Chapter 5

moth tacked to board

How to catch and how to prepare them for the Cabinet, Comprising a Manual of Instruction for the Field Naturalist. ByWalter P. Manton. Cloth, illustrated. Price, 50 cents.

The young naturalist will seize this book with avidity and study it with an earnestness proportioned to his delight in bug-catching.

Two of the above books given to any subscriber sending us one new subscription toThe PansyorOur Little Men and Women.

A BOY’S WORKSHOP.

Given to any subscriber sending one new subscriber toThe PansyorOur Little Men and Womenbefore Sept. 15th.

ByA Boy and His Friends. With an introduction by Henry Randall Waite. A fascinating little volume full of practical ideas for the benefit of boys who are getting their first training in the use of tools. Price, $1.

Subscriptions to the Magazines givenas Premiums.

These Special Offers are good only to Sept. 15th.

We will sendWide Awakeone year, free, for new subscriptions to any of the four magazines (Wide Awake, The Pansy, Our Little Men and Women and Babyland) amounting to $6.00.We will sendThe Pansyone year, free, for new subscriptions to any of the four magazines (Wide Awake, The Pansy, Our Little Men and Women and Babyland) amounting to $2.00.We will sendOur Little Men and Womenone year, free, for new subscriptions to any of the four magazines (Wide Awake, The Pansy, Our Little Men and Women and Babyland) amounting to $2.00.We will sendBabylandone year, free, for new subscriptions to any of our magazines (Wide Awake, The Pansy, Our Little Men and Women and Babyland) amounting to $1.00.

We will sendWide Awakeone year, free, for new subscriptions to any of the four magazines (Wide Awake, The Pansy, Our Little Men and Women and Babyland) amounting to $6.00.

We will sendThe Pansyone year, free, for new subscriptions to any of the four magazines (Wide Awake, The Pansy, Our Little Men and Women and Babyland) amounting to $2.00.

We will sendOur Little Men and Womenone year, free, for new subscriptions to any of the four magazines (Wide Awake, The Pansy, Our Little Men and Women and Babyland) amounting to $2.00.

We will sendBabylandone year, free, for new subscriptions to any of our magazines (Wide Awake, The Pansy, Our Little Men and Women and Babyland) amounting to $1.00.

D. LOTHROP & CO., Publishers, Franklin and Hawley Sts., Boston.

Good Housekeeping

A SEMI-MONTHLY FAMILY JOURNAL

Conducted in the Interests of the

Higher Life of the Household.

READ WHAT THE NEW YORK TRIBUNE SAYS ABOUT GOOD HOUSEKEEPING.

One of the most admirable family journals ever published is that which is brought out in Holyoke, Mass. and New York under the title ofGood Housekeeping, by Clark W. Bryan & Co. It is a practical and interesting instructor in all pleasant, refined and healthful modes of living. It is full of good sense, and its lessons, whether in manners, morals, food, needlework and household management, are generally the best of their kind. The number of May 15 opensGood Housekeeping’ssecond year—a year which it is to be hoped will add to its already established prosperity.—New York Daily Tribune, May 11th, 1886.

READ WHAT THE GOSPEL BANNER (Augusta, Me.) SAYS ABOUT GOOD HOUSEKEEPING.

Good Housekeepingis a fortnightly magazine conducted in the interest of every department of household management. It has rapidly advanced in public favor in its first year, which is due to the excellent articles from its special contributors and the superior mechanical work represented in its successive numbers. All the details of housekeeping from cellar to attic, kitchen to parlor, cookery to adornments, are attended to in the course of the yearly issues, while good contributions on purely literary topics are not lacking. Holyoke, Mass., and N. Y.: Clark W. Bryan & Co. $2.50 a year; $1.50 for six months; $1.00 for four months; 10 cents single copy.

During the first year of its publicationGood Housekeepinghas won for itself an enviable reputation in the Homes of the World. Its pages have been industriously and faithfully devoted to the improvement and development of the nobler and more desirable features of Home Life.

It is original in design, comprehensive in management and strong in individuality of character and conduct. Its discussions have been practical and had with a view of being elevating, instructive and useful in the highest degree to every one having an ambition or desire to make the Home attractive and those who dwell there to feel that “there’s no place like home.”

It has won the commendations of the press, not only in its own country, but in many others where the English language is spoken, such as has never been accorded to a family publication of such tender years.

It numbers among its list of contributors many of the ablest and most noted writers of the day, on family topics, and these are supplemented by contributions from the pens of many practical and successful housekeepers measurably unknown to fame but none the less valuable workers in the field of Home Literature.

Among these may be mentioned Catherine Owen, Rose Terry Cooke, Marion Harland, Maria Parloa, Hester M. Poole, Christine Terhune Herrick, H. Annette Poole, Margaret Sidney, Mrs. D. H. R. Goodale, Dora Reade Goodale, Helen Campbell, Mrs. H. M. Plunkett, Helen Chase, Mary E. Dewey, Lucretia P. Hale, Margaret Eytinge, Anna L. Dawes, E. C. Gardner, William Paul Gerhard, Dr. F. M. Hexamer, Milton Bradley, etc., etc.

Good Housekeepingis published semi-monthly at $2.50 a year, and is sold on the news stands of the country, also by newsboys on trains and boats, at 10 cents a copy.

CLARK W. BRYAN & CO., Publishers,New York Office, 239 Broadway.HOLYOKE, MASS.

Imperial Granum Ad

Imperial Granum

The Great MedicinalFood

THIS WORLD RENOWNED DIETETIC PREPARATION

IS PRESENTED WITH THE ASSURANCE THAT IT IS THESAFEST, MOSTNICELY PREPARED, AND RELIABLEMEDICINAL FOODTHAT SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH CAN YIELD. IT HAS ACQUIRED THE REPUTATION OF BEING AN ALIMENT THE STOMACH SELDOM, IF EVER, REJECTS.CONDITION NOT EXCEPTED: AND, WHILE IT WOULD BE DIFFICULT TO CONCEIVE OF ANYTHING IN FOOD MORE DELICIOUS, OR MORESOOTHINGANDNOURISHINGAS AN ALIMENT FOR INVALIDS, AND THE AGED, AND FOR THE GROWTH AND PROTECTION OF CHILDREN. ITS RAREMEDICINAL EXCELLENCEIN INANITION DUE TO MAL-ASSIMILATION, CHRONIC, GASTRIC, ANDINTESTINAL DISEASES, (ESPECIALLYINCHOLERA,DYSENTERY,CHRONIC DIARRŒA, ANDCHOLERA INFANTUM,) HAS BEENINCONTESTABLY PROVEN:—OFTEN IN INSTANCES OF CONSULTATION OVER PATIENTS WHOSE DIGESTIVE ORGANS WERE REDUCED TO SUCH A LOW AND SENSITIVE CONDITION THAT THE GRANUM WAS THE ONLY THING THE STOMACH WOULD TOLERATE WHEN LIFE SEEMED DEPENDING ON ITS RETENTION.

“NONPAREIL.”

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TRADEMARK REGISTERED JUNE 5TH 1877.

the Life

SOLD BY DRUGGISTS

SHIPPING DEPOT.

John Carle & Sons, New York

two women in long dresses , one with parsol sitting in hammock

To preserve the richness of color or delicacy of tint of your summer dresses, make suds of hot water andIvory Soap, allow to cool until lukewarm, then wash your dresses in the solution. Ordinary soaps contain too much alkali, which in a short time bleaches the color and destroys its beauty. Prof. Silliman, of Yale College, “TheIvory Soapcan not injure the most delicate fabric.”

A WORD OF WARNING.

There are many white soaps, each represented to be “just as good as the ‘Ivory’;” they ARE NOT, but like all counterfeits, lack the peculiar and remarkable qualities of the genuine. Ask for “Ivory” Soap and insist upon getting it.

There are many white soaps, each represented to be “just as good as the ‘Ivory’;” they ARE NOT, but like all counterfeits, lack the peculiar and remarkable qualities of the genuine. Ask for “Ivory” Soap and insist upon getting it.

Copyright 1886, by Procter & Gamble.

Transcriber’s Note:Obvious punctuation errors repaired.Page 319, “symp thy” changed to “sympathy” (do not give sympathy)Final advertisement on back cover had a label over the bottom left of the first paragraph. Words and letters were filled in using a copy of the same advertisement.

Transcriber’s Note:

Obvious punctuation errors repaired.

Page 319, “symp thy” changed to “sympathy” (do not give sympathy)

Final advertisement on back cover had a label over the bottom left of the first paragraph. Words and letters were filled in using a copy of the same advertisement.


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