The Sioux County journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1888-1899, December 31, 1891, Image 5

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    ,.r , j A
Of
TALMACE'S SER1I0N.
jovertn ilL, fi; -in all thy wavs
Wwledge lilm and Ij. shall direct
I pittlH."
promise gooa enough for many
Li, of Hie, but not for ray kind of
ays ome business mn, "the law
tujipiy and demand controls tan busi
i world." Hut I liar reason to gav
it U a promise to all persons iu any
U of bones I business.
hera is no war between religion and
Ueu, between ledgers an 1 bibles ; '. "" ' nau taken or the
Wen churches and counting houses.! 'r" own private use
the contrary, religion accelerates i , .,, : , , "mce 111 "-'agrac
liness, sharpens men's wits, se,'teii3
aylna, .npuienf mm, tour soaIi
lt patlror. l,ve her perfect work."
I reiraik, also, that business life is'
a school for integrity. So man know, ;
liat he will do when he is tempted. 1
there are II, ,.,.,. i r .
ui men who have
"!, meir mteentv n.ereiv
they never hava been tested.
of thoee men nuch as yon Tare tome
times seen, !or whom everything wenm
to go wrong. His hfe became to him
a plague When I heard he was dead,
lsaid: "'Good, got rid of the sheriffs!"
Wild am 4lw,c !.... . . .
...... iu& ( t s Ki 1 4
wsoause , the throne? When 1 the question
was elected trKutlrt.r ... ' """V. u
1 Maine some . V , bUll,ain5 on tlie of glass respond-
tinguishTfo ,7. T"! WaS.".r ! :Th- are came out of great
ew aim uprigness, but before one
)ear Had passed he had taken of
is
angelf
bity of dwpojition, fillips the blood
nbleguiaties, and throws more
Vcity into tho wheel of hard work
pves better balancing t the jtulg-
bt, more strength to the will, more
bcle to industry, and throws into
kltuiasm a more consecrated hre.
cannot In all the round of the
tld show Die a mm whose honest
ness has been despoiled by reli' jn.
kjie industrial classes are divided ,i.
Jihree groups producers, niauufaet -
Ui, traders. Producer, such as farm-
Ijnd miners. Manufacturers, such
hose who turn corn into food, and
Ll and (lax into apparel. Traders,
l;i as make a profit out of the trans
mit exchange of all that which is
Vdumland manufactured. A busi-
L man may ljelong to any one or all
ihee classes, and not one is hide-
hlent of any other. When the prince
Wr'uil of France fell on the Zulu bat-
lickl becan.se the strap fastening
(Stirrup to the saddle broke as he
aigtolt, his comrades all escaping,
il lie falling under the iaiices of the
pages, a great many people oiameu
kriiipress for allowing her mi to go
Vtli into that battle Held, and others
uiril the English government for ac-
Wine the sacriflee, and otln-r-j blamed
V Zulus for their barba.isni, '1 he.
most to blame was the harness
likct who fashioned that strap of the
Lrrnp out of shoddy and impeded
fcaterial, as it was found to have been
iHfnvard. If the strap had held, the
jr.iutl IniperlBI numu piooaoijr ime
fen alive today. Hut the strap broke.
i prince independent of a haimss
YXixX. llign, low, wise, iguoiaui, j'i'i
one 'jccupution, 1 in auuthtr, all
mind together. N that there miifct 1 e
econtriiitous line ot sympathy with
y other's work. Hut whatever your
fe-ation, if you have a multiplicity oi
lipetueiits. if into your life there
me losses and anoyances :;ul jvr
rlwtions as well us pereeiilages aud
Iviileuds, if you are pursued lrom
lunUay morning mil. I Saturday niRht,
fi from January to January by in-!
wable obllgatfou atid duty, then you
k a business man, or you are a husi-
ts woman, and my subject is appro-,
to your case.
hi the first place, 1 remark thai busi-
V life wai intended as a school ot
l rgy. God gives us a certain amount
raw material out of which we are to
our character, unr racuuies are
Ibe rest, rounded and sharpened up.
ut voung folk having graduated friu
Iraool or college need a higher educa
W that which the rasping and col-
ion of every-day life alone can effect.
ergy is wrought out only in a fire
fter a roan has been in business ac-
ity ten, twenty, thirty years his en-
Is not to be measured by weiglus
t plummets or ladders. Ihere la no
Kht it cannot scale, and there is no
Wh it cannot fathom, and there is no
wtacte it cannot thrash.
A(jain, J remark, that business life is
ktioolot patience. In your every-
fl life how many things to unnoy and
disquiet! Jlargains will rub. Com-
rcial men will sometimes lau tomeei
ir engagemenU Cash book and
ne drawer will sometimes iiuarrel.
Ws ordered for a special emergency
fflcome too late, or be damaged in
transportation. 1'eople intending
harm will go shopping without any
tion ot purchase, overturning
it stocks of goods, and insisting that
break the dozen. More bad doms
(tic ledger. More counterfeit bibs
the drawer. More debts to pay for
Jr people. More meanness on me
ttof partners in business. Annoy-
at. vexation after vextatlon and loss
erloM. All that process will either
sk ou down or brighten you up.
I It a u.hnnl of tiatiellCS. YOU liaVC
r .wv. - i
own men under the process to ue
rnifi winUnt and choleric and angry
fti pugnacious and cross and sour
am queer, anu uiey iwiuini
nd their name became a detestation.
itr men hate been brightened up un-
Hie process. They were toughened
the fecnosure. They were like rocus,
llllie more valuable for being blasted.
Ursttbey had to choke down their
h;atnrst they had to btte tneir
;. HrattUey thought of some sting-
retort they would like to mhke, but
y conquered their impatience. They
m kind words now for sarcastic
W They nave gentla behavior now
V unmannerly enstomers. They are
seat now with unfortuuate debtors.
V hart Christians now for sudden
W Wham dlil they net that
Doa? Ilv hearing a minister
eh eoneeming it on Sabbath V Oh,
X Thmr tot It just where you will get
Nf yon ever got it at all - selling hats
JttnUnc notes, turuing banisters
'Jwtng oorn, tinning roofs, pleading
m Oh. that tmid the turmoil ana
ni txMMratton of every-day
o ailxht bow the telce of Uod
es j trouble and had their robes
washed and made white in the blood of
the Lamb."
WOMEN'S DEPARTMENT.
jo3u.jgui.,nen ior crime, after. Yon
can call over the names of men just
like that, In whos honesty you had
complete confidence, hat placed in
certain (Tines of temptation they went
overlwanL Never so many temptations
to scoundrelism as now. Xot a law on
the statute book but has some back
door through which a miscreant can
escape. Ah', how many deceptions in
II, n ,1 1. , . .
...v. hi kuuum;so milCil illllKlel'lIlg
in coiiLnercial life that if a man talk
about living a life of complete com
mercial accuracy there are those who
ascribe it to greeness and lack of tact.
More need of honesty now than ever
before tried honesty, complete honesty
more than in those times when
business was a plain affair and woolens
were woolens and silks were silks and
men were men.
Hi, what a school of integrity
business life is! If yon have ever been
tempted to let your integrity cringe be
fore present advantage if you have
ever wakened up in some embarrass
ment, and said: "Now, I'll step a little
aside from the right path and no one
will know it, and I'll come all right,
again ; it is only once,"
(Hi, that only once has ruined tens of
thousands of men for this life and
blasted their souls for eternity
It is a tremendous school business
life, a sehool of integrity. A merchant
in Liverpool got a Hank of En
gland note, and holding it up toward
the light he saw some interlineations in
what seemed red ink. lie finally do
ciphered the letters and found out Unit
the writing had been made by a slave
in Algiers, saying, in substance;
"Whoever gets this bank note will
please to inform my brother, John
liean, living near Carlisle, that I am
a slave of the bey of Algiers.
The Zodiacal I Iglit.
The curious phenomenon of the zodi
acal light may now lie seen in the early
morning skies a little before sunrise.
In this latitude it takes the form of a
portion of an ellinsa whose longest
diameter is inclined somewhat from
the perpendicular and may be looked
for in that part of the sky where the
sun is about to appear. Its pearly gray
light is caused by the reflection of the
sun's rays from countless swarms of
meteors which revolve about him at
uiuereiit instances. It, has recently
been suggested that these mcteoisaro
the medium by which the electrical
connection between the sun and the
earth is established; in fact, that they
play the same part in the solar system
mat t tie copper wire does in the con
veyance of electric energy from the
dynamo to the elm-trie lamp. New
York Recorder.
Tlt- I'tMlm Cir &-arlel. '
What a year it is for scarlet: You
see a bit of the brilliant color fluttering
from Inside the smart tailor coat or
bodice, in the plaitings of the silk
bodice. You tee it iu hats, and some
times on daring maids in jackets; and
iiow v.e are to have it in the traditional
lied Riding Hood caps of scarlet the
mo,t vivid and cloth the finest in quali
ty. A tall and elegant woman with a
dark .Spanish face has brought back
with her from Paris a wonderful even
ing cloak of crimson lined with while.
bordered all about with black feather
trimmings and bearing upon its crimson
surface large oval medallions of black
velvet embroidered with Chinese letters
in gold thread. -New York Sun.
Curious Kpcovr-ryol lost Itccoi ds.
(iorhman met with a serious loss over
twenty years ago. About 1871 it was
discovered that a book containing the
earliest town reoords. from its incor
poration iu 1754 to 1875, was missing.
The. town offered a reward for its
return and many individuals joined in
the search, but hope, of finding these
records was abandoned long ago. Last
week, however the express brought
from lioston a package containing
three books in excellent preservation,
withmit, any explanation. Due of
them was the, early records of (lorham.
The, other two books contained the
marriages, births and deaths of the
inhabitants of the town from l"iil to
1 8L'2.
Itettcr Tliiin a Gold .Mine.
The steamer San Jose, from Panama
He was immediately emancipated but
was so worn out by hardship and ex
posure be soon after died. Oh, if some,
of the bank bills that come through
your haii'ls could tell all the scenes
throuirli which they have passed it
would be a tragedy eclipsing any drama
of sliakespeare, mightier than King
Lear of Macbeth.
As I go on in thii subject 1 am im
pressed with the importance of our
having more sympathy with business
men. Is it not a shame that wc iu our
pulpits do not oftnor preach about
their struggles, their trials and tempt
ations? Men who toil with the hand
are not apt to be very sympathetic
with thoso who toil with the brain
The farmers who raise the corn and
the oats and the wheat sometimes are
tempted to think that grain merchants
have an easy time and.geL. their profits
without giving nny equivalent. Plato
and AriBtotle were so opposed to mer
chandise that they declared commerce
to be the curse of the nations, and they
alvised that cities be built at least
ten miles from the sea coast. Hut you
and I know that there are no more in
(tiistrious or hiuh-mlnded men than
those who move iu the world of trallic.
Some of them carry burdens heavier
than hods of brick, and are exposed to
sharper things than the east wind and
climb mountains higher than the Alps
or Himalayas, and if they are faithful
Christ will at last aay to them; ' Well
done irood and faithful servant; thou
- i r
hast been faithful over a few things,
will make thee ruler over many things-
Enter Ihou into the joy of thy Lord.
We walk about the martyrs of
n,o T'iedmont vaney anu
the martyrs among the Scotch high
lands and the martyrs at oxtoro
Them are lust as certainly martyrs ol
Wail street and State street, martyrs ot
Pulton street and Hroadway, martyrs
of Atlantic street and Chestnut street
going through hotter fires or having
their necks under sharper axes. Then
it behooves us to banish all fretfulness
from our lives, if this subject be true.
We look back to the time when we
were at school and we remember the
rod, and we remember the narn uisks
and we complained giieveously, but
now we see itwas for the best, business
life is a school, and the tasks
nrolmrd and the chastisements some
times are verv gneveous, but do not
i,.i Tim bolter the lire the
better the refilling. J here are men
.i.a ii.miift of Cod this day in
triumph who on earth were cheated
out of everything hut their collin.
fhey were sued, they were nnprisoneu
for debt, they were tnrouieu oj u.,.-
-...i.i..a m, in a w in e iihck. oi "!
Bliiuivil ".v.. -
they were sold out by the sheriiis, iney
had no compromise with their creditors
they had to make assignments. Their
dying hours wero annoyed by the
sharp ringing or me uoor ue ur
impetuous creditior who thought It
was outrageous and Impudent that a
man should dare to die before ho paid
the last three shillings and sixpence.
1 had a friend who had many mis
fortunes Everything went against him,
Ha had good business quality and was
At the best of morals, but he was one
u.ourf.n, urn u-.u, u: ...seuYu.j, iu , we(, (00 Unlucky to be
an important ueposn oi war, rare
metal known us vanadium iu the
province of Mendo.a, Argentine Re
public. This metal is one of the rarest
and most valuable known, and is used
for setting dves in silks, ribbons,
hosiery and other line goods. The
principal source of supply, until
enlly lias been a small deposit in
the Ural mountains, and it has been
held as 81,500 per ounce. This deposit
in Mendoza will therefore be recognized
as of great importance. Sn Francisco
Examiner.
Ilnu46 I'uruUlilEs.
The latest ideas in house furnishings
are that wall hangings are growing
more fashionable, and some of the new
houses have the walls hung with plain
satin of a light hue, after which a ma
chine is passed over it which stamps a
design upon it. Screens of bamboo and
wood are very popular. Old fashioned
hrocatelle has returned into favor,
liamasks and brocades are used for
wall hangings in place of p ijier. I alms
, and rubber plants keep their places in
the drawing room. Where floors can-
not be stained and polished plain felt
ling serves as the best background foi
the rugs, which every one must have
Corduroy a fashionable covering for
library furniture. Mmill tables may be
bought in plain white pine and en
ameled or ebonized for the parlor or
sitting room. Roman sashes lire used
for table covers. Plain aud dotted
i Swiss muslin sash curtains, with Hilled
, borders, have taken the place of lace.
- i
cniboridery and silk. An excellent ef
fect is secured from famishing a large
parlor in a newly renovated house in
light green. The furniture, which is in
odd shapes, is covered with green, the
walls hung with green, the pain': is
white, and palms and rubber plants are
artistically disposed about the room.--Art
Interchange.
Tlio Ilaire fur I'earoi-k feiuhnis.
There was a lime when peacock
rfpal hers were tabooed because consid-
admiUed to the
house. Now my lady is not .it all up to
thenndeif she has no screen of t lie
vain bird's plumage in her boudoir.
.Not only that, but she lies the unlucky
plumage about her neck for a boa,
fringes her garments with the glossy
feathers, and even sets them against,
the warmth of her fair shoulders in the
neck of her evening bodice. Exchange,
Krtiication For Women ;
S-orosi sat down to her leceifibef
oanquetin "the new white ami gold
ballroom at Sherry's, w ltu l.aay usury
Somerset as her honored guest. A 11 the
Sosians were present, from Jenny
June and her contemporary ve'.erans
down to pretty little .Miss jjemurcsi
and her coterie of intellectual bucs.
Hesides the regular members there were
present many guests of note, including
the wife of 'Max O' Hell, the wife of
Bishop Simpson, the wife of Colonel
Roebling, of Hrooklyn bridge fame,
and Mrs. Davis.
The chairman of the day, Mrs. Mar
garet T. Jardley, presented for discus
sion the question. "What kind of edu
cation will best tit women for the
dutiesof life?" She poin ed out and
classified the duties of a woman's life
as religious, personal and social, adding:
'Our personal duty that we owe our
selves, that we may inako the best of
ourselves, is to be chaste, temperate,
truthful, brave and free in the condi
tion Cod intends for men and women.
Our social duty is simply the broaden
ing oi t of our personal duty to our
families, our neighbors society, the
state and the country. Social Utity is
the fulfilling of the law, to do unto our
neighbors what we would have our
neighbors do unto us with love iu our
hearts."
Jenny June presented the advan
tages of a literary education as a prepara
tion for woman's duties, not a proles -ion-al
means by which to make a livelihood
in writing or teaching, but for its dia
cipline and development of nil faculties.
Mrs. Jennie Lozier, the president of
Sorosis, advocated tho importance of
medical or physiological study us a
preparation for women's duties, be
"the neculiar duty of woman, one
she cannot relegate to any one else, is
the care of her children, mid the indis
pensable preparation for this duty is
health for herself and health to trans
mit to her offspring, and such know
ledge as shall enable her to retain
it for both."
Mrs. Terhune (Marion Ilarland)
argued the domestic education as pre
mi,,n,,i i imufirtaucc to women, and
that while the morals of the,
I y and tho integrity of the
liend upon the manner
home is kept, a practical
what underlies home
"August
Flower
Mr. Lorenzo F. Sleeper is very
well known to the citizens of Apple
ton, Me., and neighborhood. He
says: ' Eight years ago I wastaken
" sick, and suffered as no one but a
" dyspeptic can. I then began tak
" ing August Flower. At that time
" I Vas a great sufferer. Every
" thing I ate distressed me so that I
"had "to throw it up. Then in a
" few moments that horrid distress
" would come on and I would have
" to eat and suffer
"again. I took a
"little of your med
' ' iciue, and felt much
"better, and after
"taking a little more
' ' August Flower my
"Dyspepsia disap
peared, and since that time I
" have never had the first sign of it.
"lean eat anything without the
"least fear of distress. , I wish all
" that are afflicted with that terrible
" disease or the troubles caused by
"it would try August Flower, as I
"am satisfied there is no medicine
" enual to it.'1 &
For that
Horrid
Stomach
Feeling.
To cure costivenww the medicine trniftt be
more than a purgative; it must contain
tonic, alterative aud cathartic properties.
Tuff's Pills
possess these qualities, and speedily re
store to the bmvtrls their natural perifttalUo
motion, so essential to regularity.
mm!.- S7I I" four rtiivs on my iaecinc
Corset Mini SpeeliUUW. iw ..-v
VrulH lin.l I llf-'ll rrizc-s. rnini'.u "-- -
IlridL-man, bromhuiy, S. .
I ABEH17
HAY FEVER
couimum-
nation de-
in which ine
knowledge, of
comfort is ubso-
Ti nliiH iJvlaycrtby Allium Leaves
I-'.nginoers on the railroads in sereral
parts of the stale have experienced
much dil'.iculty iu running their trains
on time during tle past week owing to
the largn downfall of leaves upon tho
tracks. The lloasatonic road has suf
fered most tlurough the long stretches
of woodlaud which the road passes. It
has been impossible for tho section
hands on the different divisions to keep
the track free from tiiem. 1 he result
is that wliwi the wheels of the locomo
tive pass over them the sap from the
leaves meikes the rails slippery and the
olstruction is as bad as hail, snow or
ice. It is even worse, as the leaves re
fuse to melt -or freeze, but stick to tho
...... Vn... T ,w1.,
rails until urieu up.-icw jwu....
(Conn.) I)ny.
A FanuniH Tree Detorycd. I
The famous oak under which 'lasso
is supposed to have spent the greater
part of the day during the last year oi
his life, wlwn he had retired to the con
vent of Siint ( hiofrio, was blown (town,
it is said, during a violent gsde redently. ;
The tree, which all visitors to Rome,
used to visit, was kept stalling for.
years by supports of masonry on all!
sides. Tim trunk, it is reported, will be,
kept us a relic in the imuvent of Saint
OnofCio.-I'hiladelphia Ledger.
T lie world u AViiste. of AVatcr.
An interesting calculation has been
m5.,lbv a French geologist to the ef-
lect tliat, taking into consideration me
wear and tear on the solid hxnd by ocean
washing, rivers, wind vveauier, anu
leaving oit ot the calculation volcanic
action, the world will in four and a half
million, years be completely under water
and no dryland exist at iill.-Xew York
Recorder. ;
determine
Tenia have beat made to
the variations in the length of Ciuio
that is required to produce decny in
dilferent kinds of woods when buried
under the surface or the ground. Tho
birch and aspen were both found to de
cay in three years, the willow and the
buckeye in four pears, me nii- "
the red beech in live years, elm and ash
... .i 1 1. !. minor nnil
ill tvevfli, WHII0 sue miw, j""M"-
arbor vitai were uninjured at the ex
piration ot eight years.
The yrld of tlw orange crop Jn Flor
ida this year wiw over 3MO.00O boxes
,,! on averaco box HOIdS iw vr.iB
Cards lor Young Woman.
Young unmarried women no longer
use visiting cards of the sanm shape or
size as those the matrons have en
graved. J n place oi exact squares or
elangated bits of pasteboard they have
adopted a style a triile broader than
long, with the name iu old English ex
actly in the center. This card is ex
tremely pretty, has a distinctive look,
,.,i ; o-iriish. chic and simple. Older
w B , - -
women preserve tho conventional size,
hut it h noted that heavier strokes are
emnloved in tho engraving than were
formely seen, the old mode being readi
ly distinguished by its faint hair lines.
Card etiquette should be carefully
studied by those who assume to live in
the world, such seeming trivialites be
ing the real foundation of ceremonious
intercourse, and if novices only knew
it, saving a vast deal of effort and ex
pl'anation. -Pittsburg Leader.
Wi nun's V aires
-It makes ine tired to hear so much
I about higher wages for men and to see
women getting paid precisely rue same
as they received twenty-live years ago,"
said an Alleghany housekeeper the
other day. "Nearly every trade m
trol and are era-
vv mi;ii '
ployed has seen a gradual but great
increase since the war. With woman
it is different. Twenty years ago a
woman who come to my house for a
day's work got a dollar-that's what
she gets today. Twenty years ago I
paid my cook three dollars a week; I
nay another girl Uio same wages for the
' , ,, Avir tndav. As far as 1 know,
saute; " j .
the scale of wages for women m the
lines which they monopolize is exactly
what it was a generation ago.
"1 don't complain, because I am an
employer. Perhaps it is just; perhaps
women were worth so much in lHuJ and
exactly the same in 1S1W in certain fines
of work, lint n mm .
.-m sinaMilar that men's wages should
all have "advanced in the same time,
d advanced as much as 100, and even
-'00 and 300 per cent in some cases '.
7..., no,!, all men's wages have
iMW" l..-w ,
IjgrowninUilsway, but there ire euu..8
ft?.. nrettv strong contrast. I fell
lolhiuking of it when my husband was
lately essential to a well equippeu wo
man. Mrs. Ella Dictz Clymer said that
she would answer tho question in a
single sentence, for the kind of educa.
tion that best lilted a woman for her
duties was the education of the heart.
Then Lady Somerset spoke in her
rich, melodious English voice, and said:
"Tho world is waking up to the great
difference between woman's . position
now from the position she formerly
held. No one would ctare uuer uuwio
mii.iie. the nraver ot the old Scotch
minister, 'We thank the Lord, that
thou hast given us women to make us
comfortable,' The old order changes,
and woman's education embraces a
i,i..r miiiunk than ever before. In
considering the questson of woman's
sphere and the kind of education which
shall best prepare her for its duties
must look upon her as a me givei
a law giver of which the hrst is
Many of the ins nesn is
be overcome ana ouia-
. , . .... :.i id lioUent. lieforo
eratea u mis ii 1 -
women. The most sacred duties of
life, are presented to the people when
they are poorly prepared to find the
solution of its problems. The mother's
education is a sort of moral toboggan
i Thrwhildren are. sent out into
the world to land where they will.
we have passed beyond the oiu
that, irmorance is innocence
knowledge necessarily vice,
riotv of every mother
I & ASTHMA
.
I 'W Siriciurt.
3
. 1rsdeMSBE
W. N. U. No. 15
CURED TO STAY CURED.
Wc want the name and ad
dress of every suflerer in the
U.S. and Canada. Address,
p. Harold, Hayw, M.D., Bofilo, K.I
leamng reni'-uy .. -unnatural
diRi-hargns anj
privnledli-pasosiif men. A
certain ru re for the debili
tating weakness peculiar
let women.
, cmc.iNii,u.MPi-u , iTnuc0 u n nri-.Tiis.lu.
f,UI l iiy w."
v.n..f v Am Ail.
o-Iamnol
county,
we i
and
paramount.
heir to might
York, Neb
A Soldier's Bible.
"While Miss Winter, of Emmittsburg,
was overlooking her childhood's treas
ures, she came across an old Testament
which she found on the site of a soldier's
camp near there during the war, after
the soldiers had left for the Held of
r.Ri.fvKhr.nr. On examining the book
her eyes fell on the name
"Wolcott, Griffin's Mills, Erie
N. Y." and Miss "Winter decided to
write to the address, thinking the
owner would like to recover the book.
In a few days she received a reply
from Mrs.. "Weaden, of Clifton, N.J.
stating that she was a sister of the sol
dier and the only living member of a
large family. She said her brother had
returned home from the army in 1863,
and died in 18M, and Miss V inters
let1 "r had been forwarded to her as his
nearest of kin. Mrs. Weaden seemed
much pleased at the idea of recovering
this long lost memento of her deaa,
brother, and Miss "Winter sent the Tes
tament to her. Baltimore Sun.
Jhit
idea
and
It is the,
to gather her
srirls around her and tell them all they
D . 4-1, nr
should know, an uou meant tui
"The moral tone of the world hangs
upon the moral tone of its women.
When all women realize their power
they will not tolerate the evils of the
present-will not allow the public work
of the statesmen to give the lie to their
private lives. They will demand that
men shall be good and pure even as
women are urine .
omen take an intelligent interest in
polities the best men will stand alool
ont political Avork.'ew or Sun
1
not
The Duke of "Westminster has
again' this year given to t
Chester infirmary the sum of 2,500,
being the proceeds af the shillings
charged upon visitors for admission to
Eaton hall and gardens.
Jiow'sThis!
We offer One Hundred Dollars Ho
ward for any case of Catarrh that can'
not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure.
F. J. CHENEY & CO. Props.
Toledo, O. j
We the undersigned, have known t.
J Chenev for the last 15 years, and be
lieves him perfectly honorable in all
business transactions and financially
able to carry out any obligations made
by their linn. ,
West & Truax, Wholesale Druggists,
Toledo O., W aiding. Kinnan ss Marvin,
Wholesale Druggists Toledo, Ohio.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internal
ly acting directly upon the blood and
mucous surfaces of the system. Price
75c. par bottle. Sold by all Druggists.
Testimonials free.
A Dallas (Ga.) farmer has a potato
which has seemingly grown directly
through another at right angles with'
it, and a Lumpkin county granger has
one which has grown entirely through
and around the ring of a bridle bit.
"Browns Br ncliial Troches"
are widely known as an admirable
remedy for Bronchitis, Hoarseness,
Coinrbs and Throat troubles. Sold on-
bcveral layers of newspapers placed
between the carpet lining and the
carpet will prove a sure preventive of
cold for health persons.
talking to me tho other aay anout uio
K ...p. n of men s and wom-
j ,. - i. ...wi norhans sonic profonnd-
en s wui i. , "
cr student of economics can give me an
t .explanation ot ine ptm.w...
Pittsburg I unpaid).
Silk petticoats are hi very gcnernl
. u. grottiest and most
ittse. Among i" ; .
MANY SUCH. :
To itn, dafprd sainst the ceiling and
whirled Sown to the fluor. 1 lay there like one
dead, and every wle was rned. I was
cured in one day." A hat cured him?
ST. JACOBS Oil-
.... 1 1 ' 1 Lna Mlltwl
with canal facility nnu ceruumy, "j-;-pro
n,0v .ml pornmucutly worse cases. Here
is ono after suffering half a lifetime.
I I Sumner St., Cleveland, 0., Aurtust 11, 1SSS.
- .r3rr, elnhMnechotnubi; Could r,ot lin my arm; c-.- .
nnd an average oox . -" Z" ... of taffeta silk. They are
About half ot the crop wm se... u, - ,n
I comfortable of these are those made of
and
rail to tlw western states.
.ml nnd easv
delicious rusuo m,e
nre caueu
light,
have sort of
ni..r. u.nvpR. They
liluo.B , - rrtt, l,r
London uuu j-
-i i, rfnvelonmcnt of the influstries ot
. . . .-- .1 .. tl.lt. II. 1 . I.l..ro" 111
thesfYuthis suown "m Bnt ienvery generally
now lias 1.200,000 more spiwlles than it t the name has not been ory g
SeryetTyearsago. . opted in this country.
AiitlilMM b.M.rt r,"r;5 ..uirfffi "r IdntlM," k rrtmn IMsfc
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