Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 36, Number 5, Jasper, Dubois County, 13 October 1893 — Page 3

PERSONAL. AND LITERARY. Mrs. Julia Ward Howe is h laborious writer, elaborating her work with jjrcat caro. It is wiitl that hlits was ton years writing and rewriting: "Later Lyrics." hhc .submits her manuscript to hul f a losen Intimate literary friends for criticism. K.v-l'rt'sidcnt Harrison fjets iood pay when lie takes Iiis neu to writu it few lines. The Cosmopolitan sent him a cheek for one thousand .six hundrel and sixty-six dollars in payment Itir an article of less than eight thousand wonls which appeared in the .Septem her number. "Margaret .Sidney," the populai writer for children, is a sweet-faced, simple little woman with sunny hair und laughing eyes. Since the death of her husband, Mr. 1). Lathrop, the pubHiker, she lias given elose attention to his business anil is at theotlicc by eight o'clock every morning. Miss Kvart, of .Somerville, and Mist bees, of Lady .Margaret Hall, were In the first class of the latest list of modern history houors'at Oxford, and there were fifteen other women who took honors. The distinction of the firstclass is so great that only three men out of over one hundred attained iL Miss Martha l'ord, of Haltiiu';ro,

had the honor of being selected to read I the ' Star Spangled Manner" on Mary- ! land's thvy at tho World's fair. September 12, MKs Fttrd wre many colors orange and black. She is a graduate of the Baltimore high school, where she finished her course with marked distinction, being the valedictorian of her class. Thirty-eight novels and thirty books other than fiction have been written bv M iss Charlotte M. A tinge, and she continues to write, although she has just passed her seventieth birthday. Upon that day an autograph album was presented to her, containing the signatures of five thousand admirers. There was no public presentation, but the book was left at her house in Otterbonrne, a village near Southampton. Mme.Christinc Nilsson, now known ns the countess of Miranda, lives, for the greater part of the year, in a line house almost a palace at Madrid. In its internal decorations lie has displayed a certain amount of eccentricity, for her bed-room is papered with sheets of music from the scores of the various operas that she has interpreted, while the walls of the dinning-room are covered with a collection of hotel bills, the result of the singer's many professional travels in both liumispheres. When Hr. W. Seward Webb's new house in the Adirondack's is completed it will have cost one million five hundred thousand dollars, and will probably be the finest private residense in America. Half an acr of ground will lw covered by the house, which will be bnilt of granite, and will contain one hundred and seven rooms. It will require three years to finish the building, and after its completion Dr. Webb will entertain there on a royal scale. He is still a young man, ami W poor.vrlMMi "tie began his money aki qartrj He is now third vice-president of Che Kew York Central railroad, and possesses a uperb estate in the Aillroadacks. HUMOROUS. "Walter (at Saratoga) "Chips, ?',r?" jtraightllush fhis mind still or. last night's little game) "Yes; two stacks, loth blue."' HuiValo Courier. Poet "Can I see the editor?" Office l!oy "Yes, if you'll give me a iliine.' Poet "I will when I come out." Office Hoy "Yes, but yoc won't have time then." "My pUtny counterpart." the poet wrote Of Iii- dear child, the darling of his henrt: Then lon?ed to ilut.h the stupid printer's throat That set it up "My pig my counterpart." Antony Chekyl, in Harper's Weekly. A Word for Himself. "The man 1 marry must be handsome," she said. "Pin afraid he will not be," he answered. "Why not?" "P.ecause very leautifnl women usuallv marry plain met.' X. Y. Press. "That was an awful fall Pempscy had from the cable train this morning." "How did it happen?" "He saw his wife step oil" the right way nnd the shock caused him to lose his focting." Inter-Ocean. Mrs. Uppcrernst "You go abroad a good deal lately, lo you not, Mrs. Nuwmonnie?'' Mrs. Xcwmonnie "La, yes my dear! Why, we're in Paris so much lately that I call us regler3'arisites." Yogue. Photograph seller, saturated with modernism, to fair customer She "Have you rt photograph of Wahltington Irving?" Hi "Yes ina'amJ Hut if -you will pardon my correction, Ji is lir.it name is Henry." Their 'Kespective Worth. CSara (languidly) "My lianecc is seventy yean old. anil is wirth n million." Mary "Mine is twetity-eight, and T woul ln't take a httndreil millions fur him." Detroit l'rec Press. The KfTort Abandoned drinnen "Andyoung Kridley went to the ilogs. did hti' The last time I heard of him Miss Migglcs was trying to reform him." U.trrett "Yes, but she gave that up. She marrie! him." Chicago Tribune. Jack .Asin (to the s'tccnth heiress) "Must U bt no always. Miss Scadds? A!v love pleads l-eforo a merciless judge." Miss Scaihb "Trttn; but what night an habitual criminal to expect?" Kate Field s Wnshlygton. Hungry Ilig.'fins "I s'posc yon didn'f know I was a told if r?" Weary Wntldns "Xo. What army lld you ever Iwdong to?" Hungry Higgfns "The great army of the unemployed. Ueen soldleriii' iu It all mt life." Indianapolis .lourtul. Landlord "Now don't UH me yon Mimt a new ftirttne in the house. You know J put one in Ir.ut y'iir." Tenant -"I know thai, and It's a line funiiic. tout I think then' inoite thing itrnredg." Landlord "And what u that, pray?" Tenant "A new kopw voiad iL" arpar's Uazaar-

SCHOOL AND CHUHCH.

Waken were religious institutions, even curlier than the love fea&is ,f the first Christian!.. The t'lrnese Sunday school infusnectioi? with liroinlield Street ehtirch, Hoston, has about eighty member's. In the last twenty-five years, j-.o Aays Mr.,. Alice Kreeman Palmer.t'leven million lolNrs have been given in this country to wonmn'-s colleges alone. The Presbyterian Synod of Pennsylvania comprise Lift.! churcheswith a membership of IfjO.'KW. Addition! last year t the communion rolls 11,8.S. Prof. (leorge C. Chase, of Hates college, Lewudon, Me., has leen ail vanccl to the presidency. He is a graduate of the college, l'J years old. During the past ten years he has raided about MO,uO!) for the institution. The late Miss Sarah Heuham, of Oreenport, Columbia county, X. Y left by will the following legacies to the Ucfornied church: (i,00l to the board of foreign mission; ,000. to the church building fund; to the general synod, fii,00 for the education of students for the ministry and ?7.r,u0 for the support of the Theological seminary. I won settlement of the estate ami iu conformity to the will, each of these ob'ect. receives H percent, additional, or $(!.S-2T. ...5sy and $l5,:tül respectively; total. S'i7,s7T. A controversy has Wen going on between the .lews and the people of Switzerland in regard to the slaughtering of animals. The .lews always take the life of an animal by bleeding. The swiss Humane society prosecuted the Hebrew butchers for cruelty to animals. The law forbidding needless pain to animals was enforced against them. Inasmuch as the .lews had a religious scruple on the subject, it was sonsidcred it great hardship, and they ippealed to the country for relief, but the people sustained the law in overwhelming numbers. Presbyterian Journal. According to the official statistics the total number of schools in the whole Herman empire is .VJ.Mi"; pupils. 7,tiJ.".liSS; teachers, 120,03'J, of whom 1 $1,750 are women. The figures for Prussia are: "Schools, :4,74J; pupils, l,.UG,47G, and teachers. 70.707, S.4S4 being women. In the entire empire the scholars are 10.0$5 per cent, of the population; in Prussia. 1G.54. In Germany, outside of Prussia, there is one teacher to every I pupils; In Prussia, one to every 70. These teachers receive from 150 to $.".00 a year. The annual cost of educating a child is, in Prussia, $7.14; throughout the rest ot the empire, ?7.r,8. A very careful religions census has just been taken of Scotland, under tho supervision of Ilev. Kobert Howie, of tHasgow. The result is remarkable, disclosing, as it docs, the interesting fact that out of a total population of 4,02",Ci47 the various denominationshad 2,tfl:s,l0 in church communion, being 7$W per cent, per 1.000 of the population. This left 1,002,511, or 'J04 per cent, per l.WO "chHrchless." The churches divided the 2,S,1IW as follows: Established (Presbyteriaa), 1,14(1.247; Free efeurch, 771,081; U. P. churca, 455,101; smaller Protestant churches. 2!5S,01; Roman Catholic chnrch, $152,747. The percentage per 1,000 of population was: Established (Presbyterian),24S.7: Free, 191.5; U. 1'., 11. I; other Protestants, 59.1; Kornau Catholics, S7.C. ltutwhvre else outside of Scotland and Wales is 7$1.0 per cent of the population to bo found in communion with some church' Christian at Work. BIG FIRES IN THE SUN. tllturlitir Which Materially Affertrrt the W-ntlirr on Till 1'htnrL Krrrrtly. Tremendous fires on the sunV stirface, exceeding in size and intensity anything measurable by human understanding, recently drew the attention of all astronomers. This lescriptinn was given by Astronomer liariett P. Serviss: "A stupendous group of black spots, easily visible to the naked eye when the latter Ls protected by a lark glass, was on the meridian of the sun. X less than twelve smaller groups of spots were visible on the lish at the same time, so that the appearance of the sun's face was most extraordinary when viewed with a U'lcscope. The large group Is in the southern hemisphere, ami is probably a reappearance of a huge spot seen at previous times. It showed two main centers of activity, and the area f the solar surface covereil by it was not less than :5,000,000,000 square miles. The western nucleus of the group presented a vast circular pool, the center of which was as black as ink. The iliamcter of the black center wits not less than fourteen thousand miles, but its outline were broken by fiery bridges projecting into r.nd across itOne of these, hose length could not have been leas than ten thousand miles, was seemingly split, in two from end to end, while another vast curving line of llame rau in and across the pit to join it. The eastern nucleus was still larger, and showed a marvelous mass of black chasm crossed and divided In every .direction by blazing tongues and lnudges. Around the edge of th great group eruptions of metallic vapor v-ra evidently taking place, lifting nia.'.s f blazing matter to the height of many thousand miles. Changes iu the details of some .of the spots indicated that the most tremendous forces were at work. Philadelphia Record. Full to WtIc. "You n-ustn't restrain the boy to mach' said the confidential friend. "Keep an .v on him. bat let him follow his natural bent" "I do," sighed the father, "and it alway litis in hin getting brake." Chi cago Tribune. Mlicl Item. First Yonng DoctorAre yon getting much practice? Second Young DoctorNot yet If I could only (ret one patient IM ktep htm nick tantfl I got another W take HJi pise) Texas Siftinr.

A .Matter or Health. Housekeepers faintly realize tho danger of an indiscriminate use of tha numerous baking powders nowaday found upon every hand, and which arc urgel upon consumers with such persistency by pcddler and many grocer on account of tho big profits made in their sale, Most of theso powders are made from sharp and caustic acids and alkalies which bum and inllame the alimentary organs und cause indigestion, heartburn, diarrheal discuses, etc Sulphuric acid, caustic potash, burnt alum, all are used as gas-producing agents in such baking powders. Most housekeepers are aware of the painful effects produced when these chemicals are applhjd to the external ilesh. How much more acuta must be their action upon the delicate internal membranes! Yet unscrupulous manufacturers do not hesitate to use them, because they make a very low-cost powder, nor to urge the use of their powders so made, by all kinds of alluring advertisements and false representations. All the low-priced or bocalled cheap baking powders, and all powders sold with a gift or prize, bolong to this class. Making powders made from chemically pure cream of tartar and bi-carbon-ate of soda are among the most useful of modern culinary devices. They not only make the preparation of finer and more delicious cookery possible, but they have added to the digestibility and wholesomeness of our food. Hut baking powders must be composed of such pure and wholesome ingredients or they must be tabooed entirely. Dr. Edson. Commissioner of Health of Xcw York, in an article in the "Doctor of Hygiene," indicates that the advantages of a good baking powder and the exemption from the dangers of bad ones in which the harsh and caustic chemicals are used, are to be secured by the use of Royal Bakini Powder exclusively, and he recommends this to all consumers. "Tho Royal," he says, "contains nothing but cream of tartar and soda refined to a

chemical purity, which when combined under the influence of heat and moisture produce pure cirbonic, or leavening, gas. The two materials used, cream of tartar and soda, are perfectly harmless even when eaten, but in this preparation they are combined iu exact compensating weights, so that when chemical action begins between them in the dough they practically disappear, the substance of both having been taken to form carbonic acid gas." Hence it is, he says, that the ISoyal Haking Powder is the most perfect of all conceivable agents for leavening purposes. It seems almost incredible that any manufacturer or dealer should urge the sale of baking powders containing injurious chemicals in place of those of a well-known, pure, and wholesome character simply for the sake of a few cents a pound greater profit; but since they do, a few words of warning scce to be necessary. THEIR NAMES NOT KNOWN. A Kansas Ott maa has a stepson who is ten years older than himself. A STiuxiii: whim is displayed by a saloon-keeper in Xcw Albany, Ind. He has two polecats which he treats as pots. An English lady cured herself of somnambulism after trying every known remedy in vain, by sewing up her night dress at the bottom and at tho sleeves. Titf: matrimonial record lias been beaten by a woman in Vanlue, O. She has buriod her sixth husbaud, and has just consoled herself by taking a seventh. A Xew York otnpany refused to insure his life. A small capitalist in St. Louis drew seventeen hundred and thirty-five dollars from a savings bank and concealed it that night in the back part of tlui kitchen stove, intending to remove it in the morning. The serrant girl arose first and had a beautiful Ore biasing when her master came down. To his great dismay he found his money had been converted -into ashes OUR GLORIOUS COUNTRY. Tin: United States has had nino capital cities since the revolutionary war broke out Tin: United States has a ilowcr percentage of blind people than any other country in the world. ' ls 1820 the United States had three inhabitants to the square mile of area; in IS'JO there were twenty. ! Tin: United States hasü42 life-saving 1 stations, 1S1 on tho Atlantic, fortyeight on the lakes, eighteen on tho Pacific and one at the Ohio fnlls, Louis i villc. Ky. ! Twkxtt mvLWsa of articles of mail j matter pass through United States post offices each day. and 500,000 letters are received annually at the leatl letter office. Thf. United State have 1,255 lighthouses and beacons, 82 light ships, 107 fog signals worked by steam, 1S7 by clockwork. 1.7C1 river lights and 4,2b0 buoys of various kinds. ( MILITARY ITEMS. A xnw Gatling gun can fire $1,129 shots a minute, and, worked by a small electric motor, 5,000 shots. Tin: first mention of a naval uniform occurred in 174S. wheti an order was issued by the British admiralty requiring a uniform and describing of what it consisted. Tin: successor of the unfortunnte Vice Admiral Tryon as connim mlcr in chief of the Queen's Mediterranean squadron Is Sir Miehael Seymour, who Is both the grandson and the mphew of admirals. He himself has bevu in the navy forty-throe years. I1i:n. Moiia.v. of the French ary, has enlisted the plow In tli' service of war for the hasty preparation of i litre nc Inn on ts. A half a doiten fnmiws, which are run parallel on the lino stIcctcd, make It jwssiblc to turn up Inj treochmonts in greatly lcs time tlutii, when the earth lias to lw ioo6cned by the apadu ßlouq.

AGRICULTURALHINT&

ROADS IN NEW JERSEY. What Go. .l lllchuH)' Have Don fill t'nloii County, The fact of the matter is simply this: The rural property in Union county was not prior to 1ÖHS on the market at all. It was held, of ;ourse, at nominal value, but there were no purchasers. The roatls before being improved were f-o bad at times tlmt grand juries brought presentments and found indictments against tho road authorities on the very thoroughfares now so famous, and the property along them was simply inaccessible at certain seasons of the year. The moment the roads were completed every foot of this property came Into market and prices went up with marvelous rapidity, but not to ax iMi-novnn i:oAn. Fccnc on new county road (Telford! betweea Elizabeth und rialntleld, N. J. An Immen wagon trnKJc I carried on over this road dnc It completion two years ago, and one team car. easily haul a load of four ton3overlt- surface. From photograph. euch an extent as to create fictitious values. Here arc some of the instances in proof: In 1SSS the property on the road from Elizabeth to Plninfield, commonly known as Westficht avenue, was of fered for sale at $10 per front foot some of it within the city limits, sewered, curbed and improved. As soon as this county road was finished it went up to ViO, and is rapidly being built up. Senator John R. Mcpherson purchascd about one hundred and twentyfive acres just outside the city line, anc contemplates opening new streets, paving and improving them and building on them a lnrge number of fine houses at once. Between the senator's property and Lorraine are two farms. One was bought for $0,000 just before the roads were built; no improvements have been Bince put upon it, and the owner de clines $30,000 for it It contains twenty acres. The owner of the second farm has been ottered over $1.000 an acre for it but declines to sell at that price. Xext comes Lorraine, the first of the new railroad stations. In August, l&il, a tract of thirty-six acres was bought by a syndicate for $14,000. It has been divided up into building lots and Bold for about $.V,000, and about twenty-live cottages, some of them very pretty, now stand on these lots. Three ncres adjoining this tract were sold for 2,C00 after property begun to feel the effects of the roads, and have since been sold again at an advance of 300 per cent. On the south side of the railroad track another tract of thirty-six acres was opened up last year. It was bought for $21,K)0. It is divided into lots selling at $150 to $200 each, and will probably net the owners $90,000. The second station was built to accommodate property owners of Aldene, just west of Koselle. This tract was a farm of about sixty acres, and was bought -for $lf0 an acre after the roads were built; and the price was then considered big. It has since been sold off in building lots, realizing about $1,500 per acre, and the capitalists have purchased two hundred more acres in the same locality, pad are realizing on it at about the same ratio. Houses are being built on both tracts, and tha pros pects favor the rapid improvement of all the lots. Good Koads. DAIRY SUGGESTIONS. Loobk methods or bo method at al, and scrub cows make a big leak on the farm. Tub cow that has nothing but a burnt up pasture to feed on ought not to be expected to yield a profit Makk good butter and Mind it to a city market. There is no money in selling butter at the country store. Doks grain raising pay you? Well, no. Then why sot try dairying? That has been found. to pay when the price of grain was much better than now. Mii.k Is now in disfavor with some of the doctors for feeding infanta. They say that disease so often comes from sickly cows that it Is dangerous. Anybody who tries can get healthy milk. Tiik best cow lrcl is none too good for the farmer who will take good caro of her. It is the farm dairy that produces most of the butter and the faru dairy should be fully equipped with all modern improvements, including the best cow. Hut the cow is onlj- a ninehine. She must have good care like any other machine, or she will wear out before she should, and not be able to do the work that she docs do as etilciently as &he might. Farmen.' Voice Itnmls nil a fikx-lal Factor. Tlie common roads of a country are at once the means nnd measure of its civilization, writes John Gilmer Speed in an exchange. Without means of communicating easily and quickly from one part of a country to all other parts there can be no very widespread civilization in that country. Neighborhoods and states separated from each other by natural barriers or bad roads stagnate in loneliness and arc seldom wakened by common impulses of sympathy. "It !b doubtful indeed," says l'rof. Shalcr, of Harvard, "whether a sound democracy, depending as it docs n close and constant interaction of the local life, can well be maintained in si country where the roadways put a baarjr tax oa buna laUraeu"

Don't Iave Tart, LWt go on R long land journey, don't tart hb cHilkfrtmr, for the lur weüt, if unprovided with that defender of health and conqueror of htckm-s, Hosujtter's Stomach Bitters, which will defend you from ea slcknes, nullify iutiKue and ill health caus-ed by travel and chiinpo of diet, ami counteractmalaria. Peerb-s- I it for dycnepnia. rheuinMistn, liver complaint, uervousnoM and Jebihty. "J.vNnTTE, I'm af raid you nro a vain little wife. You g.oto into your mirror so much." "You oucha't to blame mo for that 1

haven't your advantage " "What's that?' "loucau seamy loco without loomnguiio i mirror." "I snori.t be nleascd to meat you," said tho huuury hunu-r to tho antelope, which stood justout of reach. "No, thank you," said tho artelope; "I've too much at ttcak " Bnr.ciuM's Pills are proverbially known ns "Worth it Guinea a box," but they are bold at 25 cents a box. Tan latest method of eloping by blcy cle. iu t-uch Instances it is love winch makes ihn wheels go r)umi. Buffalo Expre. THt MARKETS. im. .SCO ita n'i 3d 19 0J 7 5 15 S 0) ll M) 3 73 525 t&l i 4S 130) I'J I) ti 2 IV, Is Ol l lt.-OA1'S--Wcstt;riViilxtii!! Pfllfl.- V t.. . tit 18 75 V, ST IXUI.S WITON-MMtllln.-IIKIiVns Milppfnir Stcert... Miitititn HOdS ralrto SnSos-t Slli:i:i'-rmrin Choice I "1.013 K Patents I-'ancvto Hxtra tu WIIHAT No. 2 UuI Winter. . COHN No 2 Mixed OAT.S-Nn.2 KVK No. 2 TOIIACCO I.ui'H I:if Hnrlc7 HAY Clear Timothy lUTI'UK-ClioUeOalry K'!(;s-I'rcili I'OItlv Ütaudurit Met (tiaw)., HACON-Cicur Klh LAHO-rritno.Steam t.'IHCAUO. CATTI.K-SlitppliK.'.. IKKJS I'ulrto Choice SIIIIKI' I'alrlo Choice. l--I.Ot:U Winter I'utetiH Sprlnc I'atsnl'...... 7A t (ft 4 a 60 2 .SO 310 tau ft it (A ti ft ... a 5-1 100) y iiu 20 IS II S ft ft fs ffs it. A s et SM 6 10 3 ) 3T5 3U r. H 7 10 t .VI 1 (JO 1 :5 MV CM, 17 VJ w II HAT No. 2. Sprlin: No. 2 Itctt. ......... ... COHN No.3 OA I !" -O 32 . ...... . POIUC Mesi newi IC KANSAS CITY. CATTLC Stilpplne SUert.... i A HfWtS AIICradcM C 0-1 a WI1KAT No. Sited a? 9 OATS -No. 2 COHN No S NliW OISf.HANS FI.Ol'lt-Illt!li Grade 3 15 COi:-- No. 2 MiU h 45 fid 5C SC 31 SM 52 35 16 (O IT M II . 8 I.', 2 S.'.J 1 U) 12 h. OATs -W '-stern , t HAY-CI.lce .. I'OHir New MeIJACON iU!c - US CO'lTON' Mlddllnir ?3 "i CINCINNATI. WIIH AT No. 2 Uod Ä COHN No. 2. Mixed Ct OATS No 2 5-"xed 3 Ä l'Oltlv NpwJIcs-i HACON Clear HI ba IIS COTTON Mld.lllne fc FP.OM GIRLHOOD TO "WOMANHOOD. Tho chenga is frauj-ht with dangers. If thcro bo pain, hcadaciio and nervous disturbances, or tho genund h -alth poor, tbo judicious uso of medicine thould Le c; iployed. l)r. I'ierco's Favorite Prescription is the- best tonic and nervine at this time. It brinra noout a regularity in tho womanly functions, cures feänalo weakacet, catarrhal inibmimation, and uterine deraagomeats. Seaciew, Northampton I f.Vmnf w. To. 1 DiuIUV.riaiiCK: Dear Sir After taking your medicine I Uvl like a new inTfon. 1 siiall reeomm'nd tou and your medicine wherever 1 iro. Your mJIelna lias worlcnl vrnmli-ni for tnc and I can not praise it too much. All of my old 6ymptomR have tlisapix-srcd. Your resrw-ct fully, Mus. WILLllrTTA DODGHT1. Pierce Cure OR MONEY REFUNDED, Ely's Cream Balm WILL CVKK CATARRH I Vrtt-c aUWtri lnpl Ilnlm lnorcbnotilt ,V HltOS-MWurrfiiSt-. N V AßEHTQ ranakeloerrlir ftULn I O cllltis llic ;-m Sclwom Chari-vncr. fomliV. forwiniple.C.Il.ltL'WKI.UUartftwJ.Onii. aerSAXi saat rxria., am inaa

Xr.w Yoiik. Oct 7. CA'ITM; Native Stvvr UW a COTTON Mliltllliic f'ivt

I-'I.OITK Whiter Wheat 5 4 W'HKAT No " IJeJ 70!.."

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HORSE SHOE PLUG

"OI7 IF

YOU ARE LOOKING FOR THE BEST CHEWlfiS TOBACCO MANUFACTURED.

THE POT INSULTED THE KETTLE BECAUSE: THE COOK HAD NOT USED SAPOLIO GOOD COOKING DEMANDS CLEANLINESS. SAPOLIO SHOULD be used in every KITCHEN.

Salvation OUtTÄ "It will all come out in the wash," U joa vac Pearline. TJE CASS AYEIHJE RAILWAY IrieKf for dorm, aad Nat f 00 NtrtM aMl IMh far Sala. 4Mfe CAM AVKKDX KAU.WAT, 1 Lteat, U

KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement awl' tends to personal enjoyment wlie rightly u?cd. Tlie many, who live heiter than others and enjoy life more, with, lesi expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world's best products to the needs of physical being, will attest the value to health of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced io tW remedy, Syrup of Figs. Its excellence is due to ita presenÜBg in the form most acceptable and plcaannt to tlie taste, the ref resting and truly beneficial properties of n perfect laxative ; ctiectually cleansing tlie system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers and permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions an A met with tlie approval of the medical profession, bccauc it acts on the Kidnevs, Liver and Bowels without weakening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Svrup of Figs is for sale by all druggists in 50c and SI bottles, but it is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup O).onlv, wh'o?e name U printed on evcry package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and heit"r well informed, you will not accept any substitute if ollcred. nMWIMttMtWWVMf WEBSTER'S NAL t INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY Ten year rent la revi.-inp, ICO editor cnipiowo. lnero ' run jtOuO.OiO txpentlad. A Grand Educatsr Abreast of the Times A Library in Itself Invalnablo in Um luMivkalil.aml tn thn teacher. j.rofi-loaI C man, KU-oilucator. S Aakyour Bookseller to show it toyxm. rnM'.h-! br C.A CMTEntAM COSascniii3f aml.TTAA. ; rar-Snd forfrr! rrrTrtn rontnlnlng fprtm r-j .. llluitratlonü. truinonui, tic TW Trmde 51 Uk le on ti WATERPROOF COAT ,n ihc Wor,d ! T A. J. TOWER. BOSTON. MASS. 1,000,000 ACRES OF LAND for-ilebythaSAnrrP-tn. A DCTXTH RAILKOAD trend for !Up mad ClteavOjariNT in Minnesota. fcn. Thcj will te f nt to joa A44rM HOPEWELL CLARKE, Land ComEiltaoDtr, ÖU Ful, Mlaa BBBBBBaar' ...rtfrmlltMIU fQi tsir--k:' N-"'"-A O. W. K. MKYI1KII. M. II.. Mall Dent Mt-Vlckor'n U'luintor, (Jlilcuic. vnttklfi If CM I-irr TciUsrapnr and ttallroaaTt t'JUKC mCR Airenf-Ha tiM'herp.audv-eB SoMtuitlon. Wr-toJ I). Ii; OWN. Sedalla, Me y-.-iAJUE Ulis rATU.HQ euin

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IS mm ML list fiJLS.

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