Bloomington Courier, Volume 16, Number 2, Bloomington, Monroe County, 26 October 1889 — Page 3
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MOVED BY FIRE.
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. Xalmago on the Burning Brooklyn r . iabernaole,
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The Boa traction of tae $reat Church Doc3 Rot Morn that Kit Work in Saving Soulg i Ended Ho will Go Sight Forward, The burning of Brooklyn tabernacle left the vast congregation' or Kcv. T. Do Witt Talmajre without ft house for the moment, fcut the Aonfomy of Music was thrown open for tbriu on Surayt and-the pastor spoke to tn audience o vast sIto, His subject was The Baptism of Fire," and he tootr as his text Acts sx, 24 "None of these tfcinss move m4" pesaid: But, Paul, have you not enough affliction to move .you? Are you not an exile irom. youruative land With the most genial and lovinar nature, have you not, in order to be free for missionary journeys, given .yourself to celibacy Have you not turned away from th magnificent worldly successes that would have crowned your illustrious genius . K ave you not endured the shap and stinging neuralgias, like a thorn in flesh? i-'ave you not been mobbed on the land, and shipwrecked on tho sea; the sanhedriin ajrainsi you, the Roman government ugainst you, all the world and all -licit against you! "Uhatof thatl" says Paut "None of these thhiss move me!" It was not because he we a nattl nature. Gentlest woman was vfever more easily dissolved into tears. He jbuld not even bear to see anybody cry, for in the midst of his sermon wuen he saw ? ame one weeping her sobs aload, " hat nean yo to weep and to break mine heart? Sor l am Teady not to be bound only, but also to die at Jerusalem for the name of the Lord Jesus." What then did Paul mean when he said, "None of these thing move me?" He meant,- "I will not be diverted from the work to which I have been called by any and ail the. adversities and calamities." : , .... ' : " ' " I think tlimorninjsr I express not my own feelings lint that- of every man, woman and little ciiiid belonging to Brooklyn Taber nacle or that was lohverted there, when I look toward tho blackened ruins of the dear and. -consecrated spot and with an arousad faith in a loving God, cry out; "None of tiiese things move me." . Vhen I say that, I do not mean that we have no fe line about it. Instead of standing here to day in this brilliant auditorium, it would be more consonant with .my feelzings to sit down among the ruins and weep at the words of David: "If I forget thee, O Jerusalem, let my right hand f orjjpet her cunning.". Why, let me say to the strangers here to-dy in explanation of the deep emotion of my fiock, we had there in that build ing sixteen years of religious revival. I beliova that a hundred thousar-d souls were tore there. They came from all parts ot the earth and we shall never see them again until the books are opened. Why, sirs! our children were there baptised, and at those altars our young men and maidens took the marriage vow, and out of those gates we carried our dead; . hen from the roof , of my house last Sunday morning at 3 O'clock I saw our church in flames, I said: Thafc is the last of the building from which wo buried our De Witt on thaty cold December day .' when it seemed all Brooklyn wept witli my household." And it was just as hard for you to give np your loved ones as for us to give up ours. V hy, like the beautiful vines that still cover some of the fallen walls, our affections are . clambering all . over the ruins, and I could kiss the ashes that mark the place where it once stood. Why, now that I think of it, I cannot think of it as an inanimate pi er but as a soul, a mighty soul, an indestructible souX I am sure that majestic organ had a soul, for we have often heard it speak and sing and shout and wail, and when the soul of that organ entered heaven I think Handel, and Haydn, and Mozart, and Mendelssohn, and Beethoven were at the gates to welcome it. So I do not use the words of my text in a
iiwu-weus way, dud m tne sense tnac wen
must not and will not be diverted from our work by the appalling disasters which Have befallen us. . Wo will not turn aside one inch from our determination to do all we can for the present and everlasting happiness 'of all the people whom wo may be ante to meet. "None of these things move ;: TOfc. None of these things move you." When 1 loosed out. through the dismal stun from the roof of my house and saw the church crumbling br.ck by brick ana timber by timber, I said to myself: Does this mean thai my Work in Brooklyn is ended? Does this terminate my association with this city, where X nave been more than twenty years glad in all its prosperities, and sad in all its misfortunes? And a still small voice came to me, a voice that is no longer still or small but most emphatic . and commanding, through pressure of hand, and newspaper column, and telegram and letter an& contributions saying: "cSo forward I'?" I have made and I now make appaal to sE Christendom to help us. u o want all Christendom to heip, and I will acknowledge the receipt of every contribution, great or small, with my own hand. We want to build larger and better. We Want it a national church, in which people of all creeds and all nations find a home The contr ibo lions already sent in make a small hearted church forever impossible. Would not! be a sorry spectacle for angels and men if, in a church buitt by Israelites and Catholics, as well as all the styles of people commonly called evangelical, I should instead of the banner of the Lord God Almighty, raise a fluttering rag of small sectarianism? If we had three buntired thousand dollars we would put them all in one great monument to the mercy of tied. People ask on all sides a bout what WO' shall build. I answer,- it all depends 'on the contributions sent infrom here- and from the ends of the earth. . I say now to all the Baptists, that we shall have in it a baptistry. I say to all Episcopalians, we shall have in oar services as heretofore at . our communion table portions, of the Liturgyl I say to the Gathoiics we shaU have a cross' over the pulpit and probably on tho tower. I say to the Methodists, we mean to sing there like the voices of mighty thunderiogs. I say to . all denominations, we mean to preach religion as wide as heaven and as good as . God. We have said we had a total loss. But there was one exception. , The only things we saved were the silver communion 'chalices, for they happened to be in another building, and I take that fact as typical that we are to be in communion with all Christendom : "I believe in the communion of saints!" . I think, if all the Brooklyn firemen and all insurance companies should search among those ruins on Schermerhorn street, they would not find a splinter large an the
tip end of the little finger marked with
bigotry. And as it is said that the exhum-
ed bricks of the walls of Babylon have on ' them the letter N, standing for Nebuchad
nezzar. -1, eta iare to you that if we ever get a new church the letter we should like to have on every stone and overy . timber would be the letter C, for that would stand both for Christ and for Catholicity. The last two words I uttered in the old church on Friday niht, some of you may remembea, were "Hallelujah! , Amen!" . . The two words that I utter now as most expressive of my feelings in this our first service after the Baptism of Fire, are Hal ielujah! Anion ! "None of these things move ma", We are kept in this mood by two or three considerations. The first is, that God rules. In what way the church took fire I do not know. It has been charged on the light nings. Well, the Lord controls the lightnines. He managed them several thous-
and years- before our ; electricians were born. The Bible indicates that, though they flash down the sky recklessly God builds for them a road to travuL " , In the Psalms it is said: "He made a way for the, lightning and the thunder. " Ever since the time of Benjamin Franklin the world has bean trying to tame the lightnings, and they seem to be quite well harnessed, but they occasinally . kick over the traces. But though we cannot master great natural forces. God can . and does, and that God is Our Father and best Friend, and this thought arives us confidence. We are also reinforced by the Increased consolation that comes from confraternity of sorrow. The people who, during the last sixteen years, sat on the other side of : the aisle, whose faces were familiar to you, but to whom yon had never spoken you greeted them this week with smiles and tears as you said: "Well, the old place is gone." You did not want to seem to cry, and so yort swept the sleeve near the corner of the eye. and pretended it was the sharp wind male your" eyes weak. Ah! there was nothing the matter with your eyes; It was your soul babbling over.. I tell you t hat it is impossible V for years around the same church fireside and not have aym-
nathtea in commoA. S6mehc4r ydu feel that yOu would like these paople on the other side of tho aisle, about whom you know but little, propero 1 and pardouod ahd blessed and saved-. You feel as if you are in the same boat, and you Want to glide up the same harbor and want to disembark at the same wharf. If you put gold and iron and lead, and zinc !n sunlcient heat, they will molt into a conglomerate mass; and I really feel that last Sabbath's lire has fused us all, grosser and finer natures, into one. It seems as if we all had our hands on a wire connected with an electric battery; and when this church sorrow started it thrilled through the whole circle, and we all felt the shock. Tho oldest man and the youngest child could join hands in this misfortune. Grandfather said. "I expected from those altars to be bnriod;" and one of the children last Sabbath criou, "Grandpa, that place was next to our house." Yea, we are supported and confident in this time by the cross of Christ .That is used to the fire. On the dark day when Jesus died, the .lightning struck it from above, and tho flames of hall dashed up against it from beneath. Thit tearful, painful tender, blessed cross still stands. On it we hung all our hopes; beneath it wo put down all our sins; in the li??ht of it we expect to make the rest of our pilgrimage.. - Within sight of such a sacrifice, who can feel he has it hard? . In the stent of such a symbol, who can be discouraged, ho wover groat the darKness that may come down upon him! Jesus lives! The loving, patient, sympathizing, mighty Jesus!. It shall not be told on earth, or in hell, or in heaven, that three Hebrew children had the Son of God beside them in; the flra, and that a whole church was forsaken by the Lord when they went through a furnace about two hundred feet wide. . O Lord Jesus! shall we taks out of thy band the flowers and tho fruits, and the brightness and the joy3, and then turn away because thou dost give us one cup of: bitterness to drink! Oh, no, Jesus! we will drink it dry. . But how it is changed! Blessed Jesus, what has thou put into the cup to swtjetan Hi. Wh, it has become, the wiue of heaven, and . our souls grow strong. " I como now, and place both of my feet deep down into' the blackened ashes of our consumed church, and I cry out with an exhilaration that I never felt since the day of my soul's emancipation, "Victory I victory I tnrough our Lord Jesus Christ". Yonr riT' ye trembling flalnta, Down j torn t e willows take Loui to tiw prahe o lovo aivlao Bl I every strl.ig nwake. We are alsore-eofor jed by tho catholicity that I have already referred -to. VVo are in the Academy to-aay, not bsoau30 we ha e no other piace to go. Last Sabbath morning at 9 o'clock we had but one church; now we have about thirty, all at our disposal. The.r pastors and their trustees say : "You maytake,our main audience rooms.you may take oar lecture rooms, yo j may take our church parlors, yoi may baptise in oar baptisteries, and si& . on our anxious seits." Oh! if tuera be any largar heartei ministers or larger hearted churches anywhere than in Brooklyn, till ma where they are, that I may go and seo thorn before I die. The millennium has come. People keep wondering wnen it is eominar. It has come. The lion, and the lamb lie down together, and the tiger eats 3traw iika an ox. I should like to have seen two of the old time bigots, wi th their swords, fighting through .that great fire on Schermerhorn street last Sabbath. I . am sure the swords would have malted, and they who weilded them would have learned war no more. I can never say a word against any other denomination of Chr.stians. I thank God I never have bean tempted to do it. I cannot bs a sectarian. I have been told I ought to be, and I have tried to he, but4I have not enough material in me to make such a structure. Every time I get the thing most done; there comes a fire, or something else, ana all is gone. The angels of God shake out on 'this air, "Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace, good will toward men." I do not know but I see on the horizon the first gleam of the morning which shall unite all denominations in one organization, distinguished only by. the locality as in apost lic times. It was then the Church of Thyatira, and the Church of Thessalonica, and the Church of Antiooh, and the Church of Laodicea. So I do not know but that in the future history, and not far off either, it may be simp'y a distinction of locality, and not of creed, as the Church of New York, the Church of Brooklyn, the Church of Boston, the Church of Charleston, the Church of Madras, tho Church of Constantinople, the Church of America. My dear . brethren, we cannot afford to be severely divided. Standing in front of the groat foes of our common Christianity, we want to put on the whole armor of God and march down in solid column, shoulder to shoulder! one commander! one triumph! The trumpet gives a man's! strnln O Israel! gird thee for he fleht; J- Ar'se, the comb it to maintain; .. A Is ai d im thy f 9 to fl'gnt. .... We al3o feel reinforced by the thought that we are on the way to a heaven that
can never ourn down. j? ires may sweep through other citiesbut I am glad to know that the New Jerusalem is fireproof. There will be no engines rushing through those streets; there will be no temples consumed in that city. Coming ... to the doors of that Church, we.,, will . find, them open, resonant with songs, and not cries of fire. Oh, my dear brother and sister! if this short lane of life comes up so soon to that blessed place, what is the use of our worrying! I have felt a good many times this last week like Father Taylor, the sailor preacher. He got in a long sentence while he was preaching one day, and lost himself, and could not find his way out of the sentence. He stopped and said: "Brethren, I have lost the nominative of this sentence, and things are generally mixed up, but I am bound for the kingdom anyhow." .... V: And during this last week, when I , saw the rushing to ind fro and the excitement, I said to myself, "I do wot know jusL where we shall start again, but I am bound for tho kingdom anyhow." I do not want to go just
yet. i want to be a pastor of this people until I am aoout eighty-nine years of age, but I have sometimes thought that there are such glories ahead that I may be persuaded to go a little earlier for instance, at eightytwo or eighty -three; but I really think that, if we could have, an appreciation, of what God has in reserve for us. we wo -Id want to go, stepping right out of the Academy of Music into the glories of the skies. ., Ah ! that is a good land, why, thoy tell me that in that land they never have a heart ache. They tell me that a man might walk five hundred years in that land and never see a te ir or hear a sigh. They tell me that our friends who have left us and gone there, their feet are radient as the sun, and that they take hold of the band of Jesus familiarly, and that they open that hand and seo in the palm of it a healed wound that must have been very cruel before it was healed. And they toll me there is no winter there, and that thoy
never get hungry or cold, and that the sewing girl never wades through the snow bank to her daily toil, and that tho clock never stiikes twelve for the night, bat only twelve for the day. .. See that light m the window. 1 wonder who set it there. uOh!" you say, umy father that went into glory must have set that light in the window." ... No; guess aga'n. "My mother who die! fifteen years ago in Jesus, I think , must have set that light there.' .No; guess again. You say, My darling little child, that last summer I put away for the resurrection, I think she must have set that light : there in the , window." No ; guess again. Jesus set it there; and he will keep it burning until tho day we put our finger on the latch of the door and. go in to be at home forever. Oh! when my sight gets black in death, put on my eyelids that sweet ointment. W hen in the last weariness I cannot take another step, fiust help me put my foot on that doorsill. When my ear catches no more the voices of wife and child, let me go right. In, to have my deafness cured by the stroke of the h rp-rs whose fingers fly over the strings with the anthems of the free. , Heaven never burns down! The fires of the last day, that are already kindled in the hear 'c of the earth, but are hidden because God keeps down the hatches those internal fires will after a while break throuerhthe crust, and the plains, and the mountains and the seas will be consumed, and the flames will fling their long arms into the skie3; but all the terrors of a burn ing world .will do no more harm to that .heavenly temple than the fires of the setting sun which kindle up the window glass of the house on yonder hill top. Oh, blessed land ! But I do not want to go there until I see the Brooklyn Tabernacle rebuilt. You say, "Will it be i" You might as well ask me if the sun will rise to mor row morning, or if the next spring wiil put
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garlands on its head. You and I may not do it you and I mny not live to see it; but the Church of God doos not stand on two legs nor on a thousand leg3. How did the Jsraolites got through tho Red sea? 1 suppose somebody may have come and said' "There is no need or trying; you will get your foot wet; you will spoil your clothos; you will drown yourselves. Whoever heard of getting through such a sea as that" How did thoy got through it? Did thoy go back! No. Did thoy go to tho right! No. Did thoy go to the left? No. They went forward in the strength of tho Lord Almighty; and that is tho way Wo mean to get through tho Red iea. By going forward. But says some one; uif we should build a larger church, would you be able with your voice to fill it?" Why, I have boon wearing myself out for tho last sixteen years in trying to keep my voice in. Givo me room whero 1 can preach tho piorios of Christ and the grandeurs of hoavon. Forward! Wo have to march on, breaking down nil bridges bohmd us, making retreat impossible. Throw away your kuapsack if it impedes your nvirch. Jveon your sword arm free. Strike for Christ and His kingdom while you may. No people over had a better mission than you are sent on. .Prove yourselves worthy. If I am not fit to be your leader, set me aside. The
brightest coal on earth that I can think
FARM AND HOUSEHOLD.
Saving Seed Potatoes. While much is justly said about tho necessity of care iu saving seed corn, comparatively little attention is given, at least in tho avoragfo agricultural journ al, about tho saving of tho best seod for the potatoe crop. Potatoes arO not indeed a universal staple, as corn is, and therefore advice on this subject must fail on minds not interested in the subject. As for potato growers, the most successful have learned the importance of this point. It is with many the main secret of success, and as the potatoe crop when it is largo and of good quality is one of. tho most profitable that any farmer can grow, it is safe to assume tnat anything which will show the way to success in it must bo interesting to farmers everywhere. It is too late to make careful selections in the spring, especially of stock wintered in cellars kept ail the time far above tho freezing temperature. If a farmer is going to put his seed potatoes in heaps, let it by all means
with earth not
be in pits out of doors.
of is a country parsonago amidst the moun- ony ovoivthora, but filtered through tains. But I am not afraid to lead you I them, so that thoy will be m no dauger
have some dollars; they are at your disposal. I havo good physical health; it is yours as long as it lasts. I have enthusiasm of soul;.! will not keep it back from your service I have some faith in God, and I shall direct it toward the rebuilding of our new spiritual house. Como on, then. I will lead you. Como on, ye aged men, not yet passed over Jordan! Give us one more lift before you go into the promised land. You men in middle life, harness all your business faculties to this enterprise. Yoang man, put the fire of your soul into this . work. Let women consecrate t.ieir persuasiveness and persistence to this cause, and they will be preparing benedictions for their dying hour and everlasting rewards; and if Satan raally did bum that Tabernacle down, as some say he did, ho will find it the poorest job he ever undertook. Good by, old Tabernacle. I put my finerers to my lip and throw a kiss to tho departed church. In the last day, may we be
of either withering" or sprouting. No
manure should be used, nor enough covering to keep them far above freezing temperature. If freezing extends down to the roots no harm will probably be done if they . aro in contact with soil. As soon as.the weather begins to be warm in March the pits should be opened, and the seed potaloes will then be found as firm and solid as when put in the fall belore, with no shriveling nor an eyo started to push into a shoot. This is a condition that can scarcely be secured by the greatest painstaking with potatoes kept iu cellars. . Nine times out of ten. the potatoes so stored will be .too warm, and they will almost necessarily be too much exposed to the air. After getting out of the pit the object should still be to keep seed potatoes from pushing1 their, shoots before
able to meet tho songs there sumr, and the i-?W are planted. Ihey shouldbe kept prayers there offered, and tho sermons there . m a cool, light room, spread thinly, so preached. Good-by, old place, whee some that each potato can be brought forof us first felt the Gospel peace, and ward cveuly and with all the sunlight others heard the last message ere they fled Ithat can begot. It will do no harm, away into the skies! Goo i-by, Brooklyn : but rather good, if the sun shines on Tabernacle of 1S73! But welcome our new them part of the day. The buds will
church. (T see it as plainly as though it were already built!) Your gates wider, your songs more triumphant, your ingatherings more glorious. Rise out of the ashes and greet our waiting vision ! Burst on our souls, oh day of our church's resurrection! By your altars m ly we be prepared for the hour when the fire shall try every inau s worK of what sort it is. Welcome, Brookij'n Tabernacle of U$yO!
He Rover Got Used to Battles. CoL James M. Thompson gave his opinion as follows: 4The quality of courage in battle I regard as being to a large extent a physical attribute. I have heard a good deal of talk about the nonchalence of men 4o action, and their ease and composure after the first gun was fired, but I never took much stock in it. I went through the war in the army, and it was my fortune to be in a portion of the service in Virginia where there was n good deal of hard fighting to do, and there wasn't any creditable way to get out of it, either. I saw service in twenty-eight .battles, and I can freely saw that I for one
never got used to it' I never went : out unnecessary expense
then turn a dark green,, and the roots J at their base will be ready to push out with the greatest vigor when the seed 1 touches the soil. . This development . of the eye in the sunlight is most ini'portant for the very early planting of early varieties. The germ may almost
push into leaf with advantage if due c re is taken not to break it off In planting. Unless the potatoes are to be planted
' very early, the chief object of tho grow
er is to retard them as much . as possible. They will be all the better if kept so cool that the eyes are only expanded to the size of peas or beans if of a dark color. If larger than this many will be broken off in planting, or else the soil will not be compacted around them as it should be. For a few extra early potatoes it pays to take the extra pains required to plant eyes developed almost into leaf as they should be. What is most wanted with these is extra earliness; but with tne main crop eariiness is of less importance. The chief object with this is to secure . the vigorous start which with good management will insure large yield and with
in to a fight without an all-prevaling
sense of danger, and always glad when it was over. Of course moral courage, high patriotism, and the military spirit kept the majority of meu right up to the mark, but there were notable in-
Something- depends on selecting for
seed smooth potatoes of good size, neither over-grown nor very small. If the seed is selected in the fall and kept by itself, the farmer has his entire crop to select from. As usually kept in bins
stances of men wiiose pnysieai natures in tne ceuar, irom wnicn tne taoie is simply failed to respond when called on. supplied, the housewife inv. riably seThey could not possibly go into a fight lects for cooking the best-formed speeiA clear head and a full conception of mens leaving the rough and small in the enormous consequences of coward- the heap. It is little wonder thatpotaice to themselves failed to spur them toes run out quickly when seed is seto the staving point, and on the first lected in this Imp-hazard way. Anywhiz of a bullet their signals of distress t thing else would deteriorate either in were visible to all in sight quality or yield under like treatment . 4 A well-known New York colonel, a It will pay the farmer to assort his perfect gentleman and scholar, a pa- j crop, or so much as may be necessary triot, and a really noble fellow, was so : for seed next spring and to select the weak in point of courage, and his hu- l- best specimens. The work can more miliation so great at really being afraid easily be done while the potatoes are
to face danger, that he was forced to retire from the army, went to Washington pined away, and died in a few weeks... I knew another prominent officer whose friends, out of consideration for his well-known failing, used to manage, on one pretext or another, to keep him out of engagements, and thus shield him from exposure. Men like that are to be pitied, not blamed. They want to fight, but their bodies actually refuse to do their will." Globe Democrat
Where Colors Come From, The cnochineal insects furnish a great many of the very fine colors. Among them are the gorgeous carmine, the crimson, scarlet carmine, and purple lakes. The cuttlefish gives the sepia It is the inky fluid which the fish discharges in ordel1 to render water opaque when attacked. Indian yellow comes from the camel. Ivory chips produce the ivory black and bone black. .... ... The exquisite Prussian blue is made by fusing horses' hoofs and other refuse animal matter with impure potassium carbonate. This color was discovered accidentally. . , Various lakes are derived from roots, barks, and gums. Blue black comes from the charcoal of the vine stalk. Lamp black is soot from certain resinous substnces. ; Turkey red is made from the madder plant which grows in Hindostun. ;. The yellow sap of a tree of 8iam produces gamboge; the natives catch the sap in cocoanut shells. Kaw sienna is the natural earth from the neighborhood of Sien oa, Italy. Raw umber is also an earth . found near Umbrla and burned. India ink is made from burned camphor. The Chinese are the only manufacturers of this ink, and they will not revoal the secret of its manufacture. . Mastic is made from the gum of the mastic tree.which grows in the Grecian Archipelago. . Bistre is the soot of wood ashes. Very little real ultramarine is found in the market It is obtained from the precious lapislazuii, and commands a fabulous price. Chinese, white is zinc, scaet is iodide of mercury, and native vermilion is from the quicksilver are called cinnabar.
The Smoking Compartment A crusade against the smoking compartment of sleeping cars has, it is asserted, been inaugurated by Mrs. Frances Willard, the eloquent temperance reformer. In an interview with Mr. George M. Pullman, this euergetic lady, argued that the smoking rooms should be abolished and speci;il cars provided for users of the weed, decl- rIng thit under the present rrangeraent the smoke is blown into the body of the cars, to the disgust of the female occupants. It is to be admitted that if the odor of stale tobacco smoke invaded a sleeping car it would not be agreeable to most people, but the smookiug rooms
of the modern sleepers are so thorough- Wia. uo &j uv
3S a Very Criti-i l1' wiom uun vy umm.
being harvested. It is far better to plant few -potatoes next year, with good seed, than to put in large areas, as many will be tempted to do by the high. prices, and then have the crop a partial failure, involving loss of land, seed and labor in planting and cultiv; ting. ..." No grain crop costs the farmer so much to grow and harvost as a good crop of potatoes. This fact makes it a risky one. The skillful grower makes largely, while one negligent or unskillful looses heavily. Getting good seed, and keeping it good by careful management, has quite as much to do with success in potato growing as has any other factor. It is on this point that so many growers fail. They go into the business blindly and on the impulse of the moment Potatoes are high, and to their excited imaginations it seems that they have only to plant a large acreage to reap enormous profits. They never do. The men who make money growing potatoes are those who never become unduly exoited. They plant about the same amount of potatoes every year, and plan for these several months in advance of the time for planting. Securing tho Largest Yield, Before estimating upon the prospective yield of a location some consideration must be given that which the crops will take from the soil and the amount of fertilizing material necessary for securing the results desired. There are sections in which two, and even three crops may be grown in one year upon the same soil, nor is it a difficult matter to grow two crops in nearly 11 portions of the United States, provided the soil is rendered capable of withstanding tho double taxation upon it. We often hear of the exhaustion of the soil. Such a term should besome obsolete. True, scientific agriculture does not admit of soil exhaustion. Progress is the order of the day, and he who undertakes farming without determining to havo each succeeding year witness his soil increase in fertility, no matter what kind of crops are grown, will have something to learn in regard to his calling. In the use of a piece of land we have the advantage of tho material upon which to operate. If we take from it wo must add to it It is only the agent for our use, aud can only be expected to produce by changing the complexion and chancier of the substances given it for the purposes de?i red. Hence, we may grow an early crop of some quickly maturing plants, to be followed by those that m iy be planted later in the season. And by good cultivation, and the systematic use of fertilizing food, there is no limit known as yet reg rding the productive tenacity or the soil. Practical Farmer. . Farm No ten. Lnpd plaster benefits, all kinds of irrass crops, but more especially clover. Bein- very cho.p it should be used plentiful ,y at all stages of growth. The ox-eyed daisy will overrun the clover field unless extirpated, and it
be necessary to 0 over the field
jy aiviaea ou tnat it taKes a very
cal nose in any other part of the car to know that the combustion of tob ceo is going on, t nd it is rare that tho raosl fastidious traveler has any complaint to make on that score. Railway Age.
If the Baltimore keeps on skimming the waves at her present energetic rate she will Boon turn out tho cream of the navy. Baltimore American,
'm .1 -l r..., V, v. t.. x.
i luuucr iruut uiu curi.y awutrt uuru is one of the best foods that can be used for milch cows. The fodder is improved if cut and stored u the barn, so as I to be kept clean and bright. If cut up 'with a cutter cattle will eat every portion of the st Ik. Mowing keeps down the weeds and destroys them, If a grass plot is mowad in tho summer, aud the dry grass
burnt over after front the wueds can be kept out. If weeds appear in the pasture eriy in tho spring before the grass makes head tv y, cut thcim down. At this season all stubble should be cleaned off. Keep up the cultivation with the cultivated crops until they are rhade. ,. In many Oases one additional ciiltivatidn giveii in good season will materia" ly increase tho yield, while it will aidiu destroying the late weeds and leave the soil in a better condition for the next crop. Corn in the glazing stage mako3 the
best fodder. If cut when the ear is hard the slock is then (to a certain extent) woody, and if cut very young,' before the ears are formed, the stalk abounds iu water and is lacking in' nutrition. When iihe ear is about filled and beginning to glaze the cutting of the corn tit that stage arrests , tho nutritive elements in the stalk, and i
the fodder is the .1 equal to hay, being fed to stock with the our3 on the stalk j
or cut up in a cutter. The depth of drains and their distance apart should , be regulated by
reference to tho thicSrness and ol'der oJ : P thft wnhRt.rnf,?!. nn $. t.hn.n hr tho nha.r : We
acteror texture of the supcrsoil. II the upper bed is retentive, and of such depth that the drains can not be cut
completely through it the best system to adopt will be shallow drains at close intervals; and. on tho contrary, a pre
vious material should have deeper;
drams at wider intervals. If a comparatively thin bed of clay rests upon a porous substratum, the drains should bo cut into tho latter or through it, according to its depth; and they must, in any case, not be too far apart
What tho Boston Girl Sang. Texas Sdtings. . Oh. baust thou bean untrow, Oh, haust thou bean untrow, Oh haust, Oh haust, ,.: Qh, haust thou be&hY Hast thou bean teean, bean,Bean, UntrowP It seems to us that it must be the belief of all who use theni that Dr; Price's Delicious Flavoring Extracts of Vanilla, Lemon, liose, Almond, etc. , are the strongest, most delicate and natural flavors m ade. It makes all tho difference in the world when our cakes, puddings, creams and pastry are flavored witn Dr. Price's fresh fruit flavors. . EricoiiragHnff New York Weekly. First youth (at a railroad depot) "Traveled far?" Second Youth "Not yet, but l ex-
ect to before I stop. I am going
"est to seek m y fortune .
1 irst Youth -I just got back Lend me a dime, will you?"
Where It Pinches, Kow York Weekly.
Lovely Daughter "Why do Jrdu so object to Mr. De Poor? It is not bettor to live in a cottage with one you
love than to dwell in a. palace with one
you hato?" . Practical father "Tes, my dear,
verv much better: but he hasn't the
.... .V . cottage" . Congenial Compaiiyi Texas Sif tings. ...... ; Hostess-Miss Porker, this is Sir
Frederick Bluff; who has just come
from his ranch in Montana.
Miss Porker (of Chicago) Good
evening. And what is the price of
beef on the hoof just now, Sir Freder
ick? . Hark, the sotind of mabv voice Jubilant in gladest song, And full many a heart rejoices As the chorus floats along, "Hail the Favorl e fr-sseription." How the happy vol es blend "Wonderful beyond cleg, ription Oman's best and truest ir end."
'Well mav it be called woman's best
friendi since it does for her what no other remedy has been able to do. It cures all
those delicate derangements and weak-
nftakna vtAAiiliftt irk fumnlns. fill T Aft tb am.
mum tour nours. racK m mrs. scat- miriMtiuid ntha nrAnarationa mav af
ford temrorary rehef, but Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription effects a permanent
ure. It is guaranteed to do tnis, or tne
money paid for it will be promptly refund
ed, it is ine great rememy oi wia uge.
Thd Hduaehold. Pickled . Tomatoes. To seven
pounds of tomatoes take three pounds j of su.-rar and .one quart of vinegar. Cut the tomatoes through the middle and
so.ik them over night in weak brine. In the morning drain them well and boil a few moments in weak vinegar. Drain, put a clove in each piece and pour the vinegar well mixed over the tomatoes cold, and add a piece of horse radish root Tomatoes prepared in this way will keep any length of time. Pickled Oxioxs. Peel small onions, which should be tho silver skins, and let them stand in strong brine for four days, changing it twice.. Heat more brine to a boil, throw in the onions and boil three minutes, then put them at once into cold water and let them re-
tcrinsr over the layers, mace, white
pepper corns and cloves. Fill up with scalding vinegar in which you have put a cupful of sugar for every gallon. Cork while ho t They wil 1 be ready for the table in three months. Preserved Peaches Without Srmrrs. Choose the fruit before it is too ripe, peel it, take out the stones, and if liked cut them in halves or quarters. Add equ l quantities of sugar and fruit, and half a glass of water to each pound of sugar. Briiig it to the boil and skim
well; then add the peaches to th is syrup, ; n ji r l. X...1 : . mere.
ziuu uuu guuiiiy Mrtuiuiiju.ii atJ.uuur. They should still be in good shape;
The worst Nasal Catjarrh, no matter of
how long standing, is pormanentiy cured
by Dr. Sage's Catarrh Kemedy;
Rose Elizabeth Cleveland writes
from Holland Patent, N. Y. ! be
lieve in some boarding schools and not in others. There are girls who are
benefited and girls who are harmed
There is nothing funhsss it be the eewinsr
take them out, put thorn :in pots, and machine) that has iightonea woman's la
wnen you nave Doneu aown tne syrup quite thick pour it over the peaches. Some persons, when they have peeled and out the fruit, plunje them into a basin of boiling water, and iet them
bor as much as DobbiuK' Kloctric Soap,
constantly sold since 1864. Ail grocers
have it. Have you mada its acquaintance 1
Try it.
soak in it for two or three hours. This will soften thorn so that they ned only be boiled in the syrup lor, a lew minutes afterward, and will keep their shape better. fc. Hummer Quips. tub lixk:. Tho dude from beta? human But narrowly escapes.; For though he doesn't ape nature He's one of nature's apes. Philadelphia Press. ESl'BCIALLT SflEAUS. Most of us kick when times are close And trade is in a lull, But the scissors-grinder makes the most When everything is -dull. World-Herald. No, never! Shall strangers in the northern land Defy the sijrn of star and strip3? Shall England pluck with ru thless hand Our sealskin sai:que3 before toey're ripe! -Washington Capital. CAW VP YOU! FOHTITDDE. We ran stind the heat of summer In the city's crowded streets. Can endure the bumptiors drummer And the story ho ivpeats. But one thought our fond hope dishes, Aud our peace fs gone, alack! For, wiih tales of string of fishes, Now the- liar's coming back. Boston Budget. HAIL TO THE RAJX. Day after day ihe rain came down, The skies wore of a leaden hue, And not a single one in toWn Asked, is this hot enougn for you? The days were wet, but they were cool, There wa no wran ?! iusr o'er base-ball, And people said this life is fuil Of compensations, after all. Boston Courier.
The Queen as a Speaker. An impressive incident of the recent royal wedding in England was the unexpected appearance of uhe queen for the first time in the capacity of a speaker. It had been originally arranged that only two toasts should be proposed those of "The Bride and Bridegroom" and The Queen" and thit these, according; to custom, should be given by the lord steward (the earl of Mount-Kdgoumbe), standing- on her ir.ajesty's right. Almost at the last moment it was decided to add a third toast this coining between the other tw j and being in honor of the king of the Greeks. But when the guests were wa ting for the first to b-3 giveu they were startled almost out of their decorus bearing by the altogether unexpected appearance of tho queen as its proposer. ,The Official Court Circular" has summarized the interesting incident, but only tells an inquisitive public that her majesty proposed tho toast with overy wish for the wedded
pair's happiness; but it would have !
been far more interesting if it had'
given the text of the words employed. The circumstance is tho more noteworthy us showing how thoroughly the queen sympathized with the union.
...... Women, give most f ree rein to their thoughts when they write anonomous-
l.Y. . Dlt L L. GORSUCH. Toledo. O.. fays.
have practiced luedl id ue for forty yea s. have
never ten a preparation j;nat l coua presence itheo much coniidenceof success as can with
HttU'g Catarrh Cure." Sold by DruggUts.JoC
Miss Toki Madira, the daughter o
one of the highest fjimilies pi Japan, has decided to take ihe veil in Munich.
A Family Gathering:.
Have vou a fatnerl !3ave you a mother!
Have you a son or daughter, sister or a
brother who nas not yet taKen iiemp'8
Balsam for the Threat and Lungs, the
truuranted remedy for theoureoi Coughs
Colds. Asthma. Croup and all Throat and
Lung troubles' If so, why, when a sample
bottle is Gladly given to you free by any
druggist, and the large size costs only 50c
and 1.U0
Hiss Eva Sars, who is to marry Dr
Nansen,the Nor wegian explorer, is one
of the finest lady skaters in the world.
, - Best, easiest to use and cheapest. Piso's
Remedy for Catarrh. By druggists. 50c
The backers of Jem Smith and Peter
Jackson have arranged a match in
London for 1,000. They are to figh ten roundB, Police Gazette rules. Have you tried "Tansill's Punch" Cigar
If afflicted with Bore Eyet, use Dr. Isaao Thomp
son a Bye water, uruttta seu it.
Read Dr. Barber's card in another col
umn.
Orefon, the Pamdlte of Farmers Mud, equable clima e. certain and abundant crops. B- et fruit, ev&iu, irrasa and stock country In tne world. FuUlnforaiation free. JLddre the Oregon immigration IBoaxd, Portland, Ure SUMMER BIBOS.
tHE RICE-EATERS.
Where a Man Can LiVfi for a Penny
a Day Economy of the Cnlrieeei
Philadelphia Telegraph. ,
Th Chinese are pre-eminently ecc-
homicai Whether it be in limiting the
number of wants, in jn-eventing waste
&r in adjusting forces in such a manner
as to make such a little represent a great deal. The universal diet con
eisis bf rice, beans, millet, garden vegetables and fish, with a little meat on high festivals. Wholesome" food
in abundance may be supplied at lees than a penny a day for each adult, ftud
evex in famine time thousands of per
sons are kept alive for months on about half penny a day each. This implies the existence of a higli degree of culinary skill in the Chinese. Their modes of preparing food afe thorough
and various. What is left is the
veriest trifle. The physical condition
of the Chinese dog and cat, who has to
live in the leavings of the family, shows ihis". They are clearly kept bn star
vation allowances.
The Chinese are not extremly fas
tidious in regard to food; all is fish that
comes to their net, and most things come there sooner or later, Certain disturbances of the human organization, due to eating diseased meat,
the cheapness of Which is certain, and run the risk of the consequences, which are not quite certain, than to buy dear
meat even with the assurance of no
evil results. Indeed, the meat of
animals which have died of ordinary
ailments is rather dearer than that of
Scrofula Humor
"i: ...
Urn
4..htM'o iti was saved as we be
... -r-.-o nv;ii BpffiT she waS,- , :
neve, oy oou diubw"' " . r
six months old scrofula sores began Mr PPeJ! and In a short tima- she had 7 SSJf One phyaMan advised l.Wmf of h.?r Angers, to which we -f W-JS.. beg&n givms her flood's Sasaparilla. . improvement was noticed after ene aadkett onfi onebottle, and y,Pftt her recovery was complete. And she . ty-ao w being seven yeais old, swng and 5 -: Aloa, Lincoln Co., Me. .
5
Hood's
Sold by all dm only by C L
r4
ists. Ms six fOT .SS. m.
Hxisir. ripples in the air, Music evbrywhere! . And the molten l'quld notes Falling from so many throats, Sail upon the summer breeze Like Ushts on sunrtnerseaal Trill and warble, soft and sweet, Flutter here aud there and beat Through bars of s unl ( t pace, With melody and grace! Tones of innocence that thrill, Tones that fall and rise at will, T1U soaring strains p ierce through the blue, And ceasing BCarce,, begin anew! Bummer birds! O, summr r birdsl Songs you're singing without words. Anthems grand, of praise and pi a er, . Pulsing th i ough the i erfumed airl
Children Cry for PitcherV Castoria.
When Baby was sick, wa gar her Castoria. ynien she waa a Child,-ishe cried for Castoria, When she became Miss, she dung to Castoria, When she had Children, she gare them Castoria.
A Four Legged Smuggler. , A story is told at Police Station 3 of a. small srrav kitten, which boloiijrs
there. Three prisoners ware brought, in j
one night and locked up. Two of them i
were women and one was a man. The collroom U a large apartment, the iron pens place! in the center, with openitigs facing the four walls. The" women were on one side and the men on the other. Soon after they had been loc'ted up the women . tried to relieve their feelings by preparing to smoke
cigarettes, but they had no matches. I The man, on the other hand, had matches, but no tobacco. While de-j bating what to do, the kitten c:une in j the woman's apartment and a warm ; friendship immediately sprang up be- : tween them. Then came the idea of turning their new found friend to some I practical use. The women took some tobacco and. tying it in a small bundle, : fasteneci it. to the kitten's neck, and tho mn on the other side called the little animal, which immediately ran to him with its burden, which was removed, and some of his matches were placed about its neck and a call from the women brought it back to t',iem. Buffalo Express. i But Little ChoUto. .., St Louis Man (to New Orleans man) Get any yellow Jover in your town yet? New Orleans Man No, but we have the Salvation Army.- Pittsburg Chron-iclo.
This Traoa Mark Is on The Best Waterpof Coat . In th world.
I Send for lurtrtcd Caf logce. Frti. A. J-Tower, BortooJ
I
feijf awStryW. pi Uriaalj bytke VillTisi Catmlesl Oa
OlalanU.BfflB
X preierlbe and fttHyts dorte Big Q as Ihe onljP peciflc for the certain cure c f this disease. v K B, l$tO R A H A M, M. D.t Amsterdam, N. Y. We have sold Big G for many years, and It baa
.given tne oast oi satis action.
Chicago, ill, lii.00. BoiabrDiuggUtf
0lvessp2Clal attontion to all delicate dlseuos of both sex. Regulating remouios furuiuhod. Caucot, Tiires guarau teed without the knife. Kuptiire. no cure nopay, and no pay until cured. Piles. Reotal Trouble, succesflfully treated, aud cure guaranteed. For the aucc-6S-
ful treat uient of any other-ills not
mentioned call on or auarees,- u.
Indlannnnli. ThH.
Hurt containing 2n stamp promptly answered
and modlchv& ppni to order.
ASTHMA. Pop nam's Asthma SpeciRe. Relief in ten uiNUTaa. Wm. GuaononN.Oarduer, UU writes ; "1 Lave uot baa to nit uu an hour for thrne yesM. I hope the msu thai
iiiYOttiea inoHfKOLrio zuj hate eTerUstltig Ufa ana
ttod's
while be
blOBStnff
Utos.h8 -Id by all dnigslfts.
1 perboxb.rmall.poetuaia. Trial iMtjcuae free. Address
'X. gQgiiAAI.i'fctii.attSlJSlISi JPf
M
iOO Doses Ona Dollar : i .- .- . ' - ' elf -: r,- ;;. : $
Cf?EAM BALM , IgafTered from caianh 12 years. The droppings into the throat were nauseating; My nOse bled
almost dally. Since first day's use of Ely's Cream Balm have
had no bieeaine, soreness IS en t, rely gone- ...... D. Ql Davidsosj. WHh Boston Budget
A particle is applied into each ndstrfl and is sffey ahle. PricefiOccnts at drugfcUts; by wh JXi?J?5 So cts. ELYBB.OS..K Warren 8t.,-NFiorlC.
CATAffwH m
:m
I a at uu x
V.niLU hP LA
LESSEN
those which have an epidemic such as
pleuro-pneumonia. Another example
of careful, calculating economy is tho
construction of the cooking-pots and
hoilers.tho bottoms of which areas thin
possible, that the contents may boil
all the sooner, for fuel is scarce, and
dear, and consists generally of nothing
but the stalks and roots of the crops
which make a rapid blaze and disappear. The business of gathering1 fuel is committed to children, for one who can do nothing else can at least pick up straws, and leaves and weeds. In autumn and winter a vast army of fuelgatherers Bpread over the land, Boys ascend trees and beat them with clubs to shake off ail the leaves. The very straw gets no time to show which way the wind blows before they are .annex ed by some collector. . . . . . Herculean Strang tH Continually on the strain, or overtaxed at ln .e vals, is far less desirable ihan ordinary vigor p rpe tutted oy rational diet and exercise, aud abst ntion from excess. Professional pugilists aud athleus rarely ttalo extreme old age, ab ordln ry vigor may hi re aiaed by a wise regard for sanitary living, d for the p'ofcjctioa iga ust disease whicn tlmey and judicious medication aff rds, so also it- mj be .ost th ouh prolonged sedentery labor, uninterrupted mental strain, and f olish eating and drinking, the chief and most immediate se que oe of all four helng dysp psla. For this condition thusj ; or in auy way induced, aud for its offspring, a failure of muscu'ar and tcrve power, Huatetter's St moch Bitters R the prlmest and most genil of remedies Not o ily indigestion, hut lobs of flesh, appetit" ant sleep are remeolccl by It, IncWent malaria and rbeumatl m are bmished. and kidney, bowel and liver complaint removed by it.
0
IS PAH
DIMINISHES
.BRAfinDREW
NS
TO LIFE 0
rv.
"35
$15 tn
Wal (HUE
n m
m aTLAJHAQI
5r ir -mk
by return maAl taM deptly
clrauiJW oi j
TA. ITI
er iiessca
AnyladvotordV
ife.
Seourlty.
Accepted Suitor -Won't you fiud it
awkward when you meet your other two husbands in heaven? Interesting Widow I do not expect to meet either of th em therey
an
quickly Mm W
ens -gptB
any ssivssS: any style to aO measure for law or child. Addresy
MOODY ft m
FREE TRADE ?I
S45.1iPMftlttU
we am bow mom
B1EI HIEtl l
-uma as cnt-fl
n taobmsats
tod for 5 reacateri
id for rfrcmar ana ta
763 West Lake HU UBW.
SES1 nuM
n.
JONES
PAYS
wrist-,.'" m. .
Iron Levara. Stosf Vaaflofla, XareBaam aBsjaaiM !
Evsrrslsa Veala. WflSSH
dm
WW
0
u.riirni A.$yroioal iMil
Treat and Cuwaii wwjkw.
sasss. Dswrmnwa TKZZ
Cases. Sexual oisaases w ?-t Women and CMdnl
Mabu3 or Excess vp" ,.ZmlimUal
W TRADE MARK
fiEm
CURES
sM
PERNANENTLY
C SOLI BY Dntgftists and Dealers
THE CHARLES A. . VOGELEH. CO., BaRImott. HkX
BIS
scorn EMULSION
CURES
OOHSUMPTION SCROFULA BBONGHinB COUGHS , OOLDS . -v Wasting Diseases
Wonderful Flesh Producer Fcotts Emulsion is not a secret remedy. Containing the : b iraulati u g Hypophoephites and Pure Norwegian Hod Liver Oil, the potency of both bein g largely increased. It is used by Physicians ail ove the world. PALATABLE AS MJLK. . Sold by mil Jhruagist.
fltotaWWM iwa INDIANAPOLIS (KcorxniM i
US1NESS UHIVERSIY
IBIS BWCK, OPPOSifg POST OFfiCl
SJCDiLiK, HIES 4 0a02, Frlselptlltai Pwl;tOT.
Ladies and gentlemen educated for: profitable employment, by a course of training at this institution. Book-keeping;, Bus'ness nracuce Shorthand, Typewriting:, Penmanship and English, Lama faculty. Individual instruction. Class ariUay Lectures. Eminent indorsement. Open a year. Enter now. Attractive city. Expenses moderate. Write to us. Illustrated Catalogue, Free.
iforafl
few
LIB .
U ANTED Travellns; salesmonr send yw VVaddres and reference to Keystone HfJ W (inc.) GiratdJ -:9Eto emmtfi jgjjLSgL will mail you, fcee, a fu llPftgSWSE: model of - an article :1'-3IS trade in every town and city, aud uWMr wdiot thev will pay you a Uberal coiMiiselofl? whoj outfit weighs 6 ounces. . - -i ;. GOLD HUsTERS' AQViNTURg
SZi ASJa;aaa.a i,u; . . "raaSsTiaw ifc v
of AdTemore among Bu.Urangers and
Largest and oest iJoo k aver worn ior pn 1 w . t
DOUBLE Irskt-Uticr f .76. RIFLES U.W PISTOLS 75
era
A Allatais easaiHf - giiJinkm. aw y CiJalffa. : A&nm m POWELL a CU9BT. .
180 Mala KrmL
CtaagMHh
WSKTKIV-Smart yong men sbW-JJJST.-troduceTlie Iilitlc Jem Btsngter 1fw5t ; the only 10 e-nt bprftlatr avimriat in jfca: One Dos. t er 60 cent Postal Note. They Sell at sight..
Bin inducements to Agents. Secni-a county pan?
at once. Address. 7h IU Bn
Cto., 124 Hamilton Place, Bochester,
HAaE. DULL MANUAL.
rin.sfi la. 70 Mm. II lunilnavt tTW.
15ENT FREE on appUcaUon enciasin
( cjswmp ry aaaresainf in.wn9wm I.aM), P. p. Box,X. Philadelphia.
CHAPWICaVS ; i; M
one
'4
PIUM vs. MOfiPHiHE :TO
Home or Sanitarium m atmcnt. Free. Address THECOMlPOTOlOXlTi
OKof ASSOCIATION, FORT VfAYNB,0.
Q'
iv sage
. - -v.
I k nit 0! Eng. Tansy Pius
LMUIUO factual. Try the o
BiaTV prompt, siV inl and only anttt
( aa Woman's Salvation. Oir. and sworn ttsmofcyjK
stps. Pkgby mail gl.M. Warranted. aOATva AGENTS WWTED SuTwi monSvSluat establish County AstncdSp
ir
Uf UC STU D Y-Book-keeping:, bustaesatewM
iiumu fern
thorooxhly ta
BRYANT'S B
mansnip. Arithmetic, Short-nand.eti
uu r m. iwywv www p ' ht by MAIL. Circulaw tree,.
wiajoss, jmmuo, xi . ay
S65
A MONTH AND BOARD PAID, or bishfst commission and 30 DAYS :,- CREDIT to HERTS on our IE 0gt ?
KICLKR&CO. Oumov B;da Chicago. UL i v.
cutcurwrO'S ENGLISH
PENNYROYAL PILLS
8afo o4 Mwaj- rellaala. Ladle, ask OrusRlil tar DUmmd Brand. IB
ribbon. Take no other. AllpllU
In pa,tebom box, pink wrapper, jta a -xm nu ntjarfolla. Head 4e
iuaniy. for uarttcoUrs, teUnoalsla Relief for Ladles,1 to Mttr, ay ratiwa
ACTUMA CAN BE CURED. MO il Iwl M A trial botue be.itlrree to anyone sffllcted. Da. TAT BRO., Koctioster. N V,
SlOfr
maU 230
lAf.
Agents wanted, Hedicated Elec
ires catar rt; coids e. mp. m a. . X. Brewster Uy, Wea. v . - m T3..i.
va 1 1 aio if py Wanted to Learn Telegraphy,
TUUilU ITI CH Situations furnished. Crculare ree. Address Valsstink Bcos. k JanesTlUe, Bbv
OPIUM
Hnnit. Tne only ewftalsa and easy core. Dr. J. IV Stenhens. Lbaaon. Ohio
an a vrai1Pn F. A. LKHMANB
If A I E.m ft Xr Washington, D. 0,
oenu tor . vuvuiawif :
3
IKD
INDPLS
Wnen writing; to AdrerUars renders wUl1" V'.v confer a. favor by, ntentlcintngr thh papar,
f Wo raaraotes a good panog -
I. poftitton to every;, graauajn, oi of Telegraphy, Madison, Wlg;. -
Decidedly one ol the best, most successful and thorough in the gtote.
iTHtanlished 1867.
riAn invtiAd. . A Collfire of Booi-keeDlnc. HoRTHAND
ki d drcd bTanches, Patronised by prominent busimaa mm. 5 Catalogue any address. V r.-1
E. A. HALL
Inveetijras
Type-Writing, Penmanship and
gue aud circulars mailed iret
PISO'S REMEDY FOH CATARRH. Best, to use. Cheapest. Relief is unmediate. U certain, For Cold in the Head it has: no equaL
Easiest
cure is
It is an Ointment, of which a small particle is applifed
to the nostrils. Price, 50c. Sold by druesista or sent by mail. Address, E. T, Uazijltikk, Warwn, Paw
oofc Keeping, Short Hand. Telegraphy, Ac tt 9 B SI B C MM Af i Writs fS Catalogue ud full siibrnwitton. LUUlOVi las aL C AsT S)
4.
Km'' V.sl
5i
BRYANT & STRATTOrfBusiNESS COLLEGE 1
1
