Nappanee Advance-News, Volume 11, Number 21, Nappanee, Elkhart County, 14 August 1889 — Page 3

HOW TO GROW RIOM. Vather Clarkson Deliver* a Pointed Lecture ou True Economy. In early life we recollect hearing a young Sian inquire of a venerable gentleman, who had accumulated a large estate, what the secret of his success was. He 6aid it was: “When you earn seventy-five cents’) per day, spend only fifty cents of it and keep out of debt.” That information, simple as it was, has had an important influence upon life’s transactions. And if it were lived up to by a large mass of laborers, mechanics and all classes of wage-workers the world would be a great blessing. The rapidly increasing riches and consequent willful and wicked extravagance of a large class of our population is corrupting the minds and misleading thA practices of the great mass of workers. Whilst the riches are increasing, paupers are multiplying mucti faster. There are twice as many; according to population, of those who ask and receive aid now as did fifty years ago. And yet the wage-worker receives twice as much now as then. Tho articles of food cost no more, and clothing not half as much as then. Wage-workers of all classes, both male and female, are not prospering as formerly. They are not weekly, monthly and yearly laying up a portion of their wages as then. They live more extravagantly, spend more recklessly, and foolishly ape their neighbors in fashionable follies. Mechanics appear, at least a large proportion of them, not to attempt to make any provision for the future. When they make sls or $lB per week, instead of permanently investing at least one-third of the amount, they spend it all. Then, if work fails, or the man is taken sick, or any member of his family, so as to keep him from work, the family at once becomes an object of charity, the rents are unpaid, the butcher's bill neglected. The man becomes discouraged at the accumulated debts, until he begins to debate with himself whether he ought to try to pay the old debts. So soon as he does that —when he begins to study how to forfeit his honor, repudiate his obligations, he is gone. He no longer has that keen sense of honor which teaches him to regard as sacred his debts. Then hois no longer a man. His pride, his ambition, and all of the impulses which nerve and sustain a man in life’s conflicts, are gone. He has not confidence in himself and his neighbors have less. But if a man, lives by rule, uses the plain necessaries of life, and scorns to ape the follies and corrupt practices of the growing cussedness of the world, and lays up carefully at least one-third of what he earns, soon he will see there are better days for him. A little weekly and annually saved, the increasing accumulation of interest, the increasing ambition, and the renewed -energy will soonbuiltlor brry airouse. Then the expense of .living decreases, and the saving can be more, until imperceptibly the man with his family find thfffnselvcs in comfortable circumstances, respected by the world, his financial credit established, and he is. enabled to enter other enterprises than as a day laborer. We have seen these things worked out and demonstrated all about us for the last sixty-five years. The man who spends as he goes soon has nothing to spend, but is broken down in spirit, credit and chai*acter; but tho man who weekly saves a portion of his earnings, economizes in his business, soon places himself among the honored and respected, It is ascertain as the revolution of the spheres. But the man who saves nothing sinks lower in spirit, enterprise and character. He soon becomes too indolent to work and not too proud to beg. And he goes down as fast as gravitation will take him. Trust no man who does not regularly save and lay up a certain per cent, of his wages. There is no hope for him. He will become sour, abuse those who prosper by saving and will live a miserable life, hating the pros-, perous and dying a beggar. “If you earn seventy-five cents per day, spend only fifty cents of it.”—lowa State Register. —■ ■ BLACK IS WHITE. A Seemiugly Incontrovertible Argument from. Etymology. 1 ■' The word black (Anglo-Saxon Mac, blaze, bleak,) is fundamentally the same as the old German black, now only to be found in two or compounds, as Blachfeld, a levin or plain; Blachmahl, the floats on the top when silver is melted, and Blachfrost, and it meant originally “level,” “bare,” and was used to denote blackness, because blackness is (apparently) bare of color. But the nasalized form of black is blank, which also meant originally bare, and was use to denote whiteness, because whiteness is (apparently )bare of color. The same word was used to denote the two opposite things. From which it would seem that bl.ack is white. To any ope who shall point out a flaw in this etymological argument. I sha\J endeavor to be grateful, provided he does hot disturb the very satisfactory conclusion. This I should naturally res-ent. It may help him to a conclusion and serve as a further support to my contention to *point out that ’Mac in Anglo-Saxon actually means “white” as well as “blacky” so thatitjs not in its nasalized form only that the same word is employed to express opposite things. Why is this, unless that to the primitive mind both white and black appeared to agree in being bare or void of color, and for that reason to deserve the same name? And here I can not help harboring a suspicion, suggested by the Old German BlachfYost (which appears to be nearly obsolete, or only used in some localities.) Tbat our “black frost' 4 meant originally a frost bare of accompaniments, as hoar, rime,, and it is a coincidence only that it should be black in color and blacken the' vegetation. Hut we have long lost hold of the original meaning and believe it to refer ,to the color.— Notea and Queries.

QUEER MEDICAL OMENS. Snperatltlon* Prevailing In Various Parts of the Old World. Os all superstitions, medical ones ara perhaps those endowed with most vitality. People of all times and all ages, including oven those of the nineteenth century, of which we are all so proud, have al ways attached too , much importance to the opinions of their medicine men. But the middle ages was the time for the currency of pure and unadulterated medical superstitions. The mediaeval doctor, must have added another terror to death as his advice certainly increased its probability in illness. To wear a dead man’s bones was thought au excellent specific. To cat the first Easter daisy that could be found, and receive the benediction in three different parishes on the same Sunday, was still a more potent remedy. To steal a cabbage from a neighbor’s garden and hang it on a hook to dry was auother cure, and One certainly within the means of the poorest patient. The efficacy of this remedy was possibly to be found in the theft. People who hung up horseshoes for luck may perhaps be tempted to try it on their friends when quinine and bark* have been found useless. A tend choked to death on the eve of St. John’s day was possessed of even still more virtue. When we recall the ingredients of the witches’ caldron in “Macbeth” we are afforded, as it were,, a bird’s-eye view of the pharmacopoeia of tho contemporaries of the conqueror. The water in a toad’s brain was deemed a most efficient remedy in illness about the same period. There were cures for mental failings as well as bodily afflictions. To stick pins in a dead man’s shoes, or to carry about in the pocket a wolf’s tooth or eye, or, if .it were handy, to ride upon a boar, were all —especially the latter —cures for cowardice. We sometimes consult doctors about our nerves now. Perhaps it is the name and not disease that is changed. The modern practitioner who should advise a nervous patient to take equestrian exercise on a bare-backed boar would possibly obtain notoriety, if not patients, to-day. A sovereign cure for toothache was to apply a dead man’s tooth to the suffering jaw of the living. For epilepsy the remedies were many and peculiar. One was to wear a medal bearing the names of Gaspar, Melchior and Balthasar. M. Challamel informs us that some faith is still attached in rural France to the extraordinary remedies we have mentioned, and even in London and Paris, in educated circles, a good many medical superstitions are still extant. —Journal of American Folk-Lore. ILLICIT TRADERS. Individuals Who Are a Source of Great Trouble to Uncle Sam’s Soldiers. v , One of the purposes“for which" troops,' under express provisions of the Revised Statutes, may be employed in the Indian Territory is the arrest of illicit traders. In that Territory, and in all reservations set apart for the use of the red men, the Government guarantees that whites shall be kept,, away. Exceptions are made, of course, under the permits of the Indian Bureau, through its agents, and soldiers are also authorized to perform certain duties there. But the chances of profit .carry into the Indian country traders who have no authority to enter it. The tribes themselves in some instances encourage their presence, especially when they have alcoholic liquor among their goods, the selling of which to Indians is forbidden any way, and, they are the more .tempted to risk arrest' and punishment from the. good prices they can get. When their presence becomes known, troops are sometimes summoned by the agents to scout for and arrest the offenders. Rather a striking instance of the trouble occasionally caused by illicit traders occurred afitong tho Xavajoe of New Mexico a year or two ago. A squad of soldiers, starting from Fort Wingate to arrest whisky confronted by a large force of Navajos,-' who declared that the men should not [email protected]. The sergeant in charge of the squad, finding his party greatly outnumbered, was compelled to proceed to Fort Defiance, where the Indian agent communicated with Fort Wingate, and a troop of cavalry was sent out- For a time an outbreak of this powerful tribe was feared from the mischief thus stirred up by the whisky sellers. More recent testimony to the connection between the suppression of illicit traders and the well-being of the Indians is given in this extract from the last annual report of Mr. Carroll H. Potter, acting agent for the Usages in the Indian Territory: “There has been no improvement in the dondition of the Osage Indians during the last year. These people are not sufficiently industrious to control in the rightdirection the .amount of money they get. In consequence a large share is spent for contraband articles, which it seems .very easy for them to procure along the Btate line and from peddlers on the reservation. The latter class the Indians',will protect in every possible way. The traffic in whisky by ped- | dlers on the reservation is, in my opinion, alarmingly On th,e ijnerease.” —Harper’s Bazar. 1 . / —-Cherry Jelly:’ Common wild bird cherries make a nice and handsome jelly: Pick the cherries,!'pit in an earthen dish, add a spoonful! or two water and steam. Them half an hour; mash them well with a wooden spoon, place in a jelly bag to drip, measure your sirup, place it in a kettle and boil it fifteen minutes, add a pint of heated sugar to each pint of juice and boil fifteen minutes longer, then poui in jelly glasses.—The Home.

FARM AND HOUSEHOLD. —A piece Cf ground should bo kept plowed or spaded for the stock to use as fine dirt or wallowing. A spot twenty feet square and which is atirred up after each rain will be used by stock with advantage. —Clean up the front yard; ta*k on that loose board or picket, slick izpand make home and its surroundings as neat and cheery as possible. • You will live just as ion?, have just as goCfl crops and feel a great deal better if you “tidy up a bit.” —Gooseberry Jam.^—Stew the berries in a little water and put them through a coarse sieve, and then pour into a porcelain kettle with a pound of 6ugar to each pound of berries. Boil three-quarters of an stir constantly. —Yankee Blade. —When a piece of grass ‘fe devoted to hens and chickebs the pen should be moved every day. It is healthier for the hens nnd chickens, the ground does not bceomo tainted, and, by moving them systematically and regularly, the ground first used is fit to be reoccupied when its turn comes.—American Poultry Yard. -Corn-Starch Waffles.—Make abatter with half a pound of corn-starch, six ouncos of sugar, a little lemon flavor, adding milk as required; warm the molds, butter them out and fill, close them, place on the lire, then turn them over; repeat this until they are evenly baked; when cooked, dust sugar over them.—Christian Union. —To make mats for vases is to take a piece of white wadding, cut it round, and thirteen inches in diameter. Work around the edge with some pretty yarn in button-hole stitch. Take several round pieces six inches in diameter worked the same way. Then double them over through the center, then across through the center again. ' Taek these in the large wheel by the center of the small ones. They will then\come ia"shell work all around the ouleide. Magazine. —Beach Meringue. —Put a quart of milk, a teacupful, into a when it boils add to it two tableipoonfuls of corn-starch dissolved in the half-cupful of milk; stir constantly. When it has thickened, remove from the fire and add one tablespoonful of butter, and let the mixture cool; when cold add the yelks of three eggs and half a cupful of sugar; cover the bottom of a pudding dish with three layers of ripe peaches, pulled, stoned and quartered; sprinkle two tablespoonfuls of sugar over them, pour the custard over the fruit and bake twenty minutes; add the whites of the eggs beaten to a stiff froth to the top; brown delicately in the oven and serve cold, with cream. CHEAP POULTRY HOUSE. " ** _______ flow to Secure t-lie Mont li&om For the LeaHt Money.^ .There is probably no better time for building and arranging a good house for the poultry than after the harvest and stacking work is over. It need not, and in a majority of cases should not, he a costly building. The most room for the least money should be an important consideration. When it can be done without interfering too much with tho arrangement of the other farm buildings, the poultry house should be convenient to the orchard. Where the poultry can be allowed a free range with the Trees, fruit and fowls will be benefited. One of the first-items is to have dry land. This imp Hes a situation where good drainage can be given readily. Then with it nood roof the fowls can have a dry house. Let it face the south, or at least arrange so that plenty of sunlight can be given in this way and providing for plenty of sunlight during the winter. Arrange also to .afford good ventilation during the.summev or whenever it may be needed. Good rough boards well battened with tarred paper on tho inside will make it sufficiently warm for all ordinary purposes. A shelf roof will be the cheapest, .especially■ for a small house such as ordinarily will be needed on tlie farm. Have the nests in the darkest corners of the roost and nests are all to be in one room. Make the roosts all on a level, and arrange So that they can be readily taken down to be cleaned when needed. Plat strips are preferable to round poiesy plane smoblK and oil. The nests, as far as possible, should Jbe piade in the same way, as it will be -necessary to take do wn and clean in order to keep down’the hill, as well as to change tho material in the nests. HTheirests permanent thework of keeping clean will be considerably" increased, and in planning this kind of work convenience must always be. considered. Then with most that , are easily taken down the work of whitewashing and cleaning will be much less. A house sixteen feet square will ordinarily be plenty large for all the, poultry that it will be desirable to keep on an average farm, with the exception of ducks, and a separate place should always be provided for them, as it is not a good plan to keep them with the other poultry. An earth. floor ( will answer provided it can be kept dry, but if not then make a tiffht board floor. There is another good'advantage in a board floor and that is it can be cleaned easier. t A board floor at least ought to be provided for feeding grain and othqr ipttterials upon and be made eo aa to he cleaned readily, as filth In -any form 1 breeds disease. Properly mabKged poultry can be madg very profitable, but In doing this a good house will be found almost indispensable,—Detroit Free Pres 6. '.

HABITS OF GREAT WRITERS. Tasso wrote the finest pieces in the lucid Intervals ot madness. Ohiqen, because of his assiduity to work, received the name of Brass Bowels. Racing composed his verses while walk* ing about, reciting them in a loud voice. Moliehg used to consult his old housekeeper about his newly-written comedies. Sully is said to to four secretaries at a time without difficulty. Cuvier never recognised what he had once written. He composed with groat rapidity, correctness and precision. Milton Was of the opinion that the composed by him’ between the autumnal and spring equinoxes were always the best. A Great Railroad. Not long ago Mr. George H. Daniels, the general passenger agent of the New York entral & Hudson River Railroad, in extending an invitation to foreigners to visit this country, directed their attention to the fact that the United States of America is the greatest country on earth, peopled with sixty million of the most civilized and enterprising people on t>e globe: that the Now York Central Railroad is tho greatest railroad on earth—the only four-track road in the world; that it started from the largest city on the continent, passed through t lie richest and most prosperous region, touching the largest cities in the interior; is the great trunk line and direct route to that great cataract, Niagara Falls, and that in all respects it reveals more of the resources and riches of America in less time, with more safely and under more luxurious conditions than any other route. There is much in tho above not' only for foreigners, who want to see this country under favorable conditions, but for our own restless and moving people. The New York Central & Hudson River Railroad is tne outgrowth of a luxurious and prosperous civilization and one of its groatest engineering triumphs. As is well known it is the only line from the west to New York that lands i’is passengers in that oity without ferrying them across the North River. Its spacious and magnificent station in the heart of the city has been for years not only the pride of New York, hut a lasting monument to the foresighted liberality and enterprise of that great organizer and founder of the New York Ceiitral it Hudson River Railroad system, Commodore Vanderbilt. The limited trains of this line are the finest in the world, and its general accommodations for the traveling public are only known und appreciated by that largo portion of it who have been over the lino and enjoyed them. —Detroit Free Fress. There are as yet more things in heaven and earth than have been dreamed of in bash, but the resources for novelty in its combination are fewer than they have been. , T - What wrought the change? TUiB woman’* face la ruddy with a rose’s grace. Her eye Is bright. Her heart. Is light. Ah, truly, 'tis a goodly sight. A few brief months ago her cheek Was pallid and her step was weak, "The end Is near For her, I fear.” Blghed many a Irlend who helq lior dear. I can tell you what wrought the change in her. She was told by 11 friend, who, like her, had suffered untold misery from a complication of female troubles, that Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription would certainly cure her. This friend “knew whereof she spoke,” for she had been Cured by the remedy she advised her friend to use. She is enthusiastic in its praise, and tells her friends that Dr. Pierce deserves the universal gratitude of woman kind for having given it this infallible remedy for its peculiar ailments. It is guaranteed to give satisfaction in every cash Or money refunded. Dr. Pierce’s Pellets, one a^dose^Cure Flattery is foolishness, and whosoever is deceived thereby is not wise; nevertheless the discreet woman may use a little of it for her husband’s sake. Next to ail Approving Conscience, A vigorous stomach is the greatest of mundane blessings. Sound digestion is a guaranty of quiet nerves, muscular elasticity, a hearty appetite and a regulur habit of body. Though not always a natural endowment, It may be acquired‘through.the agency of Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, one of tne most effective invigorants and blood fertilizers in existence. This fine tonic also fortifies those who use it against malaria, arid remedies biliousness, constipation and rheumatism,Give not that which is useful to tho pigs; neither cast away stale bread, which may possess the promise and potency of u good pudding. -- -4 * —' ' j If you are tired taking tho largo old fashioned griping pills, try Carter’s Little Liver Pills and take some comfort A man ean’,t stand every thing. One pill a dose. Try them. Augusta, the widow of the lato Emperor of German v, is 77 years of age. The married life of the Emperor und Empress extended through a period of fifty-nine years. Seest thou n man rosy in bis cheek, joyful in spirit and amiable in’ all his ways! He hath taken a good cook to wife. Sea air roughens the skin. Use Glenn’s Sulphur Soap. - .' Hill's Hair and Whisker Dye, 50 cents. ” If cleanliness is next to godliness, then . neatness is side by side with piety. r j The order of the King’s Daughters now ;numbers 97,000 active members. THE MARKETS. New York, Aug'..33. L1VE5T0CK......... ... 131*1. <U> 480 Bueep. 4 (M if* 5 ‘JS * Hog* 4 lit ;kt .5 35 FLOCK —Good to Choice •). l’ateiiifc. ■ — 1 35 (<u B 45 J WHEAT—No.-* Red to l /,® Mi No. 1 White Hi® W‘,4 CORN—No. 2 White .... V) ® tl OATS-No. 2 White.... S3 a 88** RYE—Western 53 ® 53 FORK—Mesa —. .. IS W (a32 50 LARD —Steam 0 70 la 6 72‘A CHEESE 0 ® 7 WOOL— Domestic:... ... 32 <t* 39 CHICAGO. - BEEVES—Shipping Steer*.... 18 75 © 4 6" Cows ■ 1-63 48 2 75 Stockers 235 ©8 00 Feeders .* 260 a 8 10 Hutchera’ 'Stock. 2 00' © 2 90 Infer or Cuttle 3 SO © 2 76 HOGS—Live—Goon to ChoiCe.. 415 5*4 40 SHEEP 3 25 © 4 00 BUTTER—Creamery 10 si 36 Good to Choice Dairy " 12 EGGS—Fresh H 46 BROOM CORN- * = Self-Working.. 3 © 4_ Hurl 4 © 5 Inferior,..— JW& J I POTATOES—New (ourlj ' ft) © 90 PORK—Mesr... 10 30 ©lO 40 DARD—Steum,.;. 6 32(4© 6 85 FLOUR— Spring I’atejiia 4 40 w> 5 65 Winter Patent* 4 40 © 4 50 Baker*’.... •-* 3 © 8 40 Stra ght* 350 ©.4 50 GRAlN—Wheat, No. 2'. 75’i© 76’* Corn, No. 2 34'4© 'A-M . Outs. N0.2 ; rr...-: nw SHE Kyc, N*>. 2 —;. 43 © 4 'i% Hurley—September......... • 63!4’(6 64 LUMHER— _ „ Common lirtMCl Hiding 17 00 @I i.n Flooring 88 00 ©34 VO Common Board*. 18 l/ ©l3 50 Fencing. ....• DM) 6z12 00 Lath.... ... 200 ©2 10 Shingles 2 40 © 2 50 .. KANSAS CITY. CATTtE—Be*! ti 00 ©4 20 Fair to flood SOI © 8 55 HOGS— Best.... * *25 ©4 35 MedlumV . .V ‘3 90 © 4 20 BHEEP—Best T. .. 375 ©,4 W Lambs 250 ©.3 50 OMAHA. CATTLE-Host 14 15 © 4 35 sreaium i so © 2.2s hogs... 4 124® 4 20

Go Look at the South. On August 6 and 20, September 10 and 24, October 8, the Louisville ft Nashville Railroad Company will run excursions to points in Alabama, Tennessee, Mississippi and Florida;.,, Tickets will be sold at one fare the round trip, good 80 days, by connecting railroad lines in the North ana West. For further information write C. P. Atmore, Gen’l Pass. Agent, Louisville, Ky., or Geo. L. Cross, N. W. Pass. Agent, 282 Clark street, Chicago, lU. Although he had an Income of 1750,000 a year, in addition to a couple of palaces kept up without cost to him, the late Crown Prince of Austria left debts amounting to 12,000,000. s If Dobbins’ Electric Soap is what so many insist that it is, you cm* not afford to go without it. Your grocer has it, or can get it, and you can decide for yourself very soon. Don’t lot Monday pass without trying it The bread of sorrow is leavened with error, mixed with imprudence, kneaded with perversity, und baked in the oven of dissipation. Figures in tho arithmetic do not. lie; but the figures in a cook hook sometimes represent indeterminate quantities. To regulate the stomach, liver ami bowels, and promote digestion, take one of Carter’s Little Liver Pills every night- Try them. , - . —" If you borrow, you must lend; therefore whatsoever you are unwilling that men should borrow of you, borrow not of them. “Have you tried “Tan tot’s Punch" Cigar? Many a women is export with crayons who is not skillful in drawing tea. OH FOR LAMENESS AND SWELLINGS. In the Hip. mica, Fulton Cos., 111., Jon., ’ll. Throo or four y.ori ago tu Ukon with Lim.nctt In Alp; vu la b.d part of time tried oovaral doctor. without b.n.flt; wdi curad by thr.c or fbui application of It. Jacob* Oil. WM. HARPER. Always There. Palmyra, Mich., May 11, ’ll. Har* UMil It. Jacob* Oil for laman.ai with bait raauiUj bar* baullad it for twalvo yaara; alwaya In atotb. 8. P. WHITMARBH, Druggiat. Swellings. Llttla Chuta, Wla. May 31,1119. guffartd tbra* yaara with awalllnia from Impura blood: curad by axtaraal ua* of It. Jacob* OIL Uo return In Sr* yaara. ARNOLD VON BANDIL. <Q At DttubmsTs and IJbaleri. THE CHARLES A. VO6ELER CO., Bsltlmor*. Mfl. Tltt’s Pills SAVES MONEY. One box of these pllla will ive untny dollar* In doctor’* bill*. They are specially prepared a Family Medicine, and supplies a want long felt. They remove unhealthy necumulatlon* rrom the body, without nauseu or griping. Adapted to young und old. Price, 85c. SOLD EVERY WmiltK. "^ipFIELDS FEMALE* PAl^pVsC^UP^rleG^ /menstruation lr taken ouvuvjd chKhoi 0? jtoox TO WOMAN jmaffw BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO. ATLANTA BA. ituo at ail aauaamra, HARVEST EXCURSIONS. # HALF RATES Fpr the Round Trip, Iron Mountain Route, To all point* In Arkitnaita, Texas, Karima* and Nclirnnkit, Auguut (Ith and Hli, HeptmnborlOth and ‘Altlt, and Oi-tobor ith. Thirty Days* Limit, with Ample Stop-over Privileges. Cnsap Lands. . , COME EARLY FOR FIRST CHOICE, Knr dncrlptly* land pamphlet* FREE, addreaa Company’* Agent*, or if. C. TOWNHKNIL Henaral Faaaenger and Ticket Agent, NT. Louie, Mo. to cure any kind headache In fifteen minute. eontnln no opium, criilpyjlne or other lojurlou, aule Tho uuir cure for cea Slekoeaa. ■OALINE r ice. ZS conta tier box. inch containing ill. Sold by ail druggtala, oi/ on receipt of price by (be/ Company, Biffalo, N . Y ROWPEBSyd^ MrWAlf K TniN PAPER trwrt ttm* yea wrtU.

ILLUSTRATIONS Suitable for Any Subject. While ihowlng only a few specimens of oar Llvo Stock Catt, wo aro fully able to All any order for different breed* of Horses, Cattle, Poultry, Sheep or twine, and In fact anything ever, limit ourselves to this line, at wo have the largest stock of Miscellaneous Cuts to be found anywhere, thus enabling you to select a suitable illustration for any sub|ect. Special attention it invited to our Business Cute and those denoting Societies, Orders, Games, etc. in addition to supplying Cuts of every dewe carry on a General Jobbing Business in Electrotyping and Stereotyping, .<, ■ atthe lowest possible rates for thoroughly '■ reliable work and we respectfully solicit your orders. Write us for estimates, specimens sb&blT; 1 or sample sheets, and in doing so address us at the most convenient of our seven houses. THE A. N. KELLOGG NEWSPAPER CO.. . 3*B & 370 DEARBORN STREET, CHICAGO, ILL, 924 990 WALNUT ST, IT. LOUIg, MO. ITT h 179 CLM BT.. CINOIHMATI, OHIO. Tl 4 TANARUS ONTARIO STREET, CLEVELAND, OHIO. M *4O JEFFERSON ST,. MEMPHIS, TINM. Si 4 a sit west oth gr., KANgXg city, ho. 74 to ao east bth rr.. rr. pauw mirn.

All Run Down From tba weakening effect* of warm fey hard work, or from a long lllnau, you nee* a goad tonio and blood gurlfler. Hood’s Sarsaparilla' give* a good appetite, strengthens the whole ay* tem, parities the blood, regulates the digestion. “It affords me much pleasure to rseomsemsd Hood's Sarfaparllla. My health two years ago was ▼ery poor. My friends thought I was going with consumption. I commenced using Hood’s turn partita, took Ore bottles of It, and to-day I ean do as hard a days work as I ever could. It saved me from the grave and put me cm my feet a sound, healthy man.’i Will R. D. TaißßkT, Ut Bast Mala Street, Wtggonavllle, Ohio. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Bold by all druggists, gi; six forK. Prepared only by 0. 1. HOOD & CO., Apotheoartea, Lowell, Mam 100 Doses One Dollar "educational. f JI.OOMINOTON (IIX.) I,AW SCHOOL. Fall Una I) begins Sept. 10. For Circular ad'* It. M. Beniamin. UNION COIXEOKof LAW.Cblcago. Fall Term be. gins repi.lS. Forclroularadd.il. Booth, Chicago. TKNXINHS SEMINARY. Norm.l Sob<l n.l R.lm* w College, Aurora, 111. Thorough, Prostlnol, Procreirlvr, limn* lift. Law rtu*. stria beat. AdJre.* BSV. 0. C. LOVSJOT. HILLSDALE COLLEGE, SffSSftiffift Term bfgtns Sept. 10.1589. Wrlto Sec’y for catalogue. ■rNASI THIS raPXR itJ umjmiilH VflllklA IfICII Wanted to Learn Telegraphy. lUUIVH IRCR Situations famished. Clreulars free. Address Valsntin Bros., Janesville, Wla. sv-NAua inis l Ai'ta ty im* r A BOSIKESH EDUCATION AT S-so- JL HOME. For circulars, address J&Z&T CLAKE’S COLLEGE, Em. Pa. MILWAUKEE COLLEBE v^ 8 50 tilth Ycor. Beautiful location. Adran- LADIES, tagesunsurpsaaed. I‘reporatorvand Collegiate Con roes. Address Clus. K. Kinoslst, t'h. D., Milwaukee, Wla. m ga a A MONTH and more Is earned hy Sr Ellil grutloatca *lm xiii'iit elk monthe Wh||l|H or lose at the Olfuge. Bond Mdiires* fUP | mw W of 20 friends and get Clrcularauft Beautiful Specimens of I’enmanahlp. Both aexeg attend. (fr SHORTHAND TAIKIHT OT MAIL. BtIINKMrtLLESE. ATEKUNO, lIA. UNIVERSITY OF XXjXjX2STOXO. Courees In Aonicpi.TDßßi EhOlNlkßUfO, Mechanical. Civil, ami Mining: ARCIUTgOfUItS CHSM* istky. Natural HibToby: English and Modfikn Lanouaiuk; Ancient LanouaoHS. Preparatory course of ono year. Women admitted. Aildrnaa SELIM H. PMObl, LLO. o £S 1 ?S I li SUNNY SOUTH. UIIILO The ATITBfIAtDM, COLUMBIA, TSIBW., offers the moat perfect development of American Womanhood. opi ned, IHMi Chartered, 18M. Hlaleeu aorue In grove. Twenty Inetruetore. A Library of 10JIJ0 voiiiimm. All department* of Female Education thoroughly taught Foil TEH ms an and CATA I.odUM. addrese BUBEKT P. SMITH, President. lACMTC UfiUTCn loaelltheonlyAufhmttc. AUtN I u If An I CU Popular, tlluttrated und .uhtohv.IOHNSTOWN flood 0 TUB Ummmmmmm—mmimmmmm a By W. FI.ETCHEB JOHNSON. Paateat aelllagbook ever Issued. Huccrse of Agent* Is Wotuurfyl. •00,000 copies already sold. Beautiful sWglyphic pictures of the great dUatUr „Ajjily_ to lleadqaarters. Low price. U HIOTEKMA. FrttahU paid. Bend 110 cents at onoe for outfit la UUBBAHD BROS., 21< Clark Street, Chicago, IIL SW-HAMS THIS FArik me U* om writ*. THROW AWAY YOUR MONEY I This Is what you have been doing all along for worth* less medicines. Now, take the right course and send only a a-cmt stamp with your addrese for a sanmto of LAMBERT’S CATARRH OTTZCIB which I* wurranted to cure the worst eases of Catari-M. irTrr It llrst und buy It afterward*. LAMBERT MFUICIN U CO.. It Wabash Avsaur, I%l|*|o|llL — ewitAMS Tlfls I’Alku mnrdmsroonNa *<|e 1. (*EA A MONTH can bomadework. SID TO OtCOU |ng for us. Agent* preferred whh esn furnish a lmr*o and glvo their whole tlrno to the business. Spare moments may bo profitably employed iilau. A few VKCrtiicle* In towns and eltla*. 11. F.JoiinSon Afio.. tOOO Main Ht..lllchmond.VV JV./f -/Truss sfnfs npe nnd butiutii expevintet. NtvtP mind about Etndino tamp for rrpti/ n. F- J- dr (a faSeuTß'WfTW^tionn^S^TSpSnJß nlltn I O i.BidanyaoUvemsn orwointn to soil our good* WANTED by *mpl* ud ll* at boms, (slary paid " |omplly and tspoosos la ad -snos. Full parOil tlnolsr* sod samj-ls osso PURE. Wo mooßjoot i<av.o l r'a;yfifafßaaEiKS!r BASE BALLS d^MS? QCkIT CBECT Off application enclosing end I r nth (go,) stamp, by addressing, TIIKOIIOUK HOLLAND, P.O.Bux 120, Philo., Pa. CT* Attic this I'Al'Kll *ry Urns you writ*. DETECTIVES Wmipil In crrrf rnuuiT. Bhrir4 men to art In our Ijleeret not nceesmy. Bemf.Mc. n*n OrannanDelectUeßureauCo. 44 Arcade, Cincinnati,•> /~n . find Plso’a Cure for ■L*O •-T/'b-rtlJC* Comiumptlon TUB . r rTX lIKHT remedy for -/w-\*-4 N-\3'hoarseness and t —A—- r g—-A—w s clear the throat. n I HipMlgpidh For INVENTOR*. M-pew Ml ffl 1 B£* HITV I'.li.iK KHKK. AddroM l Em I h In I w. t. KincT.id Ainu../ I m a R HmITI ■ Vt Lev, Woiblngum, O. 0, SW-NAMEtIIIS l-AW.II *v.rr llm. ruu orils. MRyl 0k ptßßend Tumors Cured, no knife, Imudt Ml U free. Urs. OrollgnyA lliaol*. IVWhlllU Elm Street, Cincinnati, Ohio. .tiii*fai'E*# i,n.t;wina BfS A I fffi HKMTi low. Bend for price II etc OvALBO Weeks’Hcale Works,Buffalo,N.T. tw-NAMa yais i-sysa MI u_iwi •*. A._N, K - A 18gg WHEN WKITINU TO AWKHTIMEIM FLCAU state that yea sew the Advertleeaseat la (Ms paper.