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About The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 9, 1882)
u,l V THE BED CLOUD CHIEF. - . NI. L. THOMAS, Publisher. 3:kd CLorn, ni:i;kaska. A WISH. If I ronM Jlinl the Little Venr, Tin' ll:tiipy Year. lln kIiuI New Year IT I cmiM lln'1 liim sfttinu forth To -eek l!n micifiit tniek 1M Initio liim here, the Little Year, Like :i (.iMIer with lii.s pack. .:cl :ill of uMen ltrihtnoss, ,ii'I iidlliinx InlI or M:iek, .i nil tliiit heart eiiuM fnncv, .til nil th:it lifo iiiiiM lnek, ' MioiiM li.voiir.h:in-of the peddler's ware. AVln-ii In- undid his park. Tin1 lif-t from out his treasure A Millie of yours would coax. .Vivl-tlien we'd spei-I him on his way t iiniitiicht's failing Mrk-s, And It.'d him luirrr round the world And wni' the other folks! Maryirrl Vtlerj. sew yka it's calls. " Wi-h yon a happy New Year, hoys!" "Happy Now War!" responded throe -le.ir trebles, ami tin; loudest of them uh!cd: " ("oitig to make calls to-ilav, Uncle. n-ci?" " (Jf course I am, Johnny," responded (he rosy, frost y-whikencJ, iiiiddle-:t"-cd eiitlfinan thev were talkni"- to li lie r- 'pencil me door ot In carriage. What are von ami to do?" vour friends roiii- " We're going to m:tkc calls too," mgj out one of Johnny's comrades he ami I ami Tracy l'luinli."' "What, is Tom Fitch going with you? Where are yon g'ing to call?" - Kvcryu here," .sturdily replied Tnn I'iteh. with a hitcli at his neck-tie. "All around the Mock.'" "Vou are, are you! Have you any ards, for places where they're not at I .M home? "Yes, sir, we've cards for every body." " Indeed! Let me see them." I'nele Fred's good-humored face was all a luoad grin as he held out his hand, tor the two .smaller hoys could not h:t; heen much more than eight years old. and Johnny Cook himself, their head man, was hardy ten. " I wrote my own cards"1 'aid John ny, with proud self-satisfaction, as he dragged a handful of hitsof while paste honrd from liis coat-pocket. Tip-top!' exclaimed Uncle Fred; " only you .should always spell your name in one way. J-o-n-n-i isn't nearly :is good as J-h-o-n-v, and that one's J o-n-e. I tut they if all do." ".Mine are heller than his" said Tm. "Mother gave me some of her Id one-; and so did .sister llelle; and Tracy Plumli has miiiic. of his own lather's. Show "em to him, Tracy." "That is grand!"" said Uncle Fred. Now vou must always semi your cards hi ahead of you, so they'll know who's .tiling.1 He wa getting very red in the face j'i-t then, and the hos il not hear him mutter, :u he hurriedly stepped in to ihe carriage and drove oil": ".Mustn't let them sec me laugh. Tdiht s(-ine "cm out of it and spoil the liui. Hut shouldn't I like to he sonic 11 here when those three come in?" There were no -.igiis of laughter on the faces of Johnny Cook. Tracy l'lumh and Tom Fitch. It was decid edly a serious lui.-ine-s for them, and they marched Mcadily :iw:iy up the .-ireet. "Wherc'll we call lirst?' said Tom. " Let Johim tell. He knows," said Tracy. "There's a h.-iskct on Mr. Jones' door-bell, hoys. We'll go there lirst. That's to put our cards in." Up the steps they went, and the hell vi as duly rung, but it had to he pulled again before anv one came to the door. - Well, thinwhat is it? What doi. waul?" " Why. l'.iddy." eclaimed Tom. "we're calling! Pidn't you know it Mas New Year's l)a ?' " It's callin' ve are? - the haskit? Mrs. home the day "Oh!" .-aid Johnnv: An' didn't c Jones isn't :it 'she's out mak- ing her own calls. Give 1'iddy your i arls. hoys.'1 Howitl on. thin, ivcry wan of viz, till I show her them cards." " I thought vou said she wasn't at t. ...... .- jitimc ""Dade and she isn't; but ld rather lo-c me place than not have her Ink at i him. Shtand where viz are till I me."' The Jones family were too near neigh lrs for Biddy not to know those three "ung gentlemen; and in a moment more a nice-looking lady up-slairs was Kiing to herself: "J-o-n-n-y, Johnnv, C-o-o-o-k-e. Co 4;, and Miss Arabella Fitch and Mr. Manna duke Plumb " It's the three b'ves mum!" ex claimed Biddy, with her plump sides shaking with tun. "Sure.au it s calls they re makin . " Bring them in. Biddy. Call up the children, and bring a plate of cake, ijuick as ecr you can. I'll come right down to the parlor.' She wa there. Mire enough, just in time to hear Tracy sav: "There, Tom. I told you Johnny Cook knew. And Mrs. j Jones wouldn't let Kiddy toll stories alxuit her," I "Wi-h you a happy New War, young ! gentlemen. Have a chair, Mr. Cook, j Vie: ise. lie se:ited. TIr. l'lumh and Mr. :.. , , . ; . i i-ucn. our voting people win ue ..ere j m a moment. . "AW; iv not calling on the chil.lron ..,-....,, .-.............., "..'" ICI IUC1I1 COIUC III. And in thev came ,. ,, j ! a round half dozen ot little Joneses, and Biddy alter with a i " Tir'- ,t .r, loin wliisiiereil I mev Inlimiv ... m. ( ... m v .us t ,.:u luy IIIuen U1 :u .,c 1 '"V"ii i . . r - - i I ... - - et. i i ii-it.-. ii-i And so he did: but it was a good while , r ,. . , . , ... . ,- before Airs. Jones got through asking .i . i. ....i - i r .11 -i lhem about their plans for the dav. and i ii nit im- ii-M in inwie in ni iiiii-h- i , after that it was hard work to keep Ken .Tones from going with them. In fact. the moment they were out of doors i again. leu sat down iu a corner and liegan to howl over it. -o that he had to stay in the corner till dinner-time. Wherc'll we go now, Johun ?"' Judge Curtin-. is the biggest house on the block. bos. ami he hasn't any children.' That's the place. They'll have ice cream there, see if they don't."' Kut the moment the bell of Judge ( 'urtiu-- door was pulled, the door swung .i..ift A-Il1l and there stood his bi x. alter, in a swailow-iaiicu coat ami white era at. looking down in wonder - . ...... on his diminutive guests. It was in vain for Johnny Cook to look big and hold his head up as he handed out the cards, and Tom and Tracy edged a little behind him. Vot is dis? You pox's want some tings?" Xew Year's calls," explained John-) ny. Are the ladies at home? ""So? Very goot. Valk right in. I dake in dose card. too. De madame xill be proud to see you. Valk in." "Johnny knows," muttered Tom to Tracy. " They'll have cream here." ' May be some candy, too." But the big waiter was bowing them into the parlor now, where Mrs. Curtin and her grown-up daughters were en tertaining quite an array of their gentle men friends, and Johnny xvhispered back: "Hush, boys! There's a table, and it's full." Avery large and statelvladvivasMrs. Curtin, and it seemed to the three new comers that everybody in that room was at least a size or "two larger th3i common; hut Johnny Cock led them on bravely, and all the ladies bowed von? tow when they said: " Wish vou a hap-I pyewWar." " I am acquainted with Mr. Cook," Said Airs, I Urtltl. as She belli mil her 1......1. 1 ..i . ... . . .. i -. -.-.-- .... w .... ii.wm iu mm; - nui vviueii ot vou is Air. ! Alarmaduke I'lumliF That's my papa, ma'am, and I'm ! I raCV." I "Oli, you are making his calls for j ?'' htm?" "No, ma'am, he's out, too, but I use some of his cards." "Exactly. I sec. And this is Miss Arabella Fitch ?" " rieae, ma'am, if j-ou'U give me back Itcllc's card I'll give you one of mother's," said Tom, a. ifttlo doubt fully. "Oh, this is just as good. Hut I mut introduce you to the company while l'ierre is getting you some refreshments. I'lenty of cream, l'ierre, and some con fectionery." "That's it," whi-pered Tom to Tracy, and the latter answered: "Ilu-h, Tom! Johnny knows." It w:is remarkable how very polite were all those tall ladies and gentlemen. One great, thin, yellow-whiskered man, in particular, kept them so long with his uetions that Tom at Iat felt compelled to remark: "Don't talk to him anv more. Johnnv; the ice-eream'll be all melted." "So it will," said Mrs. Curtin. " Do let them off, Mr. Grant. Were ou never a boy? I mean, a very young gentleman?" "Never," said Mr. Grant. " I was always old enough to want to eat my cream before it melted. Come, boys, I'll see you through. I like to associate with fellows of mv own age. Come on." He was very grave and dignified about it, hut between him and L'ierre and Mrs. Curtin, Johnny Cook was compelled to sav to his friends: 'We must stoji eating, boys, or we ! can't be oolite in the next hou-t But he made no objection to Mr. Grant putting confectionery in their pockets, ami then the whole company I lowed, as l'ierre showed them the way to the front door. They wondered what he meant, as he smiled iu their faces and said: " Itonjofir, incs en funis i" " What's a bunjer?" asked Tom. "Johnny knows." began Tracy; but their leader was thinking of .something el-e just then. " Can vou eat any more, hovs? I can, if we walk a little.'' They said they thought they could. "Then we'll go to Dr. Micklin's. He tended our baby when it had the measles." "Do doctors have anv New Year's Day?' " Don't you s'pose. Johnny knows, Tom?'' said Tracy l'lumh. "Of cour.se they do." The doctor lived in a big brick house on a corner, nearly two blocks beyond Judge Curlin's; but the boys were only half sure they were hungry when they rang the bell. The door was opened by a gentleman with a coflcc-colorcd face and curly hair, and who could not have been more than twice as old as Tom. " Is dey anvbodv took sick at your house?" " "Sick? No," said Johnny. "It's New Year's calls. Take our cards to Mrs. Micklin." " She knows my mother." Tom had said to Johnny, "and I'll semi iu her card in-lead of Belle's." Mrs. Micklin was a little, black-eyed woman, with a nose thai was almost too sharply pointed, and when the collee colored outh handed her those three cards, her lirst remark was: "Julius! Julius C:e-ar! How often have I forbidden you to laugh in that way when you come into mv presence? Mrs. Fitch? On New Year's bay? Why, what can have happened! And Mr. Marmadukc l'lumh with her? It must be something serious. And Johnny Cook? How I wish the doctor were here. Show them right in, Julius, mid slop that giggling." She had bounced from her chair and was smoothinir the folds of her silkdre.ss. nervously, as Julius Casar chuckled his way back to the front door, and just at that moment a whole sleigh-load of oth er callers came hurrying up the steps. "Wish you happy New Year!" " Happy New Ycai'!" " Happy New Year!" J "Ilappv New Year, Johnny," said 'Mrs. Micklin. "But. Tracy, "whe v"s J.yoiir father? Tom. why does not your ! mother come in? I told Julius .'' "Why, Mrs. Micklin," said Tom, " it's only the cards. We passed "em at Mrs. Jones' and at Judge Curtin s. Only T sent Bcllo there in-toad of mother's." "Why, you mischievous boys! And here vou've frightened me so! I thought l soinetlung dreadful had happened " ! But at that moment the other visitors came iiourinr in. and Mrs. Micklin had j to s;iy happy New Year" to them, and I shake hands and smile and talk, and the j three loys were almost pushed out of ! the wav. while Julius Oa-sar stood at the parlor door, anil seemed to be trying to laugh without making any noise. "Julius," whispered Tom, as he edged near him. " whore's the ice-cream?" But Tomswhispor was loud enough to be heard by everybody in the room, for it seemed to slip into a quiet little place in the conversation, and so did I..i:.,-- !-...- ......1.-. ..11..1. .."t.( unn.i ' .. -"...,.' , .' -." , ",... r , "... Airs. ALickiin iiiusneu. ami one oi ner ,., m.sts slJ(1(h.niv remarked: " ..,,, .,....";, m:..m;,.-r..i..i;.,i.f.,.l to SOt.th.lt u11 ,mv jir-netI tIl0 r;.form mowmt,utm y ou won't ask vour friends to stuff themselves." ... , . -. ii.: :.. -....i- ...i 1 I I lllklltl 1 I Ml'l Illlio III ll'lll k- .11111 the others said something; but Tom Fitch put his lips to Johnnv"scarand . . '.. . .,rot,v iomnv: "Let sgo. There'? n(lth;-ir h;lh ,u;u?0 lmt nPcine." "Bow to Mrs. Micklin before vou .go. said . oiintiv: nut evervnou m tie ; i i ,-'.iii :.--...:. ,....' xiarlor. excepting the doctor s wile, was ; .. i' . i :.. . ... (i. ..i. ... , laughing about something or other when i T ,t ,7 . i ,, r ..,.., i . . ... ' ' .Tubus C ir.sar opened the front door tor i , ., ,, i ... i .. -ti i ... .. ...! , I. :.. .1. . crt iiil .lnluiTivr lmt everv Iioil in the .. xvhere'n -". ,r,r ,-" liv.'" -.i.l T J 1 ' iTin f llill T'llllnl 1 lltf Clllak- I i. ' - " , . , , , "l hlT """ -IV 0thy -'V-r' 5 gd as Mrs. Uirtm s. remarked I om. ; ( an t go twice to the same house. said l racy " ( an we. Johnny? -No. I s pose not. But we ve plenty of cjinls. T.et s try that white house over vonder."' " VVho lives there?" "I don't know. But we can find out when we get in.' It was a X'crx nice house, and there ,t-.i.. llir.i.i vnnniT l.i.imc in ir nm nttii nt "' -"- ---' ..".... ...w.v--. .......... .. . J Item wa-at that very moment standing In one of the front windows, all hidden among the heaw curtains, and another - - . . Tl T . . 1. - 1 ?! was saying: " ii s just too oau. gin Here it is two o clock, had live callers, and one minister.' "And nobody has eaten anything."' And John did, although Tom Fitch ......... . ' inlTOll thlf Ihn nnl-- m...-, . .'- 1. 1 . of them. "Happy New Year.'" - Happy "ew Year!" lt Three on each side, and then the girls talked right on. 5o fast their eallersThad no chance to correct the names. "Johnnv, vo'l have ome cake?'' "Marmadc-Imuit g-ve you some ice-creai-" jfj'J' Arabella, some chicken- cl''" :" -My name's Tom." Your card savs bella." yonr name's Ara- "Hush, girls; what can those three , ffo9" The best wealth to make a "start boys be coming here for? 1 veseen one in H"fe" for iu:m or woman, is a gocnl. of them ( before. 1 hey re making calls!" , bh gi principles, good "lell John to show them right in." i t,0 f..r .-ind imlustrious habits. Per- ". Here's m other card." "No, mv dear, vou" re nit a nnrrled lad v. And vou inu-t have a cup of cofl'.-e." Vcrv hospitable, indeed 'I' were the tlini. vmimr 1-niw.j nml l,v ft i time .-. ..-. .. -. ... . .-..-. . . tlicv had helped their mmiii:' callers to several times as much as anv three bovs could eat, Jenny was able to remark: Vow. o-irls. tin- t;ilile lie'rlim to look S if somcboilv'd been hen-.'7 " IJut I "think we'd better i "Hut I 'thiol- we'll better rn now." said Johnnv Cook. - ----- 1 1 can t eat an more." " Oh, very well, my dear; and Ara bella, too, and Marmadukc," "That's mv father".3 name, and mine's Tracy J'ltimb'" " j u-a a good, Tracy. Won't you eat some more cream?" " No, ma'am. Johnny says we'd better go." The girls were in high glee over their voting gentlemen callers; but when the latter reached the sidewalk, Johnny Cook remarked: ! gues,we won't make any more calls. I'm going home." "So am I." said Tom. "Hut I've four more cards." "I've more u that," aid Tracy: "but I don't want to go am where else. I couldn't be polite." Not one of them could have been po lite enough to eat another mouthful, and that or something else made them a ery sober-looking lot of New Year's Da caller-, :ia they walked on dow u the street. Tom and Tracy were not heard from again t:iatda: but Johnny Coo!; won dered, when Uncle Fred came home that night, why he was compelled to ghe so careful an account ot e cry thing. "You were cry polite, ei cry where?" " Yes, Unch; Fred: and at" the last place Tom Fitch forgot to bow when he came out. ami I made himgo'waj hack into the parlor and do it." " That was right. If there was anv other place where he forgot it. he ought to go back . there next New Year's Day and bow." But Johnny only said: "I don't think I want to eat any supper, to-night. Un cle Fred." l. XirJiolitj;. Concerning the Care of Children, I was a visitor at a hou-e a short time ago where one of the members of the family, a little girl of four or Ihe years, was the object of much solicitude by her parents. Hie was a bright ami pretty chihl, but had Miffercd from attacks of " lit.s" or "spasms." The immediate guardians of the child .seemed to be in telligent, sensible people, and I was ama.cd, while at dinner, to .see the Hi tic girl served the same a an adult, with rich and heart food, including ccn chow-chow, apple pie and collee! It was no wonder the poor little creature had "lit-,"" or whatever the nervous malady may hae hivii that was so designated. The ignor.:nce di-pl:n cd in the diet of the child was too utterly abomiu.iMe to be excused, and I was scarce! able to hold im tongue from crving out agains-"t. But I ca-ed mv conscience iu answering the question how I managed to give my little liny his look of superb health b cinpha-i.iiigthe fact that he had necr mi much as (ilrU collee, or apple pie, or chow-chow, or various other things commonly allowed to children. The other day an acquaintance com ilaiii"d to me of the dainty appetite of her children, of their leanne-.s, their pro-pen-ity to be " (pievcr on the stretch."' their total disinclination to take suili cient sleep and rest. The children were often guests at my hou-e. ami I knew that tin- nio-t delicate one of them all had never been trained to drink pure milk. The stuff she dail drank was a mixture of warm water, milk and sugar. All the children ale candy, cakes, line crackers, and were put to bed nun'li later at night than they ?huuhl have been. To my mind there was nothing Mirpri-ing in the fact that a good appetite was a stranger to her little ones, or that they were lean and unduly active. Another mother declares that her children alwas have "colds" from Oc tober until June. She dresses them daintily, in apparel both line and costly, iu sealskin coats, muffs, tippets and things of sin-it ilk. Their trucks are worn very shorl, tlu-ir drawers are of finest cambric, and their only " under llannel" cou-i-ts of a line and dainty knitted shut, so that while the upper portion of the body is well-protected and over protected in a -ealskin garment, the lower part is very shabbily clothed so far as warmth goes. The cold scur ries up the poorly clad legs, which the short petticoats -handsomely embroid ered fail to protect. With "the clothing of the body o unevenly distributed, is it any wonder that the children always hae colds? A good woolen undergar ment, cut to lit the body. arms, legs and all, and worn next to the skin, would do more for the welfare of her children than all the sealskin coats, feathered hats and ornamented toggery iu the universe. Tkcre is .soinetlung atrocious in sacrific ing a child's health to littery, or iu being so ignorant and careless as not to know that it is being so .sacrificed. Every nine men out of ten that have achieved distinction in this country were in childhood inured to plain food and clad in cheap, often mean, apparel. No body looks for great men or great wom en Ironi the homes of wealth where lux ury abounds. A certain amount of hard ship seems indispensable to the develop ment of character. What is it to us. who are grown to womanhood or manhood, that we wore broadcloth, or "liiisey." or silk, em broidered or patched garments iu our childhood, calico or India mull, whether we had ribbons, or laces, or .sashes, or rutHes, or finery of any sort? It is of not the smallest real consequence. What is of real con-equcnee. however, is that we had plain, nutritious food, so that our bones and our teeth were properly supplied with building material, that ! we were iicalthtullv c ad. that we were . ... i . u . i i taught to breathe well, to chew our food , ,t . . .i well, to sit and walk erect, to be truth- . , , , . , .' i ltd, honest, clean, industrious, earnest, . , , , , , . . , , to read onh jto'l books, to take exccl- h-ntcareofour teeth. and-tospeak good i.llli--ll- It parents could only di.-cei n betirc-ii important and unimportant things, and lioltl to the former and discard the lat- tor, how inime:iurablv the welfare of h,. riw wouW bo a,Iv.incClL n,lt th , wate and worry themselves over tritles hlllv th, ;nailwrm who wiH sit ..'. - .. . - .. i . , .. . . l "c o' nights and prick their imgrs sore ' over some foolish bit of tinerv andper- haps weep and sigh and be vcrv unhap , py because their little Inns or girls can't have hats and frocks like certain other children. Oh me. how foolish! Or have moitev for a -start in life." How much inone had Garfield or Lincoln, or Ellison, or Howe, the inventor of the sewiuir machine, or SteMhencon nr F"'- ioo oau. gins. , -.., . : . . "-"---- and we've""onlv t.OM or C -nopier Columbus, or A- ofthemxvasthii1 "r VanderbUt, "J , iicccner ciowe. or dotm ""---' " t.'eneral Grant. St. Paul, or Michael An- ; oeln w-Jrii i.;,.i, tn make a "start m . ' -o ; m.n;.,c enere-v is talent, ami S.I-1 UltlUVk . ..... -"".' - - . rl industn- and'ecouomv united with tend- to-xourKwn-busincss, mean competence. Mary Wagcr-Fishcr: i Rural Acta Yorker. K. C. Ketlzie h:is lately communi cated to the public the result of a num ber of careful experiments in reprd to the comparative value of partly ripe, just ripe and dead ripe wheat, based on two varieties of hard wheat. Both kinds showed the dead ripe wheat to be least nutritious, the food properties hav ing' been supplanted in ripening by carbo-hydratcs. HOME, FARM AXD (lAHDEX. Pigs are able to consume far more fod in proportion to their weight than either sheep or oxen. The roots of apple trees have lecn found to extend twenty-six feet or more. In removing grease spots by ben zine the stained outline which is left can le prevented by the application of gyp-um extending a little beyond the moistened region. When dry shake the powder ofl and no trace of the sjot will remain. Save the soot that falls from th chimneys. A pint of oot to a pailful of water will make a liquid manure of the greatest value for flowers and plants of all kinds. A horse" hoof is of the same nature as horn. If jmt de-ire to know the ef fects of apphing a hot shoe to a hor-e's hoof place vour comb on a hot stove for a minute or two. then let it cool and -ee how ea-i!y it will break. A hot shoe make, the hoof brittle instead of tough. Minced Meat I'ic Chop about one pound of cold meat veal is lt very finely with a little fat bacon: tlavor with a little cayenne, jsdt and mace, the grated rind of a -mall lemon, and a small quantity of the juice; add th" yelks of three eggs and the white of one. Border a pie-di-h with pa-te, put in the mince, cover with pa-te. and bake in a moderate oven. A smoke-house -hould be well ven tilated, and the hams be hung at least eight or ten feet above the fire, and the .smoke given out iu moderate quantities, and come from corn-cobs or hickory wood. It is important that the ham- be kept cool and dry through the whole operation. Proper entiIation of the smoke-house .secures this. If they be come moist by improper ventilation, or are placed so near the lire as to be heated, their flavor is greatly injured. - How to Make Shirts Glossy. To secure a glo-j when ironing '! irts, take of raw starch, one ounce; gum arabic, one drachm: white of r or blood al bumen, half an ounce; soluble glass, quarter of an ounce; water. Make the starch into line cream, diolie the gum in a little hot water, cool and mix it with the albumen, and beat up the mixture with the starch liquid: then add the water-ghis.s (solution) ami shake to gether. Moisten th! starchiil linen with a cloth dipped in this liquid, and use a polishing iron to develop the Coffee Cu-lanl. -Make a good strong extract of coffee by dripping it as slowly a-.po ilile through a percola tor; for ten pe-iple you will want two cupful-; take eight of the -aine mca-iirc-of milk, ami It-at into the milk theelk of six egg-; ai Id three ounces of pow dered .-ugar; mix into this the two cup. fulsof coffee; a-vo!Yio differ-in strength, taste :o see thut it is -trong enough: pour the mixture into cup-, and put tin cups inn not loo deep pan. with boiling water; the leel of the water ought iml to stand higher than half the cup; do not boil the water too hard; about fifteen minutes of boiling is necessary. The common acceptance ir. that freezing of wheat hind' late in the fall is very damaging, hut an old wheat grower gives it as his opinion that the light fall freezes are a decided benefit. The result of the fall rains is to form a cru-t upon the surface nf the wheat fields, which is again-t the perfect growth of the plant. These slight freez ings, not enough to heave the land and injure the roots, loosens up ;h, soil and makes it mellow, -o that in the warm das that intencne between the frosts the wheat roots get a better chance to "feed." and so it results after all in a benefit equal to a slight coating of fine manure. A farmer tells ns. says an exchange., that he h:is tested the value of his corn put into hogs with the following result: He commenced wilh a lot of hogs weighing 17." pounds each on the 'Jo;h of September. He fed them two weeks, and when weighed he found that at the price of pork then ruling. .'!.."0 per hun dred, hi.s corn so fed had brought him sixty cents per bushel. The two weeks were mild weather. He again weighed and fed them two of the coldest weeks in November and found that the cvrn fed. at the same price for pork, had brought him only fifty cents per bushel. lie says this teaches him that hogs ought to lie fatted early in the warm weather to get the greatest value for the corn fed. " Noodle," if properly made, is a grew addition to soup; ami is preferred by many people to the best "ABC macaroni." For a family of four, two eggs will be suflicicut; beat them until 1 hey are very light: stir in flour as long as it is possible to work it in; salt it well; roll it out on a kneading board until it is almost as thin as paiicr and is per fectly smooth: put a clean paper on a chair or table near the stove and lay the noodle on it to dry. It should be "pre pared early enough in the morning for it to dry for an hour :d least. Alout twenty minutes before the soup is taken from the stove take the noodle and fold it over and over until you have a -trip three or four inches wide; then with a sharp knife rut it in narrow strips; put these iu the soup and let them cook from ten to fifteen minutes. Beef soup, with noodle, and a pinch of curry powder, u a dish to be "somewhat considered." Cheap Snuike-Houses. A good smoke-hoit-e is a necessity on every farm, large or small, where any meat is cured at all. There exists no reason why every farmer who slaughters swine should not have the delicious sugar-cured hams as well as the more cruinary fare of pickled ork. ! A good smoke-house does not ncces- arily imply an expensive one. All that I is imperative for a .smoke-house is a 1 room of sufficient size which can be filled with smoke and shut up tight, with conveniences to hang up the meat. A sweet, clean cask h:i efficiently sen ed as a smoke-house where only a few hams were to be smoked. Iu most of the smoke-houses on farms the fire is made on a stone slab in the middle -f the floor. In others a pit is dug about one foot deep in the ground and the ''- placed in that. In some of the improved smoke houses the fire is made in a pit outside of the house and the smoke communi cated to the house bv means of pipes. Slat shelves are provided m other houses upon which the piece- of meat are laid (skins down) during th, -"moking pro cess, instead of '"S hun I. accord ing tolhc ol.' ---- , plan common in sections of Mary laiid "d Pennsylvania is building the jrtoKc-housc upon a brick wall and over a brick arch, through which a number of holes or spaces are left in the brick work for the smoke to pass through. Be neath the arch is the ash-pit, and a door opens into this. The door to the meat room by this arrangement is reached xvith the assistance of a ladder. Meat, iu whatever sort of smoke-house it is prepared, should be continually sur rounded by smoke produced from ma terial that 'imparts a pleasant flavor, as good hickory wood or corn cobs. While the smoke ought to be continuous, the smokingprocess must not be hastened to such a degree as to raise the tempera ture sufficiently to make tlif fat ooze out of the meat, or to prevenflPSiie creosote in the smoke from thoroughly permeat ing its entire substance. In a word, the tire from which the smoke arises should neither be permitted to die out nor blaze up in flames: Old smoke-houses should be thoroughly cleaned out previous to use, and Ihe conveniences from which the meats are suspended examined to in sure their being strong enough for thvir work. A. Y. World. ! Keliinous Heading. ' ox .v;ir veaits evz. rem.. l-t u jwu O .i! of aln AnilninMHii'li" ! ln? oir. lti-n'tti' thj If. diw TwlU die aifl iwirr n-tiii"ar. Il h Nmti Jut a t-up "f nrmth. A (itiani. omil..' ehlfe-h of TltH, Vet Ions ii' uirh f'T Hid ik-Jh And InrsK P"l mintfrt uf crtta. Aw! km;ri-ii"Mth to OrJ ! ;ral'--Kir ictor.es t- ill'- -w.rd m.V.n-ii: WrfHtti d wilh no k-nrtnturv : tn4. And mrl-Urvd In llenvni nKme. Of th""- I would coiiimuni with ttf ul. th'- while ihc old Veiirdw ; Hkxc N-cii cntied with vk-ir" In this -:r'r -torv tor the skies? I.f -i.ji th" rtinnimr -iniics that jitay Th. Hip:x of ottrifatil) nttfc: Karth - Hin ami !- jit wj Thi- hour l-'ftls u Joiner tit-1:. Vi hare N-,'11 iun,r to obtain Whit citrthl.t tmUf- we might H: Hut -ueh in our rvrn-w an' lu IleuM'ii take- the hiil uhiu: of thc-s. The th id we orrh iyninl the -ho, Thi" h.-i-ud- in the ri-lk- we nw!; Tin- ion- from e.hnmsl it! won, IvisiiMtd theory und -n,i! AH tle-se are n'nu-ht In ., ceHUit Wi- e... tn-ilt-ht. hi olo-K r' lew. Vhiii are the -tniim- lro nnlhie (iMlUt 'I hat Ilirtv in talite. old :iud ih-w. What hare we di tie thnt will endure When thn ati'l crown- netnt4e jicorc; W nut snuui-l of enrth o rich aifl jMiro Tiini- c-nnnot :nr It. or icinine? Not f-r a twine, that men himld -i""v With ihIw tiiijilmi.. hHie we wrousht well: Th.it n- fuuhittoti isun - wnk -ll.iw Hi'sik. hw miiii, h-t HisUiry trill If --lf is - i, if Cod i- more. W'jihlii. i.r aim to i:l 'rlt ; It -ill- that we hi. l-iil iH-fon. l!j xnirt- tnmi lleaxeu we now deny: If kindrii- In our lm-'irii hkl' The faults of others with it- vail: II low to liml hik! man abules OI tori-e, when wit and wi-dmn fall: If -nun 'thins of ttie llrarellHbovo Wo i- alitii! for nil f iiirth we're mlsvjd, AihI ki tt the Muster' law ! loe. We hnc iH't hvcil in Miii, I wist. IomI kii"s how ninny, or how finr. I If n-t.ini-s -ilrh It- these we're Won; Woonl know ihutiio-h l-due To nice He jnne u- through His Son. I.i t ii- ii"t -tjtit mir isiiifjueit-. then, I.--t th'-y In- fi'irer than we dii-iit: Hut t-in! o'urxeiM'. soul, aiiln To ho the ictm-i we may M-m. So Ii-t the your ill sJIenco die, Wl.de we with hunilde ht- imjtlore Our lollies wuh it- l-reath may 11 . And jfns- Hhotiud to ti- the morv. -IIJMint I'. IHfiurJs. StllldiM SchiMiI I.e--(is. tociiTii gcviiTiau lUc.Z' -The Italic .mil the Kui.l-aiuh 0 (--. 'S-" hii-t jcirrr:i. Iteiiiu.iiol ttif(ii.nd Mark I 1-l.t -li-tls in i.nhii e .. .. Mmk 1 11 !'..wer tollia' .. Murk l:SM 1'iihci iinri;iu Maik- 117 Tt e l'tiari-ei--Atiwered Mark '. Is -r -Clin-i and Hi- Hie t'le-i Mark C la Cliri-f l'ocs.m 1 rrietiil-.Mnrk -i U" 5 -l'.irul'ioot tlii Sower .Murk .1 l-'Ji -Crowlhot IheKin.-doiil M.ilk l.-l.C Chriit Milling the Teiil- ie-t . .. lalk I .IV it -Tower over Kil spir't- Mark !i loi -Tower over llivii-u and Heath Mark .-..JHi Mar. "ii Itoxiew, or Ten; tier nice Levuti. Keligieu in the Tar West. In the Tabernacle Baptist Church, yes teriln morning. Kcv. Dwight .pcti i'er spoke ol the dearth of religious in-lluence- iu the far West, particularly in 1'lah Territory . lie had returned troui that count r in order to picture to the Kapti-t- of the Ka-t the condition of the border land a seen from the standpoint of a clergyman and a Bapti-t. Mr. Spencer is a tall, straight, finch -formed man of simple manner-, who u-es plain language, speaks as distinctly :l- an ac tor, and exhibits an imprc.-sic c.inicsi-nc.-s and sincerity. " In the Wood I!ier country," said he, "there is not one day .-chool, not one Siynlav-sehool. not one church, and not one inini-ter. I preached in the ul lage of Haley in a tent. The town is six month- old. The people sat on the beds to hear me. There was a faro bank in operation next door. The rattling of dice and the shullling of cards were plainh heard. The songs ,.f the ballad singers and the music of the baud-wi-nt on as 1 preached. Iu the afternoon I preached iu the next town, and close at hand two faro banks were open, while two or three other- were doing hu-iiic-s a little further oil. "You would be stirpri-ed at the ele gance of the.-e gambling saloons," said the minister: "they are fitted in black walnut, are wanned and well lighted, ami are in all re-pectsthe most comfort able ami attractive places to the 'oung men of tho-e mining regions at pre.-ent. Tho imariably contain a liipior bar. Yen. often a young man bring- i-Wni of earning-into town of a Saturday even ing and loses it all before Sunday morn ing in these haunts of vice. The devil holds wa so thorough! in the country I speak of that there i- no wor-e state of affairs iu the heart of Central Africa. It seems to me, sometimes, that the effect of the education and eiviliatioti these men have received in the Ka-t enables them to practice a refinement of vice such a, is unknown in Africa. " Between gdcn. in the northern part of Utah, and lJeno.'' the minister con tinued, "there are sixty even railroad stations, and among them all there i- not a mini-ter. a mi ionarv or a church or ganization. All that is there, allied to j these, are two feeble Sunday-schools, j Altogether, in the country I refer to a tract eleven times larger than New Kn gland and -even ami a half times ;i large ; as the Middle Statesthere is but one minister to every 2.."oO inhabitant.-, and but one to every -l,".) -ipiare mile-. If vou want to get a correct idea of this re- ligiotis desolation, imagine -.'J people scattered over the surface of Connect!- ; cut. and then put one clergyman over them to minister to their spintual w :"(. !!.: . :. .1 :... .. I l r -r- T.. l in- i- uie picture pic-emeu jh - -- i ritories and one State. Xev j I asked a lxok vender on one of the t two train- of eiit coaches that daily i traver-e one -ei-tion of this country what book he -old mo-t. He said that the greatest demand by far wa- for Inger--oll's lectures. I asked him who were his best customers, and he replied that the cowboys were. These cow bov are' the cattle herders the most depravi-d and wicked people that can N- conceived ; of. Thev title into a town, get drunk, and then ride up and down the village, shooting down men. women and chtl-' dren indiscriminately, after which they ride away to le seen or heart! of no more. It is a disgrace, a -hame upon the Christianity of America that there is j no circulation of moral and elevating literature to combat Inger-oll's infidel- j itv. The bsi "khiics "-old on tho-e cars are thetrashist novels. I would send, out works attractively printed, so that they would be kept by these benighted ! eople: tracts with passages from our ', best sennons. or I would not care if they j contained the writings of Josh Billings or of Bob Burdette. of Burlington. Iowa. I The stories 0f John B. Gough would lc good. Such as these I would have ( scattered by the thousand, aye, by the i million, throughout that land. More- j over, we Baptists ought to put one mis- ' sionary a day in the field during the nex ' two years. Even then wc would r , liave enough. Let us pray for the - as well as" the money; for the bi of . purpo-' and of heart to leac .ne-e ! pleasant fca-tern homes and b"e m tne Western wilderness." A". T. Sun. Rationalism in Germany-. Joseph Cook, in - letter from G-r-m-in- r.iiWiOi.Ki in the Indszmdt ni. s;w?aks oV the ilccline : rationalism in ! ....... ...i uermaar: ' Ai a s-xi ti mbiical cnti ciam, the Tabingen sdnxil ha; peri5hetL Thc mythical thoory of the origin of Christianity ii espkxiec. iiXnuS Is no Jan. 1 Jan. -Jan Jl Jau. ."--Jan. Ji l'il. :, ivt. i: I'eh. l!i-IYI-. '.Ti M:r. 5 Mar. 1--Mar IJ longer heard here in dicnwn- n.thin udels. Hn dav and even that ! "--! r.kel .in 1 K-n:n he gore- v Hie ni'-: dangertHH tcndn ;. of t'ic nr- form d ratiouali-m fnisit-. it if w-, the philiaxiphy of -'!ii;..n hihI t:e -j-iuLiti of tnxtennli-tH' phv -, KnH Hem kel. however. ka ni im irtaiit foiloHmg in (ienu.".tiy. 'l"he L5sU though Mt th- iwiisK-st, uduri!i-t-here, jis in Soxinwl awl l'ag'nnd. are uanp4jt:i' ttitd thorough thci-L-.." " It i trtK' t-dx. a- it ki. l--n for .he !-t fifid'ttor tve:itv year-, inte-rmnnv, tiwt tin ratMmalistK- UK-ulogit-itl mff--ors uttmct far fener student than the evangelical According U the lnivcr sitats Kslettdnr fr 1 k sj rational-i-4k HeideUnTg ha mlv twetiv-fur tkpiilogieal -tinUat-s. win:.. rv.nngrlK-al Berlin hx- 2.U. angr itcil IUlle &. aad hwr-evang-lieal lMtizig 1.17 At one tiuv. n-i-cntl. H-ili'itrrx l'iv r sin had seven th-dogH'ai jni r. -.11 mtioniili-U. ml m!y svvrn Uiei4g-al rfndents. Prof. Chri-tlH-b a-sun-- :ur that tl uHtu'-r of tbc4j:icjil stiHK-n!-in (iennanv is now deeidisllv on lb- m-cra.-'. idihough it dmunl-his:! f,r a while under the ojMrition of tb utri mrs Talk Ijiws. mw Imnpilv pier-sji,-, in large part by tl- lietter srr.wigejeit. of hi such s-iirs. Knlk aH4ate.! a teiM'hcrs in tin gviuna-ia vcrv limnv twrighgiig rHti'.nnb-t-. who win nrcttstimetl t sneer at anv d" thnt pupil- w In propu-t-U i iswfv divmitv. and th'i- did thi-ir utinnst to dtmmisb tlw- jiuuiIkt of tln-ological sttsdent- in the univep.ities." And vet there nr llitwe in iHtr own ciMintry Atixims t" j-k up ami wear tin old f.hes J raliiHiah-in which have been ra.4 n-idf in Cienuaiiy r are alnHit to be thrown niy. - Iniermr. A Personal Creator. t'ertain cla-M". of -cietiti-ts hive to de scant upon the age of the world. MII. ftUH'V that bv removing the imtumI 1 creation millions ,f year- back intc eternity they weaken tmr tuith in a jwr (Mittal reator. and in Hi- siifH-rvisin,: cjin. But thev great h liii-t.tke. Ni, matter how tuanv iiiyriaN if age- mav have elaps.il. or through how manv eon vtt"ioiis the world tuav have ji d. Wh truth -till .stainN. "In the beginning I'od cn-atiI the heavens and the earth. More than this. He uphold'-th "all things by the word of His jmwer " There must be a jHiwer present iu tlw moveiiH.iit of all mru'hinerv there must In a living fops;, guiding '"he movement of the universe. The act of cn-ation. thiHtgh sublime and glorious, is huh moiv glorious than that f preserving and perpetuating. If friu untold nivriads of veal-- thi- ttnivi-r-e h.f ext-teil. (fd's pI:u- are ohii-r -till, and the -tabilitv f nature's laws butdeiixHi strate that !ihI is the same ve-terdnv that llei-to-dav. and that H- wi!II the -ante forever. What jMiwer is tht-rf in that word that upholdeth all things? 'mild a jeweler produce i watch capa ble of keeping time for a hundix-d vear without erring a second, of what price less value would it be. and liw greatly we should admire the skill of the artist What shall we sav. then, of Him vvh hIds the machinery of unnumbered v.nrlds for untold ages in perfect har mony? Nor has one item ever been lo-t. .science shows us that forms perpetually change, but -ub-tnuce- uidurc. Noth ing pert-hc-. Iu thi- -eii-e it istrtH that -not a jot or tittle of Hi-Word .-hall ever fail." fiish"ii .S'o;. -i,n. Legal Fiction. It i- easy to win for the wisdom nl hi'mIiih times a supcrlieiat triumph b , airing in lht light of d.iv, naked and apart from the vani-hed circitnistance whieh give birth to them, the extraor dinary tictions which on-e pnsse cur rent in our court--. The ipiantiiy ot , plaint noii-e:ise in habitu.il u-e was. no loubl. ama.ing. A man who had b deb ml an action might be told that he , was in jail, or he might ! iinujM.Hed to substitute hitu.sclf tor a non-existent Kit-hard Hoc. Anv one who wished t -11 an entailed e-tate might have to lie gin b .saving that it belonged n -inn-'-body eNe. A plaintiff who did not make at random a large nunilH-r ol assertion- in hi-bill was put at a serioti. disadvantage. A defendant gave small bail for hi appearance: and itwa- u-ual I to put into pleadings mere random as.-er- tiotis. none of which might be true. To recover a hor-e or a cow, or to get an -talc of which some one was in po ses.-ioti. it might be n nry to stnte ' the most egregious falsehood. In or der that one might sue ujhui a contract actnaiiv made at sea. it might !e e en ti.d t say thai it was made at the Koval Kxehange. It in- obl to be told tiutt "the wife i- the daughter of the hu baud," or. "that the mother and son are not of kin.' When thi- last adage w:ts propounded to I'nele Toby he could scarcely be prevented whi-tlitii: I.illioiirlero; and the .statement conic, a- a shock to the strongest nerves. But the fact is that when the his tory of the-e maxims is care fully scanned, it is seen that those who devised them were neither dupe nor knave-. It is a mi-take to sup that they were mere instrument, of plunder and extortion, or contrivtinei for multiphing themytorie. of law. . little iiive-iigation show- that they wr i gciierallv modes of silenth alterinr"a"v ' at a time when aliovc-txurd form,f " , novations of anv kind would h,v'' '',n stoutly ri-i-ted." When acts -f I'nrlia inetit were rareor unknovv' nhen law ; was regarded bv utieritiet' tniml.-. a- ol , 'm -acred origin, an to 'vj " 't is written' was to say "it i immutable," -the-e lietions were "p'hIc- of aeipiiring . jurisdiction and d'ni: j-tice without offering violence deeply-nted feel-1 ings. They wo'" the equity of the rude age-. But'itc- mere ignorance of his tory to foiV't that lietions were on-e -ervieenb-'. They an- the iikmIcs bv which tie .Jewish doctors of the law, the interpreters of the Koran, the Pncfor- at I'onv. the (Queen's Jutieis at W--t-mini-ter. MMight to m-Hlerate strict legal severity, and harmonize the lett-r of th" law with the exigencies of -oci'-t. Th " rude device? wr- the amending act- of early time.-. They ought u ! viewi-! iu the light in whk h a primitive wagon or plow i-regard-d. 'I hey arc vtnera-!1- ton out of date, and their u.-" in the--' dav - is wa ro te encouraged. c vn w f '3 tle-v an' turnil again-t a " timtn- -'-fonner," against whom itisa-suu 'i '-" is fair. J.onilun Tuns. niixln? of Corn. It apicar3 fromcxp'-rimentstoatwh -some apjarnnce of mixing in two -or- corn takes place th tir-t vcar. ti.1 complete crossin" i- ajparnt nly the six-ijml year in the crop grown frm the-4 misil car. F.rery turm-r i.- fa miliar with the i-aricgatf-il ears whTc sorts of two cofors an; planted near each other. Prof. IJcal rcjKrt5 an ctp-'ri-ment where he tlanicl an early, cight roweI. Trllow lent, and through it a single ru'vv of yellow tlint- Before tlow -cring. the ta els of the flint corn were all iit o:T. making impregnation bv the ij.nt on thi- n;w a nece-.sitv . iTjere was no trace on the ear of the flint of 3nv crw ing vvith the dent the firt vear. The next year, however, the Sin corn -howeI all gradation- from th- dent to the Hint. He report.- some varieties a. lying less affected with crr-5ing than othT-. and name- the rei or brown va rieties, as having the greatest fixity of type, which accord? with our own ob rvatioas. To prove the influence of climate and locality in changinr com without crir-sing. he ?ay: that the King Iltilip corn went to Kan -as and in thrvri 3 ears vvs -cat back !! marked with dent- Country Gnttf&Mzn. i The man who woulda't be foord out should atav at horse. lad camnl Six. in Oliver Town hip, Kalkaska County. Mich , had xs. j cxcttirg encounter -,-ith de-r fc" d-y jxice He fired at the deer. Urge buck, nd n in ton act of '" whn when he note c! the discrcomin,: toward him. Hi- ntle wx a tnuislc Jo-vlfr, and hi? patches were not cut ay fa.trr thar he cd them, o thai r-.fr he c'd reload the deer rw cke to hint He made lively time arousd a krge :r with the deer prc-.nng him i clvly for comfort, and, .cring tHo trr at a jhort ditance that .tiod juit ce u- gctlior. Jh trucK out xor lacm. uu- he tarely reached when th IrncV wnat ruhing bv. Here he cHkl dolje bv tween thctre, while the bin-k had to go around on at-cmnt ( hv born rlnallv the b vf'!sl bvt ,toip-l t. udy the situation. Ihr the la4l. kU 1 ram ming the bftll home, tlxrd the cap with nervou tlnger, awl. tUing th pi btwton the tree and close tko Joor's head, polled the irieger, atl kertb.p went the leatttr. A lla'. l.nrV. TTs Korrt4:in ,t' t Hrii in f-.t txte rrfcrrril n.n; r. Va tile t.i- 'ini fun ! pHiI li.Tr.r.t TV; l tkrtf ron-MDlto Vr 5aaiirt t Niif, Tlfi t .- Xlinbi't .trrrt. xtui k.-M lb ii--alIr pitkHt J eniJ rWV In tfc traitii lj..:.!ur. it HafT iburz WW M Nr it4 tifu :t mrtela thf rixiBtfr retrtiVi, kit U, ;e Ibr'r tr. Irtl iwi bnJk i leg. Hf rs?frrt. tut vrf tfut'.ris4'urfM ct . r4 he tUt iHnrli Ilk e Tfce Inlartsl !tn b tj r-uhbr.1 irrrml timr . at jb,o.i .oa.w .uc. ..,...... f si i l?ilttr0 lAtt l!c -. -i t'f l ft i Jtrelr lf Kut: .1 it l!c ".w rf JinM Oil tb-t rur.l ll- .11. :.-. Mr Mce Llmtelt rd the tTl IrfrwaK Kf-J Jof :o.v.h.ti.e i:h r"t -r. t .! .! ior VJB aJ vtBi l rh-uwatir itu. ttit l- mimlrKiil eZr i SU Nvie aU 1- '.hi-i tit' i il I a nf.:f nJiii tk;-;. ia! the il'iais tr ;t tm btml Tilt mirt- nin i'l firtt 'rt n!l! hr 1. Mr to nif ;-. rt liu.tvitJ iu tfc it t.f ba Irrrx c a!' ifJ l at feomc . )'. n-ri-ioi .lrfTfwr ll llijuat I t'nknnnn. A I,or'l i Vta fif-T. ohfi- . 'r tlicrai-r xtr I II Sh.ft. rr,Trt'''.r of I -IVImotit Hotrl. that rttT. bo .sCrreJ ub rb-um:toti i-'T cmt.-n yart itb.-5l n-i I lnj if'lrf from n tt the mimrnwi r-! iM,.f t Itijileif t. ut:t:l lir jij'!lr4 St J. (il t tioer fettn.l ml. in; that prttni csl . h rrm-.rk-.Mr ire! inunliaaf f!7rt t u it. IU,' k-j Mr. Stu-rt .jrimi i nw) .tdrrw. I'l NXslI v am li Ri-tllfiK U trfml tbn !. me ' hrr r;rari.Tril lnui4tr s m; lie, l lrs..V a th-'lT hrr hunic i..ul.t h ic t W rlnjjrit fr- iH thr K-.l-n to lb" (irvrlotlP irtjlr li4i 7ai nf Tlirotr Clii.lr- Initio lioci.ri! Nnf II." We ito not frl JiVr bl'Wlur Ui-tnh f thi rijrrlolnt ilcut l.vrn o .! M.et f Oh- i .ithvrll. art Ririt rrnlr l-.ll. rr.iug t " turn mr Moin-b ' llail t-Mt oo takru Ir lirr.r'i I"urtltc J'rlu w.'il!l ni't liarr u'ti-fr.l tboc ofili o( ..'B teuit lit itruKKi-U Wn.i. tlt " coitiini m" ht the -lo-'i sflrr IhihI Mr will in tbi olIU-p ur Lc i.: OUt ot lUe imlon' - h'4l 1 1K- "(toinrv Mr.iHCvi llt-rMirritl" (nri! rr; IsterrJ j a tr.olrm.-irl. rnr- ill )iunKi fr. n thr plniiilu or eruj-UuH toj;irit ilrukbt rattu UiClT. Tnrnr ftietihl t-r no h.l- In lir-'tumi ptofKm:; t! thr) arr uurth a ilaru A I'lntytittr. Tlir " rjt-.rlt- rrTitlin" f I- I-' enrrs "frm.i'r r.l,i., ' uhiI tli.-lrr I iz t.oij IU iltiiKl.ts. Don't thr i ay onr M Soi.r 'srf i TUcx arc m-(m1 It hj Ivrtt fwin t i' 4t c: rtnilittir) flir lurid v HI tn-ltl tl7v. tr; !olUi (,'irti lla II i.l Uritni hill. A nrosnlornt h I.ih of I ItU.1 "' pay- "loweuij lit- to !"" uri- He luil hr-'fii-' IU .rv.r t nun .V llro . ('oA'!i VtlUi I. 4 far that "1'i.o t nr (or ('.nniij.l i t f reailtlv. anl ! Kotii;; nlrrl r-tti(at. , J T Hlcl.oe. Krawceivillr. Iwl . wr.tr "I'l-o n t'Mri- Is elt grreral tnf. t.-n Mv uln it tear Iinicacl about uno hall ; over totwicr icats '' j 1 K iJil-Mtiiriii .l'H. I .'jil l. ii.c lr 1 I I l.inxcV !ii'ttri Kit Kino 'I he lHr xr V I V KSTITIt j ml 1 1 UK. iW' alliliu-.- t M rlson, riuninii-r.V I o , I hn sjf., (.. n I i;rut Ir aflticteil wltb .sr l!r. " Or Iv TbomtMn' KycWAtrr. IruzKli -oil IL "Jc Tnrnr l town In i'.iwt nnt t.j' ' m no ! ar .: tl- ii. il - It llxhUm -Ti n-rnv !. ikI b-r f.r tin' umii " ,r I--a hn- ii 1 . . tliat wln-n.1 inj'i t hi H l.nt.ir ir h t a t.irljr ! h Itlm l- o i t taKi Ii I ' tartrlr tirH nl :. n- fi" Hj;Ij fi- hr 4ti. "Mi." h. rthl (wnttttlHlrlv. "INnrt lt till HIP In HMITV MlH." "And ' J J t I iltoii t. m or-tller ilu! I r)r t Iiihi If I c. Kri'p dim Ibt trttift -il "hri.'on le-'ll tnakr m rMHtlmiMI fifMl t Iihi" me f " Yr (.! I l-n n. i In- u. jpihi te)t lor a riiHir tine. " - A HMtolir outi. fcml Ti4in: eiAfnin'i . J ! ijV HlfrT U lolwU-tim If- '! 1 ,e tirtDrmt-. J.anl Alm-lt eoMjnmt .1 the i(UrtioN "U'tr ! the i!lt!M fr " r -tfi Vot In- !" Not Wilnf ther. f l,-jr(, lat.f miIIkcUI Mm.i wrotr riO-! 1 am tuiahle to ite aecirtU. h l .i.t ' lfvr thr lh H fmr rtntOKli to tnter.'rr. ), a jtro-r fier(irniiieiij mi itutlr- JI I j;rl i. ClrYkf-Ml'i." Ht'Kirlll. fH lfro lmt rain eMlor. 1-. I .W jl-"""." tru'i? ojr! M-jM-f. t..ihiii p.n -.41MI the faeUI etpris.fcHi ut lei jctrl .iitu'i. II.-I t-i ildrMv nitkrM-k other. ac cowiit ..f tl.r -4Mritr of mm." In an athwm if aMbixntf-it- Alm" Karr Ita- wrtltfit "The flr-t Ull of ir Mt in lrlliHs; the r--ll. rl thr rmHrl In tefrrrttliiK the Hrt. "1h the ltittin l 1 ainlrr Iiiuna hu written -What l luty ' It l wlwt -ir rurt of oUirm." firnMiM Ii3 iioItcI a prW-Hi for In that rrfiiir n.ire idrW mrry at thr-t. Sri than at morlrv-n Str trc kifiv wir aifjrtrl Cf tlltrtV file rrrrmla Nter8t'eH fo' - !I4'.J year": the .i t want lmlHrl N niiiis h f-or the f jtriH-r'' !-. V.iwli hor 'liitHiiK-iI .- hr1 fnrtt - lit uh ni-i ha -jrill 1 ! rftr-fi-l wh.-if. 31 th.Hiifh hi ran 1 iiMe '".th fl mt. II turn j'i""i -innof -lt' r'iC-3- -f Ooo C" n.-r-e-rt. AITaEV ?- f --. Ijtzu. 1V - sfir-C- - In ( .:x-.-s. c rr,- tv; I- vs'- -- ffrOA. WEEK. ll2ad7tbur3raif)jrsi.Vi. "t) L CnS' 3t2t f-J AVriTl-s0. Asr-nta. 9(a Dr. -4r.o'i?-----. - -!. "ci 1ar?. lUpCin 4 num. vUZ tvxr. UZ iiia M. HAIR mbA wtjatnsC O. n rri-i. n i.i !K. HU7TTiUl.lt; WiS,.J 1CCBTC bt rxrT rsa 9r. Ct. w MSkn f K-r( nvu . 'rv- tfBi-CAUiU l5.:J20r1 t 11 t torae. S-3&! forth 1 Itwai .tt krtri-r o7a-iCST$ ihjed-w "JI-v""T ase ijfj l--;l 0i Irfrt. imnu&ttTEX&sz Ul lUiffl I- J rrtmrn . LrU-a, OtU MK. WELL BORINCao DKtlLnC BSCMHES. T t-r i tiu ? -r: xdjx LOOMISAHrMAM.Ttf'riH.OHtO. Diary freeSrs . -trsi Ij-r-fwl T t raa5. te. u ur AtT oirr- TUX TO r A.X. S-mx.Ul C--l -rHt IM IHM im If" "f -- f ten. lW - f .nc f Vm rt.l. k - rmi "S . Mr&rm'va id Am .. lT'i i " lr. . X- u -iML. UDS!6 Ctt. Mill rtMfWf m XmtiHws t4 B-mmmmf. X I. Til- 1 -. ' r ?--"" a h ' a 1 a ' A. A jL. 4. 4A A M lllMilWIpVHnp-111-! 1 TL IT Km ALWAYS KEEP COOL i j. t t.fun -l f rl -1 ! t s - i' . bi .! ft It M-" . TM .' mt WO ttk. Ire, l 1. 9f m'iw M s 7, u VI at V3Z, 4b L JV C) vs itta ')V n4 mm vJ-t" XVI '11 '"! "iW ,HU,L -"4 r 1 MmhIMi . M I r f I. !. -. ito I bum - - II W M4 1 II ! t f f . I . f tfc Il'rvr r ' i -1: .- I- . -I'm '. t.t I- lr-tt-' ' 4,-. r SiciftM - y V. w m it tfH f nr- rw 1 M .... IM . M....11..C . . . A f I. I ttW. fe n . nr- . n s - CtUB I "irfli: !' ,w -1 tbqjl " l," .ttsiu-h ! !& t l.-l ' n fmmrrmf. il fcarft-bl i- au tr4 Irii.. - "X l 't nr.'urrM j&:J5ZJZt .iltintli uMif4fO S i!-l fmAmf i.m.e f -. n.t it Uf bM "r' irr-n twit4r- ..iiit !-. on Ui-. 1 b..l,l . t W ''"' h.. th'nt.iif ." " "tl , tlr t iint- .-... Iwi4 . l ' ,-' " t? ?-.-! JT r?fe Jrl ill . 4l-f . tbm-l . lll".fWf ' w,,!,t.., ,! 1 1- r-U I wt 1 - i 1 1 '' l 1 IK; if lik&.lo 4 U m J ) 1 1 1 In ... t K I - - " .. I ti Tir... nr tfiirri t IM.t It i.l Wa r ! .1 u .n M !-. lb tu ; . i 50,000 SOLD in ;- i, ...... ..- I . . . f r.fA' . . I 50,000 IN PRESS. ''"..:, ruMiimvi lit lilt II W lUiUi. k.MSi Mi, HATtONAL GAME OF PRESIDENTS. t t - M l .vir s . j ! - . .J. . .! , . v vn t'H o. Tiimiiv itiov . - .-. li I! IM'l H I'lM 1 1. I'll . li rM om .. fS-Vi , t i -. .i t r .-.i'fc i. 1 -4i I . . . f 1.. . CI - - M- - Jl .r . . tvi .-r- tkraw4l. Jluwlt M V.T 06.. l. Simw .. K X I. tHml I tl.li .. x .s . Km c nr a v i m in - o "H i- J Xu0u'i ' om . ui. Ill y'- I II I I l l( I !' . I H RICH BLQQD ! PAHSOJiS' PURGATIVE PILLS u . n .. l e - I i c . . 1 H THAT WONDERFUL BOOK I.I lll s tl io m i ss . r III III IIMVV -J I ' I VI ICVIIIIM. n 1 I ta f . . Aft... .,.. i . t .. f .. i r i - . i.r Ii ' i til '"' .. r Vi. I Ml VV V- ltrti k . - . -I KK..-J. ... i t sOr, - .tu 1 1. a .,L l-vX. Mm 8!0 MWi MADE Pf kAh MrvtR", . n'Mfi3 r. . , ( r I'ft't' nr I r .. .f. .. .3 ts i - r . V ! .. ... . 44 K. . !! r..iw r.i !. . .... .p f- r . t . .1 i .. ., ji ... ; r oiiriuumi. (IW..1II. U. t- !!. Urn. E3E3ixr"i:-c"E,krfS j . 'jrt ... ,; -,, .j i ., .' .. , . ... HI I ! fr n j i.,m4.. , ;. ,... i rr vlf'. ' k 1... . . s t rt riil 11 illi.t 111 , -.Bi4 t'T'W i I I -!4l j a-oxiiNrsoij,i5 PnyuPRH!i Hnn FRF Urnmbiiwii womwm.! .- - -" M r 5 M lll'l.' AI I, 1 III t VI" V fr .ft - .' V- S I.. .1, FRAZER AXLE GREASE. Hollnlk. M. .- IS. (...Iu -..-fry .f.s ! r T?m4. April aal I. rkid -r-.r- , Mil II ;V It It 1 VV II -' "fl PLEASURE TRIP. 1 Tr ; ' V - Ttft. . -.r i" Ar 'r W a- -. " .-" i r !a r- vi r-rl- f ' 'Hll' I'UiiUs'ir i- t. t T i r.s-f w Ik r.. ' A- . V.fVr BUTTER COLOR ( AI4 or Alkali ilr m .M lr LIKE JUNE BUTTER. niKMM.M.v-111'rnR a M-r r.' t .,-.- It . .1 U.I.Ua'i.Vof TMkll;,i l i l. yrAFSER COLDEN UAffSM Great Future ' U .4l fbi(it f , s...l..l i.itl.ir. s m r- Itl. !.- lay.. -, Wr llar,l mmA . Jir fk. 11 r M.r.l. Ifr M. .!., Itr llf. .-"- .1 .! Im.-mm'- r til ' ? r . r. ir zir.oi.ra co r.ia. r. cM-r. ti DIPHTHERIA! juii.vtuvijiviinTvr i.tviwrvr n f- I t 'T- e &t" h" Jf 1 - e- r r - 1.' r l ' it cekr -' t " V t - .. 1 .,..,,, w, r . r . r A j T - - M'- ' t .' Ur r. -r. ' r '- FOP. AGUE, CHILLS, FEVER A.SD ALL MAUKIA1. ATTACKJ.. U XtK LL.UI 3 QUININE WINE A PREVENTIVE. AH0 8U3E CURL PLKAIAi.T TO TAKE. ZtCOTttltt.U ti ML ruiMfiuc A8PLEKDID HERVE TONIC. mr. zrsrz xxurrsr Krt ten ---. T 1 t ll fcfd- Ia" f A7j!, TT jrfA. lnJlclin ni l-mr-.l lif. !. tf?" v l.LOKK I IItICAL CO. tl Cotrml Mrt. UmUu. OREMAHCrvHOOTHEWORX 0TWO -e4rie .!. CTXXX-'X1 ; SAW1N6 MAGHIHEi f A!tT l?- 7 ir''. v 5-ir Ac mtA - r -; it r -- Trm . .! Mfala tl - J imUl TIMS TS itClTL rAmft rr c".' .. - hm4Sarrtt-itrtirt mJ-1 J. IilSl C k.s. r- :a ycJk A W? w M I A "-Sl - : x , . 1 n Ik3t3mi wursT vrr.mxo to adtektwu IteM fjiy jra w tH miirtltmri U ihi pyr. AJ-Ttlr IU u mn j i tej T r V?M " -rj'lf ?jj:jmn .