University of South Carolina Libraries
BEST. * i TTtter the roots of a rose when the sua that has scorched each petal Sicks beyond distant hiils, a circle of fcarang gold; Give to the steed a stall when the flight that bag proved bis mettle Is past, like the cyclones breath, or the speil <>? a tale that's told. IToarish tha roots of a life when the hope i :hat l ived it dietfc. Sow beytnd hiilo fhat rise all darksome, and far, andfcrino. Give to the soul that flew, more lofty than j ). eagle- wing 2ieth. f A rest when the plumes droop tired? a x - rest in life's twilight dim. ?Mary C. Preston, in N%w York New3. | y ZULLKA'S WILD RIDE. ' 'r A J.iLZ OF THE DESERT. HO can the horse man be who crosses I the market-place r of Mirouan, sitting erect in his saddle, ?with lance at rest? As soon as he came & sight, the date Merchants pointed ii?n out to one another and spoke together in low tones. V It is the invincible Ei-Malek, chieftain offeree mountain tribe, who venerate hunjjf a sain i Since he lost his eldest son, two years ago, El-Malel: speaks but little and ne ver amiiea. His beard has become al- : most white, fcut his arm has lost nothing of its power; he handles bis deadly lance as if it were a reed, and when he urges his faithful hcr=e Ye?uf across the desert terror follows as his shadow. " Yuasuf, like all the horses of the South, has a strong back, slender legs, and large hoofs; like the five favorite mares of the prophet, he is descended from Solomon's famous stables, his coat is snow white, and hie long, flowing tail is soft a* silk. Yusiuf understands and obeys his mas ter's lightest wish. Erect in his saddle, El-Malek follows with a keen glance among the motley crowd a man :n a gold embroidered bur noose, who has just ome to Mirouan. The tradesmen, also, point at this man with their finger, bat with a scornful ! air, as though indicating one stricken with the plague. This man is Hassan Bey, the insolent I chief of the Otled-Xayls, who, jealous of his brother Ahmed, killed him with arrows shot from afar; be boasts of this deed, and laughs when he sees the crowd move away from him. He had built upon ttie D'^Iefi plateau, in the centre ti his tented village, a stone house, which wa3 abo a fortress. For many yeirs he had pass^_ j his nights watching the iArab girls d?nce~A to the sounds of the de^boukas; but, one | evening, passing near the foun^fin, he had stopped to look at tfcfe^yrfung girls filling their copper urns. And now he ? has come to ilirouan to buy bridal ornajrenta, for Hassan Bey, chief of the ; Ouled-Nayls, 13 marry the beautiful Zuleika. Zuleika is only/a weaver's daughter, \ but she is very beautiful. The poor X child wept, but she wept in vain, for the ! weaver is a amer, and the chief of the \ Ouled-Nayls is not the man to allow j himself to be thwarted in his wishes. She most marry Hissan Bey, the fratri cide. Who would prevent it, since God per mits it? El-Malek had heard this story on$j an hour before he reached Mirouan. and' bad said to himself : 4 'God will not per mit it, for I will prevent it." '?????^?toiiilrfefc&.placed her urn upon the ledge .p/ thtr "foiltxafn, - but had not ! thought of filling it. Her companions, ! one alter the other, had gone away, but she still remained. It was the last time that she would come to the fountain, for to-morrow Hassan Bey would carry her away to his battlercunted house, which was sombre as a torn 0. She lifted up her little tttonzed hands to heaven imploring that death might be sent to her. But from the leaden sky no consolation came. Instead, Hassan Bey ! . appeared, riding upon hi3 flame colored horse,? and escorted by his warriors. He knewthat she was at the fountain, and wished to see her there where he had met her for the first time. She was ^compelled to hear his lying words. The young girl turned her eyes away, and, as she began to fill her urn, her tears mingled with the water. ' "Zuleika!" x. Who calls? Certainly Hassan Bey eannofc have disguised his voice with j such a grave and .nan ly tone. Who is ; this mas, with the white beard, sitting 1 erect in his saddle, lanca in hand, look ing athetfkso compassionately? s:; "Zuleika!" he called once more, jointing to Hassan Bey, who was ap ,k-~-ching'. :e looked up, and suddenly her eyes with a new light, for 3he felt tis man had been sent by God. kve me!" she cried; "save me!" ^Malek held out his hand and aided 0Mfe??irl to mount before him. ^rfrail form; he mur mured: "Do noHfcNrfwi^Theo, as tbocogh calling upon a brother, ^T-Malek said: "Yussufr' t The noble animal neighed; and started o3 like the wind. After Y ussuf rushed Hissan Bey, with ? followed by his warriors. Some of them made ai if to draw their ?ws. f'Hol" cried Hxu san Bey, "do , I want them both alive !M On by gentle caresses, Yussut and yet more fast. With 'assan Bey spu Ted his horse his escort. "They W*V\h& cries, trenibiing "Cow age, Yussuf," murmurs El V MaJek^^ycc called the wind of the : \ de?ert? &&ow that you deserve your name, mj beauty." j U Tb* day! advance*, the, sky seems; fife, Hut Yaisui does not^-fafcef Jit t* by thh t uriJfa? flight, Zule&ka sow began" to >mthe more 10 touch grroaatf-a ready gained El-Malek's mountain tribe ?*a?t^possible deliverance. The t\ child added her gentle exhortations to i^rllaijjKJe^encourageoaents- H\ssan BeyT cries seemed to gro<v m.-m faint. Had he given up the chased . ; Bait whence ccrae these clamors that , seem to 3tart from the heights abo-a* them? Have\hfo followers climbed the rocks and found a shorter way? Tl is not thei chiefs esor: that utters these crie&. They come from a cabin high op in the mountain; the occupants 5 are watching the exciting chase. Will Ei-iJalek find allies among these people, t -ji er wiR he meet new enemies? il is tribe > is nut far away; if he is recognized the "T * fugitives -are saved.. Arms are raised ;\ * "? ihey are called! '? No, the bows seod forth their arrows ! Yusiuf utters a painful neigh and Ei of anguish. orscV* flan*; * wojui unci* x [wiu : u< V*Jek responds with a r.ry. of An arrow has'sirttql; z fcor; ? ^ . -loti.er .jpje. i ? i s u< ier s .^Bakfer. ' * * ,* " V beseeches rr-Halefe. :>" ?' -I ' / With, * cesperaie efor% Yvekk .:.t:aightecs himself out and flies under : . arrows. He botnds uie a Js> i U that feels that the iioa is on hep ^ aack, "" *: 4 'Well done, Yussol" * Now there are no more arrows to fear; i wall of rocks crowns thi# height. Bat leath is only staved x>3 ? blood is streaming from the^irfe of the noble aeast; he 'Segiflrio slacken his pace. El-Malek plies his spurs in vain and Zu :?:ika wastes her caresses and praise, for .ne poor animal's hoofs dip La the nar row path and he staggers. El-Malek's inn trembles; he is beset with fever; the coolof the filling night does not suf fice to refresh his brow; the profile of the violet mountain and the confuse! yhape of the turpentine trees, with their blood-red clusters suspended over the vjvs3, are mingled before his eyes. He ;s blinded by vertigo. He cannot stoo to drink at the brook which flows in the ravine, though a swallow of water would, perhaps, save him. Hassan Bey has seen traces of blood upon the rocks, and his cries of hate have become cries of joy. 4 "We have them," he cries; "they are Our bP And yet his vjice trembles; he fc-ars the fical straggle and Zl-Malek's terrible lance. Night has again passed and the light of morning chases the jackals that have come, scenting their prey from afar. Yussuf still runs, but much more slowly. Two days' journey separates him from the tribe of which his master is chief. Two days! and Yussuf has but a few hours to live! He feels that with hi3 lait breach hia beloved master, too, will die. The path becomes narrower. Yus suf rrache3 the lidge, and, reeling, stops, i "The end has come!" murmured Zu leika, terrified, and for the hundredth time she besought El-Malek: "Do not remain with me. Your horse can still save you alone. Fly!" "Yussuf can save neither voa*,-uor t me." "Then kill me. ' "I have promised to save you!11 "God has not wished it to be so. Save ' me from this man !" "That is what I am going to do. : Alight." ? "Ah. ves; I understay vou ? death is at tSNJ^ottom of this abyss. I shall J seek "You dopot understanclme. Look!" and, with his V^d, El-Malek pointed to the north, to \he other slope of the mountains, whicn^ould be seen through i the hollow of the r<5cks. "You see," he sai^/that mirror that ' shines down there? Zahrez. The mountain on the other^i3e*T>f~the lake is the Djebel Sa'aari. There is the^ tribe of my fathers, there are camped my people. Hasten with all your strength. Order the first herdsman yoa n eet to call iQ my name to his nearest neighbor, so that, from summit to sum mit, my name may *ake my warriors. Cry to all the echoes of the mountains* 'El-Malek shall not dip unavenged T Go!" ' ~ ' ?^"But it will take two days, at least." *God be with you!" She kissed the hand of the chief who had saved her life;; then she fan down the road a9 qnfckly as her failing strength would let her. El-Malek planted his lance in the tirtund and supported himself against ii, erect in his saddle. He talked for a fong time to Yussuf, and the animal shook his bleeding head. "Halt!" ordered Hassan Bey. Reach ing a turn in the road, he had seen El Malek planted across the defile, and this new attitude astonished and disturbed him, "Does he pretend to oppose us now? Let us wait^jand in the meantime breathe a little."" The advice was good, and no one gainsaid it. Men and hories sought a spnng. Hassan Bey; however, did not take his eyes off the redoubtable man who sat there motionless upon his horse between the two wails of rock. "And now that ail have rested enough, forward!" ' No one stirred. So long as it was a question ol pursuing El-Malek, the chiefs followers felt brave enough. Now that they were called upon to at tack him face to face, the boldest were afraid. Ha?san Bey himself trembled. "Let him begin," said one, "let him come on." "Very well," growled the chief. The day declined; the redoubtable sentinel, who had gleamed white in the burning sun. now stood out in black silhouette against the starry sky. Neithei horse nor master stirred, and the lane* stul stood planted in the ground. The .moon rose, "and it was an awe 3ome sight to see this motionless warrior under the pal5* light; he watched the enemy with his steady eyes still open like diamonds. "He is covering Zuieika's retreat!" f-^^san Bey had said to himself at the very first. He felt that it would soon be too iate to continue the pursuit," Aad yet he remained in his place, changed into a statue, powerless to conquer the fear that emanated from this grand guardian. After the rosy dawn, the leaden aT-cy ; after the red twilight, the blue night; then the aurora again; and the sentinel, still motionless, as well as those whos< way he bars. Sometimes the shadow of ar, eagle makes a fleeting spot on the rocks; then the shadows increase, and great oirds come from ail corners of the heavens, drawing closer their rapid circles; now ff is no linger eagles, but vultures. -w They almost touch the lance of the cavalier, out he did not appear to see them. One of them perched upon his shoulder. El-Malek did not stir. "He is dead!" cried Hassan. Bey. mad with anger and spite; and, turning to ward his men who still hesitated, he gave the order: "Forward!" Neither Hassan Bey nor his men ad vance! twenty paces. The noise that put the vultures to flight was the the gallop ing of^the Bedouin horses that had come from,- the Djebel-Sahari. The threats ^thati-Tlassan Bey uttered to keep up hi; cou?ige were never finished; an arro^ p;c<ced his throat, and, falling from hi* horse, he rolled into the abyss. I "Eich oae for himself!" cried th< - Ckilde-Naylk' ?Aud while they rushed down the path at fall speed, without daring to locjk back, Zuicika, sobbing, kissel thei icy hand of the chieftain who ha 1 protected her in death as in life. ? Fro u the French in Argonaut. A Ruronielric Stone. O:.o j' the raost carious stoae3 in tb* worli is found ia Finland, where it oc cuts io^jaiay- places. It is a natural barometer. and actually forteils pxobable caan-cs in the weather. It is caUed se-naiuir, and turns black shortly before an approaching rain, while in line ! weather it is mottled with spots o! . white, says the St. LouisLQtobe-Dtemo crat. For a long time this curicm3 phe ^ nomenoa was a mystery, but an analysis j \ of the stone shows it to be a fossil mixel Witk clay and containing a port!oa o' Voc'^ silt and nitre. These facts beina mown the- explanation wa3 easy. Th-; ? m\t absorbing the m<37S*ure3 turned black when the conditions were favor ^ible for rain, while the dryness of tfct atrr^osphere brought the salt from the in tenrr of the stone in white epots on the ! - turXace* _ ^THE FAB* AND GARDEN. j <-*- SOAEIXG SEED POTATOES. A French potato grower claims yields ; >f forty-two tons per acre. He plants ! ihe seed whole, cultivates deeply and nanures liberally. He also immerses his eed tubers for tweDty-four hours in a I tolution of sis pounds of sulphate of am monia and sir pounds of nitrate of potash : in twenty-five gallons of water, allowing | the tubers to remain for twenty-four I oonrs afterwards so that the germs may ' iavc time to swell. ?TOR THE HOG PASTOBAGE. Cover shouid not be the principal re liance for the hog pasturage, but if there ? not juScient of this a field should be ?059a with oats, rye, or barley to supple ment it. Sorghum and pumpkins should j also be grown to help out the feeding : later in the season, so that the hogs may I he made ready for market without so J much as we have been in the habit of I using in th? past. The best profit in hog : feeding resulfis when the desired weight : can be made with the least corn. This ; .method of feeding is practicable now, ? because the market does not call for such ! heavy weight as formerly. '*I/ght : baconr' is now the grade that brings the { top prices. ? Chicago Times. - the vietues of ST0XES. I have heard a farmer brag that he nardly bad a stone on his place a3 large a3 his hand, and to most farmers the idea of a stony farm is abhorrent. This is a mistake, and stones, like almost everything else, are not without their virtues. They help to make the soil rich by constantly wearing away and giving to it new material. They make it mel low and porous, and when coolness is needed they keep it cool. In warm weather they cool very quickly at night and condense the ^ew, thu3 gathering moisture from the ir\t3t air, so the land does not bake in a dry season or run to gether in a wet. Then the stones gather th? water around them, making the soil porous. Ia winter they give warmth to the ground, for they absorb and retain the heat from the sun. Asiong as t'aey do not interfere with the cultivation of the land let them remain. ? American Farmer. SHRINKAGE OF J0L"K. During theliot, dry montfcs when flies are abundant, cows are almost sure to Bbrinje in the milk flow. There are some pointf-'about this matter that are well to consider. A great many dairy -farmers ^follow the practice of turning the cows into small pasture at night for the sake of the convenience of finding them the next morniug. During the day the cows are so bothered by flies that they will Jot %at what they should even if it is easily procured. If they cannot graze at night the result will be that they gat too little food in the twenty-four hours, and must in consequence shrink in their milk. The wise dairyman will see to it that the cow ha3 plenty to eat. If it requires a little extra study and effoit on his part to get it for her he will doit, for he knows this important fact, that if the cow shrinks in summer he can never get her back to as large a flow in the fall as he otherwise would. ^ Good management of the cows is one of the foundations of success in milk production. Fiies in the day tinn and confinment at night will beat the best cow in the world. ? Hoard's Dairy men. CARE OF FENCE CORNERS. Next to the garden, which ought to be the best but is too often the worst look ing place on the farm, the fence corners art likely, at this time, to need the most attention. It goes without saying that it is difficult to keep these places clean. It is still more difficult to get them clean after they have been allowed to beco.me foul. And jet the farmer who has a high ideal of what a farm should be will not be contented to have his fence Comers become a tangled hedge ol bushes or a nest of weeds. Bushes are worse than weeds, for the latter cjtn be cut more readily and are not nearly a; difficult to destroy. Not that it is easy to eradicate weeds when they have taken possession of fence corners and have been allowed to ripen their seeds and mature their stalks year after year with nothing to interfere with their growth and development. But it is play to'dis pose of such plauts when compared with the uprooting of wild cherry bushes, hardbacks, blackberry bushes and similar growths which find a congenial home in neglected fence corners. Yet even the latter nuisances can be extir pated. It will take a good deal of work to do it, but if the work is wisely direct ed, and is continued long enough, ii will bring its reward. Simply cutting off the tops, two or three inches from tht ground, once a year will not be enective. Removing the fence, plowing the ground, and planting it to some cro\', which requires clean cultivation, is the most ffficient course. If this is fol lowed for two or three seasons in succes sion the land can then be seeded and cai> be easily kept clean. Where this courst is impracticable, cutting the roots of the shrubs and removing as large portions of them with the stems as possible, will give a docided setback to the intruders. The nest spring cut off the tops of any and all the plants which appear, and re peat the process in the fall. It is slow work, and hard work, but if persevered in will, in time, give clean fence corners. And the faun upon which this work is needed will look enough better, and b; enough bstter to pay liberally for it performance. ? American Dairyman. EOS CHOLERA SYMPTOMS. Symptoms of hog cholera are described by the Iowa State Board of Health as follows: The presence of the disease is indicated by a cold shivering, lasting from a few seconds to several hours; frequent sneezing, followed by a loss of appetite; rough appearance of the hair, Or. opin^ of the ears, tstupidnc=?, nt tempts to vomit, tendency to rorv. the bedding, to lie down in dark an 3 q ue; places, dullness ofjthe eves, often dim; sometimes swelling of the head, erup tions oTfhe ears and other parts of the bony, dizziness, laborious breathing, vitiated appetite for dung, dirty and salty substances, accumulation of mucus, .in inner corner of $he eye, discbarge from the nose, -fetid 4m i offensive odor of the discharges from the bowels, of fensive exhalations;" diarrhce^l dis charges rj*e semi-fluid, of grayish green color and often mixed with blood. In many cases the skin on the belly be tween the hind leg?, behind the cars and -even on the nose has numerous reu spots which toward the fatal termination turn purple. As the disease progresses the animal h" ^omes sluggish, the head droops v, the nose near the ground, but usually will be found lying down with the nose hid in the bedding. -"If there has been costiveoess, about two days before death there will be offetfsive, fetid discharge; the voice becomes faint and hoarse; the animal is stupifl, emaciation increases rapidly, the skin becomes dry, hard and very unclean, there is a cold, clammy sweat, and death scon follows with convulsions, or grad ually by exhaustion, without a struggle, j In chronic diseases or those of long duration, the animal becomes weak, and i:es down most of tfceTinre, eats but lit ; !e and has the diarruas.1. These case? ! aay linger for weeks, scattering the i ioison of the disease in the discbarge rherem they go. ? Western Swineherd. ? . FABJ? A>D GARDES NOTES. An excess of manure is injurious to ;rapes. A sharp, steel rake is a good weed : ;iller at the start. Cultivation will benefit the trees for a : e?r years after setting out. Prune the trees in the orchard keep ' ? n <jood shape from the start. Good returns are made when tne ssim nilk is given to the young pigs. Pall up all dead stalks of plants fron :he flower-beds and keep them neat and I .rim. ! ? It is useless to try to keep pigs strong ?nd healthy without plenty of proper Keep the tomatoes well -pickei off the vines. Every one should be removed ! when ripe. Ciover and corn cut in the milk fed to young pigs is an excellent thing to pro*, mote growth. - - - Strict attention to your own business w?l be more dollars in your pocket than ; tne election of any ticket in the field. | No plan of management -will be beat' in all coses; the owner must adapt the treatment to the condition of the orchard. If second or third crops are to be grown in the garden, b8 ready to plant them as soon as the first crops have" ma 1 tured. ! On clay land especially the applying of course fresh manure is beneficial on account of the mechanical effects pro ; duced. ^ ~ ^ 1 here is no profit in pigs that receive1 no attention. To make them pay they ; should receive some care and be fed ia the most economical way. i Vick says that bulb planting should be dons as early in the fall as the bulb can be procured ^though it is not too late any time before winter closes in. ; Supplying all of the essentials of a I crop, such as a good soil, thorough ^ preparations and good seed are of m^re ? importance than the signs of the moon. One reason why some men do not suci ceed in fruit growing is that they gro v nothing else. They buy fertilizer, meit, grain: and everything they use. This takes all the profit. Flower pots can be rid of earthworm? by pouring on the soil a warm decoctioa of wormwood and powdered horse ohest? ni ts. The worms will come to the sur* , face and can then be removed. Nothing delights a pig or benefits him more than a feed of foots. It is worth | while to give them a ration of potatoes, j beets,: turnips, or artichokes at least ; 0Qce a week, or as often as possible. Fruit tree borers do not like to work ! where the fruit grower plants the trunks near the ground with cart grease that is j made up of a portion of pine tar. 3oms emploj gas tar, but this often does great j injury, says Meehan in his monthly, j * Any man who has spent hours of valu able time trying to locate a stopped ut j drain tile will appreciate the advice j never to make under drains* without , making a map locating them, and indi cating the depth at which they are laid. The brood sow should be given plenty of food; in fact, she requires about twic? as much a3 an ordinary pig. If 8he does not havB enough food to kee> herself and farnw in good condition the owner will be disappointed when the little pi<^ ! are full grown. ? . According to Professor L. H. Bailey ! .eight and perhaps ten species of native j cherr.es are in cultivation; of these ? three are grown for fruit an 1 all but one or two Rre cultivated for ornament. None of the species have gained much prominence under cultivation, and mr>3t of them a:re of comparatively receut in | troductior. A Penny's Wertli of Ga?. i A Philadelphia physician who h&s ; just jetum.jd from a trip to England says: "I sitopped with a gentleman ios Liverpool *rho is r&nking a fortune oot I of one of the most curious applicatr&as of the drop a-penny-in-the-slot idea thatd | I have ever seen. In England, by the j way, they u=e it for a doz?n things that I we know nothing ot in this country. J The use for it to which I allude, how ever, is the furnishing of illuminating gas to small consumers. A small device is faste .ed to any ordinary gas meter, and each time a copper penny is dropped in the slot a certain amount of gas is let into the meter, and thence into the pipe leading to the burner. A little dial l shows how much gas is admitted to the meter, and a dozen or more pennies can be dropped in in succession if the pur ' chaser so desires. Over 4000 of these I ar# now in us*! in Liverpool, and the de i m.rnd for theta in that and other big ! citics is so greit that the company own 1 ing the patent cannot at present begin to make them fast enough to supply iti^ Ik is stated as a curious fact that su cide is more prevalent in warm than cool weather. Extreme heat breeds bo | melancholy and desperation. ... THE LABOR WORLD, i A Prince drives a Moscow cab. Railroad strikes are increasing. Our telephones employ 84fl5 persons. Textiles are first in Russia industries. Chester. III., has several female. butcher?. Express messengers have organized labor unions in Chicago and 8t. Louis. Gamekeepers in the Highlands of Scot land have struck for higher wages. I ' Freight- hattdl-EBS propose organizing ?a international union: of their trade. The telegraph operators hare failed in their efforts to form a new brotherhood. Strikes of the Paris cabmen are monthly. They never last more than twenty-four | hours. W ork has been stopped in the Temesca! tic mine of California because of a disagree ment as to wages. > The laundry girls of Lojansport, Ind., re , ceatlv organ zad a union and marched in a body in the Li^or Day parade. ' The Pennsylvania Railway haxissued or ' ders to all its employes requiting the, strict est cleanliness both as to person and the company's property. London railway refreshment-room bar maids work from ; fourteen to fifteen hours j per day, and many of them are fed on hashed scraps left on customers' plate?. The corn cutters in the vicinity of Spring field, Ohio, hive forme 1 an association to fight the patent corn cutting sleds and re fused to work for farmers using the obnox i Jonss'edf. VA. CIRCULAR issue ! by tte organ;zed glass wdrkers o! France, win deman i tbe eight hear workday, says that at present their exi2?s:ve hours keep tbe *.:n iertaliers need lessly busy. There are mil? in Ne^ England where chCdr^n work seventy hours p?r week, and placards ar-1 pasted on tbe walte bearing tnesejege : "No laughter parmittei in thisnjill;" "Children who sing wiil be dis charged." ThI Washington Indians are all afraid of smallfiox, Rnd will stay at home this year rathe^ than venture into the hop fields and pic"/, ^onseauemlv a great deaJ of trouble is bain? "'snaarienced in obtaining enough labor to successfully pick cha hops. j The Convention cf the Brotherhood of . Locomotive Firemen has just been held in Cincinnati. The organizition has a mam '? bership of abou$ 37,000. The Brotherhoo.i set asiie $28. 501 for relief ol disabled mem bers and widows andorphans, and protested against the use of military at strikes. REV. DR. TAtMAGL i -Li i -jr THE BRO OKLTO DIVINE'S SUN S t DAY SERMON. t- ''Christ is all and in, all."? ?oloa Bians ui., 11. : | of mrUfe* ra?st eveQ-''-il summer co?/fromuS?v^ia.<i connf voyage give you on ac ">*?? of bread to through GfflSn"? ? ?"Z Preacl"a* toor i Chritt '&?r2?J.f ! a^e foani thsi; the greatest nam? in the 1 ocean ih-pping, and from L'verDool to StrJ Sb^rfhl^ti05^ toLX'S: | *555 ^^elfast and Dublin, is Jesu> ! to^S7 Se?S h*> hadShi* ! things Jd^'lefcSr"' Were'SSj b? i tones to be written there has always, been^ *?fc ?r.a Hefoi?tS, or a XenojSonfor J i Jcgphns to write them. Were there^oem? j V'J* instructed there has always bWa I Jobpr a Homer to construct them. Were lifSS +k r?c^ la?troas aDi P3^r.'ul to be r^T-t ? u ay? bse* a or ? Caesar to raise tbem. Were there tearhw. SSfLde(lf0r thJ ,nt-Heet and the hearts I nf? ^ a fcocrates, and a Zao, and fn?Srrl ' fu a Marcus Antoninus nom mg forth on the grand and glorious mi*sfca Every age of the world has hadits tr?uSb? of reason and morality. Tiler* bets not bLn a single age o? the world which has not hal some decided system of religion The Platonism, oripntalfsn, stoicism a^ Xwh4anttBttddh;sm? i they wera established, wera not lackingin jngenmtyand fore?. Now jn ao li tK ficent institatbn5 ancl or xJlrf li reappe!" a personage more wonderful than any pradecssor. He cam a from a family without any roya! o^aristo 2S* prSen<02- He 0311112 me* 2wl? Th n? Q<lvantaga from the schools. There were people b?side H m day after day who had ao idea that He was goioj to be any thing remarkable or do nnythinf ra.T.arKable. Yet notwithstanding all this, and without any title or scholarly profession rhetor/c He startled the world witn tae strangest announcements ran in colhs.oa with solemn priest and proud ruler, ana *ith a voice that rang through temple and pa.ace ani over ship's dec',* and mo?n tain top, exclaiaie d, "1 am the licrht of the world ! . ? ? - .uM.eu w!re ^*n aIi abac* at thi i lea that that hand. yet nard fro n the use of the ax. the saw and a z and hatchet, should wave the s.-epter of authority, and that uoon that brow, from which they had so o: ten seen Him wipe the sweat of toil, there woud yet come the crown of unparalleled splendor and Oi universal dominion] ? We all know how eifficult it is to think that anybody w.,0 was at school with u?' in boyhood has got to b=> anything great or famous and bo wonder that those who had been boys with Christ in the straats of Natarata and seea riim m after year^ in tae days of His oom plete obscurity, shoul 1 have been very slow to acknowledge Christ's woader/ul mission. From this humble point tae stream of life flowed out. At first it was just a faint riil hardly able to find its way down tha roc-c but the team of a weeping Christ added to its volume, and it flowed on until by the beauty and greenness of the banks you might knpw the path the crystal stream was taking. Oa and on, uotil tha lepers were brought qcwq and washed cf their leprosy and the de*d were lift?d iot< the waWr that they might have lire, and pi ark of joy ani promise were gathered from the brink, and innumerable churches gathered oa either bank and the tide flows on deeper and stronger and wider until it rolls into the river from under the t iron e of Gad., min gling billow with billow, and orightness with brigntnes*, and joy with joy, and hosanna with hosanna. I was looking at some of tba paintings of the artist, Mr. Kensett. I t iw some pic tures that were just faint out in?s; in some places you would see only the branches of a tree and no trunk; and in another case the trunk and no branch??. He had not finished the work. It would have taken him <?tft and months perhaps to hava completed it. Well, my friends, in this world we get only the faintest outline of what Christ is It will take all eternity to fill ? jf the picture gloving, so kind, so merciful, so great! Paul does not, in this chapter say of Christ He is good, or He is loving, or He is patient, or He is kind, but in His exclamation of the text he embraces everrtiilng when he savs. "Christ is all aad in al?/' ' ! 7 ? I remark in the firs- p. ace, Christ is every thing in the Bible . I do not care where I open the Bib!^, 1 find Jesus. In whatever poth I starts I come after a vhile to the Bethlehem mfan^er. I go back to the old dispensation, and srea laraboa the altar and say, "Beholil t ha Lamb of God which taketh away the sin oi the worliP' Th?n I go and see the manna provided for the I-raeBtes in the wilderness, "and say, "Jesus, the bread of life." vThen I look at tha tocn which was smitten bv the prophet's rod, an-S as the water gushes our, I say, "It is Jesus, the fountain opened for sin and for uncleannees ** I go back and look at the writings of Job and bear him exclaim, "I know that my Keeietmer liveth Then I go to Ezekiel and I find Christ presented th?re as "a iilant of renown,'' a'ld then I turn over to Isaiah and Christ is spoken of ''as a sheep before the shearers." It is Jesus all the way between Genesis ani Maiachi. Then I turn s. over in the New Testament and it is Christ in the parable, it is Christ in the rairacla. it is t-nnst in tn? evangelist's story, it it Christ in the apostle's epistles and it ? Christ in the trumpet peal of the Aoocalyp3?. I know there are a great maiiy resole "who do not find Christ in the BibW. '< Here is a man who studies the p<:ble as a historian Well if you come a historian, you will find in this book how the world wa? mad? how the seas fled to their places, how empires were established, how nation foueht with nation, javelin ringing against bari>9 gfon, until the earth was ghastlv with th? dead. \ou will se? the coronation of prince? the triumph of conqu?rors, and the worlc turned upside down ani back a^ain and down again, cleft and scarred wirh great agonies of earthquake and temoest and bat ?u'vi u W(?nderJ^:- history, puttins to t .e blush all others in tin accuracy of its recital and in tie stupendous evants it re oords. Homer an I Thucydide3 and Gibbon could mabo great stories out of little events but it took a Moses to tell how tha heavens and the earlh were made in one chapter and to give the history of thousands of vear* unon two leave?. ! Tiiere are others who come to tie Bible mereiy a3 antiquarian1. If you C3"na as an antiquarian, you will find a great many o Id things in the Bible? peculiarities of maanar and custom, marriage and burial; peculiar ities of dre ?, tunics, sanda's. crisping pin?, amulets and girdles aui tinVjing ornament*, jfyou come to lo^k at military arrant ments, you will find coats of mail aad j?v | ?|1DS so'l engines of war and ciroamvaHa ticn and entrapment*. If you lojk for pa cu iar musical instruments, you will find psalteries and shigiuoths and rams' horns. The antiquarian will find in the Bible curi ! 9?^** asfriculture, and in co nmerca, and in art, and in religion that will ke? him i absoroed a great while. Toere are those ' who come to this Bible as vou would to a | cabinet of curiosities, and you pick up fchia and say, "What a strange sword tibat is!" "nrv at a bat this is!" and what an unlooked for lamp that is!" and j the Bible to such becomes a British Museum Then there are others who find nothing in I the Bible but the poatry.. Well, if vou come ; a poet, you will find in this book faultless rhythm, and bold imagery, and startling antithesis, and rapturous lyric, and sweet ! pastoral, and instructive narrative, aud de votional psalm; thoughts express*! in "a style more solemn than that of Montgomery more bold than that of Milton, more terrible tban that of Dante, more natural than that of W ordsworth, more impassioned than j that of PolJock, more ten ier than that of ! Cowper. more weird than that of Spenser ?Jc'fais gr^at poam brings all the zens df the earth intg its coronet, and it weaves the flames or judgment in iw garland aud poors eternal harmonies in it3 rhythm Everything-this book /touches it makes beauUfu', from the plain stow* of tha sum ; mertarashing floor, and the daughters of { JNahor filling the trough for the camels, and i #>e fi?h pools of Hesbbon, up to the psalmist praising God with diapason off storm and whirlwind, and Job leaiin? forca Orion, Arcturus and the Pleia ies. It is a wonder ful poem, and a great many people read it as they do Thomas Mo a re's "Lalla RoOkb '* i and \\ alter Scott'3 ^Lady o! the Lake." and Tennyson's "Charge or taoLi?ht Brigade." j They siuiown, and are so absorbed in lock mg at tlft shells on the shore that thay for i get to look off on tha great ocean of Odd's mercy and salvation. . . -.-T : Then there .are others who cooaa to this boo^ as skeptic*. They marshal paasaz | against passage, and try to get Matthew ane Luie in a qmrrel, and wouid have a died crepancy berween what Paul and James siys about faith and war is, and thay try the account o? Mo;es concerning tae crea tion by modern decisions ia science, and re ^ <o!ve that in all onestf-ns between the *ci?n r jnc eipiorer an i mi i nspir <;j S will give tae preference to the geologist. j These men ? thesr soi ieri, I w4n say | rock poison out of "the iweetest flowBr? ; Tney fatten their infinity uoon td? | truths which hava lei thousands to , heaven, and ia thrir diitortel vision | prophet seems to war with prophet, and evangelist with 2ra.neri\i*t ani'ano3tle wife liatt way can ana some oaa wart or character in a maa of God mentioned in that Bible these carrioa crows caw and flap thai* wings over the carcass. Because they cannot understand bow the whale swal lowed Jonah they attempt ths more won derful feat of swallowing the monster whale of moderu skepticism. They do no: believe it possible that the Bib!e story should be true whidh says that the du nb ass spate, while they themselves prove She thinj po> ' sible by their own utterances. I am amused beyond bounds when I hear one of these men talking about a future I life. Just ask a mm who rejects that Bible ! what heaven is, ani hear him befog your j soul. He will tell you that heafven is I merely the development of the iateraal re- j sources of a man; it is an efflorescence of the i dynamic forces into a state of ethereal and 1 transcendental lucubration, in close juxta position to the ever present '?was" and the ' the everlasting "n3. j Considering themselves wise* they are foois for time, fools for eternity. Then there is another class of persons who come to the Bible as controversialists Th?v are enormous Presbyterians or fierce Ban tjsts or violent Methodists. Taey cut th* Bible to suit their creod instead of cuttinz tneir creei to suit the Bible. I? the S-ril. tures think as they do, well; if not, so nap -h the won? for the Scriptures. Toe Bible i9 merely the whetstone on which the? s-haroe 1 the o mectuig knife of controversy. tKv come to it as a government in time of wj'r comes to arm ones or arsenals for weanon.s ?d mMittau. Th.j tan d?eire7w" lasting war against all other sects, and they want so many broadswords, so rainy mus ' kefc, so maay howitrers, so many colum biadis so much gripe an i canister, so tna?y flendpiece., with Winch to rake the fi*l i thSSfo??*7 ** tho ??torf though the heavens be darkened with ths JTt w?th the thunder. 2?t$jS23?t*bo,,t th' rs,igion ot I have seen some such men corns b*ck from an ecclesiastical massacre as prou r of their achievements as an Indian warrior boasting of the number of scalps he has % htLV more Miration for a man ' wbogoes forvh with his fists to get the cham pionship than I have for these theological pugilists who make our theological masra sinea ring with their ware ry. There are m?n Tf th* 0017 ^ of th? of truth is to stick Somebody. There is one passage of the Scriptures that they like bet ? th?? tllat is thU: "Blessed teacheth my hands to war ****' W?* to us if we 5 sk?Si2^ri2^ 45 ^troversialists, or ?s sceptics, of*ts connoisseurs, or as fault fine, ere, or merrfy as poets ! f JKlJ" and gather the trophies for Jesus. From Golconda mines we gather the diamonds, from Ceylon banks we gather toe pearls, from all lands and^ngdoms we ^ ston?"? bring the ghttermg burdens and put them down at Thinf ? : Mdsay: "All these are ihine. Thou art worthy." We go forth Md iDt? 009 we gather all the 6cepters of the earth, of all ??2 wle#^2 dominions> and then we bring S ?f T setters and put it down at the ^saniu8aj'' "*ho1 art King of ^ these Thou has conquered."' ^ n 7? K?(?rth a2ain to gather more trophies, and we bid the redeemed of all . Rnd daughters of the Lord Al S? *** fchem t0 ???eand offer their thanksgivings, and the hosts of heaven bring crown and palm and scepter and here by these bleeding feet and by this riven side, and by this woundea heart cry B.essme and honor and glory an1 power be unto Him that sitteth upon the throne and ? ^ u ? kamb forever and forever r' fell me o? a tear ^at He did not weep, of a ^id not carry, of a battle that He did not fight, of a victory that He oil not achieve. "All in all is Jesis" in the greet plan of redemption . ' .J Christ is everything to the Christian in time of trouble. Who has escaped trouble? We must all stoop down and drink out of the bitter lake. The moss [ has no tune to grow on the buckets that I come out of the heart's well drippinz with tears. Great trials are opon our track as certain as greyhound pack on the scent of deer. From our hearts in every direction tiiere are a thousand chords reaching out binding us to loved one?, and ever anl anon some of these tendrils snap. The winds that cross this s?a of life ore not all abaft. The c.ouds that cross our slcy are not feathery and ataHutraying like flocks o! sheep on heavenly pastures, but wrathful and somber and gleaming with terror they wrap the mountains in fire, and come down bayinr with their thunders through every gorze The richest fruits of blesting have a prickly ! sbe11* kifehere is not lying at anchor; it is : weathering a gale. It is net sleeping in a | soldier s tent with our arms stacked; it Is a j ^Vonet charge. We stumble over grave j stone?, and we drive ou with our wheal deep in the old rut of graves. Trouble has wnnkied your brow, an 1 it has frosted your head. Falling in this battle of life, is there po angel to bind our wounds? Hath Goi ; made this world with so many thiurs to hurt and none to heai? For this snake bite of sorrew, is there no herb growing by all the brooks to heal the poisou? Blessed ; be Gr>d that in the Gospel we find the anti j dote ! Christ has bottled an ocian of tears. I How many thorns He hath plucked out of I human agony ! j 0L\ He knows too well wiiat it is to carry ! a cros.% not to help us carry ours ! He knows too well what it is to climb the mountain, I not to help us up the steep. He knows too i well what it is to be persecuted, not to. help those who are impose! upoa. He kno^s too j well what It is to be sick, not to help those , who suffer. Aye, He knows too well what it I is to oie, not to help us in our last extremitv. j Blessed Jesus, Thou kno west it all. Seeing i Toy wounded sid- and Thy wounded hand, ; and Tby wounded feer, and Thy wouniei ; brow, we are sure Toy knowest it ?1?. i Oo, when those into whose bosom we used to breathe our sorrows are snatched from u<-\ blessed be God, the heart of Jesus still j beat?, and whsn all other lights go oat ani I tne world gets dark, then we see coming out from behind a cloud something so bright j an i cheering, we know it to be the morninr | star of the soul's deliverance! The haniof ; care may make you stagger, or the hand of persecution may beat you down, or the hand j oT disappointment may b?at you back, but I thei\5 is a hand, au i it it> so kind, ani it is so gentle, that it wipeth all tears from all I facsi. Tho C >ssacks as Soldiers. The Cossacks furnish soldiers for al ! branches of the service m Russia, but | especially for the cavalry. They are skill. ; ; fu\ horsemen and brave soldiers, ari( there is a great deal that is romantic aud i interesting connected with their history. While the empire was limited to a part of what is now called Russia in Europe i thej were independent and formed a bar I rier against the Turks on the south and : the Tartars on the southeast. As th< ! Czars extended their dominions the Cos i #acks were obliged to become Ru-rgiar subjects, and thev have since rendered i infinite service as military pioneers ir i Siberia and Turkestan. Of the Cossacki \here are thirty-three regiments, not counting some others in service on th< Volga and in Central Asia. They *re al exempted from taxes, but owe their mili tary service. In time of peace only a third of the men are liable to railitan duty. Tbey are designated according i to their plac3 of residence as Cossacks o ! the Don, the Ural, of Astrakan, of Terek, of Konban, etc., the last three province? . being on or near the Caspian sea. They use instead of the cavalry saddle ; a fiat saddle with cushions, and it is t remarkable evidence of their skill io horsemanship that the bridle has only been ia use for a brief period. Theii feat? in riding, such as standing erect al full gallop, springing off while moving at full speed, leaping, riding two horses, picking up objects on the ground whil< at the gallop, with other evolutions quit* : as extraordinary, could hardly be equaled ! by the best trained modern equestrians. The military service about the Caspian i eea and in Turkestan is chiefly performed ; by Cossack infantry and cavalry recruited for the greater part in the Caucasus.? San Francisco Chronicle. No Wonder | People Speak Well of HOOD'S. " For a long time I was troubled with weak stomach. In digestion and Dys jlipsia. I began taking j 3Ka's Sarsaparilla and 2 have not felt eo well ail j Mr. R.J. Brundage. over for years. My food seldom troubles me now. My 6ifter also took Hood's Sarsapanlla with very pleai-injr results I don't wonder people rpeak well of Hood's i S&rs&Darlll&. Don't sec how they can help I It.'' R. j/BRrNDAQE, Nor walk. Ct. I N.B.? He sure to get Hood's Sarsaparilla. Hood's Pills act easily, yet promptly and efficiently on the liver and bowels. "Sick" Pearls in * Sabuerged At the foot of a cliff under the win* dowB of the Castle of Miramar, formerly the residence of the Mexican Emperor Maximilian, at a depth of eighty feet below the surface of the clear waters of the Adriatic, is a kind of cage fashioned by divers in the face of the rock. In that cage are some of the most magnifi* cent pearls in er -stenoe. They belong to the Archduchess R ifner. Having been left unworn for a long time, the gems lost their color and became "sick," and tie experts were unanimous in de-1 daring that the on!v means by which they cduW be restored to their original brilliaacy was by submitting them to ? prolonged immersion in the depths of the sea. They have been lying there for a numt>er of years, and are gradually bu! very slowly regaining their former un rivalled briiliaucy. Foundation for a Factory City. '"Four railroads", one a Wit line. and two ftia! oil nipe-Mnes arv sure to make a lux city hwe( 1 &aid Jay A. Dwfegin* Ar Co . of Chicago, when they founded GnifltU. Tli^y wero ri^ht. Four factories located at onci\ new housed and stores aregoinp up daily.? L'hicajto New?. No Chinese has been naturalized for thirteen year?. Statistics sho^r that trade docs nol decline in Presidential years. Tfce Only Ob* Ever Prlmti cur you nvi> th? word? These Is a 3 Inch display advertisement In this paper, this week, which hu no two word* alike except one worn. The same Lb true of each new one appearing each week, from Tho Dr. Harter Medicine Co. This house p!ac?s a /*Creeeent" on everything tbey makfcand pub lish. Look for it, send them the name or the word and they will return you book, bzauti rCL LITHOQ IlAPILS'Or SAMPLES rail The stooping bicycie rider may bstup- j posed to ou on pleasure beat. ? Boston Transcript. Snrnple Pnrkaic Mailed Prep. Address i'mall Bile Ewin?, Now York. A buried city has been discovered near Ironton, Ohio. Constipation cured bv $n*a. i' Bjle_Bean*. A shower of fl'es fell at Mount Joy, Penn., recently. Cure for Cold*, JTevers Debility, Small Bile B<?an?. iffk ."peroottlp. For a full crop 0:1 t'ie far n c-n neu<3 us to the old he.i. ? Li well C wrier. Many persons are broken do?vn from over work or hou-e'.iold care?. Brown's Iron Bi' ters rebui du the system, tJdt digestion, re move* excess of bile, and cures malaria. A spendid tonic for women and children. Every man'? ideal woraao is one will would believe ho caught w'.ia'.es in the river if he told her so. ? Atchison <J!o'j2. J. A. Johnson. Medina, Nr Y., s&y^: "Hall'* Catarrh Cure cured me." Sold by Druggists, 75c. */ It doesn't take a bit of meanness out of a rascal to polish h?i?. ? Iiam'i Horn. Ladies nee lln? a tonic, or children who want building up, should take Brown's Iron Bitters, it is pleasant to take, cures Malaria, Indigestion, Bilio inneas aa i Liver Com plaints, makes tho Blood rich and pure. A When a fly lights on a piece of sticky paper he realize that he U letter oi. ? Bingham ton Lea lot. __Vl Anyone would be Justiflod in recommending Beecham's Pills for all affections of thi liver and otb??r vital organs. f The man who brags much on his gooi ness will bear a gool deal of waichiag. ? Ram's Horn. Or;n Old R suable Eye waiku cur** weak or inflamed eyes, or uranuU'ed lid* without | aln "? 0">n. J. it*; R. 1>?cki*v Drufc Co., DrUt I. V* ONX} RXJOY9 Both the rhettod and results wh^is Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acta ontly yet promptly on the Ki&ieys, aver and Bowels, deanscs the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to the taste and ac ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its cffects, prepared only from the most healthy ana agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. feyrup of Figs is for sale in 50a and $1 bottles by all leading drug gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly, for auy one who wishes to try it. Do not accept any substitute. ! CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAX fKA\CiSCO. CAL. LOUISVILLE, KV. KEW YO/lt C A. IT. the Asthma Kvlly ever since I came I ont of the armv and though T have ! been in the drug business for fifteen | years, an. I have It id nearly every thing on the market, nothing has given me the slij.;!itc^t relict until a few mouths ago, when I used Bo schee's German Syrup. I atn now glad to acknowledge the great good it has done me. I am greatly reliev ed during the <lny rind at night go to sleep without ti;e least trouble." <1 2TIP a r>r i \ you on o tow . MIf and rRn??l\ to gp t ih? *>'?>! aL"eifor )0,,rm,,nri ' Krnno mize In vpjir foot wenr h\ pur. ? ki l "? v'M Sli wnich repreof-n: if,,. rnin?? for pri?r?. n?kr4. ?? 'bomund* will tr?tk|j. WTAKENOSl n?*TIT( TF. A.SK FOR W. L. DOUGLAS' ? ; if not for salf ?r. ?*.? ? wanted. PcatfiRi !rtt, ?y "PfVev? * tcr~ ' .34. ' c.in st<Tve pottob to M ?tSSS' ard the consumer wm <rtta e?m iyg A If used rv'coutt tbc attest Cfrfltf &n inl f.o for.i the i f.nem< to boilll chlid. drugg cxpnttt of rric?? p;. id. bradfield regulator CO.. *nm ^V?pial'T^ W. T. V\tm 13 ATC l%| I S WuMhinma I'M I CI" 1 W 10-parefcJj F OOTINE <tc*troj* the <x1?w of M ami .4 rxn>its iui<i I'UMi ? cnf or money rcftHM . ~ f.r U?|i M-D i icr ^ CO., S?;a?t??n iIms-leawille bi Housekeepers Mi lb.. $3. Carolina's PrtA F# l*r pair. LMriDT'llM Honest Je.ins? Ora*i and Black? v!5c., 40c. nnd 60c. pcr^ai^'l Gray, 34 1-Jc. brown, 40<-. a }ar<l; t? Wool Yarn. *11 colors, 3c. o hank. It yai docs not ke?j> tbeso qixxid order of J. \v - d: CO., Special Selling Agtt . <o reim| * Con?u*ptiTM tad peopto Who h?r? weak lun#? AiUh m^onMU. P^CnrWOf ConinmptSon. It M* c?r?? It hn not lnj?p Idonru??not bad touk* U U tb? be?t cough urup. 6oW ?Tcrrwher?. M(< Its Origin and Hlstorff PREVENTION AND CI An interesting Pamphlet mailed to tn/ 1 <ires8 on receipt of Stama Dr. L ? HARRIS, Pittsburgh, Unlike li Dutch Process No Alkalies Other Chemicals ara e$c<! tn th? preparation of W. BAKER & C0.*8 ^ BreakfastCocoa 1 trJtifh is jii.re chtl soluble. ltbas?wor?f tercet Imm thcstren'jtk of ilotoh nsued with Staruli, Arrowroot or Sueor. anil is far more eco Domical, costing l:sa than one cent a cu/a, It is ucltduus, nourishing, ?od EAaiLt PIGEiTCl>. Sold by ti-wcri rvtrvvrhir*. W BAKER & CO , Dorchetter, Kait THE J ONLY TRUE ma vr?ll purify BLOOD.* r&roUta KIDNEYS, remove LIVFR uiror.lcr. build etrcncrth. renew appetite, rcttoic health and * ISorof YOQth. n? *n? n?.r?. Jt?'i!?roition, thattlre<ffcel lti .? ai)solatel v eradicated. Mind brightened % brain pow^r increased. bones. nerves, men L1DIES rose Moo hi on < 8,iri cv?rw Pamphlet. tie?, rccelv?snew force, ro^fcrint; from complaints pt? cuii ir to tliolr sex . tuluptt. find 4 cire. Roturni .hrclvS. bvvjtltl'os Complpxlon. lu-ri?. A ! I frctxtlne coo<1* t-cuii us J ccut .staiiip for 32-paxe w. HAR7ER ME&iCIME CO., St. looll. M?. IF YOU OWN - CHICKENS YOU WANTT ) wthrib THEM T 0 * X WAY ?vcn If you merely leop tfc<-m m a dlTartiOB. Im Jer to feanUe Fowl* ju<iict?.u*ly, you mnat kco\ (omnhit-ic at^u*. t^rm. To meet thli went * ? in telltn? a (v*'t K *'"?.' " e?r*rl?nc? i f\-|w 4C. of a practical poultry rniitr forywlllj ftOvc twenty fl vp year*. It was x rlttea Uy arr>an who put all hi* rr.'n 1. and time. ?nd noney 'js M?fi|aiao pe?* ? >f C!hkkc-nras? >i{~i?rta*a p?*U??>. bn? m a business- ar.?ll' you w.;l pi ?nt lylfc CW?*ty-flr* yMri' work, ycu cun uv? am; Cfclaka cuoaUy. " Hatting ChteAens." tn4 m<vk* r<V!r ! on)* e*:n do!;*r* for yon. TV\ joint !/? 'M: jounitist to detect trouble tm tr.? I ;ulirf i ar4 *? *tr ?? s? :t ct'*,f . rv *r\>\ tniwy L?'*r >o r*n*<; y 1L Thl* ?? <<ik * its U j?>q. X tltel ?fci'w 10 cr.ri i_t:rc <i ?.-.t to(*?<*fOf *cc* i : ? f f r." *-a ' n ?? * .? i?w4v#fo? btP<-',! * R {?uriO'.fr, ar.') Vi'.jr, InJr.'J, you thou d kr. ?? onthi* ?ui>jert to rrak-c It troriinbl*. Ben! postf&M for tweutj Q-? c?r.t* tn ;c. or fUtc:; s Ocok Publishing House, 1 I tci^ ?ki) : t N _V_Ctty ri FOR '3 (SF.NTLtMEH, THf 3fST S'^C-S '? ifii WOniB W THE M0KEY. i j?. ? ?.;?. : ? ?.?'??. ' ?'? <^amlnw, i,. :? i.i ?imVbl* than " ' , . . ' < >: )? id made Khoee ft Zj '? ' 'X - '? 'I-- m. -t ; ? !(?' S. lb?-y?-^UM . . ???.??': . ^ ,y ? . . v. ^ , . ' ? ' m ? -.r '1 ail other* wh<t . .. t ? ??.! " ti fho*, rul ? V lit - ?* W^rktrniiuca'* Sho** : "V ji.mu <>tij fiiher rnik??. ir ? saJWfhow thnt w<?rk . - ? x .? .<-? r ' T '? Sih?M?l >?hnr? are *' . ? . -.???? 'hT", Tit*mo?t servic<%> . ? - > f i >'???> ?1. *n-1 M.7A * : ?. J >| -..I ? ?!?? mailt of tin- T>or . ' V f?i*> ??*r> M%ll*h. to*r>. .? jtii ? custom made *. -i >? ? ho w tb 'o?.,n<y . rf ?'?:? ?!: - 'i " < / x ?'* y!- ?? ?uMn?'.i!r:R*hoeewith. ; ii r to- |i>.? < >t.n*.i??1on bottom. - ? . r ?- ;re nr.1 to prcuccu* ir?.- '? ?v.anvi,i'.-,xr.'jn? v un<li>r ?a!se i r*-t?ic*3. ? i. i ?? i i ??? i ;i r'ac.iory. ?ratinu kind, ?izt axd width - ; .v vc to d?a?ert? an J general rner* . i-i'.e I'o * v^t^!aauv, W. Ii. Iiaugla*- Brocktou.