbl, 75c@$l 75. Onions, Connecticut red, 
per bbl. SI 50@-; do do, white, per bbl. $2 50@$3 00; 
do do, yellow, per bbl. Si 75®$2 00. 
Fruits.— Fresh.— An irregular market for most of 
the offerings of Apples; supply is very liberal ana the 
moderate demand is mainly lor choice. Pears are 
dull. Cranberries are easy in price, with a slow trade. 
Quotations are for : Apples—Pippin, per bbl, SI 50® 
$2 (X); do do, King. SI 7<j'«i$<! 25; do Snow, $2 00®$2 50; 
do, Baldwin, 81 00»1 50, do. Greening. SI c5@$l 75: do. 
common, $1 00</$140. Pears. Duchess, per bbl, $3 40 
®4 00 ; Bartlett, per box. $2 003S8 50; do. Beurre Rose, 
per half bbl. $3 00®$4 00; do, Virgalicu. per, obi, $3 00 
@4 00; do Sheldon, do. *4 00 «5 00; do, Seckel, p' r iif. 
$2 503 4 50: do, Beurre d’Anjou, per bbl. $4 00 a5 00; do 
inferior, do. $2 0032 50. Grapes, Delaware, per lb, 6® 
7c; do. Catawba, do. 4@5; do, Concord, 3 4c ; do, 
Niagara, 4®7c. Cranberries, Cape Cod, choice to 
fancy per bbl, $7 503.8 00; do do, fair, per bbl,S6 50® 
$7 25; ao do; per crate. $2 25@ 2 65; do Jersey, do, $1 50@ 
2 00. Quinces, per bbl, $1 00@$2 50. 
PROVISION MARKETS. 
New York.—Provisions.—Pork.- New mess.15 75316 
25, short clear, 1700@$!9 00, Extra Prime mess, $15 00: 
prime do, $15@15 50, and family mess, $17 00@18 00. 
Beef- India Mess, in tierce^ *19@>3 Extra Mess, :n 
barrels. $7503 8 00; Packet, $9 50@S9 75 per bbl, and 
$18@$13 50 in tierces; Plate. $9 50@10 00; Family at $10 
@$10 50. Hams -$13 00®$13 50, Winter packing. Cut 
Mkat8. - Quoted 12 lb average. Bellies, 9%c ; Pickled 
Hams. 10%@U%c; pickled Shoulders. 9c: Smoked 
shoulders at 994e: do Hams, 12%c. Dressed Hogs.— 
City, heavy to light, 8%@8%c. LARD.-October, $9 40; 
November, $8 84@$H 85; City steam, $9 25; refined 
quoted $10 50 for Contiuent, $11.50 for So. America. 
Philadelphia, Pa.— provisions steady.— Beef.— City 
family, per bbl. $10 00@10 50; do do, packets, $9 50@ 
smoked beef, U@12c; beef hams. $i400315. Pork. 
—Mess. $18 50: do, prime mess, new, $16 50; do family, 
$18 50@20 00 : Hams, smoked, per lb, 13@14c. do, S. 
P., cured in tierces, ll«*12%c; do do. In salt, 10%c; 
sides, clear ribbed, smoked. He; shoulders, In dry salt' 
andfully cured, 9%c : do, do, smoked. 10c Shoulders, 
pickle cured, 9c; do do smoked, 10®10%c: bellies, 
in pickle, 10%@llc: do breakfast bacon, 11%@t2%c; 
Lard.- Steady; Citv refined, $11 503$il 75 ; do steam. 
$11.25® 10.25; butchers’ loose, $lo 00@10 25. 
Chicago.— Mess Pore.- $14 75, Lard- $8 30 per 
100 lbs; Short Rib sides (loose), $7 50; dry salted 
shoulders, boxed. $8 00@$8 25; short clear sides, 
boxed, $8 37%@$850. 
DAIRY AND EGG MARKETS. 
New York.—Butter.— Creamery State. besf.26@27c; 
Elgin, best, 27c; Western, best. 26326%, Western, 
prime, 28325 ; Western, good, 19323: Western, poor, 
Western. June, good to best, 16321; State dairy, half¬ 
firkins tubs best, 243 25 : half firkins, tubs, prime. 213 
22; half-firkins, tubs, flne(l7320: Welsh tubs, flne,21@ 
23: Welsh tubs, good. 17@19: firkins, best, 213—: do, 
prime. 19320: do. fine, 16318. Western—Imitation 
creamery; best. 20"22; do do. fine. 16318: Western 
dairy, fine. 15(g 17; do, fair. 13314; do poor. 12%-: do 
factory, fresh; best, 13%@14; do do. good, 13®—; do do, 
poor, 11%312%; do do, June, 13@14%. 
Cheese— State factory, fancy, white. 1094311; do 
do. colored, 1094311: do do. fine. 10@l(>%- do do. fair 
and good, 93 9%: Ohio * 1 flat, prime,'0310%: do, good, 
939%; skims, light. 7%@8; do, medium, 6%@6%; do, 
full, 1%@2%. 
Eggs,—N ear-by, fresh, ?2@—: Canadian, fresh.-3 
—c: do, ice house. 20 %® 2lc Western, best, 21%@22c; 
do, ice house, 13@21c! limed, 19%@—. 
Philadelphia. Pa.- Butter.— Pennsylvania cream¬ 
ery extra, at ?4c: Western creamery, extra at 16%3l7c; 
B.C. and N Y. creamery, extra, 17c: Western factory 
14315c; packing butter. 11312c. F.ggs — Were firm 
Pennsylvania firsts. 23%c: Western firsts 183i9%o; 
Cheese- Steady; demand fair; New York full cream, at 
9@9%c, Ohio flats choice, 8J4c; do. fair to prime. 7%®8c, 
Chicago, Ill — Butter.— On the Produce Exchange 
to-dav the butter market was tlrm and steadv; Elgin 
creamery, 26%@27%c ; choice choice W f stern, 233 75c. 
choice dairy, 21324c; common to fair, 17@l8e. Eggs 
steady at 18%@19c. 
Boston.— Provisions firm and steady. New Mess 
Pork, $16 753817 00: old do. $16 003$16 25, extra prime, 
new, $15 753$17 00. Lard, $10 5(>3$12. Putter firm; 
Western extra creamery, 25326c : Eastern extra 
creamery, 25. Cheese steadv. Eggs steady ; Eastern 
extras 22c; Michigan extras, 20%@21c; Western firsts 
at 19c. 
GRAIN MARKETS. 
New York.—Grain—Wheat.— Ungraded Winter 
Red, $1063,113; No, 3. Red. $100; No. 2 Red, $111; 
elevator, $1 119431 12%- afloat. $1 1231 12% f. o. b.; 
No. 2 Chicago, $1 14 delivered: do, Milwaukee, nom. 
inal, $109%; No. 1 White, nominal, $1 1031 H; No, 2 
October, closed at 81 10%: do November, 81 11%3> 
$1 11%, '•losing »t $1 12%; do December $1 11%31 18 9-16, 
closing at $1 13%; do May. $1 16%@1 19. closing at 
$1 18%. Rye.— Unchanged in price and dull. Barley.— 
Dull, weak and declining. Barley Malt.— Dull and 
somewhat nominal. Corn.— Sales 4^0 000 bushels 
future. 206,0‘)0bushels spot and arrive, including 
ungraded mixed at 49350%c.: No. 2. Mixed, at 49%@ 
49%c.; in elevator, 49%®49%c. afloat: No. 2 Chi¬ 
cago, 50%c: elevator, 50%c to arrlvi c. f and 1.: No. 2 
October, closing at 49%c.; do November. 4»%@49%c; 
closing at 49%; do December 90%@50%c; closing at 
50%c.-do Jan., 48%348%c., closing at 48%c.-do May, 
closing at 47%c. Oats.— No. 3,29%: do White, 82%c; No. 
2, 30%330%c: do White. 33%@38%c; No, 1 White 40c; 
Mixed Western, 27331%c: White do 80340c; Vo. 2 Oot., 
closing at 30%c: do November 80%o. closing at 30%c; 
do December. s1%381%c. closing at 31%c: do January, 
closing at 82%c. Feed.— Has a light demand. 
40 16 , 75387%c: 60 16 , 72%@80c 80 16 , 803 90c: 100 lb, 92%@ 
$1 00, Sharps, $1 06@$1 15; and Rye feed, 90395c. 
PRODUCE COMMISSION BOUSE 
ESTABLISHED 18«5. 
S. H. & E. H. FROST, 
100 PARK PLACE, N. Y. 
Shippers desiring to favor us will bo furnished sten¬ 
cils, shipping cards, etc., on application. Promptness 
guaranteed. References Rural N'ew-Yorkku, Irving 
National Bank, etc. 
JOJUES 
PAYSth«FREICHT 
» Tern Waar«<a Beales, 
Ir*B L«T«ra, lK« luriifa, ):mi 
!«• 1mm aai Bmom» In far 
cflre 7irtr u}HM 
Jfcitefc »*? Si a a * a a £•, 
BINGKAIMTdBR. %7, 
BUY the WRINGER THAT 
SAVES 
THE MOST LABOR 
PURCHASE GEAR 
l Saves half the labor of other 
wringers, and costs but little more. 
CMDIDCDocanot GREASE 
„ _ _tlVIrlntThe CLOTHES. 
Solid White Rubber Rolls. Warranted. Agents 
wanted everywhere. Empire W. Co., Auburn, N. Y. 
Beautiful New Upright Piano, 
Rosewood Case, only #l«5. New 
Organs, only #31. Greatest Bar¬ 
gains Ever Offered. Est. 28 Years. 
GEM PIANO & ORGAN CO. 
Washington, N. J., U, S. A, 
VEGETABLE GUTTERS. 
Si 'es to cut fine or coarse, suit 
able for Cattle or Sheep; 
turned by a boy; will easily 
cut two bushels a minute. 
Lowest in Price, 
Easiest Worked, 
Most Rapid & Durable 
iu Use. 
T < 
Belcher & Taylor 
Agricultural Tool Company. 
Send for Circular. Box 75, Chicopee Falls, Mass 
For Lumbermen andWood Cutters. 
Cheapest and best ever made. Sets a saw in three 
minutes. Also, Champion Gauge for cutting raker 
teeth proper length. Any one can use them. Sample 
of each, by mail, on receipt of $1. Circulars free. 
J. E. WHITING, Montrose, Pa. 
34. SIZE SAW SET 
Warner’s Log Cabin Remedies—old fash¬ 
ioned, simple compounds, used in the days of 
our hardy forefathers, are “old timers” 
but “old reliable.” They comprise a “Sarsa¬ 
parilla,” “Hops and Buchu Remedy,” “Cough 
and Consumption Remedy,” “Hair Tonic,’ 1 
“Extract” for External and Internal Use, 
“Plasters,” “Rose Cream,” for Catarrh and 
“Liver Pills.” They are put up by H. H. 
Warner & Co., proprietors of Warner’s Safe 
Remedies, and promise to equal the standard 
value of those great preparations. All drug¬ 
gists keep them. 
Tho Myatio OracU with which you can tall any poraon* aga or any number 
1 thought of, tha llandkarchiaf, iiat. Fan, Panned and GUra Flirtation*, and 
Bampla Book of Card*, all only two c*nu« Eagla Card Work*, CADIZ, OUMA 
