The Fairfield news and herald. (Winnsboro, S.C.) 1881-1900, October 23, 1889, Image 4
K
TEE FARM AND (xABDEN. ji
F ' A HEATED HAY HO?.". J 3
"VThen the mow is found to be heating j tome
recommend making deep holes near j1
together in the mow bv thrusting a sharp- | i
esed pole frorn the top downward and I
putting a few handful* of salt into each '
jjfty . cavity. The safest .method, however,
i> to remove the Lay to some scaffold, 1
ftvhich wiil brin^ it to the air, and the '
y-v sooner it is done the better. If there is j I
_ Bot barn room to put it on a scaffold !'
pitch it into the rack and stack it out of !
rioors a few days if the weather is dry. (!
J[f the .stack is well made and the top is j
covered with hay caps it will stand heavy i
SpSv, j-aia storms with but little injury. After j
w remaining in the stack a few days it can j
|l>e returned to the mow again when tbe j
hi a is shining, and will give no further !
trouble.?Stockman.
PROTECTION" FOE YOCNG PLANTS.
* I A very cheap and effective protector for j
young plants may be made of the collar j
for pipe ti'c-s. which can be bought at
nearly all factories, of drain tiles. The i
collars are in sections, about the same in !
length as ordinary pipe tile, with grooves |
partly separating the individual collars, j
"Wh^n broken anart the collars are each I
ttbout four inches long and two or three j
inches in diameter. One of these is set j
rj- around each plant and pressed slightly J
into the ground, so as to exclude cold j
"winds, cutworm-, bugs and other enc- j
Mies. The collars are practically inde- I
' r" . Ktiuctible, and with reasonable care a
I tupply v.-ill last for years. Where they
rannot be obtained a very good substitute
' is made by melting the bottoms from the
tin can in which vegetables and fruit are
K-.' sold, a-^ asirisr the can in the manner as
gg.;. above.?-American Agriculturist..
AUTC3ES* "WEEDS.
Many aa otherwise good cultivator, j
says A. U. Alloa, in the New York j
Br Tribune, is very careless as to destruction }
p of autumn \vu K ihlukiag his crops are j
I-. so wii grown that letting them alone ?
can do no particular harm. But if we i
consider tint the heads are rapidly j
ripening se-vils by the million, to be jj
I blown over the land iu everydisee^maT-"
[ to germinate the ioiloTnp^spthig, we
would undoubted111 flemore careful iu
to stand. One need
qoc necessarily take time to root the
weeds out during this busy season; he
K<?c rtnlv frt yp<, tr? t.ha much nuicker I
ami lighter task of clipping the seed- i
heads from their stalk?. This should he !
^ - . done before or just as they begin to bios- j
iom, fori: cat in tuil flower many seeds
wiil form and ripen from the nutriment
they derive from the cut stalks.
One man wiii easily pass over several j
teres a day with sickle or scythe, cutting j
:lose up to the blossom-heads on the J
?taik, all of which v.ill rot well during i
gf- winter and act as beneficial mulch to the I
>oil and as fertiliser to the crops the fol- i
lowing spring and summer. All annual j
gift:-; weeds may be thus treated, but the pe- i
cennial must be extirpated by pulling or j
*:"-i v , Rowing out thc-ir roots. In doing this j
^ire should be taken to secure even the i
mallest fibres, as these enlarge rapidly, j
5^-- : ?ome even. during winter, and make |
Nourishing pknts not easily extirpated j
l|pij.S s&e coaaicg spring. Sheep may be bene- i
Scialiv turned on various parts of the i
and, especially among corn, when the J
ears grow so high they cannot reach
' -'.hem, and wiii. be content by nibbling j
&e weeds so close to the ground as to I
TSigeuiauy aestjmesa.
| SOME POINTS ABOUT FERTILIZERS.
A complete fertilizer is one that con- ;
Sains ia proper proportions nitrogen, j
phosphoric acid and potash. "When in- i
;endcd for special crops manufacturers !
*ary the proportions somewhat to cor- '
espond in some decree with wliat anal- j
rsis has shown the different plants re- j
?" t-uire. Thus there is a great difference
n the amount or potash required by dif
U plants. As stated by tiie iveaExperiment
Station, an acre of
yielding twenty bushels requires
iv.-cnty-eight pounds ox potash,
an avarage crop of potatoes re100
pounds of potash per acre, and
; of tobacco yielding 3S00 pounds
'es aud stalks require over 200
s. Generally a worn out soil reall
three of these elements to be
icd in a fertilizer in order that it
'fl nf ic for- oo-f/ai* +r\
4*ajl I/O UVUUU JV X.J JLUi, IM1V4 IV
juy such than to presume upon any one
>f them being sufficient. Owing to the
vide differences in soiis no rule can be
riven by which io teii what fertilizer is
;he best for any particular crop, and this
jaestion muss be decided, by actual
In regard to the manner of applying
II"fertilizers, it is generally best to sow
broadcast or urili and work well into the
?oil before planting. When a small
quantity is applied to each hill cr row at
. >1 ant in 2* time it acts mainly as a stimu
*nt to produce an early and vigorous
_ growth, which is considered necessary
:cr the tobacco crop, but oftcner renders
X more sensitive to drought. Care
ihould fce taken to mix the fertilizer with
the soil so that it will not come in immediate
contact with the seed or tender
plants.?yar Yorh World.
EAIiTHIKG L'i' CKLEP.Y.
qt " Several kinds oi" vegetables are not eat-'
ible without undergoing the process of !
Dleachiag, whivct takes away an astring^fWitsle
that niants txnosed to the full
y1 ??u atfd air have. Some plants, like the
y? sabbagCfced lettuce, iu the formation of
the heads perform x'.:::; part without any
r ltd from the grower. Even the cauli- j
-.^vrer, by it.- leaves bending over the j
Sower pari, performs the same duty, j
which, howevti, the grower will often
iid bv bonding back and half-breaking
the leaf, which is for the same purpose.
The sea kale rnd -ardoons arc also useh
jess for the tabic without this process of
leachinsr; but as n'-ither are cultivated
It u- any ext'-nt !i this country, they are of i
yo moment ic? this inquiry.
This precox oi! bleaching renders the
more susceptible of injury?more
* vder than vhvn growing in its natural
>v:te; hence the bleaching is done just
V"fore tho plant is to be used for the table
or market. Jn tho hut summer months.
?vhengrowth is rapici. bleaching is very
quickly performed if the plant is deprived :
*>1 iight, wi:or;:::\ tvwarii fall, it takes j
Scuble the ti-iic. i;; thedepth of winter, j (
.vita soil little a ho; e freezing, the pro- ; ;
cess is slower, yet ir-kes sli the winter, j (
^ <o:aetinies. to thoroughly bleach. At i j
L \ :h:.s tiui- o: the yc.^r. couple of weeks i <
be sunici..-nt; in theJV.il the same rc- i (
?L:t will take uioatii. Once bleached, |(
It. fs. best marketed or used, if possible, | ^
as we cianger <> - rust is considerable, by i (
i]:nt thoroughly bleached. This is the [ ,
reason why rardvners do net earth up be- |
.fond sufficient to the stalks from i
p tv,v'1>J three ?reeks be- j
As celery i> n-v.v - rov. n mostly in a few ! f
?hces, and shipped all over the country, j i
U ; v ?v.-ry means is r?ed to cheapen the cost ' i
IT ?; production * -i?i the plow and horse j t
Wr- I'-s-ss, tf? n c .-a'ss!" rent, what used ! ]
el be done and hand.. Ten i i
L ;o twenty <\ r :t vlozeu now the com- ! 1
cv.;n price ry. v:here formerly it J c
? !* twent;- lo iorty cents.?Prairie Far- } 1
vxll ncs. r
feL Many find it profitable to let the sows i
H bf?vc two Ys'-v" 'igs. one in the spring, a
B
easoaablj early, so that by pushing along ;
:hey can be ready for market early in th#
fall, and those farrowed in the fall can be
3 *
sept growing during me wjumsi auu mi- (
:ened after clover gets high enough to \
furnish good feed, says a writer in the
Repvolic. After the weather gets cool
:n the fall, and after settled weather begins
in the spring, and when grass has
made a good start to grow are the best
urnes for fattening hogs, and so far as
possible the breeding should be timed so
:hat the sows will farrow in the right
rwicrtn Pi/r= in thp fill! should come i
;ar!v enough to give them time to make
i good start to irrow before coid, freezing
weather sets in. Your pigs are easily
stunted, and a little exposure to severe
L-old will often stop their growing. In
[>rder to l>e profitable hogs must make a
?00d growth from birth to maturity.
At the start one of the most important
items with fall pigs is to provide them
with a dry, warm, comfortable shelter.
To attempt to keep them warm by feeding
corn will increase the cost so as to
icave little if any margin of profit. With
stock oi' all kinds animal lieat can be
- - n_. Li
maintained much more economically uv
providing shelter than by feeding corn.
Some corn will be necessary, unless the
shelter provided is considerably above
the average. Corn is one of the very
best materials that can be used to good
advantage all winter. At the same time
it should not be depeijded upon entirely.
The pigs will make a better growth at
i less cost and keep in better, health if a
Gjood variety of food is furnished. Wheat
bran, ground oats, and barley will add
to the value of the ration and are much
better for the development of bone and
muscle than corn, and this is often quite
~ a +a rr> noK
ilH lieniv JLL iv ic^u ivv tiiuv^
ecra, keeping even the growing pigs so
fat they will not make as good a growth
as ,,they shouid. The development of
bone and muscle is fully as important as
fat. Clover hay should be relished by
the growing pigs as well by the breeding
stock. Artichokes and small, unmarketable
potatoes will add to the variety.
A sufficient quantity should be supplied
to keep them in a good, thrifty con^uion.
"\V> Tplir?hle rules as to axumtity^.
Rra oe given. The best plan is to be !
guided by the condition of the hogs.
After cool weather sets in corn can be
made the principal food, using the other
materials to make up a good variety.
Let them run out whenever the condition
of the Tveather will admit, but they
should have access to shelter all the time.
Growing pigs need plenty of opportunity
to exercise, and will thrive better if
confined in a close pen. Keep their
quarters clean, use plenty of bedding,
and change it every few days to prevent
it becoming foul. Filth breeds disease,
and it is very important with hogs, as
with other stock, to keep them in good
health.
1
FAILM AXD GABDEX X0TES.
'Which pays most per cent, for the
capital invested, a hen or a cow?
Add everything to the compost heap
that can be converted into a good manure.
The quality of hardiness should rank
uext to productiveness in determining the
value of apple trees.
The surest way of gettingrid of thistles
is to keep them cut down as close to the j
ground as possible.
Clover never ought to be allowed to
set too dry before hauling in; there is
always much waste.
If trees are to be set out in the fall,the
order should be given, the place plowed
and properly manured.
To build a good corn crib make it vermin
proof xmderneath, water tight on
top, and vith good ventilation at the
sides.
"Water the young celery plants with a
solution of a pound of saltpetre in twenty
gallons of water. Thin them out if too
thick, and use only the strong and stocky
plants..
A liberal feeding of pure wheat with
the morning ration tends to benefit egg
production. The sweepings about the
granary can be used in this way very
profitably.
Eggs are very nourishing, and contain
much brain food. They agree with tha
most delicate stomach. Being in a concentrated
form, a pound of eggs contain
more nutriment than a pound and threequarters
or beef.
The proper size of a sitting box for a
Cochin or other equally large bird, is
fourteen or fifteen inches square?others
in proportion. The hen must have ample
room and will then be much less likely to
break the eggs when stepping in.
The most intelligent and successful
farmer is the one who looks far aheadHe
so arranges his farm as to be economically
worked and then plans his
crops several years ahead. Such a man
is almost sure to make good crops and at
the lowest cost.
An excellent way to make a strange
cow feel "wonted" or contented as possible?and
there is money in this to the
dairyman?is s daily use of the card and
brush. Such use promotes her comfort,
and very quickly causes her to feel contented
with her new master and home.
3Iinorcas are certainly wonderful lasers;
in them Leghorns have a rival that
may keep thern guessing if they do not
watch. They arc also fine for table purposes,
dressing very well, and usually .fat
and inviting. They are beautiful fowls
in appearance, and altogether they please
all who have tried them.
Professor Robertson, a weli-knowa
dairy authority, says it pays to give from
i. a... J.T ~ - C T j. V ...
two to uiree pouaus oj. oran lo eacn cow i
daiiy, even where pasture is abundant.
Tlie best way of giving it is in the shape
of a drink. Place it in a bucket of
water and stir well. If given a half hour
before milking a marked increase of milk
will be observed.
Owing to adulteration of manufactured
lard by unscrupulous dealers, some city :
families novr purchase it in the leaf, just
as it is cut from the hoc:. As the usual .
price for leaf larcl is the same as that for :
tried out, the farmer selling it gets full
rates for what if he tried it out himself
would be left as scraps fit only for soap
ijreasc or to feed to the fowls.
I
Most farmers have their cistern in the
:ellar, where it takes too much room that
is needed for other uses, where its top '
jomes so near the surface that it often ,
freezes over, and where a break is at- i
:ended by the most disastrous conseouen- 1
:-es. Make the cistern below the iloor, \
iover it well, and one of its advantages !
, w V
,vill be in equalizing the temperture. A 1
cellar thus protected will neve:- freeze in *
winter and will be cool in summer.
? t
Clay Pipe flaking."
The clay pipe industry is remarkable ]
'rom more than one point of view. The t
Y1 OTl '1 fl.1T II TO ?J "J? t 1
Axu.civ*4?.ivmiv rxcucu auu its j
mportance is daily increasing, despite s
he formidable competition of wooden c
>ipcs and cigarettes. One pipe manu- *
actory occupies an area of about ont
randred thousand square feet and give s
employment to from live hundred to six i
mndred persons, exclusive of childrec ,
ess than twelve rears of age. Th( t
mmial product is 120,000 gross. The g
lumber of styles i< infinite and is daih
creating, as the dealers are continual h *
asking for new models. tl
;< - - -- V." * ; _ ' v
A
MBBflB?aMBaag>aa?ii iii r-fagwgsagHHatq^ngg
REV. DR. TALMAGE.' j
i'
I'HE BROOKLYN DITINL'S SUNDAY j
SER3ION.
I i
Text: "They traded in thy fairs.'"?Ezo- i
kielxxvii. 12.
Fairs may be for the sale of goods or for the j
exhibition of goods on a small scale cr a large ;
scale, for county or city, ior one nation or for j
au nations. .\iy tcit ui uo w uv ...
ancient Tyre, a city th?t is now extinct, j
Part of the city was" on an island, and part ;
bn the mainland. Alexander, the conquerer, j
was much embarrassed when he found so ;
much of the city was on an island, for j
he had no ships. Eut his military genius j
was not to be balked. Having inarched
his army to the beach, he ordered them to
tear up the city on the mainland and throw
it into tne vraKr ana uauu. a cause .vav mu .
hundred feet wide to the island. So they
took that part of the city which was on the ;
mainland and with it built a causeway ox' |
timber and brick and stone; on which his j
array marched to the capture of thai port of j
the city which was on the island, as though j
a hostile army should put Brooklyn into the !
East River, and over it march to the capture I
of New York. That Tyrian causeway j
of ruins which Alexander's army j
built, is still there, and by al- i
luvial deposits has permanently united j
the island to the mainland, so that it i
is no longer an island but a promontory, j
The sand, the greatest of all undertakers for
ViiiT-T-infr havinT covered ud for the i
most part Eaalbec and Palmyra and Thebes j
and Memphis and Carthage and Babylon and i
Luxor and Jericho, the sand, fo small anit !
yet so mighty, is now gradaaily giving rites !
of sepulture 16 what was left of Tyre. Bat.
oh, what a magnificent city it once wa^!
Mistress of the sea! Queen of international
commerce? All nations casting their crowns
at her feet! Where we have in our sailing
vessels benches of wood, she has benches of
ivory. Where we have for oar masts of
ships sails of coarse canvas, she had sails of
richest embroidery.
The chapter from which my test is taken
after enumerating th9 richest countries ia
-11 Tt-i-o. "f hoi' in
axi biiu nvxiu cajo va *j?v. av. ??v. .
thy fairs.*' Look ia upon a world's fair ait
Tyre. Ezekiel leads us through one dgpzrt? j
mentaud it is ahorse fair. Jutt4er~7ed and j
overdriven for ages, the Horses of to-dav j
give you no idea' of thS splendid animals j
which, rearing and plunging and Snorting i
and neighing, were brought down over the i
plank of the ships Slid led into the world's |
fair at Tyre until Ecekiel, who was a. mi;:- \
-fSigr of religion and not supposed to ;
kno-^^Q}^hJ^9erfrv^fi??^cried' out in J
admiration: "They of the hoSf5?of Togar- |
mah traded in thy fairs with horseSS-kJi^1'6
in another department of that world's i
at Tyre, led on by Ezekiel the prophet, weij
find everything all ablaze with precious \
stones. lake petrified snow arc the corals: j
LLKC LTagHlCUW> UJL U.I C tUCSuj'jJUii C5>, |
and here is ftgat-e a-blush with jjli. colors, i
What is that aroma we . inhale? 11 is from ]
chests of. eetiar which we open, and find
them filled with all styles of fabric. JUit the i
aromatics increase as'we pass down this lane I
of enchantment, and here are cassia and j
frankincense and bflm. Led on by
Ezekiel the prophet, we come to an
agricultural fair with a display
ot wheat from Micnith anp
Pannag, rich as that of our modern Dakota
or Michigan. And here is a minera!ogicalfair,
with specimens of iron and silver
and tin and lead and gold. But halt, for
here is purple, Tynan purple, all tints and
shades, deep almost unto the black and
bright almost unto the blue; waiting for
kings and queens to order it made into robes
lor coronation cay; purpie not ns? u:;tfc
which is now made from the Orchilla weed,
but the extinct purple, the lost purple, which
the ancients knew how to make out of the gasteropod
mollusks of the Mediterranean. Oh. ;
look at those casks of wine from Helbon! j
See those snow banks of wool from the bncii I
or sheep that once pastured in GC?id. Oh, j
ths bewildering riches and variety or' that j
world:s fair at Tyre:
But the world lias copied these Bible i
mentioned fairs in all succeeding a ^es, !
and it has had its Louis the Sixth fair at J
Dagobert, and Henry the First- fair on
St. Bartholomew's Bay; dnd Hungarian j
fairs at P<5stji, and* Easter fairs at
Leipsic, and the Scotch fairs at Perth
,'hris-ht was the d?.v when I was at one 1
of them), and afterward came the Lou- !
don world's fair, and the New York j
world's fair, and tha Vienna world's j
fair, and the Parisian world's fair, and !
it lias been decided that, in conimerno- j
ration of the discovery of America in j
14'J2, there shall be held in this coun- I
try in 1892 a world's fan* that shall eclipse 1
all preceding national expositions^ I say, j
God speed the movement! Surely the event
commemorated is worthy of all the architecture
and music and pyrotechnic? and eloquent
and stupendous "planning and monetary
expenditure and congressional appro
priations wtucn tne most sanguine unrisuau i
patriot has ever dreamed of. Was any voy- i
age that the world ever heard of crowned
with such an arrival as that of Columbus
and his men? After they had been encouraged I
for the last few days by flight of land birds and |
floating branches of red berries, and while j
Columbus was down in the cabiu studying j
the sea chart, Martin Pinzon; standing on
deck and looking to the southwest, cried: j
"Land! Land! Land!-'' And "Gloria in i
Ezcelsis'' was sung in raining tears on all tho
three ships of expedition. Most appropriate
and patriotic and Christian will
be a commemorative world's fair in
1893. Leaving to others the discussion as
to the site of such exposition?and I won
der not taat some live or six 01 our cuies u.i e :
struggling to have it, for it will give to any i
city to which it is as signed an impulse of
prosperity for a hundred years?I say, lcsv- j
ing to others the selection of the particular j
locality to be thus honored, I want to say i
some things from the point of Christian !
patriotism which ought to be said, and the j
earlier the better, that we get thousands of |
people talking in the right direction, and !
that will make healthful public opinion. I
beg you to consider prayerfully wiiat I fesl
called, upon of God as an American citizen
and as a preacher of righteousness to utter. ;
Jtty first suggestion vs ttiat it is no- wise, >
as certainly it 13 not Christian, to continue j
this wide and persistent attempt of Ameri- j
can cities to belittle and deprecate other !
cities. It has been going on for years, but
now the spirit seems to culminate in this discussion
as to where the World's Fair shall bs
held, a style of discussion which has a tendency
to injure the success of the fair as a great
moral and patriotic enterprise, after the locality
has been decided upon. There
is such a thing as healthful rivalry
between cities, but you will bear me out in
saying that there can be no good to corns
from tae uncanny trunks saw aoout esc!i j
ether by New York and Chicago, by Chicago '
and St.Louis.by St.Paul and Minneapolis, by
Tacoma and' Seattle, and all through the |
States by almost every two proximate cities.
All cities, like individuals, have their virtues
and their viccs. All our American cities
should be our exultation. What
churches! What public libraries! What
asylums of mercy! What ... .demies ;
of music! What mighty men in j
law and medicine and art and scholarship! j
What Schools and colleges and universities! !
What women radiant and gracious, and an i
improvement on all the generations of women
since Eve! What philanthropists who do j
not feel satisfied with their own charities 1
luitu outsy get into tne nun areas 01 inousanas
and the millions! What "God's acres'' for !
the dead, gardens of beauty and palaces of |
marble for those who sleep the last sleep: j
Now stop your slander of American cities, j
Do you say they are the centres of crime i
and political corruption ? Please admit
the fact that they are centers of intelligence
and generosity and the mightiest patrons
of architecture and sculpture and pointing
and music and reservoirs of religious influence
for all the continent. It will bs well
ror cite country districts to ceasa talking
against the cities, and it will bo well for the
city of one locality to stop talking against
the cities or other localities. New York trill
uut get ins worms rair oy depreciating j
Chicago, and Chicago will not g^t Ibe ;
W<orld's Fair by bombarding New York.
Another suggestion concerning the coming '
?xposition: let not the materialistic an:l |
monetary idea overpower the moral and reii- !
?ious. During that exposition, the first time j
in all their lives, there will be thousands of j ,
people from other lands who will see a coun:ry
without a state religion. Let us, by an ] ;
iicreased harmony among all denominations i
>f religion, impress other nationalities, as ;
;hey come here that year, with the superior
advantage of having all denominations ;
;qual in the sight of government. All the ;
uiers and chief men of Europe belong i
:o the state religion, whatever it may 1
)e. Although our last two Presidents nave ;
>een Presbyterians, the previous one was an j :
Spiscopatian; and the two previous Metho- i 1
lists; and going further back in that line of ; J
Residents, we "find Martin Van Burea, :i ; ,
)utch Reformed; and John Quincy Adams
i Unitarian; and a man's religion in this I
ountry is neither hindrance nor advantage ! ;
n the matter of political elevation. All ! '
2urope needs that. All the world needs that. j '
L man's religion is something betwe?n him- ^
elf and his God, and it must not directly or j ]
directly be interfered with.
Furthermore, during that exoosition. i
Christian civilization will confront bur- j 1
tarism. We shall as a nation have a. j ;
Teater opportunity to make an evange- j
izing impression upon foreign nation- !
lities, than would otherwise be afforded ! '
s in a quarter of a century. Let I J
he Cheches of the city where the J j
mm?sam iiubmmcb?a??g?
?sposition is held be open every day, j
and prayers be offered and sermons j
preached and dozologies suns- In. tee i
less than three years between this and j
that world's convocation, let us get a bap- I
Ccm nf the Bolv Ghost. so that the sis j
months oi that -world's fair shall be fifty j
Penteeosts in one, and instead of three thou- ]
sand converted, as in the former Pentecost, j
hundreds of thousands will be converted. I
You must remember that the Pentecost J
mentioned in the Bible occurred when there
was no printing-press, no books, no Christian
pamphlets, no religious newspapers,
ur.d yet the influence was tremendous.
How many nationalities
were touched? The account says:
"Parthians and 3Iede=- and Eiamitek.''
that is. people from the eastern countries; I
"Phrygia and Pamphylia," that is, ths west- I
era countries; "Cyreae 'and strangers < ? j
Rome. Crete-* aud Arabians," that is. the '
southern countries; but thsy were all moved j
by the mighty spectacle. Instead of the j
sistscn or eighteen tribes of people reported j
? nil ;" !(> fill,'!' nations of I
Europs and Asia. North and South America, j
will be represented at our world's fair in <
ISfri, and a Pentecost here and then would
mean the salvation of the round world.
But, you say. we may have at iba~ fair the
people of all lands and ail the machinery for
gospslizatiori, the religious printing presses
and the chui ches, but all tuat would not !
make a Pentecost; we must have God. Weil,
you can have Him. Has He not been gra- j
ciotisly waiting ? anil nothing stands in the
way but our own unbelief and indolence and
sin." May God break down the barriers! The
grandest opportunity for the evangelization
of all nations since Jesus
Christ died on the cross will
lie the world's exposition of
ISfri. God may take us out of the harvest
R-!.i Ko'Virn th*?t but let it be known through
out Christendom that that year, between j
MaV and November, will bo*the mountain i
of Christian advantage; the Alpino and j
Himalayan height of opportunity overtop- j
3>iag ail others for salvation, instead of tiis
slo.v process of having lo send the
Compel to other land by our own American
missionaries, who have difficult
toil in acquiring the foreign language and
T!i?ii must contend with foreign prejudices,
what a grand thing to have able and influential
foreigners converted during then* visit
in America and then have them return to
i heir native lands with tha glorious tiding' j
Oh, tor an o-erwhslruin- work of gracs for j
theycar 1S90, that work beginning in the
2utumn of 1SS9'
- nnnnrf.iinif.v If our Tiiiblic men !
sea it, and it is the duty of pulpit and print- j
ins press to help them to see it, -"ill be the
calling st that, time and place of a legal
peacc congress for all nations. The convention
of representatives from the Governments
of North and South America, now at
Washington, is only a, type of what we may
have on a vast and a world wide scale at
rha international exposition of 1S62.
By one stroke the gorgon of war might
ha. slain and buried so deep that neither
trumpet of human dispute or of ...ch-angel's
blowing could resurrect it. When the last
yMapoleon called such a congress of nations
ffciany did not respond, and those that did re"
' +V,n4
r?cau gratnereci nwiui;;iug . .i.-,* '? > .
\li iv d^r,rover of the French Republic and j
t|jj' Vu^U^of a French monarchy might j
spring" ok them%^ ^hatTif thw :"ostTJ3r,Pu: |
lar government o^5#$^rr^ mezui ,.ne ,.'n ?
States Government?skouJ*M^ac'a /;v
to all nations: On the AmerSffii^ ?1?1'
in 1892, we will hold a. woMtrS^^f^
and all nations will send to it speciniemMBi
their products, their manufactures and their*
arts, and we invite ail the Governments of
Europe, Asia and Airica to send representatives
to ft peace convention thrt shad h<5 held
nt the same time and plae<\ and that shall
establish an international arbitration commission
to whom shall be referred all controversies
between nation and nation, their decision
to be final, and so all nations would ba relieved
from the expense of standing armies
and naval equipment, war having been made
dji uverlastine imoossibilitv.
All the nations of the earth worth con?ideration
would come to it, might}* men of
England and Germany and France and Russia
and all the other great nationalities,
Bismarck who worships the Lord of Hosts,
and Gladstone who worships the God of
Peace, and Boulanger who worships himself.
The fact is that the nations are sick of drinking
out of chalices made out of human skulls
aiid Oiled with blood. The United States
Government is the only government in the
whole worid that could successfully call such a
Congress. Suppose Franco should call it,
crerrnany would not come; or Germany
should call it. France would not come; or
Russia should call it, Turkey would not come;
or England should call it, nations long jeal
oils of her overshadowing power in Europe
would not come. America, in favor vita all
nationalities, standing out independent and
alone, is the spot and 1S92 will bo the time.
May it please the President of the United ;
States, may it please the Secretary of State, j
may it please the Cabinet, may it please the i
Senate and House of Representatives, may it |
please the printing presses and the churches j
and the people who lift up and put down our j
American rulers!
To thorn I make this timely and so!- |
cam and Christian appeal. Do you j
not think people dio fast enough with- j
out this wholesale butchery of war? Do i
you not think that wo can trust to pneu- !
monias and consumptions and apoplexies J
and palsies and yellow isvrs and Asiatic j
choleras the work of killing them fast j
enough? Do you not think that the i
greedy, wide open jaws o? the ?rave ought
to be satisfied if filled by natural causes
with hundreds of thousands of corpses a
yearr uv yuu iivu vinmx Hguwuv o^nvyvuw.^
better with men than to dash their Jife
out against casements or b!dw them into
i'ragments by torpedoes or send them out
into the world, where they nead ait their
faculties, footless, armless, eyeless? Do you
not think that women might be appointed to
an easier place than the edge of a grave
trench to wring their pale hands and weep
out their eyesight in widowhood and child?
lessgess? Why, the last glory has gone out
of war.
There was a time when it demanded that ,
quality which we ail admire?namely, couiv j
age?for a man had to stand at the hilt of '
bis sword when the point pierced the foe ana
while he was slaying another the other
might slay 1dm; or it was bayonet charge.
But now it is cool and deliberate murder,
and clear out at sea a bombshell can be
hurled miles away into a city;, -or while .thou-1
sands of private .soldiers, who have #0 inter. j
est in the contest, for they were con" j
scripted, are losing their jives, their
General may sit smoking one of the
best Havana cigars aftsr a dinner of quail
on toast. It may be well enough for graduating
students of colleges cn commencement
day to orate about the poetry of war, but do
not talk abont the poetry of "war to the men
of the Federal or Confederate armies who
were at the front, or to some of us who. as !
members of the Christian commission, saw j
the ghastly hospitals at Antietam and Hagers- j
town. Ah! you may worship the Lord of i
Hosts, I worship the "God of Pea?:?, who-i
brought again from the dead our Lord .T^sas j
Ul'TlSt, mat great Olittpilt'i <1 i~::c ai.t. jy.
War is an accursed monster and it was !
born in the lowest cavern of perdition, end J
I pray that it may speedily descend to the
place from which it arose, its last sword and
shield and musket rattling on the bottom of |
the red hot marl of hell. Let there be called j
a peace convention for 1S02. with delegates
sent by all the decent Governments of
Christendom, and while they are in session,
if you should some sight go out and look
into the sky abovo the exposition buildings,
you may find that the old gallery of
crystal, that war; taken down after tlie Beth- |
j ehem anthem of eighteen e?n 'curies ago was
sung out, is rebuilt again in the clouds, and |
the same angelic singers are returned v. ith j
the same librettos of light to chant "Glory to i
Ucxl m tiie nigiiei.c. ana on earm i.t-uwr, ^w., ,
v.-Ul to men." _ |
Again, I suggest in regard to the World's !
Fair that, while appropriate places are pre- '
pared for all fore'gn "exhibits, we make no j
room for the importation of foreign vices.
America lias enough of its own, and w?- need j
jso installments of that kind. A world's fair i
ivili bring all kinds of people, good and bad. :
The good we must prepare to welcome, the ;
bad we must prepare to sbuu. The attempt
will again be made in 1 SftJ, as in 1S76,
to break up cur American Sabbaths.
That attempt was made az the Philadelphia
Centennial, bat. was defeated.
\ V\?s? Vmt i
Sabbath on earth. We do not want it
broken down, and substituted in the place
thereof the Brussels Sabbath, the Vienna
Sa!>L>ath. the St. Petersburg Sabbath or an}' .
of the foreign Sabbaths, which are no Sab"
baths at all. I think the Lord ij more than
generous in asking only fifty-two days out of
the olio for His service. Ycu let the Sabbath
50 and with it will go your Bible, and after j
that your liberties, and your children or your
grandchildren will be here in America under i
x despotism as bad as in those lands where j
they turn the Lord's day into wassail and i
[roiie.
Among those who come there will be, as at
>ther expositions, lordly people who will
- ?H,v-> -\riiin<r tht? !
Dukes and Duchesses and I'rinc-s and j
Princesses of other lands are som<? of t he ;
>est men and women of all the earth. lie- i
nember Earl of Kin tore. Lord Cairns and I
Lord Shaflsbnry. But there is a snobbery ;
tnd iiunkeyisrn in American sceiaty that |
uns after a grandee, a Duke, a Lord or a
Prince, though he may b? a walking Ian- j
etto and his breath a plague. It mak?s
he fortune of soma of our qneeas of
iociety to dance one cotillion with one of :
hes'* princely lt-pers. Some people cannot j
re t their hat ofT quick enough u h .-n they ;
.uch a foreign Lord approaching, and th.y do
sot care for th? mire into which they drop |
heir kn*.*es as they bow to worship. Let no j
plendvr of pedigree or apr ponip and para- ;
j.ieraai:a 01 circumstance in axe mm auui- >
ive. There is only one set of Ten. Com- [
mandments that I ever heard of. and no class
of men or women in all the world are excused
from obedience to those laws written by finger
of lightning on the granite- surface of
Mount Sinai. Surely we nave enouga
American vices without; making any drafts
upon European vice for 1S92.
By this sermon I would have the nation
made aware of its opportunity and get ready
to improve it. and of some perils and gee
ready to combat them. I rejoice to beiiev-e
that'the advantages will overtop everything J
in that world's fair. What an introduction
to each other of communities, of states, of
republics, of" empires, of zones, of hemispheres!
What doors of information v/iil be
swung wide open lor the boys and girls now
on the threshbold! What national and i:i- l
-1 ?;-;on' What crowning !
nf industry with sheaves or' grain, and
what imperial robing of h^r with embroidered
fabrics! What scientilie apparatus!
What telescopes for the infinitude
above and microscope? for the infinitude beneath,
and instruments to put nature io the
torture until she tells her last secret! V.'hat
a display of the munificence of the God who
has grown enough wheat to make a loaf of
good bread large enough for the human race,
and enough cotton to stocking evtry i'oot,
and enough timber to shelter every head,
making it manifest that it is not God's fault,
but either man's oppression or indolence or
dissipation if there be any without supply.
Under the arches oi the chief building of
ovnnsition let caoital and labor, too long
estranged, at last be married, each taking i
tlie hand of each in pledge of eternal fidelity,
while representations of all nations bland i
round rejoicing at the nuptials, and saying:
' What God hath joined together let not man
put asunder." Thea shall the threnody of i
the needle-woman no longer be heard:
Work. work, work!
Till the brain begins to swim;
"Work, work, work!
Till the eyes ar ? heavy and dim.
Seam and gusset and band,
Baad and gusset and s=aci.
Till over the buttons I fell asiesp,
And sow them on in a dream. __ j
O, Christian America! Make ready for the ,
grandest exposition ever seen under the sun! j
Have Bibles enougi bound. Have churches j
enough established. Have scientific halls I
enough endowed. Have printing presses I
enough set up. Have revivals of religion j
enough in full blast. I believe you v/ill. I
l TV Ti!f>s>;edisht) !
ri'j.s<tuaa tu tuo vx. a/wt?v?. ?__
that coraeth iu the name of the Lord!"'
Through the harsh voices of our day
A low, sweet prelude flnds its way;
Through clouds of doubt aad creeds o* 'car
' A light is breaking calm and clear.
That song of love, now low aud far,
Ere long shall swell from star to star:
That light, the breaking day which tips
Ti*e geMea spired Apocalypse!
SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL.
A plan to connect the Siberian rivers
by canals is projected by the llussian
fl mmi I
A scientist reckons up at least 172
races of men, all, however, reducible to
the three fundamental black, yellow and
white stems;
A reliable storage battery is fur,t becoming
a necessity for use on board ship, to
drive motors to be used instead of the
smaller steam engines.
- An ingenious apparatus lias been devised
for the purpose of vaporizing solid
^ ^Mrucnts, and it has already rendered
?TC.*(. ^^jsjj^ccmuection with throat
Great strength and aurabiJjoWli^
claimed to characterize'the furniture made?
in Austria, of the beat wood, the preps- i
ration of which, for this purpose, is al- j
most a line art.
A new company lias been started in '
Paris Laving for its objects the working
in France and abroad of a system of telephonic
additions by means of an automatic
apparatus.
A Paris stationer has just announced a
discovery, which will probably ir.nkc his i
fortune. It is that of an ink warranted j
to fade off the paper in a week, without |
leaving the slightest trace.
From Australia comes a report that
r. mineral which has been discovered in
New South "Wales contains all the prop
erties of the very finest sienna and tii.it it j
is in every way suitable for painting-,
staining, dyeing and ink.
Professor Elihu Thompson has devised j
an electric welding ear, which makes ,
continuous rails of the track over which j
it passes. In thus welding the rails, it i
is proposed to have a break at every 100
feet, to allow for expansion.
Different classes of substances have
been found to affect the organs of taste j
in the following order: Bitters, acids, j
saline substances, sweets and alkalies, j
The taste nerves are nearly 2000 limes :
as "sensitive to quinine as to sugar.
It is announced that IvI. Court on, a j
chemist, produced recently at the sitting
of the French Academy of Sciences a
sealed envelope containing a description
of an apparatus by means of which objects
may be seen at vast distances, the !
vibrations of light being transmitted \
through a wire.
Of the 4200 kinds of flowers growing i
in Europe, only 420 are odoriferous. {
Less than one-fifth of the white kinds? ;
which number 1194?arc fragrant, 77 of j
the 951 vcllow kinds, S4 of the S23 red J
kinds, 31 of the 594 blue kinds, 3 0 of 1
the 30S violet blue kinds, and 2S of the j
210 kinds with, combined colors.
WISE WORDS..
Flatter a fool and you have already
won his friendship.
Busy people arc less liable to notice I
the wickedness of their neighbors.
When poverty comes in at the cottage j
door, true love c'oes at it with an ax.
J he most refined persons never betray i
anxiety for fear it will cot be noticcd.
A person's success in life depends upon
whether he will learn something himself
or depend wholly upon what is taught to
him.
If you want to have a man for your
friend, never get the ill-will of his wife.
Public opinion is made up of the average i
prejudices of womankind.
"When you compare the number of
thoughts that comes into a man's head j
with the number that goes out of his !
mouth, man is discretion itself.
The condition of the world would 1
be improved if men were to think J
less of dishonor of submitting to wrong !
and more of the dishonor of doing it.
There is time enough for anything in j
the course of the day, if you do but one
thing at once: but there is not time
enough in the year, if you will do two j
things at a time.
People are all striving to get up in the i
wavM but. if oravitation was suddenly :
removed from the earth, people would
then be praying for some adhesive arrangement
to stick them on again.
Things which never make a man
happy develop a power to make him i
strong. Strength and not happiness, or :
rather only that happiness which comes j
by strength, is the end of human living, i
Some people are dependent upon their '<
training because they are ignorant of
themselves, and the more familiar they
become vrith trained manners, the less ;
liable they will be to become acquainted
with their natural ability.
Discrcet Deafness.
It has been remarked that if all the pret- :
tv things sjiid of one by heedless or : i I -: iturcd
idlers were to be brought home io
him. he "would bccomc a mere walking
1 ?
pin cushion stuck full of sharp remarks, i
The art o? not hearing should be learned !
by all. It is quite as important to do- ;
mestic happiness as a cultivated car. for I
which so much money and time are ex- ;
pended. There are so many things which j
it is painful to hear, many frhich we ought
not to hear, very many which, if heard, j
would disturb the temper, corrupt simpli- !
city and modesty, and detract from contentment
and happiness.?American Farvntv.
*?
1
\
\ . " - ' :
\ ? ~ - V~- "* -/
TTindoo WomPIL.
On the slopes of the Himalayas, says j
a correspondent of the Denver 'Republican j
in a letrer from India, there are many j
curious tribes. Some of the tribes near j
Parjeeling reckon a journey by the num- i
ber of quids of tobacco they chew upon '
the way, and some of the most gorgeous ;
specimens of Hindoo jewelry I have seen i
1 saw on the women of the Himalayas. I 1
remember one mountain pink who had
a r * _ a 1
fifty rupees strung arouna ner necK ana .
whose Hmbs were loaded down with silver
dollars upon her ears, and her mouth
was covered by a flat, gold nose ring.
Some of these Himalaya tribes have one
wife to four men, and polyandry is common.
Ia Bombay are the prettiest
women of India. They are the parsees.
"With delicate, olive-brown skins, they
are tall and well-shaped, have beautiful
eyes aud fine intellectuaLfaces.
They dress in silks of the most delicate
colors, aud the dress seems to consist of
one large piece of silk which is wound
around the waist and then carried up
over the body and the top of the head, so
that the face looks out and the whole
hantrs in a beautiful drapery. Many of
them, I note, have silk stockings, and I!
slippers to match the color of their dresses,
and they are the brightest and prettiest
v;omen I hare ever seen.
Japanese horticulturists give a great '
deal of labor to the production of dwarf |
trees. Pines, thujas and cedars exhibited j
at Paris are only eighteen inches high, !
atr*i are said to be 100 to 150 years ol<l. '
f " ' ?"
H
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1. " Articles of great vain
Rt. Hon. W. E. Gladstone,
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P C.U.H.Iax
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PSrsBJlC- Do-OU want to juy or ?eli < i
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talarine Cures Malaria
s.ife n ml Sure Cure for Malaria. Price, $ 1.0". Malarise
C0..3E, UthSt.,K.Y. Testimonials- All druggists.
,r.r;i s?t?TCC(i ?.
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Act on t Oliver and bile: clear the complexion;
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and ail liver and stomach disorders.
U c are now making small size Bile Beans,
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ri/.c p*t bottle.
A ane!.e!zo PHOTO-GRAVURE of the
::::ovc- :-i.-ture. "KissiUK: et 7-17-70," mailed on
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^HILP P$H?LABOR I
LESSENSiPttL-pr T0 LIFE QR
; diminish# brother '
M^Hona ~ - ^ 5" CHILD
Don't 'Wasio Your Time
and moaer experimenting with doubtful
tn r>' r, AloA o^l
wuen d r# i wtco a wimqu ??
Discover/ is so po.-Uirely certaia in it-5 cam- |
tive action as to warrant its manufacturers j
in supply in: it to the public, as they aro do- |
ing t fimugh druggists, under a duly executed
?rti 5-ato ot guaranty, that it will accoaipii-.-li
ali it is i ecominencied to do, or m n^y
pai-i for i* will b? vi'omptiy return xL 15
jures torpid liver, or biliousness, indig'-sJion,
ye d>-snevsu. all humors, or bl< od taints,
'rc.u whatav^r cause wising, sain an-t sraip
iiseaso?, scrofulous affections, (not exopo
irg cjiisumptiouj or luug-scrofula), if ti-kon
ia'tirus end sirea a fcir trial. ^
Thousands of cure; f.^U >w the uso cf Tr. i
S?irr-?*s Catarrh 5) <^nt?
7-Isny imir. uo rausill's 1'micft" o.\ Cigar.
The n:an who is ri^ht is seldom left.
The toper's motto is "Live fcr to day,r'
fin* ho emiilnvs tffO d's.
The Mother's Friend, us d a few weeks
before cocfinemeut, less'us the pain i nd
makes labor quick and comparatively easy.
Sold by all Druggists.
A man likes to have good neighbors when
he must lov<> his neighbor as himself.
Oregon, The Paradise o* Farmes.-Mild,
equable climate, certain and abundant
crop. Beit fruit, g<-ain. grass and
stock country in the world. Full information
free. Address, Oregon Immigration
BjerJ, Portland, Ore.
Fish have been caught in the Gulf of
California st a. depth of 1400 feet.
it r-lH etefl wit-n sore eyes use ur. juuwu j
eod's Eye water. Druggist sell at 2oc per bottfl >
f/ooo^^TPlfM&S
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tent Contributors.
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g-Wg taste. Children take it witho
uuaiqh orbjv taatu nniafnco 1
niMUMSiR orttfti suuin rvnutni
Jest in f!tf Y^";U. ?raires t.to-tg'otli like pearls
ami fragrantbreatb. XJTInjury t?> enarne'. SI a
Sample; nta'icl, 23 c.'Ets. MACAItA
>11"(J. CO.. :> *!) 1J. SM.'j N. V. (Sty, 1
CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH
mmmki pills
reo cross diamond grand.
-v VS Safe and always reliable. Ladicts A
(<,j\ asli Dragidst for Diamond Brand, in ?2\
/jrc<l. metallic boxes. scaled with blue JFaK\
S-n ?X^i/rihlvio. Take no other. All pills \\jfiy
S.V4 in pasteboard boxes. pin's Tappers. are \S/
I'/ _ /jyclanireronn ooniitcrfclt*. Send 4c. V
1 w 2jr ("tamfw) fur particular*. testimonials sad
V "S* "IWIcf for Lndlcn," in Utter, br return |
i_ X' /?" miiil. Aante
Chichotcr Cbcm*2 Cc-, TIa<Ii*on Sq- riuIz^Bfc
A For Dairy, Farm & Househoia.
Kr.u:kS Xmeriran Woo?lf?r MarhSn^ awarded
liijrliovt medal'. Approved of a"d found
rA^gv o K by tlio iiierhe<T dairy fncuMes. A
^3r ran use tf. Always produce* Srst_
ST, .. , :a.<s butter from swart milk or cream in
?? i rtUnutes. Vfork i from one pint tip to the
ffx'3?5j lanroJ Makes more butter.
iSrf! Clear profit SO to ISO per ct. Buttermilk
y^?3SSi rrniaiii* perfectly sweet for coffee, eta
B^!336| <- also re.-osnmcndtxl by children's phyt
wLUUi''- < :a :< as l *st baby food. Machine nl*
sS'lRiiTti!?^ n.a!:es finest Ice cream In 1 minnte*. 1
#: fcKji, q!s_ $5,V>; U qta.. $10; ?0 Qta., $23, etc.
o.-^t Sena for testimonial* ?n<? circulars to
P. A. FRANK CO., Pat^ntei* and Solo Mfrs., 316 Earit
S2I St.. New York. Reliably agents wanted.
2 ? K ??,2 sT^TVBJetey Hats?US
sft? ?5 S V 5&2S Jtscrrodsthomo': *.
sA. JS"- tx cj ontDaln. Book of Dan*
P H i H WJ ? ic'S sent FREE.
S 3. LI.W0CLLS7. M.D.
jwtlajita, Oa. ofaco 6% Whitehall St.
" X ;
rTMF WONDZRFUL | ^X0?.
LOBURfl CHA1 Rx^wigp^^;
r* ... IcCMSiKIMCSAaTICUS^
v\W.-;;3c^f-jpwnuRE.
tS^ifci&aSy
CHAJnS!.//A'| W-IJg ^
VaretWmtT/'^c /?&%=& taVu "rOTT
ic/< I'-r/ /; t?fj pritcu/fj,F B11
andsusptr^stobo ?'?*>:?. rlUISS
puJ ijr'rtldMTfo. l\ J ! \^i\\'h, T> "IKKSend
tramp for \yUM/\ yiSsrrcur. ?rm
! ! >"J>Vl,iVI.UV.
| JLCBCKG Hrfi. CO.. 145 .-0> Si. rauiz.. 1*5.
j ?
(Qfl CRAYON ESCE
PORTRAIT fllC?
While Introducing rur f.rc work, 't you ?end us a
photograph ol yourself cr one member of your family,
wc *>vJll make ..,>u a lull iifc-tizt Crayon Portrait
free ot i'!;n rgv. Ibe only consideration
. mpostil uj on you \m'I tie ?hnt you exhibit it to
your friends as a <ip of rur work, and assist us
in Feeurinir orders; r.'so, il.at \ cu promise to have it
framed suitably, x, that the work will thow to advantage.
V.'ritc jour fill! rnnie and address on |
I back or pnoto *o secure its >aiety. we jcu&rantee
its return. Our offer is pood lor a few days only,
and the sample jortrait is worth $3U, be ins a*
as can be made. Address
A)!KKK:AN POKTKAJT CO..
14 Selliirinann ttlock. MMISVJM.E. KY. '
Largest Lue-size Portrait House In the World. ,
EL
Scrofula Humor VI
"Hjr little daughter's life was saved, as w? be?
lievs, by Hood's Sarsaparflla. Before she ira( ?toC
mouths old scrofula began to appear and in a short
time she had 7 running sores, vac paysaaa ?- ,
vised tbo ampatattoo of one of her fingers, to;
which ire refused assent We began giving her
Hood's SarsaparlUa. A marked Improvement mi
noticed after she had taken only one bottle, and by
a continued use of It her recovery was complete
And she Is now, being seven years old, strong and
healthy. The other members of my family h*TO
been greatly benefited by Hood's SarsapariB*.**"""
B- C. Joses, Alna, Lincoln Co., Xe. . v
Hood's Sarsaparilla f
SoW by all druggists. SI: six for $5. Prepared onJ7
by C. 1. HOOD\& CO., Apothecaries, Lowell Ma*.
IOO Doses One Poiiar
3 U u?43 M
ely's catarrh1 i
HDP AM PiTK I
Clean*** ibo Wp-^<3aS^RESii-.Jl!1l m
AUnye rain J
Infl itiisnatlon.
a.1..?^| /^SB I
Ke?;ore* lbs
Sc*s*? ?f ^
"4.t m
TRY THE ?FEVER|
A partlc'ei3 aonlled Into each n-'-strG and is agreeable.
Price 5? ccr.tsat L>rusjl?ts; oy zaali, registered*
0 cts. ELY CR0TIIi;;i3. 5G Warren Street. N.Y. H
PPCDi EfiS HV?fi Arc the .BEST.
rS?Rl,5ue BE?-? SOLDB7l)ZtCa03STBr ^M
rnuyxs ^ ^
sfef Weekly Thr--^ QKIX ft '
5 LpiHHll ? *a I 4L75 11 '
^^ BiMlLY L?25ji !
iC^61 M
Readers. p ?
variety of entertaining and *n fw*
snt on application. t fl
<3. [
e
leatth and
Science
'hey gM
of thS
890 by V
ohn G. C?
1. A. Hatrl
d SchwatlH
iters. V
bers HgHn
rork of oor favoriHj
:aster. W
lose
A series of ^ ^ i|
WITH \ '1
p, with name and 6w B 1 ? K
end "The Youth's ate.
This offer in
twAA-tiJ ?, J-i-LWJJ.?] LIP P
Unstrations. va,CW
Letter. 45 I
*
oston, Mass.
^^^^^^^byPhysician^^^B
feasant and. agreeaoie to mem
tat objection. By druggists^
No Yz Price or 50% but Free.
VTp manufacture none fc?t the beet. and for .?
COXSV'IKSiS CXT.Y. Write us for full particulars
how :?> ir<*t tht?s0 art;r!;>? free of costconsolers'
smmi co., 1
C! NCI Tift ATJ, O.
iiflflfTPfflW M 1 prescriae *ad fnlly?a?
done Big G as tb? ooty
?gffir cures la T? specific for tbe certain caw
j?fiEri TO & Days. ^3 of tbls disease.
agW?oy? ????1 G. E. INGRA H AM, M. Dfigg
otaeStrirart. ? Amsterdam. N.T. *
EIS Hra?o'yt>yti* TTe have sold Pip G for
\~?2? Circleof-t^gg-JSca faction.
\Sg?^ Ohio. D. R. DTCHE ? CO.>7
Chicago, lit
x?i^SSSaCtS^^-i t^l.CO. Sold by Drus^str
9
,
..3
Da n a After ALL others
m* u ^sl S/Bk fall, eonsult
f a fllln 328 N.15th SL
3e PHILA., PA. ^
Twenty years' continuous pi&ctice In tlie treatment
nnd cure c" Ibe awful efforts of early fl
vice, destroying 'ooth mind and l-<vly. Medicine
and treatraeut for one inontii. Five Dollar*, scat
securely sealed lrom observation to any addres?.
vii i?t
iakeghigkIhs %
pay. 1
'f wi U< T'rf.r*rli- care
t'ortWm. iv.rtj.? cT!>i!> inftx:ij? V f .
>? ? ?nu procure a HKi-I'AfiK HOOK J / Jfc
<iv:"T)K tftf . xj?-r:?-iK* cf ? i>nurti- / . / fJK
it.'. I' i:itry r- not i.n ami- / %
I*;* ?ii?J o-nt - !i:jriu>,' a of I
25 vr.:rn. it < ti you how to
Ltlcct aa J Oirr Die-apes: to Fe d 'It*" '
for ICi'KK and ui--o fo- F tteninjf; I I'
rOVi ls t<: have for XiiroiiEff I 1
j<: an'l t-verj'thiUK. Bdeea. 1-4
you FbonJd tnrw < o tfc.8 subject to m*a? it mH
i abie. Sent postpaid lo. 23c. BOOK PUS* ~
UUl'blii 1?4 liconard Street? K. Y. Ctt^ c