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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1892-6-23, Page 6• TOTING FOLKS. The Tone of Voioe.. t is not so numi what emu say, As the =eater in which you sktY it It isnot so reach the language you Ilse, As the tones in which you convey It. "Conte here 1 I sharply said, And the baby cowered and wept: 'Come here!. "1 cooed, and he looked ELZ1d A.nd straight to nay lap he crept. no words may be mild and fair, And the tones may pierce like a dart : The words may be soft as; the summer air, And the tones, may break the heart. For words but come from the mind. And grow by study and art; But the tones leap forth from the inner self, Anti reveal the state of the heart. 'Whether you know it or not— Whether you mean or care— Gentleness, kindness, love and hate. Envy and anger aro there. Then would you quarrels avoid, And in peace and love rejoice, 1,Ceep angel notonly out of your words, Butkeep it out of your voice. One of the First Ainciples, It is exceedingly distressing to a humane person to see the indifference toward the comfort and life of dumb animals by little children. This is not the fault of the child as it is the fs.ult of the mother, who allows thelittle one in early childhood to tease the kitten, pester the 'patient house -dog and otherwise show their lunnan supremacy over the dumb world. This is the begin- ning of a training hi cruelty of more im- portance to the clattraoter ot a growing girl or bcy than the mother realizes. When the boy gete a little older asid has often laid a foundation , for the hardened character -which men of good family somethnes exhi- bit in after life. - Boys and girls should be taught from their earliest infancy to respect the rights of ani- mals. They should be taught to watch the grace and beauty of the growing life around them. It is a eery bad thing to allow a child to set traps, even for wild game. It is an equally bad training to allow boys to 'witness, as they often do the tortures of the slaughter -house. When animal life must be taken, it should he done out of the presence of the impressible nature of child- hood, Love and respect for all creatures which God has put into the world are among the earliest 1 essons which should he inculcat- ed at home, Mothers who are verycareful about the religious training of their children and in- culeate precept upon precept for their guid- ance are often careless themselves about the example -set. A little child is naturelly hu- mane, lint if be sees the household animals around him treated with indifference or un- kindness ho EOM learns the lesson taught him. It is far better to destroy tramp cats and dogs in some quiet, htunane =near than to allow them to lead a, precarious existence around the household, the butt of every one. For this very thoughtlessness in itself encourages cruelty. If there seems to be a disposition in a little one it can be corrected in early childhood by interesting it in the habits of the Animal, its beautiful fur, its soft tread and agile movement. little story of the history of its race told in language suited to the comprehension of the little olio will serve a lesson and teach him that this creature of God has been put here as a gift to man to be respected and cared for end not as a plaything to be petted 1 or a moment and then to be thrown aside. It is wise to let a child have animals and hold him responsible for the care of them, and to take them away if he neglects them or i cruel to them. This will teach the lesson well taught in the familiar wards of "The !indent Mariner": He prayeth host who loveth best All things, both great end small, Fox the dear Get' who lot eth us He made and loveth ItiL Useful Hints for Youthful Gardeners. EY CELIA TILIXTER Nothing is so delightful for our young people, especially our girls, than home gar- dening. It is a healthful recreation and a perpetual aid to the uuderstanding of na- ture's wonders. Let me suggest the Drummond phlox gardens will bo interesting all segmerer They repay any care„W.I..t.....k&---Olonderful readiness an Ma • th, say, you have your seeds and 0-icalthlif loveliness. Now on your tools, your beds all forked, manured, hoed, raked and ready for planting. One thing more you need—a piece of board about two feet long and seven inches wide. You stand by your little plot of brown earth and think of all it bolds for you of beauty and delight, that you are the ma- gician who will caU forth all that sweet pageant from the silent, passive soil. It eeems a very simple thing, the planting of a seed, but I never do it without a feeling of awe, as if it were a sacred thing among the mysteries of God. You kneel by the little plot—if the ground is damp bring a mat or a piece of folded carpet to kneel on, for you don't wish to take a cold as the first step in your gardening. You lay your bit of board straight across the bed about, four inchces from the end. You lean one arm on it to hold it firm, and with a little stick draw a furrow an inch deep in the earth along its edge, straight and equal as you can in depth all thn way. Into this begin to drop your seeds as evenly as may be—they are so large yon can see them distinctly. When yon have sown that furrow make another on the opposite edge of the board and fill that. Then lift the board and lay it down carefully on the other side of the last furrow and again make a groove along the edge and plant, and so on to the end of the bed. The width of the board gives yeti _just the right distance between bate rows and saves a dem Cf Olible 111 111 E.:=11:iii Now with your hand thaw over the seeds the earth that was displaced in making the furrow ; it will give them just the right depth of covering—about twice their di- ameter. That is the rule for planting id - most all seeds. Now take your board and lay it over each row, lean on it gently to make the earth, perfectly firm—not packed bard, but firm. Do this all along the length of the bed till it is literaIly smooth as a carpet. Now take your watering -pot and • lightly sprinkle the bed all over. Don't • sprinkle ..eo long in one place or you will wash out your seeds ; go round and round the bed, holding the watering -pot high as you can to matte the shower ae gentle as possible. You need only just to make the surface damp. Water the bed lightly every night at • sunset—usiless it should rain. If the soft May showers deeeencl, every drop is pre. • cious—there is nothing so good as the sweet rain of heavea for our gardens. If the • weather is wcirm and your watering is faith- fully done, you 'should see in a week, or ten days at most, faint green shoots along the straight linos you planted. , • And nvon Shaw you' the advantages oleplautiUgaest Carefully, in straight lines. Before the itself appears you will see can el:- ta corning up all over the bed doubtless. These,;are the weeds that you Will have to week and fight with ell year 'might, for they are estranger and More de. termined then I can find any words to tell you. While they are yet young pull up every one. You know where your precious flowers are—they are safe in their orderly processious of straieht lines and then, pess yoor handfork-like a comb to and fro in the soil to remove roots and disturb new • sproues, but be very eared not to go too, near your phlox pleas, except to pull with careful finger and thumb the little weeds that lia-ve sprouted very near. This yon will have to repeat again end again—new weeds keep coining in succession. In the second or third week in May you may transplant your sweet peas from the house boxes to the open-air garden. People do not generally know that sweet pees are most easily and successfully transplanted. I discovered it for myself accidentally—in fact, I was drivee to it by my little friend, the song -sparrow, at the Isles of Shoals. The place is possessed by these dear, friendly little birds whose song is sweeter than words MU express, but they will hardly let me plant at all out of doors, screeching up and eating the seeds ae fast as I can put them in. They are so tame, they sit on the fence of my little inelosure and eye me Iseekanne if they see nee at work putting seeds in the ground, and the moment I leave the spot, or they think I have left it, dowe they swoop and go from one end to the other of my carefully planted furrows and take every seed, leaving only the empty hollow groove freshly dug out by their little feet. It is trying, and when I do plant out of doors I am obliged to have a cover of woven wire to fit over my flower beds to keep off the dear httle pests. They are especially trying in the case of sweet peas, for they wait till the peas begin to sprout and then they devour every single one ! Now for the fun Of transplanting 1 It is the most enchanting work in the world. If the day is overcast very good, hat if it is the sunniest ever dawned no matter ; if you put down your plants as I shall teach you they will not droop a leaf in the hot- test sun. Your little garden bed is all ready, your boxes of treasures about you. Now take your hoe end make a straight line about four inches from the edge of your bed, lengthwise; if you find difficulty in making it straight, take a, string tiecl to two sticks, push the sticks into the ground, drawing the strings tight between, and you will have your straight line. Take the hoe and cut clown evenly from this line, drawing the earth toward you and leaving the smooth cutting six inches deep against which to stand your plants for support. Slip your hancl into one corner of your plant box down to the very bottom and take up carefully a few pea plants. Once a few are removed, the rest will come up easily. Don't break the Jong white roots or dis- lodge the little pea still clinging there if you can help it. Stand each plant against the wall you have sliced down smooth with your hoe. Put the pleas hi, not more than three inches apart, with the roots straight down, but if very long no matter if the ends lie horizontally an inch in the bottom of the trench; draw the earth half way up over them loosely so to hold them in place, and then gently fill the trench with water, draw the rest of the earth about the roots, press it firmly witb your hands abont each separate plant, melting each stand perfect- ly covered, indeed, the earth may come up an inch about each slender stem without doing any harm. This is delightful work, and when your first row is done you will look at it with joy and pride, so green, so fresh, so promising it will be. You can scarcely make the soil too rich or keep it too moist for the well-being of pansies. For the enriching of your bed— four feats by two wide—I should pu t a bush- el at least of well -rotted cow manure and mix it most thoroughly with the soil, And if you can find a spot which the sun reaches for only half the day they will flourish much better than if they have his liett contmual- ly and their flowers will be twice as large. Pansies love the shade. If you make your bed under some tree, they will like it much. If you are transplanting, you must set the little plants about four inches apart. When all are in and the bed is full, water them copiouely ; if the sen shines, cover them with newspapers pegged down till evening etesenetake,..offeel Enispeyerings—don'tiesr-e get. If next day is briglir enni5Crcover once more, keep wet, and in a few days the bed will be safe. I think the poppy gardens must have three beds four feet long and two wide. Then we canplant each kind. by itself, Cali- fornia poppies in one, in the second the mixed carnation poppies, and in the last the wonderful Shirleys. I should add a peck of sand with the half bushel ot manure to each bed. Cover the seeds with only a slight layer of soil about twice their thick- ness ; hardly a layer at all in the case of the Shirley seeds, for they are so delicate as to be almost invisible; the carnations are much larger, the Californias larger still. Cover them with newspapers and water every night (unless the weather is wet for Iwo or three days.) They should be up in a week if the weather is favorable. Those who choose nasturtiums for a gar- den will have but little care, for they flour- ish in all sorts of soils and don't want watering unless there should be desperate drought, and once freed from weeds they take care of themselves almost entirely. The seeds themselves are most interesting. They are carefully ornamented. Deep grooves run parallel to each other from and to end of the seed, which is like a clumsy Dutch,boat in shape, but -what a freight of loveliness each carries below its shelving deck A nasturtium garden need not be manur- ed. I have found the poorer the soil the richer the flowers will be. If the Eiji should be rich the plants will run to leaves and the flowers will be comparatively few. Plent them, after your bed is thor- oughly laid out as for phlox, in straight lino as much as six inches apart, at least, for they must have room on all sides to grow. Cover them a half an inch deep, press down the earth and leave them, They will germinate more rapidly if you water the bed at night if the weather is dry. But after they are un I never water them any more; they don't like it ; don't need it. Put your row of climbers against the house, or a fence or large rocks. For rose cazrmion gardens plant the fine seeds that are very like poppy seeds, in the same way as the phlox seeds. No Career for Him. Nice Little Boy—"I wish you would teach me to black boots," Bnotblack—"Wat fur?" "I am not satisfied with my aimless exis- tence at home, and I wish to be indepen- dent." "I see. Kin you lick one boy twice as big as y'rself wid one hand, hold y'r kit in th' other an' keep off two other boys wid eter feet V'• "Too bad. You Won't do Inc a 'bootblack, Pm 'fraid you'll have ter go home an' grow up a dude. Cyclopedia,. A feller came out Isere to -day- showed a book tome; One 'at rd sure'y mIghter have—twelve parts, 'lisl one was free, He said, ez how 'ttvas sure to tell me all I'd waiter know, 'N' 'called the thing a Cyclopee-or suthin' kinder so It seemed, a purty fine old book—a reglar sort re- prize— Ontil I ast him questions, when I seen he'd told inc lies, "Tolls ev'rything 1" says L "That's good. in face, sir, that's the best Kind of a book I ever seed, but think Id, like a test Before I buy her. Lemme see! Whatdoes the volt me say About the prospects of the comin1 year for oats 'Wiley?" I thought he'd flop for langhin' when I ast the feller that. 'N' whenI ast him "What's the joke?" he look-, ed almighty flat. "It don't prognosticate," says bre, "That ain't the p'int! 'says L "What I'm a-astin' you is will the blame thing prophesy?" 'N' then he turned the pages quick, h' showed inc lots o' stuff About Egyptians. and a squib about an Earl named Duff. 13lit when 1 ast him if it told a cure for tater bugs, He said it didn't, but it had a history of rugs! 'Nd be domed if that there book he said would tell so much Had, anything on any page I'd ever care to touch . 'N' then—haw! ha w IL—I chucked that pert seeing swindler from the place So quick he hadn't tbne to take his smile down on. his face: 'Nd after him 1 threw his bag 'n' twelve -part Cyciopee— My great-grandfather's almanac's still good enough forme! - [dolmKendrick Bangs, in Harper's Magazine. Old Times, Old Friends, Old Love. There are no days like the good old days— The days, when we were youthf ! When humankind were pure of mind, Arid speech and deeds wore truthful? Before a love of sordid gold Became man's ruling passion, And before each maid and dame boom* Slave to the tyrant Fashion! There ere no girllike the good old girls— Agaiwit the world I'd stake 'eat! A8 buxom and mart and as clean of heart As the Lord know how to make 'em 1 They wore rich in spirit and common sense, And piety all supportin' ; They- would bake and brew, and had taught school, too, And. they made the likeliest courtin' There aro no boys like the good old boys— When we were boys together 1 When the grass was sweet to the brown bare feet That dimpled the laughing heather ; When the pewee sang to the Summer dawn Of the bee in the billow clover, Or down by tho mill the whippoorwill Echoed his night song over. There is no love like the good old love— The love that mother gave IN! We are old, old men, yet we pine again For thatprecions grace -God gave us 1 So we dream and dream of the good old times, And our hearts grow tenderer. fonder, As those dear old dreams bring soothing gleams Of heaven away off yonder. EUGENE FIELD. The Gift of the Sea. The dead child lay in the shroud, Ar.cl the widow watched beside. And her mother slept and the channel swept The gale in the teeth of the tide. But the mother laughed at all, "I have lost Inv, man in the. sea, And the child is dead. Be still," she said, " What more can ye do to me!" The widow watched the (lead, And. the candle guttered low. And she tried to sing the Passing Sons That bids the poor soul go. And "Mary take you now," she sang, " That lay against my heart." Ard " Mary smooth your crib to -night," But she could not say "Depart.' Then came a cry from the sea, But the sea -time blinded the glass, And " Heard ye nothing, mother?" she said, " 'Tis the chilcl that waits to pass. And the nodding mother sighed, "'Tis a lambling ewe in the whin, For why should the christened soul cry out That never know of sin 1" "0, feet I have held in my hand, 0, hands at my heart to catch • How should they know the road to go, And how should they lift the la tchl " They laid a sheet to the door, With the little quilt atop. That it might npt, hurt frepl_the ..cold- Or the, —hut the crying would not stop. The widow lifted. the latch And Strain ed her eyes to see. And opened the door on the bitter shore To let the soul go free." There was neither glimmer nor ghost. There was neither spirit nor spark, And "Hoard ye nothing, mother ?" she said, "Tis crying for me in the dark." And the nodding mother sighed, "Tis sorrow makes ye dull; Have ve yet to learn the cry of t'ne tern, Or the wail of the wind-blown guilt" "The terns are blown in'and, The gray gull follows the plough. 'Twas never a bird, the voice I heard. Oh, mother, I hear it now! " "Lie still, dear lamb. lie still ; The child is passed from harm. 'Tis the ache in your brea,-t that broke your rest. And the feel of an empty arm.' She put her mother aside, "In Mary's name let be! For the peace of my soul I must go," she said, And she went to the calling sea. In the heel of the wind -bit pier, Where the twisted weed was plied, She came to the life she had missed by an hour, For she came to a little child. She laid it into her breast, And back to her mother she came, But it would not feed and it would not heed, Though she gave it her own child's name. And the dead child dripped on her breast, And her own in the shoud lay stark; And "God forgive us, mother," she said, We let it the in the dark!" • RUDYARD KIPLING. Fatal Duel in Hungary. A duel with pistols, which has had a tragic ending, was fought here on Wednesday morning between two notable members of Hungarian society. The quarrel arose un- der the following circumstances : On the 6th of June the Emperor is to visit Buda- pest for the pupose of celebrating the jubi- lee of his coronation as King of Hungary. In his State entry into the city His Majesty is to be accompanied by a brilliant escort of Hungarian nobles on horseback, in the meg- nificent native costumes of Magyar mag- nates. There has been great rivalry amongst the young nobles to take part in this caval- cade, and among others M. Karsaf, a great landowner, put forward a claim to be in- • cluded in the list. M. Karsaf, who is a Jew, was, however, excluded. Taking great um - barge at this, for which he held Baron Aczel, a prominent member of the Diet, primarily responsible, he sent his seconds to this gentleman, and a meeting took place this morning. M. Karol was seriously wound- ed, his adversary's bullet striking him in • the breast. lie was DA once attended to by the doctors present on the ground, and as soon as possible removed to a neighbouring house, but no hope is entertained of his re- covery. • Children Cry for Pitcher's Castort4 DNS' nESII AS ItIIIXATI ROOD. An ingenious unteher Serves a Savory Dish to Sits Customers. A trial of more than meal interest wese terminated at Lille, France, on Saturday. Prior to Oetober last there lived at Roubaix a certain Gustave Rasson and his wife, who had succeeded in building up a highly - prosperous butcher's'business. The Reasons went in for specialities. Their venison was regarded with affection, and their sauages, which possessed &peculiarly savoury flavour, were talked of for miles. It may be imagined therefore, that when, on the 26th of last October, a warrant was issued for their ar- rest upon a charge of systematioally dealing in dogs' flesh, and selling it for human food, the indignation of their numerous custom- ers was intense. Gustave Rasson succeeded in escaping across the frontier into Belgium, but his wife and one of the shopmen were arrested, and on Saturday came up for their trial. Mr. Leolercq, the health inspector of the town of Roubaix, testified that on the 25th of Octeber last he had seized four pounds of chops which he found in a basket in the possession of Madame Rasson. He arrested her, and found at the back of the butcher's shop a regular slaughter -house containing all the necessary instruments, thirteen dogs' carcaaea, about sixty dogs' skins pegged out and drying, and some liv- ing dogs awaiting their turn to be converted into provender. M. Roger, a veterinary surgeon, testified to having been called in to examine the chops seized by the health officers. He at once declared them to be dogs' flesh. Questioned by the president, the wituess stated that dog's flesh was not daneerous to health providing the animal hadbno disease, Several of the regular cus- tomers of the esto.blishnient testified that they had patronised the Rassons because of the distinct and agreeable flavor of their sausage meat. It was also shosve that -the Rassons had been in the habit of slaughter- ing about a dozen dogs each week. The Court sentenced Gustave Rasson in default to six months' imprisonment, his wife to six months, and the shopman to three months, with an additional fine in each case. The French Executioner. The execationer is still regarded in France with much of the abhorrence which has always been felt for bim, but although he is an outcast from the ordinary world, admis- sion to the churches, promenades, and public places generally is not to -day, as it once was, denied to Lim. Whenever his place becomes vacant there is a rush of candi- dates for it more multitudinous, and more eager, than for any other State office what- soever. To be "Monsieur de Paris," as the executioner is styled, seems a pinnacle of ambition with only too large a section of the public. The executioner bas generally been more loathed in France than even in Eng- land. And justly so; for in the former country his work, for many centuries, has been peculiarly infamous, eot to say diaboli- cal. In the present day, it is true, "Monsieur de Paris" simply touches a button, and his victim, without a struggle or a pang, is no more. But he was not always so humane. Once it was his own hand that dealt slow death, and inflicted fiendish torture. It was he who quartered the condemnedwretch —who attached horses, that is to s5y1 to his arms and legs, and then drove them in four different directions. It was he who burned, or broke on the wheel—the latter an in- describably ghastly operation, in which he used an iron bar to break every bone in the victim's body. It is not surprising, there- fore, that even to -day "Monsieur de Paris" should be the object of a detestation which Ketch bimself failed to excite. Cupid Was Disagreeable, "miss Box made a proposal to me last night." " Ha ! You're in luck." "She proposed that I spend my evenings elsewhere, as she expected soon to become engaged." Ten men remain honest through fear of man's law where one does through fear of God's law. The Rend Surgeon , Of the Lubon Medical Company is nog- 'at Toronto, Canada, and may be consulted either in person or by letter on all chronic' diseases peculiar to mau. Min, young, old, or middle-aged, who find themselves nerv- ous, weak and exhausted, who are broken down from excess or overwork, resulting in many of tbe following symptoms : Mental depression, premature old age, loss of vital- ity, loss of memory, bad dreams, dimness of sight, palpitation of the heart, emissions, lack of energy, pain in the kiudeys, head- ache, pimples on the face or body, itching or peculiar sensation about the scrotum, wasting of the organs, dizziness, specks before the eyes, twitching of the muscles, ;eye lids and elsewhere,bashfulness, deposits in the urine, loss of willpower, tenderness of he scalp and spine, weak and flabby muscles, desire to sleep, failure to be rested by sleep, ;constipation, dullness of hearing. loss of voice, !desire for solitude, excitability of temper, Isunkeu eyes surrounded with LEADEN °max, ;oily looking skin, etc., are all symptoms of mervous debility that lead to insanity and ;death unless cured. 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Manufacturers and Wholesale Dealers in the following specialties : 1.4ardizto 071z2n.der Red Engine OILSWool Eurelta TRY OUR LARDINE MACHINE OIL AND YOU WILL USE NO OTHER. For Sale By BiSSETT BROS. Exeter, Ont. EIMISCREMPIME1101WEBOSSE PS“TOMMTVOIMMIT•0141,1M APPLICATIONS THOROUGHLY REMOVES DANDRUFF iNillitA VS 33. L. CAVIEN, Toronto, Travelling Passenger Agent. C F Ii.. Says: Anti•Dandruff la a perfoctromover of Dan. drittr-its action la marvelloua—in my own case afew applications net only thoroughly removed Gexcessive dandruff accumulation but stopped UARAIITEED /von.„,ovs1,11,1;; raiLadwatt soft and pliable and Restores Fading hair to 11 original Wog. • Stops falling of hair, Keeps the Scalp clean. Makes hair soft and Pita* Prolltes Growth. EXETER LUMBER YARD The undersigned wishes to inform the Public in general that h. keeps constantly in stock all kinds of BUILDING MATEFIJIAL E7rozaed or Insdreed. PIN E AND HEMLOCK LUMBER. SHIN GLE S A SPE 0 I A.LT Y 900;000 XX and XXX Pine and Cedar Shingles now in stock. A call solicited and satisfaction guaranted. %TAMES WILLIO. BEFORE AND AFTER USE. SPANISH NERVIN 'THE CREAT SPANISH REMEDY, Easilyquickly andpernia- nently restores Weakness, Nervousness and Lost Manhood., A. GIT.4.12AXTRILD rpoctfic for Fits and Neuralgia, Hysteria, DizzinesS, con- vulsions, wog us• Prostration caused by the use of Tobacco or Alcohol, Loss 01 l'frWer in either Sex, Involuntary Losses, cansed by over-lndul. gence. We guarantee six boxes to etre any ease or refund the money. $8 bnyta21PrAelNiabslue DlluzgEgI loots.Mor Co.- •\.„ tbroaxo, rr5, .ihrotx.erts. for $5* Address IL 6.8A01gde A. A. BROWN & CO., Agentstor Canada, Windsor, Ont. •••••••••,....- (4, e f"'" A 8s. 60" c5) 0-4 e, •CN - 110 o'C‘ "s• 00 "N.0 • .co. 4CS.C" \e" q,4 SOS e, 4 NtS' • CP c, •%• 'N.00z" W0i`. 4`vb ci'43> w 6c 0 •vg, s„,, N.- N. • ••cP 1 c' rC "NN•C' .c50 ..012 .4.4e1 ° 'N. eccc's e ,o,00 .0.e13,65S• ° `'`'\•‘. ‘b • Manufactured only by Themes Holloway, 78, New (Weld Street, late 585, Oxford Street, London. ..,i) rfir Parchasers should look to the Label on the Boxes and Pots If the address is not 53S, Oxford Street, Landon, they are spurious. :;•1 THPIWBEST COUGH -BM SOLD SY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE. E E eQ1 NRE 1 NERVE BEANS NERVE BEANS are a new dis- covery that cure the wont cases of Nervous Debility, Lost Vigor and Failing Manhood; reetores the weakness of body' or mind caused by over -work, er the errors or ex- cesses of yOuth, This ItereedY ab- o1uteiy cures the Most obstinate eases when all other wiecianzrers have tailed event° relieife. Sold by drug- gists at glum. package, 'or six for $5, orment by mail on receipt of 'price by' addressing THE a-Amns CO -I Toronto, Ont. Write for pamiiiiiist. Sold in— , MON earl ue earned at ettrNEWline Of worlc, rapidly arid honorably, by tlitlie of either ACX yoking, or Old, mid in Mari ownlooall'llos,wheroyer they live. ANY ono min do the work. Env in learn. Bre furnish eye ything. We start you. No rink. Toe eon devote your spare moments, or all pier limo to ilia work. This is NA entirely Ow leaddind brings wonderful 0000000 10 everyWorker• Beginners aro earaluir &ern 885 to 810 per week and Upwards, and more after a little experienee. We ecu famish yok 1110 0151. ploymeut and teach you FERE. 'No npaeotd explain tore. Suit Information 'FRE& TRAT30 diz CO., AUGUSTA. ILUND, BREAD -MAKER'S 31"26141..194M NEVER EAU TO OWE HATISFAOHOD Fen SALE SY ALL DEALERO . , • • •