BaddhisB in Bossla. J According to Russian law no subject Site Czar, whether born in or con certed to the Russian Establishad Chaich. that is, the Greek Eastern -Church, can abandon his religion under any cfccujnstauces whatever. And there is nofitinishmcnt severe enough for the traitor to his religion. Neither gibbet nor bullet nor a Siberian mine is dcamedBoughfor such a criminal. He must eltiMt return to his religion or die in an underground cell in some re ligions -prSoiuri, Under such conditions Hussia'cesftainly would seem to be not a f avorable'soil for free religious thought Yet no other country shows to-day such a powerful religious fermentation as Russia. The upper classes arc fast abandoning the Established Church for deism, atheism, spiritualism. Free Masonry, posith-ismand Protestantism, and among the lower classes the ltaskol or Russian Protestantism is assuming multifarious forms, from the purest rationalism to the crudest superstition. By virtue of her geographical situa tion, Russia lies in the center of all the cardinal religions of the world. On tho west she faces the Roman Catholics and the Protestants on the south tho Mohammedans and on the cast the B-uddhitts. the llrahmanfcts and the Confucians. At home she has a great majori'.v of Circek Catholics, S.OW.COO Roman Catholics, :5.00',(XX) Hebrews and as many Protestants, besides sev eral million pagans. Since steam and tin printing press hae irreparably de stroyed the barriers between the na tions of the world, a momentous ques tion has presented itself- 'A hich re ligion will be the religion of the world?'1 To-day, in the immense domains of the Car, "a powerful religious struggle is Hinr on, 'f which no other country Eas Tiny idea, and it is here in Russia that th'" principal and linal battles will .be fought that shall forever settle the question :c to where humanity shall look for mora? guidance. What curious things would happen here if religious freedom should be pro claimed in Kuss:n. Now, tnere are millions and millions of Russians who nu.wi.wi nuu hold a double belief, one for the Czar s J sake and on 10 suit their own con science. But with freedom of religions many who are u w officially orthodp would at once turn Roman Catholics, or Protestants, or Raskolmiks. or Mo hammedans, or positivists. or atheists, or spiritualists, or Buddhists, or the followers of Brahma-Somaj. The propagation of Buddhism in Russia is of rather recent origin, and it H sra,U,, !o,:,c ,,h,ra,c,1 a?d WCIl-lU-iH1 i i;i-ol-- jai;iii-iui,. i nv; long seen Russians entertaining in secret all sorts of beliefs and unbeliefs, but it is only a few days since I first made the 'acquaintance of Russian Buddhists. '1 am only a novice in Buddhism," an aged Russian holding the office of Justice of the Peace said to mo," and hardly con-ider myself as being fully initiated into the principles of my new religion. Yet 1 feel that Buddhism has a stronger hold upon me than hris tianity ever had. While I wa a Chris tian 1 had to believe in many things against which my mind revolted, and so 1 knew no p"acc in my conscience. Buddhism brings that peace and har mony for which every human .-oul longs." 'Do you bel'eve that Buddhism can be inoculated in Kuropeans?"' I asked. "1 do, indeed." he answered. "There is a notion that religions are formed according to the characteristics of race or nationality. It is wrong. Chris tianity was "of Eastern and Jewish origin, and yet it holds all the European nations ( onsider that truth, eternal truth, can be but one. There is only one system of mathematics in all the world, one sciem c of astronomy, one exposition of plnsics and physiology, and so on. Now. if religion embraces truth, it can be only one for all the world. I am sure that to-day mote than three-quarters of mankind hold to this or that religion only through mere habit, cultivated iroin childhood. Do not force upon our children any things but pure moral principles, and you w 11 see that all men. whether, in Europe, or Asia, or Afi -a. or America, will have the sune lehgion, which will bo the true one." "And that religio'i will be " "Buddhism in subtance." J5"Are mere man v Buddhistsiu Russia?' 'Well, cter ay theie were were hundred of them, and to-day there arc perhaps thousand-:. But who will and who can count them? Buddhism is spreading also in d'ermany, England, and. 1 believe, in the I n ted States. But leaving out the luddhists of Eu rope and America, Buddhism is already the prevailing religion of the world, counting at U a-t a hundred million souls more than all the Christian de nominations taken together, yet it nev er has In eii spread by force, like Mo hammedanism or Chri-tianity. Chris tians will find in Buddhi-m the com mandments ami moral : reocpt famil iar to them, but they will learn also that litiddhNts regard knowledge as a virtue ind'spensable for thoe who long for Nirvana or parad sc. To believe is not enough for Buddhists, it is ncces s-r ary to practice a sweeping chanty of which Christians have, no idea, and to ' cleave with ti.e thunderbolt of science i the moui.ta ti oc giio-anee," in order to reach the state of bliss." j I learned from other p rxins that the . BuihUiisin that is spreading among the Russians is of a purified form, a " u- i ropeanized Buddhism." :is they style it ' here. For instance, they do not intend to part with music son-'-, and the the- ! atcr. and they fi id t unpractical in our age lo abstain from taking gold and sil- ver, although BiKldha omits all of theso among forbidden thins. ihequ stion ot a cnivcrsal rolig'on is w..rmiy di-cu-sc.i hero at private tea partie-. an I the siat'stcs aie conned over which ho that in the world there are tXK,U Hi .lews. :t7. 'k.,ii-- Chris tians, 100.0 o,0 .i Mohammedans, l:Ki, OOO.tXX) Hindus or Brahmanists. -180.- 100,000 Buddhists, a'iont -'K t.000,000 Pasran and a lew in sitiviois. smrit: ualists. Free .Masons, and atheists. when she was put on exhibition by Bar St. Pctcrjtlturj C-jr. X. V. Sim. i mini, and it was only within a few How Ben Hardin Fooled a Literary So cictv. "Ben Hardin was a brilliant fellow, development, you know, and I niay yet and he had a strong -ense of humor, catch up with the rest of you. The When he was elected to Congress in nia ority of the dwarfs exhibited are 1815 he had already served several really children, phenomena1! small, terms hi the Kentucky I egi-lature. and m,t by no means the adult midgets was noted throughout the Sta'e as a tnat tne rc represented to be, and lawcr. H -taried, however, for consequently they grow out of the pro Washington dressed in the rough cloth- fess'on. That h:is" been the case with iug of a frontier .vtat. and he wore the many a 'freak,' as the showmen call slouch hat and the long buff overcoat of the Wc-i. A- he was passing through lrgima tuoouug smart-look ing fellows overt jo'v h in and tell into conversation with hun. Hardin saw at their first words that they took h m lor a greenhorn, and h put on such man- ners and accent as to confirm their il lusion. Ihe meet ng took place within a few miles of the town where they were to stop for the night. In the course ot tne comeisauon ;ne ounsr Moods told him there wa to !e a" liter- ary society meeting trnt n'ght, anil that if he "would attend he might hear omc fine speaking, and at this point Xn nf tlmm. slv'v winking to the other, said: "And perhaps, stranger, you will join the debate yourself?" "1 don't know," replied Hardm. "I have spoke some in old Kaintucky. What inoug.it your question be.- not new lo uuii. it wis one of the leading ones of the day . ru n..os(w.nAv;i o nolitical isue upon wnicu uc ws thoroucrhlv posted. As old lien Har- liu heard it. however, he shooK nisueaa -,K,.,-n. liovs. vou win aev lO B-cuw Me on thet. 1 ain't up.on thet subject. .Now, if it was whether pursuit was oei- tetthan possession, or some- ef oar aid subjects, I allow I'd tackle ye. Bnt about this yere politics I don't know." After 'much" persuasion, however, ho promised the young men:that he would attend and lie would say suthin any how.!! -hThe party separated at ihe.ho tel, and the young fellows ;went oft laughiag at the fun thevst&Jcted to have tluft-might. -TheytWtbek'friendsr-aud ia.a '"short time" "the, whole town knew.sf the green Kentuckiau's arri val, and when the literary society opened every scat was tilled. The ex ercises went off quietly until the debate commenced, when every one looked at Hardin. He sat quietly until the close. The two young fellows made their speeches, and very fai-ones, too. As the second one closed and Mr. Har din arose, each one in the at.dience nudged his neighbor, and every faco was ready to smile. Their expressions changed, however, as old Den took up the subject and treated it most elo quently. He tore to pieces the speeches of the young fellows who hail tried to p.ay the trick on him, and as he was linish ing the two were so bored that they uot upand left. He referred to them as thejr went and closed a'tc- an clo ,uent peroration by tell-ng the society that ho was a Kentucky member of Congress on his way to Washington. At this tho society gathered round him and wanted to shake his hand. He chatted with them for a while, and the remainder of his visit was an ovation. The whole town came out to the hotel the next da' to see him off, and the smart oung fellows were the laughing-stock of alk Cleveland Leader. How lo Make lee Cream. The secret of making good iee cre.m of any grade, lies in the freezing. Tho old way of freezing cream, whichls still in use among small confectioners, con sisted of occasionally stirring the cream while it was freezing in a tin can, set in a tub of ice and salt. A more easy and expeditious method is within the reach of the average housekeeper in these davs of uatent l'reeers. 'Ihe . - . , . - , .. it ,.. uc, . I'" " - - " .' -t,""". 7C huinui l;ilt;iiL-, j. t., niu iiii.mii jm. .. i cream oy a woouen ueaier. wnica ru volves inside the can by the Mime mo tion that slightly change the position of tho can in the outer tub of ice and salt. This freezing mixture hould bo composed of three parts of crushed iee to one of coarso salt, of which care should be taken that it does not reach 1 T -. hi'rh enough around the sides of the can " ..! i .. ;i I ' 'Bd I.' 'So outer tub bv the melting of the freezing mixture need not be drawn oft whilo the cream is being frozen unless it is likely to get into the can. because the water is intenscl) cold. If it is de sired to pack the cream after it is fro zen, the water may be drawn off and enough more iee and salt placed around the can to reach nearly to the top. L e cream packed in this way can be kept over night, or longer, if the freezing mixture is properly renewed. When ice cream is molded" or packed in the molds of fancy shapes all the openings should be closed with butter, or oiled rap-cr fixed about the apertures of the mold with paste or gum tragacanth. Ice creams of themost ordinary sort arc made with milk th'ekened with ar rowroot or corn starch, in the propor tion of a tablespoonful to a quart, dis solved in cold water, and then boiled in milk, which is cooled, sweetened and flavored before it is fro.en. Tho -ort of ice cream usually made at home is composed of milk, with a small proportion of cream, with eggs and sugar added to it; for instance, dissolve half a pmnd of sugar in a quart of milk: place it over the lire and let it heat to ooiling point: mean time b-at three eggs to cream, pour the boiling mil's: into them and then return to the tire and stir until it begins to thicken- then at once; remove it from the lire; stir unt'l it is smooth; then llavor it, cool it, and when it is cool freeze it according to d'reetions given. Frozen custard is mado in ihe same way, only live eggs at least are added to'a quart of milk. French ice cream, thick and yellow, is made by boiling a quart of cream with a long vanilla bean, and then cooling and straining it; then the yokes of two eggs are beaten smooth with three-quarters of a pound of sugar: the flavored cream is then mixed with the eggs and stirred over the lire until it begins to thicken; di rectly the cream begins to tlreken, take it from the fire, and stir it for live minutes, then cool it and freeze it, Juliet C-raon. The Diminutive Widow, The little Widow Thumb is casuallv a resident of New York and a welcome visitor in a considerable number of rather wealthy and fashion a le fam ilies. She is now a lad. so mature and dignified, notwithstanding her dimin utive si e, that nobody in the way of social intercom sc dares, or is much in clined, to treat her as a human trifle. To see her in the midst of a round of calls is lo get the impression, at first sight, that vour eves have somehow bc- comj teles joji'c inversely, so exactlv is s,lu a miniature ot the conventional dames of ceremonious society. .She dresses for an afternoon of formal visit ing in a toilet of semi-mourning, suita ble in style for a quiet woman of forty live which age she acknowledges and orders from a livorj' stable one of those coupes that, as to liveried driver and general appearance, are scareetv distinguishable, from private e piipages. Provided with a v.siting hst, I 1 M " ,. j.uu uasuy commanding an air of well-bred balance, she lacks only in , stature to be the ideal of a middle-aged i millionair's wife, t f con se, she 'attract- staring attenti n whenever she al glits; but her manner of silent re proof is usually elective as a cure for impuden -e, anil she i- able tog .about with far less annoyance than might be supposed. She fs about three feet and a half m height, or a f o t more than I years that she skipped growing, "it ) would not surprise me." she lately sa'd, "if 1 should take to growing again at any time. My case is one of retarded them." The pertinence of the fair, fat and forty-inch widow as a tpic here is the fact that she has a suitor for her hand. The account current in her circle of ac- quaintance sa sthat Mr. John Spencer Coyne, a mine operator, who canie east- ward a year ago with a comfortable for tune, began to scrioiisly woo her soon after making her acquaintance in this city. He is a handsome man of no more .nan forty, with cultured taste. Kood morals. and about a hundred pounds, his stature being limited to an inch or so more than five feet. That he deeply in love with Mrs. Thumb is not doubted by any of her mutual friends, but he does not seem to have made much progress toward capturing the estimable dwarf. It is said to be her firm intention not to marrv aain. N. T. Cor. Albany Herald. There is some lorafort for a child nuusnauunsamu-a piece, as one child or another is in the habit of doing almost daily; an eminent French phy sician says that copper absorbed into the system is a sure preventive si c&olsra. Button Transcript. A Stanp Frasi. Stamp collectors in all parts of Europe are just now considerably excited over the very recent discovery that a couple of rogues have been swindling them most outrageously. It appears that Afghanistan stamps are dear to the hearts of all collectors. The first stamp ever issued in that country appeared im 1870-71 (Mohammedan date 1288;, dur ing the reign of Shere AIL It is a large cjrcular stamp with the head ol a tiger in the center and the value written in characters above this head. Other issues appeared in subsequent years, but all such stamps arc extremely scarce, and therefore valuable. The brilliaut idea of personally profit- . ing from these facts occurred to one 1 Hafez Hamed, who arrived in Paris ! some short time ago and proceeded to J the old stamp-exchange in the Avenue , Gabriel, Champs Elysces, where ho in . formed buyers that the cx-Postmaster-' General of Cabul had arrived in Mar seilles, but that in one of his trunks, still retained at a port in the Persian Gulf, were stamps of tho early issues, particularly those issued in 1293, and valued at from one hundred and twenty five to one thousand francs. Hafez said he had written to the ex-Postmaster-Gen oral to telegraph to the port and have his trunks forwarded without de lay, and that immediately on their ar rival he would be in a position to fur nish collectors with some rare stamps. Just nine days later a letter reached Hafez stating'that tho luggago had ar rived, and very soon afterward the Afghan stamps were in the market. Of course they were bogus, which fact was soon discovered, thanks to the shrewdness of an English gentleman re siding in Paris, who, knowing that it was impossible for a vessel to come from the Persian Gulf to Marseilles in nine days, made a close study of one of the stamps. He got Hafez to write" for him the address of the Postmaster-General of Cabul, and this address was made in characters that neither Dgc mel ed Din, "the learned Afghan," nor any Arab, Egyptian "or other Oriental in this city could read. They all said that not a' single postmaster in Afghan istan would be able to do so cither. Moreover, some of the stamps were ob literated in red ink, and the postmark was almost as visible on the back as it was on the front of the envelope. Now, as a matter of fact, postage stamps in Afghanistan are not sold to the public as in Europe; it is the invariable rule for the natives to lake their letters to the oilice and money with them to pay the postage; the stamp seller takes both letter and money, and having first torn off a piece of the stamp, sticks it on the envelope and the operation is ended. This method, known to the Paris col lectors, was overlooked by Hafez Hamed and his accomplices, hence the forgery was soon discovered and Hafez had to seek refuge in flight. It is astonishing what a number of stamp collectors there are in the world. It is a passion which did not come into fashion until 1861, but since that year it has spread everywhere. Twenty years ago the divers stamps to bo obtained did not exceed livo hundred. Nowa days some albums contain at least three thousand. In tho Berlin museum there are four thousand five hundred specimens, so it is said, of which two thousand four hundred and sixty are Eu ropean and one thousand one hundred and forty-seven American. The rarest English stamps among those actually issued are Ihe black penny with the ob literating mark in red ink, and the Costal envelopes with pictorial borders, lack for thejpenny and blue for the two penny ones. When Marshal MacMahon was Presi dent of France his wife was very anx ious to see his image set in stamps, and some such designs were pre pared, but the postal commission re jected them, and adopted the present design. There are collectors who believe that some of these MacMahon stamps got into circulation; hence they arc supposed to be withou tprice, as valu able, in fact, as one or two "Victoria and Albert" penny stamps, which some people also confidently believe were not destroyed, although never officially issued. There exists in Paris a regular market or exchange for old stamps. As most people perhaps know, it is held every Sunday afternoon in the Avenue Ga briel, and is attended by two hundred or three hundred persons of all ages and social standings. Among the num ber can be regularly seen such famous collectors as Dr. Legrande, M. Camp bell, M. de Ferraci, son of the Duchess of Galliera, the Baron Arthur do Rothschild, Mr. T. Tapling. M. Castle and M. Marco del Point. A journal devoted exclusively to the interest of stamp collectors makes its appearance in this city once every month, and I here are others printed in Berlin and Vienna, One of the mem bers of the Paris exchange, an English gentleman, has a collection of two thousand five hundred postal cards, which is valued at upwards of fifty thous and francs. There are collections at Paris which cost their owners thous ands of pounds, and which include stamps valued at one thousand five hundred francs. One amateur is now on his way to Europe from Australia who is said to have the best private col lection in existence. Paris Jfetvs. This iu Ken- England For the credit of New England it is to be hoped that Rhode Island Taw does not often lend itself to the perpetration of such cold-blooded, inhuman cruelty as, according to the Providence Journal, hastened the death of Peter McGrail. Peter, the Journal tells us, was sued for two debts. The larger one he declared he did not owe either legally or morally, and there was(no proof in any case that he had been guilty of intentional fraud toward his alleged creditor. But judg ments were obtained against him. A justice of the peace refused to let him take the poor debtor's oath. Rhode Island law, it seems, permits creditors to lock up men in state prison indefi nitely under these circumstances, pro vided they pay their board. Peter's creditors availed themselves of their privilege. He was locked up last sum mer. He was then well along in con sumption. The prison officers Knew it; other people knew it; if the creditors did not know it. it was because they did not care to inform themselves. The air of a cell does not agree with the lungs of consumptivesPeter grew steadily worse. But he was long a-dying, and this spring the General Assembly, his case being brought to its notice, "passed a special act directing that he should be allowed to take the poor debtor's oath and go free. The humane interference came too late. Peter died the other day in the prison hospital. "His suffering," remarks the Journal, "did not coin nis blood into cash, and the only satisfac tion his creditors could have had must have been in weighing his dying strug gles against the amount of their judg ments." To readers who are not Rhode Islanders it would seem that a law under which such cruelty not only can be perpetrated but has been perpe trated should be modified in the interest of common humanity to say nothing of Christian and Yankee civilization. But it might be well, before offering ad vice as to the removal of the mote from our neighbor's eye, to make quite sure that there is no beam calling for surgery in our own. Hartford Courant. All people," 3ays an exchange, have not learned the art of leaving a room in an appropriate manner." Thf trouble, we think, ariseS from the cus tom so common anong fathers of wear ing heavy shoe-', Boston Put. OF GENERA r, INTEREST. An Indian frtar, about ei?ht inches in diameter and live inches deep, has been taken from the top of a larm bowlder, just north of Mansfield. Conn.. Thomas Murray dropped his cb'ar while smoking in his bed-room in N"ew York. It fell on a powder liask. and the explosion blew his right hand off. A spring of blood-red water, smell ing like creosote and having a very pun gent taste, has been discovered in a mine near Virginia, Nev. Denver Trio tine. Woodstock, Ulster Couuty, N. Y., has a snow-ball quilt which is a curiosity. It consists of 7,C0 pieces, and is the handiwork of a young lady named Miss I. Shultis. A Chambcrsburg (Pa.) florist has a rosebush from which, during the last three years, over ten thousand buds were plucked, which sold lor fifteen dollars a hundred. Business is pretty poor in the dia mond fields of South Africa. A man who refused $l,."iO0.00i) for his claim two years ago would be willing to sell it now for live" dollars. An exchange says: "John Glass cock was run over by a train near Jones Junction yesterday, and being deaf hu was killed." We'presume that men who are not deaf can be run over without being killed. X. Y. Graphic. A Mormon missionary has been ar rested in Vienna and sentenced to a month's imprisonment. He tried to propagate, the Mormon faith, and bap tized a man and woman in the Danube canal in such cold weather that the man took to flight and the woman fainted.. In the days when branding was a punishment for crime in England, mur derers were stamped with an M, makers of frays with an F, and vagabonds with a V. Tho left cheek near the nose was the place selected for marking, by an act passed in the time of William and Mary. A seven-year-old son of Robert Tappindcr, of Kingston. N. Y., left his bed in the night and wandered over fields and fences in his night dress, a long distance from home, recently. Ho says that when he lir.-t awoke he found that he had just fallen from a fence. Albany Journal. Some packers at Annapolis, Md., are investing very exteiiMveh in the cultivation of oyster.-.. Many acres of ground in the Severn River wero being covered with old shells to receive the spat as it lloats in the water, and largo and permanent plantations are expected to be established. Camels utterly wild may be seen on the desert lands at the head of the Gulf of California, where they find a conge nial home and multiply steadily. Theso are a remnant of a head which many years ago was imported by the Government to act as boasts of burden for the army in New Mexico and Ari zona. San Francisco Call. London Truth finds the following in tho Scots ila7m';'c,March, 1755: "There was lately presented to the Empress of Russia a laboring man who had two wives, tho first of whom brought him four times four children at a birth, seven times three, and ten times two. The second wife once brought forth three children, and the other -ix times two. The wholo number of children by tho two wives amounts to seventy-two. A Boston boy, twelve years old, was arrested in Portland, Me., the other day. and in his pockets were found a quantity of cheap pamphlets containing Indian stories about "One-Eyed Dick, the Giant Scout," etc.; a revolver, a bag of cartridges, two brass watch chains, a cheap nickel-plated watch, worth, per haps, two dollars; a toy pistol, two old jack-knives, a quantity of strings, a piece of leather, a strip of calf-skiu with tho hair on it, a button or two, a rag ged handkerchief, several pieces of woolen cloth, some candy, a lot of dirty, broken lozenges, half a dozen filthy raisins, and a handful of lino dirt. Boston Transcript. The Chicago Times publishes tho following: "A man in Wilcox County, Ala., has a remarkable tree growing in his yard. It is of the China species, is ten feet in circumference, and its top has been blown away by a storm, but six and one-half feet up the trunk of this treo two more China trees have sprouted, taken root, and grown up as high as the old tree is; and just half a foot further up the trunk of the old .original tree a peaeh tree has taken root, grown up to fair dimensions, and is now filled with fruit. At another place there is a blackberry vine and also an elm bush, all iu a flourishing ndition." A negro recently passed through 'pur county, says the Piedmont (Ga.) Press, representing himself as the sec ond Christ; that he came to atone for the sins of the colored race as the first Christ came to atone for the sins of the white people. He claimed to be the identical Christ that was crucified by the Jews, and showed seal's in the palms of his hands and soles of his feet where he was nailed on the cross, and the hole in his side which was pierced by the soldier. He created a great deal of excitement wherever he stopped; had crowds of people both white anil col ored, to visit him. He is very intelli gent, had an enticing way, and will no doubt make an easy dupe of the credu lous negro. At each place where he is known to have stopped the negroes fell down anil worshipped him, placing im plicit confidence in the words of the dar ing impostor. Shoe Making by Machinery. The Shoe and Leather licporter justly remarks that the introduction of labor saving machinery has been the most potent cause of the changes that have been wrought in the shoe manufacture within a decade. The genius of invent ors has devised implements for doing pretty much all the work that is .required iromthc cutting to the finishing of a shoe, and doing it so neatly that the in experienced cannot distinguish hand work from machine-work, and the ex perienced know perfectly well that tho latter is for all practical purposes as good as the former. The instruments first contrived for sewing leather were crude and imperfect; there were so many little defects about them that they were not regarded with favor, and did not do satisfactory service. But by de grees the faults have been so completely remedied that they do their work ad mirably, until now three-quarters of the handsomest shoes sold in the coun try are put together by machinery. In the factories the hands are distributed into "teams." each team constructing a particular part of a shoe, many men contributing in their several ways to its configuration. Of course the closest at tention has to bo given to all the details; it is essential that the materials should be selected with discriminating judg ment: that the cutting should be so skill fully done that there may be no waste of stock on the one hand, and no inferior material used on the other. "Mr. Dupree," asked the little ten-year-old, after the big sister's beau had taken his seat, "won't you let pavhit your breath just for fun?" "Why cer tainly, my little man: but why do you ask such a question?" "'Kause he said this morning that he could hit your breath any time and knock a quart of whisky out of it; I think it would be so funny to see anything knocked out of a mans breath, don't you?" Dupree didn't stop to reply. Atlanta Constitu tion. m t The most important lesson of mor ality is this: Never do an injury to abj one. KRAUSE, AGAIN TO The season for self-binders and reapers, which has proved successful to us beyond anticipation in the extremely large number of machines we sold, as well as in the perfect operation of each ma chine and the unbounded praise and satisfaction expressed by each purchaser, being over, we are again ready, and offer to the farmers of Platte and adjoining counties goods which are now in season and which we propose to sell at EXTREMELY LOW PEIOES. Mowers, Hay Rakes, Hay Sweeps, Farm Wagons, SHELF AND HEAVY HARDWARE, At the Lowest We sell the Threshinff DEEKING, WAKRIOE, CLIPPER, WOODS, Tiger, Hollingsworth, Hoosicr, ( -Umax, Surprise, Taylor, Ohampioii, and Daisy, "THE WELL KNOWISPS ABBOTT, STUDEBAKER AND RACINE Buggies and Spring Wagons. THE CELEBRATED -AND TIIE- Light - Running Orchard City Wagons. HALLADAY, ECLIPSE, "I. X. L.," U. S. STAR and ADAMS EVERYTHING WE SELL We cordially invite everybody to call on us. in our line, and will give you BOTTOM PRICES. Thirteenth Street, -WE ARE PREPARED iTIIE LAEGEST STOCK OF Oixtler-y ZN COLUMBUS, Living Prices. celebrated AULTMAN & Machines, Horse CLIMAX, CO A M STUDEBAKER ! near B. & M. Depot, LUBKKR THE FROM! TO GIVE BARGAINS IN - Spring Wagons Buggies, Sulky? Walking Plows, Wind MiUs, Pumps and Pipe. 9 Come and Convince Yourselves. TAYLOR, and C. ATJI.TM AN & CO.'S Powers and Engines. liEfi9lviiiflfcsi -ti t',,pj" " ot? - vx oiBfefnkiisBB iliiliiliilCr MX I 2A9S3S5Sffli?JMf ; r- tagy y jaiM?.llM ""- " Ffl - O. If "yBB5yCBSMSKfi?CSJsMrllfrfr IS FULLY WARRANTED! We are always ready and COLUMBUS, NEBRASKA. 3c CO. 9 glad to show anything A a V A H