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POPULAR SCIENCE.
M. Layard found in Nineveh a magn.
Scant lens of of rock crystal, which S. *
David Brewster considered a true opti
tai lens and the origin of the micro .
icope.
The* electric headlight for locomotivv. ;
seems to be a permanent institution, 1
is in use on several roads running in:.
Cincinnati and Indianapolis,and isbeiir; i
used experimentally on a surburban trait
•f the Illinois Central at Chicago, Th
light is wonderfully far-reaching am.
vivid.
The forecasts of the weather bureau of ;
France were verified last year in ninety
cases out of every hundred, the per
centage having speedily risen front
eighty-one in 1881 to eighty-three in
1882 and to eighty seven in 1883. Out
>f 180 alarm signals sent to the ports
128 were fully verified, twenty-four were
fairly correct, thirty-seven were incor- ,
rect, and only two gales were not foie- I
seen.
A remarkable effect of low tempera
ture has been pointed out to the Glas
gow Philosophical society. At about
122 degrees below zero Fahrenheit, the
flesh of animals such as mutton, becomes
so exceedingly hard as to ring like
porcelain when struck, and it may
readily bo crushed to a fine powder.
More singular still, microbia living in
the flesh before freezing have been seen
alive after thawing, even after an expos
ure of one hundred hours to the intemo
cold.
It is said that the seas of the Austral
ian coast are heavier than anywhere else
in the world. For hundreds of miles
black, beetling cliffs, from four hundred
to six hundred feet high,extend without
an opening of any kind into which a
distressed ship might run for safety.
Bound the b tse of the cliffs the crested
hills of angry waves surge and ronr.
swept along with terrible force by winds
torn at the southern polo, and which
careering over thousands of miles of sea,
have encountered land here for the first
time.
A reputable scientific authority quotes
the statement that, by careful estimate,
a spider ate four times its weight for
breakfast, nearly nine times its weight
for dinner, thirteen times its weight for
supper, finishing up an ounce, and at 8
r. M., when ho was released, ran off in
search of food. At this nite a man of
100 pounds would require the whole of
a fat steer for breakfast, another with a
half dozen good sheep for dinner, and
two bullocks, eight sheep and four hogs
for supper, with about four barrels of
frosh fish as a lunch before going to hie
club banquet.
A Soap Mino in Wisconsin.
Tn the central portion of this State in
Waupaca county, says a Milwaukee let
ter, a new industry has sprung into ox
•istence. Near the shores of the Waupaca
river, a few miles south of the town of
Weyauwega, some men digging a cellar
discovered a stratum of a peculiar kind
of clayey soil. Some specimens of th».
strange material were thrown out, and
a farm house was built over the excava
tion then made, Later, an English laa
borer at work on the farm belonging t-.
the house found the pile of strange look
ing soil which had been thrown out, and
after examining it, declared it to be a
valuable substance for scouring gold and
silver ware, such as he had seen dug in
i certain part of England. Experiment
were at once made, and it was found
that the substance would do just what
the Englishman claimed, and a gentle
man named Scoville purchased the house
from under which the substance w
taken and twenty acres of land surround
ing. Scoville interested some Oshkosh
capitalists in the matter, and they pur
chased the right to dig all of the mater
nd on his land, paying Scoville therefor
$5,000. They also engaged Scoville to j
dig and prepare the material and ship it!
to Oshkosh. In the latter place it is ■
being put up in small packages for pol
ishing pur]M>ses, and a soap is being
manufactured also w ith the now ingredi
ent as the chief substance of it.
A Society for ths Suppression of Slang.
The society formed by young women
of Cleveland for the suppression of slan- I
is meeting with considerable success,;
and its fines are promptly paid by mem- i
bers, tho revenue going to the associated I
chai ities of the city. Tho list of tabooed '
expressions is as follows:
You are another. Pretty nearly.
Willy Y’ou make me tired '
Crank. Y’ou make me weary.
Gosh. Snide.
Just boss. Slouch.
Cheese it. Allee samee.
Monkeying. Bet your life.
Y’ou can't. Give it up.
Nasty thing. Great heavens.
You are crazy. Oh. mercy.
Y’ou tramp. Cheese the racket
Y’ou poor thing. Too, too.
Y ou nuisance - Chalk it down.
Y’ou are a slouch. Too thin.
Such a gal. Kats.
Don't mention it. Not much.
What a nerve. Chestnuts.
I should smile. La la.
1 should remark. Ah 'here, stay them
I should snicker. Tata.
1 should titter. Jim dandy.
I should murmur. Just great.
I should giggle. Proper caper.
I don’t have to. Say nothing.
Hardly ever. Sure.
Give us a rest. What a picnic.
A German scientist has drawn after
tion to the fact that the Sutlej, one
the great streams of British India,
probably the swiftest large river in the
world, having a descent of 12,000 few
in 180 miles, an average of about sixv
seven feet per mile.
A SERMON BY TALKAGB.
—.—
! The Corn Crib.
T*rt, 'Senear xliii. 3: “Ye shall not see
ft ce except your brother be with y.,i> ”
Nothing to eatl. Plenty of corn jn Egypt
but ghastly lamina in Canaan. -ffid cattle
moaning in the stall. Men, tfoirien ami chil
dren awfully white with hunger. Not tho
failing of one fttop for one summer but fho
failing of nil the crops for seven year- A
•’ nation dying for lick of that which is so com-
I mon on your table an l so little appreciated:
the product of harvest field and grist mill and
I oven; the price of sweat and anxiety arid
struggle—Jiriwdl Jacob, the father, has tho
lust report from the Hour bin and 1>« finds
i that everything isoUt, and he says to bis sons:
‘Boys, hook Up tho wagons and start for
Egypt and get us some-thing to <Mlt.“ Tho
fact was there wasa gr.-at.n crib in Egypt
Tile people of Egypt save been large y taxed
in all ages, at t-lio present time paying between
seventy and eighty pur cent, of their pro
ducts to the government No wonder in that
time they had a largo corn-crib Ami it was j
lull. To that, crib they came from the re- ;
gions around al-out—-those who were famished l
, —soma paying for the corn in money; when !
i the money was exhausted paying for tho corn I
I in sheep and cattle and horses and camels; i
I and when they were exhausted then selling ’
| their'own bodies and their families into
slavery.
The morning for starting out on the |
crusade for broad has arrived. Jacob gets j
hh family up very early. Hut totore tho
elder sons start they s.-.y something that !
makes him tremble with emotion from
head to foot and burst into tears The I
fact was that tboflo elder sons had once :
Irefore been in Egypt to get corn and
j they had been treated somewhat roughly, tho
i lord of tho corn-crib supplying them with
i “v' 1 ’ butsaying at the closoof thointerview!
“Now, you need not como back hero tor any
more corn unless you bring something tatter
than money-even yotir younger brother Ben
jamin.” Ah; Benjamin—that very name was
suMgeßtive of ali tenderness. The mother had
ditMl at the birth of that son—a spirit coming
, and another spirit going—and tho very
i thought of parting with Benjamin must have
been a heart break. The keeper of this corn
crib nevertheless says to these older sons:
i “There Is no need of your coming up hero any
more for corn, unless you can tiring Benja
min, your father’s darling.” Now, Jacob and
I his family very much needed bread; but
what a struggle it would lx* to give up this
“ son. The Orientals are very demonstrative
i in their grief, and I hear the outwailing of
the fattier us these older sons keep reiterating
• in his ears tho announcement of the Egyptian
| lord: Ye shall not see mv face unless your
brother bo with you.” “Why did you tell
■ ‘ them you had a brother!” said tho obi man,
- i complaining ami '-hiding them. “Why,
father,” they said, “he asked us all about our
1 family, and wo had no idea he would make
any such demand on ns as he has made.”
“No use of asking me,” said tho father, “I
cannot, I will not givo up Benjamin. ” Tho
fact was that the old man had lost wife and
children; and I have been told that when there
has been a bereavement in a household and a
child taken, it makes the other children in
the household more precious. So the day for
departure was adjourned and adjourned.
Still tho horrors of the famine increased, and
louder moaned the cattle ami wider open
cracked the earth ami more pallid became
the cheeks, until .Incob in despair cried out to '
his sons: “Take Benjamin am! be off." The I
older sons tried to cheer up their father. They
said: “We have strong arms ami a stout
heart, and no harm will come to Benjamin.
AA e’U see t hat he gets back again. Farewell,"
said the young men to the father,in a tone of
assumed good-chi M-r. “F a-r-e w e-1-1!” said
tho old man; for that word has more quavers
in it when pronouned by tho aged than by tho
young.
Well, the bread party—Jtho bread embassy i
—drives up in front of the corn* crib of Egypt.
Those corn-cribs are lllkd with wheat and
barley and corn in the husk, for modern
travelers in these lands, both in Canaan and
Egypt, tell us there is corn there correspond
ing with our Indian maize. Huzza! Tho
journey is ended. The lord of tho corn-crib,
who is also tho prime minister, comes down
to these arrived travelers, and says; “Dine
with mo to day. How is your father? Is this
Benjamin, the younger brother, whoso pres
ence I demanded!” The travelers are intro
duced into the palaeo. They are worn and be
dusted of the way, and servants come in
with a basin of water in one hand and a
towel in the other ami kneel down before
these newly arrived travelers, washing off the
dust of tho way. The butchers ami poulterers
and caterers of tho prime ministers prepare
the repast. The guests are seated in small
groups, two or three at a table, tho food on a
tray; all the luxuries from imperial gardens
ami orchards and aquariums and aviaries are
brought there and ar<‘filling tho chalice and
platter. Now is the time for this prime min
ister if he has a grudge against Benjamin to
show it. Will ho kill him now that he has
him in his hands? Oh, no! This lord of the
corn-crib is seated nt his own table, and
he looks over to tho tables of his guests;
and he sends a portion to each of them, but
sends a larger portion to Benjamin, or, as
the Bible quaintly puts it: “Benjamin’s mess
was five times so much ns any of theirs.” Be
quick and send word bark with tho swiftest
camel to Canaan to old Jacob that Benja
niu is well; all is well; ho is faring sumptu
ously; the Egyptian lord did not mean
murder and death; but. he meant deliverance
and when he announced to us on that
day; *Ye shall not see my lace unless your
brother be with you.’ ”
Well, my friends, this world is famine
struck of sin. It does not yield irsingle cro|
ol solid satisfaction, it is dying; tt is hunger
bitten. Tho fa *t that it does not, cannot
food a man's heart was well illustrated in the
life of tho English comedian. All tho world
i honored hint—did everything for him
that tho world could do. He
was applauded in England ami
I applauded in the United States. Ho >
I roust'd up nations into laughter. He had ao .
! equal. Ami yet, although many people sup
po-R'd him entirely happy and that this world
was completely satiating his soul, ho sits
down mid writ 's: “ 1 never in my life put on
a new hat that it did not rain and ruin it I
never went out in a shabby coat because it
was raining and thought all who had the
choice would keep indoors, that the sun did
not burst for;h in its strength and bring out
with it all tho butterflies of fashion whom I
I knew ami who kiiew me. I never consented
to accept a part mid acted, out of kindness to I
another, that I did not get hissed by tho pub-
Ihe and cut by the writer. 1 could not take ;
i a drive for a few minutes with Terry without i
| I»eing overturned ami having niv elbow-bone j
broken, though my friend got off unharmed. .
J I could not m ike a covenant with Arnold, !
i which I thought was to maka my fortune, ,
I without making his instead, than in an in- I
credible space of time—l think thirteen
i mouths—l earned for him twenty thousand
pounds and for myself one. lam persuaded .
j that if I were to set up as a beggbr, every •
one in my neighborhood would leave off eatr |
ing bread.”
.That was the lament of tho world's come
dian and joker. Ail unhappy. The world ;
did everything for Lord Bryou that it could
de. and yet in his last moment he asks a
friend to come ami sit down by him and read
as most appropriate .to his case the story of
“The LUv ding Heart.” I‘orrigiano, the
sculptor, executed after months of rare and
carving “The Madohna ami the Child.’’ The
royal family came in and admired it Every
boiy that Looked at it was m- ecstasy; but
one day, after ail that toil and all that admi
rat .on. bt\ ause he did not get jus much com
ix'nsation for his work as he had expected,
he took a mallet anti dashixi the exquisite sculp*
t ure into atoms. The world is poor eotnpeusa
tion, poor sat start ion. poor solace. Famine, !
famine in all the earth; not for seven
but fur 6,000. But, blessed be God, there is a
grva f corn crib. The lord built it It is i
ber mother land. It is a large place. An
■ angel once it and as far as I can
calculate it in our phrase that com crib is ’
1. ami miles long and broa<l and 1,500 •
‘I i b * U *I- Food for all nations, i
•Oh, say the people, “we will start right :
away and get this supply for our souls.” But
•top a moment, for from the keeper of that
corn crib there comts this word, saying:
on shall not niv fa«*e except vour
brother be with you." In other words there
is no su h thing as‘getting from heaven pafr
don and comfort and eternal life, unless we
bring with usourdiyine Brother the Lord 1
Jesus Christ. Coming without; Him we shall
fail before we rva-h the corn crib and onr {
bodies be a portion for the jackals of thq '
wildeni«‘ss: but coming \Vith the divine Jesus
all the granaries of heaven will swing open
before our s-ml ami abun lance shall be given
us. We shall be invited to sit in the palace of
the King and at the table; and while the
Lord of heaven is apportioning from his own .
table to other tables He will not forget us;-
■and then and there it wiil be found thqt our I
i
I fcen jaipln’s mess is larger thafi all the others,
for so it ought to be, “Worthy is the
; that Was slain to receive blessing and riches
and honot And glory and power.”
- Want to make three points. Every frank
| and common sense man will acknowledge
! himself to be a sinner. What are yougoin*
to do with your sins? Have them pardoned!
you say How? Through the mercy of God.
V\ hat do you mean by the mebey Os God?
Is it th* adiVn 6t a bar for the ad
taidnqn di all without respect to character?
Be not descriljefl. 1 see a soul coming up to
tho gate of mercy and knocking at the com
crib of heavenly supply; and a voice from
with i n says: Arev< m alone ?” The sin ner re
plies: “All alone.” Tha voice from within
says: “you sh ill not see my pardortiilg face
unless ymj.rdivide bfothef the Lord Jdsus be
With yoU-.” Oh, that is the point at which sb
many an) disjoinfitbj 1. There is no mercy
from God except through Jesus Christ.
Coming with him we are Accepted Coming
without him We are re jected. Peter put it
tight in his great sermon before the high
priests when he thundered forth: “Neither is
there salvation in any other. There is no
other name given under heaven among rnan
whereby we may lie Saved” Oh, anxious
sinner, bli, dying sinner, oh, lost sinner. All
you have got to do is to have thi«x divine
■ Benjamin along with you. Side by side
coming to the gate, all the storehouses of
; heaven will swing open before vour anxious
I soul. Am 1 right in calling Jesus Benjamin?
Oh, yes; Rachel lived only long enough to
i givetl name to that child, and with a dying
1 Kiss she called him Benoni. Afterward
Jacob changed his name and ho called him
i Benjamin. The meaning of th« name she
I gave was “Son of my Pain." Tho meaning
of the name the father gave Was “Son of my
| Right hand." And was not Christ the son of
I pain? All the sorrows of Rachel In that
liour when she gave her child over into the
I han is of strangers was nothing compared
i with tho struggle of God when ho gave up
his only son, the omnipotent God in a birth
throe! And was not Christ appropriately
culled son of tho Right Hand. Did not
Stephen look into heaven and s*?e him stand
ing at the right hand of God? And does not
Paul speak of him as standing at the right
hand of God making intercession for us?
Oh, Benjamin—JesUs! Son of Pang! Son of
Victory! The deepest emotions of our souls
ought to be stirred at the sound of that
nomenclature. 'fo-night in your prayers
plead his tears, his sufferings, his sorrows,
'his death. If you refuse to do it al! the corn
cribs and the pala<-es of heaven will be bolted
and barred against your soul, and a
voice from the throne shall stun you with the
announcement: “You shall not see my face
unless your brother be with you.”
My text also suggests the reason why so
many people do not get any real comfort. |
You meet ten people; nine es them are in
need of some kind of condolence. There is
something in their health, or in their state,or
in their domestic condition that demands
sympathy. And yet the most of the world’s
sympathy amounts to absolutely nothing.
People go to tho wrong crib or they go in the
wrong way. When the plague was in Koine
a great many years ago, there were eighty
men who chanted themselvea to death with
the litanies of Gregory tho Great —literally
chanted themselves to death—and yet it did
not stop the plague. And all the music of
this world cannot halt the plague of the hu
man heart. I come to some one whose ail
ments are chronic and 1 sav: “In heaven
you will never be sick.” That does not give
you much comfort; what you want is a
soothing power lor your pro.wnt distress.
Lost children, have you? I como to you, I
tell you that in ten years |>erhapfi you will
moot those loved ones before the throne of
I God. But there is but little condolence in
i that. Ono day is a year without them, and
ten years is u small eternity. What you
want is a sympathy now—present help. I
come to those of you who have lost dear
friends an I say: “Try to forget them. Do
not keep the departed always m your mind."
How can you lorget them when every figure
in the carpet, mi l every book, and every
picture and every room ( tills out their name.
Suppose ivoino to you and say,by way of con
d"l nee: “God is wise.” •’Oh,” you say,
‘that gives me no help.” * Suppose 1 como to
you andhiiy: “God Irom all eternity has ar
ranged this trouble.” “Ah,” you say, “that
does me no good.” Then 1 say: “With the
swift feet ol prayer go direct to the corn
crib for a heavenly supply.” You go.
You say: “Lord, help me: Lori, com
fort me." But no help yet. No comfort yet.
It is all dark. What is the ma tor? 1 have
found you ought to go to God and say: “Here,
oh, Lord, are the wounds of my soul and I
bring with mo tho wounded Jesus. Let llis
wounds |my for my wounds, His bereave
ments for my 1/ereavements,His loneliness for *
my loneliness, His heart break for my heart
break. Oh, Clod, tor tho sake of tho Lord
Jesus Christ, the God, the man, tho Benja
min, the brother—deliver my agonized sout
Oh, Jesus of the weary foot, case my fatigue.
Oh, Jesus of tho aching htfltd, heal my aching
head. Oh, Jesus of the Bethany sisters, roll
away the stone irom the door of our grave."
That is the kind of prayer that brings help,
and yet how many of you are getting no help
nt all, for the reason that there is in your soul,
perhaps, a secret trouble. You may never
have mentioned it to a single Human ear, or
you may have mentioned it to some one who
is now gone away and that great sorrow is
still in your soul. After Washington
Irving was dead, they found a little box that
contained a braid of hair and miniature and
the name of Matilda Hollman, and a mem
orandum of her death and a remark some
thing like this-. “The world after that was a
blank t«» me. 1 went into tho country, but
found no peace in solitude. I tried to go into
society but 1 found no peace into society.
I’nero has been a horror hanging over me t>y
nightand by day and 1 am afraid to Im* alone.”
How many unnttered troubles at tins hour!
No human ear has ever heard that sorrow.
Oh, troubled soul, 1 want to tell you that
there is one salve that can cure the wounds
of the heart and that is the salve made out of
tho tears of a sympathetic Jesus. And yet
some of you will not take this solace; and
you try chloral ana you try morphine and you
try strong drink and you try change of scene
and you try new business ossocia
! tious. and anything and everything
i rather than to take the Di
vine companionship and sympathy sug
gested by the words of my text when it says:
“You shall not see my face again unless your
brother be with you.” Oh, that all might un
derstand something of th.* height and depth
ami length and breadth and immensity and
infinity of God’s eternal consolations!
I go further and find in my subject a hint
as to why so many people fail of heaven. We
are told that heaven has twelve gates, and
some people infer from that fact that all the
I ix*ople will go in wit hout reference to their
I past life; but what is the use of having a
| gate that is not sometimes to be shut? The
■ swinging of a gate implies that our entrance
| into heaven is conditional, it is not a mone-
I tarj’ condition. If we come to the door of an
1 exquisite concert we are not surprised that
i we must pay a fee, for we know that tine,
> earthly music is expensive; but all the orato
| l ies of heaven cost nothing. Heaven pays
nothing for its music. It is all free. There
. is nothing to lu> paid at that door for en
’ trance; but the condition of our getting into
' heaven is our bringing our divine Benjamin
| along with us. Do you notice how often
: dying people call upon Jesus? It is the usual
• p aver offered more than all the other prayers
■ put together: “Lord Jesus, receive my spirit”
: ()ne or mv cCmgregation when asked in the
closing moments of his life, “Do you know
I us?” said; “Oh, yes; I know you. God bless
you. (tood bye. lioni Jesus, receive my
spirit,” and he was gon?. Oh. yes: in the
closing moments of our life we must have a
Christ to < all upon. If Jacob's sons had gone
up toward Egypt and had gone with the very
finest equipage and had not taken Benjamin
along with them, and to the question they ,
should have been obliged to answer: “Sir, we
didn’t bring him. as father could not let him
go; we didn't want to be bothered with him;”
i A voice from within would have said: “Go
a wav from us. You shall not have any
I of this supply. You shall not see my face be- i
: cause your brother is not with you.” And if
we come up toward the door of heaven at
j last, though we come from all luxuriance and
! brilliancy of surroundings, and knock for ad
i inittance. and it is found that Christ is not
I with us, the police of heaven will beat us
’ InK-k from the broad-house, saying: “Depart.
1 never knew vou" if Jacob’s sons, coming
toward Egypt, had lost everything on the
wav; if they had expended their last shekel;
if they had come up utterly exhausted to the
com-cribs of Egypt, and it had been found
that Benjamin was with them, all the store
houses w’ aid have swung open before them.
' And so. though by fatal casualty we may be
! ushened into the eternal world; though we
may be weak and exhausted by protracted
[■sickness, if in that last moment we can only
just siiggei* and faint and fail into the gate
of heaven it seems that ail the corn-cribs of
i heaven will open for our need, and all the
I pa;ae«" w !l < ten for our reception; and the
■ Lord of i nat place, seated at ilis table, and
ah the at.gels of God. seated at their table.
. and the martyrs, seated at their table, and
all ohr glorified kindivd. s»‘ «ted at our table.
I the king shall pass a portion from ins table to
ours, and then, while we think of the fact
j that it was Jesus who started us on the road,
and Jesus who kept us on the way, and Jesus
who at last gained admittance for our souls,
we shall be glad if he has seen of the travail
of His soul and been satisfied, amt not be at
all jealous if it be found that our divine Ben
jamin’s mess is five times larger than all the
rest. Hall, undid ted of tli6 Lord! Thou art
worthy.
My iriends, you see it is either Christ or
famine. If there were two banquets spread,
and to one of them only you might go,
you might stand and think for a
good while as to which invitation you had
better accept; but here it is feasting or star
vation. If there were two mansions offered
and yoii blight have ottly one, you might
think for a long while saying: “Perhaps I
had better accept this gift and perhaps I ht*
better accept that gift,” but it is a choice be
tween palaces of light and hovels of despair.
If it Were a choice between oratorios you 1
might say: “I prefer the ‘creation'” or “1
prefer the ‘Messiah. ’” But here It is a choice
between eternal harmony and everlasting
discord. Oh, will you live or die? Will you
sail into tho harbor or drive on the rocks?
Will you start for the Egyptian corn-crib or
will you [M-ridi ami 1 the empty barns of the
Canaaniti-h famine?
What shall be the destiny of all my audi
ence.' I might peer into the countenances
and see here and there a person that I well
; know and make Up my mind as to what di
rect ion or street they may take in going home.
Some of them I may never have met before; |
■ some of them I may never meet again. We i
just touch and pass off. God, I believe. :
j through this sermon has shown you your neeu ,
i and the only source of supply; and yet some
jns deliberately make their own choice
as though they had in their
jxicket a certificate from the throne of heaven
i warrant'ng that they would have a hundred
I years yet in which to discuss this question
and decide it. There is but a step between
you an ! death. There is but a step between
you and the loss of «*i eternal soul. And so
J meet you and putLny hand on your shoul
der, and I beg you *- accept <‘hrist and pre
pare for heaven. hsh, the 'two re**ords—the
• re -ord made on eartfl and the record made in
i heaven. Oh what a tremendous moment thisl '
Gat-s of mercy closing. M*ssenger angels
retr -ating. lhe Holy Spirit ceasing his last
pl ato ihe heart. Tlie shadows of theeter-
! mil world dropping; whdo for some the
' graunri-s of Go! mo shut and the eternal
' famine has b gun. “Ye shall not see my
j fa e ex -ept your brother lie with you.”
The Exploration of Hudson Bay.
In the month of February last a re
-1 port was laid before the parliament of
| Canada detailing the results of an expe
dition dispatched by the government of
that country particularly for the purpose
of inquiring into the navigability of
Hudson strait and bay, and, at the same
time, of gathering information concern
ing the resources of that region, and its
availability as a field for settled habita
tion, 'Lliis report represents the first
properly organized attempt that has ever
been made to pierce the secrets of Hud-
I son bay for the public benefit.
It is at first blush not easy, to under
stand why this mighty expanse of water,
occupying the peculiarly important posi
tion that it does, should remain for so
many generations comparatively unex
plored, ami wholly unutilized, except as
hunting ground for a few New Bedford
whalers, or a medum of easy communi
cation betwen some half dozen
scattered factories of the Hudson Bay
Company. Although called a bay. it is
really an inland sea, 1,000 miles in length
by 000 in width, having thus an area of
about 500,000 square miles, or quite half
that of the Mediterranean. It drains an
expanse of country spreading out more
than 2,000 miles from east to west, and
1,500 from north to south, or an area of
3,000,000 square miles. Into its majestic
waters pour feeders which take their rise
in the Rocky Mountains on the west and
in Labrador on the east, while southward
it stretches out its river-roots away below
the forty ninth parallel until they tap the
same lake source which sends a stream
into the Gulf of Mexico. Despite its dis
tance northward, its blue waves are never
bound by icy fetters, and its broad gate-
* way to the Atlantic is certainly naviga
ble four months out of tho scar, and
possible all the year round to properly
equipped steamships. Ils depths aboun I
in linny wealth, from the mammoth
whale to the tiny caplin. Its shores arc
serrated by numerous streams, some nav
igable for long distances inland, and all
stocked with lhe finest of fresh-water
fish, and clothed as to their banks with |
valuable timber ready for the lumber
man’s axe. Its islands me rich in min
eral orc of many kinds. The country
whose margin its tides lave is well
adapted for pasturage, while all around
the region swarms with animals and
birds whose flesh or fur renders their I
chase a highly lucrative employr "X. — i
Popular Science Monthly.
Elephants Like Human Beings.
An elephant is nobody’s fool, says a
trainer in the Bridgeport Ar/a.v. They’re
very like human beings. Some of them
are good natured and some are ugly,
d’hcv’re just like children. When I have
them out in the morning for dress re- ’
hearsal they’re as quick as cats, minding
almost before the word is out of my
mouth. But in the afternoon they are j
gaping this way and that, doing every
thing but attending to business, because
they know that I won’t strike them be
fore a crowd of spectators. They hate
to take medicine, too, unless it has a lit- ;
tie of the “craythur” in it. Arc ele
phants ever sick ? Oh, yes; they often
have the colic. When they begin to ;
double up I give ’em a dose of five or six
gallons of rum and ginger. About five
gallons of rum and whisky are prescribed
lor the chills. Solid drugs are given in
pills. A pill eight inches in diameter
and containing $0 worth of quinine does 1
the business for a cold, while a pepsin
pill is given whbn one gets off his feed.
I gave J uno over SSO worth of quinine
in one fit of sickness. They don’t like
pills as well as the whisky, aud it’s a
good deal of a job to get them down,
lhe best way is to put a pill on the end
. of a stick, make them open their mouths,
and shove it down before they realize the
i situation Sometimes we cut out the mid
dle of a turnip and put the drugs inside
the vegetable.
Pierce and the Poker Players.
An “Old Stager ’ tells the following .
( story to the Washington correspondent
t of the Cleveland (O.) Leader : “It was !
i on a hot July evening away back in the ;
i fifties. Two Senators and myself were
seated with our coais off in the rooms of |
i Senatof t iemens of Alabama, having a i
• quiet game of poker. It was a game of '
five-cent ante, and the coins were lying i
! on the table, when a gentle knock was
i heard at the door. Senator Clemers
* yelled out in a stentorian tone, ‘Come
i in.’ and the door ojtened and in walked
i Frank Pierce, then President of the
: United States. As we saw him we all
‘ pushed our chairs back from the table
and arose to put on our coats as a mark
of respect, but President Pierce said. |
’ Don’t disturb yourselves, gentlemen. I ■
have just come in to make a social call
I upon my friend Mr. Clemens, and I do j
not want to interrupt your game.’ No i
one stirred, and Mr. Pierce sat down and
chatted a few moments with us and then ;
arose to go. As he left the room he
asked some questions as to how the
game was going, and said. “I am very !
fond of cards myself, and I wish I could
stop and take a hand with you. but I ‘
have other engagements, and it will not '
be possible.' With this he left. Such i
an action in this day would be remarked
upon all over the country. In 1850 it i
waft acfifinted as a matter of course. ”
PtAGUE-STRICKEN PLYMOUTH.
Oom a Similar Danger Everyoni
OW PUBLIC ATTENTION IS DIRECTED TO
PERSONAL PERILS,
l r >cht9Ut (N. Y.)
StntineL
“Judge,” said a young lawyer to a very .
iccesfful senior, “Tell me the secret of your
;nifonri success at the bar.”
“Ah, young man, that secret is a life study,
but I will give it to you on condition that
you pay all my bills during this session of
court.”
“Agreed, sir,” said the junior.
“Evidence, indisputable evidence.”
At the end of the month the judge romir
?J the young rnan of his promise.
“I recall no such promise.”
“Ah, but you made it.”
“Your evidence, please?”
And the judge, not having any witnesses,
I lost a case for once!
The man who can produce indisputable
! evidence wins public favor. I had an inter
crew yesterday with the most successful of
American advertisers, whose advertising is
most successful because always backed by
evidence.
“What styles .of advertising do you use?”
I asked H. IL Warner, Esq.
“Display, reading matter and paragraphs
of testimonials.”
“Have you many testimonials?”
In answer he showed me a large cabinet
j chock full. “We have enough to fill Boston,
■ New York, Chicago, St. Louis and Philadel
phia mom in gpa pe rs. ”
“Do you publish many of them?”
“Not a tithe. Wonderful as are those we
do publish, we have thousands like them
which we cannot use. ‘Why not?* Let me
cell you. ‘Warner's safe cure’ has probably
!>een the most successful medicine for female
disorders ever discovered. We have testimo
nials from Irdi »s of the highest rank, but it
would be indelicate to publish them. Like
wise many statesmen, lawyers, clergymen,
lectors of worldwide fame have been cured,
but we can only refer to such persons in the
most guarded terms, as we do in our reading
articles.”
“Are thes® reading articles successful?”
“When read they make such an impression
that when the‘evil days’ of ill health draw
nigh they are remembered, and Warner’ssafe
cure is used.”
“No, sir, it is not necessary now, as at first,
to do such constant and extensive advertising.
A meritorious medicine sells itself after its
merits are known. W> present just evidence
enough to disarm skeptics and to impress tho
merits of the remedies upon new consumer’s. !
We feel it to be our duty to do this. Hence,
l>est to accomplish our mission of healing tho
sick, we have to use the reading article style.
People won’t real plain testimonials.”
“Yes, sir, thousands admit that had they
not learned of Warner's safe cure through
this clover style they would still be ailing
and still nn;»overisbing themselves m fees to
unsuccessful ‘practitioners.’ It would do
your soul good to read tho letters of thanks
giving we get from mothers grateful for the
perfect success which attends Warner’s safe
cure when used fox- children, and the sur
prised gratification which men an I women of
older years and impaired vigor, testify to the
youthful feelings restore! to thorn by the
same means.”
“Are thass good effects permanent?”
“Os all the cases of kidney, liver, urinary
and female diseases we have cured, not two
per cent, of them report a return of their
disorders. Who else can show such a re
cord?"
“Whet is the secret of Warner’s Rafe cure
permanently reaching so many serious dis
orders:”
• will explain by an illustration: The
little town of Plymouth, Pa., has been
plague stricken for several months because
its water supply was carelessly poisono L
The kidneys and liver are the sources of
physical well-being. If polluted by disease,
ail the bloo.l becomes poisoned and every
organ is affected and ?/*is great danger
threatens every one. who neglects to treat
himself promptly. I was nearly dea l my
self of extreme kidney disease, but what is
now Warner’s safe cure cured me, and I
know it is the only remedy in the world that
can cure such for 1 tried every
thing else in vain. Cured by it myself, I
bought it and, from a sense of duty, presented
it to tho world. Only by restoring the kid
neys and liv< r<an disease leave the blood
and the system ”
A celebrated sanitarian physician once
said to hf>; “The secret of the wonderful
success of Warner’s sate cure is that it is sov
erign over all kidney, liver and urinary dis- ,
eases, which primarily or secondarily make I
up the majority of human ailments. Lib»» all |
great discoveries it- is remarkably simple.”
The house of H. H. Warner it Co. stands •
deservedly high in R-ochcMxr, and it is cer- ;
tamly matter of congratulation that merit \
has Iteoii recognized all over tlio world, and
that tins success has been unqualifiedly do
served. Ten Point.
“Dear me,” said a forty line Puff to a
Standing Ad. a column long, “Here you
are yet. 1 always find you in the same
old place. What are you doing?” “I
am making Sl.s(M)h year for the Paper,”
replied tin- Standing Ad. “What are
you doing ? ’ “Me? Oh, lam whoop
ing it up hot for a man who borrows
the paper and advertises on the fences.”
Years Tench 'lore ’’h hi Rook*.
I Among other vaiuable ie-isons imparted by
his teacher is the fa t that for a very lone
, ime Dr. Pitre’s “Golden Medical Discovery"’
has been the prince of liver ('orrectives and
i >!ood purifiers, liei’ g the household physician
> f the p< or man, and the able consulting phy
i i ian to the rich patient, and prais-d by all
I «r its magnificent service and eflicacy m «!!
i iseases of a chronh- nature, as malarial ;
; ’oisoning, ailments of the respiratory and di ,
! estivc- svstems, liver disease, and in all case*- ;
vbere lhe use of an alterative remedy is indi
I cated.
I Sleep: The thief that roba ns of our time, !
i giving us health in exchange.
| If afflicted with sore eyes uro Dr. Isaac
I Thompson’s Eye Water. Druggists sell it. 25c !
1 Clouds:— The curtains of fight, as sorrows !
are of joy.
. Ink purest, sweetest aud beet Cod Liver Oil
in the world, manufactured from fresh, healthy
■ livers, ujxjn the seashore. It is absolutely pure i
1 <nd sweet. Patients who have once taken it pre- j
j fer it to all others. Physicians have decided it |
*ujh-rior to any of the other oils in market. Made
by Caswell, Hazard Co., New York.
When you sju ak to a person, look him in the
j face.
D li n-e I»’nrns<-H
i either sex. however induced, promptly. ;
j horimghly and ftermnnently cured. Seinl ;
• jree letter stamps for large illustrated trea '
j tise World’s i ’ispemsarv Medical Association, i
' Buffalo, N. Y.
Fool-.—One who shows his folly and doesn’t ■
| mow it.
Clisppc ' hands, face pimples an<l rough fßtn
cured by nsim; Jumper Tar Scap, made by Cas
well. Co.. New York.
Don't Discharge your Doctor
I But hi™ frankly you are
/ r getting desperate. Perhaps ha
I <« U* 51 will review his treatment, and
/ x V' -u wH ax^VLSe a tr ial of
Er* 'Oikß/ Ayer's Sarsaparilla,
j cvfeß~inf^/ i n th*® case > as in many others,
tc=TTr :==^i^S U / the change worked wonders:—
1 / - I Three years ago I suffered greatly from
I j r-r I ILiver Complaint. General Debility. Loss
l 1 Appetite, and Headache; my stomach
t was disordered, and. although I at©
——2 S sparingly, of carefully selected food. I was
s pr ,n con^tant distress from indigestion. I
j 2/ was troubled with sleeplessness, and be-
Z x ) v- k came so emaciated and feeble that I was
( \ Yyy/ F £ /} unable to leave my room. After remain-
~ A ing ' n re d uce d condition over a
""1 / / M(~> month, and receiving no benefit from the
* 1 | medicines prescribed for me. I obtained
fc J Br~ aTtf Ig, ni Y doctor’s consent to a trial of Ayer’q
’ Vl fiy Vi M Sarsaparilla. Before I had finished the
J iV"j\ 11 /i A ® ret °f medicine I began to im
-J ’^T7 < x !VI \ )( ‘\ ) prove. By its continued use the troubles
—/ / —A ‘nislO with my liver and stomach gradually di«-
{-— —*l x y\ appeared, and my appetite and strength
’ Jr I returned. After taking eight bottles my
| l|j f health was fully restored, and lam again
_V ——7 |vk able to attend to my business. lsaac D.
** Yar rington. Bunker Hill st., Charlestown
Copyrighted District. Boston. Mass.
For all disorders of the Blood, use
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla.
Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell. Mass. SviA by Druggists. Price $1; six bottle*, sa.
1 1
Ab Only Daughter Cured of C»B«umptloD.
When death was hourly expected from Con
sumption, all remedies having failed and Dr.
H. James was experimenting, he accidentally
made a preparat on of Indian Hemp, whi: h
cured his only child, and now gives this recipe
on receipt of stamps to pay expenses. Hemp
also cures night sv.ra's, nausea at the stom
ach, and wili break a fresh cold in 24 hours.
Address Craddock & Co., 103 i Race street,
Philadelphia, Pa., naming this paper.
Good company and good conversation are the
very sinews of virtue.
Pile Tumors,
□owever large, speedily and painlessly cured
without knife, caustic, powder or ointment
Consultation free. Write for pamphlet and
references, enclosing two letter stamps for
reply. World’s Dispensary Medical As&ocia
-ion, 663 Main stre Jt, Buffalo, N. Y.
Clxarity:—A service that the receiver should
remember ami the giver forget.
I niporranr.
Wb*n you Tioit or New York city, m.»o bier
eiprfteeeae and $3 carriage lure, a <1 stop at the Gran 1
Union Hotel, opposite Grand UentraJ depot.
O<> ele<ant rooms, titled up at a cost of one milltou
dollars, J*l and upward p*r day. European ptan. Ele
vator. Restaurant supplied with the best. Horse cars,
stage- and elevated railroads to ail depot*. Families
can live better lor h»s money at tne Grand Union
liote than at anv <»*her fiißt-ela-a hotel in th** --tty.
More Than Thanks.
Fort Madison, lowa, Mrs. Lydia E. Pink
ham: “I am glad to inform you that I have
tried one bottle us your Vegetable Compound
and have Xouud great relief. I more than
thank ycru for your kind advice. I have
never felt so well as I do now' since I iia-1
these troubles. Yours Resp’y, Mrs. W. C.
A—." The above is a sample of the many
letters received by Mrs. Pinkham expressing
gratitude for the benefit derived from her
vegetable Compound. Another letter from
Xauiinan, Texas, says; “Your Compound
has done more good than all th* Doctors
ever did. lor which 1 thank you with all my
heart. Your friend, Anna B
<’AKl< for Endowment Insurance Policies. A. K.
J*A ID i Brockleaby, Hartford, Connecticut.
PemliErtoD’s Fracii Wine Coca,
The Great and Sure Remedy
For all Nkkvovs Diwrbiss. Such as Mental
and Physical Depression, Neuralgia, Loss of
Memory, Sleeplessness, etc., etc.
It is the gkxat restokim of health to body
and mind.
Millions of our people are in a condition re
quiring no other remedy. Over-worked, men
tally and physically, they toil ok in suffering,
showing themselves heroes in the tattle of life,
worthy of health. This they will certainly
obtain by the use of
Pemberton’s French Wine Coca
There is health and joy in every bottle.
Young, middle-aged ami elderly men who
have given free scope to their passions or incli
nations, sooner or later experiences degree of
Lassitude, Weakness, Ix>ss of memory. Prema
ture Decay which point with unerring finger
the road to dissolution and the grave, can l>e
rescued and restored by the use of FRENCH
WINE COCA. Do not delay, bnt commence at
once to use this wonderful Tonic and Invigor
ant. Send for Book on Coca.
For sale by Druggists.
J. S. PEMBERTON & CO.,
Manufacturing Chemists, Sole Proprietors,
ATLANTA, GA.
a Iteam engines
JL AND BOILERS,
A 4 •> Horizontal and Vertical.
ly ■■ Dredge-Boat Outjitß
Flour Powder, Slate and Flint
Mill Machinery, Turbine Wnte
iIPSRC. Wheels, BhafUnff, Pulleys, H;tog
Illustrated Cstaiugus
mailed free.
york M F G CO.. York. Pa.
BOSTON’S PALATIAL HOTEL
The Vendome.
W. TRACY EUSTIS, Manager.
A Roanoke Cotton Preu.
_ M The Best and Ohoapaat Preua
r|rrTPrr3i? * jT * r rt ther presses Hundreds
Bj I * n actU) d use at both steam
' ■ ■ and benie power fius. Bales
1 / faster than any gnu can pick.
5 * / The new improvements in <in
X- I / houses desctibed in the words
V R 19 ■ / o< their inventors free to all.
9 / Address Ro amoxe Ibom awi>
’ Wood Worm, Chattanooga,
SO Tenn., or R anoii C<»TTos
• --» y pju. mi Co., Rich Square, N.C.
MFRICAL DEPARTMENT OF THE
Vniversity
OF LOUISIANA.
. Formerly. IM7-IRM, the University of Louisiana.)
' Posse ees unrivaled advantage" for practical instruction.
! since the Saw-e urns it superabundant mvtanals from
; the eat Chanty Hospital with its 7<M beds, ft,OtX) sick
admitted and lOjMki visiting patients annually. Students
j ere freely admitted to and are tau<ht at lhe bedside ot
j r' t-Ki, k, as m n>> other institution. F--r circular or ad
’ ditnma information, address S. E. CHAILLE, Dean.
P. O. Drawer New Orleans, La.
B4MA CURE 1 "!
ii m a C u r e neveryuia to srive <m- ■
i the worst caHeeJnsure® comfort-■
cte cures whereall others fail. .tB
U vuMt skeptical, w Price sOc. and K
infimsorbymail Sample FREEH
SILT ICHU M. PIIIPLE> AND FKI < K-
Ll> (I RED bv DR. 11 1 T< HIN.-ON, ■
< »«<> Derma 1 Institute Ca.ca« , lU. TREAT
'I ENTS, by mad, FREE, Send two 2-cent stamps
FipLh BA AH A ■ KBBB Pa. t. Praptto.d—t have taken wveral bottle* of
Kb ■Bffl BB ■ Km your Female Regulator for falling of the womb and
IW| KK B| other dlsea*e* «*ombtned.of 1« yean standing, and
wEHI ■w 3 W KKK KKi Z really bettere Inm cured entirely, for which please
- , . accept my heartfelt thank*. I know your medicine
1 ‘r. J ii»Ai>FiKi' > i hav •■. a> you know, been sell saved my life, so you see I cannot sneak too highly ip
ing your t-emale Regulator for yean, and have had a its favor. Re*i>ectfullv.
I steadth in reading demand for it; it give* the very Mku. W.K Stkbbixs, Ridge. Oa.
: best satisfaction. I frequently sell It to physician* For sale by all Druggists.
who use it in their practice with the most satisfac- ' —■■ ■■„i i»
Jun . a. k D - I ~ t HPaiilatAiJ
Send for Treatise on Woman. Mailed free. afitew •> wa &* JL a
Bradficld Rkoclatom Co., Atlanta, Ga.
COLUMBIA ATH^NEUM. VoVumbTa
I s ’ pwmber ;th - “»•
I malaria
Enter, tiie from xialcsiowii
at all .eawti».
Shatter, the Serres, Impairs litgesaon, toil
Enfeebles the Muscles.
iw w
qS M a BEST TONIC.
Quickly and completely cures Tin iariis«<md ( hide
and Fevers. For Intermittent Fever#. La*"
bitude, Lack of Energy, it h«» no ‘ 6
enriches and purifies the blood, stimulates no ap
petite, and sr renrthena the muscles and nerve *
It does not iaptre the teeth, cause headache, cr.
produce const in<v ion— all other
Father T J. Rzii.ly. the patriotic and scholarly
Catbol>oDivin«. of Arkansas sars:
"I have used Brown’s Iron Bitters with the treat
eat satisfaction for Malaria, and as a preventive of
Chills and like diseases, aud will always keep it on
hand aa a ready friend.”
Genuine has above trade mark and crossed red nnea
on wrapper Take no other. ,Made only by
BROWS’ CHE Wl< AL CO- BALf IMORE. MIL
Ladies’ Hasp Book— useful and attractive, con
taininjf list of for recipe*, information about
Coins etc., riven sway by all dealers in medicine,or
• . Mto any address on receipt of 2c stamp.
PATEN T S
n ix, Putent lawyer. Washington. D. C.
DROPSY
TREATED FREE!
DR. H. H. CREEN,
A Specialist for Eleven Years Past,
Has treated Dropsy and Its complications with tho
most wonderful success; uses vegetable remedies,
entirely Removes all symptoms of drop**
in eight to twent y days.
Cures j-atieuts pronounced hopeless by the best of
physicians- ,
From the first dose the symptoms rapidlv disap
pear, and in ten days at least two-thirds of all symp
toms are removed.
Some ma ry humbug without knowing anything
about it. Remember, it does nnt cost you an*, thing
to realize the meriof my treatment for yourself.
In ten days the d;‘ , --ultv of breathing is relieved,
the pulse reg'iGr, the urinary organs made to dis
charge their mH duty, sleep is restored, the swelling
all or nearly gone, the strength increased, and appe
tite made. good. I am constant!* curing cjmum of
long standing. ca*es that h a ve been tapped a num
ber of time*, and the patient dec ar««l unable to
live a week. Bebd for JO days' treatment; directions
and term* fr • Give full history of cw. Name
sex. how long affli< ted. how badly swollen aud where,
is bowels < o-t;ve, have legs bursted aud dripped
water. Send tor free pamphlet, containing teati
ttmnials. questions, etc.
Ten davs' treatment furnished free by malk
Send 7 cents In Mam;>* for jxistage ou medlctna.
Epilepsy hU positively cured.
IL 11. i.REEN. H. !>.,
s«> Jon*-a Aieuue, Atlanta* Ga.
Mention this paper.
THURSTOIi'SpEmTOOTH POWDER
hi oping Teeth I’ertrrt aud (.uuis Healthy.
IMMEDIATE RELIEF!
Gordon's Kinx of Pain relieves pain of whatever na
ture, the moment it la applied, and 1* a household
remedy wherever known for Rheumatism. Neural
eta, Headache and Toothache, Burns and Scalds,
Sprains ami Bruise*, Diarrhoea Dvsentery, Sora
Throat, 1,-< r*. Fresh Wounds, etc. Burns will not
blister if ap) i;< u. and Bruises will heal In a day that
would require a week by any other method. The
remedy is furnished In powder, with labels, etc., and
i« sent by mail, postage paid. It fs put up in 50c.. $1
and $5 packag* ' The Sue., or trial package, when
reduced to liquid form, will fill 24 2ox. bottles, which
are worth at retail, 86. Agents can coin money sell
ing It. It in worth ten times its cost for burns alona.
Send postal notes or two cent stamps. Address
Sole I’roprictor. '! oledo, i >hio. _
FURNISHED Circulars free.
I V ALENTI NE HR.>>., JaaeavUte| Wto.
Paynes' Automatic Engines and Saw-Mill.
Ol It I.EAOEIt.
offer an •<■> 1 11. P. mounted Engine with Mill,
k) in. solid haw. 5c ft. bating tint h»»-'kn. rig <• mplete
for operation, on cars, <lo*. I’njpne on skite, sl<f
less an 1 fur circnGr (B| R. W. I’HXK <.V
HONMy Manufactcr-rs of all styles AutoHMitir En
gine*, from 2 t<> a < H P. also Pulleys, Hangers and
Snaitng, Elmira, N. Y. Box j 830.
PENNYKOYAL
"CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH"
The Original nnd Only Griinlns.
•afi* atii alwaya re'iabl* B-warsof Worthleas foritaifvas.
"Chit hMtre’s English’* ar- b«at ■>».!• IsdlspeasaNe
TO LADIES. t>al»ae tc »taan|>e For parU.-nlar*
■ SOT htadl.Mß I ■
BEST TRUSS EVER USED.
Improved Elastic Tros*.
Worn nightand daj ■ Foa-
Itivdv cure* Rupture,
f f ELASTIC fM Se nt by mad everywhere.
jj n c « “ EJ Write for full dwtripUr,
circulars to the
■' pw Tork Elastic
\ f Truss Company,
V# VX 744 B dway, New York
H 31 ■ ■ ft sales, and 300 perct.
U 1 B I s * B H pr-.nt made l>> men
■ ■■■■■■ B# ami women with our
n rj K H tabor-saving inven-
’4ll all g
B B Agent write*; “lour
wap’’ Kt ut t* , Hn bring* money
BJ '!uicae«t of any I ever tried. - Any man or woman
imiKkrv; than per week should try our
"nsy money making business. vVe guarantee it the best
.‘i>ing io the land. Bl samples quick wHling gooda free
> any lady or gent who wiil devote a few hours daily. Ex
• ,**nence unnece-nary; no talking. Write quick and see
urw jour county. Addreae, B U. Mernli k Co. Chicago
YOU ARE NOT SATISHeU
vKrWg with your Window Fastener Tr
Leiacbe's Burglar-Proof Sash L •
Au'omato- \S;nd>w Holder an -
YOU WILL RE. Mi !.- of Malhn
ble Iron and cannot b»- broken, hiqi;-
in all respects to curd" and weight*, and at on
tenth the cost. Can be a pt-lied with a aerrw-drrier
bv au\ l.andr person. Sample complete for th-’
window m illed upon receipt «f 10ci*. Agents wanted
m every town. J. R. CLANCI, Syracuse, N. Y.
YOU
Cw<^*X. r for Dos B.yor.’ Qvfdat
OX « I
P<f 2 *• y* “Z « r *’ dtfcmit bnsodi, prfoCT E
/Xa Z “> e y *re vertk, asd >Ler« to bay W
ASSOCIATED FAKCIESS &
_** ***’“•<’<- PhfliJ’a £
Lcrillard’s Climax Plug
hearing a rrd Mn ru v ; rr. : .e r’J lardl
, . Kos ” Le« f fine em ; ’hut Lori Hard •»
*T a I y <■ ! iw»k’.*nd that Lcr’'lard a»Snaffß. a*«
I * ca cheapest, quality eoxuddered ?
AGENTS WANTED
We want a reliable Lady or Gent in each town and
i townsh.p to seh onr good*: also geniT;-.. amenta, par
ticulars JkFKEaaOM M’r <» C*•.. Toiedo O
easily cerr®. rook free.
> DR. j. C. HOFFMAN. Jefferson. W soonsin
Hrt Bf n T 7 510 TO 820 A DAY made with
I Bl i V outfits for manutacturnig
; it] I er and Rubber stamps.
i |1 I I Catalogue free, S. M. SPKJfCtt
WAWM A 11-, Washington St., Beaton, ¥tw
Riair’e miff Great Enalish Gout and
LJIQII o g Rheumatic Remedy.
Oval aiox, 81.00; ronnd, oO cts.
Penstans
VARinnCFLF p ‘ !n,rw •«* ***
—_ nIUOU *"L £■ C;vui« Agenp, HMF o ?taa at-, M. Y
k-Twenty-nine.