Democratic Sentinel, Volume 9, Number 9, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 27 March 1885 — Page 8
W. C. T. U. DEPARTMENT.
Tflgßr- C. T U. will -i eet at the of Mrs, S, A Henry, Mareh flMfipwP' m to carry out the fo]]owir. 0 Society. Mrs. B ParrisUwe# Prayer- Society. fSeming minutes, SecIfcsil'ftßk Mi-sei Wright and Osborne. Hmm, Miss Alice IrwinSelefjijßeading. Miss Hill, . Doxology. Society. asSygyWM ,„ Drinking baffiles u», confounds us, and mocks ue at every point. - WcMHHm’ alike the teacher- the man of the patriot, and the legislator Kverngber business flounders in hopeless tßßculties, but the public house triumphant ecurse.—[London cannot be burned, beheadA lie co the throne is and tr uth in a dungeon is -"W&vMill; and the lie «n the throne is to defeat- atad the truth in the dillMeon is on the way to victory HMm McKinney. No,liquor has been seid for the last [astkyaura in one of the.■s-/ealt best and ■fiKiiKisperous cuonties of Texas, and JteteHfenlly the jail is empty- The gMH||Npiould pause and consider that MIOMI • great moral.—[Chicago Stand - : IfcjS © orre ctly estimated that the cost '■WWfcJiquor traffic in the United States finMUjithe damage of thirteen Chicago ■MHSttßiy. year—more than one Chicago month. The liquor traffic, t thereß&e, Is a conflrgration which evflHbar burns up thirteen Chlcagos. fr iMtomputed that the average glass gßsgßHßkey, which cost' the drinker from ■to flitteen cents, only cost the one-sixth of a cent. is the key to the only reasonable argument agarnst at the question of prohiw * v<) te at the people. Here are goißtoMbe joctoets of manufacturers, >4hegover^ment.sod dealers,: from the distillery all the my down the miser* abtKydfl&nkardin the gutter. With profits and gains is it that they who share in the •pelt! |hould unite and spend large sums ■ to save the miqditoae traffic, they have their living.— [Kx. tried moral suasion for scores haye tried high license for Yet the«liquor powea has MlMtoides that put to shame ail the i-ntewrioua growth of our other industries. It baS4lot retraced a step. It is holder, insolent and high-minded to than ever -before in history These are not -groundless assertions; we shave spared,., neither dollars nor daps of labor .-verifying these fact. The. one temedy tha has not bean tried is a prohibition law backed up bv a national |3mililWti on party. lowa has the law: but it -hasn’t the party to back it iKanaas-iias the:law; but-no party stands or falls with it. Maine has the Uw, rand it had a, party too, years ago; for the Maine republican party was founded «n abolitionand prohibition. But the law has never yet had the .toackiug of nationalT>arty. And a State can only .aboliak the manufacture, and sale *lthin its borders; the importation from Its states it cannot abolish national law to help it. The teloon is an enemy io God and <mani llMnsed or unlicensed, it produces noffi|n|j;but fi ia aQ d sorrow; it thrives onlf on The stronghold 'Without Which it is powerless, with rwhlch alone, it is terrilbv potent, is the political jjbtronghold. It will never be persuaded to abandon it; it must be and kenet out forever—[Ex.
Where to Draw the Line.
.Co’t-DUpatxSi Although II ike good English aames, yet I cannct say that I am one of those no P’d-ienee with the adoption foreign names or of foriegn terminations to English .names. There is undoubtedly an insane deEire on the part of m&qy young iladies, especially, to have odd-sounding names or to affect French spelling, and as long as it tends towards euphony let them do so, but the line should be drawn somewhere. /We can stand Mae and Marie, Lucie, ,yut»4 $ 'host of other softened and foreign names, but J thought it was a little .too far when I read on a, young ladies’ names Miss Belliet 'We darw the liae at that.’ |F -■■ «•». The operation of fixing the denomi’’nations of -the charred and mined notes found in the safes of the express com-jf-fcanyafter the late railroad aooident Mfisr/Wastiington.. keeps the women •experts Jn the Treasury pretty busy. ,Tt is done solely by women, and so Bmm?■■is their skill in handling that they accomplish re* |||»||M:Would be utterably unattainthem. It h s been found experance that a counterfeit uayrough half the banks in the Without being detected, until back often torn artd mut Hated, ®t&ihe-i|ands of the Treasury women. 180^ certa ' n of detection. They -.•l|||aKy..eves and feel of a note i. they suspect it. > If it feels wrong, in half a minute point out the incongruities KHHlp&terfeit.- Lx, j3WI known citizen attempted to me that G’ol Vilas’s ■.wne s®wld be given a French pro_ln speaking of him, he •taid. we-thou d asy G’ol- Vee’.a givin a awl to the final. As he insistwas the onl y proper way in HHHgl||hpeak of the new postmasterMMOOried it on.the first Wisconsin ‘‘What do you think of ■HHMHstment of Veela?” I asked. sMwwri< u es* he's all right-” “Veela.’ 1 ritP'OBF “ I guess Lamar’s all Then I spelled it out Bill Vilas? ’■VhyHMMtW.io before?’ So it doesn’t '’WB"* letterHMMbeks ago, at a swell party in daughter of a greui -■iig-BttiV" Oppeard in such a scant was described as “two loops • at| d a belt around the waM*” When she loft the room it was she gone bom- to **"*”•“ (n "' l ‘ re,,,,! '
Waiunf grov. > are beiug t pUnied in many parts- at the west. Queer Olga, of Greece, is said to be the most beautiful woman now on a throne. The enthusiastic miners of Eagle City Arizona, presented f 5,000 in gold dust to the mother of the first clii'd born thereThe largest and fines memorial stone in the Washington monument is the one presented by the Corporation of delphia‘Pat have you any prairii ain Ireland like we have in Illinois?’ To be shore we have. Didn’t yez Ivor hear of Tipperary?’ The White House has been painted so often that the white lead upon it is said to be by actual mersurement, nearly a quarter of an inch thick. An old colored man who bad imbibed too freely on New Jersey applejack, said: ‘Some .people is tilled with delight, but Use tilled wid de lightening.’ >.«♦».. Turpentine in small quantities mav be used with advantage in the laundry, but resin, which isusualy found in soap, is injurious, discoloring some goods and shrinking woollens- — ■ «»<•► Black walnut sawdust is now mixed with linseed gum and moulded into ornamentation tor furniture- When varnished it is handsome and mure durable and carved wood.‘I feel like Joseph,’ said a sorrowing husband; ‘Hue Joseph in the Bible;lor jpy wife is (lead; aht was cremated, and yonder stands ttie.urn with the ashes io It, and, like Joseph, I love my Pot-of-tear.’ Statistics show . that one hundred thousand people aye killed by whiskey .where one pereoi jh killed by a mad dqg. And yet must eteiybody would rather tackle a glaasot whiskey than a mad. dog, The juice of the curious ink-plant of New-Granda requircs.no preparation for being used for writing. The color is reddish when first applied to paper but soon.,becomes a deep black which is very.duraole. Tbe United States cavalry have introdtteed a drill of teaching their horse to lie down and firing frem behind tbem.lt is said that the instruction is not difficult and was achieved in less than three anon ths. ‘Mamma, who tore Mr. Bland’s hair all out*’.said little Mabel. -Hush, child, you mustn’t speak ot suchtbings Papa is bald, itoo, you know.’ ‘Yes, but I want to know who lore Mr, Bland’s hair all-uui; he isu’t autrnied.’ Saidthatdapper little lawyer, Ambrose H, Purdy, ‘There is a restaurant in New York city where 1 .-an get twentytour kinds of meat ao< vegetables for fifteen ceute.* ‘How yuu do that?’ asked Omlonel Fellows. 1 order hash.’ Han Augustine, Florid., mum the first permanent settlement m-.de by Europeans, within the limit of .the present United Stales- The setUemeut was established in 1565, and San Augustine is therefore, the oldest city in the United StatesNear Tallahsssa. Fla-, there resides a .man who has Jived in the same house, on the same farm .all bis life, but has al.ways voted and, paid taxes in two different States. His home is near the Georgia line, and the several purveys have placed him in a differandt. State each timeA brilliant black varnish for iron, stone, or wood -can be made by .ihor oughly incorporation ivory black with common shelae varnish. The mixture should be laid on Mery thin. But ordinary, coal varnish will serve the same purpose In moat .cases quite as well, and ,js net nearly so expensive. The exchange editor has been discontinued at the White House. He was invented by Hayes and continued under Garfield .and Arthur. .Ais business was to clip favorable notices of the president and file them for;future reference Colonel JJamont having once been a managing editor, drew the blue pencil through that useless executive appendage-
The New Star.recently printed chare shewing the location of 465 liquor saloons in the Eighth Assembly district. There are iu the,city of New -.York 10,875 licensed aud .about 1 .oOfi unlicensed sadoons, making a total of 11’8,75 saloons, or one for every 119 inhabants. TLe total number of bakers, butchers and grocers in that city is only 7,611. * J Two Highlanders were seen on an ocean steamer, one of whom .eajried and lined ostentatiously a large red handkerchief. Hisefriead, mthe,courses of the voyage, produced an orange and eoihmeuccd to suck it. He of the UaiiCkeackeif looked .curiously at it for a few moments and the exclaimed - ‘Here’ Sandy, mon. g< e us a suck o’ your orange, and I’ll gie ye low o’ niy napkin. ’ The act forfeiting the Texas Pacific land grant which has just passed 'Jongress res’ores to the people 15,000,00ff--000 acres of their domain,. Thisjwill make 93,750 homestead farms or 180 acres, which will soon be opened for settlement and culwation. The Texts Pacific is but the beginning «f a restoration to the people j>f the domain that has been forfeited by the railroad corporations.
A solution of oxalic acid has been used tor removing ink stains from cotton, linen’ or the fingers’ but it is attended with the danger of injuring textiles and and the skin. A much safer and better treatment of ink or rust stains consists of the application oi two parts of powdered cream of tartar and one part of finely powdered oxalic acid- Shake up the ingredients well together and apply the powder with a dry rag to the dampened stain. When the snot has d'sippcar d u.e pirt should be well Wash© I.
Two Friends.
Philadelphia Call. Jones: “I hear that tli« handsoi"« young tenor of your choir is to mu v the charming soprano. Sing-uiar, is »t not?” Smith. “Yes each struck a chord in the otners’s heart; it did not take mng to register (heir vows, and it will be a note-able wedding. Thew will spend the honeynoon or the high Ob.” “Very romantic atf a’r no douot ” “Well no, ixcept that they met ny chants ”
AGRICULTURAL.
To remove warts on horses, take a piece of concentrated lye as large as a walnut, put it into a bottle with rain water enough to dissolve it and apply with a feather. An Illinois correspondent states that experience has taught him that cattle will thrive better on good, bright flax straw than on oat or wheat straw, and he never knew cattle to be injured from eating it In selecting potato seed two things should be kept in mind; first, plant only such seed as may be expected to produce smooth, fair-sized potatoes; second, plant -only when the seed is in full vigor.— JL W. Cheever. Basswood trees are urged for planting by the roadside, as they serve the double purpose of attractive shade and abundant forage for bees. They also make excellent timber whenever it becomes desirable to fell them. One of the best disinfectants, says the Poultry Bulletin, is Gandy’s fluid, which is made by putting one ounce of potass, permanganate in a pint of cold water. For use, one ounce of this fluid should be added to half a pint of water. The cause of club-root in -cabbage is claimed by a German experimenter, Woronin, to be a parasitic vegetable, which lives and feeds on the healthy tissue of different cruciferous plants. All weeds <df that order (producing pods, like turnips, mustard, radish, etc.) should be eradicated while land is being rested preparatory to a renewal of cabbage-growing. 'The Indiana Farmer says the Ben Davis apple is «o poorly flavored that even the coddling moth generally passes St by for some better variety, and the consequence is that but few of these apples are wormy, and, being of high color and handsome shape, they ;are a very popular apple at the city fruit stands, where they outsell other Ikinda about two td one on the average. Trefoil is said to be extensively used in England for alternate husbandly, but it is reported not suitable for permanent pasture mixtures, except in very small quantities. A writer states that this plant is well deserving of .cultivation on light, dry and high, elevated inferior soils, and on such will yield a greater bulk of herbage than any of the cultivated clovers. It is highly nutritious, and eaten withiavidity by cattle. From the great depths to which its roots penetrate, it is not liable to be injured by.drought, and is thereby enabled to retain its verdure after the grasses and other plants are burnt up, a fact worthy of notice by Western farmers. Farmers who burn green wood are probably not aware of the waste of heat. The sap .uses up—that is, .carries off in a latent state—a very large portion of the heat produced by its carbon, or its dry material. As much man and team power is require'd to haul three or four cords of green wood as for six or eight cords of dry wood. The lesson is: cut the fuel and split it as finely as it is to be used, in the grove; haul it home when well dried, and keep it in a dry place for use. It will be worth far more for heating purposes than ifburned green, or wet, or damp even. The only exception to this advice is, when by reason of easier hauling on snow, and on account of the leisure of men and teams in winter, it may be expedient to haul home the green wood then; but in all cases let it be well dried before it is used. To stop a colt from pulling back on ’his halter in the stall, take a sufficiently ■long piece of half-inch rope. "Fut the .center of it under the tail like a crupper, cross the rope on the back, and tie the two ends together in front of the breast, snugly, so there is no s ack, otherwise it would drop down on the tail. Put an ordinary halter on (a good one), and run the halter strap, or rope, through a ring in the manger or front of the stall, and tie it fast in the rope on the front of the breast; then slap his face and let him fly back. He will not choke or need telling to stop pulling back. Let him wear this awhile, and twice or thrice daily scare him back as suddenly and forcibly as possible. After one or two trials,he cannot be induced to pull back.— Chicago Evening Journal.
An apple in perfect preservation, although ‘Jtj years old, is in possession of a gentleman, in Ulster county, N. Y. As it round -I up from the blossoms of the parent stem in the early summer of , 1787, a bottle was drawn over it and I attached to the branch, and after the apple had ripened the stem was severed and the bottle sealed tightly. It looks as fresh as when first plucked. , Black raspberries may be planted either in autumn or early spring, using only tips of the fall’s growth, planting no deeper than they grow; and, if set in autumn, cover well till spring. These should be planted about three feet apart, where plants are not too expensive, etter P ut two Plants in the same hill, or very near, so as to secure a stand. The same is true of red raspberry and blackberry plants. Evebt flock-ewner should improve his flock year by year by the use of good bucks, and keeping the best ewe lambs, and disposing of the oldest sheep in the flock. It is very poor economy, indeed, to sell off the lambs every year and keep the old sheep until i they are 10 or 12 years old, because the flock by this method will not yield as much profit as by a judicious system of weedmg out annually, —Chicago Jour’ nal. I
The water which can be gathered from the roofs of barns and sheds needed to shelter stock will, if carefully •sved, be sufficient for the stock through | the year. To accomplish this the cistern should be a large one, to hold the surplus of a wet season till a time of scarci y. With a basement barn the cistern should be in the corner, where ! the bank of earth against the wall is deepest, to prevent freezing. Then, with a faucet in the lower part of the cistern, a continuous small stream can be kept running, adapting the flow to the number of animals, so that the tub shall never be empty, and never, or very seldom, run over. This plan is a great convenience in winter, and more tljan repays the expense by saving manure, besides the greater thrift of the stock. — Chicago Journal. Early Potatoes. —Beside commanding a high price, there are other considerations that come in to make the early crop of potatoes valuable. The Early Rose continues to be as good as the best, not only for the early but the late crop, and always fetches a remunerating price in the market. But there is this additional advantage in the early crO p—it can be harvested and removed and the ground put in good order for fall crops. The best turnips we have ever known camo out of a piece of ground cle. red of early potatoes. Indeed, we do not know of a more Erofltable arrangement of crops than to ave turnips follow potatoes. The ground usually has to be pretty good' for potatoes, but it is not essential that the manure be very much decayed. Some, indeed, contend that long, strawy manure is all the better for a potato crop. The turnips, on the other hand, must have the manure very well decayed, in order to give out its best results. Hence, after the potato has done with its fertilizer, there is enough left for the turnip to thrive upon. Wheat and rje also thrive very well on land which has been previously wellmanured for potatoes. In all these cases the early potato has a great advantage over the late one. They allow of a much-earlier preparation of the ground tor the subsequent crop. There is still another advantage in an early potato. Tn this part of the country at least the plant is subject to the attacks of the Btem-borer. They usually commence their ravages about the end of June. They bore out the whole center pith of the stems, and before the end of July the plants are all dead, being dried up before the potato is matured. In such cases there are not often fifty bushels of potatoes to the acre, and of these half of them are too small to be salable. By getting the potato early in the ground and using varieties which mature early, the tubers are of pretty good size before the insects get to work, and thus there is a great gain. It seems to us wa can almost do without any more late kinds. We say nothing here of the depredations of the beetle, as it has been so completely met and overthrown as hardly any longer ; to be considered as a serious injury to the crop, early or late. > vtlogTapK
HOUSEKEEPERS’ HELPS.
Appe Custard.— A nice apple custard is made of one pint of apple sauce, one pint of sweet milk, and three eggs. Flavor and sweeten to taste. To be baked with an under crust. Oatmeal Muffins. One cup oatmeal, one and a naif pints flour, one teaspoon of salt, two of baking-powder, one pint of milk, one table-spoon of lard, two eggs. Mix smoothly into a batter rather thinner than for cuo eak< s. Fill tho muffin -'in•; . two-thirds full and bake in a hot oven. Cookies Without Ecgs.—Take two cv.p.> of si!g".r, erne cup oi butter, one cup. of s’seet mi'.k, one teuspoonf.id of s»da or baking-powder, and flour eneue.h to make a soft dough. Roll thi:i cw, :<;t -’a:, qur.-k oven, not water c.;u I? ? ula the place of the milk v,li ; v.ay •/'.-•I roquets. Potato Cr-iquEites. —Take six boiled potatoes, pass them through a scire, add to them tbreq table-spoonfuls of ham chopped finely, salt, pepper ami chopped parsley to tasie. Work into this mixture the yelks of three or four eggs, fashioned into bails, roll them In bread crumbs and frv in hot lard. Brown Bread.—Sift together one pint of corn me th one pint of rye flour, one tabie-spooui'ni. of brown sugar, one tr-as'j.Den!'-!I. oi sr! '■ at'J two of oakiiigpoadm. Emi iUo r.;?? mmt urn one table-spoonful of lard and add threefourths of a pint of milk. Mix into a batter-like cake and bake one hour. Protect, it with bimwn paper if it should brown too sash id first.
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MARCH 2 BLIZZARD The United States Government Cen«na Vol-ARl’A*r??-wcs* d ’. of the “REMARK UNTIRI onr “CzNIQUK sud UNTIRING aFFORTS,” in Dnshing the Amera«b iculttriht. It began the current year with a larger subscription Hat than at any correer? ‘J! twelve 7 ears - The able corps of Editors, who have made the American Agri. CUI.TCRIBT a welcome visitor to hundreds of tbousan sos reader* for a quarter of a century, are still bending all their energies to make the journal, if possible, more interesting and valnuthat, H eVer And y ° n m ’ y rigetly co cl,l(le Is Coming to Indiana, where it already has so ni<inj subscribers and friends to quadruple its circulation fail t 0 embrace THIS UNPALLELED OFFER* A FAMILY CYCLOPAEDIA FREE. Anv -person subscribing to the American asricultu Rist. (English of’German) so 1885, whose sub. scnption is promptly forwarded to us, togeth- r with the subscription price, $1 50 per year and 15cents extra for packing and postage on the Cyclopedia, making $1 65 i all—will receive the American Agriculturist for 1885, and be presented with the American AGRtDULTURisT Famiings CLOP ’ EDI A’ J nßt ont > 700 pages, 1000 engrev-
TWOMONTHS FREE ..Every new subscriber (sUd only new ones), wbe promptly forwards bis subscription in accordance with tnereconditions ran have his year’s subscription date from March next, receiving free the numbers of the Amerr can Agriculturist for January and February. TWO MAGNIFICENT ENGRAVINGS FREE- . .Everv su< h subscriber will also be presented- I post paid, with the magnificent plate Engrav I Ings “In the Meadow,” and 'Foes or Friends,*’ I of which over eighty thousand ht>ve been sent I for hy our subscribers. CYCLOPEDIA. ENGRANINGS. AND A DICTIONARY FREE...To anyone promptly forwarding us the name of a new subscriber to the American Agriculturist with $2 00, we will send Webster’s Practical Dictionary, just out, 600.900 words. i.4"0 illustrations, while to the new subscriber we will send the American Agriculturist for 1885. and also the Family Cyclopaedia, post-free. Furthermore, on receipt of fifteen cents extra, (maki g $2 15 in all,’ in this case for packing and postage, we will forward the two engravings, “In the Meadow,” and “Foes or Fuends,” to the sender of the subscription, or to the subscriber himself, as we maybe directed. Mention these offers in writing. Send six cents *starns', for mailing you specimen American Agriculturist; forty-page Premium List, with two hundred Illustrations; specimen pages of < yclopaedia and D ctionary, and full descriptions of the Engravings presented. CANNA3SERS WAANTED EVERYWHERE. Address Publishers Ambbican Agriculturist. DAVID W. JUDD, SAM'QBURNHAM. Pres’L Sec. 751 Broadway, New Yoik.
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, G ' and Best I PET ONYIiAQI ZINE Unequaled Premiums for 188 PUIX-SXZE DRESS PATTERNS —— —«a •«»->-♦ »■ Peterson’s Magazine is the Best ami Cheapest of the lady’s-books. It gives more forth, money, and combines greater merits, than any other. Its immense circulation and lone- estahii.h ed reputation enable its proprietor to distance all competition. In short, it has the B otamtsn BEST STEEL-ENGRAVIN GS. BEST ORIGINAL STORIES BEBT CO bIs R T DR F E A SS H PATTfeRNS, BEBT WOI BES^! 8 P i^?g. Nß iTe . The steriee, novetets. etc., in “Peterson,” are admitted to be the best published ah G. nopular female writers contribute toit. Every month, a Full-Size Dress Pattern which Is alone worth the price of the number. Every month also, there appears a 18 Rlven COiOOD BTHBL yASKIOM-nATB! TERMS ATWAYB IDT ADVANCE, $2-00 A YEap UNPARALLELED OFFERS TO CLUBS. 2 Copies for $3 50 ( With the “Pearl of Price,” a splendidly illustrated volume of noetrr 3 » “ a-tn 1 la s? s teel - en g ravlI ML “The Won In Love” for getting up the Club, P 7 “ “ 800 With boihan extra copy of the Magasine for 1885 and fheiaroe.t..i * 10 50 Ing, or the “Pearl of Price,’ to the person getting up the Clubf* * B F*’ FOR LARGER CLUBS STILL GREATER INDUCEMENTS’
THE REMINfiTOH FAIR Association this year have Two Di*-1 triet Lrots for the counties of J-jgj c r 1 Benton. Newton and tt’hih*; one. al three minute trot and the other .-J two year-old Colt trot In the :w<>year o<d trot each Colt shall be nam ] ed by the owner, and entry m de nod later than May 1, 1885. end shall pay at the time of entry $5 00 to be add-l ed to tl e purse tnd divided. The) purse will be divided into four parts] In the three minute r trot there shall] be an entry fee also of $5 00 to be) added and divided. Entries to-clo3e> the day before the race. Fair—SepJ tember Ist, 2d and id. H. W. SNYDER, Sec’y.
Are You Going To New Orleans! Or Florida? I If so ynu can fzo via- the Monon! Route via Louisville or Cincinnati J and see the Mammoth Cave, Nash*! ville, Blount Spring, Montgomery, Mobile, and the G’llfl coast for the same money that wilM take you thruegh the- dreary, unin-a habited Mississippi swamps; we are! confident you cannot select a line to the South enjoying half the advant4 ages that ..re possessed by the Monon Route and its Sournern connections. No one should think of goiua South without visiting the Mammoth Gave, the great natural wonder o this continent- 8© much* nas beei written of this world famou wonder that it is impossible to say anything new in regard to it—it conuot be described ; its caverns must be explored] its darkness felt, its beauties seen; to be appreciated or realized. It 1c the greatest |na ural curiosity—Nia gara not excepted—and h<» whose expectations are not satisfied by Its marvelous avenues, domes an< starry grottos must be a tool or W demi-god. From Mobile to NeA Orleans (141 miles) the ride along the Gulf coast is alone worth the entire cost of ths whole trip.. In fill sight of the Gulf all the way . past Ocean Spring, Mississippi City, Pass Christian Bay, St. Louis, and’ Beauvoir. the home of Jeff Davis. When you decide to goSouitth make up your mind to travel over the line that passes through the b st country and gives you the best places ro stop over. This is emphatically the Monon Route, In connection with the Louisville and Nashville and the Cincinnati Southern Railways. Piill» man Palace Slee ers, Palace Coaches double daily trains. The best to’ Cincinnati, Louisville-, ew Orleans or Florida. For full nforma'ion, descriptive books, pamphlets, eefe, address anv Agent of the Company, or Robt. Emmett, District Passcagen Agent, No. 26 Fo, Illinois Styeed ndianapoiis Ind. I W e call attention of our readers to an advertismsnt of the Obica go Cottage Organ Company in another cellumn.and we take pleasure i n recons’mendirg to the|general public a com. pany whose organs have attained a* popular reputation for their superior mnslcal qualities, artistic beauty an<J general excellence. This Company ranks among the laigestand beat in the United States, having a capacity for manufacturing 800 organs pet month, and Its organs are shipped into nearly every inhabitable portion of the globe. The members composing the firm of the Chicago Organ Com I pany are men of experience, integrity skilled in their line, conduct theii business on an equitable basis, and we predict'for the “Chicago Cottage Organ" a brilliant future.
Services at the new Catholic© Church every Sunday at 10 o’clock a. m. Rev, Zumbuelte, pastor, NEVER GIVE UP. If you are suffering with lowand depree sed spirits, lossj of appetite, general debility disorded blood, weak constitution, headache, or any disease of a billions by all means procure a bottle of Electric Bitter You will be suprlsed to see the rapid improvement that will follow, you will be inspired with new ife; strength and actively will return; pain and misery will case, and heneefoith you will rejoiee in the praise of Electric Bitters, bold at fifty cents a bottle bv F- B. Meyer. 35—C
