SILVER DEDATK IN ALABAMA, Clarke Won the Honors In a Triangular Contest. A special from Clayton, Ala., says: The free silver advocatte haying arranged a meeting at this place Saturday to bear the lions. Joseph F. Johnson and Jesse F. Stal ling", the friends of sound money asked for a division of time and it was conceded that Hon. Richard Clarke, of Mobile, should make a speech. BtilliDgs and Johnson had the opening and closing, respectively, with one hour each. Mr. Clarke was given one hour and a half. The burden of Mr. tailings' upeech was to prove that it ha 1 lyen the set tled policy cf the Democratic party to favor free coinage of silver, and that this country e.ouM carry out tha policy without the as sistance of any other country. Mr. Clarke gave reasons for having changed bis mind on the ptirjt of free coinage by ptudylnf? the o,n"fion. He re viewed the coina'g-; J:Kislation of this coun try; tnat the fman'ial content of lS3i-'37 was really to rt-.tore gold to circulation, and that the UN wn.i signe J by Andrew Jackson. That wan tfc J-.-viO'.rHti-law ai;ain in 13S3. TJuring rier's administration, the ways and meins commiTt". iiortreft. Houston, chair man, report'-1 a bill re-ln' iijg A" amount of silver and hnlf and ouart-r dollars and dimes. ind limiting their leal t'-nKfr quali ties to f 5 ; thnt lew Mlvr dollars had been coir.' I f-inen ;')r,t at whi'h timi Jefferson topped the coinage of silver dollars ; that this a'tion during I'icn-e'B administration demoneti::"d th" only silver dollar that was belritf coined, and that the f-ilver dollar of the daddies was a myth. I showed that the d'-alini.'- of the Southern fanners were entirely with v eoiintrie", and that a depredated HiT',n,'V would be a burden galling nlnayson the farmer. He power fully J re.-,ii- the way in w hi"h creditors would swoop down on debtors before free ilver could I"' adopted ; rr, ntra:dd condi tio)" here with M"xi'0 and silver countries, and flowed how '.iiiurpr rec-ivd far more wajfe.a ntid cotiforts of life h"ro than in ilver coi'iit I jej. Capt. Jo.j. I . .r..hrioii closed the debate. His remark" wr in oi!.''v jf silver as a money, ren ,'irkini,- t ti;t gold, intririM'-nlly, was worth more than iron. He prayed for n shower of ertvi-r and had no fe;irs of any leluge froinjt. II- d'dnr-d that in paying lebts a bf'.weti ft fifty-cent dollar which rome said th' mIvt dollar was. and a two hundrel-ci'Tit d "liar, which he said gold va?4aj preferred the fifty-cent money. He labored to show that the people were Jm-povcri'-li I. (here wn-5 no demand for what 'fhef made, and chiiri;cd it all to the money .ptiwer wlii-di. h" aid was opfressing the rrnintty : said the country required now two ''billions of sliver dollars'to pay taxes and ordinary delitn. etc. 'J he. honors ot th" dis.oi-siou were easily won by Mr. Clarke. The di" Mrion was extremely eouxtlou and aothin," unpleasant occurred. RK'I I'KNIMi PKOSPKKi TV. Better D iys For I no Wm kliigtue n. Their inin iisat ion iolng t'p. At Poltslown, Pa., the nailers at KHis A Lessing's iron and steel jiia-it have been no tified that on and aHer August l.-t they will receive a!i iiicrea.o ,f 20 8 10 per cent, in waaes. On the same day the men employed In the pl.ue mill will l put back to the scale of '93, which s a decided advance over pres ent rate. At East Liverpool, ()., the Knowleg Com pany's potteries, the I ie-,t in the United Wates, and the wm-ks of Carlwrlght P.ros., Burfoid Pres., Walli'-e - Chotwind, the Bebrlng Toitery Coinpany, the Ka-t Liver pool, and the Standard pottery Company, nave all resumei op"i iition. Three-fourths Of the potteries in that city are now in full operation and others are running part time. At Lowell, Mass., tho Collin Woolen Mills Corporation in liraeut has posted notices au ooudidng an iii'T-ase or io per cent, in wajre of the operative. At Flti hhiii. M,i-s.. the operatives of the Beoll and I- itchimr wni ?ted ompanh": have received the following notice : '-On Julv 2ith the schedule i wages In this mill will be re adjusted, and advances inado as far as tho conditions of business will admit." This ad vance will affect 000 or more operatives wkohovo Miffered a reduction since hard Umee began . 0,Gr,7S.J Hales In Sight. Hie total visible supply of cotton for the world is 3,0(i,210 ba'es of which 2,6S?,010 tales are American, against 2,.r)P,'7'J bales and 2.0.H.r.7J bale l.-t year. i: .-eipts of cotton thi week at all interior towns. 5.905 bales: receipts from the plantations, 218 balc; crop i:i sicjit, ?,C)'.7S3 bales. Ta Las'! as. tte pleasant effect an perfect safety with which lad Ire may aae the OaltforntkHqald lax atlre, 8ynip of Figs, nnder all cendltlona makes It their faTorlte remedf. To nt th tmeand (rcnnlne article, look far the name of the California FIr Syrnp Co., printed near th bottom of tho arkase. Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothlnx Syrup for children teething, softens the rutnn. reduce Inflamma tion, allays pnin.currK wind colic. 25c. a bottle. Maavy tiprmt la Parker's Glaftor Taala la well Invested. It subdues pain, and bring better dtirestion, better strength and health. After physicians had Riven me np, I tras saved bv l'lso's Cure. I! Al.ril KniEO, Wil llamsp M t, !., Nov. !S'.i;t. If afflicted with sore eyes use Hr. Issac Thomp so.rs Kre water. IiniKK'lts sell at 2x- perbottla A Good Appetite Indicates a healthy condition of the. system and the lack of It shows that the etomtch' and digestive organ are weak and deblll tatej." Hood's 8arsaparllla has wonderful rower to tone and strengthen these organs and to create aa appetite. By doing thla It restores the body to health and prevents at tacks of disease. Remember Hood's Sarsaparilla lathe only trne blood purifier prominently before the publlj eye today. HOOd 'ft PI I la tb tr ltnnar p(U aaA if A5K YOUR DRUGGIST FOR $PERIAT The BEST FOOD for INVALIDS JOHN CARLE & 50SS, New York. 1 flPflfl Book-keeper rwan a rxJ salary. A 1'"" We, tiii!ri!tliln v ur rech by 1,!rri-nn AIX ttRKI'Y, Kalimiaioo, Wlch. s BALSAM tb hair, trovth. K"tor OraT :tl Uair to tta Youtuful Color. Cuio ''p h:r t&Uicf. N. IT. 30. I fiaarmTEAL PwaiwLTpwTta ' PRACTICAL i-iin.c kvuikt in Cicc due Best Ciutrn sjrup. TaoteaUuuO. Use in time, htoui tiv arnsiatiL . s...- "I l r H n IV L It &Ztt7l HAIR hi "ORDINARY PEOPLE" Dlt. TALMAGE'S TIIKMK SUNDAY. God Is Jost as Oool in What He TTIth holds as In What He Gires. ' TtiT: "Salufe A.-ncritu. Thleflron. Her-nin.'-. Fatroba". Hermw, FhllologTi3 and Julia." Ilomana xvi., li, 15. Matthew Henry. Albert Barnes, Adam Clark. Thomas Scott an 1 alt the commenta tors pa6 bv thes versus witLout any especial remark. 'J he othertwenty feorle mentioned in the chapter vteri distinicuished for some thintr and wer; therefore discupsed by the Illustrious expositor", but nothing la said about Asyncritti". Fhlepon. H"rmaj, Patro l;a", Hrmff. Fhilologus and Julia. Where were they i.orn? No on; know?. Where did thiydif-? '1 UT't in"' rordof their decease-. For what were; th'jy di.atinar'iished? Abso lutely lor n'thinz. or the trait of character sou Id have bcn brought out by the apostle. If they had V"eu very intrepid or opulent or hir?ute or musical oT cadence or era33 of fyl or in anywise anomalous, that featurd would have tien caught by the apostolie camera. But they were 200 I people, because Taul ftit to them his hih Christian regard. They were ..linarv People, moving in ordi nary .-phere. attending to ordinary duty and meeting ordinar. respon-ibilities. What tlo world want is a religion foi ordin.irv p. r)fle. If there be in the United States 5,000.'KM people, there are certainly not rnopj than 1 .Oon.ooo extraordinary, and then there are fil.no t.Oi.O ordinary, and we di well to turn our ba"' for a little while upon Ihe d!tirii;iii-lie I and conspicuous yieople of the liilde and eouider in our text the seven 3rdinary. We spend too much of our tim in twisting garlands for remarkables and building thrones for magnate? and fsculptur' ing warriors and npotheosizing philanth ropists. The rank and fllo of the Lord's soldiery need 'special help, Th" va-t majority of people to whom thi sermon comes will never lea l an army, will never write a State constitution, will nevet electrify a Senate, will never make an im portant invention, will never introduce a ii"w philosophy, will never decide tin fate of a Nation. You do not ex P;et to; you lo not want to. lou will nol be a Moaeh to lea 1 a Nation out of bondage. You will not lie a Joshua to prolong the day light until you can shut five kings in a cav ern. You will not tie a St. John to unroll an apo'alyp:-". You will not be a Paul to pre side fiver an apostolic college. You will not tie a Mary to mother a Christ. You will more probably be Asyncritus or Phlegon or Her nias or i'atrobas or Hrme3 or I'hilologus or Julirl. Many of yon are women at the head ot households. This mornint you launched the family for S ibbnth observance. Your brain decided the appnrtd. and your judgment was final ou all tpiestions ot personal attire. Every morning you plan for the day. Tho culinary d-p irtment of your household Is in your dominion. You decide all questions of diet. All the sanitary regulations ot your house are under your supervision. To regu late the food, and the apparel, and the habits and decide the thousand questions of home life is a tax upon your brain and nerve and general health absolutely appalling If there be no divine allevisition. It does not help you much to be told that Elizabeth Fry did wonderful things mid the criminals of Newgate. It does not help you mui'li to bo told that Mrs. Judson was very brave among the liornesian cannibals. It does not help you much to be told that Flor ence Nightingale was very kind to the wounded in the Crimea. It would be better for ine to tell you that the Divine Friend of Mary and Martha is your friend, and that lie sees all the annoyances and disappointments and abrasions and exasperations of an ordin ary housekeeper from morn till night, and from the first day of tho year to the last day of the year and at your call He is ready with help and re-enforcements. They who provide the food of the world decide the health of the world. One of the greatest battles of this century was lost be cause tho commander that morning had a fit of indigestion. You have only to go on some errand amid tho taverns ami the hotels of United States and Great Britain to appre ciate the fact that a vast multitude of the hu nan race are slaughtered by incompetent o iknrv. Though a young woman may have taken lessons in music and may have taken I -ssons in painting and lessons in astronomy, -lio. is not well e lucated unless she hastaken -sons in dough. They who decide the ap-i-arel of th world and the food of the world lid'j the endurance of the world. An unthinking man may consider it amat I't of little importance the cares of the h'Misehol I and the economies of domestic life but I tell you tho earth is strewn with the in trlyrs of kitehr n and nursery. The health shattered womanhood of America cries out for a (J 1 who can help ordinary women In (lie ordinary duties of housekeeping. The wenring. grinding, unappreciated work goes n, but th- sani" Christ who stood on the ii.in'; of fl.ililee in the early morning and kiu died th fire and had the llsh already eh-an-d and i-roiling when the sportsmen stepped ashore, chilled and hungry, will help every woman to prepare breakfast, whether by h r own hand or the hand of her hired Vdp. I"i ; l whi male in lestructiblo eulogy . II winVi. who made a coat for Samuel, or - ei, an I carried it to the temple every v 11 . will h-lp every woman in preparing the t nily wardrobe. The God who opens the H'.'i'- with the story of Abraham's entertaln- 1 - it of th 'thro angels on the plains ot l,vnr- will help every womau to provide ho-pitality, however rare and embarrassing. It i -ht rli time that som of the attention we 11 ue tiecn giving to th remarkable women "T the r.i)ie:-..;n:irkn''le for their virtue or w nit of it or remarkable for their deeds 1 ! rah an 1 Jez ! d and Hero Ua Hnd Atha bah and Iorasan l the Marys, excellent and abandonu.l -it is high time" some of the at t"nti jh we have been giving to these con spicuous women of the Bil-le be given to J'llia of the tet. an ordinary woman amid ordinary circumstances, attending to ordi nary duties and meeting ordinary responsi bilities. Then there are the ordinary businessmen. They ii" I divim and Christrian help. When we lie-in to talk about business life, we -hoot right oft and talk about men who did business on a largo scale, and who sold million of dollars of goods a year, but the vast majority of business men do not sell a million dollars of goods, nor half a million, nor a quarter of a million, nor the eighth part ot a million. Fut all tho business men of our cities, towns, villages and neighbor hoods si 1 by r-ide. and vou will rind that they eil less than 150.000 worth of goods. All these men in ordinary business life want divine help. You see how the wrinkles are printing on the countenance the story of worrtment and car. You cannot tell how Id a business man is by looking at him. Gray hairs at thirtv. A mau at forty-five with the stoop of a , . . rian. No time to attend to improve I dentistry, the grinders cease Peeause they are few. Actually dying of old a;e at fort.- or fifty when they ought i i e at me men-nan. Many f these business nien have bodies iikc a neiecte 1 n.vk to which vou come. and you win. I it up. and it begins to buzz an i roar, an men the hun ts start aro'io rcry rapidly, and then the cl"""V striker. Ave rrteu, or forty, and strikes without any .nV and then suddenly stops. So is the bodv of that wornout business man. It is a uegleoteit clock, and though by some sum mer recreation it may l wound up. still tho machinery is allout of gear. The hnds turn around with ft velocity that excites the as I mishnient of the world. Men cannot un I'erstaul the wonderfnl activity, an 1 there is a roar, and a bu.rz. an I a rattle a b-Mit the disordered lives, and they ftrike ten whn Ihey ought t' strikn five, and they strike twelve when they ought to strike six. and they strike forty when they ought to striks nothing, and suddenly they stop. Fost mortem examination reveal the fact that all the springs and pivots and weights and bal mct wheels of health are completely d range.1. 1 he human clock has simply run "own. And at tho time when th-? sfa lv hand ought to be pointing to tho in hi-trim"? hours on a clear and sunlit dial the whole machinery of body, min i an 1 earthly capac ity stops forever. The cemeteries have thou sand of business men who died of old ag t thirty, thirty-live, forty, forty-tlv?. Now. what is wanted is grace Ifvine era- for ordinary business men. men whi are harnessed from raorn till night an 1 all th days of their life harnesse J business. Not grace to lose 100,00l. but gra e to los- 10. Not grace to supervise 25) employe- iu a factory, butgra 'e to supervise the look keeper and two salesmen an 1 the small be f that sweep out the store. Gra-e to inve-c pot the sn KM of net profit, but th 5d) ' clear gain. Grace not to endure the o$ or a whole shipload of spices from th in dies, but grace to endure the loss of a naDr of collaw from the leakage of a display ehlngle on a poor roof. Grace not to endure the tardiness of the American Congress in passing n ne2essary law, but grace to endure the tardiness of aa errand boy stopping to play marbles when he ought to deliver thegoois; such a grace as thousands cf business men have to-day, keeping them tranquil whether goods sell or do not sell, whether customers pay or do not pay. whether thetariflf is up or tariff is down, whether the crops are luxuriant or a dead failure, calm fa all circumstances and amid all vt5icitudef -that is the kind of graie we want. Millions of men want it, and they may have it for the asking. Som3 hero or heroine comes to town, an 1 as the procession passes through the street the businessmen come out and stand on tiptoe oa th;ir. Mora step; and look at some one who ia arctic eitmeor in ocean storm or in day of battl ' cr in h'j-pitat agonies di 1 the brave thin. not realising that they, the enthusiastic specta-" t'ira, h-ivc one through trials in bn-iaM life that are just as great before Go i. Thr ar; men who bav i gone through fre'zin arctic? and burning torrids and awful Marengo? r,f experiences without moving flv" miles from their doorsteps. Now. what ordinary business men need is to realize that they have the friendship ot that Christ who looked after the religious interests of Matthew, the custom house clerk, and helped Lydia of Thyatira to sell the dry goods, and who opened a bakery and fish market in the wilderdess of Asia Minor to feed the 70 ) who had como out on a religious picnic, and who counts the hairs of your head with as much particularity as though they wre. the plumes of coronation, and who toolt the trouble to stoop down with His finger writing on the ground, although the first shuffle of feet obliterated the divine cattgrapny, and wno snows just how many locusts there were in the Egyptian plague and knew just how many ravens were neces sary to supply Elijah's pantry by the brook Cherittb and who as floral commander leads forth all the regiments Of primroses, fox gloves, dafTodilsi hyacinths and lilies which pitch their tents of beauty and kindle their camp fires r.f color a'.l around the hemi sphere; that that Christ and that God know the most minute affairs of your business life, and. however inconsiderably understanding a'l the affairs of that woman who keeps a thread and needle store as well as a'l the af fairs of a Rothschild and a Stewart. Then there are all the ordinary farmer?. We talk about agricultural life, and we inl ine liately shoot off to talk about Cinciu uatus, the patrician, who went from the p ow to a high position, and after h? got through the i'.ict-Mor-'o n irt tweiitv-onn ilavs went bak again to tho plow. What encourage ment is that to ordinary farmers? The vast majority of them, none of them, wid be pa tricians. Ferhaps none of them will be Sen ator.-. If any of them have dictatorships, it will Iu over forty or fifty or 100 acres of the old homestead. What those men want is grace to keep their patience while plow ing with balky oxen and to keep cheerful amid the drought that destroysthe corn crop an I that enables them to restore the garden tho day after the neighbor's cuttle have broken in an 1 tr-impled out the strawberry be 1 and goue through the lima bean patch and eaten up the sweet com in such large quantities that they mast bo kept from the water lest they swell up and die; grace in catching weather that enables them without imprecation to spread out the hay the third time, although again and again and again it has. been almost ready for the mow; a grace to doctor the cow with a hollow born, and the sheep with tho footrot, and the horse with the distemper, and to compel the un willing acres to yield a livelihood for the family, and schooling for tho children, and little extras to help the older boy in business, and something for the daughter's wedding outfit, and 11 little surplus for the time when tho ankles will get stiff with age and the breath will be a littlo short, and the swing ing of the cradle through the hot harvest field will bring on the old man's vertigo. Better close up about Cincinnatus. I know 500 farmers just as noble as he was. What thy want is to know that they have the friendship of that Christ who often drew His similes from the farmer's life, as when He said, "A sower went forth to sow," as when Ho built His best parablo out of the scene of a farmer's boy coming back from his wanderings.ani the old farmhouseshook that night with rural jubilee, and who com pared Himself to a lamb in the pasture field, an t who said the eternal God is a farmer, declaring, "My Father is the husbandman. Those stonemasons do not want to heat about Christopher Wren, the architect, whd built St. Faul s cathedral. It would be bet ter to tell them how to carry the hod of brick up the ladder without slipping, and how on a cold morning with the trowel to smooth oft" the mortar and keen cheerful, and how to be thaukful to God for tho plain food taken from the pail by the roadside. Carpenters standing amid the adz, and the bit, and the plane, and the hroa lax need to b3 told that Christ was a carpenter, with His own hand wielding saw and hammer. Oh, this is a tired world, and it is an overworked world, and it is an underfed world, and it is a wrung out world, and men and women need to know that there is rest and recuperation in God and in that religion which was not so much intended for extraordinary people as for ordinary people, becauso there are more of them. TLe healing profession has had its Aber orombiesand its Abernethys and its Valen tine Motts and its Willard Farkers, but the ordinary physicians do the most of the world's medieining, and they need to under stand that while taking diagnosis or prog nosis or writing prescription or compound ing medicament or holding the delicate pulse of a dying child they may have the presence and the dictation of the almighty doctor who took the case of the madman, nnd after he had torn off his garments in roaming de mentia clothed him again, body and mind, nd who lifted up the woman who for eight pen years had been bent almost double wit I the rheumatism into graceful stature, and who turned the scabs of leprosy into rubl. ?und complexion, and who rubbed the numb ness out of paralysis, and who swung wide rtpen the closed windows of hereditary 01 accidental blindness until the morning light came streaming through the fleshly case ments, and who knows all the diseases and all th remedies and all the herbs and all tho eatholicons, and is monarch of pharmacy and therapeutics, and who has sent out 10. fMH doctor? of whom the world makes no rec ord, but to prove that they are angels of mercy I invoke the thousands of men whoso ailments have been assuaged and the thou sands 01 women to wnom 111 crises 01 pain they nave Peen next to God in benefaction. Come, now, let us have a religion for or dinary people in professions, in occupations, in agriculture, in the household, iu raer chandise, in everything. I salute across the centuries Asyncritus. Phlegon, Henna, l atrobas, Hermes, I hilologus an t Julia. First of all. if you feel that you are ordi nary, thank God that you are not extraordi nary, lam tired and sick and bored almost to death with extraordinary people. They take all their time to tell us how very extra ordinary thev really are. You know as well as I do. mv brother and si.-ter. that th" mo-t of the useful work of the world is don" by uni retentions people v,h toil right on. by people who do not get tnu-h approval, and no one seems to ?av, '-That is well l..ne Phenomena are of but little us-v Thin that are exceptional cannot be de pended on. B-nter trust the mail-- plan t that swings on its r"it thai t-a -vu-t shooting this way and th f. nr.p-riliu : th longevity of worlds attending t th-ir ".v business. For steady ilbi'iiiu'iiion l '.t-r 1 a lamp thau a roeke. Then, if vou f 1 that j on are or-iiuary. rememt r ttiat y eU- r sition invites the les attack. Conspicuous people how th.vhavcto t it! How they are misrepresented au I a'ei-e I ana snot ai: in" nigner til.- norns o, ,a roe buck the easier to trak him down. What ; delicious thing it must b !- be ;t c.i-i ti lat for President of the Unit"! Stat"-! It pius t-e so soothing to the n-rve-' It mu.-t i-)ui into tne soul ot a -au li J!e ;.u- h a s. scxenuy wnn no reals tn bles-el news papers! 1 came into po.es-na ot th-i abusive car toons in the time of Napoleon I, print"! while he was yet alive. The r-tr-.it oj th army from Moscow, that army buried ia th news of Russia. oU of th" mr-t awful t rage lies of the centuries, represent" I uni-r the figure of a m?nt"r callel General Frost shaving the Frn :h Emoeror with a raz:-r o Icicle. As Satyr and B.-elzebub he is repre sented page after page, page after page. England cursing him. Spain cursing him, Germany cursing him, Rassi. cursing him, Europe cursing him, North an 1 South Ameri ca cursing him, the most remarkable man of his day an I the most abused. All those men la history who now have a h ilo aroun 1 their nam" ou earth wore a cr"wa of thorns. Take the few extraordinary railroa 1 men of ur tim1 and see what abuse comes upon bi"in whilethou sands of st ockholders escape. All the world took after Th omas S?ott,Fr!s1 lent of the Pennsylvania ruilrovt. ahus! him until he got under the ground. Thou aads cf stockholders In that company. Ail fh? tdame on one mm. --The Central Pacific Railroad. Two or thre- men get all th blame If anything goes wrDng. There ari 19.009 in that company. 1 mention these things to prove it is ex Inordinary people who get abused whilt the ordinary escape. The weather of life if not so severe oa the plain as it is ol the higfc P"ak. The world never forgives a mart who knows or gains or does more than it can know or gain or do. Parents sometime! give confectionery to the children as an in ducement to take bitter medicine, and the world's .'.agar plam precedes the world ! a-iua fo-tis. The mob cried in regard tc Christ. "'Crucify Him, crucify Him!' and thy had to say it twic to be ui derstood. for they were so hoarse, and thej got thtir hoarseness by crying a littdo wbil before t the top of their voice, '-Hosanua!" The river Rhone is foal when it enters Lafci Leman. but crystalline when it comes out or. the oth"r side. But there are men who have tnterel the bright Lake of worldly prosperity crystalline and came out terribly rilei. If. therefore, you feel that you are ordinary, thank God for the drfenss anl the tran quility of your position. Then rern-mber. if you have only what is called an ordinary home, that the great de liverers of the world have all come from such a horn1?. And there may be seated reading at your evening stand a child who shall be potent for tho ages. Just unroll the scroll of nien mighty in church and state, and you will flnl they nearly all come from log fabin or poor homes Genius almost al ways ruus out in the third cr fourth generation. You cannot And in all his tory an instance where the fourth gen. eration or extra r liuary p?op'iO amount to anvthiiig. Columbus from a waaver's hat, Impx-thenes from a cutl r's cellar. Bloom fled an 1 Missionary Cir-fy froai a shoemaker s bench. Arkwright from a barber's shop, and He whnss nam" is high over all in earth and air .in 1 skv frOri a manger. L !t us all b c patent with suc'.l things a? we havs. Go I is j ut as g l ia wait IU ke'ps away fo a us a? iu wait He givsi Ui. Even a knot may be usctui u u is at tue- ena of a thread. At an anniversary of a deaf and dumo asy lum one of the chil iren wrote upon the bhukbo.ar 1 words as sublim-s as the "Iliad." th-) "0 Jyss"y" aad the "Divine Commedia' all compressed in cm paragraph. The ex aminer, in signs of the mute language, asked hen "Who male the world?'' The deaf add dumb girl wrote upon the black board, "In the beginning Got created the heaven and the earth.'' The examiner asked her "For what purpose did Christ come into the world.-1" Tho deaf and dumb girl wrote upon the blaokboard, "This is a faithful saying and worthy of all accep tation, that Christ Jesuscame into tho world to save sinners." The examiner said to her, "Why were you born deaf and dumb while t hear and speak?" She wrote upon the black board, "Even so, Father, for so it seemettt good in Thv sight." Oh, that we might be baptized with a contente 1 spirit! The spider draws poison out of a flower; the bee gets honey out of a thistle, but happiness is a heavenly elixir, and the contented spirit ex tracts it not from the rho todendroa of the hill3, but from the lily of the valley. A IIOKKII3LF: CRIME IX ENGLAND. Two Boys Murder Their Mother and Play C.rds Over Her Roily. A most horrible case of juvenile depravity and brutality came to light in Tialstow, an eastern suburb of London, Friday morning. Two boys uamed Combes, aged respectively 13 and 11 years, were brought before a mag istrate upon the charge of having murdered their mother and the accusatioti was sub stantiated by Ibeir own confession of the crime. The hoys killed their mother by 6tabbing her through the heart ten d ivsago. .since which time they have occupied the bouse alone with the woman's decomposing body. The husband of themudered woman and father of the two boys is a ship purser and is absent from home on a tea voyage. The house is weli furnished and possesses all the rerpiiirmeiits of a comfortable home. After the boys committed I b.ir crime they 'pawned a number of valuables they found in the hoi's" and proceeded to enjoy them 'selvcs bv taking trips to various nlaeea nn Ithe river, and in the inlet im visiting cri:ket grounds ;md indulging iu other forms of amusements. When they were arrested they were ptnving cards in tho house containing ,tlie decompose.: corpse of their mother, in company wun a nan viitou man aim anna- rentiv getting ti.e iiigncsr -legreo of eujov meut from tneir p istune, ic-spite the stench which pervaded the loom. jin' magistrate was astoun. iea nc tne ne-velopmc-uis of the ease and amazed at the cool demeanor of t he hoys. He declared he could not believe the youngsters sane, and remanded them pending tti -ir mental exam ination. The miuds of the boys seem to have been up"ei hv reading novels which made heroes of "nt throats, robbers and the like. T ho ci are has crcalcil a great sensation in London. SOUTHERN RAILWAY CO, (EAITERN grSTKU.) ffaitern Tim t Columbia and TU. Korth Northbound, !ts 9( !ta 10 Ko SI A pi li 21. 1898. Daily Da'Jy Dally I.t. Jacksonville .. 5.4 p T OO a L.V. Savannah 10.14 p 11.90 a Ar. Columbia 141k S.4S 9 Lt Charleston 6.30 p Ar Columbia 10.10 p Lt. August 10.80 p 1 40 a " Granitevyie 11.11 p t.n p " Trenton 11.48 p 2 3 p " Johnstons 12.M a 2.43 p Ar Columbia 2.20 4.22 p Lt Columbia S.M a 1 50 4 CO p ' Winnsboro 4 49 a 4 At a 5.52 p - Chester 5.35 a 6 85 a 0.44 p " Pock Hill 0 08 a 6 08 a 7.20 p ar Charlotte T.OO a T OO a CIO p " Danvllie 11.40 p 11.40 a U.COnt " Richmond 4 49 p 4 40 p CM " Washington 9. S3 p 9 JJ p C.4C a M Baltimore 11.33 p 11.35 p 8 08 M Philadelphia 8 00 a 8.N a 10.28 a " Kbw York 1 4.23 a 6 23 a 12 68 W LT.Kew York 12.lSatil2.15nt 4.80 p " Philadelphia- T.20 7.20 a 8.55 p " Baltimore 8.42 a 9.42 a 9.20 p LT.Washington 11.01 a, 11 XI a 10.42 9 Lt. Richmond ...... ' 1.00 p l.Ct pi 18.06 I.T.nanvllle CIO p C10 p 4 4ft t LrChar o'te 11.05 p 11.06 p 8. 95 a - Rock Hill... 11 SI pillJl p 18.27 a Ches'er 12JBnt.12.25nt H-08 a " Uicnsboro 1.14 a 1.14 a 114 a Ar. Columbia 2JE0 a 2 24 a 1.00 9 LT.ColninUa 4.80 a 1 45 p " Johnstons- 0 82 a 8Jt p " TrenToa 8 48 a 8 42 p " Graniteville.. T.18 a 4 06 p Ar. August 8.00 a 4 88 p LT.Colum! la 8 4 a 4 .20 p Ar Charleston J1J4 aj 8 40 p I-T-ColumWa 1 30 a 12 10 9 Aravacnan 6.44 a C34 p " Jathionvilie 10 JO a) 8.1C BLEEPING CAR SERVICE. Nop. S7 and 3, Washington and South wcit-ru LimiteJ, composed ol Pullman Car; minimum Tubman rate 12.00; no extra fare. Through Sleeping Car? between New York fti.d N-w Orleans. New Tork and Memphis, New York and Tampa and WahlnRton, Ashe vu'.e an i Hot Springs. Also carries first -clacs cot- h between WahJnton and Jacksonville. Dining Car tttweea Greensboro and Mont gomery. I-.W35 aad So, Tolled States Fast Mali Pullman Sleeping Cars between New York Atlinta and Montgomery, and New York and Jacksonville. AUobas Sleeping Cr brtweeo Charlotte and Augusta. No. 12. Sleeping Car Greensboro to Raj. eih. No. 55, Sleeping Car Raleigh to Oreen boro. Through tickets on sale at principal stations to all poiLts. For rates or Information ap ply to any acerjt of the Company. N. J. O'BRIEN. Superintendent First Di-vi.i-.(-i, Danville, Va. W. a RYDER, Superintendent Second Di vision. Charlotte. N. C. W. H. GREEN, General Superintendent Wv-hineton, D. C. W. A. THJRK, General Passenger Agert Washington, P. C. BILL ARP'S LETTER. HE 3IEETS A COUPLE OF MUUS. SHINERS ON THE RAIL, And a rery Interesting cmd Mutual Confab Ensues. 'Ffr' Coma in hextl Ccme right along. said the deputy marshal, and four prisoners followed him into the smoker aud sat down where he pointed. Iwo of them were while and two colored. There were ihr3 officers in charge and the party waa bound ir Atlinta. The TonnRer white prisoner sat iin 1 cuiu ms, and after a glaaes at hira and sedng his hand bound rip In rags l Tenmrea to i what waa the matter with it. He said that a I ieco of timber fell on it and mashed it He as a voung man with barely any beard and bid a ph asant face- He seemed grateful that What hare rou au ueinaoinsf eiu . 'Moonshining, they say," ho said, with s weak smile. The officer sitting next 10 mm then iufcrmed me that this gtnj was ctptnr d in Tolk county Tester 'aT, not far from lay l.rsvj le, and Ihey had the biggest still that had crtr been found in the woods. It was ho bis that it would not to In at the car door ani had 10 be hauled on a fla. ... Where in the world did yoa get lt, saa 1 lo tl e Touns? man. "I didn't pet it," said he, "but they ssy II y. me from Rome." "He don't admit anything," said the officer. smiling, and you rausent press him to- hard. H Las l-iBt te n bouna OTer 10 in isuerai court, and if he can t gire a bona win naT lie in jail till October. "You are not married?" I asked, No," tai l he. "That's good," said I. "How about that ether man?", "Ho has a wife and one chdd," sai 1 he. The other white man looked about thlrly, and was well dressed. Ho was the degner and promoter, the capitals, and dident seem to be mu :h concerned. He boiiRlit some candies fr. m tho iicwuli v an-l bai.ded them to the young man ind the officer and the two negroes, and wa unite chatty. The negroes sc. med nn concerned ad enjoyed the rida One s.vd: "Dis de fu-t free ride I LaTe In a long time. Hit beita a 6cnrshiou." After awhile one of them dropped to sleep. But the voting white man was evidently snffer- inc bo'h physically and mentalk. His face had u sad an I dteamy expression. 'Is ihis your lirat expeii nee in this lin'7" I enn'iired. ' Yes. sir." faid he, "and it will by last. I ncyer thought about it much until I was Into it. "How .'ong hai that still been running there." laid 'About three month1," he said. YUi tj do your folks liye?" ' Up in Union," he raid, an I I could almet fe1 Ins thoughts going batktotheo'd hom" folk, where a few years ago he as happy and fre. AHei- awhile he was ca'led on the other side, and I d'Sdursed with the deputy more frtelv about their rnoon-hine business. He said it was inci casing in his territory thit fifteen or twenty seizures had been made in Polk county within the pat twelve month that generally the business fell off in the summer months, but thrs ir.ia great fruit year and very fa r i-pirits could Le made with a little mral and either ap pies or peaches or blackberries niixrd with it And I cs des. said he, the times are awful hard on poor fo'ks and a young man like this one is e-isily drawn in. Home moonshiners are bad men and dcspratc, but these are not. But all of them get fco'ed sooner or later. For ten dollars some fellow will tell on them. I reckon there weift twenty or more men who knew about Ih's si ill and the meancs! one in the lot w generally the one to give the officers a hint. We d n't know where to huut for stills and we never would find out if somebody did't giTJ ui a cue." "Where do they get ihe stills and how do they get them to their hiding places?" 1 SKked. 'They buy them in Atlauta.or Romo.or Chat tanooga and haul them away in the night and keep c ff the public roads. Some buy the sheet copper and rivets and make their own stills. More than half we find have wooden bottoms that ret flat on the ground and the lire is bndt around the still instead of nnderncath it. Sometimes Ihey use a big wash pot or caldion. Their hiding places are very peculiar. They n ed to have them under the floor of the liout where the unoke cou'd go np the chimney, but that has played out. They can tide them from the officers cay enough on these moun tains, but they can't keep the 66 ret long from hunt rs and tramp. Of course they have to buy these fellows with whisky, but that costs too much, for one fly will draw another and if they are not caught they have to move. It is an all night business, moonshine or no m on f hine, and if the poor devils would work half a bard at something else they could make a good living- The most pitiful part of the business is the suffering and trouble it brings on th v omen and children when the husband or the father is serving a term in pri on." "Well. Is there no remedy no stopping tha business?" . "No," said he. "There are nomo pc pi in every community ilm had rat In r do-- lr, law thn obey i't. Thy like the ij k and the peril of morn shin 11;. Regular hone t w rk is too tame for them anl, bisid-. th v haw fpiie agams the government that al own a rich roan to run a big distillery and ay to a 1 o n man you shan't run a little one." The oulv remedy that I see is to clop tin m uli, 1 i ; : n'l little, or turn everybody ! ose to make it. Bu the government is o liged to have that two hundred millons of revenue and of cnnrce tin present system must go on. n "What had these negroes to do wi h thw CMt21' said I. "Oh, thy always have one or two black lieu tenants to help around ami buy corn, or steal it. and to sell the whisU? by the Jugful to other ngroes. Th'-y are the best sort of trus ies and ill keep a secret bettor than a white mar Those negroes will swear that they 'just hap pened dar' and had nothing to do with tLe stilt." "Will either cf these men be able to give bond and keep out of jiil until court?" said I. "I wouldn't bo s'lrprised," aid he. "They have s m mb-tantial friends in their neigh borhood. Th bmds are 3TJ each and they niHlits nt back to-morrow to get seenrity. It is a t'l'i-h ng how many peop'e in a coninnn:ty sympathize with the moonshiner and a-e down on the informer vih?n they find him out. That's a secret that we officers have to keep in violate or we would never catch another still." A few yeeri ago, when I was gettmg the ri;bt of way for the E 1st. Tennessee railroad, I was belated one moonlight night in Paul iing county, and bad to ride several miles to the house of an acqr.a ntance who was with me. Down in an ugly ravine our road crossed a little branch, and n ar it was a covered wgon and a yok of steers and two rough-looking men sit ting by a amp'he "M"onbin-rs," said mj friend. "Ttieie in a still up tho branch about a mile, and these fellows have started to mar ket w.th some whiskey. I knew them, and they know thut I know them and iheir l uins. We mut s'op a minute and be fr endly, tr they may su'poct thit you are a rivenm offi-er.' We a cpjwil and chatted ahile, and mv fnnd told ho I was and what I was tloiu? Th-v were ea-ily satufie 1. bui I didn't like the look fif ihe two gnus H at wer- h-aning against a rce. Not long af lei wards I as driving t my tr.n'i h rue t ut Cart revdle and over:oo ire l man who Lad a little black valine in hi fiand. I aeked him if be wouldn't like to ride, ind he thanked me and got iu. "Hjh far are ion co'rtg t'os wa V" I a-kel. 'To Fannin cotiniy." he said. J d you come on the train this eTenin j?" I ked. 'No, sir," said he; "I have walked from At linta. B-en s atiug there for three mentis, " Moon-hiiier?" said I. That - i" sa-d be. 'T.ev took y u down on the cars and ent on back on foot?" said I. ' That's it." aid Le. WfJL my fr;en'i, I reckon this willmakevou yi't the bnine, won't it?" ' Well. I don't know about that. We rather k- it tip in the mountains, and abont t e hlt way we cn sell our corn. One bushel will ra ke iLrec galh ns of wbiitky that we can aril or $2. I nt we can't haul the corn tixtvmiks to ciarket."' " it 's apainst the law," atid L ' Yen, I know it is. Lut tbec is no sin in tol.li; a Uw that as made for rich iren to get 11 her and k-e a p'or man down. TLcra U 11 j'laiice in th.fe' revenue lae." An t o it go. a on and ill conttnui to go on. il it T"iy like th snmgkr 03 the cos st." J be trs h zard i f it is fascination to tbove who in se it. Th'M are smnggles now on the Fl rila a-t Lrw fatter and grandfathers imnletl U-ft r thtm. arxl the buines will roniiii'jc down f r gencrttioja to come. Bill ler in Atl n'a Ccntti'ution. The disputed di ri-t in French Guiana will, according to nn agrmiut N-twHn France and Brazil, t-s tfovernedby dutlrnlo. 1TISE 1T0RDS. An acorn ia bigger than a saw log. The woands made bj a friend nerer heal. Thorns grow fast while a lazj man sleeps. Behind the shadow tbere is always aligM. Half-hearted semce u tno cowara tribute. The more we lore the more we can see to lore. ? Some people haro more reputation than character. The man who has gold for his mas ter wears iron fetters. To-morrow is the fool's seed time. To-day is the time to do. All other eyes are fall of beams to the man who has a mote in ms own eve. A mistake is sure to attract atten tion where a nrtue would oe over looked. The poorest man is not the one who has tho least, but the one who wants tha most. There is more help in an ounce of encouragement than there is in a ton of good advice. A happy heart is worth more any where than a pedigree running back to the Mayflower. The fellow who is doing nothing himself is sure to complain that no body else is doing enough. The only reason why we don't 6eo the face of truth everywhere is be cause we live too low down. Eloquence may sometimes provoke righteous indignation, but it cannot produce righteousness of life. Ram's Horn, The Kockln.T Chair Cur, Among the many remedies, or allev iatives, for indigestion is the agreeable one of the rocking chair. An excel lent medical authority declares that the Blow, rockiug motion after meals stimulates tho digestive function?, and gives marked relief. This is for the peculiar form of indigestion that results from sluggish action of tho intestines. The patient ought to be placetl in an almost horizontal posi tion. New York Dispatch. By the will of Joseph Far well, whoj vaa a prominent citizen of Unity, Me., nearly $20,030 is given ti n!i in ties and churches. Highest of all ia Leavcnbg Ofl thousand new thirty-ton coal ears have been ordered for the Beading railroad at a cost of f 100,000. California peach growers are being advised not to send any shipments East owing to the large crop from Georgia. The amount of property destroyed through the celebration of the glorious Fourth in the United States was enormous. At Waltham, Mas?., John 6. Johnson, in om petition, rode a mile on a bicycle in 1.58 2-5, breaking tho world's record. Alwaj's Cures Indigestion, Ivnivrda, Bid Brenth. Debili ty, Sour Stomach, Want of Appetite, Distress After Eating, and all evils ari-in from a weak nnd disordered stomach. It. builds np from the first dose. Hnd a bottle or two will cure the worst c.ifh. an-l injure a kot! appe tite, excellent rl iestion a nd result in viuor ous health tul boiiyancv of spirits. There ia no lK'tter way lo insur' notxl health and a lorn? life than to keep th htmnach ri;ht. Tyner's I)vpep-ia Keinedv is i;iiaranteel to do thi-:. Tli" Trart'i'iilizing Aftvr-DinnT lirink. For .-ale hv Dnuists. Manufactured byl". ). Tyner. Atlanta. Bof He (Iitw or f moke? If so. it is only a question of time when bright eyes grow dim, manly step lone flnn new. and the vigor and vitality so enjoyable now will le destroyed forever. Get a book, lit led "Don't Tobnoco Spit or Smoke Youi Lite Away," nnd learn how No-To-Bae.with out physical or financial risk, cures the to bacco habit, brings l-HCk th vigorous vital ity that will make you both happy. No-To-Tae sold and guaranteed to euro by Drng gisls everywhere. Book fm. Ad. Sterling I'.emedy Co.. New York Citv or Chlngo. Wlfetmed "M other Friend" before flrat ehildwas quickly relieved: suffered but little; recovery rapid. E. E. Johnston, Eufaula, Ala. ..A.,l??,rtH'Jrc', WeBt Toledo, Ohio, ays: II alt Catarrh Cure saved my life." Writ him for particulars Sold by Druggists, 7c XYhr Tea SheaH Use lllntferesraa. It takeotit the corns, and then you have com fort, surely a cood exchanie. lc. atdrugiata. Oae Gives Relief. It ia so esr to be rnitaken about lndlgev tion, nd think there i iime other trouble. Th- cure is It puns Tubules. One tabule rlrea reiief. A- k any druggist. John Cunningham was instantly killed at finegari. Mo. lie had contracted to make ix ascensions at a celebration. He mado hree successful ones in the forenoon, bat at he first onj in the afternoon he went about 500 feet high, and when be cut loose Ala larachute failed to ot-eu. " Old Rip Van Winkle went tip into the Catskill mountains to take a little nap of twenty years or so, and when he wakened, he found that the "cruel war was over," the monthly magazines had "fought it over" the stcond time and "blown up" all the officers that had paitkipated in it. This much is history, and it is also an htu torrcalfad that, it took the same length of time, for Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Dis covery to become the most celebrated, as it is the mo-t effective. Liver. Blood and Lung Keuicdy of the age. In purifying the blood and in all manner cf pimples, blotches, eruptions, and other skin and scalp diseases, scrofulous fores and swell ings. and kindred ailments, the "Golden Medical Discovery" manife'ts the most poutue curative properties. MA The One Crop System cf firming gradually exaausts the land, anless a Fertilizer cor.tr mjn percentaze of Potash is w aascr banic account can only then be expected. A V.'rite fcr our " Farmers' Cuide." a iiz-oare iMustrared book. 4 is brim full of useful information will make and save you money. Address. '" '-' CF11I1N kTltf wnotre v .... Vtw (From the Troy, X. Y., iratea dt sunsrroK oiirin . .1 has entailed on him peculiar consequences. At the pr-nt writfcJ'5M la a prominent officer of Von Cohoes, and a past all de cn:i;p oatw 1 ol the commander-ln-chlcf c f aj; aa "f the Interview with a reporter h H "I was wounded anl gent r- t,. at v mcnepier. x ney sent rr ethers, to Washington a miles. Irsvins no room in t i: were placed fa..e up on th cars. The sun bent down u; tected heads. When I rci !. I was insensille and wns , daj-s while 'c the hospital. .. ered In ray car and br jk: it t erlng and breaking ever of this 100 mile ride and mi: disease, nervcu' pru--tr.it: i rheumatism; a comj !ct. iv which cave me no re-t r.V.-t.t last resort I took fi-ni' l',n helped mo to a wonderful 1 ,-t matLm is Rene, mv heart l;u: n .1 ; . .u i. ..... ,. 1 ... . ' "I 1 V .;v 7 ry cess in my car has tt- t 1 ,,. i . 1 mv head feels as clear rt l m VV1:," It felt as thonch it would Ik..' ehnttcrcd bpmoik svLmm V' .'5-J sound. Ijook t thoM lii--. r said, ''do they, look s if tli-1 matism thereV" He movc-i 'MhJ ; Wit ly ana irceiy nno stroiic .1' .( t yountr boy. "A j 1 a r air. fCnarieu ni ine ouns umi .-.1 tf-4, not hold n peu. My km c w ui i 'f, and I could not Ftraighb'-n n i..2s J01U13 wuuiu Murnk wii'-ii 1:; T' i.nar is ine living irmp. 'When I rame to thinl- t to be crippled with iIl uii: j with the rest of my ailm-i,. 1 t-it v B ? seemed not worth livim. l Mi!r...-,ii aesponuency. 1 cun 1 1 t-t t, said Mr. Edwards, as he di w .1 1, r.j C ! .k.t tnuliiii ij n . r. .... . . ' you lifted ten years right n p v 1 me prime and vikoii'U. . could feel no belter. I v;i eould only dia? myself a 1 house. Now 1 can walk trouble. That in it-lf." 1 1v.- I.J Ml K ii':ii!i cause for n juicing, l ut wlu n i consider that I am no l i,-. r .(.,, mifiht call nervous, mi l that :!,v ii(.,in t preniiy ueariy n .in n . :: n nt l , v nlRhts, you niHy reiili;-.- win ..vsJ., peak in extr-ivagiint pt.u- . ,f -iU j These pills quiet my neiv, 1 :, oppression irom my n,i i ,n 1 a' the time enrich mv Mooo. J I: no circulation in my l-ovi-r my legs being: cold and Kow the circuhition there brisk as at any other part tried to be so light-ln-itd.' my nervous disorder tiini while crossing the flour 1 n . -I t !. : nt t.; Iwil :,! "I II: v ,,: Mnd'.h.vyt is coming ami 1 never i' ti ii tt r in rr v fc' and I am looking forward to u l u-v 01 wort Labrador's year. seal fishery i a fail Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report ine iong-eonteetel rerun a cimn m 00,000 acre of Arljvma land . pron-syd t iraua ny reueral Laud Court, it bantf! Mew Mexico, and Jumon A. IVr.Vis & lie claimant, was arrested. The Herreshoffjj have made nn off rt United States Ooverument to build a trf m wun a guarantee! hi - 1 f it Bven knots an hour for f 1 5;c'j'. It .U. lonstrncted on Navy Department J'1ub( K bonds will be asked for extra ned. The Greatest fledical Discover) of the Age. KENNEDY'S Medical Discover) DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURT, S! Has discovered in one of our cots'! pasture weed? n remedy that cum e kind of Humor, from the worst tscro down to a common rimpl". He baa tried It In ovt ' ii-vn buni case, and never failed vx-yt 10 twora" (both thunder humor). II" h;w no his possession over two li'ir. !rl c cates of its value, all within twenty t-fi Of Boston. Bend postal car I f r t")t A benefit is always exp' t'i' ii- 1 from first bottle, and a perfect cif h wsms when the right quantity li takf.'i. When the lungs are aff"-t" l it t' shooting pains, like n-" 11 -t I- through them-, the same with th I-1 or Dowels. This Is cauel 1 y tbol- being stopped, and always di-i; ('lit' week after taking it. lt-a 1 th laL If the stomach ia foul or W.isi cause soneamlsh fcelimrs at I'-r'- the best you can get, and er.o'i?ho. Dose, one tablespoouful in water ' J time. Bold by all Drugu JOHNSON' tllll.I. A' ff Cvrt roa M cent butt) If aa1 not a Moff'o ent bd1 it J- n Dt do 11 Jrc' lt. Chi'.! f i rr. f4. 1 tra it F 4lh Hmocrhcic l' l:t. Im(u t'f ei. M "til J'ir StS. L Jini pw lfoa7 baek if ona bottie f " H. A- B. GiatabtAV, b-t'-. Notice to Mill And lunni ovnin snitU t.or ' I.I. U . 11 ...... . t " 1rldi.mi(..nu 11 11 1 1.1. M 3AIIMIiklail Avr.. i.m prt Wor.d'i Fair 1 Cbc-. A , f p. np la lh liat. Pr.to r1i ' ' I'-ucb ftlil , Ualmc Fr-Man1 Tur' - , ruUrf and btafung a a J aii k.u-t 0 TO AVOID 0 TETTER'" li. t rvt. It lie w .f ' rauDd it'h. : " V Put n I "Ji in tm it-L in "' HtM..v or rub I 1 btrinnah a. . ' dferrid a t t -: CAN SHE By Ord-rioXp nuiim.nisjSaBtyiR' raoa E. M. ANl)i:Ws'.i cfi.u.Lorrt- CafWrite for Prices and Tern used. Better crops, a better soil, ai-'i s Xr fr,r. u -;n i - .r,t free. ar.i ar.i w IBs&ung '4 ,1 7

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