Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 10 June 1893 — Page 6
WEEKLY JOURNAL.
SATURDAY, JUNE 10, 1893.
FROM JiJS&E Afll) THERE.
Th« case of W. D. Jones, ndministruor of the estate of James Oalbreatb, agninst the ^lonon, has been dismissed. —Waynetown people are confident that there is. natural gas beneath their feet and propose to drill deep enough to find it. —Will H. Thompson and family arrived Fridav from Seattle, Wash., by the way of the Canadian Pacific. They •will remain until September. —Sheriff Bible is very prond of an ear of corn that has been ftiven him by an admiring friend, and will lake pleasure in showing the same to all who may call. —Lebanon Patriot'The Crawfordsville citv council has cut down the salaries of city officers—a very unusual thing for councils to do, yet not reprehensible. —J. G. Overton is the proud possessor of a complete 6et of fractional paper currency, so common in the sixties. He ha6 refused large sums of money for his collection. —llev. W. B. Slutz and family left Frankfort for their new home at
Carthage, Mo., last Tuesday. Mrs Siutz is a daughter of Silas Peterson, of Sugar Creek township. —It is not often that a man is so well pleased with his house that he builds another exactly like it, but Joe E. Fisher will duplicate his former Jefferson street residence on his Wabash avenue lot. —The other day Jamea Smith, of Alamo, while at work building a barn in the country fell from the top to the Bloepers below, a distance of 32 feet. His arm was broken, his shoulder crushed and he was other badly injured. —A south Missouri girl waved her linnd at a slranger, and in three days t.hey were married. Two days 1 iter tbe young wife waved a iiat-ironj at her husband, and the next evening he came home waving a divorce., ., What are the wild waves saying? —A "Boys Brigade" was organized this week with Lee Durham as drill master. The bripadeis another branch of league work in which it is the object to gain the interest of the boys in the church affairs through the medium of of military tactics.—Methocli.it Herald. —Attorney-general Smith is much pleased with the proi peetive decision in the great railroad test tax suit, which is to be tried at Washington, Oct 16. T)i« attorney-general will argue for the State and thinks he will surely win. If so, it means an addition of $1,200,000 to the State. —In the vote at national Presbyterian gathering at Washington on the question of sustaining the appeal from the verdict of the New York Presbytery in acquitting Dr. Briggs, Pvev James "Williamson, of Thorntown, and Elder
J. Franz MyerB, of the Crawfordsville Presbytery, voted in favor of sustaining the appeal. —Eugene Wilson has returned from Peoria where he just graduated from the Parsons Horological Institute after a five months' course. He is the firBt Montgomery county boy to receive a diploma there although two others, H.
Trask and John H. Sutlierlin are tnking the course and expect soon to be full fiedged watchmakers. —Con Cunningham is home from Washington, D. C. He failed to bring the appointment to a fat consulship home with him much to the regret of Ln larg and active constituency. The Bt,irrici. events of a private life are opening grandly up be ford this double barrelled elalesmuti who cm straddle the ft-iice nnd touch ground on both sides. —H?v. E. V. Hunter has resigned the president of the Indiana Anti liquor League arid also the chairmanship of the Christian Endeavor World'* Fair Hunday closing committee. He finds that the work in these two positions interferes with his pastoral duties at the
C-ntral Presbyterian church of Terre mte. He also adds that the chairmanthip of the committee has no further use for him, since the matter of elating the Fair on Sunday has been thrown into tbe courts.
Mrs. Wm. Hulse, Taken from the grave. The doctors said I had the worst case of womb trouble they ever saw. S/v
I had heart trouble, lost my speech and the use of my limbs.
I frequently had it a in in spells, and I could not sleep. Three of the best New York doctors gave me up. came to see me
among them my cousin. She said she believed Lydia E. Pink hams Vegetable Compound would help me, and persuaded the doctor to try it. Oh! how thankful I am they ,ave it to me, for it took me rom the grave. I began to improve immediately. I soon got out, and am now well and strong. No words can express my gratitude to you for my life. Since then I have given it to others, and it never fails."
All druggists sell it. Address in confidence, J.VDIA E. PINKHAM MED. CO., LYNN, MASS,
Mrs. Pinkhajn's Liver Pills, 25 cents.
THE BRIGGS CASE.
A
SERMON DELIVERED LAST
A
SHNJ.
DAY MORNING BY DR. R. CUNNINGHAM.
Bighteous Protest Against the Action of the General AssemblyPlain Words.
Acts
XVI. 31.—"Heiiovc on the Lord Jesus Christ and hou shall, be saved. Tlte words of Paul to thcPhillipian jailor when he called for lights, and sprang in, trembling for fear, fell down before Paul and Silas and brought tliem out, and said, "Sirs, what must I do to be saved
What does it meanthis agitating of the Presbyterian church Irom center to circumference with doctrinal strife? In the iirst place, 1. It means an interruption of the great work of aggressive evangelization, at least, temporarily. Little time is allowed in this Assembly for exciting in the church new interest in the great departments of its missionary enterprise. Questions of theory and uOgmatics that people have their own opinions about and are going to have their opinion about after the Assembly is over, take days and days and overshadow the whole two weeks. Suppose the field clear of these disputations, what a helpful time it would have been, occupied as it would have been chiefly with the Lord's commission given to his disciples, "Preach the gospel to all the world, teach all the na tiODS."
The commissioners would have re
turned to their churches full of information and enthusiasm about the real problem of the Christian church, with news from the front of the ba,ttle with paganism, with irrchgion, vvith Idolatry and covetousness, with worldliness in the myriad forms in which it opposes itself to the Kingdom of righteousness, truth, love and peace, with zeal and determination for advanced work. What streams would have flowed from the Assembly, making glad the whole church and refreshing the waste places of the world!
For the work of the church has gone prosperously the last year. Millions of dollars have been expended in building up churches and in planting hundreds of them in new territory. An advance upon anything done before! But the enthusiasm those reports created was not what it might have been for the parliamentarians and dialectitions and the metaphysicians were, from the first and every moment, whetting their blades aud skirmishing for the vantage ground. It is very sad to have to read in this day when it did seem as if the church was forgetting its dissensions and its doctrinal differences in the spirit of the Lord's demand to work, the backward chapters of the wars of words of other days.
To go from the consideration of the Foreign mission field which shines its brightest this year, strengthening the faith of tbe laborers in the harvest, appealing stronger than ever before the doubting Thomases, showing more than ever before the imperial strength of our Foreign mission work, how the church is leading the entire Christian host in America in evangelizing the nations—to so from the enthusiasm of that council, in an instant into the heat of a battle about technical nhrases for ten times as many hours must have seemed a kind of wickedness. No wonder
Dr. Field said: wish that the Uriggs case and this wboie Assembly were in the center of Africa, and that many who heard the remark said, 'Amen.'
It is for many reasons to be regretted and an occdfcion for an outburst of indignation not the least of all the reasons this that it takes time that were better spent in the practical consideration of the grca commission which Christ gave his disci pies, "make disciples of the nations."
The ui.happ.y cause for this and similar occasions lies in the polity ol the church, and in the readiness of some in it to provoke controversy, and in tiiedetermination of others to biud their brethren with traditions aud symbols of the past. There is something very wrong somewhere in a church when it can be agitated after this sort, while the agitators on either side have been working together for twenty years in perfect peace, finding themselves now, at length, differing about some questions in a way which it is not easy for us nor for them to explain.
The offender at the close of his defense raises his right hand in the presence of them all aud solemnly aflirms that he believes the Bible merrant in all matters concerning faith and practice, and in every thing in which it is a revelation of God, and that there are no errors which disturb its infallibility in these matters, that he holds to the entire system of doctrine set forth in the Westminster Confession. He has been a teacher of the Bible in one ol our seminaries for twenty years, and challenges the production of a single one of these ministers that have been under his instruction during that period who can say that anything that he has taught him has undermined or diminished his faith in the divine authority of the Holy Scripture or his love for the word ot God. That belief he not only assumed at his ordination but reassumed every three years since according to the rule of the Union Theolog ical Seminary.
In the light of all this why, in the name of reason and charity, is he before the church on trial time after time, and the world made to think that he is little better than an infidel, and that the Christian faith is only a war of words! Isn't it to be expected that a man with his gifts and opportunities and application in the realms of s- holarly and historic investigation con cerning the Bible and the sacred learning of the past, will have some ways of look' ing at things and some explanations of things wnich men of little or no learning whatever in these subjects, will not have And of the five or six hundred who com pose the jury that is sitting in the judg ment on his work how many of them are qualified by education, training and attain
ments in the field of criticism to render an intelligent verdict Not one in a score is able off hand to go into these questions of the Higher Criticism and determine whether he is right or wrong in his results. If he were not a good man, or were making false teachers of religion, or were denying the Lord who bought us, then it would not require scholars to pronounce upon his work but since this is not the case, and is not claimed to be the case by any, it is a grevious mistake, and to my mind a wickedness to create aud carry on such an agitation about his work as threatens disruption and causes inevitable loss that years will not overcome.
II. In the second place, the evil and trouble of it all are greatly exaggerated in the public mind. Herein is the larger part of the evil of this case, that it gets the scent of a scandal though it should not. and spreads and grows and is accorded infinitely more attention than it deserves. Fcr more than a year it has been absorbing public attention and one would think, reading the religious papers, that this was the greater part of the work being done in the Presbyterian church during the past year, attacking and defending Briggisin. Not so, as the reports of the work of the church abundantly show. The contribu tions to the great cause of Foreign Missions have been larger than ever before. The church has crossed the million dollar line for the first time.
I wish that this might be published far and wide that the world may know that other things are absorbing the cuci gy aud interest of the body of the church not less tlianbefure.
III. There is another view of this doctrinal agitation which I wish to hold up before you. namely this: that it is the condition of progress. Is there no progress of religious truth and doctrine! Who doubts that there is yet more light to break forth from the Biblei I need not tell any one here that a good many things have been found out about the Bible since the Westminster Assembly sat.
These three hundred years la?t past, have yielded more Bible truth and lite to the soul of man than any similar lc::gth of time since the ascension of Couslautirie, immeasurable more. No one doubts that riea discoveries are yet to be made. The ho'y scriptures are an inexhaustible miue of religious wealth. The discoveries of science have been changing, not the scriptures, but the interpretation of them from veneration to generation. Those who have been deciphering the mouuments of Egyptian civilization have been illuminating the ancient scriptures. Those who have been digging among the ruins of Assyria have added to our knowledge of the bible. The study ot the scriptures as literature, or the Higher Criticism, as it is called, has shown as nothing else could how impregnable is the rock of holy scripture. Ancient manuscripts have been brought out of old monasteries. Stones engraven that have lain for centuries under the sands and ruins of temples have been resurrected by antiquaries, restored and translated. The ancient languages ot the
Orient are yielding up still their meanings. This lamp let down from heaven is shining brighter and brighter on our human pathway for all that is being learned from the books of nature and of history.
Ignorance and prejudice have been the chief obstacles in the road of religious progress. Not a few of you whs are listening to me,ministers and elders,have been in several engagements of this great conliict foi religious freedom. We are in another now. The minds of men are still in bonds ot other men. It. makes no matter how long ago since they died, two hundred or three hundred years nor how they forged out their own opinions in their day, wrote their own creed, we must not think to write one for ourselves, liaidly dare offer change afew lines of what they wrote and adopted, and adopted by a strict party vot.e, aud by a small majority often, without our beint' accused of disloyalty to the church if
Christ, suspected of villainy. The glory of Protoilantism is its being a synonym of individual liberty of religious belief, and utterance and life.
It was a glorious day when the young monk nailed his theses to the church doors. Jt is the great moments that eoutit in the history of the cliurch or in the lives ol men. That was one of them The blond of freedom-loving men started in their eins when mans' individuality and ndependence in the search for truth came to such assertion as that on the doors ol the Wettenburgh church at midday when the city was thronged with pilgrim worshippers. But the Luther of to-day as lie of old time, is ant to wake the lion with Ins piercing pen and set him roaring. The elector in his dream, which was not ail a dream saw the powers trying to break
Luther's pen aud give up the trial. He asked the monk where he found so -itroug a pen aud was told that it belonged to a Bohemian goose a hundred years old, th.it. he, Luther, had it from his okl school masters, and that it was so strong because no ono could take the pith out of it.
They burned the hand of aHuss, the Bohemian, but his pen was taken up by one and another and another who have wielded It in turn to this day, but hardly ever escaping efforts of the powers that be to wrest it from the writer's grasp. The battle which was begun with Huss when he began to unchain the word of God which had been shut up and forgotten and lost in the moss-grown monasteries of Europe has not been fought out to a finish yet. There has not been a generation since in which men striving to get to free air, ampler air, and to cause new light to break forth from tlie word of God, have not been thrust out of the fold. O, It Is a strange, sad thing. What has been the fruit of heresy trials in the Presbyterian church?
Lyman Beecher was not fit to preach in the Presbyterian church. There is not a greater name in the annals of the American pulpit unless it be that of his greater son and the Presbyterian church would not have permitted him to grow to his bight within its courts.
Albert Barnes suspended from the ministry! Think of it! "That disciple whom Jesus loved," was he, In his day. In the eyes of the organization known as the Presbyterian church not worthy to be a teacher and guide ot men's souls. What a triumph It was when Prof. Swing was finally out of the Presbyterian church! Is he not respected for his characters' sake and for his works' sake by leading Presbvterian ministers in Chicago, this same Prof. Swing?
Vet, what has the church learned from the unfortunate and shameful history it has made
in its heresy trials from the first.? Has it learned to be careful lest it be condemning today tlioso whom it would gladly lionoi tomorrow? Has it learned to practiceihat liberty of thought and expression which is due? lias it learned to really value, extend and de. fend those principles of individual freedom and Independence In this universe of truth, which gave protestantism its birth and Is the chief reason for its being? If the church has not learned to tolerate men of variant views If it has not learned that there are new views which have as much right to a place as those that now are old when they were new if we have not learned that votes are of little and often of no account in determining of truth, and are going to make men heretics and outcasts by votes of men who know nothing of the merits of the real questions at issue, and are proud that tluy do not know anything of theiu, since it would be handling pitch to read and study such thins's, that jii'ch Irom the lowest pit if ministers are to he held to the system ol' doctrine formulated by an age of less light, and ol persecution and battle, which system of doctrine, rings in every line of it with controversy whose merits we do not understand and care nothing lor except, as matters of history If men arc to he ejected from their pulpits and their prolossors' chairs for not squaring their every word and opinion with that elfete system, then, all our boasts that we have reached a stage of enlightenment are vain. We are not much better than the persecutors tli it we think were monsters of narrowness and bigoted prejudice. The battle is still on, the battle for indiviJual light of free speech in the pulpit and in the teacher's chair. It will go on till there is absolute freedom that is to say, till the door of utterance is as wide as the door of heaven. What justification can there be for a test of orthodoxy which all consent is not applied at the irate of entrance into heaven? If one's teaching and work will not shut, one out from ent ranee and recognition in the church above what possible reason, that nicu will respect., can exist for applying here one which condemns one's wot as damnable heresy?
Hut. there has been a change in the judgments of men as to this matter whether ti Assembly shows it or not. And, I think the Assembly does show it, There is a new spirit abroad to-dav in religious teaching and believing that not all the power of Confessionbound assemblies eau quyuch or even smother.
Inquiring and progressive minds will judge of Prof. Briggs' work for themselves, lndopendant students will prefer him to those who are anchored to the changeless past The vci.v i'uiUs of him will attract. There is a good deal of the blame of this whole proceeding.
If those ivho compose this -Assembly could content themselves with putting themselves on record as against his teaching In those respects in which they are wrong in their sight and dismiss the case, that would he enough. What will more do? Not. a conviction nor all expression of a single puipit of the church will be changed by that action whatever it may bo. No man is going to take his keynote, no honest man is, no brave man, from the Assembly, in this
matter
of belief and expression unless he
belongs heart aud soul to the side which acted in the action passed.
INDIANA'S EXHIBITS.
All Will be Ready for the Dedicationiirst floor Damp.
Tho Indiana Building at, the World's Fair is practically completed, and the entire Suae exhibit, will be ready for the ded c.ition June 15. The furnishings of the Imiiding are in place, with the exception of some of the paintings. The pictures are nearly all in Indianapolis and the d'.'h'.y in hanging them is due to the tardiness in shipment. The building is a poiut of general attraction, since its location is* convenient to le larger buildings and on the way to and from the popular i:nr lines. The place is not open on Sumh. r. but a large number of visitors utilize its broad vernndas and comfortiiiile ch urrf when they be come liri'd of t-:yLit. se-i I.'he .bird story contains a lar^e room that i* being need at- a luueli room, and I'mm 11 to 2 o'clock each day the place is crowded with ludiaiiiaus and vk-itors from other St-ares who i-p.'ea their lunch
Iheie. The m.iiii ni"in, ou 'he lirst floor, is alp at prei.-w.it. \t?tt(-rdav f.he ti.'or was i-s u'e1 as it it Juid bi-^n ipp-d nil 1 iia ii i'J be- i. ried. It iw hoiij. Lit in. it ij1-' v,-liter e-oHi-s itiruiigh from liflo--. account of poor drainage or for tlie* r-:..-o, tiiut, ii.- iioor i» too near the ground. Thi:- rouble, it is said, is oiuv leuioorarr. The i.^ncnll unil an I placed in ini- i. II yens is
1 tuiporar v. :ninj cslii!'i lllOl! '.lp!Ol\ cou, p!' 1 iTii.vni.. for a
ruU: iu tbe JFairfor i^uicuWor. 1 iuryv i.t.U-.iii..ncc tj.\i-^ci'd !r I I' bi.i.le.
In Paint
it
SAM O. SCOTT is with us.
'i
He
former her railr -d a -t in 11
low
the best is
the cheapest. Strictly Pure
White Lead is best properly applied
will not scale, chip, chalk, or rub off it firmly adheres to the wood and forms a permanent base for repainting. Paints which peel or scale have to be removed by scraping or burning before satisfactory repainting can be done. When buying it is important to obtaia
Strictly Pure White Lead
properly made. Time has proven
that
white lead made by the "Old Dutch" process of slow corrosion possesses qualities that cannot be obtained by any other method of manufacture. This process consumes four to six months time, and produces the brands that have given White Lead
as the standard paint.
its character
"Armstrong & McKelvy" "Beymer-Bauman" "Eckstein" "Fahnestock" "Anchor" "Kentucky" "Morley" "Southern" "Shipman" "Red Seal" "Collier" "Davis-Chambers"
are standard brands of strictly pure Lead made by the "Old Dutch" process. You get the best in buying them. You can produce any desired color by tinting these brands of white lead with National Lead Co.'s Pure White
Lead
Tinting Colors. For sale by the most reliable dealers in Paints everywhere.
If you are going to paint, it will pay you to send to us for a book containing information that may save you many a dollar it will only cost you a postal card to do so.
NATIONAL LEAD CO.,
1 Broadway, New Yotk,
Cincinnati Branch,
Cincinnati, ... Ohio.
Speaking of
Commencement Hops,
Everything is
Ladies' Choice
At Abe Levinson's
Because of
The Quality
And the Price.
fTiifthentcp-'ii EnffllftH TMnmord TCwmS.
Orljlnul and Onl. SAFC, always reliable.' LADIES, ask ])rurqist for*C\»rfte?fer'a
JCv.oliah Dia-i
mond Jirund
in lied aud
Gold,
Sola by all Lttou Drugglju,
Your Druggist will supply you.
DEAF
AIESS A HEAR NOISES CTME9BR IftVlbiliLK TUBULAfi EAR CUSHIONS* Whispers heard. Com
fortable. Sarefmlol wbrrf all Uem«die«fall. 6*1(1 bj
IF YOU ARE 'I O
lie inre :ind act vour tickets by tho QUEEN and CRESCENT and E.'T. Va. &Ga. Rys.
Is 110 Miles Shortest. There are no extra
rhames on limited trains and you the best to bo had. DON'T pay the same price and put up with interior service, tor rates or further particulars address D. G. EDWARDS, G. P. Agt. Q. & C. Route,
^ir'-inn:'ti. O. or ask your home Ticket Agent
OUEEN and CRESCENT ROUTE.
E N
105 S. Washington St.
New Grocery Store
Goods New and Strictly First Class. Cail and see us.
metallic^
boxes, aealed with blur: ribbon. Tftke no other*
Refute dangtroua
tions and imitations. At Druggists, or scad 45« in stamps for particulars, testimonials an| "Itelief for Lndles," in
Utter,
Hair to its Youthful Color. Cures scalp diseases & hair falling. 50c,and $1.00 at Druggists
The Consumptive and Feetole and an who suffer from exhausting diseases should use Parker's Ginger Tonic. It cures tho worst Cough, Weak Lungs, pebilitv, Indigestion, Female weakness, llheumatisnn and Fain. 60c. &
fitfiRKSaKLf.
The only sure cure for Corns, ing easy. 16cU. at Druggists.
Do you Know?
That more ills result from a: Unhealthy Liver than an other cause-Indigestion, Constipation, Headache, Biliousness, and Malaria usually attend it. Dr. Sanford's Liver Invigorator is a vegetable specific for Liver Disorders and their accompanying evils. It cures thousands why not be one of them? Take Dr. Sanford's Liver Invigorator.
A. J, McMULLEN & SON.
NATURE'S REMEDY
FOR
LIVER
b? return
Mail* IO.OOO Testimonials.
PARKER'S
HAiR BALSAM Cleanse* and beautifies the hair. Promoted a luxuriant growth. Never Fails to Bestore Gray
COMPLAINT
Name Paper*
Chichester Gnomical Oo.jAladlaon
S*lUUda.tl*feSquares
Thoroughbred Poland China Pigs
Y.
HISCOI,
•nlji 60S UrMway, New Turk. Write for book, of proofs fUXS*
It wont cos!yen
nn" more. You'.vill Ret there quicker.
nil will
mutt r.nd truvcl with ihe very best clnss of people. Your surroundings will be as luxurious :is money tan piociiri.'. ,\Vt have five complete and really nairnificent trains running daily between CINCINr: vn and ST A COUSTINH. These trains are the onlv Complete Vestibuled Trains from Cincinnati to the'SOilTH. You will save near] half a day in tune. This line
SCHENCK'S
ANDRAKE
LIVERPILLS
Garfield Teas
Cures Constipation. Restores Complexion, Saves Doctors' Bills. Sample free. GAKFIELDTKACO.,319W.45UiSt.,N.Y«
Cures SickHeadache
$40 PER MONTH
AND EXPENSES
Paid GOOD MEN for taking- orders. Steiidy work aud will furuisli tine oulllt and choice territory. A good chance. Apply.
PROTECTIVE NL'RSEHIE3, Gcucvr. N.
Ripans Tabules cure constipation. Hipans Tabulos: for sour stomach. Kipans Tabules euro bad breath. Ripans Tabules: best iiver tonic. Ripans Tabuies: pleasant laxative. Ripans Tabules oiw gives relief. Ripans Tabules standard remedy. Ripans Tabules cure liver troubles. Ripans Tabules a famih/ remedy. Ripans Tabules cure biliousness.
JFCDJFL SAI
Of both soxos.ofKiill litter sired by the jtZ* noted liojr, workl- cSfmMgrtvi beater, Jumbo No 1 .",201, A.KC. record. This is one of the larjrest breeding hogs in the Slate. Now- is the time to purchase 11 pitt that, will do vou (rood in the future. N.B.— I breed Burred Plymouth KoeUs exclusively. I have the lluest birds 1 evev raised, and still add a few jrood bird* to my llock each year. 1 am lirei'dinjr from two yards. l-Jfrjrs from either yard will ue sold at *12.r. for one sitting or *2 tor two sittings.
1
Address. GEO. \V. !'UI.LKIt, Crawfordsville. Ind.
Spectacles.
AND
TikLeading Republican Family Paper ofthe United States One Year For Only $1.50.
THE
Gives all the news of town, county and State, and as much National news as any other paper of its class. Your home would be incomplete without it.
®The New York Weekly Triton
Ts a National Family Paper and gives all the general news of the United States and the World. It gives the events of foreign lands in a nutshell. It has separate departments for "The Family circle" and "Our Young Folks." Its "Home and Society" columns command the admiration of wives and daughters. Its general political news, editorials and discussions are comprehensive, brilliant and exhaustive. Its "Agricultural" department has no superior in the country. Its "Market Reports" are recognized authority in all parts of the land.
A special contract enables us to offer this splendid paper and "THE JOURNAIJ lor one year
FOR ONIY $1.50 CASH IN ADVANCE
JV. T. Weekly Tribune, regular price per year, The Journal
We Furnish BOTH PAPERS ONE YEAR For $1.50.
SUBSCBIFTIONS MAY BEGIN AT ANY TIME.
Address orders to THE JOURNAL*
Special attention tolli.tiug Spec liieles and Eye Glasses tor
which purpose the Doctor has one of the most, elaborate and complete set of te.stuid appliances in the west. Snecial puins taken to lit the eyes and face, thus jriviiwr the greatest. and Comfort as well astrrcatly improvinjrthe personal appearance or the wearer. No charge for flttiiij-r. Du. K. IIUNTSINCKH.
W'ANTKD
D-Salesmen salary and expenses si art steady work (rood chance HUOWN 1SKO-'., Nursery-
from
for
for advancement.
Chicago. 111.
YOUR FAVORITE HOME NEWSPAPER.
$1.00 1.25
Total...."~$3Jeb
