Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 4 August 1888 — Page 5

lx st r.nicdy for

all complaints peculiar

to women.

Sold bv Cvnry Druggist in Tows.

THEJOURNAL.

SATURDAY, AUGUST 4. 1888.

TALMAGE IN TIIE WEST.

HE PREACHES TO A CHAUTAUQUA ASSEMBLY.

Tli® Martym of Ererj-rtny XJfr—Th© Sword

Hhii

Not Slain So Many an the Noodlo. The Majority of Martyr* Are Women* The Heroe* of Christian Cluirlty.

LAKESIDE, 0., July4.#.—For many voara an assembly of the Chautauqua tvpi» hits loon heltl at thi.s point. Tho lending professors, scholars atid clergymen of this ami nthor lands have addressed tho audiences. The llov. T. I)o Witt Tnlmnge, 1). 1).. of Brooklyn, is now here. He lectured yesterday (Saturday) and preached t*iuy, t'» thrones innumerable. The subject of his sermon today wa«i

4,The

Martyrs nf Everyday Life.'*

He l.w.k f"r hi: lost: "Thou, therefore, endure hardness."—II Timothy ii, Dr. Tftlinrtge said:

Historian* are not slow t" acknowledge the merits of great military chieftains. \W have the full length JH»rtraiU of the Cronrvdls, the Washington*, the Napoleons nnd tho Wellingtons of the world. History is not written in black ink, but with red ink of human blood. The gods human ambition do not drink from

IKW1Sof

Hold hospital and in the asylum had fevers which no ice could cool and no surgery cure. No shout of a «*omrado to cheer them, but numbness, and aching, and homesickness— yot willing to suffer, confident in God, hopeful of heaven. Heroes of rheumatism. Heroes of neuralgia. Heroes of spinal complaint. Heroes of sick headache. Heroes of lifelong invalidism. Heroes and heroines. They shall reign for ever and ever.

Hark! I catch just one noto of the eternal anthem: "There shall l)o no more |min.n Bless God for that.

In this roll I also find the heroes of toil, who do their work uncomplainingly. It is comparatively easy to lend a regiment into battle when you know that tho whole nation will applaud the victory it is comparatively easy to doct the sick when you know that your skill will be appreciated by a large company of friends and relatives it is comparatively easy to address an uudicneo when in tho gleaming eyes and tho flushed checks you know thut your sentiments are adopted but to (lo sewing where you expect tluit the employer will como and thrust his thumb through the work to show how imperfect it is, or to have the whole garment thrown back on you to

IMJ

do done over again

V) build a wall and there will be no one to say you did it well, but only a swearing employer howling across tho scaffold to work until V"iir eves are dim ant! your back aches, and your heart faints, nnd to know that if you stop lmforu night vour children will starve. Ah! the sword lias not slain so many as tho needle. Tht* great battlefields of our last war wore not Cieltyi.burg and .Shiloh and South Mountain. The great Imttleflelds of the last war wore in tho arsenals, and in tho shops ami in tho attics, where women mado army jackets for six]vnee. Thov toiled on until thoy died. Tficy had no funeral eulogium, but, in the name of rod, this day I enroll their names among those of whom tho world wns not worthy. Heroes of the noodle. Heroes of tho sewing machine. Heroes of tho attic. Heroes of the cellar. Heroes and heroines Blcsa God for them.

In thitf roll I also find tho heroes who havo uncomplainingly endured domestic injustices. Then) are men who for their toil find anadety havo no sympathy in their hcanos. Exhausting application to business gets them a livelihood, but an tnifrugol wife scatters it Ho is fretted at from the moment hoon-

ters the d«»r until ho conies out of it. me exasperations business life augments! by the exasperations of domes* tic life. Such men are laughed at, but they have a heartbreaking trouble, and they would have long ago gone into appalling dissipations but for the grace I of tiod. Society today is strewn with the wrecks of men ho, under he northeast storm of d»m«^lic infelicity, have been driven on the n-.ks. There are tens of thousands of drunkards in this country today, made such by th"ir wive*. That. not poetry. That is proe, But the wrong is generally in the opposite do ion. You would not, have to go far to liud a wife whohc life is a |erpetual martyrdom. Something heavier than a stroke of a fist unkind words, staggering* home at midnight, and

Constant maltreatment which have left her only a wreck of what she was on that day when in the tnid*t of a brilliant assemblage the vows were taken, and full organ played the wedding march, and the carriage rolled awav with the U'nedirtion of the |eop!e. What was the burning of Latimer and Ridley at the stake compoml with this? Those men soon became unconscious in tho tire, but here is a fifty years* martyrdom, a fifty years* putting to death, yet uncomplaining. No bittej w.»nN when tho rollicking companions at 'J o'clock in tho morning pitch tho husband dead drunk into the front entry. No bitter word* when winintr from the swollen brow the blood struck out in a midnight carousal. Bending over the battered and bruised form of him, who, when he took her from her father*!! homo, promised love, and kindness, and protection, yet nothing but sympathy, and they when tho family Bible goes for rum, and the pawnbroker's shop gets the last decent dress. Some day, desiring to evoke the story of h*»r sorrows, you nay: "Well, how are you getting along nowf and rallying her trembling voice and quieting her quivering lip. she rays: "Pretty well, I thank y«m. pretty well." She never will tell yon. In tho debrium of her last, sickness she may tell all th* secrets of her lifetime, but she will riot tell that. Not. until the U*il of eternity are opened on the throne of judgmen* will ever b» known what. shebassnffered. Oh! ye whonre twisting garland for the victor, put itonthatpilebrow. When she is dead the neighbors will beg linen to make her shroud, and she will he carried out in a plain box with no silver plate to tell her years, for she has lived a thousand veal's of trial and anguish. Tie* gamblers and swindlers who destroyed her husband will not come to the funeral. One carriage will

prayers, nn.1 for^v™™ before I

nro asked for. No bitter words

Iks

mado out of silver,

or gold. or precious stones, but out of tho bleached skulls of the fallen. Hut 1 am now to unroll before you a scroll of he^s that the world has never acknowledged those who faced no gnus, blew no bugle blast, conquered no cities, chained no caj- ives to their chariot wheels, and yet, in the great day of eternity, will stAnd higher than thoao whose names startled the nations and per\ph, and rapt spirit, and archangel will tell their deeds to a listening universe. I mean the heroes of common, everyday life.

In this roll, in the first place, I find all the heroes of the fiick room. When Satan had failed to overcome Job he said to (Jod: "l*ut forth thy hand and touch his bones and his flesh, ami he will curse thee to thy face." Satan had found out what we have all found out, that sicktie-« is the greatest test of one's character. A man who can stand that nin stand anything. To be shut in a room as fast OH though it were a hostile. To 1M SO nervous you cannot endure the tap of a child's foot. To have luxuriant fruit, which tempU* tho appetite of the robust and healthy, excite our loathing and disgust when it first appears on the platter. To have tho rapier of pain strike through the side, or across the temples, like a razor, or to put the foot into a vise, or throw the whole body into ablaze of fover. Vet there hav© been men and women, but more women than men, who have cheerfully etidnn*d this hardness. Through years of exhausting rheumatisms ud excruciating neuralgias they have gone, and through bodily distresses that raspM the nerves and tore the muscles and paled tho cheeks and stooped the nhouldors. Hy the dim light of the siek room taper they saw on their wall the picture of that land where the inhabitants are never sick. Through the dead silonce of the night they heard the chorus of the angels. The cancer ate away her life from week to week and day to day, ami she became weaker and weaker, and every "good night" wns fwbler than the "good night" Iwfore—yet never sail. The childrvn looked up into her face and saw suffering transformed into a heavenly smile. Those wlio suffered on the buttle field amid shot and shell were not so much heroes and heroines as those who in tho

enough for that funeral—one carriage to carry the orphans and the two Christian woman who presided over the obsequies. But there is a Hush ami tho ojening of a celestial door and a shout: "Lift up your head, ye everlasting gate, and let her come in!" And Christ will step forth ami say: "Come in! ye suffered with me on earth, be glorified with ine in heaven." What is the highest throne in heaven? Von say: "Tho throne of the Lord (»od Almighty and th« Lamb." No doubt about it. What is the next highest throne in heaven? While I sjteak it seems to mo that it will be the throne of the drunkard's wife, if she with cheerful patience endured all her earthly torture. Heroes and heroines.

I find also jn this roll the heroes of Christian charity. We all admire the George Peabodys and the James T^enoxes of the earth, who give tens and hundreds of thousands of dollars to good objects.

But am speaking this morning of those who. out of their pinched poverty, help others—of such men as those Christian missionaries at the west, who are living on

in New York, saving "1 thank you for that $2.'). Until yesterday we havo had no nn»nt in our hnusf for thnn? months. We have fiUlFeml torrihlv. My children have no «hoes this winter." And of those jw»ople who have only a half lonf of hread, hut j?ive a piece of it to others who are hungrier and of tho*) who have only scuttle of coal, but help others to fuel and «f those who havo only a dollar in their pocket, and give twv: ty-flv«' cents to somebody «»lse ami of that father who wears a shabby coat, and of that mother who wears a faded dress, that their children may bo well appareled. Vou call them paupers, or rn^nnmfiins, or cmijrrant.s. I call them heroes and heroines. Yon and I may not know where thev live, or what their name is. (iod knows, and they havo more angels hovering over them than you and I have, and they will have a higher seat in heaven.

They may have only a cup of cold water to give a j*or traveler, or may have only picked a splinter from under the nail of a child's finger, or have put only two mites into the treasury, but. the I/rd knows them. Considering what they had, they did more than wo have ever done, and their faded dress will l»eeotne a white robe, and the small room will lx» an eternal mansion, and tho old hat will a coronet of victory, and all tho applause of earth and all tho shouting of heaven will lo drowned out when God rises up to give his reward to thoso humble workers in his kingdom, and to say to thorn: "Well done, good and faithful servant." You have all seen or heard of the ruin of Melrose ablnn*. I suppose in some resjjoe.ta it is the most exquisito ruin on earth. And yet, looking nt it I was not so impressed—you may set it down to bad taste—but I was not so deeply stirred as 1 was at a tombstone at the foot of tluit abbey tho tombstone pineal by Walter Scott over the grave of an old man who had served him for many years in his house—the inscription most significant, and 1 defy any man to stand there and re^ul it without tears coming into his eyes—-the epitaph:

4,Well

done, good and faithful servant." Oh, when our work is over, will it U.» found that lecauso of anything we have done for God, or the church, or suffering humanity, that such an inscription is appropriate for us'. God grunt it.

Who are those who were bravest and do-servf-d the greatest monument—1^ ird Claverhouse and his burly soldiers or John brown, the Kdtnbiirgh carrier, and His wife? Mr. Atkins, the persecuted mini.-tor of Jesus Christ in Scotland, was M'civU'd by John Itrown and his wife, and 'faverhouse role up one day wit his an 1 men and shouted in front "f the house. J«»hn Bn-wn's little girl came out. Ho said to her: "Well, miss, is Mr. Atkins here?*' She made no answer, for she could not betray tin* minister of tho (iosjR'l. "Ila!" Claverhousj" siiid, "then you area chip of the old block, are you? I have something in my pocket for you. it is nosegay. Some jx'oplo call it a thumbscrew, but 1 call it a nosegay." And he got off his horse, and he put it on the little girl's hand and lngan to turn it until tho bones cracked awl she cried. He said: "Don'tcry: doift cry this isn't a thumbsorow this is a nosegay/' And they hoard tho child'? cry, aud tho father and mother camo out and ClavcrhousG said: "Hal It soems that you throo havo laid your holy heads together determined to die liko all tho rest of your hyjtocritical, canting, sniveling crow rather than give up good Mr. AUdn^r pious Mr. Atkins, ybu woula die. I Imvo telescope with me that will improve yoar vision," aud bo pullod out & pistol. "Now," bo ssjd,

,ryou

oy

9

matica], lest vou should catch cold in this cold morning of Scotland, and for the honor and safety of the king, ?o*av nothing of li.e glory of God and the

thn fniC!„P„„ of hnr

1

K'ood

of

our Minis, I v. j!: proceed simply and in the iieatoi anfl st e\-|.i-!itio'jh .stvie pussjhio blow your bruins out." .John IJrown fell upon ins knees md began to j.nn. ••Ah!" said iaverh"U«\ "look out. if vou are going to pray i»tH.r dear «.f the king, the council and Richard Cameron," Wi! Lord," .vjid •John Brown, "since it M-ems to be thy wjli that I should leave thi* world [or a \w.rid where I can love thee b-'tt -r and thee more. 1 put this poor widow woman and these helpless, tather!o*. children in.o thy hands. We ii.v.'e be»-, ther in J.M -O a good while, but now we must look forth to a b"t:*r meeting in heaven, and as for the*e poor creatures, blindfolded ami infatuated, that stand intfore me, convert them before it be too late, and may they who have sat in judgrneutin this lonely place on this blessed morning upon me, a i*»or, defenseless fellow creature—nmy they in tho last judgment find that mercy which they have refused to me, thy most unworthy, but faithful servant. Amen." Ho rose up and said: "Isabel, the hour has come of which I spoke toy .*i on the morning when I proposed hand and heart to you and are you willing now, for the love of God, to let me die*" She put her arms around hiin and Kaid: "The Lord gave, ami the Lord hath taken away. Blessed be the naznfl of the Lord I" ^Stop that sniveling," said Claverhouse. have hail enough of it. Soldiers, do your work. Take aim! Kirol" And tho head of John Brown was scattered on tho ground. While tho wife was gathering up in her apron

husband1, head-eaiher-

tug them op for ^.«ti—davorhouse loo^ into her face and said: "Now, my good woman, how do you feel now about your bonnie man/" "Oh," sho said, "I always thoughtwell of him ho has been very' good to me I had no reason for thinking anything but well of him, and I think letter of him now." 0 what a grand thing it will l»e in the last day to soo God pick out his heroes and heroines. Who are those paupers of eternity trudging off from the gates of heaven/ Who are they! The Lord Claverhouses and the Ib»rods and those who had scepters, and crowns, ami thrones, but they lived for their own aggrandizement, and they broke the heart of nations. Heroes of earth, but paupers in eternity. I beat the drums of their eternal despair. Woe! woe! woe!

But then? is great excitement in heaven. Why those long processions? Why the t*ooniing of that great bell in the tower/ It is the coronation day in heaven.

Who are those rising on the thrones with crowns of eternal royalty! Thoy must have been great ]*enplu on the earth, world renowned people. No. They taught in a ragged school. Taught in a ragged school! Is that all? That is all. Who are those souls waving scepters of eternal dominion? Why, they are little children who waited on invalid mothers. That all! That is all. She was called "Little Mary" on earth. She is an empri.»ss now. Who ore that great multitude on the highest thrones of heaven? Who are they? Why they fed the hungry, they clothed the naked, they healed the sick, they comforted the heartbroken. They never found any ret until they put their head down on the pillow of the sepulcher. God watched them. God laughed defiance at the enemies who put their heels hard down on these his dear children and one day the

I»rd struck his hand so hard on his thigh thut the omnipotent sword rattled in the buckler, as he said: "I am their God, and no weapon formed against them shall prosj.KT." What harm can the world do vou when tho

II yi'nr thai tliry may prK-]uim Christ to thn l^.nl Almighty with imshcathLs'l sword tights people, one of them, writing to the secretary for you? i- X? 1 .It I. 1 1

I preach this sermon for comfort, fi home to the place just where God has put you, to play the hero or the heroine. l)o not envy any man his money or his applause or his social position. Do not envy any woman her wardrobe or exquisite apjearance. He tho hero or the heroine. Tf there be no flour in the house and you do not know where your children are to get tlunr bread, listen, and you will hear something tapping against the window pane. Go to the window and nnd you will find it is the lw»ak of a raven, nnd open the window and there will fly in the messenger that fed Klijah. I)o you think that, the God who grows the cotton of the south will let you freeze for lack of clothes! Do you think that the God who allowed the diciplos on Sundav morning to go into the grain Held, and then take the grain and rub it in their hands and eat—nlo you think God will let you starve? Did you ever hear the exierieiiee of that old man: "I have l»een young, and now am I old. yet have I never *een the righteous forsaken, or his seed lagging bread f' Get up out of your discouragement, O, troubled soul! O, sewing woman! 0, man kicked and cuffed bv unjust employers, O! ye who are hard b^set in the battle of life and know n«»t which way to turn, 0! you bereft one, O! you sick one with complaints you have told to no one, come nnd get the comfort of this subject. Listen to our great Captain's cheer: "To hint that overcometh will I givo to eat of the fruit of the tree of life which is in tho midst of the

Paradise of God."

Dyspeysia

Makes the lives of many people miserable, imd often leads to self-destruction. We Know of no remedy for dyspepsia more successful than Hood'*

Sarsaparilla. It acts geutly, yot

surely and efllcleutly, tones the stomach aud other organs, removes the faint feeling, creates a good appetite, cures headache, and refreshes the burdened mind. Give Hood's Harsaparl^a a fair trial. It will do you good.

Stop that hawking with J. H. I., catarrh remedy. We have thousands ol teMimonla ofpcriunnenlcwes,

Horchound Not a New Discovery lr. Ward

states: llorehound lias bei-n

known to physicians since the beginning of the woild as the Icing of all remsdles for diseases

of

the Throat, iiest and Lungs. I

ltelleve Ballard's lloiebound Syrup Js the best combination known to-dav forconsntnjtion,oUk! hs olds, Hronchitis and all dis casts having their origin in the Throat and chest. There are hundreds of physicians use ng the plain home made remedy in their Iractlceand thoy all report the same unlprtnly good resuit. all for free Sample Mottle fro om our agents, T. I). Hrown A Sons.

SOME DOCTORS honestly admit tin. Kheumutisni and N« say they can hut—«. i)Ho«ros says nothing 'PI.

can't'cure' jia. Otheiu »'». Ath-lo-1 —cures.

That's the secret of its success. Years of trial have proved it to be a quickt safr, sure euro.

Concord, N. n.. S*'pt. 3.1887

In my own family Athlonhoro* was used as a la«t rcHort, tho USIT having- sufferi'd from rbeumatisiu for years and ha\1ntf tR«cn treated for the disca^o by differunt phyHiciaas in this Btato and MassarbuMitts without even temporary r»'Jl«f. Upon my recommondAtion Hcorut of poo. plo havn used thia remedy with tho sanio reaults claUood for it. C. 12. Wasos.

Dubuque, Iowa. Jan. 3,1888.

Athlophoros has completely enred rne of nervous headache, and I /eel tliauk/ul for all thogoodit has done me.

Mrs. LOUISECHEABY.

49" Scud f» cents for the leautiful colored pioture, Moorish Maiden."

THEATHL0PH0H0S CO. 112 Wall St. H. Y.

Why You Feel

So weak and exhausted is because your blood is impure. As well expect tho sanitary condition of a city to be perfect with deliled water and defective sewerage, as to expect such a complicated piece of mechanism as the human frame to be in good order with iinpuro blood circulating even lo its minutest veins. Do you know that every drop of your two or three gallons of blood passes through tin heart and lungs in about twoand a half minutes, and that, on its way, it makes bone and muscle, brain and nerve, and all other solids and fluids of the body? The blood is the great nourisher, or, as tho Bible terms it,

"The Life of the Body."

Is it any wonder, then, that if the blood be not pun and perfect in its constituents, you suffer so many indescribable symptoms?

Aver's Sarsaparilla stands head and shoulders" above every other Alter* atlve and Blood Medicine. As proof, read those reliable testimonies:

G. C. Brock, of Lowell, Mass., says: For the past 25 years 1 have sold Ayer's Sarsaparilla. In my opinion, the best remedial agencies for the cure of all the diseases arising from impurities of the blood are contained in this medicine."

Eugene I. Hill, M. D., 381 Sixth Ave., New York, says "As a blood-purifier and general builder-up of the system, I liave never found anything to equal Ayer's Sarsaparilla. It gives perfect satisfaction."

Ayer's Sarsaparilla proves equally efficacious in all forms of Scrofula, Boils, Carbuncles, Eczema, Humors, Lumbago, Catarrh, See. and is, therefore. the very best

Spring and Family Medicine in use. It beats all," says Mr. Cutler, of Cutler Brothers Co.. "Boston, how

Ayer's Sarsaparilla

does .sell." Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer Sc Co., Lowell, Mass. Price $1, six bottle, $5. Worth £5 a botile.

DnLINDSEYS'BLOQD SEARCHER

Makoa a Lovely Complexioa. Is a ^^Splendld Tonic and euros Caaeer, Bolls, ^^^PlmplM, Scrofala, Mercarial and all^ ^vDlood Diseases. BoJdhy yoar Druggist gclIcTi IU&UIm Co., ntUbur|tt Pi.

LOW BATES TO PACIFIO COAST

The new agreement between the traavMnti« neotal lines authorizes a lower rato to Pacific coiuit points via the Maultoba-Pacific route than is mitde via any oUier line. Frequent excursions. Accommodations first-claMa. For rate«, maps, ami oth*r parucularH, apply to C. II. WAHUICS, General I

a srtMMU A Bfl MINNM'OUI A

Apent, St.]

Paul, Minn.

Plso's Remedy for Catarrh Is the I Best, Eaaii'flt io Uw, and Cheapest.

A A

Sold by lrti|rci.«t« or BOIU by mall. 50c. E. T. liazMltiiw, Warren, Pa.

DYSPEPTICS

REJOICE

In tho Spee&7 Belief OBTAINED DY CSINO Tnrrnnt*s

Seltzer Aperient. Soli! bv Tarrnnt ft Co., N.Y., and Druggists everywhere.

furpost

S a 1

Two farms, one of 100 acre* Wa'nu township, mid one of Pju acre.* In M^dl^n township. hot 11 a t' ne state of cu 11 vat ion. i'he PJO acres will he sold in 4U or sj nrr,. tfici- i'Ml at llceorder's ofMrc.

!V'H\\!'n|.!$ morf»ni*Pd

M\M§ »N!VERSIT

V,r'.h Sl„ itolullkc.

UE-JiAlI, aid rrryrietcrs. 1'rst faciluirs for Business. Shtrtham!, l'euman:.h:p. Knglish and husinrss TrAiuing. IIKIV-vMu.-ti Ivhicaic -r i«ifn least c*pei»nvc t:i lime and tno cv Attractive City. (Waduatrs hold lucrative posui- u^. A strictly business S Hj.CN dl vcar ki.ter now Writr to us,'

E»:J!.

LEGANT

CATALOGUE, FREE.

LOW TOURIST RATES.

I or $47.o'1 a round t-:n tie^t,

?e

:o»nl for 90 duyn, u, ..i btojv-ovw pris cno obtained from St. 1'iuil to Great Falls, Mou t&im, the coming munnfa^turing oentre of tlw nortV.west.. a sn^ut a Only $56 00 Saint Paul Ka A to Helen* a«d return Af||yQQ£% Similar r«dnctiotiBlfl baiivax Jr^froin point* Miat and »outh. Rates correspondingly qb lov will be named to points in Mlnniwota au£ lnkota, or upon Pueet 6ound and the Pacific Coast. For further particulars address H. R. Tupper, District PasMmter Agent, 232 floutb (lArk 8tnet, Chicago, III., or C. H. Wuutut, Gete-ral Vaswisny: Aeest, et Paul. Minn.

JUDICIOUS AND HRSIITENT Advertising han always proren KucccAsfuI. Hcforo placing any Now«papor AdrertiMntc cf»nault

LORD & THOMAS,

inVKRTlltftf AGVVTA,

41 niPMU CHICACO

WHERE ARE YOU GOING?

TTbeti do you utartT "Wliew Jrom How mr*:.* in ytiur party? Whnt s^nonnt of frvlKht or bttOt&ue have you What rout« do you preler?

CJHHI

nn^eipt e( an answer to the above quo tiou* you will be lurnlshed, tr*?e of with tbe iowent A 1 A rates, also tune phiets. or »HU» HIFORIVT- B9B RAILWAX, w.!l save trouble. t4me and money. Acent.s will CK in person where neci»w«nry. Parties ready to answer above quentiontf should cut out and prvwrve this notice for future reference. m»»v become u^ful. Address C. 11. WAIIRSN. G*t*rul I'uHsengur ARenu 8t. Paul, Minn..

lurnistu'O, ir*?e oi wiin rates, also

ITDBOl

AN

CATARRH

H. Warren, Qenerali Passenger Agent, fit. Paul, Minn.

$1,500 In Cash Prizes

Total,

DAILY NFor

n"'i'r

I RAILWAT, »»ationuhieh

ELY'S

CREIM BALM

I I' il II tiic

Nas:d

HAYFEVER

Alia I'ain and

InflamniMionjV.ii

I IcaU the Sores,' c« the Sense of Taste

AY-EEVER n.ui

Smrl!.,,.......

TRY THE CURE.

A particle it applied into me novtril and is jjfrec*hle. frier .T# rrnli by mail, re istered, 00 cents. KLY MKOS.M Wsrrfro ktroet, New York

Minnesota Leads the World

With her .took, dairy ant grain prodtxta 2,000,000acres flat timber, farming Mid gr&jdni lands, adjaosnt to railroad, for ui« cheap ea sasy t«nns. For maps, prioes, rates, etc. address, J. Bookwaltar.T^ana CommlssioDei, ox

I UHQ UOmTTIl—IQPCT, OX

ManWOBAiiukivMWM.

AsX lor Book B.

LADIES!

Ib» Yonr Own Dr«lne at Hem# vr itn

PEERLESS DYES.

Thov will dye ererythiuK- They are sold ev^rjwheie. I'riee 10c. a package. 40 colors. Thoy hare no *qual for strength, Rrljhtness, amount in packages or for fastuesa of color, or non-ladrnc }uslittrs. They do not orocfc smut. Tor sale by l^ew Fisqrr. T. D. Hrown m. John Rresks. iSr., US H. Market street, a fordsv llle. I nd

The Chicago Daily News has reduced its price from two cents to One Cent per copy. For a year past its sales have been over

,4a

American d-aily paper upon the basis of the lowest unit of American coinage—ONK CENT.

To successfully accomplish this end two tilings arc essential:

EWS will require to be most prominently brought out. The advertisement must emphasize:

1—That THE DAILY NBWS is fir*.i, last and all the time, a n^fj-paper. Ikcause that should be the first and controlling consideration in the production of an American Daily paper,—and 11 isn't always so. It costs money, enterprise and hard work in uustinted measure to make a genuine urtw-paper. a—That TUBDAILY NEWS is a daily paper for busy people. Hecause this is a country of busy people, and the North-west is the busiest part of it. Most people haven't the time or patience to read a "blanketsheet,"—they absolutely haven't any use for it. Newspaper reading, after all, is but an incident of life, not its chief business. Therefore

Titc DAILY NI:WS II A short-and-to-the-point-paper 3—That Titc DAILY NKWS is an independent, truth-tellinp newspaper, Hecausc the American people art intelligent enough to prefer honest, impartial journalism to the misleading, truth-discolorinu dishonesty of the regulation political "organ." Kvcrybody really wants to know the truth inpohtical matters the most violent partisan doesn't want misinformation for a daily diet. And as tocditorial expression, even the most unreasonable partisan will rarely take lasting oflWicc at an adverse opinion, so long as he is confident of the

fu*ui-±tv

back of the opinion. It's not the mere fact of disagreement that makes trouble, it's the suspicion of insincerity.

feint very strong nnd r/r.ir. It's It'cauie

Muke thh

Tint DAILV NEWS/MJ

Trail it's the n):/:Jence cf its rf.idcrs rf cfeiy K'itiiatifaith -s ^ta' *1 /'as ti^it'culation rf oi'tr I-IKHi/j/J•a• .rrA\*"j 4—That TUB DAILY NKWS is a family paper, because this the age of the newspaper,—a time when everybody reads it. and it is all-impor-tant that the newspaper should be made with direct reference to the needs of all

the member} of the family. Woman and her interests

never occupied so large a share of the world's thought us to-day—a fact not to be overlooked. The moral tone and influence of a daily paper must also be constantly watched, for children read it. THE DAILY News is for the home, and therefore it follows 5—That I'llK DAILY NKWS is against the saloon. Ikcause "the liquor interest" arrogantly assumes to dominate in American politics, and '. TUB DAILY NKWS believes that it «s not for the country's good that -v any one interest should thus override all others, much less one which stands as the representative of all that is most un-American amongus.

TUB DAILY NBWS is not the orcan of prohibition. It is not sure that prohibition is the best thing. Good people who have made this sub* lect a life-long study do not agree as tothe remedy. TUTDAILYNEWS "as no eutopian hope that it is possible to legislate men into good-

-cJLiwsv iu ••. CHicA^Knis-

ALWAYS CiVE:

ITS PATIIGKS

Tho Full "W 'Al* o*. Ihctr hy TiJvirj Tlicni 3 a/«iy IOIIJ Quick! l«2tWuon

Chicago tp Lafayette Indianapolis Cincinnati rf* Lfluisville

PULLMAN SLEEPING CARS ELEGANT PARLOR CARS

tLLTRMNS RUN THROUGH SOLID

miMion a-wcek," and it believes it now sees the way to safely lead in placing an ideal

First—To make as good a newspaper as the best, if not a little better second—to let every man, woman and child in the Northwest KNOW it's being done, and done at one ccnt a day. THK DAILY NEWS believes that it is competent to take care of the first named condition, and knows of no better way of meeting the sccond than by general newspaper advertising. To do thi latter most effectively it her® solicits the co-operation of all who believe themselves competent to write an effective newspaper advertisement. To induce the best effort in Us service in this matter THE DAILY NEWS will reward the writers of the three belt advertisements submitted, with three cash prizes, aggregating Fifteen Hundred Dollars, divided as follows

First Cash Prize—For best advertisement, Second Cash Prize—For second best advertisement, Third Cash Prize—For third best advertisement,

The advertisement mny be single announcement, or a series of announcements not exceeding six in number. The ipac£ required must not exceed that occupied by this advertisement—eight inches deep, six nnd one-quarter inches wide.

the general guidance of all who enter the comjietition, the following ten points are briefly stated as Iteinp those which

Other points will suggest themselves to the regular reader of the paper itself, and may be introduced according to the judgment of the advertisement writer. Outline illustrations and poetry may be introduced if desired, but they are not necessarily essential to success in the competition. The prizes will be awarded to the three most successful advtrtisements, the publisher of Tim

the sole judge, whatever may be the absolute grade of their merit. All advertisements must be received before September 1st next, and the awards will be made at the earliest date practicable thereafter. Intending competitors must apply for the paper's complete pros, pectus, and advertisements must be submitted under the conditions therein named in detail.

Tickets Sold and Baggage Checked to Destination. tF~0«t Xapt and Time Table* If you wuit to b« mor* fully Informed—all Tlckct Acent* atOoopoa Vtationa haTt them—or addr«M

CHEAP EXCURSIONS

lookinti for new location* or invefttmeute. M?ruimonthly ezrursionA luive b^en arrunytd, at on* tare for the ronnd trip, to all polntnin Dakota and Minnesota. Ticket* flr cla*H and cood for 3 duys. For maps and further particulars ade. 11 w,i,«r..v, Li ft '.tenrrul Paaneneer R/l A A«e«it, at. Tuul, Minn, fii AKITDHII a 1

THE GL^AT PULQRITR FORJHEBLOOD

A P0SIT1YL CURE FOR5CR0TUIA'

TEXT£R

RHtUMATlSM^CA.LD HtAD OR

BOILS PtMPLlj QLDoRCHROKtC S0f«3! .tfWiKI)(b5A»(oAu. DlSE/\5t5ARISlHij FRPH AN IMPURE, STATE, OTT^BLQtfflj

SLFTRBDTUE 6FTTR$5

15 THE BE5T tABJH'

7EYER.TA1U5 TO CUR1.

.X. I.N.C.'

J5T^E0KLYIKFAIV.IBLL CO,

KEUIW.01A.-

.-SOID EV£RYVMT^

FOR THREE BEST ADVERTISEMENTS.

$1,000.00

300.00

200.00

$1,500.00

ness, but it has a very positive conviction that it entirely practlca* ble, and altogether desirable, to legislate saloon-keepers into their proper place, as being engaged in a traffic which here, as everywhere else in the civilized world, is only tolerated as, apparently, a neces* sa:y evil.

TUB

[There must be no uncertain sound iftt this feint.]

6—That Tun DAILY News is a happy paper. Hecause it believes in the practical wisdom of b«ing good natutcd of being generally satisfied rather than everlastingly disati*!icd. 'I'he chronic fault-finder is a nuisance, and Titu DAILY Niuvs will have the least possible of bim.

The wot Id is better than it used to 1m\ and is getting better every lay. It's a good place to live in—let's make the best it.

7—That THK DAII.Y Nnws costs a great deal of money to inaki*. L?ecauv« there sometimes no way of demonstrating the value of a thing, to frotne people, conclusively as by showing, even in part, what St costs to make it. There are ys2 people on the regular weekly pay-roll ofTnn DAILY Ni'.ws, and their salaries ranae from S5,5* to J^,ooo per week, aggregating j^oo.'xo a year, 'i hr white paper rost* another fjoo.uco a year.- The a^giegair expenditures of 1'iiu DAILY

Ni'.ws for 18S8 will vary but a trille eithcr uny fiorn -•:. And yet 8—1 hat 'Inn DAILY Nnws now co^ts the reader only One Cent a Day.

Ilecause this i«» the most wonderful thing in modern juuni.insin.and deserves telling o'er and o'er.

too this feint.\

VICTOR F. LAWSON, Publisher The Daily Newt, Chicago.

[There is little tl.xnjcr rj making

9—That Tim DAILY Nitws is now literally everybody's paper. Because hwetofi.M: metropolitan daily paper* have been too expensive, both in price and in time requited to read them, lo make it practicable for the farmer or the mechanic to lake them. Now this is changed. The farmer particularly should take a daily paper now that it costs but little more than the old-time weekly, and is condensed so that he can also afford the time to read il. He'll save its yeaily cost over and over again by knowing the market prices wvery day, instead of weekly as heretofore. JO—ThAtTiie DAILY NKWS now inaugurates a newspaper revolution, because such a combination of values as it now offers die reader is absolutely without parallel among American newspapers, and it is bound to make the dry-bones rattle. The result of this revolution it •"i that every English reading person living within daily newspaper distance of Chicago can now afford, both as to price and time, to have his city daily.

DAILY NEWS

being