Bloomington Courier, Volume 15, Number 50, Bloomington, Monroe County, 28 September 1889 — Page 3
& CJVlJ 1 . 1 , ft r 4 4 Ul f
, " " '
if'"'
A
ssaaft
-counting me .oouiangev vote. Just previous to the Czar's clopurture for
Tbouand, prairie : eih&kms aro beiug J Poterhoff The station ws
bacBy wofeesi &nd a railway signal man wa kHiecl. It is fully believed that it was
DOMESTIC
4 v -L V
killed around Tolon, HL
A saloon-keeper at Dupont, O., was whipped by, White Car s. A tornado swept the Florida ctvasfc Moa. day and did great damage, .... , . At PhilUpsburff,Pa.TSic Hopkins killed hismother-in-law and Ms wife Monday was emancipation day and was celebrated bytfy- colored people at many places. It is reported from Chicago that fcbere will V a window frlass. trust, but the story
ia denied from Pittsburg; , "The United States Circuit Court at St. jPaul, Minn., Monday, declared the beef inspection law unconstitutional ... Twelve persons near Meadville, -Pa., have died in the last few days of. an unknorn disease resembling dysentery. The Kansas City Board of Police Commissioners has ordered the Chief of Police to suppress the Salvation Army in that v. J. P. Williams, the receiving teller of the "First National Bank, Denver,is a defaulter to the extent of 38,000, and has gone to -Mexico.'. .Dr. C..3X Miller, of Poughkeep3ie, is building a steam yact which is expected to make the extraordinary speed of thirty miles an hCur. . y The w5Uof the late S. S. Cox has been filed forj probate at New York. The Instrument, gives all thc'estate, -real and personal, o his widow. . , " A deputy United States collector -anex--pectedly appeared at Guthrie, Ind. T., and :arrestedVT' twenty-two liojaozbssUars, .such sales beinp" prohibi ted. J . John Allen and E. H. Piatt, who left New York May 14-to go across the conti nent on horseback, arrived' at San Fran--dseo Saturday evening. Dispatches from Mt Washington state tthat on the summit snow is eighteen inches deep, and Monday , was the first id-ay of sunshine thia month. XX G. Sayle ha been granted letters of administration upon the estate of Davis S. Terry, lately killed by Marshal Nagle. The estate is valued at about $100,000 Thomas Roe, the Chicago bicyclist, - started from San Francisco Sunday afternoor. pn his journey by wheel to Chicago, "cwfcerene expects' to arrive in fif ty days. ' - The well-known and mammoth publishiing house of Belford, Clark &Co., Chicago, New York and San Francisco, made an p assignment Monday. Liabilities 400,000. The hog cholera in Kent county is rapidly spreading and,unless some active step is .taken by the authorities the disease will create havoctnqng the swine in Southern Maryland.
Intended to have the explosion take. jilUce when the Czar passed through the station on his way to the Irttiu, but through some miscalculation it otoutTe oielVruthc time of his. Majesty's iteWrture, ... . Mr. Olaxiatone received a deputation of Liberals from Hyde at HawarSen Monday. In response to the. ftduress presented h$ the depuitltfa, Mr. Gladstone said that
the Issue? of the dock laborers1 strike wa pregnant with hope for the future of laboi
in England. The political outlook,., he do elated, was very, hopeful for the Liberals
Mr. XJal four considei'od his reference to the
endowment of a Catholic university in Ire
land, at the end of the session of Parlia ment, a cunning etrdke of statesmanship, which would split the Liberal party t pieces. A similar dodge in 1885 had hum
bugged Irishmen into supporting the Tor
ies. The letter by Mr Balfour to the Sec
retary of the Protestant Alliance, in whicl
he says the question of a foundation en
dowment for the proposed university ha
never been considered by the Government
is, Mr. Gladestono said, the shabbiest part
of this shabby proceeding.
WONDERS OF THE WEST. Talmage Talks of His Traus-Ooutinontal Jonmev. TUo KftM&ttft nf a jGfnin Cou'dtrj" Christ Shall Ifafo Wmihlcm toVtr it All:
REVENUE REDUCTION.
Southern .members of the House of
Representatives deny that they intend to
make any special demand for legislation on that part of thoir section of country
With one voice they say it is their pui'pose
to work for legislation of equal importanc
to every section. .They are extremely an-
xiousfto have the tobacco tax abolished.
but they do not intend to ask it as a con
sideration for voting in favor of any oiu
for Speaker for the one, if no other reason that they do not consider it necessary
They say the Republican party is pledged to do this, and all reports about demands
they will make in the formation of com
mittees are fabricated.
Almost immediately after the House is
organized and the committees announced surely on the first call of the States foi
the introduction of bills a bill will be
passed to abolish the tobacco tax. The committee . vays and means will be expected tc -vjort this from its first regul at
meeting, as the propriety of doing so has long since been settled. It sconsideration by the House will be demanded very early.
As this will be the basis of the future action mi the revenues, and will, in a
large measure, govern a largo revisiou oi
the tariff, it is expected to consume much time; but it is expected to pass before any
nrtcitivp atfn tnlrnn nr n tn-rfP hill Thnrn
Ex-Fath.er Butler, a priest who eloped Congress will." know exactly how much
tariff revision the revenues of tho country
with ono .of his parishoners while assistant
pastor of St. Bridget's at Newark, N. J., naa appealed for reinstatement. He and hi? wife have separated. ; .
iuring ine aosence oi tne casmer, a
thank at Hurley, Wis:, was robbed of $4OTO0O.
The money was lef t-with the bank by the United States Express Company, which
will suffer the less, as the funds were, not
regularly on deposit with the bank.
A vicious mob at Rosalia, Kan., handed
Alon20 Edwards and his wife to trees and
subjected' them to other infamous treat 3nent in trying to extort a confession from them that they had killed a - child. The Jittle one? was found unharmed at a neigh-
boning farm house.
- A dispatch from Kansas City, Mo., says :
' There is every reason to believe that a ang of adroit, swindlers is preparing to ifiood the "eastern cities with fraudulent bonds of Southwestern Kansas and Northwestern Texas. Bankers have been re-
can stand.
Republicans generally believe that the
work of reforming the tariff will proceed
by piece-meal that is, it will be done by
specific bills, affecting only one article at
once. J? or instance, sugar will oe worked
upon by itself. Then, if it is advisable to
go further into a reduction of the ravenues,
other articles will be taken up by them
selves. Bills will . be introduced by the
hundreds on every phase of the tariff, thus
going round the old way of proceeding
with a general bill affecting almost every article an the list. If the tobacco tax is
abolished there will not be more than hall
the present latitude for work on the customs laws. If half the sugar tax is re
moved the incomes will be reduced to
about the minimum. General Browne,one of
the oldest and most influential members of
the House, and an experienced member of
the committee on "ways and means, was the
ceivinginquiries from the East for several Urst to advance the idea of specific Legis-
I.-.
i weeks in regard to bonds of various Kan
sas and Texas counties, mostbf nicQ
Hi'aye not been listed.
Senator Voorhees, who is now atTerre Haute, has been invited to deliver the
eulogy on the late Samuel Sullivan Cox,
at tne memorial meeting to oe neid m
Cooper Insitute October 9, but he will de
cline the invitation. His physicians have advised Mr. Voorhees to spend several
weeks-at Asheville. N. C. , and avoid exer-
h tion of any kind if he would.guard against
; a return of ; his recent illness.
An important raiiroaa oecision was
Tendered at Pittsburg, Thursday, by Judge
Ewina in Common Pleas Court.'' JU. D. B.
Reese was expelled from a train of the Pennsylvania road because he refused to r pay the 10 cents extra for cash fare, the
money to be refunded at any office of the company on presentation of receipt. The
Judge held that the 10 cents extra was
wrong and so instructed the iury. Reese
obtained a verdict for $2S0.
For some time two young fellows, who made Milford Center, 0.,their headquarters
have done astonishing business in pianos.
They have soldnearly two hundred in this,
Champaign, Clark and Madison counties in the past three months. They claim to have
" secured' a lot of first-class pianos in exchange for advertising. They sold them - at ridiculously low prices. It is now known
' that a maker of cheap pianos in New York
shipped the men unstencQed pianos, on
which they placed the name of the piano
wanted by the buyer, as ascertained: by an
advance visit by one of the men.
; ; At Cincinnati on Sunday night
last -Manager Pennessey gave, , a musical entertainment at one of his
r theaters, and he and others who par-
- y ticipated were arrested. It was regarded
' as'an effort tr resume Sunday theatrical
entertainments. Thursday the cases were
heard before Judge Ermston, of the police
court, on a demurrer. The court- found
that the statute clearly prohibited on Sun
day any theatrical- or dramatic -perform
ance' as well as various other performances
lation on the tariff, and the suggestion is
being almost universally indorsed. Be the Work done as it may, there will be no more
lengthy committee hearings and long bills.
DISASTERS IN JAPAN.
Advices . from Japan place the
total number of persons drowned in the
flood of Aug. 20, in the city of Wakayamo,
and in the districts of Minaniihmuro,
Mighasi-Muro, Nishi-Muro and Pidaka, at
10,000, and the number of persons receiving
relief at 20,424. The river Cinokuni swelled
from fourteen to eighteen feet above it
normal level, and the embankments and
the city of Iwahashi were washed away.
Immediately the village and about forty-
eight other hemlets were covered by the
raging waters.
On the morning of Aug. 19, an enormous
mass ot eartn ten trom tne mountain near
the village of Tennokawa, stopped the course of the river of the same name, and
which being already s wool en greatly, sub
merged the village and drowned nearly al
the inhabitants. A number of the villagers
belonging to Tsujido took refuge in their
temple, which was on high ground, but
when the land slide occurred about fifty
persons were buried alive.
HE DENIES IT.
No Truth in the St 't'xnent that Iectec
lives Are Gnarding the Preside nt.
The statement that he was guarded by
detectives is denied by the president. He
said he never traveled more unattended
that instead of protecting himself from the
G. A.-R., he would turn to them for a guard
if 'he ever needed'one.
in the whole united Mates there is
not a flavoring extract that is so valu
able,, so positive, so effectual in pro
ducinfir the most delicious, desirable
and delicate flavored cakes, pastry, ice
cream, etc. , as Dr, Price's justly cele brated Delicious Flavoring Extracts
Almond, Lemon, Vanilla, Grange, etc
- Duttnat itis suent as to a musical per- them and you will be delighted.
iB.ruw requiring criminal
statutes to be strictly construed', prevents
'making a musical performance a crime or
misdemeanor by implication, , and hence the defendants were dismissed. ; This will
open the theaters to Sunday concerts if
- they- choose to try them. --. - -
THE MARKETS, Indianapolis, Sept. 25, lSSSJ. , OUAXN.
Wbeat. ; Corn. Oats.
Louis Westergren, of Rockford, 111., aged l lndianapolls,. 2rd 75
; fortyfive, an unmarried, cabinet-maker
k out of worki who had been dissipating for J several weeks, committed- suicide Monday 7 night. . On that- evening he dressed him-
- sen in his nest, oiacked ms shoes, was s shaved, lighted a cigar: walked down to
I ' the river, selected a neat grassy spot, laid
:.. down on bis back;-2crossed his feet and,
drawing a pistoldrpve a bullet into his tern- Toledo
s pie. ne even wea; a nanaKercnier arouna
" his' neck with the ends ' covering his shirt
: s :ir rfronfcsothat the blood " -would not soil it.
- He was found, resting peacefully in death, ' with the cigar in his mouths and a satisfied
' " ook on his face.
3 r'd 71
Chicogo.i. ...... 2 r'd 77 Cincinnati..... r'd 7G St.Lonis.... ,2 r'd 76 New York. r'd SZ Baltimore J
Philadelphia; 2 r'd 79J4
77X
Detroit. I wh 81 Minneapolis ; I 77 Liverpool .....I
1 w 35 '2 w 528
33
m 43
21
1.8 26
20 '22
Rye
46 38 f0 CloverSeed 4 i.0
i
r'4-
9 -
. .... FOREIGN. ' -;
. . Wilkie ' Collins, the . novelist, died . at
IJondon Monday.- -.t':
b- -fphe BepubliCans m'a3e large gains in the
French elections of Sunday.
I . The authorities of :Cbinaare considering
j - a- memorial -asking' for the expulsion of .
Americans from-HJUina. p: :
i?r - The Iope has written.'' Cardinal Manning .r ' congratulating hiiir in his" success in settle-'
" ing the dok-labdreiV striked
Nine hundred houses hi-Quebec, near the
live stock. Cattle Export grades 11 r,(tc . V Good to choice shippers 3.50(f(.0() Common to medium shippers. . , . 2..V)W3.?S
Good to choice heifers'..; .m . ; ,4; : r 4r,
vjoinuion wj muuiuui uuiiera i.tu-;. iu .... .,. u-r
uwua uu v,yv, va ...ju , r 4 .iM'th Oi the til
iuir to mcaium cows i.ouukj.uo ,, r.,v ,yu ova
tiOGSneavv a. vim, in
Light. 4.80$4.45 Mixed ; 4.1 5(c4f Heavy roughs tt.25($3.?f) Sheep Good to choice ...... 4.20(4.50 Fair to medium . . ' ;j.rr(rM.l 0 Common -Q.S3m8.7q Lambs, good. to, choice 3.50()5.35 Common to medium , 3.50(5.50 Bucks, per head 2.00(53.5O
M1SCELIjX kocts.
J.
y " "scene of last week's disastei1, will . have to
. --v Wool Fine merino, washed
; landslides. 4- - r !,. . unwashed medum; 203i
; The elections in TFranee occurred, Sun-1 very coarse. 172i
Vlnv witrtift 'dfRtfiThati ThA PPtmWi- I EGGS BUTTEK, 1'OULTUY.
ihe sermon of Rev. T. Do Will Talmage
on last Sunday oh the subject: "From Ocoante Ocean; or My Transcontinental uonrnoy," was listened to with wrapt attention by an audience that filled Brooklyn
Tabernacle to the very doors, 'loxt:
Valms Ixxii, S: "He shall .have dominion rom sea to sea," The pi oacher said : Vhat two sens arc it'forrod to? Somo
might say lhat the text mount that Christ
was to reign over au tho land do; ween tho
Arabian soa and Caspian sea, or between
he Red sea and the .Moditorrnucau sea, or
between the Blacic sea and the North sea.
No ; in such case my text would have named them. It meant from any largo body of water on Um earth clear across to any
ther Targe body o! water. And sol have
. right to read it: Ho shall havo dominion
rom the Atlantic soa to tho Pacific aeu
-vly theme is, America for God!
First, consider tho immensity of this iro-
essionv It it wore ..only a .small tract oi
land chpable of hotaihg better than sasro brush and with ability only to support prairie dogs, I should not havo much enthusiasm in wanting Christ to havo it addled
to his dominion. IlUt its immensity and
Hffluenco no one can imagine unless iti im:
migrant Wagon, or st a'o coach or in-rail tram of the union. Pacific or tho Northern
t'acliio Or the Canadian Pacific or the
Southern Pacific, ho has traversed it, Hav-
ng been privileged six times to cross this ontinent, and twice this summer. I havo
:ome to some appreciation of its hiagnitude. alifornhk Which I supposed in boyhood
from its size oh the map, was a lew yards across, a ridge of land on whih one must
walk cautiously lest ho hit his head against
he Sierra Nevada on one side or slip off nto the Pacific waters on the other, Cali
fornia, the thin slice of land us I supposed
i to be m. boy noon, i nave lounti a to oo irgcr than all tho states of New England nd a 1 New York state and all Pennsylania added together; and if you add them ogether their sounre miles Jail far short of
California. North and South Dakota, Mon
tana and Washington territory, to be launched next winter into statehood;
will be giants at their birth. Let
.he congress of tho United States strain a point and soon admit lso Idaho and Wyoming and New Mexico. vVhat is the use in keeping thorn out in tho
.'old any longer? Lot us havo tho whole
continent divided into states with senato
rial and congressional representatives and
we will all bo happy together if some of
(.hem have not ouuo tho requisite number
of people, fix up the constitution to suit those cases. Even Utah will by dropping polygamy soon become ready to enter. Monogamy has triumphed in p trts of Utah and will probably triumph at this fall election in Salt Luke City. Turn all the territories into states and if some of tho sisters are
smaller thau the elder sisters, give them
time and they will soon bo as large as any of them. Because scmo of tho daughters of a family may bo five feet in stature and the others only four feet, do not let tho
daughters five feet high shut the door in
the faces of those four lest hish, s Among
the dying utterances of our good friend, tho wise statesman ami great author, tho oriliant orator and magnificent soul, S, -S. Cox, was the .expressed determination to move
next winter in congress for the transference of other territories into states.
"But."- says some one, "m- calculating
the immensity of our continental acreage
you must remember that vast -roaches of
our public domain are uncultivated, heaps
of dry sand, and the 'bad lands' of Montana
ana the great American desert" 1 am
lad you mentioned that. ithin twentyvo years there will not bo between the At
lantic and Pacific coasts a hundred miles of
land not reclaimed either by farmers1 plow or miners' crowbar. By irrigation tho
waters of tho rivers and tho showers of
heaven in what are called the rainy season
will bo gathering into great reservoirs and
through aqueducts let down where and
when the people want them. Utah is an ob'ect lesson. Some parts of that territory
which were so barren that a spear of grass could not have been raised there in a hun
dred .years are now rich as Lancaster coun
ty farms of New Yorifor Somerset county farms of New Jersey,
Experiments have proved that ten acres
of ground irrigated from waters gathered
in great, nyaroiogicai Dasinswm proaucoas much as fifty acres from the downpour of
ram as seen m our regions. e have our
freshets and our droughts, but in those lands which are to'be scientifically irrigated
there; will be neither freshets nor droughts.
As you take a pitcher and get it full of wa
ter, set it on a tamo and take a drink out oi
it wnen you are vnirsiy anu never, ramie oi drinking a pitcherfui all at once, so Montana and Wyoming and Idaho will catch the rains of thoir rainy season and take up all the waters of their rivers in great pitchers of resovoirs and drink out of them
whenever they will and refresh their land whenever they will. The work has already been grandly be
gun by the United btates government. Over four hundred lakes have already bpou
officially taken possession of by the nat ion for the great enterprise of irrigat'ou. Rivers that have been rolling idly through these regions, doing nothing on their way to the sea, will be lassoed and corralled and penned up until such time as the farmers need them. Under the same processes the Ohio, the Mississippi and all other rivers
will be taught to behave themsclve? better, and great basins will be made to catch tho surplus of waters in times of freshet and keep them for times of drought. The irrigation process by which all the arid lands between tho Atlantio and Pacific oceans are to be fertilized is no new experiment. It has been going on successfully hundreds of years, in Spain, in China, in India, in Russia, in Egypt. About eight hundred million people of the earth coday are kept alive by food raised on irrigated land. And here wo have allowed to lie waste, given up to rattlesnake and bat and prairie dog, lands enough to support whole nations, of industrious population. The work begun will be consummated. Here and there exceptional lands may be stubborn and refuse to yield any wheat or corn from their hard fists, but if the whole fail to make an impression the miner's pick-ax will discover the reason for it and bring up from beneath those unproductive surfaces coal and iron and lead and copper and silver and gold. God speed the geologists and tho surveyors, the engineers and tho senatorial commissions and the capitalists and the new settlers and the husbandmen who put their brain and hand and heart to this transfiguration of tho American continent 1 But while I speak of the immensity of the continent, T must remark it is not an immensity of monotoue or tameness, Tho larger some countries are, the worse for the world. This continent is not more remarkable for its magnitude than for its wonders of construction. hat a pity the United States government did not take possession of Yosemite, California, as it has of Yellowstone, Wyoming, and of Niagara Falls. New York! Yosemite and tho adjoining California regions! Who that has seen them can think of them without having hi blood tingle Trees now standing there that were old when Christ lived. These raonarchs of foliage reigned before Ca sar or Alexander, and tho next thousand
j years will not shatter thoir scepter. They ' nro tho masts of the continent, their can
vas spread on tho winds while the old shin boars on its way through tho ages. Their size, of which travelers often sneak, doos not affect me so much as their longevity, 't'hnuuh so old now, tho branches of some
ni tnem win cracaio m ine last con nagration of the planet. That valley of the Yosemite is eight miles long and a half mile wide and throe thousand feet deep. It seems as if it had been the meaning of Omnipotence to crowd into as small a place as possible some of the most studendous scenery of the world. Home of tho cliffs you do not stop to measure by feet, for they aro literally a milu high. Steep so that neither foot of man nor beast ever scaled them, they lit and in everlasting defiance. 3f Jehovah ti s a t hrone of earth these are its white pillars. 81 audi n g down in this great chasm of the val.e.y you look up and yonder is -itih drill Uo 'k, vast, gloomy minister bail- fur the silont worship of the mounlafoi N' dor Is Sentinel Kock, 3,370 feet .ii . ho'ii. solitary, standing guard among '' s'' . its "op seldom touched until a j". . . one b'o M-Ut of July mounted it and pjai.tfi ': national standards and the IK'iim c down in ihe valley looked up and 4-v ;,. 'ujad oi the mountain turbaned
Ai.n jus : mi stripes.! lonoer are tne
thousand feet high; i and South Dome
ptu red save by the
under storm.
no stopping place
.or Pn; ns.no. Ainuntains .hurled on moun...jjs miniums in the wake of moun.tuns. Mountains flanked by mountains. AiootJain split. Mountains ground. ountains fallen. Mountains triumphant. As though Mont Blanc and the-Adirondack and Mount Washington wore hero filtering themselves in one magnificent i-norus of roi-K and precipice and waterfall. Sifting and dashing through tho rocks, the Water comes down. Tho Bridal Voil falls, io thin you can see tho face of the mountain
Or hind it. Yonder is Yosemito falls, drop-
water in pearls, the water in amethysts, the water in diamonds. That cascade (lings down tho rocks enough -Jewels to array all tho earth in beauty, and rushes on until it drops into a very hell of .waters, tho smoke oi' their torment ascendmg forever aUd fcveiy. ...,., Hilt the most wonderful part or mis Amorieun coutiucnt is the Yeilovstono park. My visit thoro, last- montli tuadfl "Pbu iq n-4 impression that ivili -Hist fifty OVeft AfteV all poetry has exhausted it -elf and all the Morans and Uierstndis and tho other enchanting artists havo completed their canvas, there will bo other revelations to mako and other stories of i bs beau ty and wrath, splendor and agony, to bo recited. Tho Yellowstone park is a goologistfs paradise By cheapening of travel may it bocomo the nation's playground 1 In soino portions of it ihcre scorns to be the anarchy of the elnmonts. Kiio and water, and the
Uiy-
hnvo giron devlllstlo names to matiy place in the west and northwest As soon as you get hi YelloWstddO par or California you have pointed out to you place,- cursed with such names as "The npvira BUdey hTHe Ubvd 4 Kitchen uTuo Devil s Thumb," "The Devil's Put-
There la many a man thteka ho is in lidvanee of the times when he is behind them.
Vapor horn of that niarriage, temJic.
sbr cones or hills Of .crystal tout havo been bver ilvb thousand years growing, In
m "The UoviVs Mush Poi,? "1 i'.S DZVll ? . Tea Ketrio," "'J'ho Devil's Saw Mill,". ,
The nevjl's Macluup hou,",! ?') uevii 8 Gate" ana. so on. Now it ia vjsrf -piu-Sn
cians made large -gains, and Boulangerism
Eggs.. ...., He
received another backset.- Re-ballots are-- Fancy 'dairy . . . .12c PQcesaary itta third of tha- districts. Th CMiee country, . . 10c
Hens per lb 7c Roosters, Jit Turkeys Di Feathers. . ' J5c
Qitifi -.'"'A feet, sixteen times greater descent man tnat of N iagara. These waters dashed to death on the rocks, so that the white spirit of the slain waters ascending in robo f mist seeks the heaven. Yonder is Noviv
places tho earth, throbbing, sobbing, grc&uing, quaking with aqueous paroxysm.
At. lho I'vnirat.on of every sixn -rive
minutes one of the geysers tossing its boiling wator 165 feet in the air and then -descending into swinging rainbows. Caverns
of pictured walls largo enough for tho sepulcher of tho human race. Formations of stone in the shape and color of a caila lily, of heliotrope, of rose, of cowslip, df Buniiower and dr gladiola. Sulphur and arstinio and oxide of iron, vlth their delicate pencils, turning the hills into a Luxemburg or' a Vatican picture gallery. The so called Thanatopsis geyser, exquisite as tho Bryant poem it was named after, and tho so called Evangeline goysor, lovolv as tho Longfellow heroine it commomorates. The so called Pulpit Terrace from its white elevation preaching mightier sermons of God than lips ever uttered. The fid callSd Bettiesda geyser, by the warmth of which invaUds nave already been cured, the Angel of Health continually stirring the waters. Enraged craters, with heat at live hundred degreesi only a little below the surface. V lde reaches of stone of intermingled colors, blue as tho sky, green as tho foliago, crimson as tho dahlia, White as the snow, spotted as the leopard, tawny is tho liou, grizzly as the bear, in circles, in angios, in stars, in coronets, in stalactites, in stalagmites. Hero and there aro the petrified growths or tho dead trees, and vegetation of other ages keut through a process of natdral. embalmment In some places Waters as innocent and smiling as a child making a first attempt to walk from it3 mother's lap. and not far off as learning and frenzied and ungovernable as a maniao in murderous struggle with his keepers. But after you "have wandered along the goysorite enchantment for days and begin to 'feel that there can bs nothing moro of interest to see, you suddenly come upon tho peroration of all majesty and grandeur, the Grand canyon. It is here that it seems to me and 1 speak it with reverence Jehovah seems to have surpassed himself. It seems a great guloh let down into the eternities. Here, hung up and letdown and spread abroad, aro all the colors of land and sea and sky. . Upholstering of the Lord God Almighty. Best work of the Architect of worlds. Sculpturing by the Infinite. Masonry by an omnipotent trowel. Yellow! You never saw yellow unless you saw it there. Red! You never saw red unless you saw it there. Violet! You never saw violet unless you saw it there. Triumphant banners of color. In a cathedral of basalt, Sunrise and Sunset married by the setting of rainbow ring. Gothic arches, Corinthian capitals and Egyptian basilicas built before human architecture was born. Hugo fortifications
of granite constructed before war forged its first cannon. Gibraltcrs and Sobastopols that never can be taken. Alhambras, where kings of strength and queens of beauty reigned long beforo the ilrst earthly crown was erapearled. Thrones on which no one but the King of heaven and earth over sat. Fount of waters at. which tho lesser hills are baptized while-tho -giant cliffs stand as sponsors. For thousands of s'ears before that scene was unveiled to human sights tho elements were busy,--and the geysers -were hewing away with their hot chisel, and glamors -were pounding with their cold hammers and hurricanes wore cleaving with their lightning strokes and hailstones' giving the finishing touches, and afier all these forces of nature had done their best, in our century the curtain dropped and tho world had a new and divinely inspired revelation, tho Old Testament written on papyrus, the New Testament written on parchment, and now this last Testament written on tho roo s. Hanging over oue of the cliffs I looked off until I could not get my breath, then retreating to a Jess exposed place I looked down agaTn. Down thoro is a pillar of rock that in certain conditions of the atmosphere looks like a pillar of blood. Yonder aro fifty feet of emerald on a base of live hundred feet of opal. Wall of chalk. resting on pedestals of beryl. Turrets of light tumhlinff on floors of darkness. Tho brown
brightening iuto golden. Snow of crystal melting into fire of carbuncle. Flaming rod cooling into russet. Cold blue warming into saffron. Dull gray kindling into solferino. Morning twilight flushing midnight shadows. Auroras crouching among rocks. Yonder is an eaglos nesfc on a shaft of basalt Through an eyeglass wo see among it tho young eagles, but the stoutest arm of our group cannot hurl a stone near enough to disturb the feathered domesticity. Yonder are heights that would bo chilled with horror but for tho warm robe of forest foli-ao-o with which thov are enwrapped. Altars
of worship at which nations might kneel. Domes or chalcedony on temples of porphyry. See all this carnage of color up and down the cliffs ; it must havo been the battle field of the war of elements. Hero aro all the colors of tho wall of heaven, neither the sapphire nor the chrysolite nor the topaz nor tne iacinth. nor the amethyst nor the
jasper nor the twelve gates of twelve pearls wanting. If spirits bound from earth lo heaven could pass up byway of this canyon, tho dash of heavenly beauty would not be so over-powering. It would only be from glory to glory. Ascent through such earthly scenery in which the crystal is so bright and tho red so flaming would be fit preparation for the "soa of glass mingled with lire." Standing there in the Grand canyon of the Yellowstone park on the morning of Aug. u, for the most part we held our peace, but after a while it flashed upon me with such power I could not help but say to my comrades: uv hat a Hall this would bo for the last Judgment !" See that mighty cascade with tho rainbows at the foot of it. Those waters congealed and transfixed with the agitations of that day, what a place they would make for the shining feet of a Jnage of quick and dead. And those rainbows look now like the crowns to be. ca9t at his feet. At the bottom of this canyon is a floor on which the nations of tho earth might stand up and down these galleries of rock the nations of neaven might sit. And what reverberation of archangels' trumpet there would be through all these gorges and from all these caverns and over ail these heights. Vv-hy should - not the greatest of all the days the world shall ever see close amid the grandest scenery Omnipotence ever built? Oh, tho sweep of tho American continent! Sailing up Puget sound, its shores so bold that for fifteen hundred miles a ship's prow would touch the shore beforo its.. keel touched the bottom, 1 said: "This is tho Mediterranean of America." Visiting Portland and Tacoma and Seattle and Victoria aud Fort Townsend and .Vancouver and other cities of that northwest region 1 thought to myself : These aro the Bostons, New Yorks and Savannahs of the Pacific coast. But after all of their sum
mer's journeying and my other journeys westward in other summers, I found that 1 had seen only a part of tho American continent, for Alaska is as far west of San Francisco as the coast of Maine is cast of it, so that tho ceiitral city of the American continent is San Francisco. 1 have said these things about the magnitude of tho continent and given you a few specimens of some of its wonders and let
you know tho comprehensivoncss'of the text when it says that Christ is going to havo dominion from sea to sea; that is, from the Atlantio to the Pacific. Beside that, the salvation of this continent means the salvation or Asia, for wo aro only thirty-six miles from Asia at the northwest Only Be bring straits separate us from Asia, and these will be spanned by a great bridge bofore another century closes, and probably long be?f ore that. The thirtysix miles of water between these two continents are not all deep sea, but have three islands and there are also shoals which will allow piers for bridges, and for the most of the way the water is only about twenty fathoms deep. The Ameri co-Asiatic bridge Which will yet span those straits will make America, Asia, Europe and Africa one continent. So you see America evangelized, Asia will bo evangelized. Europe taking Asia from one side and America taking it froin the other side. Our groat-grandchildren will cross that bridge. America and Asia and Europe ail one, what subtraction from the pang' of seasickness! and the prophesies in Hevciation will bo fulfilled. There shall bo no moro sea. Bnt do I mean literally that this American continent is going to be all gospelized? I do. Christopher Columbus, when ho went ashore from the Santa Maria, and his second brother Alonzo, when he went ashore from tho Pinta, and his third brother Vincent, when ho went ashore from tho Nina, took possession of this country in tho name of the Father and tiie Sou and the Holy Ghost Satan has no more riht to this country than I have to your pocket book. To hear him talk on the roof of tho Temple, where he proposed to give Christ the kingdoms of this world and tho glory of them, you might suppose that Satan was a great capitalist or that he was loaded up with real estate, when the old miscreant never owned an inch of ground on this planet. For that reason iprotest against something I hoard
and saw this summer auu otuoi
needed that geological surveyor, or congresi sional committee or group of distinguished tourists go through Montana and Wyoming aud California and Co orado and give other names to thoso plaoes. All these regions belong to tho f .ord and to a Christian nation, aud away with such Piutonio nomenclature. But how is this continent to fee gospelized t Tlo pulpit and a Christian, printing press harnessed together will be tho mightiest team for the first plow. Not by the power of coi l, formallstle theolpgy, .hof by ecclesiastical tochnh-alitios. J am a'icjt Of them and the world is sick of them. But it will be done by the warm hearted, sympathetic presentation of tho fact that Christ ia ready to pardon all our sins and -heal all our wounds and save us both for this v ?r!d and tho next. Lot your religion of glaciers crack oil and fall into the Gulf Stream and get melted. Take all your creeds of all denominations and drop out of them ail human phraseology and put iri only scriptural phraseology and you will see how quick tho peonle will jump after them. On tho Columbia river a few days ago-we saw the salmon jump clear out ol the water in different places, I suppose forthe purpose of getting the insects. And if tvhed. We waut to lish for men wo could only have the right kind of bait the.v will -spring out above the flood of their sins ami sorrows to roach it. The Younjr Men's Christian associations of America will also do part of the work. All over the continent 1 saw this summer their new buildings rising. In Vancouver's I
asked: hat aro you going to put on that
The Spar tun Virtue of Fortitude jinst bs iioasesscd in no ordinary degree;by those w o bear the ti mgs of rheumatism withan individual: Sutwny Fnoty the J martyrdom begins, extinguish hd s aitofclou malady with. Hosteller's Sfo h Kitt rs, the efficacy b Jfhiqh - a preyeniive of the d aease. as well as the fnSrtfls af .relle vMveil established and amply flWefiteddWlnR thtf las thirty-five ycaie, ever -profM-iOflBI. frnm thfl blood ihWi OiiTia
principles which h get tho pain nnd inflamrofttlou characteristic of this compUmt. which, it ;
should bo recollected V always; inure to nominate life sudd en tv when H attefs a viral part. The Bitters also expels tho-yifiifl-oi nr-ja-na irom the svstem. remedies dyspepsia, Sidney complaint, contipntion ai'd blliousnera. .quiets the nerves, and invigorates the whole physical organisnii
Still He Adhered to Hie Principle A clean, ehrewd-looking gentleman atepped into a streetoar oil Pennsylvania avenue yesterday afternoon, says the Washington Post, and took a seat inside. The conductor, who was in a conversational mood, turned to a gentleman who stood upon the platform and said: "You saw that man who just got
The i 6ighal nickel inthe-slot machine" was the bo"biftil car;
"Xes." . . "Well, i saw hint do; the footed thing on day last winter than any man ever did.''1 . "What was it?" "He got on my car and gave flS$ a dime out on ijio platform. I handed hitn a nickel, and in trying to put it
sightly place Tho answer was: A Young A en's Christian association build ins." At Lincoln, Nob., 1 said: "What ar4 they making thoso oxcavations fori" Answer; "'For our Young Men's Christian association building." At Des Moines, la.. 1 saw a noble structure rk&ing and I asked for what purpose it was boinp: built, and they toid nip tor the Young Men's Christian association. These institutions aro potng to take tha younjr men of this nation for God. Those institutions seem in bettor lavor with God and man thau over beforo. Business mon and capitalists are awaking to the fact that they an do nothing better in :ho way of livmg beneficence or in last will and testament than to do what Mr. Marquand did for Brooklyn when he made our Young Men's Christian palace possible. These institutions will trot our young men all over tho land into a stampede for heaven. Thus we will all in some way help on tho work, you with your ten talents, 1
with hve. somebody else with three, it is . estimated that to irrigate tha arid and desert lan Is of America as they ought to be irrigated, it will cost about one hundred million dollars to gather tho waiters into reservoirs. As much contribution and effort as that would irrhruto with gospel influences all the wasto places of this continent. Let us by prayer and contribution and right living all help to till tho reservoirs. You will carry a bucket and you a cup, and even a thimbleful would help. And al ter a while God will send tho floods of mercy so Fathered, poLring down over all tflo lnd, and some of us on earth and some of us in heaven will sing with Isaiah: "In the
wilderness waters have broken out and streams in the desert," and with David: There is a river the streams whereof shall make clad the sight of Cod." Oh, fill up the reservoirs ! America for God !
Her Face Was Her Fortune; f-ttiA urns ns nriittv as a picture and 60
animated and lively that it did one good to inln ltts nfifeet ho drooped it and it
look at her. She was ail this, hut sho is . A not now. Poor soul, the roses linger no rolled off into the sluSit, no macte a more in her cheeky the g'. J"8? dive for it, and in jumping off tho car her eye is gone. Sho is a woe-begou looking piece Of humanity now. She has oiie fell down and doubod mmseli ail over, of those troubles do common to vvomcn and T efrtrt1 ff.rt -n- u.. uft RnA o ffd needs Dr. Pierces FavoYit Prescription. I stopped thd cary but no saia to go It recuperates the wasted strength,- pu;s on. that ho was eoing' to find his nicklo. fli.i iiflirtln oirotnnt flfrllf lVxct.AVfta the rOSfjS - li'- '
and md XaKslte wiJSa what So M ptiwed avound in the boh. wow
till he found it, noppoa auuaru uio next car. paid the nickio to that con
ductor, and reached home one car later and a good deal madder and mussier than he wbu!4 U he had staid on my car and let his nickel go. Any article that has outlived 24 years of compotitioti and imitation, and sells more and more each year, -must have merit? Dobbins' Electric Soap, 6rst made in 1S65, is jd9t that article. Ask your groeer for it He has it, or will get ife There is no experience mote heavily fraught with deep ghastly lonesomen ess than that of being shaved by a deaf-and-dumb-barber.
Makiiis? a Comfortahlo Meal. During: one of tho most crowded fair days recently a well-dressed, com-fortablo-looking couple, evidently husband and wife, went into one of the leading St. Louis restaurants. The woman carried a little -satchel, which she held ic her lap when sho was seated at the talkie. They consulted the menu card without a bit of the m certainty and embarrassment which are so often shown by people who are strange to restaurant ways. When tho waiter came the woman spoke up promptly: "Roost beef and a cup of tea." The man said: "'Apple pie aud a glass of milk." The restaurant was oho where the
portions are generous and the prices
in keeping. .When the meat came the womau divided her own portion in two equal parts and then hesitated. Her husband had no plate except a .small one on which his pie was served. The pie was quickly put on the pie-plate. Enough bread had been brought with the woman's order for two. Before she began to eat she opened her satchel and produced some celery, which was divided. Tho bread, the meat, and the ceierv disappeared, and then the
annlo me was divided, lho woman
sioncd her tea and her husband., quaff
ed about half the tumbler of milk and
she finished it. Then the satchel pro
duced some cranes, which were leis
urely eaten. .,,..
When the waiter was summoned to
make out the cheek he saw the celery heads and grape stems, and looked
nonplussed, but evidently decided that he wasn't called on to say any-
thinir. and so the cheek only claimed.
pay for the four articles ordered. w There was nothing in the appearance of tho pair that hinted at any need of economy. Everything about them was first-class, and the fact that they avoided a low-priced restaurant showed that they wanted nothing but the best. If their repast was a sample of thoir general management they are on the road to wealth.
aha ohch tvns, hricrht. well and happy.
"Favorite Prescriptiofc" is the only medicine for women, sold by driigghts,- under a positive Guarantee, from the manufactur
ers, mat it win give ScUlSlttULlUIl. Ilk CVUij caso, or money will ho refunded. This guarantee has hecn printed on tho bottle wrapped and faithfully carried out for many years Fcr all. derangeiuehls of the iivet stohiach and bowels, take Dr, Pierce's Pellets. One a dose. Inferior Arms of Oar Soldiers. The question of arms is a live one in
Europe, where fighting may be expected any time; but we, the very warlike and extremely un military sovereign people of the United States, Can afford to view it with indifference. We know that we have . millions of fighting men ready to spring to arms at thoir country's call. The arms they would spring to may not be of the best, but" the. men are splendid. Wo have Springfield rifles for a few. thousand of tho millions and have provided by the law of tho
iana, in rorce in tne year or gricc 1889, that each man of all the rest shall have a good musket or firelock, two spare flints, a sufficient bayonet, M and
other warlike rear, except in the case of . officers, . each of whom must have "a Bpontoon and a sword or hanger," as he may elect Our criterion of railitu
ry excellence is very different from that of Europe. There it is the capa
bility of men to get into position to
shoot, and to shoot straight and quick;
here it is the prettiness with which sol
diers, under police escort, can march
up the main street of a great town.
We consider, it the part of wisdom to
prep re lor more peace in time oi
peace, but should a foreign foe sudden
ly attack us, the pulse of the patriot
would thrill at the spectacle presented by our armies springing to their arms
and march insr down Bro 'd way under
the protection of the Broadway Squad
each man of the rank and tile brave
ly bearing" along his firelock, his two spare flints and his sufficient bayonet,
and every officer crallantly brandish
ing his hanger and flourishing his
sppatoon, while the cowering and cow
ardly enemy were pitching two thou
sand pounder shell among them from a safe position off Conev Island.
Lieutenant, W. W. Kimball, in Scrib-
ner's Magazine. W. H. GRIFFIN, J ckson. Michigan, writes: Suffered with Catarrh for fifteen - ears, holl'ii Catarrh Cure cured me." Sold by Druggists, 75o. The old bachelor who would alter his ways should begin at the altar. We recommend "Tansill's Punch"Cigar. "Not enjoy ment and not6orrow Is ourdeetined end or wty; But to act that caoh to marrow
Find us fart tier, t nan to-day .v. The sentiment so aptly expressed by the poet ought to sound lilrt) a trumpet to every slutrtrisn soul, and animate them to new and vigorous efforts to improve their condition. To all those who have the desire to press forward, but who are not sure of the way, we say. write to B. F. Johnson & Co., Richmond, Va,, and they will be of service to you. The chrysalis is like a hired man: they both make the butter fly. A Beaml-tnl Picture Free. For a 2-cent stamp (to pay postage and wrapping) we will mail n panel photogravure of our popular picture, "Kissing at Seven, Seventeen, and Seventy." Address the makers of the great anti-bile remedy. "Bile Bean," J. F. Smith & Co., St. Louis, Missouri. If afflicted with Sore Eyes, use Dr. Isaac Thorn p on8 Eye Water. Druggists sell it. v
Sick
Is a very dtotressihg affection, generally arista from Momach tttrattes, hflioasness and di tPfTfl. and we feqndntly find persuiiB of t Oth sex-
es suhjeot to periodic hwdachei for which bg can ascribe no direct cause. ; But the hed'che , is a sure indication that there. s JgJ, wronK f omewtiere, and whAiever the mMi Ho-d's SarBanarilia U -a bleTemefgr headache and for ah troubles which iflMJi rcouir. a corrfcrtve and a regulator. tIt dvspep ia, bdiomness, roalariH. tones 'heji??! -: fleb; ceites anoppeUte, aud givfei treDgh-ja thenerves., .
mi
Hood's
BrA hv nil ArntttrialM. tfi tiix for $5.
onlv bv C I. HOOD A COi, foweU Mass'.
I OO Doses One Dollar
9
CREAM BALM
Ol eHtt the Nasal Passages Allays Fain aiul Infl animation, Heals the Sores, BeAt ores the Senses . of Taste and Smell.
HMjf
Jacobs d!!
For Swellings, Bruises, Cats
Try The CureHj:EVER;
A particle is applied into each nostril and is agrteahiej PricoMcents at drttgll; by tnaU. regUtered, . 60 xts. ElrY BEOS,, m Warren 8t.. Newport. h v
BRONCHITIS i nilBPfl:J:
Alter , spondxoff ISm Wixi&M SoQtb,.
yap uarea oy oww B j&mutw: " U& Centre St. Xewtorkl 2 X J The Winter after tho ktM flra
In Chicago I contracted Bronchial
Affection, and since then' tiaVij
been Obliged to spend nearly ever f Winter South. Last November was advised to try Scott's e mulion of
VOa klYSr Wli wan nyHViwa"ve;-
and to my surprise was reiisvad-ar" ones, and by conti nufna Jts use three months was ntlreTj'oured .
was able to stand even the Bt?-;
zard and attend to business ev
day. - C T. ChuOHILLv - 8Ud by all Jnt(WUU. I
.--;S
''.-j
u Daily Sights I Cures rmd Cured I"
, . ... AT DRUGGIST3 AND DEALERS . . THE CHARLES A. VOSSLEB CQ.,Balilfflof , Utt ...I-.- - "
fa
1 All letters containing -2c. s
np'-' t4orfic
Wm .11 Uontion to
tlnhiM uccewfollr nted, ,;
.cnr.gnar.nued. LFor .uce .
PlndiftSspoiM. tna.
M m.
iaflgVPJtinfH
AtMr romi ii" i bi
2&zk rmcn - j i nr
4M
1 AT"
LUsr LABOR
LESSENS PAIN RER fa UFE jjta DIMINISHES DAHGER. p
to mu i liimtim
t.niLU
suminors
3 si falls plurigiog ffvn hum4x,4 'fMVtl'M Montana and Oregon and Wyoming and Pitt in ww'wii, iU welter in ropittfcit f&f. j G$axa4Ai&& Gst&i&mia,
Tho Alnminium. Age. 10 is possible that tho aluminium ago will follow tho iron age, just as the iron ago followed the bronze age, and the bronze age followed that of stone. In this respect it ia interesting to note that the diseo verer of the only cheap method of obtaining the metal has just died i5 nd the carefully kept secret has died with him. Once move the entire world is a sutferer through the avarice of a single individual. The secret has beeu sought by thousands of scientists unsuccessfully, and will continue to be. Some day, sooner or later, it will be again fouud and the use of the metal aluminium will follow the use of iron as rapidly as electricity is supplanting steam. The results that will follow tho substitution of aluminium for iron are enough to astound even the educated thinkers of the Nineteenth Century. It is obtained from common clay and is the greatest constituent of tho earth's surface. In other words, the whole earth is an immense aluminium mine. Tho mills that produce it will be located in the most convenient place, anywhere, everywhere, aud the ore without mining or freighting will be found at their doors. Its cost will eventually become absolutely trilling, It weighs but a third as much as iron and but about three times as much as wood it is, in fact, the lightest metal capable of resisting the action of air in the presence of moisture. It is the most sonorous of metals. It is as beautiful as silver and does not tarnish. Fused with copper it will form a compound as beautiful as gold and at the same time as strong as iron; it is as hard as zinc and less easily affected by acids than any metals except ffold and
platinum. Thus it will bo seen to possess nearly every desirable quality that a metal -can have. -Chicago Journal. President Harrison's Peculiar Experience. President Harrison had a peculiar
experience near Deer Park recently, He alighted from his carriage and entered a drug store w:.th a bottle in his 1 triad. "A pint of alcohol," he. said. "Havo you a doctor's prescription ?" asked tho proprietor. 4No, I want the stuff for an alcohol lamp," returned the President, who had uot been recognized. 'Sorry, sir," returned the druggist, 'but Garrett county wont local option, and if you want to buy spirits without a prescription you'll have to vote against prohibition." The President walked thoughtfully .to his carriage, while a bystander informed the druggist who it was he had Wtutedf
gUTl TO 5 DATSO IWOnutaWd not Ul FgW o.k Btrlcwr. vrdntrtha ftSUnai Che-abtl Oo.
Ohio. Ji
-as
x Mr a iri v
When roti dart to; rthk
Jona ot BinKh&ratoa, mtm
Uamton.N-X- doiun't bau
very bt FIVE-TON
FREE TRADE PRICES!
f nil IKBIHt i mi
We are now Bcluns jgor j
r II iHtlnf FD Sllttl ICPtl
a cut torn irilT, n MttanhTnanta and
t.i. a a vnara tor onlr
m4 for d re n Tar and MfnU
T Wew LU b uwv.
Vise emeiy Jbr Oatanb lJb Beit, Saalest to'TTw, and &ipL
Sold by drngtets or sent toy mall.
60c. E. T. Haxiuue, warren, ra
Br
the
D
ECTIV
ES
WAGOISCALES
Ream Box. Tare Baani. for PC ft
Free price liat every size, 0U II
Jones ho piyi tho freight"
Wanted in every connty. shrewd mentoeo under Instruction, in our secret service. Experience not neoessnrv. Send 2c. Btamp. Granja Dtom e Bnrt-ti Co. 44 Arcade. .Cto'aft,
I 'I M M
Kg 4
mi
m 1
.SSj M 1 . vU
ASTHMA. Popnam's Asthma Specific. Belief in ten -minute. Wa. Oukohobw, Oardner, 111., writes i "I hs.ve oot bad lo sit op an nour tor Tnrfe foaw. I nope th maa tbat a vented tne 6peoiw mar nave everlastinir lit a and God' blessisir wnUe.he Uvea." 8 ld by alt druiraists.
fl per box by maii.pof tpaia. Trial package free. Ailaress
Breech-Leader S8.75. RlflEsn.oo
mm
Ankla4Maarrt4
boy, mm aa Bar fx wm t cidtfT l80 3ljdaStrV
T. POPHAM. Pa iidex phi a . Pa.
I prescribe and tolly en dorse Big 13 as tne only specific for tne certain cure of this disease. O. H. ING RAH AM, M. D., ... Amsterdam, K. Y. VWe have aolii Big G for many years, and It nae
Sven tne nest oz sawaction. B.B.DYCirEACO.. Clhlcajro, 111.
$1.00. BoldbyDrogfUta.
ML UKILIS
Siad 3 Oata.fW mauling:
ilill partleulwa
cauaMTtazAMD.GAnaatAVSV
OPIUM
IIsU(, The onlyeeastlai and easy cure. fir. J. JU 6tepbena. Lebanon. Ohio.
C BRYANT &
foUl'd 1850.
Entirely Helpless to Health. The above statement made by Mrs. 8. H.
r-oru. wi.o or ruru, cuji ou vuuouoa vnilsin UCII Wanted to Learn 'reiegrapny. for by nearly tho entire population of Lor- J jJUllU mLil Situations (urniflhei. C rculars
unna, micq.. uer noun jor yea s. ane wasj i foe. Address YaIsntink iJHos., janesnue, wibp
iov two years a terrible surrerer irom rneuniatisra. being confined to her bed most of the time, her eet and limbs being so badly swollen she could sea cely move, bho was induced to try a bottle or Hibbard'a liheumaiio f-yrup. It helped her, and two additional bottles entirely oured her. To-day she is a W'sti woman. , ' l'lrst ask your druuririst: should he not
keep it, we will seud on receipt of prioe, $1 per bottle or six for f 5. llHEUiiATio Syrup Co. ' Jackoon, Mich. Hibbard's Rlienmatic and Liter Fills. These Tills are scientifically compounded, uniform in action. No gripinp puin so commonly following the uso of iUs.- -They are adapted t both adults und children with perfect siftv. ..We guanmtee they have no equal la the euro of tft'cfc Headacne. Const ipation. Dy."-pHpsi a. BiliouBneBs; and. as an appetizer, tney excel any other,fpreparii-
tlon . A BcRutifttl Portfolio of Painting in Water Colors. The" manufacturers of the wellknown Scott's Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil are issuing the most beautiful portfolio of eight artistio studies (birds and flowers) that has over come under our notice. This work is worth at least $2. but Messrs. Scott & Bowne, with thoir usual enterprise, have made arrangements whereby they can supply a copy by mail to anyone who will write to them, enclosing 25 cents in
stamps or postofflce order. This is a
chance seldom offered, and all lovers nr n it. alt mil rl SVV nil themselves of it.
Mention this paper, and address Scott & Bowne, 132 and 134 South Fifth avenue, New York.
Head Dr. Barber's card in another column. ,
BASE BALL'SSr ' 7i""JBr0 swa"lmssrt.sVWVfc ,: SENT FREE on application encnoaina: ona t AJJD, ftO.Box.li'O, Phnadelphia, - . .. .
HABIT enred to : Std WdW! fL
nmA rrr Rnr.ittirinm Treatment. -ira,
W tree. Aaoresa invv"w ciS'CSSv GBX ASSOCIATION, FOBT WAKE. XHD-: "-v ,
I
Ms
o
P1UM vs. MORPHINE
I An CQ' Knff- TQy Pilis. aftj, m LAUICO factaa). Try the rialjandosmttIna Woman's Salvation. C. W&tmtimgr2 itSs. Pkaby mail tLOC; Warrantedi JB. CAJOlty S357TS6STON. MASS. .T. ... A OT LJ fail A CAN BE CURED. InyonTafflioted. Dn. TAFI BBQ Bocbaster,
UflliC STUDY. Book-keeping, DusmewrorM H UNI t PenSaiiBhip, Arithmetic, Short-handtO
thoroufirnly taaant
BRYANT'S BUS
bv MAIL. Circular rae
to S a day. Sunplas worth W.15 T&B&i ines noQander thohom'sfriteBrBiaaj Bem-Rolder Compan7, HOLIii, JUO
INU
39-89
When wrtUnf to AdTrtlarra readers will eonbra iTorby mwtionmg this paper.
.Lean TMagrapn-T aero and we wffl .
help yon to gooa siiaaur.aa. ah
American ScHool oiT-uegranny. joaoi mu.jt .
IttNTiON THIS KE- WMMM ism IWUBMI
CTDATTAM 1
Jy -WHEN BLOCK, OPPOSITE lTwfriyfc - j
(Conaolldatonol the Bryant & Stratton and Indlanapoli Bnaineaij
Of Indii
And one of the best equipped and largest Business, Short-hand witS reliable book-keepers, atenegcaphera, penman and aerka.s Bleat cpgue? nee any address. ' -'v-ti--., -.,i--r-''".w-Vi.V vi; vi'V E. J. heeb, Manager, Indianapolis ml r
Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria.
DlGiPISOS CURE! A rV)TrVO FOR 9 BV AU PHUGSI8T3. BS : " "T?
of pe hesti ac Ofc-keeplag. SH OH r-HA N O . mailed m u
When Baby woa aide, we gare her Caatorla. When she was a Child, ahe cried for Caatorla, When she became Muw, ahe clung to Caatorla, When she had ChildMn, she gave them Castoria,
w-viie-h iM7. Decidedly one
any address , . v"m js
Ca M .sTi-M-aaiM
WM? iisaranued cfn r
Ret
jf return mall fax deacripUva circu.ara of
Tni StSTt
OF DRESS CUTTIHS
Any lady ox oroi nary Intelligence
can tasuy bqu quickly learn to vnt and mats way garment, in any style ta any meaaare lor lady or child. Addresf
MOODY A CO.,
Cincinnati. 0.
mm All DUAiflAM-r
A aW W3b iJrllormnnf)
fca N IP l laiwwuwi,
rotidnt
idlngcoat,!
tS,TSH brand slicker izzSl
: f thi h-udort itonn. The new "'"WirST. without taa
ii
iiwknt & Sttattoti Wcata Busing
H . P- " 1 nwvftTKH TRA.INlNa SCROOP. It, theSXAlAKia
Iinstitotion and wl"5;bbYaot
-ntoinon. Tprma, etcsem r 1a'".K 'x ovinKM McnUon tfeJH laperwnen you u me.
rwK RECOMMEND THIS nuaww
RRYANT & ST
RATION IUGpUEGE ! 1
