TAiJtAGE'S SEEMON ;
FALSE NOTIONS ABOUT REAL
RELIGION CORRECTED.
"Of Splees Great Abaadaaee ; Neither
Was Thar * Aay Sack Bplee M the
Q@ * a of Sneba Gave King Seleses. * '
II Chronicles IX : 9.
[ Copyright , 1901 , by Louis KIopBcb , N. Y.I
Washington , Aug. 4. In this dis
course Dr. Talmage corrects come of
the false notions about religion and
represents it as being joy inspiring in
stead of dolorous. Text II. Chronicles
ix. , 9 : "Of spices great abundance ;
neither was there any such spice as
the queen of Sheba gaveKing Solo
mon. "
What is that building out yonder
glittering in the sun ? Have you not
heard ? It is the house of the forest
of Lebanon. King Solomon has just
taken to it his bride , the princess of
' 'of the por
Kjcypt. You see thVpHlars
tico and a great tower , adorned with
1,000 shields of gold hung on the out
side of the tower 500 of the shields of
gold manufactured at Solomon's or
der , 600 were captured by David , his
father , in battle. See how they blaze
in the noonday sun !
Solomon goes up the ivory stairs of
his throne between twelve lions in
statnary and sits down on the back
of the golden bull , the head of the
huge beast turned toward the people.
The family and the attendants of the
king are so many that the caterers of
the palace have to provide every day
100 sheep and thirteen oxen , besides
v- the birds and the venison. I hear
the stamping and pawing , pf 4,000 fine
horses in the royal stables. There
were important officials who had
charge'of the work of gathering the
straw and the barley for these horses.
.King Solomon was an early riser , tra
dition says , and used to take a ride
out at daybreak , and when , in his
.white apparel , behind the swiftest
horses of all the realm and followed by
'mounted ' archers In purple , as the
cavalcade dashed through the streets
of Jerusalem I suppose it was some
thing worth getting up at 5 o'clock in
the morning to look at.
Seeing for Oneself.
; Queen Balkis was so pleased with
the acuteness of Solomon that she said ,
"I'll just go and see him for myself. "
Yondon it comes the cavalcade
horses and dromedaries , chariots and
charioteers , jingling harness and clat
tering hoofs and blazing shields and
flying ensigns and clapping cymbals.
The place is saturated with the per
fume. She brings cinnamon and saf
fron and calamus and frankincense
and all manner of sweet spices. As
the retinue sweeps through the gate
the armed guard inhales the aroma.
"Halt ! " cry the charioteers , as the
wheels grind the gravel in front of
the pillared portico of the king. Queen
Balkis alights in an atmosphere be
witched with perfume. As the drom
edaries are driven up to the king's
storehouses , and the bundles of cam
phor are unloaded , and the sacks of
cinnamon and the boxes of spices are
1 opened , the purveyors of the palace
discover what my text announces : "Of
B spices , great abundance ; neither was
there any such spice as the queen of
Sheba gave to King Solomon. "
Well , my friends , you know that all
theologians agree in making Solomon
a type of Christ and in making the
queen of Sheba a type of every truth
seeker , and I will take'the responsi
bility of saying that all the spikenard
and cassia and frankincense which the
queen of Sheba brought to King Solo
mon are mightily suggestive of the
sweet spices of our holy religion.
Christianity is not a collection of
sharp technicalities and angular facts
and chronological tables and dry sta
tistics. Our religion is compared to
frankincense and to cassia , but never
to nightshade. It is a bundle of myrrh.
It is a dash of holy light. It is a
sparkle of cool fountains. It is an
opening of opaline gates. It is a col
lection of spices. Would God that we
were as wise in taking spices to our
Divine King as Queen Balkis was wise
in taking the spices to the earthly Sol
omon.
Christ Brings Cheerfulness.
How any woman keeps house with
out the religion of Christ to help her
is a mystery to me. To have to spend
the greater part of one's life , as many
women do , in planningfor the.meals
Jand stitching garments that will soon
" be rent again and deploring breakages
and supervising tardy subordinates
:
> and driving off dust that soon again
LK will settle and doing the same thing
day in and day out and year in and
year out until the hair silvers and the
back stoops and the spectacles crawl
to the eyes and the grave breaks open
' under the thin sole of the shoe oh , it
11 ! is a long monotony ! But when Christ
comes to the drawing room and comes
to the kitchen and comes to the nur
sery and comes to the dwelling , then
how cheery become all womanly du
h ties ! She is never alone now. Martha
gets through fretting and joins Mary
at the feet of Jessus. All day long
Debora is happy because she can help
Lapidoth , Hannah because she can
make a coat for young Samuel , Miriam
because she can watch her infant
brother , Rachel because she can help
her father water the stock , the widow
of Sarepta because the cruse of oil
is being replenished. O woman , hav
ing in your pantry a nest of boxes con
taining all kinds of condiments , why
have you not tried in your heart and
life the spicery of our holy religion ?
"Martha , Martha , thou art careful and
troubled about many things , but one
thing is needful , and Mary hath chosen
that good part which shall not be taken
> si away from her. "
I must confess that a great deal of
the religion of this day is utterly in-
/2pid. There is nothing piquant or el- !
ej.tng. | > about It 'Men , and women go
around humming pMthas in a minor
key and cultivating melancholy , and
their worship has In It more Irb.s ,
than raptures. * We do not doubt their
piety. Oh , no ! But they are sitting at
a feast where the cook'has forgotten
tqjseason the food. Everything is flat
in their experience and in their con
versation. Emancipated from sin'and
death and hell and on their way to a
magnificent heaven , they'act as though
they were trudging on toward an ever
lasting Botany Bay. Religion does not
seem to agree with them. It seems to
catch in the windpipe and become a
tight strangulation instead of an ex
hilaration. All the infidel books that
have been written , from'Voltaire down
fo Herbert Spencer , have not done so
much damage to our Christianity as
lugubrious Christians.
Fat la Mere Spices.
I have to say also that we need to
put more spice and enlivenment in our
religious teaching , whether It be in the
prayer meeting or in the Sunday
Echodl or in the "church" We 'minis--
ters need more fresh air and sunshine
in our lungs and our heart and our
head. Do you wonder that the world
is so far from being converted when
you find so litle vivacity in the pulpit
and in the pew ? We want , like the
Lord , to plant in our sermons and ex
hortations more lilies of the field. We
want fewer rhetorical elaborations and
fewer sesquipedalian words , and when
we talk about shadows we do not want
to say adumbration , and when we mean
queerness wo do not want to talk
about idiosyncrasies , or if a stitch in
the back we do not want to talk
about lumbago ; but , in the plain ver
nacular of the great masses , preach
that gospel which proposes'-to make
all men happy , honest , victorious and
free. In other words , we want more
cinnamon and less gristle. Let this be
so in all the different departments of
work to which the Lord calls us. Let
us be plain. Let us be earnest. L"et "
us be common sensical. When we talk
to the people in a vernacular they can
understand , they will be very glad to
come and received the truth we present.
Would to God that Queen Balkis would ,
drive her spice laden dromedaries into
all our sermons and prayer meeting
exhortations !
More than that , we want more life
and spice in our Christian work. The
poor do not want so much to be
groaned over as sung to. With the
bread and medicines and garments you
give them let there be an accompani
ment of smiles and brisk encourage
ment. Do not stand and talk to them
about the wretchedness of their abode ,
and the hunger of their looks , and the
hardness of their lot. Ah , they know
it better than you can tell them. Show
them the bright side of the thing , if
there be any bright side. Tell them
good times will come. Tell them that
for the children of God there is im
mortal rescue. Wake them up out of
their stolidity by an inspiring laugh ,
and while you send in help , like the
queen of 'Sheba , also send in the
spices. There are two ways of meet
ing the poor. One is to come into their
house with a nose elevated in disgust ,
as much as to say : "I don't see how
you live here in this neighborhood. It
actually makes me sick. There is that
bundle. Take it , you poor , miserable
wretch , and make the most of it. " An
other way is to go into the abode of
the poor in a manner which seems to
say : "The blessed Lord sent me. He
was poor himself. It is not more' for
the good I am going to try to do you
than it is for the good that you can do
me. " Coming in that spirit , the gift
will be as aromatic as the spikenard
on the feet of Christ , and all the
*
hovels on that alley will be fragrant
with the spice.
Singing as a Religions Daty.
I promise a high spiritual blessing
to any one who will sing in church
and who will sing so heartily that the
people all around cannot help but sing.
Wake up , all the churches from Ban-
gor to San Francisco and across
Christendom ! It is'not a matter of
preference. It is a matter of religious
duty. Oh , for fifty times more the
volume of sound than has ever yet
rolled up from our churches ! Ger
*
man chorals in German cathedrals sur
pass us , and yet Germany has received
nothing at tne hands of God compared
with America. And ought the ac
claim in Germany be louder than that
of America ? Soft , long drawn out
music is appropriate for the drawing-
room and appropriate for the concert ,
but St. John gives an idea of the
sonorous and resonant congregational
singing appropriate for churches when
in listening to the temple service of
heaven he says : "I hear a great
voice as the voice of a great
multitude , and as the voice of
many waters , and as the voice of
mighty thunderings. Halleluiah , for
the Lord God omnipotent reigneth ! "
Join with me in a crusade , giving
me not only your hearts , but the
mighty uplifting of your voices , and I
believe we can through Christ's grace
sing 5,000 souls into the kingdom of
Christ. An argument they can laugh
at , a sermon they may talk down , but
a 5,000-voiced utterance of praise to
God is irresistible. Would that Queen
Balkis would drive all her spice-laden
dromedaries into our church music !
*
The Remedy for Sorrow.
Why did you look so sad this morn
ing when you came in ? Alas , for the
loneliness and the heartbreak and the
load that is never lifted from your
soulj Some of you go about feeling
like Macaulay when he wrote , "If I
had another month of such days as I
have been spending , I would be im
patient to get down into my little , nar
row crib in the ground , like a weary
factory child. " And there have been
times in your life when you wished
j-ou could get out of this lite. You"
have ild , "Oh , how sweat to my lip *
would be the dust of the valley ! " an *
wished you could pull over you in year
last lumber the coverlet of green
grass and daisies. You have said :
"Oh , how beautifully quiet it must be
in the tomb ! I wish I was there. "
I see afr around about me widow
hood and orphanage and childlessness ;
sadness , disappointment , perplexity.-If
I could ask all those in any audience
'whohave * felt no sorrow and been'buf-
feted by no disappointment if I could
ask all such to rise , how many would
rise ? Not one.
A widowed mother , with her little
child , went west , hoping to get better
wagesr there , and she was taken sicfc
and died. The overseer of the poor
got her body and put it in a box and
put it in a wagon and started down the
street toward the cemetery at full
trot. The little child the only child-
ran after it through the streets bare
headed , crying : "Bring me back my
mother ! Bring me back my mother ! "
And it was said that as the people
looked-on.-and" saw" her crying 'after
that which lay in the box in the
wagon , all she loved on earth it is
said the whole village was in tears.
And that is what a great many of you
are doing chasing the dead. Dear
Lord , is there no appeasement for all
this sorrow that I see about me ? Yes ;
the thought of resurrection and re
union' far beyond this scene of strug
gle and tears. "They shall hunger no
more , neither thirst any more , neither
shall the sun light on them nor any
heat , for the Lamb which is in the
midst/of the throne shall lead them to
living fountains of water , and God
shall wipe away all tears from their
yes. " Across the couches of your
* sick and 'across the graves of your-
dead I fling this shower of sweet
spices. Queen Balkis , driving up to
the pillared portico of the house of
cedar , carried no such pungency of per
fume as exhales to-day from the Lord's
garden. It is peace. It is sweetness.
The Most Magnificent Temple *
Have you read of the Taj Mahal , in
India , in some respects the most ma
jestic building on earth ? Twenty
thousand men were twenty years in
building it. > It cost about $16,000,000.
The walls are of marble inlaid with
carnelian from Bagdad and turquoise
from Tibet and jasper from the Pun
jab and amethyst from Persia and all
manner of precious stones. A traveler
said that it seemed to him like the
shining of the enchanted castle of
burnished silver. The walls are 245
feet high , and from the top of these
springs a dome 30 more feet high , that
dome containing the most wonderful
echo the world has ever known , so
that ever and anon travelers standing
below with flutes and drums and harps
are testing that echo , and the sounds
from below strike up , and then come
down , as it were , the voices- angels
all around about the building. There
is around it a garden of tamarind and
banyan and palm a'nd all'the floral
glories of the ransacked earth. But that
is only a tomb of a dead empress , and
it is tame compared with the grand
eurs which God has builded for your
living and immortal spirit.
Oh , home of the blessed ! Founda
tions of gold ! Arches of victory ! Cap
stones of praise ! And a dome in which
there are echoing and re-echoing the
halleluiahs of the ages ! And around
about that mansion is a garden , the
garden of God , and all the springing
fountains are the bottled tears of the
church in the wilderness and all the
crimson of the flowers is the deep hue
that was caught up from the carnage
of earthly martyrdoms and the fra
grance is the prayer of all the saints
and the aroma puts into utter forget-
fulness the cassia and the spikenard
and the frankincense and the world
renowned spices which Queen Balkis
of Abyssinia flung at the feet of King
Solomon.
When shall these eyes thy heaven
built walls
And pearly gates behold ,
Thy bulwarks , with salvation strong ,
And streets of shining gold ?
Two Passengers' Dislikes.
A lady of a truly masculine spirit ,
accompanied by a small poodle , is said
to have failed sadly the other day in
an attempted reformatory movement.
She entered the smoking car of a
suburban train and sternly refused ,
when approached by the conductor , to
go into another car , observing that
her presence would keep the other oc
cupants from smoking.One 'thick-
skinned wretch , however , insensible to
the claims of refinement and reform ,
began to enjoy his accustomed cigar ,
which was suddenly snatched from his
lips with the remark in a high treble :
"If there is anything I do hate it 'is
tobacco smoking ! " For a time the
offender was motionless , then , gravely
rising , amid the curiosity of the as
sembled smokers , b.e took that little
poodle out of the lady's lap and gently
threw him through the window , sigh
ing : "If there is anything I do hate it
is a poodle. " Chicago Tribune.
Caught a freak Iiobster.
Daniel Carpenter of the South Ferry
recently caught in one of his lobster
pots a freak lobster. While this crus
tacean is of ordinary size and perfect
ly developed , one-half of the shell ,
running down the back , from the cen
ter of its head to its tail , is of a bril
liant crimson and the other half of a
brigh green , while according to the
learned ones of Brown University who
are making a study of this species of
marine animals , similar specimens
have been found. A lobster thus col
ored was never before seen by old
fishermen in these .waters. Provi
dence Journal.
British lifeboats save , on an aver
'
age , 550 lives a'year.
' * BOARD OF GREEN CLOTH. "
A Special TrlBHaal far British Kejal
<
Heaieaela1 aad Cevrt OMcen.
In England all the members of the
royal household and the officials of
the royal court , no matterwhat their
degree , art , subject to a special tri
bunal , known as the board of green
clothwhich has likewise exclusive
jurisdiction in the case of all offenses
committed within .the precincts of the
royal palaces and the gardens , grounds
and parks connected therewith. The
board of green cloth , composed of sev
eral high dignitaries of the household ,
is presided over by the lord steward
of the household , who has the power
to delegate to any judge or magistrate
bis authority to deal , in the name of
the board , with offenses that would
legally come before the latter. It is
as the representatives of the board of
green cloth , and as our deputy of the
lord steward , that the senior police
magistrate of the metropolis .holds
court in a room underneath the grand
stand , at Ascot-during the Ascot race
meet each year , the Ascot racecourse
forming a part of the royal domain of
"Windsor. Besides the board of green
cloth there is the House of Lords ,
which is called upon to serve as a tri
bunal in a number of specific cases.
Strictly speaking , there are two sep
arate tribunals known as the Houses
of Lords. There is , for instance , the
tribunal to which cases may be carried
on appeal from the Supreme court ,
and which is composed of what are
known as the law lords , that is to say ,
of peerswho have occupied seats on
the bench , or who are still regular
members of the high court of judica
ture. But no lay or spiritual peers
have anything to do with this tribunal ,
which has jurisdiction only ill the
United Kingdom , the judicial commit
tee or the privy council serving as
court of final appeal for the British
empire. Ex-Attache in New York
Tribune.
COLD DRINKS INJURIOUS.
tow Temperature or Drink * Cause * Kid
ney Disease , Say Doctors.
Americans drink far too much of
cold beverages and consume too much
frozen condiments , says physicians ,
And beauty doctors aver that woman
will never have a lovely complexion
while she looks into the soda water
glass when it froths or lingers too long
at the ice-water cooler. The low * tem
perature , 'say doctors , at which wafer
and liquors are so largely consumed
undoubtedly had as much , if not more ,
to do with disease of the kidneys than
any other single cause. A writer in a
hygienic contemporary calls attention
to the fact that it is a great mistake
to imagine that cold drinks are neces
sary to relieve thirst. He says : "Very
cold drinks , as a rule , increase the fev
erish condition of the mouth and stom
ach , and so create thirst. Experience
shows it to be a fact that hot drinks
relieve the thirst and cool off the body
when it is in an abnormally heated
condition better than ice-cold drinks.
It is far better and safer to avoid the
use of drinks below sixty degrees. In
fact , a higher temperature is to be
preferred , and those who are much
troubled with thirst will do well to try
advantages to be derived from hot
drinks , to which they have been accus
tomed. Hot drinks also have the ad
vantage of aiding digestion instead of
causing debility of the stomach and
bowels. "
Filipino Hats In Favor.
The coolest thing in the way of mas
culine headgear seen in these parts
*
in many moons is the Filipino hat.
These hats are the most recent of the
imports from our new possessions.
The head is made of what closely re
sembles the cane used in chair seats ,
but is mucn lighter in weight. The
material is closely plaited and the hat
looks like a cross between a chopping
bowl and a Soudan helmet , without
the helmet's front piece.
The hat is so constructed that the
headgear proper does not touch the
head at all. It is lined with a light
fabric , sea green in color , and to the
crown is attached a steel band cov
ered with oiled silk , which band rests
upon the head and supports the hat.
The result is that the hat proper ex
tends some inches beyond the fore
head and beyond the back of the head ,
so ttiat all the air there is stirring may
have full play at one's cranium. At
the back the hat tapers off like a fire
man's helmet.
How Malt Bests Passengers'
The vast difference between the mail
service and the passenger is well illus
trated by the following fact : One of
the Pacific railroads hauls a combina
tion train , mail and passenger , over
the mountains. When the level coun
try is reached the mail cars are cut off
and sent on ahead. A passenger leav
ing the coast may mail a letter in one
of these cars on his own train , and by
the time he has reached Chicago he
will find that the letter has already
gone through the Chicago postoffice ,
been delivered and is waiting for him
at his hotel. Gunton's Magazine.
H < w Assortment of Names *
The Duchess-of Cornwall is blessed
with a liberal assortment of Christian
names. Should she eventually share
the British throne she can select from
these : Augustine , Louise , Olga , Paul
ine , Claudine , Agnes.
Gifts to Colleges.
In thirty days recently the gifts to
colleges , art museums and libraries in
the United States exceeded $20,000,000.
The year 1901 pron&ses a total of over
$100,000,000 in large benefactions in
this country.
MEMBER OF FROi SANDWICH
CONGRESS ISLANDS
eBSM _ _ _ _ * r
HeBSSJSSSSSV ftMWSiaiBnBSMMSMHi Mt (
Cured of Catarrh ofthe Stomach
by Pe-ru-na.
3 CONGRESSMAN R. W. WILCOX , t
: Delegate to Congress from Hawaii , t
YIIITr T TTf Ft YIMMTTI TTITff " TTTTII T T I TITT IT rT <
Hon. Robert W. Wilcox , Delegate
to Congress from Hawaii and the Sand
wich Islands , in a recent letter from
Washington , D. C. , writes :
" / have used Peruna for dyspepsia
and I cheerfully give you this testi
monial. Am satisfied if it is used
properly it will be of great benefit to
our people. lean conscientiously rec
ommend it to anyone who is suffering
with stomach or catarrhal troubles. "
R. W. WItcox.
All over this country are hundreds of
A laugh to be joyous must flow from
the joyous heart.
It , like truth , only asks a hearing.
Wizard Oil cures pain.
Poverty is no disgraca to a man ,
but it is confoundedly inconvenient.
Mrn.VinelowH soothing Syrnp.
'For children teething , softens the gums , reduces In
flammation , allays pain , cures wind colic. &c a bottle.
There are 28,894 juvenile temperance
societies in the British islands.
DON'T SPOIL YOUR CLOTHES.
Use Red Cross Ball Blue and keep them
white as snow. All grocers. 5c. a package.
Only 40 British novelists are able
to live on the profits of their books.
Ask your grocer for DEFIANCE
STARCH , the only 16 oz. package for
10 cents. All other 10-cent starch con
tains only 12 oz. Satisfaction guaran
teed or money refunded.
GREATLY REDUCED KATES
via
WABASH R. R.
$12.00 Buffalo and return $13.00.
$31.00 New York and return $31.00
The Wabash from Chicago will sell
tickets at the above rates daily. Aside
from these rates , the Wabash run
through trains over its own rails from
Kansas City ! St. Louis and Chicago and
offer many special rates during the
summer months , allowing stopovers at
Niagara Falls and Buffalo.
Ask your nearest Ticket Agent or ad
dress Harry E. Moores , General Agent ,
Pass. Dept. , Omaha , Neb. , or C. S.
Crane , 6. P. & T. A. , St. Louis , Mo.
We should all like to see the unde * -
taker prosper if we could designate
the source of his income.
*
FRAGRANT
a perilct liquid dintifrici for tht
Teeth and Mouth
New Size SOZODONT LIQUID , 25c
SOZODONTTOOTH POWDER , 2Sc
Urge LIQUID and POWDER , 75c
At all Stores , or by Mall for the price.
H ALL & RUCK EL , New York.
the man who wears Sawyer' *
Slickers. They're made of
specially woven Roods , doable
throughout , double end triple
etitched , warranted water
proof.
proof.Sawyer's
are soft and smooth. Will
not crack , peel oft or become
sticky. Catalogue free.
7/H.M. Sawyer & Son , Solo Mfrs.
East Cambridge , Mass.
people who are Buffering from catarrk
ous time , and enduring needless suffer
ing. The remedies they try only tem
porarily palliate the distress , but never
effect a cure. Remedies for dyspepsia.
have multiplied so rapidly that they
are becoming as numerous as the leaves
of the forest , and yet "dyspepsia con
tinues to flourish in spite of them alL
This is due to the fact that the cause of
dyspepsia Is not recognized as catarrh.
If there is a remedy in the who ! *
range of medicinal preparations that 1
in every particular adapted to dyspep
sia , that remedy is Peruna. This rem
edy is well nigh invincible in these
cases.
Dr. Hartman , President of The Hart-
man Sanitarium , Columbus , O. , says :
" ' ' ' '
* >
"In''mylarge''practicesandcorrespon-
dence I have yet to learn of a single
case of atonic dyspepsia which has not
either been greatly benefited or cured
by Peruna. "
No one suffering with catarrh of the
stomach or dyspepsia , however slight ,
can be well or happy. It is the causa
of so many distressing symptoms that
it is a most dreaded disease. Peruna
acts immediately on the seat of the
trouble , the inflamed mucous mem
branes lining the stomach and a last
ing cure is effected.
If you do not derive prompt and sat
isfactory results from the use of Pe-x
runa , write at once to Dr. Hartman.
giving a full statement of your case
and he will be pleased to give you his
valuable advice gratis.
Adflres's Dr. Hartman , President of
The Hartman Sanitarium , Columbus , O.
Ask your grocer for DEFIANCB
STARCH , the only 16 oz. package for
10 cents. AH other I0-cent > starch con
tains only 12 oz. Satisfaction guaran
teed or money refunded.
When you face a difficulty never let
it stare you out of countenance.
HARVEST
20,000 HANDS
required to harvest t/lie groin crop of West-
err > Canada.
The most abucd-
nnt yield on the Con
tinent. Reports are
that the average
yield of No. 1 Hard
wheat in Western
Canada will be over
thirty bushels to the aero. Prices for farm
help will bo excellent. Splendid Ranching
Lands adjoining the Wheat Bolt.
Excursions will ho run from all points In
the United States to the Free Grant Lands.
Secure a homo at once , and if you wish to
purchase at prevailing prices , and secaro
the advantage of. the low rates , apply for
literature , rates , etc. , to F. PEDLET ,
Su'perinfoudentlmmigratlon , Ottawa , Can
ada , or to W. V. Bennett , Canadian'Gov-
ermnent Agent , 801 New York Life Bldg. ,
Omaha , Neb.
When visiting Buffalo , do not fail to see
the Canadian Exhibit at the Pan-American ,
EDUCATIONAL ,
THE UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME ,
NOTRE DAME , INDIANA ,
Classics. Letters , Economics and History ,
Journalism , Art , Science , Pharmacy. Law.
Civil , riechenical and Electrical Engfoeeriofr.
Architecture.
Thorough Preparatory and Commercial
Courses. Ecclesiastical students at special rates.
Rooms Free. Juntor orSfiniorY.ear , Collegiate
Courses. Rooms to Kent , mouerate'cbargesf
St. Edward's Half , for boy's tinder 13.
The SS.h Yewwillopen September 10th,190l.
Catalogues Free. Address
RBV. A. MORRISSEY , C. S. C. , President.
ST. MARY'S ACADEMY
Notre Dame , Indiana. (
Conducted by the Sisters of the Holy
Cross. Chartered 1855. Thorough.
English and Classical education. Reg
ular Collegiate Degrees.
In Preparatory Department student *
carefully prepared for Collegiate course.
Physical and Chemical Laboratories
well equipped. jv.Conser.vatory.of JJusie
and School of Art. Gymnasium under
direction of graduate of Boston Normal
School of Gymnastics. Catalogue free.
The 47th year will open Sept. 5,1901.
Address DIRECTRESS OF THE ACADEMY , \
St. Mary's Academy , Notre Daaae , 1
HAS No EQUAL.
You gf.t chromo starches
under all brands and
names , but they are
all tiie same poor stuff
and have to depend upon
something to sell them ,
Use Defiance Starch , No
premiums , but 16 ounces
REQURBNOCOOKWG
PREPARED FDR of the best starch for lOc
\
Don't forgetit a better qua >
ity and one > third more of it