University of South Carolina Libraries
Hi* TEE BKBOR WORLD. ; Bostos iMBTanpisberauMi'* Union. <Mnr Yojuc dru? cierks haw; a union. THjtht: is a National Waiters'* U n?< .o.' Th? Govemm*rit rais Hungarian muiee. ? ?l>*?rv"KR (Col. / City laborers %el F- a day. ; ; Bbsro* union waiters get ?'! ? j>.-r month. Waksewi^n printers tv?L1 Ludd a I^.OO) ."^enU- . * ? U.viox barber shops increase ,a New V<>rk Vlt3RA, Austria, hi?> ?W>) rJJo ih? makera. jTbsk* are 50,00o unemptoved men in Xew [iork City. Vf&ACKAX?5T' > Cal., ha-. aa arbitration cccumttw. T?k wife oi London'.* Mayor was .\ ' cbvnberai-'U'!. S*- (tOOOTx bas a 1Tbrkfn?*o'>'< C .wsrai Benefit Caioa wttb four branch. Souths c Pacific is compelling tele graphers to take oath thx ta^y arj aoi Jk. sr- Indianapolis 'Ind-> clerk sued a firm for the time be worked over eight iwv4 *1*5. bat the case wttt boap; ? . Cmssvh statistics show that the number of CtBfjoyes on the Eastern raUr^-in increased twetty-fiye per cent, per mile from Iff) to 38?V ?hfle in the Middle West the number par ?tie decreased slightly. Ptv* ol the conductor; oa the Pitr.sbur? mmi Erie Division iennsrrraam' Railroad arr a&t&ed McDoWsij. and are ail * -"There are aiso on the fine five Timed Fitzmaurice, aL brothers. 'aptaui J. B. ?o&d, icmzvicr oi tb? plati gb? Ukfbutrr in Amerif t, is to have a 8t*i*e erected in hi* bono.* by his own work men. Captain Ford resides in Pittsburg, 7*4*4 . , and ? now eighty year? o;d and a , Xfflrfoff JRdewa lk in Operation. Aaothe/ test of the aao7nl)'.c sidewalk air Jackson Parle was mrvie the othertray With satisfactory resnlt*. fill," as it is called, is cksisJtt&J^to /carry viafctors from oac bufldin^ to an ?tker dating the fair. It ran four banr\ j yesterday whVrat a break. The *'side jHwHt* ia in the form of two parallel plat- j ? One of these, moves at the rate | miles ah hoar. If that speed" ias WQft enough to suit the passenger he j " over oo the other platform, which sat the rate of six miles' an hour. ; platforms are carried by the same ' i and wheels, but the iuvemors ; that a sew principle ha* been ap- j mi securing two rates of speed, j jiaiform that runs six milys an j haatrvaxM on the rirn of the wheels while 1 the three-mile platform runs on the- axle. : Ta satisfy the exposition authorities that ! ' idenpik" could be operated on a j the inventors pat in a loop 9 JO icog and operate it with ninety ! power of electricity. This U sof- | ponder to carry 900 people ? >?**& I Adirondack "Laagers." y maimer visitors to the Adi freqoently hear & term used by in describing some ot their ia those delightful and ?g$vftg regions that greatly mys thanV first. The people thus re to technically are callcd tW| ' .w?o are generally found to pretly pknti ful. "Lunsers,'' pro ficad ^hx^-ets,''1 is a . word that has kas y?t got into general usage outside i range of the pine tree odor* of the Jhernmoat part- OKJiew York State; ?*? ? ? jjp| j^riritinn are soon corapel instant admiration their riraplicifcy ''and .significance, "tangtts" ot the Adirondack rc i ace none other tha&4he coustimp resort thithsr* or jfce benefit j their long troubles, and who form a by thtm$elW? in the eyes of the me apart from the mere huntsman ' pteaaure seekers. There is a sort of Nct*? in being a lunger that naught i can girt; and though the word thus d by an admirable philological > sterna to ha*e a touch of rugged j in it %t first sight, yet there is, all, a kind of rough sympathy in redolent of. the soil. As the knowledge of tile Adirondack iaertaaes in minuteness, as it will, one may expect to hear i&x* detailed designations of "one t* ^?half-lungers,1' etc., though i felM&evod, has not vet been ob i*> York Tribune. ?. Of ****** sad lirer to pro^ertj ttgnove the lac tleifr wtfS add from the vrtem, res qflfe in i It traumatism in the fibrous tissue particu' sad canes Inflammation an<l the j ac ben, which ace more agQj^xlcg : a Mtcvttetni Is made. The Way to Cure ? to parity the bkxxL And to do this kxI portlier. \ but Important K ttm Ba p| Mr. 0. 8. Freemaa, pr> ? thn BaQ Hoaae, Fremons, Ohio, sayiigr^i j Mfcnfcftt* and one-hair bottles of Hood's Sarsaparilla ? tiHewed ay rbemnatiEm ot ? years' standing." <Kjjfi<w?ii.l>emoot.a^io. > iltLD BIRTH ? ? ? MADE EASY! u MonrHEjti* Frictd "bi scientific- ^ aHy pcepared Liniment, every ingrc- ^ db?* of iecogniaed vahje and in constant us? by the medical pro fession. Tfiiese ingredients are com biaedin a manner hitherto unknown "MOTHERS' FRIEND" ? > WILL DO all that is claimed for it ANDUHORE. ItShortens Labor, Lessens Pain, Diminishes Danger to lie of Mother and Chid. Book ;tfo"MoTHi*s,,nfeiledFRE^ con ,j 'taring valuable information and ? ' vofcntary testimonials. j t<4^expt?ucin rrrtiptof price |1 JOptrbflttU j * MUORIL& RECUUTOt CO., A*fa?*. ??? rt?U> BY AIL DKCQGiara \ GET igrffi ! h ?w>d a Cat*- ?" K222S2^^2^S^^ales^l>??hmia i ? i Vtk cod-liver oil has lost its viieness af^S^ott's Emul sion and gained a good deal Inefficiency. J ?ct drops It is broken up into tiny A ? which are covered with iae, just as quinine ih } fsf coated with sugar Of gelatine You do not get Aetaste at alt. |>Sjilie hyptraiosphites of fide* and soda aHsi their tonic effect to that of the hai ^di gested cod-liver ciL tL' Let us send you a book on **<Ur?ful living ? free. IBs?*t,C5*a?i,J)jSo?S>5rt?Atwo?, ?ft. fceepeScfKb's EanUics of aod-lr?er -? ? ? " i * ?* THE FARM AND GARDEN. | TRAINING TOMATOES- j In my experiments in pruning and training tomatoes I have noticed that the fruit Colore tetter on the vines which ! nave not hero pruned; also that the di ; ^ect rays of the sun toughen the skin and : :au>e discoloration of the fruit; a fact which demonstrates Dame Nature a su perior knowledge of the amount of ; foliage required to nourish and mature | ? her fruit. Many of the rocks and trel- | iises designed for the support of tomato ! v:4ics doubtless have good points, but as j I am somewhat sce;*ical on this subject j I never provide chairs or settees for my , tomato plants, but train them rigorously j ? to the jKrrpeudieulv; hence my viaesare ! iupolied with tive foot stakes, two to I -aciV plant, split from ash logs, and ? fastened with bas?T stuff, so there can i'*? . tt I e flipping or stretching. A'tinr AjricjiUuriat. VAP.Y a UOHSE S P23D. A short time a^oa valuable horse, an imported draft stallioo, was fed all t;i? 1 hay he would eat, with dire result. It j took an experienced hor-iemnn months to j -etffrect the mischief done by a season s i jtufhag with hay. Since that severe ; lesson we have had constantly the care j of workhorses, and have found that fully j as good results in feeding were had where good bright sctf*w, of which the animals ate little^ was used for roughness and variety, but nil greater quantity of jrain was" fed them when hay was a large and constant part of the diet. An oppor -rtifntj to inspect the feeding of horses in a iarge/itable belonging to a street car revealed the fact that the horses , required to make twenty-four miles per : day at a jo^-trot, in heats of six miles I each. were fed almost entirely a grain j iiet, being given only' enough hay to ; ecu re good digestion. The common ration was cQished corn and wheat-bran mixer! by wtight, and the whole mixed with coarse cut hay. Ot thw about half ji bushel was fed dry i# one mes3.? On aha Siocinw i. j : ? * S\WOCST as BBDtDLXG. j Sawdust or fine shavings from-, the : plaain^mill make good bedding for cattle and b*rses in the sense being cleanly, but there are some objections to its u*e. II decomposes very slowly in the manure or In the ground after ap plication. Jf used in large quantities, an acid develops in it when wet that is in jurious to vegetation, and manure in which it U used will do better upoj-dry land than in wet laud. It certainly should not be used where the Iannis liable to b2 wet most of the season, aiH? does not decompose at all under water, i When' it docs decompose it furnishes a certain amount of potash and some | nitrogen, and certainly the pojash, and ; possibly other elements, woul^ exist in j larger proportions in the sawdust and { shavings from hard wood, or non- resin- | ous soft woods than in hemlock, spruce j or pine. In a stiff clay, or clayey loam, j jt would serve to lighten up the soil, and j if not too wee would decompose after a | while. In a light, sandy loam it would j be f<Jo drying. It would be better that i tfcemanure in which it^s used should be pile ! up to heat ani -ferment before ap plying to any kind of soil. Dry leaves from any trees except those of the pine . or resinous woods would be more ' valuable as bedding, and are better ab- ; sorbents.of the liquids of the stable than sawdust, and sawdust is better than shavings, and soon leaves can be gathered about as cheaply as sawdust can be got. Ground tanbark is similar to the sawdust in its effects on the soil, but not as good, and should cnlv be used very ^pannijly. ? Button Cultivator . ? i 0 DOCKING EOIWE.V TAILS. Fashion seem* to have performed a complete revolution in it3 orbit and has brought in once more in full force the cruel and absurd practice of docking horses' tails; Just at present the cus tom is in full force, and the unfortunate animals appear with the shortest pos sible tails. As a question of beauty, it must be conceded that there is a loss instead of a gain. -The horse's glory, like that of a woman, i3 in his hair. The abbreviated representatives of the flow in'* tails are a poor apology for the sweeping locks that should grace th e animal. The proportions of the mem bers are destroyed by re;m>ving the tail, ft thrown the horse out of balanre so that his long neck and heavy head seem out of proportion. It produces the effec? of the horse pitching forwavrl on- his nz*?e. The animal when docked looks harmonious from no point of view. The loss of the tail as a weapon against 3ics and other insects that so torment the horse, peculiarly sensitive in his skin, is one of the great injuries-done him in the docking process. Again, however hu manely the process of amputation cau be conducted, it is certain that it is gener ally aa occasion of great cruelty, and thjrf ignorance w the cause of the inflic; ing of g*cat su tiering. One" consolation underlies the matter. It i- tha* fashion is perpetually changing an<l that a new generation of horses may be spared the indiction. The horse with, docked tai'v as he grows old, will de scend to ignoble u<es, and when the once fashioaaoly mutilated creature ap pears iu the lower roles of commercial work, the cultured rider may be willing to accept nature as the exponent of beauty unalornei. ?Scientific ?m*rica.i. Harvesting fikld corn*. The best time to begin harvesting corn is the earliest moment the crop can be put in the crib without damage. Every i day after this the corn is apt to become 1 more gr les? 'damaged in the field. The : autumn dars are longer than those of winter. With gloves a man cannot husk corn -so fast as without them; and he cannot husk so fast in December or Jan uary, when his bare fingers will often be numb, a3 bje can in November, when the ?weather il more agreeable and the days [ are longer. The earlier the ears are gathered the earlier the cattle can be pot in . the fields and the more and better feed they will get. When two men anr at work it ? best to drive over a row, each roan taking histora on the 44down \ rows." The horses should be muzzled, not on account of toe corn they eat, but j because they waste it. Perhaps the- best ! puzzle is a hand-mase- basket just large r ehbt^h to cover the nose and raoatb. It is ma^e of hickory slips, and any farmer can make it- Many con- I sider this muzzle better than the wire | basket. If a boy can be had at half wages let aim husk the^down row, as the men otherwise. will lose some time while going ro.-.i the side to the^rcar ;>f the wagon. When there are two men :it work have two wagons: then one man cm husk while the other put* the lo.-vi'inthe crib. If the man rs'ra-untnic in the field throw the corn on ground it must be han dled agfta. an-i thus effort is wasted. Wnen mnn gatners let f.im take two or three rows on the left side of the wagon (unless he is left-handed;, driving over the Ia^t low husked. He should have a high extra board on the side oi . the wagon farthest from him. Every wagon tr?ei irf^^jatnenng corn bi; fitted with % sc-)">p:n^ tajtff^oa :the j rear. The hist substitut^Br this ? si ; board four feet long wider than til f acoop, one end resting ou the rear end- ; gate and the other on the end cf the bed. ; The lines should be fastened through loop3 put in the side of the wagon -bed nearest to the man and in the rear end- j gate; then if the team is frightened (and ' horses are frequently frightened in a field : of ripe corn), the maa can speedily get i, at the liues froia either the side or the rear of the wagon; moreover, lines so I arranged are not in the way of the ' corn. Some men are much faster huskers than others, and this is largely owing to the better way in which they grasp the es.r. If the corn is to stand in the crib for some time the silk should be akent oil as weli as the hus<. Tue silk favors nixe and ir.oLI more than the husk, and detracts much from tue appearance of the ear. If the silk is to be ? removed gpasp the ear at the point with the left -bund; pull back the husk with the right hand; catch the point of the ear with th? Sf me band; shove the left head, grasp ing the sTHc and under husks, to the butt of? the ear, and breik o!T the ear by a quick upward movement o! the right hind. The movement of the right hand [ back to the point of the ear, and of the left hand from the point of the ear to the butt, can be made almost, simultaneously. Some men can easily crib five busheLs per hour? buskin? in *hi3 way. of corn that yields forty bushels, shelled, to the acre. When occasional siiksand hu*ka adher ing to the ears are~S!Towable, as they are when the corn is to be fed in a short time, the be** plan is to grasp the butt of the ear, firmly, with the left hand; strip back with the right hand, the husks toward it; grasp the ear about its mid dle with the right hand, and by n quick upward jerk lift it out of the remaining husks and break it oif. ifJiny prefer a steel or bone husking peg, slightly curved in front of the hand. It should be half ^an inch broad, else it will blister of callous the hand. The best preventive^; Of cracked fingers is thorough washing in rain water with V. castile soap, and nuoiutiag with glycer ine, rubbing, it iu well. The best* cure is shoemakers wax put oa a bit of cloth and pressed over the crack when warm. ? American Agriculturist. PA.RM AND GARDEN* MOTES. Piain whitewash is said to be a remedy for the wooly apis. Feeding the young chickens on a cleat , surface is a good preventive of gapes. Langshaas, brahmas and cochins fatten very readily aud should not be fed exclusive!/ upon corn. If the geese are weft provided with warm quarters and are well fed, they can be picked regularly all winter. Whenever possible, farm neighbor hoods should hold experience meetings, taking the wives aud young people along. A. hen will eat anything that a hog will, and if well managed will return a much better per cent, of profit oa the capital invested. Select a good, heavy rooster of your favorite breed; let him be broad across the back, full breasted and active, aud use him for breeding this winter. The safest plan is never to inoreed the fowls; change tiie roosters every year and better results wilt be secured, especially when it is desired to improve the flock. Wire netting is aa excellent material to use for mining .temporary yards for the fowls. It is easily to put up and can be readily taken 4ewn and moved when necessary. The trouble with those who fail in feed ing bran is ? they feed too little meal with it. When they feed a well balanced ra tion, of which bran is a part, they will find the milk all riiibt. Very fat pallets not only weau. few eggs, but if the egg* are use i for hatch ing the chickens will be weak and sick ly. A thrifty condition of the hens is ueces.sary to thrifty chickens. Good Horses arc always in such de;uand that it seems strange that so many far mers show an aversion to raiding colts. A colt is easily broken it kindly and Sraily treated from the start, and no animal is surer of a market. Many horses are lamed by improper paring of the hoof by right handed blacksmiths. They pare unevenly, make one side tender, and lameness results. Farmers should make a note of this when thej go to the blacksmith shop. By boiling them soft enough to mash aud mix with bran, bea is can bs made to take the place of vegetables in poultry food during the winter. They contain a good percent, of aitrogea, which ea ters largely into the composition of OS " ' It is not generally known among farm ers that the same food that makes a a pound of dressed beef woulJ make a pound of butter. At the present price of cattle, the farmer gets about live cents a pound for his dressed be***, while butter is worth fifteen cents. Thrilling Exploit of a Soldier. The Imperial troops have reached 6 Wenchow, China, and after several skirmishes have driven the bandits into the mountaiu recesses at last. Many prisoners have suffered capital punish ment, but the leaders are still at large. 1 Notwithstanding the large rewards of fered, no one seemed to possess th< requisite courage to beard the lions in their dens. A master of arms, however, vo'unteered to undertake tha dangerous task, and obtained a guard of soldiers to assist him. Hiding by day and moviD^ at night, they steadily moved on toward the robber cniefs place of onceilraent. One very dark and rainy night thev came to the cavcrn of the terrible Yeh S: Lung, a redoubtable chieftain steeped in crime and well known to be a dead shot with rifle and revolver. Tne darkness surrounding the entrance of the cavern was favorable to the bold band, who lay low and beat the ground with their feet and hands, so as to tempt the robber chiei to fire at tbem. The strategy was successful. The besieged robber aimed at the spot from which the sound p;p ceeded and loud wails followed, but they ^?ere uttered only to delude him into the belief that he seDt one of hi* foes ict/s eternity. This device was ke >fc up until the robber, emboldened by his owr imagined success, crept softly out of the reeky hole. The moment he showed himself his ride was knocked out of his hand and the soldiers closed on him. He attempted to draw his sword, but the master c^afms got hip by the waisl; and threw him down. He has since been tried and will soon be decapitated. Dur ing the trial &?-- d**ri?cl nothing, but boasted of his exploits, only regretting that he could not get a chance before he died of wreaking vengeance on his cap tors. ? S<v* Francis-/ Chronicle. The CaAier is Still Kissing. Wilmington/!* . C., [Special.] ? No further news has been .iieard * as to the whereabouts of Cashie/^Bowden, of the smashed First National Jack here. His hastily le&riag-at the tiino when he was to meet Back Examiner Alden leads many to expect " & sensation. Some are ?ow expressing the teiief that he will aotaetusn. Tne bank examiner, , when asked for -fafarCDation, . compresses hia iipc^i&akeihii'heftd and aaTa nothing. KEY. DR. TALMAGE The Brooklvn Divine's Sundav Sermon. ? ? I Text; ^'Surely, in win the net is spread tnthe sight of any bird.''? Proverbs i., 17. Early in the morning I went out with a fowler to catch wild pigeons. We hastened through the mountain gorge and into the forest. W? spread out the net, and covered up the edges of it as wall as we could. We arranged the cail bird, its feet fast and its wings flapping, in invitation to all fowls of heaven to settle down there. We retired into a booth of branches and leaves and waited, 1 After awhile, looking out of the door of the booth, we saw a flock of birds in the sky. Tbev came nearer and nearer, and after a 1 while were about to swoop into the net, when suddenly they darted away, Again *ye waited. After awhile we saw another flotfk of birds. They came nearer and nearer un ?tjljust at the moment when they were about to swoop they darted away. The fowler was very much disappointed as well aa. myself. We said to each other, "What is the matter?' and ''Why were not these birds caught?' We went out and ex amined the net and by a flutter of a branch of a tree port of the net had been consoicu* cusiy t-xposed, and the birds roming very near had seen their peril and darted away. vV hen I saw that I said to the old fowler, That reminds me of a passage ctf Scripture : ' 'Surely in vain is the ne* spread fn the sight of any bird.'" Now- the net in my text stahds for testation. f he call bira of sin tempts men on from point to point and from branch to branch until tbejrare abou?to;drop into "the net. If a man kinds out io time that it is the temptation pX the <fevil, or that evil men are attemjltjneto capture his soul for time and for et?rnvt^7" the man steps back . He says, "I am notto be caught in that way; I 6ee what you are about: surely in vain is the net spread in the sight of any bird." There are two classes of temptations? the superficial and the subterraneous ? those above ground, those underground. If a man could see sin as it is, he would no more ern I >race it than be would embrace a lep3r. Sin is a daughter of hell; yet she is gar landed and robed and trmketed. Her voice is a warble. Her cheek is the setting sud. Her forehead is an aurora. 7 She savs to men: "Come, walk this path with me. " It is thymed and primrosed, and the air is be witched with the odors of the hanging gar dens of heaven. Tho rivers are rivers of wine, and all you have to do is to drink theoi up in chalices that sparkle with dia mond and amethyst and chrvsoprasus. Fee! It is all bloom and rosate cloud and heaven." Ob, niy friepd?, ii^for one moment the 1 choiring of all these coSftayted voices of sin could be bushed, we shouldtsee the orchestra of the pit with hot breath ; blowing through tierv flute, and the skeleton arms on drums of thunder and darkness beating the chorus, "The end thereof is death." I want to point out the insidious tempta tions that are assailing more especially our young men. The only kind of nature com paratively free from temptation, so fit* as I < an judge, is the cold, hard, stingy, mean temperament. What would Satan do with such a man if be got him? Satan is not anx ious to get a man who after awhile may dis pute with him the realm of everlasting meanness. ? s> It is the generous young man, the ardent young man. the warm hearted young man, ihe social young man that is in especial peri]. A pirate goes out on the sea, and one bright morning he puts the glass to his eye and looks off, and sees an empty vessel float ing from port to port. He says. "Never mind; that's no prize for us." But the same morning be puts the glass Co his eye, and he sees a vessel coming from Australia laden with gold, or a vessel from the Indies laden with spices. He says, "That's our prize; bear down on it!*' Across that unfortunate ship the grappling hooks are thrown. The crew are blindfoldei and are compelled to walk the plank. It is not the empty vessel, but the laden merchantman that is the temptation of the pirate. And a young man empty of head, empty of heart, empty of life? you want no \oung Men's Christian Association to keep him safe; he is safe. He will not gam hie unless it is with somebody else's stakes. He will not break tbe Sabbath unless somebody else pays the horse hire. He will not drink un less some one else treats him. He will hang around the bar hour after hour waiting for some generous young man to come in. The generous young man comes in and , accosts him and says, "Well, will you have > a drink with me toAiay?' Tbe rnaD, as though it were a sudden thing for him, says. "Well ?well, if you insist on it, I will? I will." Too mean to go to perdition unless some body else pays his expenses? For such young men we will not fight We would no more contend for them than Tartary and Ethiopia would fight as to who should have the great Sahara desert ; but for those young men who are buoyant and enthusiastic, those who are determined to do something for time and for eternity? for them we will fight, and we now declare everlasting war against all the influences that assail them, and we ask all goo I men and philanthropists to wheel into line, and all the armies of heaven to bear down upon the foe, and we Almighty God that with the thunder of His wrath He will strike down and consume ail these influences that are attempt ing to destroy the young men for whom Christ died. The first class of temptations that assaults '? a you ug man is ted on ty the skeptic. He_ will not admit that he is au infidel or athe- ; isf. Ob, no! be is a "free thinker:" he is one of your ??liberal' men; he is free and easy in religion. Oh. how liberal he is, he is so ! "liberal'' that he will give away his Biblt , ! he is so "liberal'' that he will give away the i throne of eternal justice; he is fo "liberal'' j that he would l?e willing to give God out of the universe ; he is so "iiberai" that he would : give up bis own sou! aud the souls of all his ! friends. Now what more could you ask in ! the way of liberality? The victim of this ! skeptic has probably just come from the { country. Through the intervention of i friends be has been placed in a shop. On Saturday the skeptic says to him. ? "Well, what are you going to do to-mor- j row?' He says, am going to church." j "Is it possible?" says the skeptic. "Well, I ?? used to do those tl .ngs; I was brought up, I suppose, as you were, iu a religious family, i and I believed all those things, but I got j over it: the fact is, since 1 eam? to town I have read a great dea', and I have found : that there are a great mauy things iu the j Bible that are ridiculous. Now, for in stance, all that about the serpant being ; cursed to crawl in the Garden of Eden be cause it bad tempted oar first parents; why, you see how absurd it is; you can tell from i the very organization of the serpent that it , had to crawl; it crawled before it wascursed just as well as it crawled afterward; you can tell from its organization that it ?Tawled. Then ail taat story about the wha'e swallowing Jonah, or Jonah swal- ' lowing the whale, which was it? It don't make any difference; the thing is nb>urd ; it is ridiculous to i-upi-ose that a man could have goDe down through the jaw* of a set monster and yet keep bis life; why, his r^s piration would have been hindered, he would have been digested; the gastric juic2 would have dissolved the fibrins and coagu lated albuc^en, and Jon^h would hWe been changed from prophet into chyle. Th^n all that story alwut the micraculous: conception ? why. it is perfectly disgraceful. Oh. sir! I believe m the light o? nature. This is the Nineteenth century. Progress, sir. progress I don't blame you. but after you have been in town as long as I have vou will think just as I do." Thousands of young men are going down under that process day by day, and there Is only here and there a young man who can endure this artillery *: tcorn. Th-*v are si v iae un their Bib!?w Tfc<? lirbt 0?nntnre ' They have the light of nature in China; they have it in Hindostan; they have it in Cey lon. Flowers there, stars there, water? tber-?. winds there, but no civilization, no home-, no happiness. Lancets to cut and juugger nauts to fall under and hooks to swing cn. but no happiness. I tell you, my voung brother, we have to take a religion of some kind. We have to choose between four and five. Shall is be the Koran of the Moh&mmedan, or ths blas ter of tiie Hindoo, or tfaeJSendavesfaa of tha Persian, or the Confbeius writings of the Chinese, or. the Holy Scriptures? Take -what yon will: God helping me, I will take the Bible. Light for all darkness; rock for all foundation baktt for all wounds. A glory that lifts its pillarB of ; fire over the wilder ness march. Do not five up your Bibles. Ask them what infidelity has ever done to lift the fourteen hundred millions of the rare ?->nt of Harbarism. Ajifthem when infidelity ever instituted a sanitary commission, an 1 before yon leave their society once and for ever tell them that they have insultei the memory of your Christian father, and spit upon the deathbed of your mother, and with the swine's snout rooted up the grave of your sister, who^died belie v in t in the Lord Jesus. If these people scoff at you a* though re ligion and the Bible ^vere fit onlv for weaV: minded people, you just tell them yon ara not ashamed to be in J ? company of Burke, the statesman, and ..lphaert, the painter, and Tborwaldse.v tbei sculptor, aiStf Mozart, tl>e musician, and E&ackatooet the lawyer, and Baaon. the philosopher, and Harvey, tiie physician, anri John Milton, the poet. .. Young man,- hold on to youjr Bible It is I' the best book joit ever owned. It will td! you bow to dress, how to bargain, bow to ' walk, bow to act. how to live, how to die. Glorious Bible! Whether on parchniMt or paper, is octave or duodecimo, on tbe center table of the drawing room or in the counting room of the banker. Glorious Bible! Light to our feet and lamp to our path. Hold on to it! The second class of insidious temptations that come upon our young men is led on by the dishonest employer. Ev?ry com mercial establishment is a school. In nine cases out of ten the principles of j the em ployer becomes the principles of the em ployee. X ask the older merchants to bear me out- in these statements. If, f hen you were just starting in life ? in commercial life ?yon were told that honesty was not mar ketable; that, though you might sail all the foods in the shop, you must, not sell vour conscience: that, while von were to ex ercise ail industry ana tact, you were sot to sell your conscience; if you were taught that gains gotten by sin were combustible, and at the moment of ignition would be blown on by the breath of God until all the splendid estate would vanish into white asheiscat , tered in the whirl wind, then that instruction has been to you a precaution and ahelp ever since- ^ There are hundreds of commercial estab lishments in our great cities which art edu cating a class of young men who will be the honor of the land, and there are other Estab lishments which are educating young ition to be nothing but sharper!. What chancais there for a young man who was taufcbtifc) an establishment that it is right to liejf it. is smart, and that a French label is all that'ia necessary to make a thing French, and that" ! - you ought always to be honest when it pays, and that it is wrong to steal mil*aa you do it well? Suppose , new. a young man just starting in life enter? a place of that kind Where there are ten young men, all drilled in the infamous practices of the establishment, rle is ready to be taught. The yd^ig mMn has no theory of commercial ethtc? Where is he to get his theory? He will get the theory from his employers. One day he pushes his wits a little Deyond what the establishment demands of him, and he fleeces a customer until the clerk is on the verge of being seized by the law. W hat is done in the es eablisbment? He is not arraigned. The head of the establisment says to niax, "Now, be careful; be careful, young man, you might becaught; but really that was splen didly done; jou will get along in therfrorld, I warrant you. Then that young man goes up until he becomes head clerk. He nas found there is a premium on iniquity. One morning the employer comes to the establishment. He goes into bis counting room and throws up his hands and shouts, "Why, the safe ha3 been robbed f What is the matter? Nothing, nothing; only the clerk who has been practicing a good while on customers is practicing a little on the employer. No new principle introduced into that establishment. It is a pqafr rule that will not work both ways. Y go must never steal unless you can ?o it X&l. He did it well. I am not ta^dug an'abstraction; I am talking a terribW and crushing fact. Now here is a young man. Look at him to-day. Look at him five years from now, after he has been under trial in such an establishment. Here ha stands in the shop to-day his cheeks ruddy u ith the breath of the bills. He unrolls the goods on the coun ter in gentlemanly style. He (jommends 1 them to the purchaser. He points Out all the good points in the fabric. He effects the sale. The goods arewrappei up, and he dismisses the customer with a cheerful "good morning," and the country merchant departs |0 impressed with the straightfor wardnec of the young man that he will cotte again and agaiti, every spring and every autumn , unless interfered with. The young man has been now in that es tablishment five years. He unrolls the goods on the counter. He says to the customer, "Now these are the best goods we have in our establishment.*' They have better on the next shelf. He says, "We are selling these goods less than cost." They are mak ing twenty per cent. He saya, "There is nothing like them in all the city." There are fifty shops that want to sell the same thing. He says, "Now, that is a durable article; it will wash." Yes, it will wash out. The sale is made, the goods are wrapped up, the country merchant goes oft feeling tnathe has an equivalent for his money, and the sharp clerk goes into the private room of th? counting house, and he says: "Well, I got rid of those goods at last. I really thought we never wcul.1 sell them. I told him we were selling them less than cost, and he thought he was getting a gool bargain. Got rid of them at last." And the head of the firm says: "That's well done, splendidly done!" Meanwhile God had recorded eight lies? four lies against the young man, four lies against his employer, for I undertake to , say that the employer is responsible for all ,~<he iniquities of his clerks, and all the ini quities of tbosi who are clerks of these clerks, down to the tenth generation, if those employers inculcated iniquitous and damn ing principles. Island before young men ti??. jgpEBiog who are linger this pressure. I sav, come out of it. "Oh!"' you say, "I can't; I hare my widowed mother to support, aDd if a man ?oses a situation now he can't get another one.1' I say, come out of it. Go home to your mother and say to her, "Mother I can't stay in that shop apd be upright; what shall I do?1 and if the is worthy of you she will say, "Come out of it. my son ? we will just throw ourselves on Him who hath prom ised to be the God of the widow and the fatherless; He will take care of us." And I tell you no young mau ever permanently suffered by Wcii a course of conduct. In Philadelphia, in a drue shop, a young man said to his employer, 'T want to please you, really, and I am willing to sell medicines on Sunday, but I can't sell tilis patent shoe blacking on Sunday.*' "Well," s4fiid the head man,~"you will have to do it, or else you will have to go away." The young man said, "I can't do it; I am willing j to sell meJicines, but not shoe blacking/' | ' Well, then, go! Go now." The young j man went away. 'Hie Lord looked after bim. The hundreds of thousands of dollars he won in this world were the smallest pare ) of his fortune. God honored him. By the j course lie took he saved his soul as well as ] his fortunes in the future. A man said to his employer, "I cant wash j the wagon on 'Sunday morning; I am willing j to wash it on Saturday afternoon, bur, sir, j you will please excuse me, I oan't wa-hthe j wagon on Sunday morning." His employer ; jaid, "You must wash it; my carriage comes j in every, Saturday night, and you have got | to wash :t on Sundav moruimr."' "I can't do it," the man said. They parted. Ths Lord looked after him? grandly looked after him. He is worth to-dav a hundred fold more than his employer ever was or ever ! will be, and he saved his soul. Young men, j it is safe to do right. There are young men in this house to-day who, under this storui j of temptation, are striking deeper and deep- j er tbeir roots and spreading out_ broader j their branches. They a re Daniels in Baby- j Ion, they are Josephs" in the Egyptian court, ; they are Fauis amid the wild l>easta of i Ephesus. I preach to encourage them. Lay hold of God and be faithful. There is a mistake we make aboat young men. We put them in two classes; the one 1 class is moral the other dissolute. The J moral are safe. The dissolute caunot be re- I claimed. I deny both propositions. The j moral are not safe unless they have laid hold ? of God, and the dissoluts may be reclaimed, j I supper there are self righteous men in > this uouse who feel no need of God, and will j not seek after H;:n, and they will go out in j the won 1, and they will be tempted,and they | I win oe nung cown t>y mislortua?, and they will go down, . down, | down, until some ni^Ut you will them , going home hooting, raving, shouting bias > phemy ? going home vo their mother, goin^ liome'to their sister, going home to the young companion to whom, only a little while a^o, in the presence of a briilian'. assemblage, flashing lights and orang.* j blos^ms, and renders swinging in the air. ? they *? promise' fidelity and purity, and | kindness perpetuil. As that man r?ac;i<-s j the door, sh'j will open it, not with \ an outcry, but she will stagger bac? j from the door as he corae:> in. and in her look there wilL be the Droohec? of j wots that ore coming, want that viill | shiver in need of tire, Lur.g:-r that will cry in vain for brea !, cruelties that will not kave the heart when they have crushed it, but pinch it again aui stab it again, uutd s>me eight sbe will opaii the door of the place where her companion was . ruined, and she wi-1 fling out her ?rm from under her ragged shawl and say, with al I most omnipotent eloquence: "Giva me back , my husband : Give me back my protector! I Give me back my all! Him of ti^e kin I I heart and gentle wor<ls aud the :nar!y brow, '> give him back to me.'- And tbpn th* ! wretches, obese au* v "l bau* j their matted locks and they will my : 'Tut | her out! Put Ler out!* Oh! self-rij'iteous , man. without God you are iu pe?i3. Seek after Him to-day. Amid the ten S-ousan Is temptations of life there is no safety for a man without God. But I may be addressing some who have gone astray, and so I assault that other proposition that the dissolute cannot be re claimed. Perhaps .you hare only gone a little astray. While I speak are you troubled* is there a voica within m say ing: ' What did you do that for? Why uid you go there? What did you mean by thatr ' Is there a memory ia your soul that makes you tremble* God only knows all cur ! hearts. Yea, if you ha v<T gone so far as to commit iniquities an J hive gone through the ! whole catalogue. T u:vite you back this hour. The Lor l waits tnr you. "iiejokv! O voung.mau in toy ycu:b, svudiet thy heart cheer th^e in the dav?? o!! thy youth; i ut know thou that tor a*> thesi thing^.Gol fviU ' J""} ' k* Came home, you*g man,1 to jour tatter's 'God, Come homa young man, to -your mother's God. Oh! 1 wish that sll the bat? iteries of the Gospel oould to-day be unlim bered against all those influences which are 'taking down so many of oar young ton. I would like to blow a trumpet of warning, and recruit until this whole audience would march out on a crusade against the evila of society. But let none of us be disheartened. Oh. Christian workers, my heart is high with hope. The dirk horizon is, blooming into the morning of which prophets spoke, and of which poets have dreamed, and of which painters have sketched. The world's bridal hour advances. The mountains will kiss the morning radiant wad effulgent, and all the waves of th4 sea will become the crystal keysets great organ, on which the fingers of everlasting ,^y shall play the grand inarch of a world redeemed. Instead of the thorn there shall cotne up the fir tree, and instead of the briar there shall coma up the myrtle tree, and the mountains and the hills shall break forth mt > saucing, and all the trees of the wood stall clap their bauds. PROMINENT PEOPLE. Minister Egan was an errand boy. - Greece's King speaks twelve language?. The Emperor of Japan latsly entered on his fortieth )jear. *j The Emperor of China has begun the study of English arithmetic. i * I 1 The late Lord Lytton js said to have been a firm believer in ghostl 1 Colonel J. 6. Mo? by, of war time guer lame, practices law if San Francisco, . Bignor Crlspi, late Premier of Italy, i9 writing his memoirs for posthumorous publi catfn. S ; I . j l&XLEjris one of the few men of science wh?) sjadkes, and he never commericei the htr'^rt until he was fort}*, fit. a.vk R. Stockton, the novelist, was rr^nal ly an engraver, and worked at that caflmg in Philadelphia. ^kn'khal John Palmer is the tenth Ken tufcky-boru Senator who has represented Illinois at the National Capital. t'OLONEL Josef Arknzibak, the heroic fofander of Peruvian independence and the oldest officer on the army rolls, is dead ' Louis Kossuth is now feeble and almost blind More than this; he is poverty striken. It isSforfcy years since he made that memor able t^ur of the United States. Mist Mary Chenowith, the chief apostle of Christian Science, it said to be worth in the neighborhood of ?$, 000,003 and lives in a house ia San Jose Col., which contains 100 rooms. ( Dr. Ernst, the new professor in the Har vard Medical School, was the man who once demonstrated to some sceptical professors the fact that a curved ball oould bo pitched by repeatedly curving the ball between two posts set up in a line. William S. Haymond, a lawyer at Fair mount, \V. Va., claims to be the youngest Confederate veteran. He was a courier on the staff of General lmboden, in 1863, when but ten years of age, aud_ at eleven held a commission as Major. President 'Harrison a tremendous pedestrian, and his favorite method of get tii)? a good tramp is to be idriveii out in the country in the Wnite Houa) mailvragon and have tbe driver set him down at a long dis tance from home so that ht? can walk back. Governor Jones, the head of the Choc taw Natioy, isr a pacific savpge clad in store clothes, waich look asifne hod donned them with the aid of a pitchfork. He woars a stubby gray mustaciie, a portentous watch cbam and a diamond pin nestling' in n sky blue cravat. He talks v?ry little) English. NEWSY GLEANINGS. New Yoi&c has 600 tea taster?, China couttins 330,000,000 souIf. Canada's debt has reached $i$35, 000,000. The population of London is now 4,421, 66J. In Palestine there are now 78,000 He brews. Train robberies are on the increase in' Russia. Illinois pays a bounty o? two cents for j sparrows. South Carolina planters report a short j crop of rice. There are fttudenw from fifteen foreign countries at Yale. Massachusetts has 837 abandoned or partially abandoned farms. Philadelphia's export Jrad-3 is growing fast toward mammoth proportion! Canada has decided to impose a duty on all Ii.sh imported from Newfoundland. Uncle Sam has curs in the postal service, and *3 is mails are carriod on 159,518 jnilet. On Blackweh's and Ward's islands, there ire ^_KX> insane paupers, sunt thither from New York City. Trade depression is so great in England that one nromineut steamship iiue will take several vlteels off the New "York route. President Harbison ha* ordered a public record to bo kept in all the Executive De partments lis to faithfoinasti and efficiency of employes. The Navy Department named the re .jently launched gunboat No. 0 ''Macliaie," in honor of the lirat naval battle of tLe devolution. Just now there is auunufcualiy large num ber of destitute Americans of bouh sexes in London, and few Amernjsu residents escaj>e the appeal for assistance.' Most of the Beiiamy colonists .at Kaweah, "Lower California, are now livuig on acorns and alfalfa greens. Trie days of this co operative experiment are numbered. Secretary Noble decided the L is Vegas '.and grant case in New Mexico in favor of ' the town of Lis Vega?, which will open to ; settlement from 5i>u,u0u to [uJ.OO'j acres. It lias already coat -ill,' MA) iu probing the affairs of the defunct Keystone Bant: of Pniladelphia, 1'eiiM., and all that is settled is that th'?re was a complete collapse of the bank. The riia.in crop of Ci'.iforr in will fall ?hort fully 2dJ,<HlO boxes tiiU year. Bnown's Iron Bitters cures Dy??i>fli>eia, Mala ria. Biliousness and (ientral Debit: ty. Give9 Strength, aids DigeKtion, lone* the nerves creates a;>p?rtite. The best tonie fur Nursing: Mothers, weak women and chihiree. Counterfeit Swedish money if made la I this country. oro? KXJQYS Both the method and results when Byrup of Figs is tak en ; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acta gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is only remedy of ita aind ever pro duced, pleasing to the taste ana ac ceptable to the stomach, prompt in Its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the mod healthy and agreeable substances, fts many excellent qualities com mend it to all and nave made it the moat popular remedy known. Svrup of Figs is for sale in 50o and $1 bottles by all leading drug gista Any reliable druggjst who may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. 8AN FRAkCibQO, C*L WW.ui. rr rotl ??? THE SMALLEST PILL IK THE WORLD ! TUTT'Sf TINY LIVER PILLS h*Te?Ilth?rirtQc?o!rh<> Iju-gi-r ont* j equally eflfccHre; par?ly v?f?table? Exact ifw iboirata this border. ?? 1 i ? Washington's Fine Scenerf. 1 "I have traveled pretty extensively over the world," said Mr. Dillman of Spokane, "and 2 suppose I shall be ac cused of indulging in braggadocio when I say there is more diversity of scenery in Washington than in any country I j have ever seeR. A complete circle o 4 .1400 miles can be, made around the State by rail. Do not novo nervously ia ecit when 1 tell jou that on this you tfftTfcee mountain scenery to which that of Switzerhnd is commonplace; landscapes tiner than Ihose in southern Italy; forests richer thin Turner's vi<*ws of old Brittany; aud brook scenes like those in the forest of Arden. To my mind Puget Sound is more beautiful than the Mediterranean Sen." ? Xevo York /W. UeaTotM Can't be Cared By local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There U only ona way to cure deaf aese, aud that is by conalitu tional remedies. Deafness is caused by an in flamed condition pf the muoou* lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube geta in- " flamed you have a rumbliut; bound or imper fect hearing, and when it i? entirely closed, deaf new is the result, and unices the inflam mation can bo taken out and this tube re stored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever, nine cases out or ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing bat an In famed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for ary Case of deafnes* (caused by catarrh) that wa cannot cutur by taking H all's Catarrh Cure, ?end for -circulars, free. ? _ F. i. Cutxrr <* Oo? Toledo, a Sold by Druguitots, 75c. t A xzw Tenneesee law prohibits Bandar work. . The Oufc- One Brer Printed. CAK YOU n.ND THR WOIID? These Is a 3 cinch display advertisement .In ' this paper, this 4 eek, wbi -h ban no two words aliKe except one word. The sarue is true of each new oneanpfaring each week, from The, Dr. Harter Medicine Co. This bouse place* a 'Crescent" on everything they make and pub lish. Look for it, send them the nsme or Uie word and they will return you book, bjcacti rUL L1THOO RAPES or SAMPLES rK?K. Thxbb are 579, (#4,(33 acres at pubtto hands still vacant. - i ' Irj our Back Ache*, or you are all worn out, pood for nothing, it in general debility. Brown's Iron liitturs w.ll cure you, make you Strong, cleanse your liver, and give a good ap petite?tones the nerves. t Co-opt hativi Alliance stores are to be Mtablished ja every county in Kansas. Da. Sw aji*8 PAUTi ucm Cure ft male iceaknem*; bis T-Tablets cure chroniccoiirtl;?atioii. Sam ples free. Dr. Swan, Eeaver Dam, Wis. Tbx man-of-war Tall&poon has bees ?oo lemned. FITS stopped free by Dr. K link's Ghkat Nkbvk IIutoekr. No ilts aft*# fim day s use. Marvelous cures. Treaii e 9nd $2 trial bottle tree. Dr. Kline. 981 ArrbSt.,Pbila ,Fa Eosuix flash la Germany la now nearly as rt^tly M beef, Itafflicted with M>re eyes use Hr. I>aac Thomp son's Eye-watur.bru^irlhtd sell ut 25o. per bottle "77iere$ isomcihing behind i&' That's wliat [ you think, perhaa% ! when you road that' the proprietors of Dr. Sage's L'atarrh Remeay.ofier $500 reward for au incurable' ease of Catarrh. liathcr unusual, yoi? think, to iind the makers of a modi* cine trying to prove that they be* lieve in h, ".There muaCJ>e some* thing back of it ! " i V. But it s a plain, square offer, nude' !n pood faith. ; The dnly thing theft back of it is tjlie Remedy. | It curee Catarrh i:i thj; Head. To its soothincr,' cleansing and healing properties, the worst cases yield, no matter hoi^ bad or of how long standing. It* has a record the! {joes back for 25 years. m It doesn't' simply relieve ? it perfectly and permanently curcs. With a EeltK edy thi.% thti proprietors cm make such c 1 offer anttj m can To be sure here's risk in it, bat it's ko very binall that they are ' willing^to tal o it i i fi You've " never hoard of anything like this offer ' " True enough* But then v<fvVe never 4hear4 of. anything likd iV^ Sagute ??5Sfc Etr-s j , CREAM BALM Irt WORTH ! $5 00 TO AN V WAN, Woman or Child trnflcriig froui CATARRH noi ? LIQUID or SNUFf. A partlclo in applet im<> each iv?JirU ?nd U i aX/lu. n Ice 5U cent* at DrtivtTMU or lfl( ***&_ kXY UKOrUJtHJfl 50 U arrcn Mr?eC *<**? OPIUM PHENV.lfttMM3 How About Your : \ rn of ail Sjkuvaf'.:; is a blood disease a Scrofula or Kings Evil is the most stubbc fections, Whether inheritecToi^the^wise, it and cannot be permanently cur&l by anyt ling but Si. Si, S. A GRATEFUL DAUGHTER. ; My Mother was sorely afTl" oto<1 with S:rofula for throe year* and ft ^during t iat time tlie glands on hor rirck l^ir-t open in t? openings were small and healed right up, InTTS^Jther break opeu anew, abou: evjry(tw ? weeks always cau2 ft _ prostration, bhe was go reduced -u s r n;tli, that toolcfr .1 nil c be generously used to keep her .tiro S'tc <onmdnce|i taking* Improved from the start, the f.r-t h-mic <;;iNe her an sppvtU? ntji .1.. it ? ... - - VI othen kI * e places. Tbtttaffht two v.oufd fill up Aid 'and oft* had to 8. B., and 7 the finished the fourth bottle ! ei ou k healed up. she Is now entire a! it*. IL J. lh'WKLL,| Mcdford. Hi i! -Til I I Books oo Wood auO Hkln dlwauM*, iree. THE sfVUFl SrixDlTlC CO- A' "German ! Syrup" ! " We are six in fam A Farmer at ily. We live in a place where we are Edom, Texas, ^ul)Jcct to vio]ent , Says: y ? Colds and Luug TrorMes. I have used German Syrup for six years | successfully for Sore Throat, Cough, i Cold, Hoarseness, Pains. in the Chest and Lungs, and spitting-up of Blood. I have tried many differ ent kinds of cough Symps in my time, but let me say to anyone want- < ingsuch a medicine? German Syrup is tlie best. That has been my ex perience. If you use it once, you will go back to it whenever you need it. It gives total relief and is a quiek cure. My advice to every one suffering with I,ung Troublesis ? T.y it. You will ^oon be con vinced. In all the families where your German Syrup is used we have no John trouble with the Frank||n Lungs at all. It is the medicine for this ?? Jones. country. G. G. GttE?Sv?tfk MuB'frAYoudburjjNJ. PFNRlftN K? Pension. No F??. ranowri tiB%r&?&v*riLuL ARCMTCathaveungiiek nULIl 1 0 waktbd u bell iu WORLD'S CHAMPION, th# i'ir-Ur.'l !l*od Corn Bh*l!* on Enrtb. Th* crily thit will' nuh or* ? 8 1 ,.-ok. Kb?:u 10 hnah *ic J- 1 hror. Tr;c? J3.JO. SVk*| I Vi tirrtnt#4. Th? Imrn r^ 4 '1*1 Mit, ?ji i it t !i?- Co? * t '.o r?"C'>M SV4 {??r month f<,r tend 2c *"t Attiantr *nrn |Vi *tf*H a a ?> II ??? IJ.lttrtiU Wrntifd 4>*?rT?rl>vr? M I J M mi W to I wui i?"iicyON KFAI. F.rt ifl w li In I TATF..HI a u?*vr plm. unl v> T(> ? ?"-cur*- ?f i .rn* f'?r our ???? ? *wi D lt*ars .f <??.?-? Ml.'TUAl- Itf* ? M SI J f \ F,'5T31KNT C MHAN V, 412 SJc (?V ? V ? olU-t An-uuc. Mmo?-*r*>tU, Mtuo. Ptao'fl Remedy fbr CaUrrh ia tb? to rw), and 'Tinwrt. / Sou l>y Onjp^lhis or bent by mm!. - Vju E- T Ilai^IUn^, Warren, Pa. a rx AsratsAixNi. -J I B1IY8 A-;ij:pr:R i-crua. ^ kdlrr-,1. we will Mil t'.il V UllbMr^nl k r* CI C C! TMi 01. TAFT IIOS. N. u(j ,ES?r.LSl L8,H.T.S* KbC 1 RDfTC ^ mo FS2 :zr: :*a pm??. fc-r rt? l?. awl M?4W-f?a l. few. larnwjF. Or Qnrt^-nan|r?i ir?*/. K.T S. >' P. 0! UflM F *T,J D VlRxit nmo, MMM MM ? lY!^ /tnwa?v<Mp, AritKmetliL K*orf-A??4, 4(3 II TnoKoro m.T T J*) wt rv.M Alii* ClreuUra (S Brrant'w Collcy, 4J? )uip Bti linfMo^ I.L WOODBURY1? FACIAL IOAF. k. of lb* *H?, ?*?!? ?.nd CmiBuIm. (?l??f iOy<Mnr>xi*ru?M?: U l>ru<tK??'? orb.r n*ji, " U?k- * e<l itt p hook ??? L mj<1 n<*ut7,Tuiu?.j^oo N ?*!-?' <mi* ?r.'l lltootf dl * nl for DthKigcrarM* titer Rurrw *?.!?. W.tff. IM? I ok a ad Rati*. v?r?. IM(?a ?f Sew, 6* Mrfluc i* lUir. ria?!r?. it . 1 1 nmrf JOM* It. ItOOBEt'KflL HirBiTOMOfflt tMTTIOTK, ISi W?m? V. Cit?. f nlltim feHbUolVt or Lv letter. Aieen wamtei la c4cfc plMfc FREE? TO MEN. Wb*0 you 1,-pC of tiu- with tMrblf prl<*'? jukI ounrk ryn|^l:f s uftteln moaad I irlll m) ?Mid (v-rifc'ili fftftj .> t>rcvr1j?Ooo that will actcffiff an<i cmrri.it- illdC l\ cvit* Lo*t lltwo*. WeaknoM. l^-kof ?>?-?.Tl??.,inent, IinpoU'racr, Vtrtar oel<\ etc., fn?a exo**^* -<r oilier cmimi. A K??r PMUire Itemed)- ? ?i?. Ti vurMi ?b?a ??errtbl?f I J. 1>. iv>x?. AlkUa, MUfc. Polish." Q * rofi, DEAUTYof saving Labor. Cleamuness. DURABIUTY&CH7.^NLSS.UHE00AII?n No Odor when Heated. You -don't want coofort. If ycu do?l wish io look well dretsed. H j#tr don't want tko best, then you don't want th<j lace Bnck lutfender. Your dealer ha? it if he i< alive. If hei?nlh?*houi<'n"t be jour dealer. Wf? w>tl matl a pair on receipt of $1.00. genuine without the atamp at above. ! Lacr Rick :-ti?p?n<*T Co., 67 l"rinc? : S. Y IF LITTLE LIVER PILLS ,j DO SOT OEIPE KOB KICUtt t'.r SICK IIBUW K, itrptirrd ???l ?now?. reiaoTt n.JLTjI.. ot> KJd> n*yWUw1drr. CooctMt k DMUm* ii<T7on? du om*r?. i:>ut?tuti i# k Ul*l bAILlr AltXOW. rert-t M*&A- ? ' ' ?^'???.c?nJlS5S r ???-. v. r. ier.e, ^ ^ J . . f * ?>*" ? i r.fir.Kii'r. Tit't. ( -i I r *>s>i<i rfctre. AI! ti??rlCr?*<*i.C" baltjr. i?Ua.p.Vo'j (" I3J p?i?U?.k OR. HARiER HEDICtNE CO., St. looU. M* IP COLDS, COUGHS. HOARSENESS, CONSUMPTION A NO ALL AFFECTION'S OF THE THKOAT AM) LINOS, TAYLOR'S CHEROKEE REMEDY OF SWEET GUM and MULLEIN* Is (he BEST KNOWN REMEDY. Ask jour drugtrist or merchant f?r it, and take no *ubstitnt4|, as nothing else can take its plaee. >v.xi; fejitf 'l SlsiUi __, L04J13VIU.E,