Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 1 May 1891 — Page 6

REPUBLICAN.

Published by

ONTGOMERY. INDIANA LAND. KNOWN

tlon of the United States Trodden by White Men.

N*rer

'ashington has her great .unknown lanft like the interior of Africa, •ay's the Seattle Press. The country ihiut in by the Olympic mountains, which includes an area of about 2,500 miles square, has never, to the positive knowledge of old residents of the territory, been trodden by the foot of man, white or Indian. These mountains rise from the level country within ten to fifteen miles of the straits of San Juan de Fuca in the north, the Pacific ocean in the west, Hood's canal in the east, and the basin of Quinault lake in the south, and rising to the height of 6,000 to 8,000 feet, shut in a vast unexplored area.

The Indians hare never penetrated it, for their traditions say that it is inhabited by a very tierce tribe, which none of the coast tribes dared molest. Though it is improbable that such a Ij. tribe could have existed in the mountain country without their presence be-

Comic known to the white men, no man Las ever ascertained that it did not exist. White men, too, have only ijb Vague accounts of any white man having ever passed through this country, for investigation of all the claims of !•', travelers has invariably proved that ythey have only traversed its outer edge. 11?,^ The most generally accepted theory in regard to this country is that it cong*/-* sisted of great valleys stretching from \l the inward slopes of the mountains to a great central basin. This theory is supported by the fact that, although the country around has abundant rain, and clouds constantly hang over the ^r* mountain tops, all the streams flowing toward the four points of the compass |ife are insignificant, and rise only on the outward slope of the range, none ap&V pearing to drain the great area shut in ®y the mountains. This fact appears to support the theory that the streams flowing from the inner slopes of the mountains feed a great interior lake. ,'v But what drains this lake? It must j. have an outlet somewhere, and as alf streams pouring from the mountains 4 rise on their outward slope, it must have a subterranean outlet into the ocean, the straits, or the sound. There are great discoveries in store for some $i" of Washington's explorers.

A gentleman named Drew, now reb' tiding at Olympia, states that he has climbed to'the summit of the eastern from Hood's csinal, and looking own could see great valleys stretching toward the west. A party of railroad prospectors claim to have penetrated the interior, but could give no account of it. and appear only to have skirted the outer slopes ten or fifteen miles from Hood's canal. A party of United States soldiers are said have traversed the country from "•ort Townsend, but no data is obtainble as to what they saw. £Tu,mprous attempts have been made irfj Jo organize exploring parties, but they #oave invariably fallen through, the courage of the projectors oozing out at [the last moment. There is a fine opportunity for some of the hardy citi-

Jaens of the sound to acquire fame by J?unveiling the mystery which wraps the land encix*cled by the snow-capped

Olympic range. A Converted Assassin, pr City-front pedestrians were edified recently, says the San Francisco Examiner, by the eloquence of the first

Chinese evangelist who has made his appearance in that locality. He announced his name as Ah Qui. He did aot claim any connection with either the Salvation Army or the Holiness Band. ••Ten years ag-o I was a very bad lan," said he. "What you call highinders here, that's what I was in

Janton. I worked for a big mandarin fteen years. During that time I kil 1id jifty-one people for money. Twenty hem were women. I will tell you aa*.. I was converted. My master set his eyes on a Christian Chinese girl, but could not get her, so I was sent ta kill her. I was to receive ten dollars for the act. I found her alone in the house one night, and on her refusal ta accompany me to my master I told hell she must die. She asked time to pray,

I was so affected that the knife dropped •.from my hand, and that incident leu me to Christianity. I grew to lov*i hei' and she became my wife. The prffiich!er at whose house she lived married us. I "One night we were seized and carried

TO

the house of my.former master.

He ordered me to murder her, and I refused to do it. Then he said that another would perform that office and that I could end my days by hari-kari. His order was obeyed in one case. They disrobed my wife, and three men bound her, while a third cut off limb after limb. She prayed for them while they were doing this as long as ishe had breath in her body." I At this point Qui leaped into tbo dr and shrieked three unearthly yells, 'while the crowd who had listened to (he weird story stood aghast with supipressed excitement. He seemed to be 'insane for at least a minute. Then Iwipingr his eyes, he exclaimed: "The 'next day I escaped, and here I am."

The exhortation which followed lasted for at least ten minutes, and was intensely earnest. lie said that he proposed to go through this land and tell story of his conversion to show the £Hwer of srraoe.

Consumption Cnred.

ild physician, retired from practice, S* ad placed In his hands by an East ^Sionary the formula of a simple for the speedy and per•••••'S,#Ha&umption, bronchitis,

X'^Sll throat and lung *Nve and radical cure

£s wonderful of cases, iknovvn to

Jl by this Vnan suf [•e, to all lierman, lions for |lby

ad-,

ipapefy .'jches-

SERMONS IN STONES.

Bocks Typical of Christ's Presence.

Meaning of the Edifices Where His Praises are Sung—Salvation not Mere Worldly Reform—Dr. Talmage's Sermon.

Rev. Dr. Talmage, for the first time, preached in his new Brooklyn tabernacle Sunday. The new church will seat 5,500 people and cost $500,000. Text: Joshua, IV, 6. After making a few preliminary remarks he said:'

Blessed be God, He did not leave our church in the wilderness! We have been wandering about for a year and a half worshipping in the Academy of Music, Brooklyn, and Academy of Music, New York. And some thought we would never reach the promised land. Some said we had better take this route and others that. Some said we had better go back, and some said there were sons of Anak in the way that would eat us up and before the smoke had cleared away from the sky after our tabernacle had been consumed, people stood on the very site of the place and said: ''This church will never again be built." We came down to the bank of Jordan we looked off upon the waters. Some of the sympathy that was expressed turned out to be snow-water melted from the top of Lebanon. Some said: "You had better not go in you will get your feet wet." But we waded in, pastor and people, further and further, and in some way, the Lord only knows how, we got through and tonight I go all around about this great house, erected bv your prayers, and sympathies, and sacrifices, and cry out in the words of my text: "What mean ye by these stones?" It is an outrage to build a house like this so vast, and so magnificent, unless there be some tremendous reason for doing it and so, my Mends, I pursue you to-night with the question of toy text, and I demand of these trustees and these elders, and of all who have contributed in the building of this structure, "What mean ye by these stones?" But before I get your answer to my question you point to the memorial wall at the Bide of this pulpit, and you say to me: 'Explain that unusual group of piemorials. What mean you by those stones?" By permission of the people of my beloved charge I recently visited the Holy Land, and having in mind by day and night [luring my absence this rising house pf prayer, I bethought myself: "What can I do to make that place significant and glorious?" On the morning of December 3 we were at the foot of the most sacred mountain of all the earth, Mt. Calvary, there is no more doubt of the locality than of Mt. Washington orMt. Blanc.

On the bluff of this mountain, jvhich is the exact shape of the hutnan skull, and so called in the Bible ''the place of a skull," there is room |or three crosses. There I saw a fctone so suggestive I rolled it down the hill, and transported it. It is at Hie top of this wall, a white stonq, tvith crimson veins running thi-ough it, the white typical of purity, the primson suggestive of the blood that baid the price of our redemption. We place it at the top of the memorial wall, for above all in this church tor all time, in sermon, and song and prayer shall be the sacrifice of Mt. Calvary. Look at it. That stone fras one of the rocks rent at the crucifixion. That heard the cry, "It is finished." Was any church on earth honored with such a memorial?

Beneath it are two tables of stone which I had brought from Mt. Sinai, tvhere the law was given. Three pamels were three weeks crossing the desert to fetch them. When at Cairo, Egypt, I proposed to the Christian Arab that he bring one Btone from Mt. Sinai, he said: "We can easier bring two rocks than one, for we must balance them on the back of the camel," and I did not think until the day of their arrival how much more suggestive would be the two, because the law was written on the two tables of stone. These Btones marked with the words "Mt. Binia," felt the earthquake that shook the mountains when the law was given. The lower stone of the wall is from JMars Hill, the place where Paul stood when he preached that famous Bermon on the brotherhood, of the Jiuman race, declaring "God hath made of one blood all nations."

Since Lord Elgin took the famous statuary from the Acropolis, the hili adjoining Mars Hill, the Greek government makes it impossible to transport to other lands any Gresian antiquities, and armed soldiery guard Hot- only the Acropolis, but Mars Hill.

That stone I obtained by spe­

cial permission from the Queen of l&reece, a most gracious and brilliant woman, who received us as though we had been old acquaintances, and through Mr. Tricoupis, the Prime Minister of Greece, and Mr. Snowden, our American Minister Plenir potentiary, and Dr. Manatt, oue American Consul, that suggestivablett was sawed from the pulpit of rock on which Paul preached. Now you understand why we have marked it "The Gospel." L'ong after my lips shall utter in this church their last message theso lips of stone will tell of the Law, and the Sacrifice and the Gospel. This day I present them to this church and to all who shall gaze upon them. Thus you have my answer to the question, "What mean you by these stones?"

But you must not divert me from 4he question of the text as I first put Jt. I have interpreted these four memorials on my right hand, but

there are hundreds of stones in these surrounding walls and underneath us, in the foundations and rising above us in the towers. The quarries of these and transatlantic countries at the call of crowbar and chisel have contributed toward this structure. "What mean ye by these stones?"

You mean among other things that they shall be an earthly residence for Christ. Christ did not have much of a home when he was here. Who and where is that child crying? It is Jesus, born in an outhouse.^ Where is that hard breathing? It is Jesus, asleep on a rock. Who is that in the back part of the fishing smack, with a sailor's rough overcoat thrown over him? It is Jesus, the worn-out voyager. Oh, Jesus is it not time thou hadst a house? We give thee this Thou didst give it to us first, but we give it back to thee. It is too good for us, but not half good enough for thee. Oh! come in and take the best seat here. Walk up and down all these aisles. Speak through these organ-pipes. Throw thine arm over us in these arches. In the flame of these brackets of fire speak to us saying: "I am the light of the world." Oh, King! make this thine audience-chamber. Here proclaim righteousness and make treaties. We clap our hands, we uncover our heads, we lift our ensigns, we cry with multitudinous acclamation until the place rings and the'heavens listen: "On, King! live forever."

Is it not time that he who was born in a stranger's house, and buried in a stranger's grave should have an earthly house? Come in, O Jesus not the corpse of a buried Christ, but a radiant and triumphant Jesus, conqueror of earth, and heaven, and hell* Blessed be His glorious name forever! Again, if any one asks the question of the text: "What mean ye by these stones?" the reply is, we mean the communion of saints, Do you know that there is not a single denomination of Christians in Brooklyn that has not contributed something toward the building of this house? And if ever, standing in this place, there shall be a man who shall try by anything he says to stir up bitterness between different denominations of Christians, may his tongue falter and his clieek blanch, and his heart stop! My friends, if there is any church on earth where there is a mingling of all denominations, it is our church. I just wish that Joha Calvin and Arminius, if they were not too busy, would come out on the battlements and see us. Sometimes in our prayermeetings I have heard brethren use the phrase3 of a beautiful liturgy, and we know where they came from and in the same prayer-meetings I have heard brethren make audible ejaculation, "Amen!" "Praise ye the Lord!" and we did not have to guess twice where they came from. When a man knocks at our church door, if he comes from a sect where they will not give him a certificate, we say, "Come in by confession of faith." While Adoniram Judson the Baptist, and John Wesley the Methqdiet, and John Knox, the glorious old Scotch Presbyterian, are shaking hands in heaven all churches on earth can afford to come into close communication. "One Lord, one faith, one baptism." Oh, my brethren, we have had enough of Big Bethel fights.—the Fourteenth New York Begiment fighting the Fifteenth Massachu setts regiment. Now let all those who are for Christ and stand on the same side go shoulder to shoulder, and this church, instead of having a sprinkling of the divine blessing, go clear under the wave in one glorious immersion in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. I saw a little child, once, in its dying hour, put one arm around its father's neck, and the other arm around its mother's neck, and bring them close down to its dying lips, and give a last kiss. Oh, I said, those two persons will stand very near to each other always after such an interlocking. The dying Christ puts one arm around this denomination of Christians, and the other arm around that denomination of Christians, and He brings them down to His dying lips, while He gives them his parting kiss. "My peace I leave with you. .My peace I give unto yov."

Still further you mean by these stones the salvation of the people. We did not build this church for mere worldly reforms, or for an educational institution, or a platform on which to read essays and philosophical disquisitions but a place for the tremendous work of soul-saving. Oh, I had rather be the means in this church of having one soul prepared for a joyful eternity, than 5,000 souls prepared for mere worldly success. All churches are in two classes, all communities in two classes all the race in two classes—believers and unbelievers. To augment the number of one and subtract from the number of the other we built this church and toward that supreme and eternal idea wo dedicate all our sermons, all our songs, all our prayers, all our Sabbath hand-shakings. We want to throw defection into the enemy's ranks. We want to make them either surrenjpr unconditionally to Christ, or else fly in rout, scattering the way with canteens, blankets and knapsacks. We want to popularize the story of Christ. We would like to tell the story o'f His love here until meci wonld feel that they had rather die than live another hour without His sympathy and love and mercy, We want to rouse up an enthusiasm for Him greater than was felt for Natmaniel Lyon when he rode along the ranks—greater than was exWi bited for Wellington when he came back from Waterloo—greater than was expressed for Napoleon when he stepped ashore from Elbs. We really believe in this place

Well, the Brooklyn tabernacle is built again. That was done this morning. To-night we dedicate ourselves. In the Episcopal and Methodist churches they have a railing around the altar, and the people come and kneel down at that railing and get the sacramental blessing. Well, my friends, it would take more than' a night to gather you in circles around this altar. Then just bow where youi are for the blessing. Aged men, this is the last church that you will ever, dedicate. May the God who comforted] Jacob the patriarch, and Paul thejaged make this house to you the gate ofj heaven and when, in your old days, you put on your spectacles to read the hymn of the Scripture lesson, may you get preparation for that land where you snail no more see through a glass darkly. May thoi warm sunshine of heaven thaw the' snow off your foreheads!

Men in mid-life, do you know that this is the place* where you are going to get your fatigues rested, and your sorrows appeased, and your souls saved? Do you know that at this altar your sons and daughters will1 take upon themselves the vows of the Christian, and from this place you will carry out, some of you, your precious dead? Between the baptismal font and the comrauuion table,, you will have some of the tenderest of life's experiences. God bless you, old, and young and middle-aged. The money you have given to this church to-day will be, I hope, the best financial investment you have ever made. Your worldly investments may depend upon the whims of the money market, or the honesty of busi.iess associates but the money you have given to the house of the Lord shall yield you large percentage, and declare eternal dividends long after ths noon-day sun shall have gone out like a spark from a smitten anvil and all the stars are dead.

The Twenty-Four O'clock Movement (From the Railway Age.) The twenty-four hour notation reform is not dead, although it has seemed to be sleeping. The committee of the American Society of Civil Engineers which has been long and effeotively advocating the adoption of the plan of numbering tka hours of the day consecutively has issued another report, in which it shows that a large majority of the railway companies of the United States and Canada, have already expressed themselves in favor of the change. The number of officers who are now on record in the affirmative is given as follows: Presidents, vice presidents and general maij.agorls 135 general superintendents, 77 superintendents, 114 general trafic managers, 12 engineers, 65 total, 403.

The report states that the advantages of the twenty-four-hour notation are also beginning to be recognized in various branches of civil life, as for example in hospitals, in meteorlogical tables and other directions where simplicity of system and accuracy in noting the hours are essential. The Canadian Railway continues to use the system in its time tables, to the great convenience of travelers over this long transcontinental line and to the advantage of those engaged in handling trains, and it is difficult to see anything to prevent the speedy adoption of the reform on the other great lines of the country. At the instance^ the society of civil engineers a bill has been presented to Congress authorizing the use of twenty-four-hour notation and making it equally valid with the present method of number-1

Christ will enact the same scenes that were enacted by Him when He landed in the Orient and there will be such! an opening of blind eyes and unstop- Frightful Explosion of Gunpowping of deaf ears, and casting out of unclean spirits—such silencing bestormed Gennesarets as shall make this house memorable five hundred years after you and I are dead and forgotten. Oh, my friends, we want but one revival in this chuaeh, that beginning now and running on to the day when the chisel of time, that brings' down even St. Paul's and the Pyramids,shall bring this house into the dust.,

Oh, that this day of dedication might be the day of emancipation of all imprisoned souls. My friends, do not make the blunder of the ship carpenters in Noah's time, who helped to build the ark but did not get into it. God forbid that you who have been so generous in building this church should not get under its saving influence. "Come thou and all thy house into the ark." Do you think a man is safe out of Christ? Not one day, not one hour, not one minute, not one second.

Three or four yeara ago, you remember, a railroad broke down a bridge on the way to Albany, and after the catastrophe, they were looking around the timbers of the crushed bridge and fallen train, and found the conductor. He was dying, and had only strength to say one thing, and that was: "Hoist the flag for the next train." So there come to us tonight, from the eternal world, voices of God, voices of angels, voices of departed spirits, crying: "Lift the warning. Blow the trumphet, give the alarm. Hoist the flag for the next train."

Oh! that to-night my Lord Jesus, would sweep His arm around the great audience, and take you all to His holy heart. You will never see so good a time for personal consecration as now. "What mean ye by these stones?" We mean your redemption from sin, and death, and hell, by the power of am omnipotent gospel."

MADE ROME HOWL.

der in the Eternal City.

Hundreds of People Wounded, Several Killed and the Whole City Shaken— Many Houses Demolished.

An explosion of 150 tons of gunpowder on the 23d, shook Rome, Italy, to its foundations, spreading terror and dismay on all sides. The people rushed from their homes into the streets, houses rocked, pictures ftll from the walls, thousands of panes of glass were broken everywhere, crockery was shattered, furniture wa3 overturned, chimneys crashed down upon the roofs, and in some instances toppled over into the streets below. The cupola of the House of Parliament immediately after the explosion shook violently and then collapsed with a crash which added still further to the feeling of horror which had spread through the city.

The scenes in the streets and in the houses after this fearful explosion hava possibly never before been equalled in dramatic effect during the history of modern Rome. All the thoroughfares were strewn with bricks, stonesl splinters and other debris, hurled there by the force of the powerfu, concussion which had caused Rome to totter on its foundations. Peoplo of all ages and conditions were rushing, pale with fear, about the streets, trying to seek consolation from others who were as thoroughly terrified as themselves. In the houses doors, windows and cupboards were burst open. Rents and cracks appeared in the walls, the plaster fell from the ceilings and general desolation prevailed. In many instances people were thrown from their beds by the- shock which caused so much alarm, and cries of terror filled the air as thousands of families rushed ouj into the streets, Parents with children in their arms, children leading aged parents, «he younger helping the elders, made for the streets as if the only chance for safety depended upon their being able to reach the open air.

All the houses within a radius of a kilometer of the scene of the explosion are seriously damaged. Two officers were dangerously wounded, and nearly 120 civilizans have been taken to the hospital, suffering from wounds or bruises caused by the explosion. King Humbert, who was heartily cheered whenever his presence became known to the populace and soldiery, used his own carriage to convey wounded people to the hospital.

The shock which caused Rome to tremble did not spare the Vatican. That venerated pile shook with the rest of the Roman buildings when the force of the explosion was felt, and several of the historical stained glass windows of the old buildings were shattered. The windows in the ancient Raphael chambers and the stained glass in the royal stair case presented to Pope Pius IX by the King of Bavaria, were seriously injured.

Seven persons areknown to have been killed.

A correspondent of the Lo on Times at Madrid says that grave anxiety is felt there over the state of affairs in Portugal. He expressed fears that a revolution is about to break out, in which event, he says, the lives of foreign subjects will be endangered.

DEATH OF VON MOLTKE.

Herman Charles Bernard Von Moltk^ died at Berlin on the night of the 34th. He was the fatherland's greatest warrior and spent nearly all his life in battling for the cause «f Prussia. He was the author of several important works. He died of heart disease, very suddenly, having attended a session of the Reichstag in the afternoon.

jvoali Armstrong-, owner of the great race-horse Spokane, reports that his famous steed cleared last season about $23,000.

THE MARKETS.

Baltimore

incr FBA hnnrq in fwn sprifm of dairy, 30c country,

mg the horns two series

of

twelve

hours each, and it is to be hoped that

this reasonable legislation will be

enacted.

INDIANAPOLIS, April 2T, 1891.

Wheat. I Corn, Oats.

Indiana polis..

2 r'd 3 r'd !i r'd

1 03 1 w74

St. Louis—..

74

Philadelphia.

&•' t*-

57

3 r'd

Toledo

9($

83

52%.C

lover Seed. 4 15

1 15

58

I

Detroit.

76

1 12

73

1 wh 1 10%'

Minneapolis..

63

CATTLE.

Fancy export steers .: .V.. 40§)5 S3 Good to choice shippers 4 75@f 25 j/air to medium shippers 4 00@4 50 Common shippers 3 40^3 S3 1 Feeders, OCX) to 1,100 lbs 3 G0(c£4 10 Stackers, 500 to 800 lbs 2 75@3 40 Heavy export heifers......— Good toclioice butcher heifers. Fair to medium butcher heifers Light, thin heifers Heavv export cows. ni

4 40(^5 00 3 50@4 00 3 00(a) 3 35 2 25@3 75 4 00@4 ft) 3 lOiatf 75 2 90(«a 25 1 r0(rf2 50 3 (X)l!\4 50 2 25(3)3 50 2 ?5@3 50 13 00®2a 00 37 00

Good to choice butcher cows. Fair to medium butcher cows Common old cows. Veals, common to choice Bulls, common to medium.... Bulls, good to choice Milkers, good to choice. Milkers, common to medium....*/

HOGS.

Heavy packing and shipping...$5 [email protected]

?S"v.v.v.v.v.v.v.v.v.v.v.v:. I *1

SHEEP.

Good to choice sheep and yearlings 50@6 2«» Fair to medium sheep and yearlings 4 50(3)5 25 Common sheep and yearlings... 3 r0M4 2S Bucks, i(P head 3 00@5 00

M1SCKIXANEOUB.

Eggs, 13 butter, creamery^ 24@26cj

method of number- Eggs, 12 outter, creamery, MWW

bM9^ftX

2Dc.

ICKJJ

i8good @20c wool, 90@35c, unwashed,

hens, f»c: turkeys,

10c,tonus,

seed, [email protected].'

(qenuinehss

OLD HONESTY

DR.

Ryo.

1 w58

1 0. lyo73

Chicago

61

109 08%

Cincinnati—

2 r'd

1 13!

73%

67

2 r'd

1 03

71

New York

55%

2r'&

123' 118 121

81

59%

05

a

RED tin tag on every

pi tig.

is acKnowN

edged to be tfye purest and 17]0st Listing piece of Standard CS*jewing Tobacco on IhemarKet. Trying it is a better test than any ta!K about it. Give it a fair trial.

Your dealer has it. 1ND. FIKZER & BROS., LOUiSlilkP-

J. SMITH,

Doctor DeiaTal

Burgery.

Office Corner and M&ln Street*. I

Beeldenoe Corner State andfllpp*StrMta.

Frlces Seasonable.

GREENFIELD, INDIAKA.

JY-ABT L. BRUNEB, M. D.,

Diseases of "Women.

Residence, North PennBjlranla St,

GREENFIELD ENDIAJLU

81 tf

WARREN R. KING,

PHYSICIAN AKD SURGEON.

OFFICE—In Gant's Block, corner Pena, and Main streets. Residence, West 31*19 street.

GREENFIELD, IND,

J. H. BINFORD,

ATTORNEY-AT-LATT,

GREENFIELD, IND.

This Announcement

Isjfor the benefit of the few people

who

have not yet learned that the

BEST BARGAINS IN

Dry Goods, Groceries, Boots, shoes, Hate, Caps, CoDfeetioncry, Etc.,

Are secured at our store. One trial wttl convince you that our goods are as low as th»y can be bought"v anywhere. See our new line of 5 ct. Calicoes. Thi best that have ever been sold for the money.

THOMAS & JONES WILLGW BRANCH

J. O.BRANSON,

E

J(ew Palestine Dniggist

Keeps oae of the Best Lines of

Drags, Medicines, Paints, Oils Varnishes, Etc., to be found in the county and Prices as low as they can be made. GIVE HIM A CALL, lOtf

A VI? A If I I untlertftke to briefly tench nny fairly ItiteUigtnt person of Qitttcr Isex, who e»m rftid and write, and who, after instruction, will work industriously, how earn Three Thousand Dollar*

who are mnkin^

feathers, 35cI

80 clovcr

over

I

a

Yrnrintlieirown lofftlUle*Twhereverth«y Mve.I will also furnish the ftftnntioii or employment,at which yon can earn that amount. No nionov for *uorrRM'ul n? above. KaMllyand quickly lenvitod- 1 daalva but ono

worker from

have

*nch

already tuujrht

district or county. I

and

number,

provided with employment a iHrpn

a

MOIjKO*

.reareich. It's Af JS W

Full particulars

WTC KK.

Addreaa at unro.

AC. AliLJRXi filox 4BO, Augusta, Maine*.

Jean 1»r earned at ourKF.TVlinoofwnrk-taj-idly nttri ttoniMr. by Iho-o or either sex, young or old, and in their own iocanttt«,whm?ycr thry live.

Any

onurcin

do tho

work. Kuay

to

learn.

Wo furnish everything. Wo start you. No rink. You can

your *]»nra momonts, or nil your timo

entirely now lead,and

bvUifts

devot*

to

cho work, 'this a

aa

wondi'rftdsnccciw lo evory

worker.

Beginners arc earning from $25 per week and upward** aml morn alter a llltlo cxnerioQo*.

We cAnfttrniah you

the e»-

uloyiiuMit anu teach yon PNftK No snaoo lo explain here. Poll liitoramtton FliE3. 'iVUUJR Ai CO., AtdiOTA, AUKS.