Pike County Democrat, Volume 24, Number 25, Petersburg, Pike County, 3 November 1893 — Page 7
RELIGIOUS AND EDUCATIONAL. —The first modern medical school was at Salerno in the eighth century. —France had, in 1887, 85,545 schools, 180,800 teachers and 6,308,000 scholars. —Greek education comprised reading, writing, arithmetic, music, literature. art and gymnastics. —Faith is the sacrifice of the understanding to God; repentance the sacrifice of the will.—Jeremy Taylor. —The states of the union expended for education in 1890 $148,734,647, of which $95,791,090 were in salaries —Practical technical instruction was first given in the Chester (England) Diocesan Training college about 1839. —During the sixth, seventh and eighth centuries the Irish monastic schools were the most renowned in Europe. —From the tenth to the fifteenth century female education in Europe consisted of reading, singing and embroidery work. —The greatest Mohammedan university is at Fes. It is attended by 700 students, and the course of study is limited to the Koran. —Connected with the synod of China are S3 foreign and 27 native ministers, with 27 licentiates. In the 65 churches there are 0,000 members. —Mcditeval education comprised the trivium: grammar, dialectics and rhetorie; and the quadrivium; arithmetic, geometry, astronomy and music. —There are 82,712 women and girls in India under Christian instruction, and outside these stand the appalling number of 111,332,927 not under instruction and unable to read or write. —Christian peace is unclouded azure in a lake of glass. It is the soul which Christ has pacified, spread out in serenity and simple faith, and the Lord God, merciful and1 gracious, smiling over it —Hamilton. —Nine casks of missionary arrowroot have been sent to Edinburgh this year from Aneityum, New Hebrides, and three from> Fortune. The latter is a contribution from the native Christians to help prepare native teachers and to build the first church in Fortuna. ' —How soon are our tears (for sin) dried up. If this plaster of sorrow begin to smart a little, presently we pluck it off and think it is enough. Whereas, we should let it lie till the sore be thorjf oughly healed, which is not till death, when as all tears, so these of godly sorrow, shall be wiped away.—Dyke. —The English historian, Sharon Turner, says that at the end of the first century there were 500,000 Christians. By the end of the second century there
were «,uuu,uuu. .mis uumucr was increased in the next hundred years to 5.000. 000. Then the figures advanced as follows: 500 A. D., 10,000,000; 600 A. IX, 15,000,000; 700 A. D., 20,000,000; 800 A. D., "4,000,000; 000 A. D„ 80,000,000; 1000 A. IX, 40,000,000; 1100 A. IX, 50,000,000; 1200 A. D., 70,000,000, 1800 A. D., 80.000. 000: 1400, A. D., 75,000,000; 1500 A. D., 80,000,000; 1000 A. D„ 100,000,000; 1700 A. D., 115,000,000; 1800 A. D., 155,000,000; 180S, 250,000,000. The army of the Lord is marching on. WIT AND WISDOM. —Freedom is not caprice, but room to enlarge.—Barthol. —There's always room at the top for larger potatoes.—Blizzard. —There %re but three classes of men, the retrograde, the stationary and the progressive.—Lavator. —“Soy, Phalim, what’s a ventriloquist?” "lie's a lad phat stands on one side av th’ room an’ talks to himself from th’ other.” —Labor is discovered to be the grand conqueror, enriching and building up nations more surely than the proudest battles.—Carlyle. —A really great man is known by three signs—generosity in the design, humanity in the execution, moderation in success.—Bismarck. —Reflect upon your present blessings, of which every man has many; not on your past misfortunes, of which all men have some,—Dickens. —There is one safe way of avoiding fatal mistakes in distinguishing between mushrooms and toadstools. Eat parsnips.—Kansas City Journal. —Little Charlie—Papa, do angels see what's going on in the world? Papa— I suppose so; they’re often pictured as weeping. —Cleveland Plaindealer. —Sir Edwin—Shall we take the high road home, dear—I mean Lady Angelina? Lady Angelina—No. I should prefer the bridal path, I think.— Judy. Hardalee—We had a fine sunrise tliis morning, Van. Did you see it? Van Tank—Sunrise? Why, old man, I am always in bed before sunrise.—N. Y. Ledger. — Principal—You had a defect in the cash account yesterday. Has the error been discovered? Clerk—The error, yes, but not the cash.—Boston Home
Journal. —True knowledge will make us humble, modest, and kind to others. It will not puff us up, and it will not lead us to overlook the real happiness of others.—Barnes. —Clara—You must have refused Harry Sparker last night. Maude— How did you know? Clara—He told me this morning he had just had a narrow escape.—N. Y. Herald. —It is a common thing for women to say that men are. all alike. But when two men happen to fall in love with the same woman a difference very soon exists between them.—Boston Transcript. Doctor—Well, Johnny, don’t you feel better since I gave you the medicine? Johnny—Yes, forgot all about being sick. Doctor—That’s what I thought, and it wasn’t hard to take was it? Johnny—I guess so, for it took two of us boys to hpld Fido when we gave it to him.—Inter Ocean. -■-Literature certainly runs in the Greensmith family. The two daughters write poetry that nobody will print, the sons writes plays that nobody will act, and the mother writes novels that nobody will read.” “And what does the father write?” “Oh, he writes checks that nobody will cash.”—Press and Printer.
USEFUL AND SUGGESTIVE. —Salmon Scallop*.—Chop one can of salmon, add one-half capful of white sauce, one-half cupful of crumba, salt, pepper and minced parsley. Fill pattypans, strew with crumbs, and bake.— Good Housekeeping. —Cocoanut Biscuit.—Mix well together one grated cocoanut, half a pound of white sugar, and the wellbeaten whites of two eggs. Break off, with a fork, pieces the size of a walnut, place them in a pyramid form on wellbuttered paper. Bake them in a very slow oven, as they must dry out without becoming discolored — Housekeeper. —Cornucopias of gayly-colored crinkled paper lined with tinfoil look pretty at a luncheon when filled with flowers. If sweet peas are the floral decorations, have a cornucopia of pale pink paper at each guest’s plate filled with the sweet blossoms By tying pink ribbon arouffl it, on which the guest's name is printed, you avoid the necessity of a separate place card.
—R»ce luddiug.— lake two and a half tablespoonfuls of rice, a quart and a cupful of milk, a cupful of sugar, a teaspoonful of vanilla or other extract. Put the milk and .the rice in a saucepan, stand on the back qf the stove, and let simmer about two hours, until creamy—but do not let boil. Add the sugar and_ the flavoring, put in a dish, bake in the oven till brown.—Harper’s Bazar. —Buttermilk or sour milk biscuit — One pint of buttermilk or spur milk, one quart of flour, piece of butter hall the size of an egg rubbed into the flour, one teaspoonful soda dissolved in hot water, a little salt Hub the butter and salt intp_the flour, and stir in the milk. Stir the RodiKin with a knife until well mixed^ Add flour enough to mould it sxqoeth. Roll ahd cut as tea biscuits. Bake in a quick oven.—Boston Budget ^Quick Soup.—Into one quart of boiling water put one cup of cracker crumbs, one half cup of Irish potatoes chopped fine, one tablespoon of rice, butter the size of an egg. onion enough to flavor and salt and pepper to taste. Let this boil until done, then add a teaspoon of extract of beef and a raw egg. Beat the egg all together for a few minutes, then pour slowly into the boiling soup and stir cons to The soup is Detroit Free now ready Press. Baked Beets—Baked beets are nice. We consider them sweeter than when boiled. It takes them some time to bake, but if allowed to remain in the oven until they are perfectly tender, you will prefer them to boiled beets, I think. Remove the skin when they are done, slice and season them with salt, pepper and butter, as you would boiled beets. A little vinegar may be added if liked, but I think it a good way to leave the vinegar to be added at the table, as some do not like it on beets.—Prairie Farmer. —Creamed Onions.—Spite of a certain social prejudice, wd^can not lightly forego the onion, which has sOme Sturdy dietetic virtues, and its too great self-assertion may be modified in some degree. Peel in a bowl of water and there will be little to annoy in the process. Boil in plenty of salted water, and unless the onions are very mild it is well to change the water when parboiled. When Very tender drain thoroughly and add from another saucepan a cream sauce, made by rubbing together a tablespoonful of butter with one of flour, and when well cooked adding gradually a pint of rich milk. Let the onions simmer gently in this sauce for ten minutes, then dish with butter, salt and pepper to taste.—Country Gentleman.
A RAPIDLY AGING TOWN, The Decay of the Canal Street Region In New York. It is a fact illustrative of the high pressure way in which the city of New York is run that the Canal street region already is old. In a fashion that would make a European city dizzy, it has dashed through all the phases which mark the progress from youth to age; and already, in no more than a man’s lifetime, has passed on into defeighty years ago it was suburban and obscure. Twenty years later, Hudson square having been laid out and St. John’s church built, it began to be fashionable;. In another twenty years —the square being then surrounded by the wide-fronted houses of which many stately wrecks remain—it was one of the most gravely respectable parts of the town; and for more than a decade it remained at this aristocratical higlvwater mark. Then began its slow de
emu"—which cuucu in a iiuuucu ami irrevocable plunge, in the year 1869, when the Hudson river Railroad Ca crushed the region utterly, so far as its fitness to be an abiding-place of polite society was concerned, by clapping down-four acres of freight station over the whole of the luckless park. Only one man of position stayed by the wreck, and even may be said to have gone down with it. This was John Ericsson, the builder of the Monitor, who continued in his house for many years on St. John’s park, holding up in that frowsy and bustling region its traditional respectability, until he died there only a little while ago. To-day, the dwellers upon St. John’s park are mainly foreigners; a few Germans, but more Italians—as even a blind man, possessing a traveled and intelligent nose, would know by the presence of several distinctively Neapolitan smells. The stately houses, swarming with this unwashed humanity, are sunk in such squalor that upon them rests ever an air of melancholy devoid of hope. They are tragedies in mellowtoned and carved wood-work that once was very beautiful. By an odd twist of destiny it is mainly to the aristocratic houses on the square that an evil fate has come. The less pretentious structures therebouts have sunk only to the level of lodging or boarding houses; and many of them, as Is manifested by their superior air of self-respecting neatness, still are private dwellings.—Thomas A. Janvier, in Harper’s Magazine
FARM AND GARDEN. STORAGE OF POTATOES. How to Contract a Temporary Ftt and Pcrmaaeat Cellar. Wher* merely temporary storage lor potatoes through one winter is wanted, a pit dug about three feet deep, four to six feet wide, and as long as is necessary to store the crop, will he found satisfactory. Make a ventilator for every fifteen feet in length of pit, by using a one-by-stx inch fence board sixteen feet long, sawn in two pieces, one nine feet and the other seven feet long. Rip the seven-foot piece lengthwise, making stnps three-by-one inch. Place these strips even at the top end and nail together. This leaves an air space of three by four inches, and the narrow strips coming only to within two fest of the bottom end give a circulation of air all through the tubers; set these up in the pit before putting in any potatoes, resting the bottom end on the ground, so as to take all damp n
FIG. 1.—CROSS-SECTION OF POTATO PIT. air from the bottom. Fill the pit to ■within six or eight inches of the top at sides and ends, rounding up in the middle to one to two feet above the surface of the ground (Fig. 1). Cover with at least two feet of good dry straw, wheat or rye •preferred, using care to have straw well tucked in at sides and ends of pit, so that as the covering freezes and separates from side of pit, there will be no air space made. If care is used in covering and the pit not dug too deep or filled too near the top at the edges, I have always found the tubers coming out sound in the spring; but where pits of this kind have been made too deep, I have sometimes found a loss on top from the warm vapor from the bottom rising and freezing in the straw above, to thaw out in a warm spell and overheat the potatoes. There will be no need at any time of closing the ventilator, as the damp air going out will freeze in cold weather on meeting the surface, air and, in very cold weather, close up the top, thawing out as soon as the weather moderates. Where' large crops of potatoes, or other root crops, are regularly grown, a permanent pit or cellar will be found not only the most satisfactoryj but the cheapest If possible, select a*high, dry place to locate the pit, or else make it so by drainage. Excavate the pit by using a plow and road scraper, finishing up with a spade, I prefer a pit eight to ten feet wide, and at lea&t eight feet deep. It may be wider ii many varieties are grown, so as to allow an alleyway along one side. Build it as long as necessary to hold the crop. Dig a space at one end eight feet long and six feet wide for a hatchway, with steps or ladders. Draw a line through center of pit lengthwise,
FIG. 2.—PERMANENT POTATO CELLAR. and dig post holes one and one-hall feet deep and large enough to take in a good post of cedar, or other durable wood, eight inches in diameter and ; twelve feet long. Set these firmly in ' the holes and tamp well (Fig. 2). Square and level the tops of these, which will extend three feet above the top of pit. Place the ridgepole, nailing roof boards on planks at side of pit. Make frames two by six, and three feet in depth, with cleats inside for bottom cover. Use a tight-fitting cover for both top and bottom. The top cover ‘ should extend over the edges one-half inch. Place the frames not over fifteen feet apart on one side of top for the convenient filling of the pit. Make ventilators four by six inches inside measure, and one long enough to extend two feet above surface of covering and one foot below ridgepole,- and spike in place on one side of same. Now make another long enough to reach the bottom of pit and large enough to slip up over the one just described, but be sure to have the first four feet of the bottom quite full of two-incfi auger holes, or else do not extend side boards to within one foot of bottom. On top of roof place cornstalks, sorghum bagasse, or other coarse material. On top of all spread two feet of soil. Wherever possible, sow the soil on top of pit with clover to prevent washing. Make a hatchway with tightfitting, inside and outside ridgepole a strong timber eight by ten inches, and as long as the pit Spike this to top ol long posts. Choose two two-by-twelve inch planks and lay them on the ground, one on each side of pit, at least six inehes from the inside edge of pit, using fence posts sawed one-half round, cedar being the best. Lay them two to three inches apart, resting the top ends on doors. Such a pit, if dug in good, dry soil, and if good material has been used, will last for years. If the soil on the sides should not be sufficiently strong to stand, the walls must be boarded. If too wet, cement must be used. I find that a pit constructed in this manner keeps the tubers firmer and longer without sprouting, than where a solid plank or stone top is used. Much of the moisture enters the soil from above. The dirt roof lasts much longer than the plank top or a board roof would.—i’. B. Van Orman, in American Agriculturist.
Tb«y Understood. •‘Mrs.. Bordem,” said the upstairs young man severely to his landlady, “this coffee is too weak.” It was then that, amid a general excited nudging and signaling, the other boarders passed the whisper: “He’s paid up!”—Chicago Record. It Made a .Difference. Mamma—Come, little daughter, you must wash your hands after playing with the cat. Little Daughter—Yes, mamnpc^bnt TO jes’ have to rinse ’eijftfriJK^jie^ I been playin' with the Ritten.-^HaiV per’s Young People. ' \ A Theory. \ “What do you understand by the phrase ‘Profane history?’ ” asked one young man of another. “I don’t know,” was the reply, “unless somebody has been compiling comments on the weather.”—Washington Star._/ The Worst of ilL Hostess—Oh, I think some people are so disagreeable! Don’t you hate people who can sing and won’t? Old Grouchy—No, not so much as I do those who can’t sing and will'—Life. No Trlfler. “Did he propose to you?” “Yes.” “Was he in earnest?" "He must have been. He asked me how rich my father was.”—Truth. It's a Way Girls Have. Miss Pert—What a singular man is that Mr. Dubbs! Miss .Flirt—Yes; so singular that many girls would like to make him plural.—Town Topics. Something New. Nannie—We’re going to have a new porch in front of our house. Marjorie—Well, we’ve got new yawning to all of our front windows.—Harper’s Young People.
They Come High. Bingo—This is rather a unique set of china you have, old man. It must have cost you a pretty penny. Kingley—It did. My wife painted it.—Judge. A Quotation. Brown—You didn’t get that federal appointment you were after. Jones(proudly)—No, sir. I’m unawed by power and uncorrupted by patron.age.—Puck. . f A Setback. Fresh Drummer (in suburban wait-ing-room)—Fine day, miss. Beg pardon, but is my cigar offensive to you? Miss Rural—No; not in comparison. THE MARKETS. Nkw Youk, Oct. 30. i CATTLE—Native Steer*..... *3 90 ® COTTON—Middling. FLOUR—Winter Wheat.. J 75 a WHEAT—No. *■ Red. 70 © CORN—No. 2.. 4 OATS—Western MlfW. St Vi© PORK—New Mess..’. 19 50 © S ST. IAlUIA COTTON—Middling. . 7K© UEEVES—Shipping Steers... 470'© Medium. 4 35 © HOGS—Falrto Select. 5 90 ® SHEEP—Falrto CUoioe. 2 50 © FLOUR—Patents. 3 IB @ Fancy to Extra Do.. 2 30 © WHEAT—No. 2 Red. Winter. . 60 © CORN—No.2 Mixed.. 37*© OATS—No. 2. 26 © RYE—No.2. 42 © TOBACCO—Lugs. 650 © I Leaf Hurley. 10 0J © 1 HAY—Clear Timothy. 9 00 @ I BUTTER—Choice Dairy. 20 © EGGS—Fresh. & PORK—Staudurd Mess (new).. © 1 BACON—Clear Rib. lO1*® LARD—Prime Steam.9X© CHICAGO CATTLE—Shipping. 5 55 © HOGS-Falrto Choice. 6-0J © SHEEP—FnlrtoCliolce. 3 01 © . FLOOR— Winter Patents. 375 © Spring Patents. 3 40 © WHEAT—No. 2. Spring. No. 2 Red. CORN—NoJ!. OATS—No.2.. PORK—Mess (new).17 50 KANSAS CITY. CATTLE—Shipping Steers.... 2 10 HOGS—All Grades. WHEAT—No.2Ited. OATS—No. 2. CORN-No2. NEW ORLEANS FLOUR—High Grade. 3 10 © CORN—No. 2. .. .. ® OATS—Western. © HAY—Choice. 17 00 © PORK—New Mess. BACON—Sides. COTTON—Middling. CINCINNATL WHEAT—No. 2 Red. . 61H© CORN—No. 2 Mixed. © OATS—No. 2 Mixed. PORK-NewMess. © BACON—Clear Ribs. • COTTON—Middling. ©
KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who live better than others and enjoy life more, with less 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 embrace^ in the remedy, Svrup of Figs. Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most acceptable and pleasant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect laxative ; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers and permanently curing constipation. It has given Satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels without weakening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. , Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug*gists in 60c ana $1 bottles, but it is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Fi,: . and being well informed, yon will no. accept any substitute if offered.
Oft* o«»* oVaiIUkin& Absolutely Pure. Powder SHOULD be used wher- a ever yeast has served heretofore. Veast acts by0 fermentation and the destruction of part of the gluten of the'flour to produce the leavening gas. Royal8 Baking Powder, through the action of its ingredients upon each 'oilier in the loaf while baking, itself produces the? necessary gas and leaves the wholesome properties of the flour unimpaired. It is not possible with any other leavening agent to make such wholesome and delicious bread, biscuit, rolls, cake, pastry, griddle-cakes, doughnuts, etc. ; ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., 106 WALL ST4 NEW-YORK.
' —The head of the American Missionary college at Marsovan, Asia Minor, Dr. George F. Herrick, is a Vermont man, formerly of Essex, and a graduate of the university of Vermont. The school has had considerable trouble with the Turkish government, and the porte has recently intimated that Dr. Herrick’s return to Asia Minor was undesirable, "to which the United States government has sent answer that under no circumstances would American missionaries be prohibited from returning to that country. t — “Wimmen's suffrage?” said Mrs. Hollersnag. “Not any fur me, ef you please.” “Why not?” “Uecause, ,1 hev ter wait on Josiar enough ez it is without goin’ter town an’ doin’ his votin’ fur ’im.”—Washington Star. __ —The present title holiness, as given to the pope, dates only from the fourteenth century. Before that time it was used by kings and emperors. “Sweet Charity,’* In the Artists’ Exhibition of 1893 at the New York Academy of Design, there was exhibited an oil-painting by J. U G. Ferris, entitled “Sweet Charity.” Its richness of coloring commanded instant attention, while the lesson it taught was so impressive that one naturally returned to it for a second view. Its subject is a young lady of colonial times who is on an errand of charity to one of the poorer families of the town. She has a sensible, charming face, which expresses with remarkable fidelity the sentiment of her errand. There is not a home that this charming picture will not ornament. It must be seen to be appreciated. “Sweet Charity" was purchased by the Publishers of The youth’s Companion and has been reproduced in colors In large size, 14^x21. It will be sent to all new subscribers to The Companion who send $1.75 for a year's subscription, and the paper will also be sent Free from the time the subscription is received, to January, 1894, and for a full year from that date, to January, 1895. This offer includes the Double Souvenir Numbers published at Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year’s. Address, The Youth's Companion-, Boston, Mass. Hicks—“I saw. a well-dressed young man quite boozy at the theater last night.” Wicks—“So? Wonder what college he belonged to.’’—Boston Transcript. Fractional currency—broken promises to pay.—Galveston New's.
—Swift.—Rockwood—*‘That is l he fastest yacht oh American waters.” Ripley—"Is that so?” Rockwood— “Yes. She never goes out for a cruise without a gay party and a load of all kinds of liquor, on board.”—Puck. —The statistics of the Indiana yearly meeting of Orthodox Friends- show a membership of 17,442,with 146 churches and 188 recorded ministers. They show an increase in membership during the year of 664. " * Success Follows Failure To cure disease when, instead of the numerous palliatives of that scourge of humanity, that potent and comprehensive medicine. Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, is resorted to.\ Improvement is rapid and relief complete when it is used in cases of liver or malarial complaint, dyspepsia, constipation, nervousness, kidney weakness or neuralgi^x Debilitated people speedily gain strength when digestion is renewed by the Bitten. “You may think you’re smart,” said the tragedian as the audience pelted him with late lamented hen fruit, “but I think you’re making some pretty bad breaks.’’—Elmir* Gazette. “That watch Hardupps sold me turned out to have rusty works.” “I don’t wonder; it had been in soak three months. ”— Philadelphia Record. SLEEPLESSNESS,
Nervous Debility,. Neryous Exhausttion, Neuralgiav Paralyr sis,' Locomotor Ataxia, Melancholia,
and kindred ailments, wnetner resulting from over anxiety, overwork or study, or from unnatural habits or excesses, are treated as a iroecialty, with great success, by the Staff of Specialists attached to the Invalids’ Hotel and Surgical Institute at Buffalo, N. Y. Personal examinations not always necessary. Many cases are successfully treated at a distance, a ornTTir A ^ new and wonderfully Au I UMA. successful treatment has been discovered for Asthma and Hay Fever, which can be sent by Mail or Express. It is not simply a palliative but a radical cure. For pamphlets, question blanks, references and particulars, in relation to any of the above mentioned diseases, address, with ten cents in stamps, World’s Dispensary Medical Association, 603 Main Streak, Buffalo, N. Y.
Sure Cure for Sprain, Bruise or Hurt 1 S? ST. JACOBS OIL You’ll Use H Always for a Like Mishap. WORK THIS WINTER For us. Cash pay weekly; businessmen, professional men, mechanics, farmers—their sons, daughters' and others, work for us the year round—because nothing else brings them so much quick cash, beginners taught; our men sell where others fail—om* prices half others, our Whole Root Trees lit* (one cue* tomer planted 16,3w and every tree lived), guarantee with every order, we pay freights, insure satisfaction* build up trade, hold It; you work dfrrrt, no middlemen; 900 new outfits just ready, the finest ever used. Write quick (giving age, references,Bbo’s Nurseries & Orchards Dep't, Louisiana, MoTor Rockpokt. III. Founded 1825; 1,000 acres Nurseries: 20,000 acres Orehurd*. Send two stamps for Orchard Book, photographs of Fruits, Nurseries, Orchards, etc., and much exact information about trees and fruits. ^
7&\ iHAY-FEVER & GOLDIHHEflol . ''—CREAM BALM—Cleanses tho Nasal Passages. r Allays Pain and Inflammation, Heals the Sores, Re* ”, tores Taste and Smell. The BALM is applied into the Hostrils, Is quickly absorbed. Is agreeable to use, Gives relief at once. , \ W*t Druggists or by mail. ELY BROTHERS, 60 Warren St., New York.
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This Trade MaiklsontlMbMt WATERPROOF COAT IKS1 in the World! *««• A. J. TOWER. BOSTON. MASS. 5 "COLCHESTER'' • RUBBER CO.’S • “SPADING BOOT” H Von Want a First-lass Article.
MoYloker’a Theater, Oaloago, ItL YOURS MEN ASEtftSSSSte? roo4 •tt»tton>. WrtwJ. D. BBOWH,*! (004 eltwattope^Wrtf J.JDK BmOW , SedelU.Ma
i nnn nnn acres olr lawd l,UUU,UUU for talo by the Saiht P a VI. 6 Duluth Railroad Compact in Minnesota. Send for Maps and Circutan. The j will be sent to joa Address HOPEWELL CLARKE, Land Commissioner, St. Paul, Minn, FARM FOR SALE :"“H3 Webster County, Mo.: one of the CIMCCT CDtaiT sections in the country. Farm rinWI ■ llvl ■ - '* -•—•*~of timber ^ THXELE4SKFU 2tf6 Walnut Street, St. Louis. AIo» Biliousness. Sour Stomach. Loss of ApIIIUIUL«) IIW»r»petite. Vomiting cured by KKING’S DYSPEPSIA POWDERS. Price SOe, sent to an? INDIGESTION,! (ddKM. Kring’t Fharmacj, 2>t» S. IU St, 81. Loob, M*. Mto $12 INCOME FEB MONTH on an inroKtmfnt of SOS and no work. Investigate immediately. Add. h. Galitzki, Schiller Bldg., Chicago, 111.. ■wuniHiunntnnk A. N. K., B. 1472. wm warrixo to abtsbtihebo ruuii Mat. that m taw the MnrtkMwt »■ O*
