Democratic Sentinel, Volume 21, Number 47, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 November 1897 — Page 1

yolume XXI.

Frank Foltz. Charles G. Bpitler. Harfy K. Karrie. FOLTZ, SPITLER & KURRIE, (Successors to Thompson <fc Bro.) (.tv, kl Est&li, km, Usinck & Loans. Only set of Abstract Books in the County. Rensselaer. - - Indiana.. HOLM !i 10PEISS, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, XENSIELAEIi, ... INDIANA. <*■ Offioe second floor of Leopold’s Block, cornet Washington and Vanßens. selaer stieets. Paotice in *ll the oonrts, purchase, se>' and lease real estate. Attorneys for Rensselaer 8., L. & fi Association and Rensselaer Water, Light and Power Company. C. W. Hanley. J. J. Bant Hanley Sc Hunt, Law , Realty, Insurance, Abstracts and Loans. Rooms 5 and 6 Forsythe Blook, Bensselaet, Indiana,

Wm. B. Austin, LAWYER AND INVESTMENT BROKER, ATTORNEY FOR THE L N A <fc C, Ry., and Rensselaer W L &P. Company, ser Office over Chicago Bargain Store. Rensselaer - - - Indiana James W. Doutliit, Attorney-at-Law & Notary Public. ter Offioe. front loom up-stairs over Fendig’s store, Rensselaer. Indian.. llalpli . >lai’sliall, ATTORNEY- AT-LAW. Practicees In Jasper, Newton and adjoinins counties. Espeiinl attention given to settlement of Decedents’ Estates, Collections, Convdyances. Justices’ esses, etc. Office up-st airs west side Farmers’ Bonk building, Rensselaer, Indiana. Charles E- IMills, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Rensselaer, Indiana. Pensions, Collections and Real Estate. Abstracts carefully prepared, Titles examined. •S’ Farm lojns negotiated at lowest rates. Office np stairs in Odd Fellows’ Hall. Mortecal P. Cbileote, George N. Dunn, Notary Public and Notary Public Abstractor of end Titles Collector Clxilcote Sc Du nn, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, Will practice in all the Courts of Jasper and adjoining counties All business of tho profession ■ ttended to with prompt ness and dispatch Collections a spa cialty „ Office in Makeever’s Block, over Farm era’ Bank t2ln4

Ira W. Yeoman, Attorney-at Law, Real Estate and Col leotinß Agent, Remington, Ind. I. B. Washbubn. E. C. English. ~Washburn & English a kTiioianß & Surgeons Itmteiaer Ina Dr. Waehbnrn will give special attention to diseases of Eye, Ear, Nose, Ihroit «nd Chionlc Diseases. Dr. English will give special attention to surgery in all departments, and Gen oral Medicim s. Office in Leopolds Corner Block, over Ellis & Murray’s. Telephone 48. W W Ilartsell 9 >l. 1> HomaMiiathic Physician A Rensselaer, ilnd. O' Chronic Diseases a Specialty. "®* -Office in Makeever’s New Block. •John Makeeveb, Jay Williams, . President. Cashier. Farmers 7 Bank, Rensselaer, Indiana, Reeoeive Deposits, Buy and Sell Exohange, Collections made and promptly remitted. J. W. Horton, Dentist.

UJTTTTI All diseases of Tee h and Gums carefully treated. Filling and Crowns a spe oialty. Office over Post Office, Ronssel Mi, tad ana . O O. P. KAIILEK, RENSSELAER, IND., 'Wftdsg, Wagon-Making. Special attention given to repairing Machines, Dnpli'-eting Castings in Iron «r Brass, etc Shop near the Depet ' s ■■ '■■■• Si- r - ii-. ’'.■■■ . -' -' ,- -

The Democratic Sentinel.

L A BOSTWICK City Engineer, Maps and Blue Prints OF mu d Hi LAND DRAINAGE, Map Work and Platting a Specialty Rensselaer Ind. Office, Room No. 7, Forsythe Building

WRIGHT, mkHt |)hderhker & embulweß Rinbbzlakb - - India -u C alls promptly responded to d ay or night. A.. J. KNIGHT, Fainter —AND— Paper Hanger. SSaTOnly the Best work done. SATISFACTION GUAR ANT’D! Rensselaer. Indiana

Addison Pakkison President Geo. K. Hollingsworth, VicePresiddent. Emmet I , Hollingsworth, Cashior. TIIE (rJOMMERGML BANK OF RENbswLAER. IND. Directors; Addison Parkison, James T. Randle, John M. Wasson, Geo K. Hollingsworth and Emmet L. Hollingsworth. This bank is prepared to transact a general Banking Business. Interest allowed on time deposits. Money loaned and good notes bonght at current rates of interest. A share of your patronage is solioited. At the old stand of the Citizens’ Stateßank

ALF HoCOY, T. }. BcOOY, i. K. HOPKISS, Prosident. Cashier. Ass’t Cashier Jl. McCoy Sc Co.’s Bill, RENSSE AEB b . IND. 'ae Old es i ml in Jasper County ESTABLISHED 1854. Transacts a General Banking Bn ness, Buys Motes and Loans Money on L ng or Short Time on Personal or Re t Estate Security. Fair and Liberal Treatment is Promised to All. FobeignExchangeßoughtand Sol Interest Paid on Time Deposits YOTJR PATRONAGE IS SOLeCITED. tSFPatrons Having Valuable Papers May Deposit Them for Safe Keeping."®*

] | A PERFECT CARRIAGE. J | smitb Premier ONLY TYPEWRITER MADE ] [ ] | THAT HAS A i > ! | BALL-BEARINO CARRIAGE. ! < 1 ABSOLUTELY NO FRICTION. II 'WrovEMINT THE ORDER OF THE AOE." cmb 'j i:Ai UMF nIH n'l o a c < !! D Built for Use nod Wear. ' | I The Smith Premier Typewriter Go., !| I SYRACUSE, N.Y., U.S. A. i iMieieeiiiiieeeeeeeeei > Catalogues and Information at CHICAGJ OFFICE IP4 Monboe Street, John A. Jchnson, W. H. Graves, President. Manager. STAR CITY MftCHIHNE & FOUNDRY CO., —MANUPACTUBEBS OF—--111. HQU, BE. ANDCast)ingfs Of Every Description. SpeM MseMnerv Designed and Built to Order **■ Comer Third and Brown Street*, LaFatette, In»

Rensselaer, Jasper County, Indiana, Friday November i9,*897

mieotr-'io RaIlWaY MifTißß In the Circuit Court room Od i Fellows’ Temple, next Wednesday evening, at 7 o’clock. Everybody urgently inv’ted to be prepent, .especially thorn along the proposed line o f constructionCome out. The Mozarts! H ar the Mozart j I Thanksgiving, Thursday I next week. Try KenneJ Brothers’ Vienna Bread. None better. George Mo’gan has resigned ' is position a= guard in the state rison north. Secure sea’s at Fendig’s drug, s ore for the Mozart Symphony club. Judge Healy’s is the plnct for shoes —Genes', Ladies’ and Children’s. Don’t forget it.

Hear the Mozart Sympho y Club of New Yoik at(J e/a House Tuesday next Nov* 23. dvertised Letters—Elmer Sul l nbarger, Mrs. M*>ry Potts, A E Johnson, Vam Hi ton and Emma Gossep. H9ai Mis Ma"i Luoise Gumae r Pr ma Donaa Contralto at Ellis’ Opera House Tuesday Nov. 23. The second entertainment of the ecture course will be g ! ve>? next Tuesday evening, November 23d, at the Opera House Starr’s brick warehouse, in process of construction at the rear of his store building, fell with a clash Monday evening. Resposibility is attributed to the wet weather and quicksand. Good warm lunch Kennel Bro’s restaurant and bakery, for 15 cents.

The two-year-old son of E. P» Honan, while playmg in an up» stairs room fell to the sidewalk below, but, we are pleased to state sustained only a few bruises. Harry Coffman, who was married to Miss May Burns in this city a short time since, has desert-, ed his wife since their r -moval to E wood, taking with him money furbished by his father-in-law to encage in the barbering business. The . superintendent of police has offered a reward of $25 for* his apprehension. ‘•lts the Jidge ye mane,” who is the exclusive shoe dealer in Rensselaer. A practical workman of many yiars experience; a good “jidge” of stock style and finish, its always “the Jidge ye mane” who keeps the largest and best stock ot boots nnd shoes, at the most reasonable prices, in the city Charlie and John Jones, serving j«il sentences for stealing a lap robe, took French leave Satuiday evening and made their way to Sheldon, 111. Sheriff Reed and Jailor Joiner followed them up, and through the pursuasive eloquence of the sheriff they were induced to accompany him to the Indiana side of tbe state line, when he informed them that he would cheerfully escort them back to Rensselaer without bothering about a requisition.

NOTICE IN REGARD TO CONTAGIOUS DISEASESChildren who h&ve had anv cons tagious disease or whose home is with a family in wbioh such disease has prevailed, will not he alt low d to enter or re enter the public schools until a certificate has been proemed from the attending physician, countersigned by the City Health officer (8.. C. John son, M. D.) Dermittingjsaid pupil to attend school. No verbal state ment will be accepted litany case whatever. Mordecai F. Chilcote, President of Board. November 2, 1897. Low Rates, One-Way and RoundTbIP TO THE 80IJTH, VIA THE Southern Railway The Southern Railway, penetrating the bast States of the South and South east, calls attention to its One-way Settlers and Round-trip Home So kers tiokefs at special rates on third Tuesday of October and on the first and third Tuesdays of November and December. For full information; rates and Maps write to J. C. Beam, Jr., N. W. P. A* 80 Adams St, Chloago.'H). Wpa H Tayloe, A G P A Louisville, Ky.

•‘A FIRM ADHERESOV TO CORRECT PRINCIPLES.”

‘‘Daughter, if th? Inttn.” #Gen ihi Van*. Rensselaei Chap <er D. A. R. will meet Friday, November 20th, at 2:00 o’clock p. m;. with Mrs. J. J. H. Chopman. Mem eis capond to “patriotic say’ngs of greatest an ! wisest men of the Revolutionary period.” The farmers aro now busilv engaged in husking 18 cent corn. —■ ■ IV here did the recent ovclouo in New York deposit Hon. Bourke Gockran? Watterson’s request that he he alio ved to become a private in ihe ranks of the Democratic army should bo acquiesced iu, and the privater the better.

Au exchange says that the Pres ident is ashamed of the showing made by Ohio. Well, horse and horse. The returns indicate that Ohio is ashamed of the of the showing made by the President. l’he Indianapolis News (repub** lican) says “if the prevailing deficits in revenue were occurring under a Democratic administration the Republican organs would be clamoring for t u iff revision,” T:i<? suroiiiH iu the treasury has been gradually dwindling down under the operations of the DiDglev tariff, if the gold conspirators were iai-lined to make a gold raid on the- treasury they could foico a bond jgsut i two weeks.

Hanna r u behind Governor Bushnell something like 40,000 and lost the state o the legislative vote by over 10,000. The gerrymander was all that saved him. He may yet be defeated. President McKinley, in hi- Cincinnati speech, asked the question: ‘What will make the nation strong?’ Governor Le-dy, of Kansas, is the first one 1 1 make answer. His reply is a vigorous one. He says: “Why not ask how can we secure for the average man his fair share of the wealth he creates, instead of Feeing it swell the coffers of trusts, combines and corporations? The way to make our citizenship most useful • and effeedve ih to break the force ot ancient prejudice, direct the citizens’ attention to the evils of government by injunction and by financial syndicates .

“If the children of great cities 1 ke New York and Chicago could have the same educational advantages Kansas provides for hen, much would be ained. If the nation is to remain strong, its com mon people must thrive. A real Democracy cannot mainta.n an a istocracy of wealth that hypnotizes courts, congresses and cabinets. ’’ - ■ 1 ...... .m ■ - , < ■ -■ C ommenting on the statement made by the New York Evening Post that such transactions as the Union Pac fie railway job are large ly responsible for BryaJsm; the Indianapolis Sentinel says:*

4i<“our contemporary, for once, is right. What our Wall street con temporary chooses to style ‘Bryan ism’ is, as a matter of fact, a good deal more than a mere theory of finance. It is a protest against the perversions of the functions of government to the service of greed the manipulation of and congresses and oouits in th interest of corporate monopolies the systematic prostitution of the law mak-'Dg and judicial and ad ministrative machinery of the na tion and the states and the mum cipalities to the ends of the job bers and schemers who have for so many years largely controlled le gislation in this countiy. “Does anyone suppose that if Mr. Bryan had been elected pres ident in 1896 the Union Pacific steal would have beeu carried cut, or even attempted? The Evening Post, by its unguarded confession that such scandals tend to stirnu late ‘Bryanism,’ unwittingly ad mits that the two things are ineoi. sistent When the national gov ernment is dominat d by P-ryap ism there will be an end to the ex ploitation of toe treasury and the people, by the classes who were so much alarmed about the ‘na

tional honor’ last year when theri grip upon the government was po seriously threatened.”

HOME AMUSEMENT AND FOREIGN INDUSTRY.

Lousier the proposition. A protectionist schemer eot es along and says; “1 want to start a new •ndustry. It will give Jeraploy ment to n great many men. It will prevent our spanning money abroad for ihese goods.” The st lf-supportiug citizen replies: ‘‘Very good; why don’t you start it? Nobody is hold in ; you.” “Rut,” says the protectionist, “1 cannot affo ato do so. 1 caunot compete with the foreigners.— They make the g oda cheaper than I can on a count of our highs priced labor. You must tax your, self by allowing me to sell my goods at a higher price. Then I can afford to pay the men American wages, and still make a profit on my goods.” * Hut why,” asks the citizen, ‘‘should we take men out of their present high-priced employment, and put them in au employment which you admit is not remunerative to them to you, unless I make up the difference by taxing myself? - *

“For the future,’’ answers toe tariff man. “After we get this in-* clustiy established we can make goods cheaper than the t( reignera, aud then we will take off the tax aud sail them cheaper than now. and then we will puy our men higher wages than they get now, and the) will ha e all this moiey to spend, which will maue everybody pro peious.” “Gome off,” says the citizeu.— • We have been taxing ourjelvesti tart infant industries for a century, and) the longer) they d<|busi~ ness the more tax they say is necessary. They have kept on raising the tariff uut 1 now they claim it ib absolutely necessary to make the rates prohibitory and keep out foreign competition altogether. They also that; snywages are too high, and must be" reduced. The country is kept in a fever by strikes and lookouts, aud your pr mined prosperity never appears except there is an interference of Provi deuce, such as a crop failure in other countries, and that prosperity does not come from your pro tected industries.” “But,” says the protectionist, ‘‘don’t you see that you are spend ing your money at home instead of abroad?’ “Yes, l do, ’ replies the citizen. ‘ That is what makes me weary. L give my money to you fellows at home and you spend it abroad 1 stay here and work like a slave, and you get up trusts and combines and hire smart fellows to run them, while you go off to Europe snd spend the profits. You buy cas ties, and 1 ace horses, and yachts, and hire foreign noblemen to mur ryyour daughters, and 1 stay here and tax myself to maintain home industries. We have too much home industry ana foreigii amuse ment. I want to help start a ays tem of home amusement and for eign industry.”—lndianapolis Sen tinel

EMBOSSED IN GOLD.

To buy and reproduce fatuous p intitgs involves au expenditure that could hardly bo born 'lunless, as in the erne of The Youth’s Companion, the enterprise *6 sustained by the approval of more tha.fi,e hundir-d thousand sub' scribets The Companion’s Souvenir Calendar for 1898, a series of charmi g figu e pieces, faithfully copie' in colors and embossed in gold, is recognized as one of the richest and most costly examples Of ibis form of «rt Yet every new subscrib e rec ives it without ad* drtional charge. M reov r, the paper is sent free to new subscri. bers every week from the time the subscription is received until January, 1898, nd then for a full ye r toJaruary, 1899. The popular price of The Companion, $1 75 a year, and the character of its contents, make it a paper tor every household. Exceptional attractions are promised for the fifty-two numbers to e issuea during 1898 The Rt. Hon. W. E Gladstone, the Hon. Thomas B Reed, Rudyard Kipling, Lillian Mor’icc*, John Burroughs,^W. 1 . Howe ’sand Max O’Rellare prominent in the long list cf eminent contributors named in The Companion’s announcement, whieh will be sent free to any o e address ng The Youth’s Companion, 205 Culumbus Ave., Boston, Mass. Thanksgiving services in the Christian church next Thursday. Rev. C. D. Jewries ■’ ill preach th sermon. Everybody urgeutly invited to attend.

AIRY THINGS ABOUT THE HEIR.

JaybßuJk My sod baa become quite a b. cycle >art; rides two wheels at once. Cluy pool—That's nothing.’ My W by rides four at once.—Washington Tlinese. “Well," aold the kits to the email boy, “I gue« I will have to> admit that you have me on the string. And that,” continued the kite, “I* what make* me 'soar.”— lndianapolis Journal. teacher—Tommy, pane dtacrattoo. Tommy (feeling bu way)—Dtacratto©a noun—feminine. Teacher—Hew do you make It feminize? Tommy— lt’a the better part of valor.-Pittaburg Newa. Mother Yea, doctor, Jaaneeey la that tongue-tied he can’t apeak a word. What trade would you advlae him to learn? Doctor—Make an artist of hta, by all mean#. He can make aignA—Buffalo Time# Mr. Ftgg— 1 aee that a prieet In St. Louie made the members of hie congregation’deposit all their motto buttons on the altar before he would go on wKh the service. Tommy—i guess he waa makta’ a collection.—lntttanapolta Journal.

Judd—A baby grow# more the fliat month of its life than at any other similar period of lta existence. Sometimes )t gains an Inch In length during this tJrne. Spndd—l can easily believe that, for later in life It will often find Ksetf getting short—Washington Times. “There," said the feud father, as the political procession passed by. "Does not that All your young soul with (high aspirations?" "You bet it Anas pa," answered the Mttle boy. "I’m goto* te Kit a broomstick And begin practicin’ for a drum major mootTm I gtt home."— Cincinnati Enquirer. Tommy had been suffering from a lame back for a day or two, an 4 his mother bought a porous plaster for the same and prepared to adjust It As tht eyes of little Mabel fell upon the puns tured square she exclaimed: "Oh, maw ma! What are all the bolas forr ‘1 know," Interjected Tommy; “they're for lettln’ the pain cut"—fitchasoad Dispatch.

SOME POINTED PARAGRAPHS.

The Ignorance that !a bltm Is the fcnoranee of the man wba ttlalu he know* It olL—Puck. People who make a boMt of saying what thoy mean gt-nually have menu thlugH t<> eay.- Hoston Twneerlpt. One reason a uian bate* to be bald 'h that all hl« fpo! friends are continually patting the bare spot—Buffalo Times. Never argue the point wlt(h the man who tells yon that be hi one In a thou-sand--he may be one of the ciphers.—* r.oulsvUle Times. Always do as the sun does—look at the bright side of everything; It Is Just as cheap and three times as good for the digestion.—The Doctor. After a man has made a pleasant allusion to the daye when he oourted hlo wife there Isn’t anything she will refuse to do for him.—Atchison Globe. A man out la Western Massachusetts Is busily trying to discover the secret of perpetual motion, and Mr. Moody Is busily trying to convert New York.—Boston Globs. Before a girl gets marrisd she never thinks a man has suoh a thing as a stomach. After she’s bean njarried a while she wonderi If he’s got anything else.—New York Press. Nothing flatters a man mors than to tell him that the receipt he gave you cured your cold, whether, as a matter of fact, you really tried tbs dose or not—Somerville Journal. It is beginning to be recognised that the rabbit’s foot Is an agent of good luck only while it'remains on the rabbit and helps him to escape from tbs hunts*—Philadelphia Ledger.

POPULAR SCIENCE.

There is no water on the moon’s surface. Our sun Is but one of thousands of others of equal or greater magnitude. The light of the moon Is only about one-six hundred thousandth that of the euu. Wind power Is derived from the unequal beating of various portions of the earth by the sun’s rays. Astronomers say that there is every reason to believe that human life on Mars Is much like it Is on this earth. The greatest depth, writes Prof. Seeley In his “Story of the Earth,’’ at which earthquakes are known to originate is about thirty miles. It has also been calculated that a heat sufficient to melt granite might occur at about the same depth. A Hamburg young man has just had his sanity proved by the Roentgen raya. He declared ten years ago that he had a bullet in his head, which he had fired iuto it in trying to commit suicide. He complained of the pain, and, as ha attacked his keepers, and the doctors could find no trace of a wound, waa locked up as a dangerous lunatic. The Roentgen rays have now shown the exact pluee of the bullet. A novel disposition of sewage is made at Exeter, England, according to London Machinery. The method consists of four tanks, a fourth of the sewage passing into each. Light and air are excluded from the tanks; putrefaction and decomposition axe rapidly set up; the microbes multiply and the solid portions of the sewage are consumed and the outflow from the tames through filters loses all color and taste, No chemical is used and no at* tentlon to tin* tanks of any sort is needed. Each filter bed automatically cleanses Itself by bviui tat of vaster a »uot time. v ,

Doctor Moore, the careful spe-* cialist, Rensselaer, Indiana. FINE STOCK FOE SALE At O K Ritchey’s farm, four miles sooth of Reniselaer. Having‘retired from the turf," not from choice but necessity, will sell all my thorongh-bred horses, Jersey cattle, thorough-br.d Poland-China' ogs, both male and female, bred and unbred, and all being fashionably bred stook. JFai*m Loans. Wa are prepared to make faim loans at a lower rate of interej than any other firm in Jasper county. The expenses will be as low as the lowest. Call and see us. Office i*' Odd Fellows’ Temple, near the Court Houbo WARREN & Hi WIN. The finest line of box, calf and winter tan shoes for ladies and gents, also the best stock of boots ever brought to tl is city, at Judgo ’’aley’s, toe “tine ould Irish g;nwho will take great pleamo in chowirg them to you

Low K-uteN. iMMMliini Through Sleeplb ro Washington and Baltimore The new Mouou tlnough sleeper between Chicago and WasLington and Baltimore has become sr popular that it is often n ceseary to put on an extra. Requisitions for berths should be made at least a day iD advauoo. It is attached to No. 81 which leaves Monon at 5;12 a m. aud arrives at Washington at 6.47 a. m. and Baltimore 7‘.05 the following morning. W. H. Beam. Agent.

RHEUMATISM Is caused by Uric Acid and other impurities lingering in the blood, which nave not been filtered out by the Kidneys through the urine. Tlie seat of the trouble it not in the akin or muscles. It’s sick Kidneys. Electricity, liniments or plasters will not reach the case. But the disease can be CURED I have used the sample of Dr. II bbj Kparagus Kidney Pills, and they have ,< enefited me more than all the medicine I have heretofore nsed I hav been troubled with rheumatism to suoh an e tent that mv fingers were stiff ; nd the jo nts immovable. I can now use my bands with ease. Mrs Julia Chinn, 611 South A St., Tticbmoud, Ind. HOBBS Sparagus Kidney Pills. HOBBS REMEDY CO., Pbopbiktobs, Cniciso. Dr. Hobtm PHI* Kor Main in REN6BALAER. IND.. by KIUNK B. M!.’vn:R. DruEgixt ‘

Hie to Mil The State of Indiana. Jasper County: In the Jasper Circuit Court, „ January ’term, 1898. Non Lynch 1 vs V Complaint No. 3464, Edward J Lynch. 1 Now oomes the Plainttfl, by Janies W» Douthit her attorney, and files a oomplatnt herein, together with an affidavit that the defendant Edward J Lynch is not a resident of the Bta.aof Indiana. Notice is the efi re hereby given'said Defendant, that nnless ho be and appear on January 16th, 1898, the same being the 12th day of the next term of the JasSer Circuit Court to be holden on the ret Monday of Janna y a. d. 1898,’at the Court House in the ity of Rensselaer, in sai ’ County and State, and answer or demur to said complaint, which is for a Divorce, the same will be heard and determined in bis absenoe. ( ~* i In Witness Whereof, I j Seal. > hereunto set my hand and —-v-—' affix the seal of said Court, at Rensselaer, Indiana, this 13th day of November, a. d. 1897. Wm. H. COOVEE Clerk, J antes W. Douthit, Att’y for pl’ff.

YERINGTON’B COLLEGE, 8t Louis. Michigan, will open its rev enth yeor Bept. 27th, 1897. courses Teacbeas’ Gommeacial, shorthand, Pen nanship, English,Music, Elocution, aixt Physical Culture. Tuition: For any or all studies in the college, 12 weeks $10; 24 weeks $18; 86 weeks $lB. The Gom«. mon Branches (Arithmetic!, Grammar and Geography] with Private Lessons in Music and All lTree Glass Drill*, for r.lvove The Oommon Emmlces with /*)' Free Jlnss Drills [without Trh ' > r-. in Eusic] only Jl6 a ve.ir. Pt- j Drills are Plain ’and Orna» Penmanship, Reading, Spelling, L writing, Music, Elocution, Physics, Culture, Debating and Pailiamentary "ork. Btuitents may dub where tbep have use of Boarding House complete tor 50 rents a week and furnish their own provision for a trifle.—AU studies in the college handled bv professionals —Our Commercial and Sborthond graduates bold the best'positions in our largest cities Not one from our Teachers’ Genres has failed at Teachers’ Examinations during the past two years Drop a card for free catalogue to 0 W YERINGTON, 8t Louis, Michigan Blackford IndiaaaDoil*. UrgMt and bwt | shortatt ttm« 1 1 await r*t«* | pwltloas - —^—-

N umber 47