,Tti HarrbOQ Prcss-J urnal 0. 0. BUJ'.KJS, FlltiPIUKTOB HARRISON, NEBRASKA The nail trust UisWveil, probably be cause there was too ranch water in It. Alfred Austin has written a poeru en titled "Hood Xifc-hf If we could only believe he moans It! Up 'o date. Kuiperor William hat killed 47, H3 "pieces" of 'game, some of which were not haltered at the lime. When The South American republics bcowI at Uncle S.iiu they are making faces at the only real friend they have. It is reported that King I-'-opol 1 is golnj to get married again. The name of the lucky music hall artist is not given. According to Uncle Itussell Sage, "great fortunes are rnlKforrunes." It Is wonderful how some people cling to misfortune. Schwab says he can't understand why people insist on gos ping about him. This Is a strong Indii-ation of mental derangement. A New York lady who sui.nl for IKKJ for breach of promise has been awarded damages in the sum of six cents. That ought to take the conceit mit of the fellow. tlen. Harrison's name appears as "Ben" Harrison on the new bill. BU11, even at that it Isn't likely that a very large percentage of the popula tion will get too familiar with It. Remember the date Nov. u, 1!X)2 the day the first message was transmit ted by wireless telegraphy across the Atlantic ocean. You can't have too many things to tell your grandchildren about. Arrangements have been made to turn over to the creditors of the Count and Countess de Casteliane all but 1200,000 a year of their income. How can the poor things ever hope to pull through on such a niggardly allowance as that? It has been decided that a change of hape which enables an Instrument to perform new functions is Invention. Among leading Inventors of the day must therefore be reckoned the men Who by changes In formation enable a football eleven to perform new func tion. The Crown Prince of S'am took pains to avoid women during his stay In Chi cago. His royal highness will, lu ac cordance with Siamese customs, be compelled to have anywhere from 50 to 500 wives, and he probably Is desir ous of putting off his trouble until the last minute. Education makes a man-that is the only true education. And H isn't ob tained by shooting a boy through the grammar school, where he learns to spell and is taught to make the elemen tary calculations of commerce. If edu cators yield to this grotesque notion, as some of them seem to be doing, they will prove themselves sorry guardians of the people's welfare. ' One of the political parties In the riiilllppines has petitioned the Philip pine commission to furnish free trans portation to the United States for b'ili pino teachers who desire to fit them selves here to teach at home. Even If the Filipinos did not study many books while here, a visit would do them a great deal if good, and their pupils when they returned would be benefited by their enlarged outlook. Commissioner Woodbury of the New York street-cleaning department lately exposed some gelatine plates for half an bour In the best residential parts of the city, and In the crowded tenement regions. Those exposed to the air in the clean portions of the city captured ten or a dozen colonies of bacteria; those In the East Side from seventy Arc to a hundred thousand. Rather a neat way to preach the gospel of clean streets! The Ber. Dr. Huntington, rector of Grace Church, has offered the use of the schoolrooms In the parish mission boose to the department of education of New York City as a measure of re lief for the overcrowded public schools. "The church receives very valuable privileges, and enjoys Important exemp tion at the bands of the civic authori ties," eald Dr. Huntington, "and it therefore seema only fair that when sftd arises, as In the present Instance, there should be at least an offer of reci procity." It to ft cwlooa fact that not one sa mttaf philanthropists bent MtsrldUc reading natter for the bM rrsr tboagst of establishing bssyllal library or of giving attention to ttt ateettoa of stimulating books far Tftlaac ta. Of course, books a wrlttaa for wail people, and every fcO kaatra that It takes a healthy rtm to dJgaat some of them, but v -i Cs aaaay tonic tales that might - ' . , Ternary ft1 which ought to And (.)t!rb hospital book akaJrea. IX tnr t Oft Totanssf that are foosd Cri Haw Caifss form bat ft soade ' r 1 V C.lzZZz up of the cast- . m t libra rlM. the tacar- , cr CzX kjOc?y Insane stories t.'CH fcrrs 3i tsu fsTftc. Of f u toza wt "i Mk book ' ' -' ipt man cJkbet vary : t ti trrtrrl cl: ri cf f-' to rrr3 tl I. r pursuits. And again. It may be Mid that patien's provide their own hooks or uav? friends who bring In literal tidbits Just as they supply more ma terial delicacies. But these sources are not always to be depen led upon, and some one ought to arise who can pat up literary prescriptions and who can discover the novels that may be calculated to aid in bringing back the flush of health. It Is declared that in the month of October alone more than 40,000 emi grants passed through Chicago for part? i.evonl the Mississippi and Missouri Rivers, and that this volume has been sustained fur some time and has shown no signs of decrease. Most of the settl ers are of the better clas of foreigners but many of them are Eastern farm ers, who have sold out their small hold ings in the old States for the larger ones that the price will secure In new lands. Without doubt most of those who seek Western homes at this time will fart well. The West is capable of sustaining and profiting by a vastly greater popula tion than it now holds. If the west ward movement is drawing to some ex tent on the big cities so much the bet ter, for the centers of population arr becoming dangerously crowded. In little Denmark it has been discov ered that poverty is not a crime; ant1 that aged poverty is a misfortune that at once puts a moral and legal duty on the shoulders of the State. It !s not askeJ why a human being, white-hair 1 ed and tottering, pnst the age of enda vor, has failed to gain a competence. bif what can be done to make the lot ol the old folks comfortable. The old agt home in Copenhagen is a great modert building, standing in the center of i beautiful garden. It has nothing it common with the average poorhonse It Is a place to live in, not simply thi housing of misery. All the rooms an bright, well warmed and ventilated prettily furnished, and the food is pre pared by a chef who takes delight ii coaxing the appetites of the inmatei with dainty dishes. Think of coaxiuj the appetite of paupers! One wonders after an inspection of some America! poorhousefi, aad they are all aearlj alike, if the people of Denmark are Ins ing their senses. One thinks of thi places where old and young are herd ed together idiots. Imbeciles and ol( men and women who are worn out ant not wanted where the food Is at thi mercy of men who desire to attain l1 record for cheapness of maintenance j where the inmates are made to fee that they are paupers during even waking moment. It is a crime. Den mark takes care of the old folks, nri the State must pay the bill It doe pay It without grumbling, for a hlgl sense of duty has been implanted it the breasts of the Danes. An evil excrescence Is growing upo. our public school system which canno be removed too speedily or completely j It is the Greek letter fraternity evil' The evil does not lie in the Greek letter That is merely an accident. Any othe symbol would serve as well whlcl . should produce the same impression o,1 ostentatious mystery and exciusiveness The evil lies in the effects of these or ganizations upon the spirit, the babiti and the relations of the pupils, an these effects are almost wholly bad The Greek letter society may not be at unmixed evil In a college or university Possibly It may in some cases be ai agent of good. It may, for Instance' bring together to their mutual advan tage students of similar tastes win have already made choice of simila' pursuits. In the public high school thi sort of society Is wholly out of place' The public schools are essentially aem ocmflc. If thev should cease to be they would fall to accomplish one of tin most Important ends of their creation The secret "frat" Is not democratic; i Is essf-nt'ally aristocratic and a breede of class and caste spirit. Wheneve these societies are Introduced Into I bleb school distinctions of caste appea ' at once. The members of this and tha frat" are selected not because of su perior scholarship or merit as shown b; their school work and deportment, bu because they are socially ncceptaDie to this or that "set." The result is In triguing, clannlshness and superclliou? ness on the one Ride and resentment oi the other not only In the first year, bu at each succeeding advance. All thi has the effect not only to found llfelon; enmities and to beget and strengthen the caste distinctions and feuds whlcl promise no good to the republic, bu they Interefere seriously with tb proper work of the schools. Intrigue and the social diversions, amounting often to dissipations, take the place o school work, and scholarship decline! while mental habits which are far froi conducive to good cltlsenship - ar formed. The Crneltr of Mno. The divorce lawyer looked up. "Yon desire a eprntlon7" he askel to open the conversation. The pretty woman readjusted be rell nervously. "Yes,'' she said, "a the grounds of extreme cruelty." "Will yon detail the Incidents t me?" ssked the lawyer. "Yes," replied the fair one, sohbln ly. "Three times recently I hare crie for Ave minutes at a time, and boi boo! he be hasn't even asked w-w what I was crying about!" Clndnnat Commercial Tribune Ulcus. Towne I think my barber's In lor Browne Doesn't eat onlona an more, ebt Towns Tea, aad he's so a been simoXL He pinned tne newspspt arftsmd my seek this morning aad gat me tovtf to mi, PUteosifBl OLD FAVORITES t The Lanif o' tbc Ial. I'm wenrin' awa". Jean, Like gnaw wreaths in thaw, Jean, I'm wearin' awa' To the land o' the leal. There's nae sorrow there, Jean. There's neither cauld-at esrt j.-ars, The day is aye fair In the laud o' the leal. Our honnie bairn's there. Jean. j She was baith glide ami fair. J -.ui; j And. O. we grudged her sair ' To the land o' the leal. But sorrow's sel' wears past. Jean. And joy's a-roming fast. Jean. The joy that's aye to last In the land o the leal. O, hand ye lenl mid true. Jean. Your day it's wenrin' through. .Iin, And I'll iclco!r!P yon To the hind o' the leal. Now fare-ye-wecl. my din Jejin. This warld's can s nre vain. Jean, We'll meet, and we'll lo fain. In the fund o' the leal. Lady Nairne. A boa lien A (I hem and the Angel. Abou Ben Adhein (may his tribe in crease!) Awoke one ni-iit from n deep dream of peace. Anil saw. within the moonlit-lit of f.i room. Making it rich, and lik a lily in IiI'mhii An aneel writing in a book of gold---Exceeding peace had made Ben AiHi.-ni bold. And to the presence in the room he -,id "What writpst thouV" The UKion raivi Its head. And wild a look made all of sweet neeorj Answered, "The names of those who love the 1-ord." VAcd is mine one?" said A twin. 'Nay. not so," iteplii-d the ant-el. Abou spoke more low. But cheerily still, and said. "I pray thee, then. Write me as one who loves his fellow men." The angel wrote and vanish'd. The next nic'it It came again with a great wakening light. And show'd the names w hom love of Hod had hless'd. And lo! Ben Adhem's name led all the restl Leigh Hunt. It Is a notable fact.that most of the subjects of King Edward VII. aw Hindoos. It bas been observed that a man's hair turns gray five years sooner than a woman's. Copper money In France is to be gradually replaced this year by alu minum bronze pennies of a pale yellow color. There are 2.Cw counties lu the Unit ed States. Texas has the lirgest nun) ber, '2H, and Delaware the smallest number, three. According to official central market Matlstics recently Issued, eight liiin lircd tons of snails were sold in Paris during the year l'.H)l. As a rule, dwarfs live much longer than gi;:nts. The latter usually have weak constitutions, their blood clrcu tation Is sluggish and riiey have brittle bones. The Gulf stream flows at the rate of about two and a half miles an hour. Five miles is exceeded In some places, and tbc rate varies much with condi tions of weather and tide. M. Hamard, the French sculptor, has ust completed In Paris the model of 8 xtatue of Marshal Itochambeau to he presented to the city of Washington a a companion statue of Lafayette. It will be ready to send to the United tStates In April. Cows are scarce In Labrador, be- ause it Is dlllicult to keep then In the xtremely cold weather. The natives roeure their milk for the winter and hen kill their cows. The milk is kept n barrels, where It freezes and never urus sour throughout the entire sea- Hin. When one wishes to use any milk Jie has simply to go to the barrel and t-ut out a slice. Last winter, during a spell of freez ing weather, at a quarry In Aberdeen, Scotland, a large stone weighing six tons had been drilled for blasting, when the thought struck the foreman that the severe frost might be utilized. Water was poured Into each of the boles, and It was found after a conple sf days that the block of granite had broken Into pieces. lie Wnlted. "What were you doing at the time of your arrest?" asked the magistrate of tbe prisoner. "I wns-wsltlng." "Waiting for whomr "Just waiting." "What were yon waiting for?" "To get my money." "Who from?" 'The man I was wilting for." "What did be owe it to you for?" "For wsltlng." "1 don't know wbst you mean. Ex plain yourself." "I tbougbt you knew I was a waiter in a restaurant." "Ob!" gasped the magistrate. Mont real Herald. When a man and bis wife have de nied themselves that their daughter may enjoy an extended visit In some dber town, ike often rewards them by pending bar flrst trailing after she .etftrss raJftttat ksw sbs kfttsi to soma Civilized by the Uganda Railway, The Importance of a highway is no! necessarily proportionate to its length. Although tliL' I'gnndi railway, which now connects the "Pearl of Africa," as Lake Victoria Nyatiza is called, with the Indian Ocean. Is nuiy live hundred and seventy two miles long. Its exist ence has been the means of suppressing the slave tr.ule throughout British Last ArJi T e u t ,v - e ten yiua'tuago. I). iiH Stanley eight months to travel from sea lo lake; two years ago six months were reqtuvd for thu same journey. To day It takes two and a half days. ('oiiiiiH i;uig on the gn at change wrought in the tweiitj seven years since h'.s own liisl Uganda explora tions. Stai.iey tells in the lnde; ndent how he cliinlxd the highest puik of a llltk Island in the Njanza and reflected tiijii the future: "1 seemed to see steamers trailing their dark sm .ke over the gray wuieis of the bay, loaded with passengers aiil the natives of the east coast making blood brother hood w lib the natives of the west const. I seemed to hear church bells ringing at a great distance, and 1 hoped and prayed that some day that vision might be realized. In those days Mtesa of Ug'iula Impaled his victims and club bed his women to death upon the slight est provocation and nil along the shores barbarous people were sighing and thirsting for bio id. To-day the converts of Uganda are carrying the gospel to the distant lands of the west; three hundred and twenty churches have Ih-ci) established, with ninety thousand Christian people; there are five hundred children In the Mengo school." If, as Sir Henry asserts, the lake re gion has advanced so marvelously dur ing the slow period when the laden por ters carried the I ads of the missionary and the sugar-chest of the trader up to Uganda, what will be its rate of prog ress now that Uganda is brought with In two and a half days of the sea? To the undaunted services of explorers, the fidelity of missionaries and the sa gacity of English administrators the great Uganda rnllwaj adds an nlmi st Incalculable force in the regeneration of East Africa. And bow came thut part of Africa to lie explored, and who were the first ex plorers to accomplish Important and permanent results? They were Chris tian missionaries. First came the great Livingstone, Stanley himself made his first trip into the interior of Africa and began his career as an explorer In the effort to find Livingstone. The story of the great Scotchman's zeal, his de votion to the cause of Christ and his death in the wilderness of the Dark Continent made one of the most elo quent missionary sermons ever preach ed. Youth's Companion. MONEY MADE IN OX HORNS. Trade Has Reached Iarse Proportions from a Hmall Iteinnintc. A familiar sight In the business quar ter of this city is the Kussian horu peddler. The man himself is pictur esque, having the strong features, dark skin, long beard and Ill-fitting clothes which mark the Slovak, while his wares are always noticeable for their oddity. Sometimes It is the hat rack, consisting of two ox horns beau tifully polished and fitted together at the butts upon a small wooden board ready for hanging In a hallway. At another time it Is a small three legged stool, of which each leg is a great horn. Again It Is a gun wk. where the books are horns, yellow, white, gray, brown and black. If you desire It he will Kupply you with easy chairs, arm chairs and rockers, of which the entire frames are made of horns. Of similar construction are easels, music racks, picture frames, wall trophies and baby cribs. The industry was started about fif teen years ago by some poor Russian Jews near the kosher slaughter-house. Before that time the horns were sold with the boofs to the glueiiinkers and button manufacturers. They brought but a few cents a pound and the glue buyers bad no trouble in getting all the raw material they needed. The manufacturers flrst prepared the horns by boiling and using alkalies. Afterward they found they could se cure better results by treatment wiih cold alkaline solutions followed by an tiseptics. After the horns have been cleaned they are scraped and polished until they gleam like burnished metal. A few are varnished, but the practice is not recommended by the trade. New Tork Evening Post. TEACHERS ARE UNDERPAID. Bcrvicea of the Chef Valued Above Those of the Kducutnr. The race is not yet so far advanced in the scale of civilization tbat men are willing to pay as highly for services tbat minister to Intellectual and spir itual culture as for those that relate to physical and economic well Ik-Ing. There Is sn Imperative urgency about the demand for the latter which causes them to be liberally rewarded. We value the services of the physician and the lawyer more highly than those of the teacher stid the clergyman. The expert chef Is proverbially better paid than the-greatest college president; the successful Jockey gits more than the foremost preacher. In fact, the great law of supply n ml demand Is a gro tesque failure as a salary regulator, asserts the Boston Transcript. The teachers and preachers ought lo start a movement for Its rejienl. Aft effective remedy for (be evil of low pay In the teaching profession Is not ready at band. Trade nnlunlsm for Isacfcers hardly seems appro- . Nothing, Indeed, can be expected a work a complete reform here excep' the slow evolution in human naturt. whic!i w ill create a proper appreciation of the services reudered by this class. , P.ul something could be done by raisin the standard of requirements for teach ing If more thorough preparation wert demanded thUs would keep out the tran sleuts. dilettantes and Incompetents who are now the bane of the calling. The oversupply of mediocre talent ! would be cut off and the average pa? i would certainly be Increased. EFFECTS OF TOBACCO. Data Gathered by Tolc'a Doctor ol hysicat Crttnr;. The effects of tobuivo on mind snd body sire of perennial interest to ail Interested in the health of others. A,..otig recent adverse criticisms of the use of lolincco that of Heaver, (II- I rector of physical culture at Vale Uni versity, Is evidently based upon care ful observation. He finds by a tabu lation of records of the measurements of all the students taken In the Vale gymnasium during nine years that the smokers average fifteen months older than non-smokers, and that their siw In every respect, except weight, was Inferior. The height of the non-smokers, was 7 millimeters greater; their lung capacity Si cc. greater, and their weight was only 1.4 kilograms less, though over a year younger. The ob served rate of growth at this age would lead us to expect tbat the smok ers would surpass the noii-sinokers by ' millimeters In height and 10 cc. in lung capacity. To estimate the effect of tcbacoo when they reach full maturity on lioys from 10 lo "."i. a comparison was made of the men of one class, which was divided Into three groups, the first not using tobacco, the second using it reg ularly, and the third using it Irregu larly. During uudergradnati' life, es sentially 3.5 years, the first group grows In weight 10.4 per cent more than the second and O.f, per cent more than the third; in height the first group grows 24 per ci-ut more than the second and 11 per cent more than the third; in girth of chest the lirst group grows 2i.7 per cent more than the second and 'SI per cent more than the third; In capacity of lungs the first group gains 77 per cent more than the second and 411.5 jwr cent more than the third. Seaver refers to the obser vations made by Dr. Hitchcock, of Amherst College, in a similar series of measurements of young men, no doubt suggesting to Seaver the possi ble value of suc h studies. It Is Impossible to determine the ef fect of tobacco on mental processes, but as giving some indication Seaver mentions that only 5 per cent of the highest scholarship men at Yale used tobacco, and whenever it is desired to secure the highest possible physical aud mental working ability, for exam ple. In athletic sports, tobacco Is one of the first things forbidden. If the whole period of physical growth is di vided Into periods of seven or eight years, the third period Is devoted to rounding out. At this time the most strenuous mental application Is begun and opportunities for recreations are curtailed; at this period also the to bacco habit is usually begun. If at all. As a large part of the functional ac tivity during this roundinr-out eriod pertains to growth. Seaver believes that it Is logical to remove the motor depressant influence in order that there may bo thi- greatest possible in crease in size and Improved activity. This position has been taken by the directors of govei nnieiital schools not only In this country, but In Europe. Many private schools have been fol lov '.tig their example during the past ten years, and Seaver suggests tbat other institutions would do well to also take this step. American Medi cine. MILLIONS FROM COTTONSEED What VYo Once !er-med a Nuiaance I Now h honrce of Profit. One of the romances of the census b tin; story of the cottonseed oil and, the millions of dollars It yields annual I ly, where a few years ago the seed war a nuisance, outlawed by the States ol the cotton belt. In the Mississippi laws of 1XJ7 was one Imposing a fiof j of $2't for every day that cottonseed was left around a ginhouso to menac public health. In 1S70 a process for extracting oil from cotton seed liad lx-en discovered and a - product worth JH.tKJO wa realized. What was deemed a nul snnce in 1Vj7 continued to prove valu able, through Invention, until in the census year of It gave a return U tin- mill operators of over $12,411,000 Cottonseed oil Is used on the table, rivaling that of the olive and threat enlng to drive the latter from the mar ket. The oil also enters Into soap and butter making, says the New York Commercial, and Is burned in nihiers" lamp. The bulls are used In maklug paper, fuel and fertilizer, while enor inous quantities of the seed Itself find a market as food for cattle. KnIUh Fakir In India In Itiitlfch India tbere have lieeo dur ln tbe IdhI llilrty or fort 7 years quit a number of Englishmen who, yield 1 ins to some tnonoiiinnln, have adopted the role of fnkir and bnve ended their dnys lis hermits, subjecting themsclvet to nil those dreadful forms of accet ' Iclsm and of penance practiced by tb Indian dervlKbes. When a plugged dime Id passed on i woman, she "green with hpr consclenw that It. would be a sin to attempt u pnxN It, but puts It In her purse know ing that some day It will be punnet along when she la not thinking about It. t cr get 70a anything ts aftftraw -r aa brothar. A Lurking Danger. Th-re is a lUiC'ng gi danger In the aching J I back. The aches and 21 I ,.r L-I.liioi'B Auo-iarnplr- ed. (io to the kid neys' assistance when backache partis warn you. A kidney warning should be promptly heeded, for dangerous diabetes, Brian's dis ease, dropsy are nlly a step away. Head how the dan ger can bp averted. CASE NO. 15,7 I!ev Jnrnh P. Van Poren, of 57 Sixth street. I'oud da 1AC Wis., Presbyterian clergyman, pays: ",K man or woman who has never had kM ney compliint or any of the HUH- W consequent upon irritated or Inactrre kidneys knows very Illt'e nlmut wfiat prolonged suffering Is. I had attacks which kept me in the house for days at a time, unable to do anything, .ml to t-press what I suffered can hardly be adequately done In ord.nary Anglo Sjxou. A time pass.vl, cnriipl'oitloii ft in. the p'triienlars of which I will be pleased ' give In a person. i! 'irtcr view to any one who requires Informa tion. 1 used plenty of rcmejies, and, ever on the outlook for somel hilt x that might check or benefit my condition. I began taklns Doan's Kidney Pills. ITti I can conscientiously say, Dunn's KM n.y Pills (inned a general bnpnrrp men I In niv health. I'hcy brotit gnat reliif h.y lessening t':e pain ami correcting the action of tb! k.'dney se ct c'Sons." FRKU TRIAL of this great Kidney n:edlc'.ne which cured the Iter. Jacob an Doren will be mallei on applica tion n any part of the United States. Address Foster Milhcn Co., liurf.tlo. N. Y. For sale by all dmggis-.a, prlcn 50 cents per box. An Irish auctioneer, in WIlL.tighby street, lircuklyn. siirl of "a set of iiiourninij jewelry which be was trv Ing to dispose of tbat it was "just the sc rt of article he would purcbtise for bis wife if sb" wore a widow." Scented c otb, design d f ir ladies" dresses, is the latest novelty from Paris. The f.ibric ret tins its grance so lung as there is a fragment of the material left; you may tear, drench wi'h rain or fling aside Hie perfume gown, but its particular fra grance will clitig tc it still. The woman with brilliant prospects often casls a shadow thereon by a want ol mental equipoise. Capsicum Vaseline Put lip in Collapsible Tubes. A SuUtitut for and Raprlor to MaUrr1 or ftaf Mher plair, and will not btitier tl mot (Wic4 attn Tb nam aulxvin aiiiil f.iiraLi-rn nttalil m ni this rlc e are wumU-rl ui. It will nop tbe lootaV wche atouc, and Miefw bfeid&cbe aui tctatic. We ire enmfjd It at t bo Jst and ftarMteitrrual Counter IrritAnt krKwn, a' to a ta external raos-a dv fur pHini In ih cheU and atomitrb and tfl rkeumaitc, nfuraitric and gnuty crr-mptftlnU A trial wtit pmv what - r!& m t it, and II will be fovnd to l tnTalnabl-a tn h h'nhoML Mny people my It la tU lt of ail your pva-railon-a," Trine 15-nenft, at all dniirclt'. or otW d-al-rrra 0T by tending Oiii amuutit to ut in (oftttr lumptt we will p ti ly u a tutu by nail. Ko article- abould 1 a-wtiiwl I j tb pabllo na t the wirpfl carrit our Ubd. a otbrwu ft 1a CIIESCBROUGH MAMTACTl'RING CO. 17 6tU St.. New York Cltv. A RE YOU SATISFIED ? fa M -Are trou cnttn-Ir s-itlBM with tnet-o-jci jou Uuy tna wlUi t! prti-pj Hi a l you lrajrr Over 2(hji) jrfNijylfl lire tn.1!ni with an hnd ((. Mut iheir uous ui utioltiaU fncel. Our i.MO-paro entiUoirue will b sent, on receipt of 16 cent. Ii fits the utonr. CHICAGO The hoiiw! that tcltn the troth. m w ESTERN CANADA. Tha Vf 1m. nfik . tf 1. mbI Agrlrnll url Mtr mrm luf miiir diMnn m tl.. . 1 arM. "TUT. lillANAUV OfTIIK HOUI.U. "THE LA.KU or t'ni.M!." Tfc.KATCBALrErniKB tnot far tTSCE. Arm mmi r Crap la lm-l,(tMI1 Atrm. 1 UI4 la 1 U-l 1 r,Dlt,7: 1 Uaikela. Ahnnnrraof W(n r ul, Flrnlltul. Cliaari BnlU lri. Maumiil; (;vh Urn, for i Atur an-i lta.a farina -I. s aumrt.nt rainfall, anil a eiinmla yiTina a upi an I ..-iioi mmwo ut (iimlli. if. i-d J. n.i. of ihi A,.r y , k, . , (iuftt, 1 OJ I II.ilajrlap.ll M dl.lrlH. 1 "" f.ir All.,. Nf,4 ntliar ll'ar tura to Saarrla. """' lanal.rallaa, Ouaaa, ( ...... at tn IV. V. H.tii.tl, Wit hrm otk l it. lllila . Oioal,. Nali Aifit lur lli (iovurnnintil f ('aiiAla.l,o oijl aoi..l 1 .u W1W eatOill-au K1U )uU loluiad raUaaJj tmim. iC i a I a a a. man' t.SO and (SJW 4io than an; othaf two manufacturen in ma world, wMsh proraa mair aupanonrai lhav a ra amrn faa aiata paopla In all matlona of ma man an otnor maka. Iler-auaa T. U. IloiurlM is ilia largMt manafk-turtr ba can Lay ebaapsr aud pnxlona hi stioos at a lower rxiat than other ntv J rarns, wliirh anahlra him tn Mil iIiom for $:i.fiO aad S-I.WI eiusl In evary way in tlm soVl ala. wharf Inr S4 anl ilMll W. I.. Iloilirlaa Li Vll - - - t' nawwa. pa mf trmrnim ana3shoaaraworn br UiuuMinUof inanwha liar bean paylnf K and fo.not Iwllavina Unsv eonlil l a rirs-W-laa ihoa for 13. BO or M OO. 11 has cnnvbwrvl them Uiat the stria, 01, and wear of hi I.1.A0 ami 13.00 shorn I jus) M good. I'lav xl i. It shle it is impnaslbla to we any dilTarnnca. A trlsl will rorivlnra, ?"If 1 fiwWni .S.aaS.BI I" "Jn.laaaa 1 n "l: J.4,40.M AinofSS.S.4a.1lrrTr..' Worm (SAO Compared with Other Make. .1 JZ."..'?'0"' "' mrrK Irtlhm. W Jtl Of', t-m.1, t,. Citf, Clf. VM fit. cJli , 9Hml erM. fml Caar I ,,., ('-' W aaaalaa kaa W. L, MVOLAS to 'tfliT cms! mem. If M W UNION MADS f ' Mf I R.U.I.I SSft. .A ' 1