Ligonier Banner., Volume 29, Number 47, Ligonier, Noble County, 7 March 1895 — Page 7
THE SUN IS AL;WAYS SHINING. « It storm clouds gather on life's way, .+ No use to fret about it; In other climes the sun still shines; Twere foolishness to doubt it: And though it be so dark that we ; Can see no silver lining, This truth we know, for it is so, . The sun is always/shining. _ And if the night falls dark and drear, Take courage in believing - : That morning light will soon appear; There is no use in grieving. 2 And though sometimes we cannot see “The cloud with silver lining,” . | ‘We know ’tis true, in ether blue, Ve . Somewhere the sun is shining. " The orb of day sails on its way, . ¢ The storms are all below it; . 1t needs no sage to turn the page, ! « - And read this truth—we know it! Then let us bear of life our share, And try to cease repining: : This truth we know, through joy or woe; God's sun is always shining. | ! —Rural World. ¢ s ’ - ‘ I \ “T‘? e W | 94 0 A ) (A =\ o Qs ’ " e I () Iy N YA W V 7 Mee Harriet TEhwee SF A st e f i '}». .‘y : » p B Wfi. St gl il 84 ABE, you’'re 2 £ / p°f I plum’ simple ANK. T (" . about Stiry NBN NS Ann. As of W 7 R | " good worsted, a 7 7 rp made up to (_,w’f v‘# .l \-a\' home, wasn’t ‘}i’i'“ -’ TR ;'z good enough R N\ A/ 3 w ! \, Yy . for her SunL% (\ day’s be'st, _ | : that you must ‘ ol go and get her a silk mixéd and a mantel maker to cut and baste it.. In mine and your ‘mother’s days we'didn’t have such fine fiXins 1 !
“But socicty makes more requirements now than it did then, Aunt Jemimy.” . 1 “It don’t require paupers to be dressed in silk mixed no more now than it did then, and it’s not accordin’ to fitness.” 1o “Vou must notj call Satiry a pauper tome, Aunt 'Mime. You know she had respectable bornin’, and it’s not her fault that 'shé’s-.’tioor and an orphan. When mother and me took her to raise —a little, slim, big-eyed thing of ten— I promised I'd be a—a parent to her, and I ain’t no cause to regret all I've done for her, for she’s been more than a daughter to—to mother. She’s so kind and good that even the cats love her more than common.”
“That's ‘cause she gives them their eatin’. It's a sinkul waste, the plates of good broken vi;t,t,e]s she sets down to them cats.” -
_ *Aunt 'Mime, g think we can feed two cats off our fable scraps without its bein’ imputed any great extravagance, 'special\l’yi; as the mice would pretty nigh take ns if we didn't keep ’em. As for Satiny, every brute critter on the place loves her.” - v
“An’ some that ain’t brute critters too, I'm guessin’.’! :
Gabriel colored:and gave his aunta sidelong glance.. She saw, but, pretending not to, went on: “How’s her an’ Luke Snell gettin’ on? You've trigged her. out so fine now I reckon he’ll bei poppin’ the question pretty soon, for fpar some of the other fellows gets aheall of ‘him; for 1t can't _be gainsaid that S’tiry Ann has plenty ‘of admirers, buté for my part I never counld see any beguty in a complexion of chalk and_chee!se. Shouldn’t wonder if she’d make ai heap of doctor's expense for the man that marries her.” *‘Satiry has perfect health, aunt.” . “No sign she’ll always have; but if Luke wants to| risk it I reckon he’s able, an’ it's nonj of our concern.” Gabriel flushed again, and then turned pale to the tips of his fingers, all the bleod in his being seeming to surge in one great wave about his heart:. 3 ; . - *“I must be gping,” said he, rising. ‘“Must I tell mother you’ll be over tomorrow? She wanted special for you to come.” 1 w 2 Yes: Treckon.” o ;
“It’s wonderful how Gabe sticks up for S'tiry Ann,”! said the aunt, as she looked after the rretreating form of her nephew, ‘‘an’ tain’t for nothin’ neither or I miss my regkonin’. I wish Luke would marry her offhand an’ get her out of the way, forldon’t want my children knockei out of the prospect of inheritin’ the Yest farm in the county by that, little white-faced thing. Men’s never too old to make fools of themselvés, an’ Gabels only thirty.” Yés, only thinty; that was all, but he had been called *‘Old Gabe” so long that the idea lof seniority had long since attached to him. He had not resented the appellation when, in his teens, it was first applied to him, but now, as he pux}’sued his way along the meadow path, it impressed him with a keen sense of ihjustice. “I wonder ifi Satiry cares anything out of the comhon for Luke Snell,” he went on thinking. ‘I never thought of them as anything but friends till Aunt ’Mime set me on it to-day. It’s plain she doesn’t think of there being anything in me forg a young girl to fancy. I wonder if she really has a suspicion of the state of my feelin’s, and what she’d think if| she had.: Think me a fool, 1 reckon}bwhich I s’pose I ‘am.Well, if it's to jbe Luke, I'll not stand in the way, and most of all, I'll never let Satiry guess. She’s more than life to me, and it'lli be more than death to give her up and make no sign, but old Gabe can do it.” : Wise Aunt 'Mime! She had counted not amiss on| the effect her words would haye oni{Gabe. Once make him think that Satika’s happiness depended, on his silence,land he could die and make no sign. S“For, if she loves Luke, it would pain her kind little heart to know that I care,” thought he; but a great surge of pain swept his being as he thought how in the plenitude of his aflec%ion‘ he had lavished on his heart’s idol the personal adorninents he so rejoiced to bestow, only the sooner to lose her because of the added attractions they gave her in the eyes of a younger and handsomer rival; but, having made his renunciation, it was the nature of the mam that it be wholesouled, and thenceforth he did what he could to make, as he supposed, the waters of true love run smooth, = It soon became evident to him that Luke had a “more than common fancy” for Satira, and he did not stop to question for a moment that she returned the sentiment, so if he often hurt her by his own voldness and change of de*k inor, h wth Bfi it, and : m?kp" »M”w"’” she exey - o MR T e G
Satira ventured timidly, one evening, when Gabriel was struggling with several pages of accounts. , “] s'posed you wouldn’'t care to—now.”
“Why now!” with an accent and a searching glance, but he avoided meeting her eyes. Dared he let her sit beside him, as in the olden time—some three months in reality, but years as reckoned by what he had felt and suffered—and risk the accidental touch of her little fingers, or her fluffy hair, perchance, against his cheek, as they bent over the ledger together. - “This once,” love pleaded, ere he answered: ‘lf you’re sure ypu don’t mind, I'd be proud to have you.” *lf he’s sure I don’t mind. Why will he treat® all my little kindnesses so, cool, and as if he thoughtl didn’t mean them? And he’s'done so much for me. Seems as if all at once he’s got set against me,” Satira was thinking, as she went on adding, subtracting, multiplying anfl dividing, the pain in her tender little heart growing heavier and heavier as the slow minutes ticked away, for it was 'in vain- that Gabriel tried to seem his own natural self, and in order to avoid ‘‘making a fool of himself,” he assumed a coldness . of demeanor that was chilling to her, so that it was with the utmost effort that she kept a steady voice as she went on.
At last the effort became too much for her. ‘Nine and nine are eighteen and seven are twenty-five, with two to carry,” she faltered,and just.then a big tear splashed down on the page and she could not see what came next. Gabriel turned and took her face between his two hands, and for the first time in weeks looked squarely in her eyes, but the long lashes drooped, the blood mounted to her face and two more tears rolled slowly down her cheeks.
“What is it, Satira? Is it anything about Luke? Maybe old Gabe, can make it right for- you, if it’s only a lover’s quarrel.”
“‘Lover’s nonsense! Bother Luke! I wish I never had seen him.”
- “Why, aren’'t you engaged to him, Satiry?” atiry? - SNo; I'm not.”! : ; “But you love him, don’t you?” ¢“No; I never!” ; *Do you love anyone, Satiry?”
The flushed face dropped lower, but no answer came. He raised her face
agalin. ; “Satiry, look at me.” For an instant only, the gray eyes unveiled themselves, but Gabriel saw ;.;'Il'“ 'lm‘ / : 3 : : alltidi il i ‘]l’l“‘;//}{"// I L 1 i 2 TITRIEE — 1;‘;!'!""\“1 Bl '!'. ' e |SI | ‘& K Ty = NSN : é \‘. ’ = Y - \‘ki' W /_A,';‘// }4// .l %?‘ 4535,;57:‘& W N L o \ ‘\\7:/ ; = | » ;/ i '@ABRIEL TOOK HER FACE BETWEEN lIIS HANDS.
that in their depths which set his nerves thrilling. ‘‘Satiry, can it be possible that you love me?®”
“Would it be so very wonderful if I did?”» | e
“It would be a glimpse of the: Delectable mountain, after wallowin’ for ages in the Slough of Despond.”
“There’s some that deserve to stand plump on top of the Delectable mountain, for very goodness,” answered Satira. ’
‘‘Satiry,” there was a ring of pain in his voice, ‘‘do you love me for what I've done for you?” . “I love you because—just because I love you.” : ‘ ‘*And you do not think me old and ugly?” - - : **old and ugly!” ‘
That was all she said, but there was a look in her eyes, a ring in her.voice that satisfied him. G
‘‘Oh, Satiry!” as his arms encircled her, ‘‘an hour ago I thought 1 was the most miserable of men; now I know I'm the happiest.” - So Aunt Mime's heirs lopt their prospect of “‘inheriting the finest farm in the county” after all.—Good Housekeeping. . |
Lodging Not Boarding.
In one of the few letters that have been preserved, written by Luttrell, there are some amusing lines which may thus be explained. The letter was written from Dropmore to Rogers; there had been some joke between them about a stingy friend, one of their coterie, anda Greek epigram appeared to illustrate his miserly characteristic. Luttrell had translated the Greek, and, as he says: ‘“‘The following is as close a fit as I can make it in English:”
*‘Cries —, in his closet once spying a mouse: *Pray what business have you, little friend, in
my houge? s Says the mouse, with a smile, to the lover of
hoarding: : ‘Don’t be frightened; °'tis. lodging I look for, not toarding.’ To which might ve added in the way of retort courteous: ; _ ‘ *Since that's all, replies ——, ‘’twould be hard to deny you; ‘You may lodge how you can, but to board I'defy you.” "—Temple Bar. ()qe on the Miller. : The man: at the little mountain gristmill waiting for his turn became impatient, and growled at the miller. ‘Now, did you ever,” said the miller, “spe anything so industrious as this mill is? 1t no sooter gets onme grain crushed than it hops onto another one.” ‘‘Pshaw,” retorted the man, ‘I could eat it faster than your mill grinds it.” *“You could, could you?” snapped the ‘miller. “Well, how long could {ou?” “Oh, till I starvedto death, ] reckon,” replied the customer, and went\ on growling.—Detroit Free Press. How Ile Tells the Time. . “My father,” said the small boy to the woman who was calling on his ‘mother, ‘is a great man. He knows ~what time it is withouteven looking at ‘his watch.” - ~ “What do you mean, Tommy?” gue--I{ed the visitor. (R ~“Oh, when I holler out an’ ask him ‘what time it;:a in the morning, he A?il: ‘ways' says it's time to get up. An’ when T sl him what, tiae 1t 14 in_the ‘evening, he allus says: “Time to go to ‘bed, Tommy.’ Oh, I tell you my fa Eflmfiqsmt man.’—Waterbury, e o R e S L S A
FARM AND GARDEN. WIDE-TIRED WAGONS. Conditiors Under Which They Can Be : Used to Advantage. A prominent manufacturing concern has instituted a series of experiments lately, to find out the conditions under which the broad and narrow tired wheels could be used to advantage. In ‘the experiment to ascertain the difference in draft between wide and narrow tire upon grass sod, the figures arrived at were: 5 ‘Weight of wagon and 10ad......... 4,590 pounds Dratt to start load with 1%4-inch tire, cutting into sod I'% in. deep. 1,250 pounds Draft to move at dead pu11........ 650 pounds Draft to start same load on,good, Bard roBdS. ...l i .viviiseuvars . 850 pounds Draft to draw load on good, hard TOMAR .0 biek - B 0 poinds Draft with tire 3 inches wide on I BAMB 80, 0o .. viiisneavsis s 1,200 pounds Draft to move load at dead pull— BANG SOM o iRI ibiciinnes siinienie - Doo’ pORNds Draft to start load with 3-inch tire on bard roads.:.vei..s.cnieise o 700 pounds Draft to mnove at a dead-pull on ? DRTA TORAS ..ol oivacsciivais . vose . 350 pounds Draft at a dead pull on hard paveFRONL. iks aiies s v 120 DOUNAR Another experiment was. with fourinch and one and one-half inch tires respectively on block pavement, good, hard, sandy road, good, level, gravel road, and in each soft and deep mud. The iconclusions arrived.at by the committee were: - : | B
1. On hard roads, block pavements and other permanent and substantial roads there is no argument, so far as actual draft is coneerned, in favor.of the wide tire, the effect being rather against the wide tire. : - 2. In their efiecet upon hard roads the wide tires have the advantage, and that this benefit is not sufficiently appreciated by turnpike and macadam road companies. |
3. In soft mud, slush, and under similar cirecumstances, under which even the wide tire, cuts in, the advantage is against the wide tire and in favor of the narrow. |
4. On soft sod and soft ground, where the wide tire does not cut in and the narrow does, the advantage is on the sidée of the wide tire.
5. In loading a team a draft of 650 pounds steadily applied. is as much as should be expected for a day’s work, and that on soft sod this may mean, when a dead-pull has to be taken, an increase in the draft of 1,200 pounds.
6. The difference in the latter case between the regular draft of 650 pounds and the increase of 1,200 pounds is equivalent to an addition of two tons 580 pounds to the load. 7.-Or, in other words, the draft of
the load being 650 pounds may be considered as equivalent to a load of two tons 580 pounds, and the difference from the steady draft of the load in fair motion, and that of the same load started at a dead-pull, is equivalent to doubling the load. : - The committee closed their report with: “We advocate wide tirz for farms, and narrow tire for good roads and pavements.” = Experiments at the Utah experiment station demonstrated that a given load on I}¢ inch tire drew 41.6 per cent. heavier than when on a 3inch tire, -the draft being on a fairly stiff grass sod; on a moist but hard road the 1} inch tire drew 12.7 per cent. heavier than the 3-inch.
An authority upon the subject of the effect of wide tire says: ‘‘ln New York state the experiment was made of using wide tires on a road about 3 miles long leading to a stone quarry. The heavy wagons used thereon were equipped with rear wheels having tires 6 inches wide, and forward wheels having tires 4 inches wide, the forward wheels tracking just inside the rear wheels. Each wagon was thus transformed into a roller covering 20 inches in width every time it passed along. Smaller wagons were equipped with wheels similar in principle. The road. which formerly rutted incessantly and deeply, was covered with stone chips, which these wagons soon rolled into a hard mass. The road now supports loads of from 8,000 to 10,000 pounds, and consequently has a hard, compact, and regular surface. The cost of hauling loads over this road in reduced about 20 per cent.” ,
THE SOURING OF MILK. Thunderstorms Seem to Have But Little to Do with It. From data deduced in various experi- | ments conducted by Prof. H. W. Conn., | who has been trying to establish some | identity between thunderstorms and | the well-known phenomenon of milk ' souring, the conclusions drawn point | to the fact that the atmospheric condi- | tions prevailing at such times are not | such as to cause struetural transforma- | tion in the lacteal fluid. | Neither is the | electricity which pervades the atmos- | phere at such times c’apable of souring ' milk, or even materially hastening the I process.. Some have suggested that ozone is one of the pri’meg causes of the l change from sweet to sour milk in a | very short time, but Prof. Conn has | proven that ozone is no more responsi- } ble for the change than are the electric | conditions which prevail at such times. | To bacteria, the microscopic atoms of | vegetable growth which are now sup- | posed to cause almost everything, the | professor attributed the souring of the | milk. Milk is a favoiite breeding | ground of the bacteria.| They. grow i best and multiply most rapidly during | the warm, sultry period which immedi- | ately precedes electrical storms. These ; microscopic forms of plant life not only | grow -and increase in rfiumbers— with ! alarming rapidity, but each exudes mi- | nute drops of acid, which is so sour ‘ that none of the commmercial acids can | be compared with it. This acid sours I the milk.—St. Louis R‘e'p blic. ‘ : HORTICULTUR‘ALI NOTES. l THE pecan will come into bearing in about eight years. The hickory requires a somewhat longer time. _ - ONe who knows writes that the hickory will grow readily if planted in the fall, and, contrary to the general opinion, will grow wlien four years old after being in a box in a drawer all that time. ! _DR-MiLLER says that wdlnuts grow about as freely as sound corn grains.. Simply cover in the fall an inch or two rfeep. These should be planted where the tree is to stay, as they soon get so large that they are unwieldy and not so sure to grow. : . CANAIGRE culture, we think, is bound | to grow to considerable volume and importance in this country. Wa have ‘lo doubt that it can be grown successfully on any sandy soil that has enough _moisture, and we see that it is émtgd that it can be grown on| heavy soils dust what ean be done with it In thé states should be made a matter of favestigation by the experiment stations. bty Yole .
SUNSHADE FOR FRUIT.
How to Make Use of Vines on a Trellls Above Berry Bushes. |
Red raspberries, currants and geaseberries are often greatly benefited by shade from the hot sun in the middle of the day. Orchards and trees afford shade to a certain extent, but not always when and where needed. Part will be shaded when the sun is most needed. To remedy this, T should arrange to shade inthe middle of the day by the use of grapevines on a ' trellis above the bushes, as shown in the illustration. Set the rows of bushes six feet apart, and set grapevines in the rows eight to ten feet apart. ‘These can be supported by stakes with am arm two feet long, piaced to hold three wires to support the ones above the bushés. This gives shade in the middle of the day, and sun in the morning and afternoon, and possibly a crop of grapes when the bushes fail to produce. P r
This shade is a great benefit to red raspberries in a warm climate. Gooseberries are often blistered by the sun and fall to the ground before ripe. Mildew to a certain extent is checked by shade and a heavy mulch. The English varieties succeed best when slightly shaded. I know this by ex-. perience. For a number of years the Industry mildewed badly, so that the fruit was wortaless. I was about ta " m-L! 7 o - '-:\u 3 R A R e R R . Y ) M 1 S e S i\ | stpas@iissia: Lt Y SUNSHADE FOR FRUIT. . dig them up. Last spring I mulched with coarse manure. The weather was almost continuously rainy and eloudy until the berries were half-grown. The result was no mildew and a fine crop of smooth fruit. We are apt to associate mildew with damp weather. It is the hot sun following, with little air, that produces bad results. If the bushes could be dried by the air before the hot suh shines on them, there would be less mildew. e
Shade to the ground is a great protection to prevent - winter-killing. Ground that is mulched with manure or sawdust after it is frozen will often secure a good crop even of the tender varieties. I have proof of this near me. The Antwerp raspberry is snecessfully grown in orchards on a bleak hill at an elevation of 400 to 500 feet above a protected valley, whilein the valley they almost invariably winterkill. This is due to the sap starting in the warm weather in the early spring, and afterwards freezing. This is one cause of failure'in the southern states. Cnrrants shaded in the middle of the day hold their fruit and leaves much longer. I have picked currants from bushes thus shaded from July 1 to the middle of September.—C. Mills, -in Country Gentleman.: Caie
VICTORY FOR DAIRYMEN.
States Have the Right to Regulate the _ Sale of Qleomax‘garine. L
The law of Massachusetts forbids the sale of oleomargarine colored to imitate butter. Benjamin Plumey, a Boston dealer and agent for the Chicago fraudulent butter makers, undertook to sell vleomargarine colored, ¢ontrary to law, relying on the unconstitutionality of .the law for protection. He was arrested and the case came before the courts, where he was triedand found guilty. He appealed to the state supreme court and then to the United States supreme court. Justice Harlan rendered the'decision, declaring that every state had a right to protect its people from frauds of all kinds, and should control the sale of food products in so far as to protect them from adulterations and fraud. The original package decision does not ifi_,any way prevent one state from forbidding the sale of frandulent products from anther state. s
The decision is a distinct victory for the dairymen of the United States and covers about the whole ground of their contention. It sets at rest the ¢guestion of the powers of the states to regulate the sale of oledmargarine.—Farm News. Bt
Apples for the Complexion.
Helen Campbell says: ‘A ! modern scoffec has lately written that the reason Eve yielded tc the serpent was because apples were good for the com- ‘; plexion, and he told her so. Whether the argument was needed or mot, it is | a 8 true one. Nothing in all our varied | and fascinating range of fruits holds guite the quality of an apple. A ripe, ! raw apple, at its best, is digested in . eighty-five minutes, and the malic acid which gives its distinetive char- } acter, stimulates the liver, gssists di—i gestion and neutralizes much noxious matter, which, if not eliminated, pro- | duces eruptions of the skin. They do not satisfy like potatoes, complain ' people to whom they have beem recommended as food, but the starch of the potato, added to the surplus starch we ave always eating, makes the veg- : etable a thoroughly undesirable stand- | by. The more fruit we add to our dietary the clearer brains and the clearer skin we are lilely to have.” 1 How to Plant Apple Trees. ! There is a deplorable tendency among apple orchard planters to set the trees] too close together. = Numerous . .orchards, just coming into bearing, have their trees only twenty-two and twen-ty-four feet apart, with limbs almost interlocking, while thus young. The smallest limit should be two rods, or thirty-three feet, thirty-five feet'wounld be better, and thirty-eight or forty still better. When the trees get large and their limbs meet passage through the orchard with horses is obstrueted, as ‘'well as cultivation. Further, the ground so densely shaded becomessour and unproductive, so far as/fine fruit is concerned. -o) Remedy for Bloody Mitk, 1 When a cow occasionally gives bloody milk, sometimes from one guarter and then from another, it is said that benefit is had by the application of tincture of cantharides to the udder once a week as a stimulant, and giving one dram of iodide of potassium at a dose twice a day for three or four weeks, or in some cases one and one-half drams of sulphate of iron instead of the potassium at a dose. The medicine can be given in bran mash.— Farmers’ Voice.’ e Gows Must Have Salt. | ~ No man eats all the salt he thinks he will need for a weclk at one time, but & good many feed their cows salt asif _this were the proper way. Salt isan how ben praven by experiment. oL e e
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Tae Jupez—**l will sentence you thirty dai'ys in the workhouse and a bath.” Woeful Smithers—!Say, jedge, couldn’t you make it sxxß -widout de wash?’—lndiangpolisJo
THE MARKETS.
: NEW YORK, March 4. LIVE STOCK—Cattle........ $35 @ 545 SHOED: . dda v asvisiisssesns s 300:@ 44100 £ HOBS . ains sndiossacanssevee '~ 430 @ 4.6 FLOUR—Minnesota Bakers'. 200 @ 360 City Mill Patent 5.......... 400 @ 415 WHEAT—No. 2 Red.... caaens B%@ HB% NG 1 Northern....... .ve 8@ - 6834 CORN—NoO. 2......lcoioeciners 48 @ 434 VAMBN (L iesnivessibisraccanane 9 @ 4934 OATS—NO. 2iicccivsiecnnsecen 3BR@ 34 IV I Govavssannssinais soanessbons b 4 @ 5 PORK—Mess, NEW..c...ceeeee. 1125 @ll 75 LARD—Western...ccc cccece.. 670 @ 675
BUTTER—West'rnCreamery 14 @ 22 Western Dairy............ 9 @ 15 " CHICAGO. ]
CATTLE—Shipping Steers... $370 @ 5 85 Stockers and Feeders..... 250 @ 4:5 , Butchers’ 5teer5.......... 340 @ 400 Texas Steers.... ccceesc.es . 300 @ 4 75 AR S odons amisnsisoisaeassesin 890 @ 44} SRR s e 200 @ 470 BUTPTER—Creamery.......... 10 @' 20 DRITY: . teiiandiscnmnospsinasn 7@ 18 EGGS—Fresh ......ccpuavnnnne 24 @ 25 BROOM CORN (per t0n)..... 60 00 @l2O 00 POTATOES (par bw......... 52 @ 60 PORK—MeSSB..cceeeeeeeae-nc.. 1020 @ 10 20 LARD—Steam,.........ccc.... 0637%@ 640 FLOUR—Spring Patents..... 300 @ 350 Spring Straights.......... 210 @ 27 Winter Patent 5........... 250 @ 26» Winter Straights......... 23 @ 250 GRAlN—Wheat, No. 2...... .. 5. @ 5% GO, RO 8o voioiioiihhis 43 @ 431 Ot NGB oo 28¥ad 29 Byé. o v LG R sl@ © 52% Bariey, M. Rooceiicnis nacs 2%@ 54 LUMBER—Common Boards. 13 40 @ 13 50
PODOINT.cvcee sasincicaisany 1200 @l5 B 0 Raath; Iyl el RlO @ 29 Shingles ... cicciiavnsn. 235 @ 26 i MILWAUKER.
GRAlN—Wheat, No 2Springs 55%@ 5514 Born NS caici il 4£254Q@ 424 ' Oats, No. 2 White......... ,31%@ 81% Bye, Wos Bl viaiii iiuseed B 2« 53 Barley, No 2......cecaivn-. 53 @ 53y PORK-——MeSSaaee ceencenaneaeae 10 10 @lO 15 LARD—Steam .... cecscceeec. 630 @ 635 B 8P lOOUIS.. . :
CATTLETexas Steers...... $320 @ 400 Native Steers......cideeeee 420 @ 460 HOBB Lo oovis saeassioniones. 80 @ 21204 SHERBP icohaciciaiiisiitine. 30 @ 38 Sl " OMAHA. e &
P CATTLE oo cdesaccsciinsena. 8390 @ 529 HOGS—Lighs and Mixed..... 350 @ 385 RN S i e S RGN WS SHERP [ ol iinnius 20 @ 400
GIVE AWAY . A Sample Package (4 to7dosés) of 3l ® ’ 5y Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets $ Tomm:adiggmcaudaddfis 0 guson a postal card. : : ; ONCE USED THEY ARE “WAYS IN FAVOR. Hence, ony object in sending them out | broadcast - , | - dve—— ON TRIAL. — cncnsmt. ‘ o ‘: : : Tlgey'gbsolfihelj cure - B\ sick HEADACHE, ‘ a ' Biliousness, Coustipation, | % ) Coated Tongne, Poor Ap- - R /Ry petite. Dyspepsia and kin- ; J ¥ dred derangements of the : ¢ St:m‘nl‘eh,mver aud Bowels. Dow’ ¢ acoept some substitute said fo be *‘just as good.” The substitule costs the dealer o e 7t costs you ABOUT the same. - HIS profit is in the “‘just as W..” - 5 , : . WHERE IS YOURS?
MoSwaTTEßs—*lt's very funny.” Mrs. McSwatters—*“What « is?’ McSwatters—“Why, when the. doctor treats me I always have to pay for it.”’—Syracuse Post.
FREE!
To COhristian Endeavorers—Pocket Gulde ‘and Map of Boston, the Convention city. X L
The Passenger Department of the Big Four Route have issued & very convenient and attractive Pocket Guide to the City of Boston which will be sent free of charge to all members of the Young Peoll)le‘s Society of Christian Endeavor who will send three two-cent ‘st.amfi)s to cover mailing charges to the undersigned. This Pocket Guide should be in the hands of every member of the Society who cortemplates attending the 14th Annual Convention, as it shows the location of all Depots, H’otels, Churchesylnstitutions, Places of Amusement, Prominent Buildings, Street Car Lines, fitc., Ete. Write soon as the edition is limited. =~ -
i B, O MCCORMICK, .o Passenger Traffic Manager, Big Four floute, : Cincinnati, O.
He—*l think Percy Giblets is a perfect calf.” She—*You misjudge him. He could %ottbe perfect in anything.”—Syracuse ost. - L N
Profanity and Pain
Too often go together. Refrain from swearing ‘if you are suffering the tortures of rheumatism, and seek the aid of Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, which will expel the rheumatic virus from your blood. lgidney ‘and malarial complaints, dyspepsia, constipation, neuralgia and biliousness are all relieved by this sterling and comprehensive family medicine, ‘which should be kept always on hand for emergencies. | !
* It issafe for the devil to sleep whey he goes to church and sees that the preacuing is net keeping anybody awake. . ;
_To NEw ORLEANS the Queen & Crescent Route is the direct line; 90 miles shortest from Cincinnati. Solid vestibuled trains.
G=B=o=o=o=o=o=o=o=o=o=o=o = [f you've neuralgia, lake St. Jacobs Oil— rub it g on —rub it on bard — keep rubbing it on — 1t bas got & S i".‘i”"’i’f’i’ ._f_”.i'w”i_’ difer. o oo
W. L. DoucLAs ; 3 IS THE BEST, S§ SHOE FIT FOR A KING: ;:"‘.‘.,.__ 53. COEDOVAN’ : @.. )\ FRENCHAENAMELLED CALF. e £4.>350 FINE CALF &KANGARDD. , @ $3.89P0L1CE,3 SOLES, B T L g 0 92. WORKIN fi i, A‘ 52'5’ «EXTRA .FINEG'M Ehfs.. ‘1 Yey 52,9175 BOYSSCHOOLSHOES. ) 33.32!?4?:?;.5; LT b L i NN S e . ~ &CBX:PSOUN;MSG%‘ Over One Million People wear the | W. L. Douglas $3 & $4 Shoes All our shoes are =qually satisfactory. They give the best value for the monefi. | The{ equal custom shoes in style and fit. | Their wearing qualities are unsu?assed. The prices are uniform,===stamped on sole. - From $1 to $3 saved over other makes. If your dealer cannot supply you we can. ° ’ — Ely’s Cream Baim Biecs = WILL CURE U tp, CURES COLD ‘ R CATARRHE % | " | AP Ramaßio caonnostrl. BEIFRIN G
“ We think ‘Piso’s CURE | ; for CONSUMPTION is the ] only medicine for coughs.”— ; . JENNIE PINCKARD, Spring- i | 4 : field, IL, ;October T, 1804. FOR L AN (BB ....CURES WHERE 'ALL ELSE FAILS. - BEST COUGH SYRUP....
" “THERE’S a bonnet,” said the editor's wifa, ‘“that: is- a -perfect poem.” ‘Yes,” he replied, absent-mindedly, ‘‘but we never pay {or poetry.”—Demorest’s.
A Pointer
to homeseekers and Florida tourists. All (feztsons.contemplating a trip to Florida, and all points in theggoutheas_t, will do well before purchasing their tickets to write to or con= sult Briard F. Hill, northern passenger agent of the, famous Dixie Flyer line, which passes through Nashville, Chatta~ nooga, Marieta - and Atlanta, over the lines of the: Lookout' Mountain route cozsisting of the Nashville, Chattano%ga and St. Louis ‘Ry., and the DBattle Field route, the Western and Atlantic R. R.,over whick are run 4 -double daily service of through Pullman Buffet and sleeping cars to Jacksonville, Fla., via Macon and Tifton, leaving Chicago at 5:02 p. m., I'enc_h'¥l§' Jacksonville on the second morning at 7:20, thus avoiding all detention or delays while en rovte. Folder, maps and all information pertaining to this short through line will be furnished or mailed on ‘a;l)plicutiou to the Chicago-of-fice, 194 8. Clark St., Room 2.
Faraer—Didn’t I see you strike your little -brother?” Tommy—-—“l guess not,or i'ou‘d ashut/me up in a dark closet now."— nter Ocean. - f s
- “No MAXN,” says a loquacious wife, “over complains that a woman “talks too .much when she’s 4 girl and he’s engaged toknwi’’
. A POODLE:can dn. a great many things that a baby can’t, but a baby is worth a regiment of poodles,-just the same. 3
- Sorrow is a kind of rust of soul which every new idea contributes in its passage t® scour away.—Johnson, - 2 :
TAxe the Queen & Crescent Route te Knoxville and Asheville. - Only through cas liné Cincinnati to Asheville.
“TEETH inserted withoutgas,” as the fetlow who owned a savage dog inseribed om a board outside 'his- garden gate.—Tit-Bits.
BEST POLISH IN THE WORLD,
I‘STOV‘ED[I SH l
DO NOT BE DEGEIVED : with Pastes, Enamels, and Paints whick stain the hands, injure the iron, and bura red. The Rising Sun Stove Polish is Bril liant, Odorless, and Durable. Each-packagm containg six ounces;-when moistened wild make several boxes of Paste Polish. HAS AN ANNUAL SALE OF 3,000 TOKS. Fargest Srowers of Seastand Olaves Bbede i AT e o e (iase MiChton aat lifetime, Meadows sown inApril will givea mum crop in July. - Prices dirt cheap. Mammoth farm see catalogue and sangle of Grass Mixture, free for Ta. ¢ postage. JOMN A. SALZER SEED CO., La Urosse, Wis. A N K—A _i13842 WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS PLEASE . state that you saw the Advertisement in this
