University of South Carolina Libraries
f HAP. SlSS 5SE?P. rr _ , ^ u\ Having sheept may be readily and Mttttsently done* for *a year, while the ?tee groxs, by taking a pinch of R^ae&sn red in the fingers and pulling P*6ugh the wooL The Prussian blao a?d common lampblack may be used to qewgcate different grades or classes. The use of oil or turpentine is to be avoided, as it cannot be removed from the wool and is a waste. ? American "Farmer. 3 (CVS?2 OF PAKTICLE3 15 SOILS, r- The size of the- particles of a soil N largely " determines its water-holding cap afcifcy, and thereby its fitness for cer tain crop*- M. Whitney, of the Mary- j bad station (B. '91), js iniitotigating farm soils in the weil-equipped iabonr tories of John* Hopkins University, un der the scperTiaion of the station, and aided by the United States Department of Agriculture. The accuracy and thoroughness of the investigation ia a credit to American science. Among f!;; other results, it waf found that no crop can Jbe successfully grown, unless highly fij manured or irrigated, on a joilhaving so ? few as 1,700,000,000 particles ia a A tieapoonful weighing a gr*m. flood l| TBancat truck is grOWn on a soil having $,868,000, 000 particles in a gram, To? l\' bacco soil contains 8,358,000,000 par 1|; ha* 10,358,000,000 ? ^^jtrtieiwTand Iime3tone grass land con T~ tains 24,653,000,000 particles ia one gram. ? American Agriculturist. FLAX HEAL tOB CALVES. At Iowa station^ex^ri meats hare gain progreis to determine the feei iogjjalue of ground flaxseed for young iaivas. A bull and heifer calf of botbj Holstein aud Shortaora breeds were* choaen,the two bull* beincj fed on whole and the two heifers on milk Bed after being set twelve hours, at much flaxseed a? they could ha ?inflate without scouring. These ex periments lasted through three months, tbt calve* being weighed every fifteen virC ? The results indicate: L That a ration ; of ski rat mUk and ground flaxseed com favorably with a new milk ration ywag calves? 2*. The skim milk and meal fed calY^gwere le*s in in their growtr by weaning were the whole milk calves? 3. A vafue of butter fat alone at $1.11 month on each-calf, was effected by . __jitituting the ground flaxseed? 4. < ?The cost of producing a pound of gain, ?etimating new milk at 87$ cents per *~jdred pounds, skim milk at 15 its per hundred pounds, grain 1. cent pooad,ba| $5 per ton (the latter two ^ led alike to both lots), and flaxseed Zi cents per pouod', %as 7.6 c$fet* per pouhd increase wiih the fresh milk ration, and only five cants with the skim oalk'jration. It seeoi?,therefore, more -eeosooKtal to feed calves^kim milk and flaxsetd th m with whole Ameri can Daily man. \ ' \ ] how io Dsaoief. _ Horns on my cattle are a thing of rae f writes Waldo F. Brown. Jurery &A I raise now is treated when a week r~ so old , and the boras are killed. f tf "^ck of caustic potash at the drag !'?- ?tore; throw the ealf cm its side, so as I 'to hold it easily, aad .wet the hair on a pj spot the size of a half dollar over the W embryo horn, aad then rub oa thgnj^^ thoroughly. When I bezMgflKME&| potash I d:d not 1 enough,, one horned ani nSWfSow 1 rub til! the h &Mt comes off, and the blood begins to i tart through the skin, aud it iMpresserthe horns ef 1 would not use any liquid [ preparation of potash, ? there is dap f ftr of its running down where it is net I'HWted, or being spilled by a sudden |1jO?WBent of th$ calf; I never tried the ' Ittquid but once, and came near putting poBtaneye. Be careful not to get the ?Melt potash on your fingers; wrap sev Karat thicknesses of paper or cloth around Th# dehorning of grown cattle is a ? process; takes but a few seconds, C9?r U properly fastened, and I' not think it is very painful, for the ;le begin to eat as soon as the horns d, and cows do not s'nsink in their , at all. I dehorned the first week one > Holsteitt that waj boss of the Vand fronrbeing kept in a small lot, become entir^r too hsndy with tier horns, opening gates and doors. - St ace her horns were taken of! she has become a moat proper and respectable cow; the smallest heifer m the herd makes her walk away from her feed, or drives her where she peases. The saw is much I better, 1 think, than mppe&; the latter lakeiy to crush the boae and prevent "fng so quickly. The only applica wejaade alter sawing was to fill the ' I with^gpoeat Soar, &nd although hot weather an i fly time, the i healed over in % few da.ys. ? York Tribune. ' i; ? i Wfc--_-fgy>wr?m cwumbrrs roa pickles. BrlPllft1 do not Tjpposc it would be pro KtaM? for the great majority of farmers Mfc^JSnder take to gTOw cucumbers for Imffiejo-e quantities ot these Kdles are a^Jmattr consumed, it is true; a very large area ?fJjPTSc immense lot of cu<H?ber3. Ml-Ht fat jarmers in afescality favorable for ?pPpoi* it night be wonh: iyhile to. Bpto t^triai, for the crop i^ a prodta wtk ojjflpsrhen property managed, yield '^Rjigaptameg ss nigh as fto per acre ^ The twtni K was meet favorable to sue- j Rw ?l p4qlt#|p?iriag a re nea.uess to a KpNipir'' wgfi4ffr facility W disposing of in a fresh state to a factory B|[fe!rodk vegetable; are picktari either la qreiaanar: or. ia defau;fc>??these, H*^Mp|N7 applittocgs for pickiia^Slf^ MfT** Aib, for suppfr?i?c thefofrHrfordis [feililljaarttetB. - A ci^febcr grower *?<*** ftpptyioaatry,, where ! a?ak* be obtained*: ^^Rpr c0&fc*QZ into rfoegur. KJWJ& ctrfura ion oA cucumbers for ' ?P??lr- *ery sinipJe. A ware, rich, mm*? kM? ia the best soiLf<it should be ragiiffri^mrirt and plowed deeply, ia or ii the growth so as to secure || ftij^flMuisite tenderness sad succulence, I# 4pft aitow the roots to penetrate the soil g||pf *' oaasiderahie depth. The rariety pickling is the Green ,^Prto0#c. "the time tor sowing thg> seed d&out the middle of July. .* lof planting, the ground ^aouid be v; Milked out four feet each way, a deep :f Awfow berng m^ie so as to leave room gPfrt^goocfr sho^afuJof rich compost at PflW?^Ksertion. r&is should be worked III soa^t; or **oe aQ^ vfie ground fefeked. T Five or air seeds are enougti I- for each itli. whfca will requite between jj- ffitlfc andbf t<wo pounds per acre. When I "* **** started a ad all danger It **|Bcta is past, they should be | ' '<*rt *? t?ree^J*^a,^iaata the | I ?!V~;f Ml* i ii Ul cd cocmnber grower ? | X*yjnnec<j< that when the seed is sown I t&ZS"* ^WS?QS ?f three or four I pounds of Pemrian guaao per <y?fca*rtd be apptiea, as tfcsu fertilizer i allias ^^Tean especia^y good effect hundred thousand cucumbers to tht acr* ?were o fcuiaed, nUeryii double tbsiv yield, Aj the crop wis sold for H.50 per fefl?i the expewfiture of $15 added nearly $200 to the priee re ceif6d per acre. The cultivation required ia to keep the coil loose bj feeqoaat atirang until the ?ices cover the' ground. The mala vines i should be pinched at the ends to keep | ' them within bouads sad encourage the growth of lateral breaches, which a-e the most prolific of fruit, aa they bear ch^flj pistillate blossoms, while those of the ifc^in breaches are mostly stamenate or barren flowers Th* fruit should b? gathere^Fevery nlornin?*?i soon t* It as* re<tched the proper size, from two to three inches in length. , The pf^itti?petuie3 of the cucumber srs lice, whi<^ prey upon the teares,?ncl the striped beetfe ani its larra. Tne former may be dealt with by picking of the first infeatei lesres, by which the (-'rapid spread of the pest may be pre venjjed. The striped beetle should be treated with s doatm? of finely groad$ gypsam; its lams, a small,- sleaier, white worm, which gnaws into the roots, may be siKcessfully oombetted b f pour ing about the roots of 9?e plant a mix ture of one gill of kepatse oil with a solution of oae pound of common yellow soap in one gaBo* of hot wstar, (he whole being shaken into aa eauinoa. -This has been found aa effectual remedy ? New York Mail aad Express. ? 7 ARM A5D SARD Elf TfOTXS. By the way, how clean do you keep your cows' udders? | 7 The ftrmer or dairyman who allows ...weeds to taint his pasture* is not a suc If fowls hare a large range now, the grain feed may be cut to once a day. Let them hustle for the rest they hare. If the milk can is old and corroded with rust, bay a new ode for the milk, use the rusty one to bring whey from the factory. ^ Keep your chickens growing from the shell, and they will be ready for the table or market any time after ten or twelve wee'ts of age. The good layers are active and gen erally on the move and. scratching aoout ? are the first bird* out in to* morning and the last to roost at night. ^ Doea it cost more to raise 1000 pounds of flesh in the form of poultry than it does toraise 1030 p raais in toe form of beef? Which sells foe/the most! The agricultural experiment stations ^and dairy schools ouiht, in each State, to note the appearamse and spread of weeds that cause an u^p'.seeint flavor m milk. The wet season makes very "slushy grass. The cowj, the milk and the bat ter will be better if some grain is fed. Bran is better than com meal for fcct weather feed. > The Malta bees are noted for the purity and delicious flavor of their honey. - They extract moat of it from sulla, or clover, of sbisfejtiMBB is an ex tensive crop. Do not feed ftot of lockwcl* till they become "old roosters," than sell on the general market. It ia hard to make them para aa "spring chicken* even if the dealer cuts thespers off. Clover is valuable hi the wiafer feel ing of hogs as well as for wtmmt pw? tare. 8towJ away a little that is eat young and hicety .cnreJ, sod feea it to Jiogs that you carry over. euialjaad have bad dispositions treatment when they arecott*. ness is a first requisite in tn&sfah- " . educating the cott for future ? ' The dairyman who feeds only products, corn fodder *nd corn meal, for instance, doss not always practice econ omy. Better vary this one-sided ration by exchanging some corn for Unseed meal. % A fall and strong stock of bees at swarming time contains about 30,000 workers and c one prolific queen, the mother of the whole colony; also 600 to 800 dronea are about the number to be tolerated. The best profit to the stock breeder always comes In breeding for special purpose animals. Meet your purpose, the dairy, beef, mutton or wool, the horse for the road or the saddle, and than stick to it. Apple growers can take a profitable step forward this year by abandoning the time-honos^d barrel and packing their finest fruit in small boxes or crates. The market js quite ready for this departure, and such packages would undoubtedly prove popular. Freaks of Hdttti Tlsttm. "I do not auppose this world looks alike to any two persons," said Thomas McHecry at the Southern. UA dozen of as were looking at tb$ moon the other night. To one it appeared the tfoe of a five cent piece, to another much larger than a cart wheel. To one it appeared *cil -rounded globe, and to another a flat circui^r piece of brass. I noticed this diversity of haman vision once is Galveston, Texas. I saw a mas named O'Dell shoot a fellow gambler named Qqinian to death. He fired four shots from a large revolver. At the trial one man testified that Quinlan had a knife in his hand at the time of the shooting. A nother thought it was a cane, while a third expressed the opinion that it was a billiard cue. I was standing facing him when be was shot, and would make oath that his hands were open ami con fined nothing. Those who testified vera disinterested spectators, and toH ? the stand what they honest Ij though hej saw. The shooting began in a sa <w>n. -r Quinlan ran out, followed by '>#eH, who kept shooting. Some J&ttght one shot was fired in the saloon, -eWBwS; thought three, yet si* were look ing right at the two mea. Ton often hear peojslesaj that what they see they know;' Irot they don't. . They have no durance l&U they saw right. A maa s a ho implicitly believes his eyes is liable fall into grievow error.1*-? St. Louis UN>fce- Democrat. . * * Advantage mt "AuMrkaa lufrtry.* ^ A correspondent writes to tbf New York Sun as follow#: ilWkt advan tage is it. to tbe Inman Line to bare American registry to steamships City of New York and City of Paris! ; I can readily see that oar advantage wt8 be to , have two ships in the naval reserve, but why they should desire it postal me." Replying to ti* shore, the Am says: **A majority of the stock ol the Inman aaxl International 5>tea<#ahip Company it !>wned in this country ; hot under our k-\*s, as the ships were not built here they wmfd not fly the American Sag. The ships therefore carried the British Sag, and were liable to be seized by die British Government in case it want to war with any other country, to be need as transports. Now tbe ship? having been transferred to due country, under the new act, Great Britain ha* no control t over them, amir there ia much leas dangwr of the company's losing them at the deman '* f Wr>roen were employed in prman? offices aa long afo, st ia said, sa 1530. , BOW CHINA IS GOVBRNEtt ? 1 ^ TTB gTJt A^JGEST SY3TEHt OS TKM , 'ACS or THE Tbe~Emperor and Bli Chief Uud? ins? Viceroys are Responsible lot Damages by Floods and Fire. THE system of government by which the Empire of Chins it mac aged it probably the strang est the4ace of "bar j?lobe. The esse and uniformity with which this population of 400,000,000 of human be ingtis governed under the las and peco Kar laws of the empire i?, indeed, almost a phenomena. It a form is that of an absolute monarchy, but the absolutism is so generally divided among the vnri oua provinces that it may probably be best termed a ani ?n of absolute Govern, ments. The Emperor is, of course, tbe su preme head of all, and is supposed to receive bis instructions as to the^n&na^e meat of tbe rut territory committed tj kit charge by decrees from heaven. He h considered by his subject* as being second only to the Almighty Go 1, and to be the connecting link between them selves and tbe Almighty. To remove from the Emperor^some.of the burdens of Government, he if assisted by a Cabinet, composed of the four chij^ Mandarins of the Empire. Under the& are placed six boards, which have cog nisance of alt the smaller details which, though too weighty for tbe Provincial i Governments to handle, are still not suf ficiently important to brin ; to tbe atten tion of his Majesty. Distinct from these boards ys another, known as the Board of Censor*, and whose duty it is to ascer tain Md keep informed of all intrigues and ^ plots which may be concocted to weaken the lawful authority of the Cen tral'' Government. Members of this board- are dispetched to all parte of the Empire to keep informed upon all points ?which might tend to bring about opposi "iSonio the Emperor. They also care | folly spy out everything connected with the private and public character of all officials upon whom suspicion may rest. These members have power to arrest 8nd bring to trial any one whose conduct may be supposed to nee 3 in venation, and very frequently and unexpectedly do these censors perform thef^dntiet. This board is probably one of fee most effici cient of the various departmeits of the Empire, aod does more than any other branch of the Government in maintaining it against the powerful coalitions which are being constantly formed to overthrow the present Tartar dynasty. The Emperor chooses his own sue ewof," whether the person chosen may be a member of the rofai family or not*, yet the great desire ac Emperor hts to ?tee hit own dynasty perpetuated usually mates him choose a sou, whenever such it anikHle. Toe people of Chitu are taught from fatfattcy to regard the Em peror at the ton or representative of ?Heaven, tad the Empress as the repres entafefe of the earth. One of the chief duties of the Empress is on certain days of ifasjpear to worship the tutelary dsity of the silkworms. 8he has also to care fofly inspect tnd approve of all thf silk fabrics which the ladies of the imperial harem^etve for the garments of the vartovs State idols. Besides the Em press, the Emperor has eight other wive3 who htve the rank and title cf Queens. The selection of an E npress cr Queen depends solely on the personal attractions of the ladies in question, and without any reference whatever to their connec tions and family reputation. To choose them, upon the accession to the throne of ^Bj|||P^^^r^s^^MnPekin, ^fighters of banner men are iovited^SSF' K parts of the empire. The lady de clared the belle of this gathering is chosen as Empress, and the eight next chosen are made Queeng. The empire it dirided into eighteen provinces, each of which is preside! over By^ yiceroy and staff of assistant Mandarins, who are in most respeets as independent of the Central Government in the administration of the provincial affair: as though they were conducting an entirely disbnet Sfctte. E*ch to<vn an 1 village also hts its own officials, who it turd are more than semi -independent of the provincial authorities. 'Unquestion ably the system by w'aicii China is ruled l* the most lax of any in the world, an1 | yet this empire has extsted formor^ than j forty centuries, while other Nation? with jnore ideal forms of government have passed and continue to ps&3 out of ex- . istence as time rolls on. China, how erer, seem* as stable to-day as she ere; was. S? ? The Viceroys and other high officials are appointed by the E nperor, and coi*. . stitute his chief hold upon the virions- ' provinces of. the empire. They are not allowed to hold office over toe provinces of which they are natives, but are in variably appointed to rule over those parts moat distantly remove 1 from the early home of the Viceroy. Nor are they allowed to contract marriages in the provinces over which Ihey have been ap pointed to rule. This is done to pre clude all possibility of their acquiring too much local and family influeuca over their provinces. To further guard against this, a Viceroy is removed to an other post every three years. The salaries attached to all Chinese Governmental officers are very small. and this- k the direct cause of much of the ?caodaloos and irregular proceedings so prevalent in Chinese affairi. Thus the Mandarins of China, though obtaining the softlleftt possible amount of pay rrom the public treasury, are enabled by tho accumulated gains of fraud, -avai^cs and extortion to retire from office a* men of wealth and substance. SeWmn does a Chmese official care to spend more than a single term of three years- in office, for bj that time he has gamei a fortune which will reader him forever the envy d? his Jess fortunate countrymen. Toe Mandarins have been for a^es the very worst ^urse o? the empire. B? their , misrule a?d oppression they have thrown the ?wintry, with its minions of in . dmliiifHie people, into that deplorable anarchy* confusion and misery for which.; it is conspicuous a n ?. i , i ts Nations of ? the earth. The duties which ? Viceroy w ex pected to perform are r&tj (hficaJt He if held as directly responsible to the Em peror, who in turn is responsible to the s *a? for the general peace aai prosperity of the province. When a<iy serious re volt breaks ^ont among the secret so- ] cietiee, or s <tobd or famine occurs, to* Viceroy Is regarded as the subject for rpeniahsaeat, and loses his office an i soaaetia&es his bead for aot having prd vseted the disaster. Particularly is tut; ^cetpyahip of the Province of the Yel low River an untenable one. This river jesobjaaa to periodic overflows, and each raM large tracta of land are submerged, doing great damage to the people and Upon each such occasion the mandarine in charge are held ace wintable wsth th^ir !rw to f?ir not haT.Bir jM-5.ren-- I r V; ? v,..j , v __ , * ? , which, wHh their means, is utterly lm possible to accomplish. ?> - The officials of. the Chinese Empire | are divided into nine different grades or j classes, distinguishable fn n oae aa:>tier by the button worn ?>n r;ie a-. A :mn darin of the first class, ot ai^,.w ??'. i ol .ran..*, wears upon toe. ap^x o: n.s.uu ft dark red coral button; of the second class, ft light red bpft|ps; of the third class, ft light blue Wtton; of the fourth class, ft dark blue button ; of the fifth class, ft crptftl button; of the sixth class, a mother-of-pearl button; of the sevanih class, ft gold button; of the eighth otass, ft smaller gold button, and of th* aintlk class, ft silver button. Be tides the button, they may also wear s peacock's feather, which is attached to the base of the ball on the apex of the bat and dope downward orer the back:. The outer garment of the officials is * long, loose-fitting, bine silk robe, ric'fly 3 ?mbtoidered with threads o( -rold ; it reaches to the ankles and is bouni around the waist by a batt. The slIevM are wide and long, completely covering the hands. When engaged in ordinary work the sleeves t!r? always folded back I over the hands, bat whenever an official appears in the presence of his Majesty the lon^ sleeves are required to b-i stretched over the hands. This, of course, renders the official more or less helpless. This custom is of very ancient ' origin, an<? was adopted to preclude any possibility of an attempt upon the life of the Emperor by those whose duties call them ( cc isionally into his presence.? New -York Times. I SELECT SIFTING9. Almanacs for 1893 irt oat already. It costs about $17 a day to keep an elephant. A case is reported of a somnambulist who walked fifteen miles in his sleep. Russia exports every year more than a million pounds of earner, which . is pre pared from the roe <$' the sturgeon. * At San Jacinto, in Sen Diego County, California, they raitt alfalfa six feet three inches high in six weeks, by irrigation. Violinmakers , priie above all other kinds of wood thatjwhlch they extract from the seafos# timbers of old houses. A big raft on the Jogg&s pattern, containing 3,500, 000 feet of timber, wks successfully launched at Fort Brag A' Ca! ./ ^ : ? Unless an Austrian gains the consent of his 4ife, he cannot get a passport to journey beyond the frontier of his own country. Several years ago there was a law in Poland which compelled every slanderer to walk on all fours through the streets of the town. ' The Italians invented the term influ enza in the Seventeenth Century, and attributed the disease to the influence of certain planets. A fine has recency been imposed upon an English woman who permitted her two dogs to draw her baby carriage on the public highway. Picardy, Prance, claims the honor oi being the place where the first plate glass was made. The process was discovered by accident in 1688. y The last execution for forgery in Eng land took $lace at the Old Bailey on December 31, 1892. The name of the convict -was Thomas M*yii*rd. . v Oscar Wilde is said to be deep in the development of a new flower, a golden veined tujip, which he declares to be "a triumph of classic horticulture." The first monument ever erected to the memory of the Union soldiers who fell in the Civil War is that in the cemetery on Somerville avenue, in Somerville, Maw. ? A very convenient mucilage can be madeifr onion juice. Oa beiDg billed a sftort time it will yield, on being pressed, Quite a large quantity of adhesive fluid. ? The former record for fast typewriting has been broken Jfiss Catharine V. ~ 8yracuse?rN.Y., who can write ,182 perrec^HSLio ?M miBOte' 8" * has been operating A man living in New EaglaudTwh^ff five feet seven inches in height, has ? beard six feet two inches in length, or eight inches longer than himself. Toe beard began to grow twelve years ago. A nugget of gold weighing forty -five ounces, almost pure, and having, accord ing to the assay, a money value of $345, was exhihited in Leadville a few days ago. It was taken from the Gordon mine. One hundred and fifty of the songs and ballads of Burns are ftoon to be pub lished in Czech by the editor of a Prague newspaper. In every instance the Bo hemian translator has preserved the metrical form of the original, a feat of apparently great skill. ?'There is nothing so fatal to crawfish as a thunder storm, 11 said a Washington fishdealer. " When I make a shipment of tiftm to any place at a distance I al ways make sure that the weather prom 1wa well. On more than one occasion I have had entire consignments killed on a joarney by a small electrical disturb ance." An old restaurant bill of fare, printed in Richmond, Va., in January, 1861, gives the following war-time prices in Confederate money: "Soup, $1.50; chicken $3.50; roast beef, $3.00; ham and eggs, $3.00; raw oyaterf, $2.00; coffee, $2.00 ; bread and butter, $1.50; a bottle of ale, $12.00; and a cigar, $2 00.w The natives of Gibraltar, and also -the Moors across the striit, hare a tradition that somewfaiere on the rock there exists a cavern whence a subterranean passage leads under the strait to the mountains on the other side. The existence of the passage, they say, is known to the mon keys, who regularly use it in passing from one continent to the other. . A Strange Disease. .James Mullen, of Louisville, Ky., bled to death the other day, as the result, of a strange malady which has for months baffled the skill of the physicians. His blood lost all its coagulati7e properties and had taken on the appearance and consistence of fresh milk. The corpus cles of the blood had become perfectly white. 4 From a small scratch or cut the blood flowed with such rapidity that on several occasions it was scarcely able be stopped before causing death, moraing one o( ! ihe uuUutof the .tpManSt under the toogra oecatne bi The poin t where tiie blood came was so small that no danger was appre headed at all. All efforts, however, to ? stop the flow were futile. Every remedy was resorted to, but to no avail, and in little lest than as hour Mr. Mullen bled to death." ?-New Orleans Picayune. A |ii?h Moa'ttain Railway. Tbe Most recently completed high mountaivrailway in Switzerland is that up the Rsthborn, 7250 feet higfc, from lake and town of Brienz, not far from Interlakea. The road was completed so that a locomotive reached the summit October 31, and will be opened the com ing season. Tbe Rothhorn will com mand a magnificent view of the Jnngfrau ?and tbe other mountains south and ftrath east of Inter taken. Tbe material th*fegh | which tbe eleven tunnels of this line are excavated consist e 1 of debris which bad slipped down tbe iv i a tain, and wbich seerne4 disposed to ao on sliding when r disturbed. Subterranean springs also made tbe work difficult, and in places new beds bad to be made for mountain | ? Scientific American. o THE BROOXL" DIVINE'S SUN DAT {'SERMON. s } Txxt : "Fair 'as the moon. cUar -i ?&? splendor of the morninp~-in <SnWb<ito to ?e richness. of HauJL ,-, -*37-^ .T sain tn .our aay in regard to i& If one stock. bokisrT>ecome? a cheat, dosstkt dsstouj the whoJeeorapany? If one soldier fa* a oo ward, does that condemn the whole eftay? And yet tfam ?*? maity- in feb day to unphllue* phw, so illogical 90 dishonest an as to dspoanoe th# entice church cans? thereto* here and there hi longing to it < L ? - *r? t^loaB say that the church <* Qod is not up to thespirit it tfaa day in whfch its lira; Dnt I have to tell yod that notwithstanding all the swift wbeele and the flying shuttles and tfaa lightning communis cations, tha world has never vwlKbeeo able to kesp up with the church. As high m God is above man, so high is the chorcn of God ?higher than all human institutions. From her aunp the best discoveries of the world hare been lighted. The hast of our inventors hare believed in toe Christian religion? the Pultons, the Morses, the Whitoeys, tfaa Perry* and the Livingstones. She has owrffcd tfce ibest of the telescopes and Leyden jars, . **?mu infidelity and atheism have gone j^eeffltmgthe most startling dis coveritortoat^ereabout to be developed the* earth, and the air, end the sea have made <mick and magnificent rehouses toCbristain philoeopher?. v i . > Tha world will not be up to tha Church of Christ until the day when aH marchao dise has become honest merchandise, and all governments have become free governments, and all nations evangelised nations, and the last deaf ear of spn-itnal death shall be broken open by the million voiced shout of nations born in aday. Use church that tfeboohadnezsar tried to burn in the furnace, and Darius to tear to pieoss with tfaa lions, and Lord Claver house to out with the sword, has gone on, wading tfaa floods and enduring the fire, until the deep est barbarism, and the fiercest cruelties, and I the blackest superstition* have been compelled to look to the east, crying, "Who is ehe that looketh forth , as the moratog, ^air as the moon, clear astoe sua and ram ble as an army with banners*' \ Yet there are people who are ashamed to otfohg to the church of Christ and if \vou ask wem whether they are insooh associa tions they s?y, "Yes, I sometimes attend the church," instead of realising the fact that there is no honor compared With the honor of being a member of the church of Go& I look beck with Joy to the most honored moment of my life, when in the Old country meeting house the minister of Christ announced my name as a follow#' Of the Lord. /' You who are floating about in toe world, seeking for better associations, why do von not jcdn-yourself to some of the churcaes? j An old sea oaptain was riding in the can toward Philadelphia, and a young man sit, down beside him. He said, 'Young man, n where are you going?' "I am going toPhila dejphia to live," replied toe young man..: "Have you letters of introductionr asked tfae old captain. "Y?e," said the yonnfinen, and he pulled some of them out. "Weil," said the eld sea captain, "Haven't yon a ;i| church certificate?" "Oh, yea," replied fee j young man; '?! didn't snppoee you would want to look at that." "Yes," said toe sea captain, "I want to see that. As soon as you ? ~ to Philadelphia present it to some Chris 1 church. 1 sim an old sailor, and I have been up end dqwn in the world, and it's my rule as soon e*a get into port to fasten' my ship fore and aft to the wharf, although it may cost a little wharfage, rather than nave my ship out in the stream floating hiths^ and thither with the tide." Oh, men and women, by the tides ot friv olity and worldliness swept this way and swept that way, seeking for associations and for satisfactions f of the immortal soul, come into the church of Jesus Christ Law fast ; to her. She is the pillar and the ground of truth. I propose to speak of the threefold glory of the church as it is described in toe text: First ? ''Fair as the moon." 6K>i, who has -determined that everything afraH be beautiful in its season, has not left the night without charm. The moon rules the night The rtars are only set as gems fin her tiara. Sometimes, before the sun has gone dowp. th# moon mounts her Ifcrona, but it is aftn^ that .sbe sways her undisputed [er island and continent, river a?d? ie plainest maple i?*ves become from shore to shore Jooft like rors, and the ocean, under her glanoeu witH great tides come up panting upon the baaoh, mingling, as it were, foam and fire. Under the witchery of the moon ttoe awful steepe lose their ruggeineas and the chasm* their terror. The poor man blessa* God jfor throwing so cheap a light through the broken window pafie of his cabifc, and to the sic k it seems like a iight?ro;u the other shore that bounds this great deep of human pain and woe. If the $iiu be like a song, fuH and krad and poured forth froai brazeu instruments that fill heaven and earth with bannony, the moon is plaintive and sod, standing be neath the throne of (rod, sending up her soft-, sweet voice of praise, while the stars list-m and the sea ! No mother ever more lovingly watched a sink cradle than this pale watcher of the sky bends .over the weary, heartsick, slumbering earth, singing to it a silvery music, while it is rocked in the cradle of the sphere*. No1**, say? my text. "Who is she. fair as the moon5" Our answer is the church. Like the moon, she is a borrowed light . She Sthers np the glory of a Saviour's suffer js, a Saviour's death, a Saviour's resurrec tion, a Saviour's ascansion, and pours that light on palace and dunjeon^Bn squalid heathenism and elaborate skepticism, on widow's tears and martyr's robe of flame, on weeping penitence and loud mouthel scorn. She is the only institution to-day that give* any light to our world. Into her por tals the poor come and get the sympathy of a once pillowless Christ, th e bereaved come and tee the bottle in which God saves all our tears, and the captives oome. and on the sharp corners of her altars dash off their chains, and the thirsty come a&d put their cup under the. 41 Rock of Ages,!* which pours forth from its smitten side living water, sparkling water, crystalline water from under the throne of Goi and the Lamb. Blessed the bell that calls her worshipers to prayer. Bleesel th9 water in which her members are baptize!. Blessed be the wine that glows in her sacramental cups. Blessed the songs on which her devotions travel up and the angels o? God travel down. As the moon goes through the midst of the rearing storm clouds unflushed and un harmed, and comes out calm and beentifu! n mi) TTPurr jioq, 3TJ COT CBUrCII OI \SO~l OU gon?JtJ?rough all the storms of this world's persecut4on and come out uninjured, no worse for the fact that Robespierre cursed it, and Voltaire caricatured it, and Tom Paine sneered at it, and all the forces of darkness have bombarded it. Not like some baleful comet shooting across the skr, scattering terror and dis-nay among the nations, but above th? long howling nigh* of the world's wretchedness the Christian church has made h?r mild way, ?'tf'air as the moon. ' * I take ^ step f urther in my subject? "Clear as the sun.*1 After a season of storm or fog, bow you are thrilled when the sun comes out at noonday*'" The mists travel np httt above hill, moan tain above mountain, unfcii 8*y tost. The forests are full "?ne; hon*T m***? oo%k pounaing tne oars, tie chatter of the squirrel on the rail, the call of <a hawk oat of d clear sky "mW yon J ttaakfiritf or rlM) sunshine whidh makes all tfcewond so busy and sp gtod< The save wn which in tiie morning kindled confla grations among the caatles of cloud scoops dowa to paint the lily white and tbe butter cup yellow and the forgetmeoot blue. what can resist, the sun? Light for voy ager on the deep. light for shepherds sward ing tbe flocks afield, .'ijht for ode poor who have no lamps to burn, lifr'it for *n?? 'k> a a cast and the wee*-- io,- acatng eyes and burning ; ran .T ;J consuming captive, fight for th? ?+ ? ?th brow of childhood aad tbe dirn'MskfT: :.i the octogenarian, light for tbe queen's coronet and sewing girPs needle. , "Let there be light.*' ; . * ?Now, says tot text, ^Who is she that looketh forth clear as tie sun?" Our answer is, the church. You have beeu going along a road before daybreafc, and on one tiae yon thought you saw a lion, and on the other side you thought you saw a goblin of the darkness, but when the san came out you found these were harmless apparitions. And it is the great mission of the charch of Jesus Christ to came forth "dear as the t&n." to illumine all earthl v cLar knees to mx yarn, ? n?r as pa?Die, an mystery, ana to make tbe world radiant in its brightness, and that which yea thought was an aroused Hon is found out to be a Numbering lamb; and the sepulchral gates of your dead tarn out to be the opening gates of heaven;, and that which you suppose I was a flaming sword to keep you out of paradise Is an angel otbghtto hecxoayou ; Tb? on altars will cast their 1 erlow niTrw darkest nafhwav anr? cheer T^u wouVJ leap tad thettghtatMr would imam. ^Tba okarch of Godwfflytf mm to (ill mM tail fat that day aH :vk atnMa ? cTSTfrtd wffl be saorad 0*5553 ftth tMitor ot C?lfirTt ?d dl tfcam*aflowVrfhemo?*o(God Ite tool Biloaa^ and aHlakat bs ndkst with Qo?p? niiiaiatttMks (knniM ?* <bd> of tha sea be crowntd wllb apaal 7V** viston Hke PatoMs, and all cMtt^ataarad as Jeraealem, and all tardaat luiariaut at *na woo wauang tit the oool 0# the day. Then the chorals of g*o> wffl drown out aH the anthems of earth. Tim the throne ef Christ wifi overtop all earthly authority. Thsn the ctownof Jesus wifi Kn destroyed. Tbt AO thedarkmmsof sin, *11 tb* darknesses of troohle, all the ._ of earthly mystery hieW themselves *0 t heirderu, ''cS.rrSf STnSrS the sun!" . Porther, "rerrihle as an army -with baa ggnsssK'sgsss Wit. of the terror that win strike ththsart* jrfti^ enemies 0 f God when the efctrrch st last marches on like "en anaiy with -ban* neraw Yoa know there is nothing that atdtet ?okMert* psthnsias? ?o vmuh ?iwnH w Many a rtian al most dead, catching a glitapsa of the national ensign, has sprung to his fee* an d started again into th* battle. Now, ay friend*, I don't *pnt yim to think of 1m church of J ecus Ch&*t as a defeated institu tion, M the victim of inftdei sarcasm? eotne* ; thing to be kicked and cuffed aud tranipled on through all the ages of the world. 11 it ?an army with banners." lt has an in Mrfhtion and colors snob as never stirred tbt hearts of an earthly soldiery. We have oar banner of reornlt, and oti it ie inscribed, "Who is on the Lord's side!" Our banner of deOanoe, and. on it i? in scribed, 'The gates of heU shall not prevail against us!" Oar banner of triumph, and on it is inscribed. "Victory through oar Lord Jesus Cbrielf and we mean to plant that banner 00 every hilltop and ware It at thegatg of hearen. : to load as we qeed not fear. I will not underrate the enemy. They are a tremendous ho#i They come on with aoatset strategy- Their weapons by all the iafcah* itents of darkness hare been forged in fur naces of everlasting fire. We oontand aot with fl^stntad blood; bat with nrinrlnMitias , and powers and spiritual wickedflms i?i high places; bat if Gfod be tnh us who can bt against tu ) Come on, ye tH^s of die Lord! Falltoto linet Close ap the ranks! On, throtifh horning sands and orer frown mountain tope, until the wholt earth sur render* to God i He made it; Ha Hdesmsl it; Ha shall have it. They shall aot bt trampled with boofs, they aha# aot bt cat with sabers, they shall not be urushsl with wheels, they shall not bt ctoven with, battle axes, but the marching, and the onset, and the victory will be none rae less decisive for that. A 1 s: With Cfcnst to lead us, and heaven to look down upon us, and angels to guard us, aod martyr spirits to bend from their throat and the voice of God to bid us forward iato the combat, our anemic* shall fly like chaff Vin the whirlwind, Jand all the towers of beayen ring because tin day is ours. I di vWt this army with banners iato two wings ?the American wing and the Buroptaa wing. Ihe American wing will march on across the wilds of the west, over the table land?, and come to the ooean, no mora stopped by the Pacific than the Ivaelitai were stopped by the flbd sea, marching oa until the remaining walls of China wflf foil before this army with banners, and oold Si beria will be turned rto the warm heart of Christ, and over' lofty Himalayan peaks shall go this army with banners until it halts at Palestine. The European wing will march oat to meet it, and Spanish superstition shall be overcome, and French mftdehty shall ha ooaqnered, and over the Alps, with mere than Hannibal's coavage, shall march that army with banners and up through the mows of Russia, vaster in multitude than the hosts thac followed Napoleon iato the conflict And Hungary ana Poland, by the blood of their patriot* and by the blood of Christ, shall at last be free. And ifiilna into Asia the law shall again btproolafaaoa on ttinai, and Christ in the persoa of His ministers will again preach on Ojivet and pray in Gethsemane and exhibit His love on Calvary. And then the army will halt in front of the other wing, the twata having conquered all the earth for Goi. - When the Prussian army cans* back from their war they were received ta 1806 at the gates of Berlin, and a choir stood abort the gates, and as the first regiment advanced and came to the gates the choir, in mtMic, them what rUfht they had to enter of thefr con flicts and victories. Then they marched fas. and all the city vras full of gladneM ana triumph But oh ! the great joy when the army with banders shall come up to the gates of our King! It will be choir to choir, music to music, hosanna to hoeanna, halleluiah to halleluiah, lift up vour heads, ye ^/er lasting gates, and let them come in. There will be spread the banquet of etern&J victory, and the uu fallen ones of heaveu wtfl sit at it, and all the ransomed of earth will come in and oele brate the jubiles with unfading garlands on their brovrs telling of earthly conquests. , All the walls of that oelestifcl mansion will be a-gHtter with shields won in victorious battle and adornei with the banners of God that were carried in front of the host. Harp shall tell to harp the heroism in which the oonquerors won their palm, and the church that day will sit queen at the banquet. Her wanderings over, her victories gained, Christ shall rise ud to introduce her to at! the nations of heaven, and as she pulls aside her veil and looks up into the fao* of her Lord the King, Christ shall exclaim, "This is she that looketb forth &*> the morning, fair as the moon, clear as the sun anl terrible as an army with banners T' . THE LABOR WORLD. Thzrt are 1,803,406 domestic eervanti in England. The lumber manufacturers in the South ee* better times ahead. Twenty thousand men are wanted in Kan?t.8 to harvest wheat. England employs 5600 women and girls In an1 about ita coal mines. Algex, Mich., has 200 Indians picking *300 bushels of huckleberries daily. j 0:enese control almost the entire shoe m?.v itg business in California. Macros is la* common among miners th?n any other class of people. ! AOZSkhave been advanced to the Fall H v r i Maite.) cotton mill people. I ^ urHEEJf Minnesota needs help in the herv-fst field; also, North Dakota. n the Italian silk trade there are 117,000 : wnrcen employed, and but 17,700 men. FcRtheflrrt time there will be but one Labor Day parade in Chicago this year. W aiters employed on the Iron Pier. ! Rociaway Beach, N. Y., have been compiled ; to sb*ve off their mustaches. In* mill in Berlin. Germany, where shod > dv cloths and yarns are made, the earnings ? oi 1 4O0 hands averages 62 cents the year j thro?i?b. w atkik James, the aged $fcpfath?r o* Ex .orer Henry M. Stanley, is one of the strikers at Homestead, Peon. Stanley's mother is dead. 7 TatBB is great activity in foundries; wagon and carriage works, too! works, cotton mills la the Sooth, saw mills, and in establish ment! turning out material for the inside finishing of houses. _ It is asserted that the average earning* of trainmen on one of the Texas railways for I tile month of Hay la?t were as follows: En gineers, $275; firemen, 1160; freight con ductor e, 9240; brakemen. $170. I re drouth is Mexico is driving laborers j aero** the border into Texas, where ther ? off -r to work for almost nothing. Hundreds of toese paaper laborers are living in mod huts on tha rrr^balow El Paso, Texas. Bsbuk employs about forty women to sw?>p and trim the graas in the squares, pick up ths leaves that rail from the matchless \ trees and keep the walks and rustic seats itidy. They work from 6 to 7 o'clock and I* 92.45 a week. The Putt; of PjiitoI*. Fatti has sevfi: pet j?inls at. (>*?<*-?? ; Nos, which she brought from New Yor*. 1 One is * parrot fiat accompanies her ; songs, not meiV.y imitating the trills and i <TouUdes of his mistress, but puttinp in some original touches of his own. Another of the parrots for a long time kept mate, until finally one day a doc j tor appeared on the scene to attend to a sore throat of his mistress, when he ex claimed: "Ob, doctor, I'm so sick."?' New York Tribune. r ? I;. . ! : w. ? . . . i fBOMDfBHT FEOFLR" Hnonf Hasbsqv haa a ?oH mem** gta. Csm W. Fold* life was intored for mooo. Pmnpcii Boharck haa &a inoome of $85^ OOOayear. * i Jimum 8mii is the only mambtr of the Supreme Court who wears whitkert. L towumpwi Caxm, of lMeob, it t declared to be the beet camp cook is Co?? V Csjwrcrt O. Bkitb, of Hertford, Conn b*bM fifty yaart a 0m nnn of the First Baptist Church in that dty. StnftUKfcDxrr Brora, thehaadofthe lfew York Pciee Department, hit Jutt eel* ehrnted hit fiftieth birthday^ Oman Victoria it don at detectiret et wl __ person of hie Crership or Ruarfa. ^sr preeent Lord Fairfax, who livee ifl ^j-zinia, is a doctor and praetiott hit pro Uf km. In England bit title it fuDy ac knowledged. . Craurcey M. Defrw taft that while oo shipboard ha sieepe ftpw*d of eighteen, hoars oat of tbatwenty-fodl hi awry da/ of th? Txxjrmgr. If Srcrrtary J. w. FMnx It tha only diplomat, who has held thraa first-class mis-< swnt. Grant tan* hhn to Mazioo, Hayaa ta Russia and Arthur to Spain . Prutcww Mart or EoorBTMS, who by har marriage to Prince Pardtnand will be come, a future Queen of Roomania, it not qnita seventeen yaart of age. Go vrrkor Pick, of Wboonafn was oncec a printer Hrisg on a back street. Ha now Hree bandeomefy in the bouas hi wtoch Oi# Ball, thf famous riolinist, oooa Mrad. \ Captacv Fnxo I. Dear, of Wajfeinfctoa, D. C., though not an old man in yaart, ia said to be the oldest G. A 7*7 vataran br ing. Ha bona of its origiahl four org%n ii Hrrrt H. Starlit hat baooma to ahgarad by the aOusione hi tha American newspapers to bit lata canvass for Parlia ment that hededaree hawib never aat foot to tha United Statat agflc. Honor H. Folger, <>f Mettilbffn, Ohio, it claimed to ba tha olotet prartfcrtng attor ?tay In the United States. Ha warworn in Chettar County, Penn., 1912, and bagan tha practios of law thirty years .thereafter. Edward Outer Woloctt, of Massa chusetts, who tarred aaa private in an Ohio regiment in 1864 abd now npitetuts Colo rado in tha United 8tates fluittoy ha a taken Oakriew, ai-Pratideut Cleveland's old frome. Richard Crorer, who roat from a ma chinist' ? bench to ba tha head of Tammany Hall, waa engineer of the Ural ataam fire en need hi New York City. He afterward foreman of Engine Company St, a of inflttanoa aod importa&oa a pol and hft election at Alderman a few yaart later, in 1887, gara him a start on tha career he hat since foOoared. Joseph Sekioe, whoaa death occurred rectntlr, was famous in England for tha verses he wrote while toiling at hit forge at a cutler in Sheffield, lie pqbMahoo hit poetry under the tMe of "Smftfay Bhymat and Stithy Chimes," and tha hook had a large tale. At the age of strty-fl-re Mr. i Senior was sliiokeu with bHndaess and he thenceforth derated hfmetlf entirely to terse making. During last year 3741 bodies wfre cre mated ia Frauoe. Three new crema tories were added to the number in Ger many in 1891, and Italy has twenty-two crematories, several being movable ones, Fare ul Wfceleae? QhIHt COamends to public approval the California liqufil laxative remedy, Syrup ofVig*. It is pleasant to the taste and by acting gently on the kidney^ liver and bowels to cleanse the system effectually, it promotes the health and comfort of all who nse It, and with millions it is the best and only remedy. Iowa has forwarded to the ? board 82,000 tons of corn and Hour far She wllef of starring RmelMi. ' The Oalr 0>e BverPrlatH. ' caw roc turn thi word? These is a 3 Inch display advertisement fn this paper, this week, which has no two words alike except one word. The same is true of each new one appearing each week, from The Dr. Harter Medicine Co. This house places a "Creecent" on everything they make and pub lish. Look for it. send them the name of the word and they will return yon book, bxacti vcl LiTHOOBaPHS or SAnrna rmta. will soon ^Wwa to one cent a Thb human system needs continuous and careful attention to rid itself of its impurities. Beecham s Pills act like magic. NKWOtUEAHB, I A, it to h?T? ft Mf ?borthoon ftsd jftll to oost $850,000. Miuitii cared and eradicated fiwn the tret em by Brown's Iron Bitters, which tn richeu the blood, tones the nervee, Kids dlgee tfcm. Acts like a charm on persons in general 111 health, g ivtDg new energy and strength. Paina wolres are creating baroc among ?tock near Elkhorn, Wto. F. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo. 0., Pr?pr>. r<t Ball's Catarrh fure, offer flflO reward for hot rase of catarrh that cannot be cored by t*V ing Hall's Catarrh Cur*. Send for testimoni als, free. ?old by Druggists, 75c. Ovtb 8700 journeymen hare graduated during the last ven years from she New York City Trade School, which at present has about 600 pupils. Hood's Sarsaparilla So promptly tnd ally overcomes THAT TIRED FEELING.** to coftC-lasiv*ly prnre th;> medicine? " m*k^ th* wealc ?tronK." J. B. Km ?rton, a well-known me*-, 'chant of Auburn, Main^. v* t i Inirtoo DY8PEPST A mx, *? a. AmirwD, complicated with Liver and Kiimj trouble. He took HOOD'S B>WffAPAFTTT * ?"d it *av?> relief pSi SmfortT "It la a Godoend to any on? wfferlnR a? I d?o." HOOD'S PILLS cure Habit ual ( onst na tion oy watering periataltlc action of th**h. manUry c*n*L CHILD BIRTH ? ? ? ? ? ? MADE EASY! " Motheks' F?iekd " is a scientific ally prepared Liniment, every ingre dient of recognized value and tn constant use "by the medical pro fession. These ingredients are com bined in a manner hitherto unknown "MOTHERS' ? FRIEND" ? WILL DO all that is claimed for it AND MORE. It Shortens Labor, Lessens Pain, Diminishes Danger to Life of Mother and Child. Book to u Mothus " mailed FREE, con taining valuable information and voluntary testimonials, ItntbTtxprtMen receipt of price II .80 per b?ttU MMDFIfLB SESUUTOi CO., ?old mr all Dituoorrra. Mftbftkibr of oottoaa* til* tends. t?! ?.Dnnb?jt or glass pM*?? August Flower" I had been troubled five months with Dyspepsia. I had a fullness after eating,1 and a heavy load in tht pit of my stomacSj. Sometimes ft deathly sjcknftss' would overtake me. f wa^^rvpikinp: for Thomas McHenry, Dr nggistj A I leg Ik try City, Pa., in whose empioy T h?d been for sever* years. I used August Flower for two weeks. I Mas ielieved of all trouble. I cait w eat things I dared not touch before. I have gaine(^weiitr^oiimjb?. Auce my ie coverx^JUJ^Q^^lhgli^iiyriV ? ICRATCHED TEH MNnI* A troublesome skip canned me to scratch IQT ff months, and has been curaTby a few.dajV use of M. H-Wolft, Upper Marlboro, w EOIFIO I wis ?u?d ?wwl ytui ? g? ?f whlt* mOtlf ta b$ tog by using symptoms of ? andhftt?hftda? turn of tb? mm. Mtoy prominent phj-Bici*n? etteooee mm tad all failed, bat 8. 8. 8. did tbe work. Paul W. Kjrk?at*ick, Johnson Treatise on fclood and Skin Db niea mailed fre^. Swift Srecjric Co , -Atlanta, Ga. * II" : PtooH Itemed? ft* Catarrh te\h* Bert, Eufert to Vf*. *n<i Cbetpett 8(44 b?4rucgi*t? or sent bMQftU. Me. E. T< HeetitlnhiXS'MTeorSr 15 to $15 "2L *a4 tabl E ?witb f*U, - JT3S.1 *.?ss?*.s. . cmSS | tan. lanm* ?'WJ fTinptom or blood, or a uilur* bT tte to perform their proper i orer -eating arc bet>ent?d ??chr * A|Mtt Witttdi STEAM CAROUSAL - -r*.- "5J " " ttAM'FAClTRERS QP THl GALLOP J\a HOFSF. STEAM CAROr&AI.. ,OR MRRBY-eO-KOrNI). Hivinj h?<1 vv^ml rfar*' *n tn#B'lfw furlns *n<1 ^p^nitlnii machine, *? *r? or? p-arM t? f?unUh ? rnachtn>. wht? h for b#*uty. rtur iMIItj *a<1 <^>rtirl^ne??, >? surpawH Msrhtn** constantly ort Ina'l All ordm flJUd rrop<r?lv VV r'*? f^r cntiitof <i* an<1 pr1c*? OWEN & MARCESON, Hornells*itle, N. Y. RELIEVES all Stomach Distnaa. REMOVES Kaurer, Sens* of TttSaM* COHOMTIOH, Pair. REVIVES Fniwfl ENERGY. RESTORES Korrad ClrculAtJnn. ud Warn to ?os Tips. ML VARtEi MIOICINC ??.. W. ImK ?* ? ? S V r vz&sshisi ??fct?et to ?r**ecBttoa ky Ikn for ak. ^ 5^?jV woney ??. L tor false prrteaee*. S*SHOEUS A tannin* mb.j _ t FOR w vi aVh GENTLEMEN. A wwrd ?boe that %* ill n?*t rip \ tine Calf, MaBuew, nmooth ln*ide, fioxlMr. more comfortable, etyT.ah ?nd dorahlr than any other Btx* ? ?r foM ? t the price. E/l a* Is f"l|ltftTB E?df fhoes CO?tl~-' fr> '11 $4 to $5. The ooW *3.00 nailo vith two r?mplrin uIm, secirrelv n?*f a* theonnooc * ve'.-us 5hovrn In cat), wfcieh rlv^s <1octl:5e tb? wear of enw;-, ><. ?ir fW??oM at tbi ?&me pri<-?, lor sues e?.?ily rip, Lhk itiK only ?".ne p*i. ' fon n?irrt,w ?trip of } eat her on tbe and wh?nn??' ^ worn tbrough are vrcrthle#* i w(w? MiMoftbeW.It. DOfOI. \ S *3,OOSho? wh? worn through can be r?p.?.r? n timo? as n????ry,MtheTwil!neTcrr:f' r:-< ? ;;fr !;ith.-nrv~~ PUrchAwr. ft t - - w- ? ? . .jv' ir '.??lrlcn to 4COQO mile, BbouM Tr.sid' r <>-"? p*t >r oB^iiries of 't?'. e ?h'>? ?. '. ' ' n-'t ' - tnn'y,nee<t to b'i *? ' h'-ap ? ? v'-. ?*svl3 nt .*3.09. hiring only *pp?- reacott mcintu If ,l?OI' til ?*? ? - 5^-00 -oi #1 .T.'S ?t*n<api tf n?<itj7a