k Q + .n. . ? IA T h' SERMON. THE PROPER SPHERE FOR WOM- AN-HER OPPORTUNITY. ! ! i ° T5oted Preacher Says That Capacity L the Guiding Star of Woman's 17ao- lnlneaa-Tho Allaremonts That Are Dangcrons. x k . l T. LOUIS , MO. , June 16,1895.-In his ieermon for today ; Rev. Dr. Talmage , y who has reached Ithis city on his western tour , dis tcusses a subject of universal Interest , viz. : "Woman's Op. portunity , " his text being : "She shall be called woman. " i Gen. II. , 23. God , who can make no mistake , made snan and woman for a specific work and 'o to move in particular spheres-man to be regnant in his realm ; woman to be dominant in hers. The boundary line between Italy and Switzerland , between England and Scotland , is not more thoroughly - oughly marked than this distinction between - tween the empire masculine and the empire - pire feminine. So entirely dissimilar are the fields to which God called them , that you can no more compare them than you can oxygen and hydrogen , water and grass , trees and stars. All this talk about the superiority of one sex to the other sex is an exerlasting waste of Ink and speech. A jeweler Islay have a scale so delicate that he can weigh the dust of diamonds ; but where are the scales so delicate that you can weigh in them affection against alTection , sentiment against sentiment , thought against thought , soul against soul , a man's world against a woman's world ? You come out with your stereotyped - typed remark that man is superior to woman In intellect ; and then I open on my desk the swarthy , irontyped , thun- der-boltell writings of Harriet Marti- neau and Elizabeth Browning , and George Eliot. You come on with your stereotyped remark about woman's su- perlority to man in the item of afTec- tion ; but I ask you where was there more capacity to love than in John the disciple-and Matthew Simpson the bishop and Henry Martyn , the missionary - ary ? The heart of those men was so large , that after you had rolled into it two hemispheres , there was room still left to marshal the hosts o : heaven , and act up the throne of the eternal Jeho- vah. I deny to man the throne Intellec- tual. I deny to woman the throne afi'ec- ' tionaL No human phraeseology will ever decline the spheres ; while there is an intuition by which we know when a man is In his realm , and when a woman - an Is in her realm , and when either of them is out of it. No bungling legislature - ture ought to attempt to make a definition - tion , or to say : "This is the line and that Is the line. " My theory is , that if a woman wants to vote , she ought to vote , and that if a man wants to embroider - broider and keep house , he ought to be , allowed to embrolder and keep Clouse. There are masculine women and there are effeminate men. My theory is that you have no right to interfere with any one's doing anything that is righteous. Albany and Washington might as well decree by legislation how high a brown-thrasher should fly , or how deep a trout should plunge , as to try to seek out the height and depth of woman's duty. The question of ca- paclty will settle finally the whop question - tion , the whole subject. When a woman - an is prepared to preach , she will preach , and neither conference nor presbytery - bytery can hinder her. When a woman is prepared to move in highest commercial - cial spheres , she will have great Influence - ence on the exchange , and no boards of trade can hinder her. I want woman to understand that heart and brain can overfly any barrier that politicians may set up , and that nothing can keep her back or keep her down but the question of incapacity. My chief anxiety is , not that woman have other rights accorded her ; but that she , by the grace of God , rise up to the appreciation of the glorious rights she already possesses. First , she has the right to make home happy. That realm no one has ever disputed with her. Men may come home at noon or at night , and then tarry a comparatively - ly little while ; but she all day long governs - erns it , beautifies it , sanctifies it. It is within her power to make it the most attractive place on earth. It is the only calm harbor in this world. You know as well as I do , that this outside world and the business world , are a long acene of jostle and contention. The r man who has a dollar str , , blcs to keep it ; the man who has it not struggles to get it. Prices up. Prices down. Loss- es. Gains. Misrepresentations. Un- derselling. Buyers depreciating ; salesmen - men exaggerating. Tenants seeking less rent ; landlords demanding more. Struggles about office. Men who are in trying to keep in ; men out trying to get in. Slips. Tumbles. Defalcations. Panics. Catastrophes. Oh , woman ! thank God you have a home and that you may be queen in it. Eetter be there than wear a Victoria's coronet. Better be there than carry the purse of a princess. Your abode may be humble , but you can. by your faith in God , and your cheerfulness - fulness of demeanor , gild it with splendors - dors such as an upholsterer's hand never yet kindled. There are abodes in every city-humble , two stories ; four plain , unpapered roe ns ; undesirable neighborhood ; and yet there is a man who would die on the threshold rather than surrender. Why ? It is home. whenever he thinks of it he sees angels - gels of God hovering around it. The ladders of heaven are let down to that house. Over the child's rough crib there are the chantlus of angels as there that broke nvr'r E'thlehem. T ! is home. These children may come up alter awhile , and they may win high position , and they may have an affluent residence ; but they will not until their dying day forget that humble roof , under - der which their father rested , and their mother sang , and their sisters played. t Oh , If you would gather up all tender memories , all the lights and shades of the heart , all banquetings and reunions , all filial , fraternal , paternal and conjugal - jugal affections , and you had only just four letters with which to spell out that height and depth , and length , and breadth , and magnitude , and eternity f meaning , you would , with streaming eyes , and trembling voice , and agitated - ed hand , write it out in those four liv- capitals , H-O-M-E. L _ _ . When you want to get your grandest idea of a queen , you do not think of Catherine of Russia , or of Anne of England - land , or Marie Theresa of Germany ; but when you want to get your grandest idea of a queen , you think of the plain woman who sat opposite your father at the table , or walked with him arm-in arm down life's pathway ; sometimes to the thanksgiving banquet , sometimes to the grave , but always together-sooth- Ing your potty griefs , correcting your childish waywardness , joining in your infantile sports , listening to your evening - ing prayers , tolling for you with needle or at the spinning-wheel , and on cold nights wrapping you up snug and warm. And then at last on that day when she lay in the back room dying , and you saw her take those thin hands with which she had tailed for you so long , and put them together in a dying prayer that commended you to the God whom she had taught you to trust-Oh , she was the queen ! The chariots of God came down to fetch her ; and as she went up all heaven roseup. You cannot think of her now without a rush of tenderness - derness that stirs the deep foundations i of your soul , and you feel as much a child again as when you cried on her lap ; and if you ooufj1 bring her back again to speak just once more your name , as tenderly as she used to speak it , you would be willing to throw yourself - self on the ground and kiss the sod that covers her , crying : "Mother ! mother ! " Ah ! she was the queen-she was the queen. Now , can you tell me how many thousand miles a woman like that would have to travel down before she got to the ballot-box ? Compared with this work of training kings and queens for God and eternity , how insignificant seems all this work of voting for aldermen - men and common councilmen , and sheriffs , and constables , and mayors , and presidents ! To make one such grand woman as I have described , how many thousands would you want of those people - ple who go in the round of fashion and dissipation , going as far toward disgraceful - graceful apparel as they dare go , so as not to be arrested by the police-their behavior a sorrow to the good and a caricature of the vicious , and an insult to that God who made them women and not gorgons , aid tramping on , down through a frivolous and dissipated - ed life , to temporal and eternal damna- tion. tion.Oh Oh , woman , with the lightning of your soul , strike dead at your feet all these allurements - lurements to dissipation and to fashion , Your immortal.soul cannot be fed upon suchgarbage. Godcalls you up to empire and dominion. Will you have it ? Oh , give God your heart , give to God all your best energies ; give to God all your culture ; give to God all your refinement ; give yourself to him , for this world and the next. Soon all these bright eyes will be quenched , and these voices will be hushed. For the last time you will look upon this fair earth. Father's hand , mother's hand , sister's hand , child's hand will no more be in yours. It will be night , and there will come up a cold wind from the Jordan , and you must start. Will It be a lone woman on a trackless moor ? Ah ! no. Jesus will come up in that hour and offer his hand , and he will say : "You stood by me when you were well ; now I will not de- sert'you when you are sick. " One wave of his hand and the storm will drop ; and another wave of his hand and midnight - night will break into midnoon ; and another - other wave of his hand and the chamberlains - berlains of God will come down from the treasure-houses of heaven , with robes lustrous , blood-washed and heaven- glinted , in which you will-array yourself - self for the marriage supper of the Lamb. And then with Miriam , who struck the timbrel of the Red Sea ; and with Deborah , who led the Lord's host into the fight ; and with Hannah , who gave her Samuel to the Lord ; and with Mary , who rocked Jesus to sleep while there were angels singing 11T the air ; and with sisters of charity , who bound up the battle-wounds of the Crimea , you will , from the chalice of God , drink to the souls eternal rescue. Your dominion is home , 0 woman ! What a brave fight for home the women of Ohio made some ten or fifteen years ago , when they banded together and in many of the towns and cities of that state marched in procession , and by prayer and Christian songs shut up more places of dissipation than were ever counted. Were they opened again ? Oh yes. But is it not a good thing to shut up the gates of hell for two or three months ? It seemed that men engaged - gaged in the business of destroying others did not know how to cope with this kind of warfare. They knew how to fight the Maine liquor law , and they knew how to fight the National Temperance - perance society and they knew how to fight the Sons of Temperance and Good Samaritans ; but when Deborah appeared - peared upon the scene , Sisera took to his feet and got to the mountains. It seems that they did not know how to contend against Coronation , and Old Hundred , " and "Brattle Street , " and "Bethany , " they were so very intangi- ble. These men round that they could not accomplish much against that kind of warfare , and in one of the cities a regiment was brought out all armed to disperse the women. They came down i in battle array ; but oh , what poor success - cess ! for that regiment was made up of gentlemen , and gentlemen do not like to shoot women with hymn-nooks in their hands. Oh , they found that gunning - a ning for female prayer-meetings was a 1 very poor business ! No real damage was done , although there was threat of violence after threat of violence all over the land. I 'really think if the ; women of the east had as much faith in God as their sisters of the west had , and the same recklessness of human criticism , I really believe that in one month three-fourths of the grog-shops of our cities would be closed , and there i would be running through the guttrs iI of the streets , Burgundy , and Cognac , I and Heidstck , and old Port an3 Schie- dam Schnapps , and lager beer , and you , would save your fathers , and your husbands , and your sons , first , from a drunkard's grave , and second , from a drunkard's hell ! To this . battle for home let all women rouse themselves. Thank God for our early home. Thank God for our present home. Thank God for the coming home in F heaven. 1 One twilight , after I had been playing with the children for some time , I lay down on the lounge to rest. The children - dren said , play more. Children always want to play more. And , Ilalf asleep and half awake. I seemed to dream this i dream : It seemed to me that I was In- a far-distant land-not Persia , although mace than Oriental luxuriance crowned the cities ; nor the tropics-although I more than tropical fruitfulness filled the gardens ; nor Italy-although more tha ; Y ; C : YS ftalian softness filled the air. And r wandered around , looking for thorns and nettles , but I found none of them grew there. And I walked forth and 1 saw the sun rise , and I said : "When will it set again ? " and the sun sanlz not. And I saw all the people in holiday - day apparel , and I said : "When do they put on workingman's garb again , and delve in the mine , and awelter at the forge ? " but neither the garments nor the robes did they put off. And I wandered in the suburbs and I said : "Where do they bury the dead of thh great city" and I looked along by the hills where it would be most beautiful for the dead to sleep , and I sad castles and towns , and battlem i a ; but not a mausoleum nor monument , nor whits slab could I see. And I went into the great chapel of the town , and I said : "Where do the poor worship ? where are the benches on which they sit ? " and a voice answered : "We have no poor in this great city. " And I wandered out , seeking to find the place where were the hovels of the destitute ; and I found mansions of amber and ivory and gold , but no tear did I see or sigh hear. I was bewildered , and I sat under the shadow of a great tree , and I said : "What am I , and whence comes all this ? " And at that moment there came from among the leaves , skipping up the flowery paths and across the sparkling waters , a very bright and sparkling group ; and when I saw their step T knew it , and when I heard their voices I thought I knew them ; but their ap4 parel' was so different from anything had eve seen , I bowed a stranger t strangers. But after awhile , when theyl clapped their hands and shouted : "Wel come ! welcome ! " the mystery wax solved , and I saw that time had passed and that eternity had come , and that God had gathered us up into a higher home ; and I said : "Are we all here ? " and the voices of innumerable generations - tions answered : "All here ; and while tears of gladness were raining down : our cheeks , and the branches of Leb = anon cedars were clapping their hands , and the towers of the great city were chiming their welcome , we began to , laugh and sing , and leap and shout Home ! home ! home ! " I Then I felt a child's hand on my faced and it woke me. The children wanted to play more. Children always want to play more. A BONAPARTE LOVE LETTER. Endearing Terms with Which Luclen Wrote to Mme , Recamtor. An invincible charm wraps up your very Indifference. You repulse my prayers , you order me to be silent , you repeat the declarations that drive mete to despair , you chill my hopes , you dispel my Illusions as fast as they cAowd on me , and although one word would make me happy you will not say it. A gesture , a kind look , another sight of you in the garden walk where you avoided me would transport my soul. I prefer to hear you chide me to being banished from your presence forever : In telling me that I am a mad man you infuse a grace into the harsh words that make me truly mad. Those pretty trifling airs and graces of which you are unaware are mingled so deliciously with your refusals that I cannot resent what you say. They go to the bottom of my soul. My Juliet , believe me when I say that I never knew what a demi- sentiment was , that I could never lie to a woman , that I am capable of going through fire and water for her , and that I should be broken hearted were it not for the fancy that a momentary gleam of joy passed over your face the last time I approached you. I was too timid to show my feelings. I did not dare ask you for as much as a piece of ribbon - bon , as a symbol of my slavery , for aleck lock of hair , a flower. Send me a snip of ribbon or a tress. Write nothing. I. shall then respectfully throw myself at your feet. The only thing I want is td see the tear of sensibility fall from your eye , or to hear from you that you trust me as a friend. This , indeed , would be a blessing. Oh , Juliet , a ribbon , a lock of hair , or a tear.-L. B. Too Lazy to Move. A most curious and sluggish creature is the tautawa , a nine-inch lizardd , whose home is in New Zealand. This little imitation saurian has the reputation - tation of being the laziest creature ever created. He is usually found clinging to rocks or logs along the shores of rivers and lakes and has been known to remain in one position perfectly - fectly motionless for many months , How the creature manages to exist is a mystery. Many people in the state of Washington - ton who dislike the abbreviation "Wagh. , " are trying to substitute "Wn. for it. Spain has , a magnificent domain of 119,000 square miles , a territory as large as the combined area of Missouri and Illinois. The largest sailing ship afloat is the remodeled Persian Monarch , 3,923 tons measurement. Her iron masts are 134 feet high from the dccx. There will be a copy of the great bazaar - zaar of Constantinople , a Cairo square and an exact reproduction of the Al- bambra at the Paris exposition in 1900. Jinklets-I want my wife to be a woman who thinks before she speaks. -Plunkett-Why don't you say you are confirmed bachelor-Detroit Free Press. "What makes them call Boston the hub ? " "I guess it's because its such a center for wheels , " replied the vulga- rian who thinks Browning is nonsense. 'as'm'rton Star. Many of the pleasure gardens and castles of the Japanese nobles are now turned into parks and schools , and used for other public purposes. Two or three species of birds are known to accompany the crocodile whenever he appears above water , and they give it the alarm when danger ap- pears. The brain of man is the most convoluted - voluted of that of any animal in the world. The lower the animal in the scale of intelligence the smoother the brain. The humming bird , in protecting its young , always flies at and pecks at the eyes of its adversary. Crows have been found totally blind from the humming bird's bill. There are practically no oaths in the Japanese language. About the most emphatic - phatic remark available for use , even by jinrikisha men in a street blockade , s shinksu , or "beast. " Lady-How nice you removed that bunion. Chiropodist -es , I have had considerable experience. I used to do all the carving at one of the biggest hotels in this city.-Tamamny Times. GRAND OLD PARTY. MORE TRUTHS ABOUT DEMOCRATIC - CRATIC MISRULE. The Blessings of Free Trade Coming with a Vengeanro-Results of the i Great Crime of 189.1-Sound Arguments - ments for a Protective Tarif. The following table shows the monthly receipts of the treasury since the enactment of the McKinley law , and will enable the reader to see at a glance what the workings of the McKinley - Kinley and Wilson laws have been. He will see that from the enactment of the 1lciinley law until the meeting ( August - gust , 1893) of the Democratic congress whose mission was the destruction of the tariff , the receipts seldom fell below - low $30,000,000 a month , never as low as $25,000,000. The moment that congress - gress met , however , the receipts dropped to the nnprecedentediy low figure of $23,890,885 , and in the twelve months that congress was considering the tariff continued at unprecedentedly low figures. He will further observe that , low as those figures were , they are far surpassed in their unsatisfactory - tory showing by the receipts under the new law , and that no eight months' period in the entire history of the McKinley - Kinley law has produced such small receipts as the eight months of the new law , nor can any month be found in the record of the old law which produced - duced such small receipts as those of several of the months under the new law : McKinley Law Enacted. October , 1890 . . . . . , , , , , . . , . $39,222,174 November , 1890 . . . . . . . . . . . . 28,678,674 December , 1890 . . . . . . . . . . . . 31,106,164 January , 1891 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36,810,33 February , 1591 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29,273,173 March , 1891 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29,027,455 April , 1591. , . . , , , , , , , , , , , 25,465,231 May , 1891 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27,289,305 June , 1891. . . . . . , , , , , , 31,631,849 'July , 1891 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34,258,244 August , 1891 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28,713,981 September , 1891 . . . . . . . . . . . . 27,165,554 October , 1891 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28,448,562 November , 1591 . . . . . . . . . . . . 26,562,057 December , 1891 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27,646,515 January , 1892 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30,383,4 78 February , 1892 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30,698,944 March , 1892 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29,836,606 April , 1892 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26,971,24 May , 1892 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2S,228,393 June , 1892 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30,955,617 July , 1892 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34,314,331 August , 1892 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33,479,058 September , 1592 . . . . . . . . . . . . 31,797,623 October , 1892 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31,288,540 November , 1892 . . . . . . . . . . . . 28,739,835 December , 1892 . . . . . . . . . . . . 33,066,963 January , 1893 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35,005,652 February , 1893 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29,69S,192 March , 1893 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34,115,809 April , 1593 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28,415,367 flay , 1593 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30,92S,957 June , 1893 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30,717,101 July , 1893 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30,905,776 Democratic Congress Meets. August , 1893 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $23,890,885 September , 1893 . . . . . . . . . . . , 24,553,756 October , 1593 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24,553,394 November , 1593 . . . . . . . , . . . . 23,979,400 December , 1593 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22,312,027 January , 1894 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24,5S2,738 February , 1894 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22,269,299 March , 189.4 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24,824,797 April , 189.4 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22,692,364 May , 1894 . . . . . . . . . . . . , . . 23,066,094 June , 1594 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26,455,925 July , 1894 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34,809 339 August , 1894 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40,417,605 Wilson Law Eacted. September , 189.4 .22,621,22S October , 1894 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19,239,240 November , 1894 . . . . . . . . . . . . 19,411,403 December , 1S4 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21,866,126 January , 1895 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27,804,399 February , 1895 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22SSS,0057 March , 1895 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25,470,475 April , 1895 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21,247S16 The following figures might be a good thing for the average voter and citizen to paste in his hat by way of comparison of the Wilson and McKinley - ley laws : Wilson law , receipts in its first eight months , $153,448,874 ; McKinley law , receipts - ceipts , same period , preceding year , $189,314,735. McKinley law , receipts in its worst eight months , $187,347,219 ; Wilson law , receipts in best eight months to ( late , $183,448,87.4. McKinley law , receipts in first eight months , $2.46,872,409 ; Wilson law , receipts - ceipts in first eight months , $133,449- 874. McKinley law , surplus first eight months , $21,208,767 ; Wilson law , deficiency - ciency first eight months , $51,73,466. -New York Tribune. The English Wheat Supply. No. 47.-Can I obtain a statement of the imports of wheat from different countries into Great Britain during a succession of years or for even one year ? R. H. BOND. Sterling , Kan. , April 30 , 1895. Certainly you can , says American Economist. The total imports of wheat into the United Kingdom during the years 1593 and 1594 were as follows in hundredweights : - 1893. 1594. From Cwts. Cwts. Russia . . . . . . . . .10,061,9SS 16,775,851 Germany . . . . . . . 362,086 715,043 France . . . . . . . . . 1,452 4,715 Turkey . . . . . . . . . 103,55 3"1,523 Roumania . . . . . . 89,272 108,03) Egypt . . . . . . . . . . 10,586 1S4 United States. . .32,62S4S 24.65S,245 Chili . . . . . . . . . . . 2,580,147 1,764,413 Argentine . . . . . . 7,845,587 13,272,152 Brit. E. Indies. . 6,196,096 5,349,036 Australasia . . . . . 2,5S95S8 ; 3S77,418 Brit. N. America 3,157,355 2,525,515 Other countries. . 201,431 456,121 Totals . . . . . . . .65,461,9SS 70,134,355 It will be seen that England imported - ed 4,673,00 hundredweights more wheat aat year than in 1S93 , but she bought 7,600,000 hundredweights less from the United States , her pi j iiasea in 1894 bet - t _ I , - - - n - - lug larger than in 1S93 from every country in the world , except Egypt , the United States , Chili , India and Canada. Of interest in the same connection is the statement of the wheat crop of the world during the same two years , which we give as follows in bushels : 1593. 1894 , Bushels , Bushels. N. America. . 446 ; 87,000 515,438,000 S. America. . 81,453,000 104,000,000 Europe . . . . . .1,469,526,000 1,538,216,000 Asia . . . . . . , . 355,016,000 341,959,000 Africa . . . . . . . 31,891,000 47,095,000 Australasia . . 42,458,000 33,360,000 Totals . . . . 2,426,731,000 2,590,121,000 Goods In Bond , We have given from time to time , and will continue to do so , as complete details of the workings of the Gorman tariff as it is possible to secure , but manufacturers and wage earners should bear in mind that there is always a considerable quantity of foreign goods in bond at the close of each month that are waiting to be sold in our markets over and above the actual imports that have been entered for consumption. At the close of last March the total value of these goods amounted to $31,431,128 , the principal items being as follows : Articles. Value. Bar iron , rolled or hammered. $ 143,621 Chemicals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 564,64 Cotton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1,184,112 Earthen , stone and china ware . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 341,380 Glass and glassware. . . . . . . . . 425,619 Gloves , of kid or other leather . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 192,211 Leather . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 804,823 Manufactures of textile grasses and vegetable fibers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51,345 Rice . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 379,655 Silk , manufactures of. . . . . . . 2,238,660 Tin plates , tome plates and taggers' tin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 614,506 Tobacco leaf . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12,703,571 Vegetables . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 112,062 Wines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1,277,694 \Tools , manufactures of. . . . . 1,770,963 Total value of imports of merchandise remaining in warehouse . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $31,431,128 In the textile trades the manufacturers - turers of woolen goods , silk and cotton goods have an idea of the extent c'f the foreign competition that they must expect - pect to meet every month , over and above the actual quantity of goods that have been sold Fu the market. The manufacturers of tin plate , too , will note that at the end of March the quantity - tity of plate in bond was worth $614- 506. The rice growers of the South will find that there was a large tuantity of foreign rice waiting to depress the value of the home product , and the same is true in the cases of glass and glassware , earthen , stone and china ware and gloves. The supply of tobacco - bacco leaf in bond seems to be inexhaustible - haustible and gives no promise of better - ter prices for the American tobacco trop to American farmers.-American Economist. Free-Trade Ii lid of Reciprocity The American cattle grower who is a Democrat can now have an object lesson - son of Democratic practice more forcible - ble than any mere theory could bring to him. By reason of the scarcity of cattle American growers were about to receive fair prices for their stock , but Secretary Morton tobk it into his head to interfere , and in order to knock down the price , under lletense of fighting - ing the dressed beef trust , he ordered that imports of Mexican cattle be per- mitted. Forty thousand of these are now coming in. The beef trust promptly - ly takes them and keeps up the price of dressed beef precisely as before , but rises the Mexican cattle importations to depress the price of cattle on the hoof. The Mexican cattleman is delighted - lighted , the dressed beef trust is helped , the administration is happy-but what about the American cattle grower- Tribune , Salt Lake , Utah , April 29 , 1895 , Labor I , : Cheaper. Democratic papers are taking much pains to tell the laboring man how much cheaper everything is nowadays and what bargains he can have if he will only pitch in and buy. And all this owing to the Wilson tariff bill. The thoughts of the workingmen when they read such stuff can best be inferred - ferred from the reply which one of them made to a man advancing a similar - ilar argument. Said this latter to the laborer : "Jack , you had saved up some money , why don't you go to work and put up a home of your own ? Why , , man , you never could build as cheap as you can now , ever since the Wilson bill is in effect. " Answered the laboring - ing man : "Yes , d-n the Wilson bill. T'have been out of a job ever since it was passed and my savings are gone. " -The Burlington Havrkeye , April 2.4 , 1595. Farmers Are Neglected , We have not heard anything of the benefit of the Gorman tariff to the American farmer who grows hay , but would draw his attention to the fact that last March we imported 26,718 tons of foreign hay , as against x,577 tons imported in March , 1594. During the 1 nine months ending April last we bought almost 90,000 tons more of for-1 eign hay than a year earlier , over halt' sent out of the country. How does this benefit the American farmer ? I n 'a ' About Gloves. t The manufacturers of American kid , or other gloves made cf leather , must a be having a lively time of it in meeta fag the foreign competition. In March l our imports of gloves were valued at $764,599 , as against imports worth only $322,572 in March , 1894. During the nine months ending March 31 , 1395. the increased value paid for foreign gloves' was $1,100,000. r x . i I Your : Health Depends s. Upon pure , rich , healthy blood. Therefore - ' foresee thatyour blood is made pure by ' 1 , Hood's . . Sarsaparilla , The only true blood purifier prominently - nently in the public eye today. act harmonlou-IV vlth t Hoods Pills Hual'5Sanapar111a.2. _ T * ASK YOUR DRUGGIST FOR * 1\tXNIJM \ i IT Is , t + i THE BEST * , ii , Fv3b JD 11 1 1' FOR INVALID S * JOHN CARLE Ec SONS , New York. * 4I. Bicyclesj I Eao 60r Iy Elegant In Design i i Snperlor Iii Workm shID Strong and Easy Ruaalna t Hartfords are the sort of bicycles - ' , cycles mast makers ask $100 for. l Columbus are far superior i to so-called "specials , for which $125 or even $15o is asked. It is well to be posted upon the ' ' bicycle price situation. The great Columl ttl plant is working - ing for the rider's eneftas usual. Columbias , I 00 n I ' OS70N POPE MPG. CO. NW YORK I I General QTce ! CNICACO , and Facturic , SAN FRANC FROYIDEN c HARTFORD , Conn.FROYIDEN BUFAlO , The Columbia Catalogue , awnr'cof ' h'hes.nrt. telling of and picturing clearly 1 I all the new Columbia and lfarturds. is free from any Columbta Agent , uric mailed $ for two 2-cant etamps. 1 b"e 1IAAAAA A * * r 011111 , I I ' _ THE PERFECTION OF ' - > ' ' i } , trl CHEWING GUM. ' A DC iCIC11S ERi1 ; dJ For all rarnti of t i + t < 1 ' 7 .z I 'IO . y , - ' , ; 4 C.tUTIONthat the 1 name Bowman is oa each . 2 , + Ha Ltabictcontalnsono t I 3 'v grain pure i ep' In. If t'so 4 , , gum cannot be obLlinvl I from dealers send $ ceL'ts 1 In stamps for sample package to ; l BEE3LtN ( 'IIEMICiL CD. , 90llan't St. . ( 'Ievennd , 0. 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Cure cases pronounced - nounced bopeless by best physlcin..From lust dose yrn 4uns disappear ; In ten days atleast two-thirds 111 symptoms removed. Send fur free book testimo- r rlals of miracatous cures. Ten days treatment ' rte by mall. If you order trial send IOc Is' stamps , quay pstago. fR.H.ILGNF.EN k : oNs Atlnnta.a. f vud order trial return this adverb = emPnt u , n. lAw1 lsui uu. ' s AND theDrrtnlt7e. 1 Has cured thous. U S E 0 ends since and win I Cute . Send you. tOCA1I V for free book. . .nl eymptoc bran : t WITH Pk. + b y raSt , s1.oo. , Insamator. t ta. STKE'S SURE CURE C3. , II CLXTIN EL"C. , C&LC3. ' : old by all dtuggists. PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM ; : _ Cleans : , and b ntifles the Sala Pronwes a lnaudart growth. " 27ever Fails to Bentore Gry I' , < * hair to ite Ycuth.ul Color. , . : - Cures srolp disrases k hair talhn . .e.ardILUat Dazzleu pr r r r4 rI Examination and Advice ap to ratentablllty of , > venuon. Send for "Invento 'buide.arflowtoGet f ncan's can's Chemical Barb Mire L inirnent , o an mrn and b y , to letr.duen it 'o f craters , I n : h rsamen. Sen t 5 c fur sample. if not 'atis- moy b ckt or write u . VAN Tllll : itG , UL311CAL S MFG. CO , 11aiacetra. : . , s 1 0 GORES WHERE Ml E FAILS. Bat Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Lr6C 1 - in time. Sold by druggists , - ( i / / _ _