* Muck Made. Money stringency is not the only cause of hard times, and it takes very little money to make a good deal of happiness, as the follow- ing shows: Mr. IL. B. Kyle, Tower Hiil, Appomattox County, Ya., writes that he was aficted with rheumatism for several years, and physicians guve him no relief. Finally he was rubbed all over with St, Jacobs Oil and it During his illuess he had spasms and was not vxpected to live. This points x way to many who think times hard, cured, but who can flud an eusy way out ol hair troubles, Every time the devil makes a hypocrite he has to admit that noth. ing pays so well as being good. 1410 Bus, Vortatees Per Acre. This astonishing yu Hahn, of Wisconsic there. he itor reported by Abr, Salzer's poiatoes always gel of the Rural New Yorker vepuriss £306 bushels and 8 poun is per ace from of Abov new seedling Salzer's early po tatoos, 111) vasuels ars irom Hua wire l-fold., His ning Salzer's new early potato. Light Express, has a record of 86 bushels per acre. He offers potatos as low as Land the best wourld fur but $24 IF YOU WILL Cu tRis oUt to the Joan A. Crosse, Wis, ¥ 25.3 a barr potato planter inthe SXD SEND IT with ~nlzer Seed Cou. La wa will recaive his mawe package of sixe Gc postage . free moth potato catalog ae and =» « BIL raqishi, teen-day “Gol there Much bending breaks the beading th - mind. Low : mud How's This! We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrn Care. F. J.Caexey & Co., Props. Toledn, O. We. the undersigned, have known F. J. Che. ney {or the last 15 years, and believe him per- fect] honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any oblige tion made by ther firm. WEST & TrUAX, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. WaiLpisg, Kixvan & Manvix, Draggists, Toledo, Oho. Ha'l's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act. tng directly upon the blood and mucous sur. faces of the system. Price, The. per bottle Sold by all Druggists. Testimonials free. Wholesale great inet is that fe is a services only question is, “Whom will we sprye Malar‘a cu m the sys by Br wr Hit . an riches COUGHS AND i's Bromchial 7 FrovnLes i hey reli FARoOAT Ieee ve we of the , Genulae, Lapp Drug Grass und Clever Seed, {| Clover Sead Uvelr srass a sme, Wis fk lowest prices! s New York, Va and the T AND SEND IT with “Salzer deed Co, La en packages Boia farm ir Lhe (ale A 4 Pills wtend of silos am's~no others, 5 ™ i Mrs Eliza E. Hills Fenner, N. XY. Indigestion--Distress in the Stomach. Desired Results, “0, 1 Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass. “Tear Sirs and eusativepowers of Hood's Sarsaparilla and cheerfully state that 8 has done wonders for me. For yoars 1 have heen a great sufferer from agonizing headaches and Distress in the Stomach after eating and at other times, accompanied by sour stomach. 1 was very bad with indiges. tion also. I noticed in different papers men Hood’s*=»Cures tion of the cures Hood's Rarsaparilln had wrought and thought 1 would try it. Jt has Accomplished the Desired Results. The pain and distress in the stomach and the severe headache spells have been overcome as well as my indigestion. 1 can now enjoy a meal without any distress and can recommend Hood's Sarsaparilla as one of the best of medi. cines.' Euiza E. Hives, Fenner, New York, Hood's Pills are pureiv ve etable, eotly harmie s. always reliable sad eMclent, ah very . Take no substi. tlemen or send for Justrated Calalogne giv ine REV. DR. TALMAGE. THE BROOKLYN DIVINE'S SUN- DAY SERMON. Subject: “The Lightning of the Sea.’ Texr: “He maketh a path {5 shine afte him,"—Job xli., 82, If for the next thousand years ministers of religion should preseh from this Bible, thers will yet be texts unexpounded and unex- plained and unappreciated. What little has been said concerning this chapter in Job from which my text is taken bears on the than deseribed as disturbing the ssa, creature it was I know not, Somesay it was a whale, Some aay it was a crocodile, My own opinion is it was a saa Jnonster Dow ex tinet, No creature now floating in Mediter- ranean or Atlantis waters corresponds to What What most interests me is that as it moved on through the deep ft left the waters flash- ing and resplendent. In the words of the text, ‘“He maketh a path to shine alter him.” What was that illumined path? It was phosphorescence, You find it in wake of a ship in the night, especially after rough weather. Phosphorescence is the lightning of the That this figure of speach is correct in describing its appear- incident, After first « time fan. crossing the Atlantic the jean magazine an account of my voyage, in which nothing more fascinated me than the phosphorescence in the ship's wake, I called it the lightning of the sea. HRaturning tomy hotel, 1 found a book of John Ruskin, and the first sentence my eyes foll upon wus his description of phosphorescence, in which he ealled it “‘the lightning of the sea.” Down to the postoffice I hastened to get the manuscript, and with great labor and some expense got possession of the magn- zine artiels and put quotation marks around that one sentence, although it was as orig- inal with me as with John Ruskin, I sug pose that nine-tenths of you living so near the seacoast have watched this marine ap- pearance called phosphorescence, and hope that the other one-tenth may some day be so bappy as to witness if, the sea diamonded ; it is the inflorescence of the billows ; the waves of the erimsoned as was the deep after the sea fight of Lepanto the waves of the ses on fire, There are times when horizon the entire ration with this changes every 1 dazzling color on all fyvou. Yous looking over the taffrail of the yacht ocean steamer, watohing and waiting what new thing the God of beauty will de with the Atlantic, It is the ocean in trans fon : it is the marine world easting its garments of glory in the pathway of ti Almighty as He walks the deep ; it is an verted firmament with all down with it. No pleture can otographer’s Y iran TE t 5 oo 14 f the painter awed and powerless, t is the waves of “en from hd seems | splendor OCEAN strange (0) See its sfars og) sh it, and dr Cann MT] table, thras same MADY respects where we wore { will be ten ve OOK at the tami or into the is where vou ars } mirror were p and feet of not one feet may tri tars has tripe ture of the te after use? It oul my text suggests it, wat infloene after we have gone through it? swer handrads « the immortals, of the world it w habited it." YX saving thwt I pass down thro ence and u through theses galleries, and I am K some one whom I eannot find, I am looking for « who will have no i flaence in this world 100 years from 3ut [ have found the man who has the influence, and I inquire into his history, I find that by a yes or & uo he fod some one's eternity, In time of temptation he gave an affirmative or a negative to some tempta- tion which another, hearing of, was induced 10 decides in the same way, Clear on the other side of the next milion years may be the first you hear of the jong reaching influence of that yes or no, but bear of it you will, Will that father make us path to shine after him? Will that mother make a path to shine after her? You will be walking along these streets or slong that country road 200 years from now in the character your ndants, They will be affected by your courage or FOUL COW ardice, your purity or your depravity, your holiness or your sin. You will make the path to shine alter you or blacken niter you Why should they point ont to us on some mountain two rivalets, one of which passos down into the rivers which pour out into the Pacific Ocean, and the other nivuint lowing down into the rivers which pass out into the Atlantic Ocean? stands at a point where words uttered, or deeds done, or prayers offered, decide oppo. site destinies and opposite oternitics, We see a man planting a tree, nod treading sod on either side of it, and watering it in dry iogve In we are not yours after we are i be as though we never wre Wrong in 1 igh this and! ing § fe and of desc ture, and he never plucks any fraits from its bough. But his children will, We are ail planting trees that will yield froit hundreds den fruit or groves of deadly upas, I am so fascinated with the phosphor. oscence in the track of a ship that 1 have sometimes watehed for a Jong while and have seen nothing on the face of the desp but blackness, ‘The mouth of watery chasms that looked like gaping jaws of hell, Not a of mrf ; not a taper to Hiluminate the might y sepulehors of dead ships ; darkness 5000 feet deep, and more thousands of feet long and That is the kind of wake that & bad man leaves behind him as he plows through the cosan of this life toward the vaster ocean of the great future, Now, suppose an man seated in 6 corner sory or business office among olorks gives ch’ to jolly skepticism. Ho langhs at the Bible, makes sport of the mirseles, speaks of perdition in jokes and laughs nt revivals as a frolic, and at the passage of a funeral procession, whish always solemuaines sensible people, says, “Boys, let's take & drink,” There is in that group a young man who is making a great struggis against temptation and prays night sud morning and his Bible and is asking God for belp day by day. But that gaffaw against Chris. tianity makes him lose his grip of sacred things, and he gives up Rabbath and chureh and morals and goes from bad to worse, till he falls under dissipations, dies in a lazar | houses and is buried in the potter's fleld, | Another young man who heard that jolly skepticism made up his mind that "it makes they shall influsnes for all time, while you add to all that the work of the churches he helipad bulld and of the institutions of mercy he inipad found. Better give up before you 10 measuring of the phosphorescence nll come out at last at the right place,” and { began as 8 consequence to purloin, Some | money that came into his hands for others he applied to his own uses, thinking per- haps he would make it straight some other time, and all would be wall even if he did not make it straight, He ends in the peni- tentinry., That scoffer who uttered the jokes neainst Christianity never realized what bad work he was doing, and he passed on throuah life and out of it and into a futurs that! awn not now going to deplet. I do not propose with asearchlight to show the breakers of the awful coast on which that ship is wrecked, for my business now is to watch the sea after the keol has plowed it, No phosphorescence in the wake of that ship, but behind it two souls struggling in the WAVe-A WO YOUN men destroyed by rock less atin nnd on all sides of them, Blackness of dark fiestas, You know what a gloriously Rev, John Newton was the most but before his conversion he wis a wicked sallor, and on board the shin wich instilled infidelity and vies Into mind of a young man principles which de stroved him, Afterward the two met, and Nowton tried to undo his bad work, but in vain, The young man became worse and worse and died a profligate, horrifying thos who stood by him in his last moments, Batter look out what bad influence yon start, for you may not be able to stop it, It does not require very great fores to rain others, Why was it that many years ago a grout flood nearly destroyed New Orleans A erawfish had burrowed into the banks of the river until the ground was saturated and the banks weakened until the flood burst, But I flod here a man who starts out in with the determination that he will never ss suffering but he will try to al- and naver see discouragement try to cheer it, snd naver with anvbody but he will try to do good, Getting his strength from God, starts from home with high purposs of de all the good he can possibly do none d Whether standing behind talking in the business office hind hisear, or making » rain with a low trader, or out in the fleld with his next neighbor the wisesi rotati the crops, or in the shoo nw good of his life, man Vers Har the life leviate it, mat he will [ret the coun witha pon discuss i OF nakerss joathe " thnre is nnd in his phraseology and in per, that demonistrates the gracs o heart, He ean talk awkwardly drageing it in : - i | an ad § % ROG IS sole some i On religion by the elernal destiny, For fifty or si alfnrwar i anw shou maket of a gospel minister 5 remarks had « auion fo recall a fight in a farmhouses When Iwasa boy a un evangelict spending s night at my father’s , who said something and tseratifal and impresseive that it led ma into the kingdom of God and decided my destiny for this world and the next, You wi toe fare twenty-four hours £o by, mest some man y¢ woman with a big pack of care and trou- bie. and you may say something to him or her that will endure uotil this world shall have been so far lost in the past that nothing but the streteh of angelic memory will able to realize that it ever existed at alk f am not talking of remarkable men and women. but of what ordinary folks ean do 1 am not speaking otf the phosphoras in track of a Newfoundland fshiug smack, God makes thunderbolts out «parks, and out of the small words and deads ot n small life He can launch a power that will flash and burn and thunder through the Mernities, How do you like this prolongation of your sarthly life by deathless influcnes? Many a habe that died at six months of age by the anxiety eroated in the parent's heart {0 meet that chill in realms seraphic is living yet in the transformed heart and life of those parents and will live on forever in the his. tory of that family. If this be the opportu. nity of ordinary souls, what is the oppor. tunity of those woo have espacial intellectaal or ancial or monetary equipment? Hava tou any arithmetic eapable of eseli- | seating the inflaanes of our good and gra cious friend who a fow days ago went up to rost--(oorge W. Childs, of Philadelphia? si house #0 tender Porn sles the ol Who ean tell the post mortem influences of a Bavonnroln, nn Winkelriod, a Gutenberg, a Marlborough, a Decatur, a Toussaint, a Boli- r, nn Clarkson, an Robert Raikes, a Harlan . who had 125 Sabbath scholars, eighty- four of whom became Christians, and six of ® With gratitu le and penitenes and worship I mention the grandest He that was ever lived, That ship of licht was launched from the heavens nearly 1900 years ago, angelic hosts chanting, and from the celestial waarves the ship sprang into the roughest sen that ever tossed, Its billows were made ip of the wreath of men and devils, Herodie sanhedrinie persecuiions stirring the deen with red wrath, and all the hurricanes { woe smota it until on the rocks of Golgo- ia that life struck with a resound of agony yalled the earth and the heavens, Bat in the wake of that life what a phospho- the cheeks of souls pardoned, and lives reformed, and Nations redeamad, The millennium itself is only ne roll of that radiated wave of gad ness and besnasdiction in sublimest of all s+nsss it may bo said of Him, “Hemaveth & path toshine after Him,” But I eannot upon that luminosity that follows ships without realizing how fond the Lort is of Hife, That fire of the desp is myriads of creatures all a-swim and a- and p-romp in parks of marine beauty and parterred and rossated and ned by Omnipotense, What isthe use 0! thoss creatures called by the naturalists crustaceans” and “copepods.” not more than one out of hundreds of billions of which by human God cranted for the same reason that He cregtes ywers in places where no human foot ever makes them tremble, and no human nostril r inhates thelr redsalence, and no human eye over sees thelr In the botanioal world they prove that God loves flowers, in the marine world the phosphori prove that loves life, and He loves ile in play, life io ney of gladness, life in exuberance, %0 I am led to believe that He loves ¢ mission as fully The Bon of God fhiave life and have it But I am glad to tell you tthe God eritic at the head of +. or an infinite scold, or 8 God better waddings ighter, an Nuna Sahit rescancs of smiles on the look LPS VET Seen oye’ SAE a" charm, nw i i f ms sometimes de. 8 8 harsh the funerais than if profars tears 10 ia a for O04 the universe 1 whether the Majestic He nursery iar to garret, how much that oil iy smonped w the most prosper. i i You know « ow nek an hergtsn SO invalid who is appetite, She cannot sannot eat, Broil a von and take It to her before night and her poor appetite inlo Keen relish, ' You know of some ons Yho likes 1. and vou lke him, and he ought to be a tell him what religion has for you, and ask him if you ean pray for him { some of weil Christian, Go done Ob, for a mition so charged with sweetness and light that we cannot help st shine! Remember if you cannot be a leviathan lashing the ocean into fury you san be one of the phosphori, doing your part toward making & path of phosphoreacence, hon I will tell sou what impression you will leave as you pase through this life and after you are gone, I will tell you to your face and not leave it for the minister who ofl- firiatos at vOur ohseuios, The faliars in ali eulogium of the departed is that they eannot hear it, All hear it ex. cept the one most interested, This, in sab stance, is what I or some one alse will say of you on such an osoasion : “We gather for « It is how many tears he wiped or how Haine fas impossible to tell away, how many burdens he lifted, thirty years without one word of defams- tion or sourrility or scandal, and putting a chief emphasis on virtue and charity | and olean intelligences, be reaped a fortans for himeel! sed chen distributed a vast | amount of ft among the poor and strugaling | putting hiv invalid and aged reporters on | pensions, until his name stands everywhere jor largn heartedness and sympatny nad ! help and highest style of Christian gentle man, In an ors which had ie the chaire of its i joccnaiiom a Horace Gresley, and a Henry J. | Raymond, and a James Gordon Baanstt, and | ap Brastas Brooks, and a George William | Cartix, and an Irenaeus Prime, none of them 1 will be longer remembered than George W. Childe, Staying away from the unveiling of the monument he had reared at large ex. | pense in our Greenwood in memory of Pro- i | fessor Proctor, the astronomer, lest | should | paid for the monument. Tf all seknowl- | sdged a representative of the highest Ameri. | own jonenaliem, | Ifyou would ealeulate hie influence for | ood, vou must count how many shestx of NEWRDA| have been published in the aarter of a century, and how many people have read them, and +h5 effect not only upon those readers, but upon all whom tal in saving. His influence will never oon. We are all better for having known him. “That pillow of flowers on the casket waa presented by his Sabbath-school class, all of That eross of hose i i i § mission, and the other was from a prison cell which he hat often visited to encourage repentance in a young man who had done wrong. hose three loose flowers mean quite as much as the garlands now breathing their aroma throngh this saddened home crowded with sympathizers. ‘Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord. They rest from thei: labors, and their works do follow them." * Or if it should be the more solemn burial at sen, lot it be after the sun has gons do and the captain line read the ap liturgy, and the ship's bell has { lod, a on are lot down fromthe stern of the vesssl nie the resplendent phosphoresestios at the wake of the ship, Then lst some one say, in the words of my text, “He makoth a path to shine after him,” Win mI AGS Virginia City, Nev, is 6400 feet above the ses. vin Is PARC FCs A006 Fang on ema G3 x £9 bed 4 Lins rreatest ROYA Writes of Church History. Rev. Dr. Philip Schafl, éminent as at his home in New York. He was born at Coire, Switzer- land, in 1819, father, who was a soldier, died early in life, and at 10 years of age “boy was forced to earn his own liv ing. He worked the gymnasium at afterwards attended fectures at Halle, Tubingen and Ber- iin. He spent a winter at Rome, working in the library of the Vatican by special permission of the Pope. Last year, or fifty vears later, he worked in this library, securing Pope Leo's permission through a letter from Cardinal Gibbons. Young Schaf! was ordaided in 15844. Then he came to this country and was professor in the Theological Seminary the German d4 Church of the Upited States until the year 1863. in 1870 he accepted the orship of red literature in ) Theological Seminary, in which he was active until a short time ago. He was many times sent to Europe in the interest the American Evangelical Alliance. Dr. Schaff is remembered as Presi- dent of the American Committee historical and DR PHILIP ECHAYY iis way through of Heforme wig of Hest Bible Revision His works are mainly exegetical ssn on IIIs WHEN 3 man but hasn't got to wed, 50 fot anxious essary 8 if he ne were marry- Rag yi iY r Th 7% ENOWLEDGE ngs comfort and improvement ard tends wrsonal enjoyment when rightly a The many, who live bet- ter than others and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more spromptly adapting the world’s best products to the needs of physical being, will sttest the value to health of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Fi Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most soceptable and pleas ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect lax- ative: effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers sng permanently curing constipation It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kid- peys, Liver and Bowels without weak- ening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. p of Figs is for sale by all drug: gists in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is man- ufsctured by the California Fig Byrup Oo. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will not accept any substitute if o OUR RING CURES RHEUMATISM. 0.000 acid tn 1985. A Tree trial of (hose Rings isviven Write for particulars. Waren & Co, Hadiyme, Conn B io A remedy which, if used by Wives abonuttoex : the painful ordeal attendant wpon = taint da BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., Atlanta, GA. BENUS Er 57, Nida Sey The Drummer's Advice. First Passenger (on rajlroad “Traveling man, eh? Familiar with Boom City, 1 presume?” Drummer—*Yessiree. » 2 eA LINE Ne es Os er © Take it in “Glad to hear it. 1 have never there. What hotel would yon La vice me to stop at?” “The Boomton House. “Io you always go there?” ; “wo, 1 have never stopped at that stel. But I've been to all the rest.” —aNew York Weekly been How to Eat an Orange. Those who take an orange every morning may like 10 try the manner of eating them that prevails in the land OYanges, Take a thin-skinned, heavy orange, thrusts fork through it from the stem end, snd with a shary knife cut the rird away, beginning at the fork and cutting downward, Place the orange on ice for half an hour and bring it to the table with the fork still in it. If oranges are goxi they can be from the pulp with perfect ease, 1 satisfaction than other way 4 Rien and w much more CURES OT S To build up both solid flesh sud strength after grip, pneumonia, fevers and other prostraiiag diseases, there is nothing to equal Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. PROSTRATION FOLLOWING GRIP. Mra Rrvpex GARRETY, King George C. H., Va, writes: “1 was taken with grip which Suoally resulted In poeumonis. Was prostrited for three months. Had a terrible and was emaciated ry weak. Was fast g into quick con- on. 1; actor _RnG vw driftir 4 of it without any I had pain in oy Ider and Lack you, and you ed your OTT ok only : y bottles 1 could sit rom thi grave, i strength” Mus GARRET one hott) After tw i Deen save vos pleteeet of our 13 advert te, of wh thie os Ne ort ls worth $28 and we will slisw you that seouni for Lie Srdiowiny wa Ee of owe tine by © veg willy 24 This pope wed stely @ ftv Tor w wir sab pears, armel got yo and Awtos 2 ws Eve ine? ome Op eddrem of bth svibarviber which Chey Gove ol iggmd, Tuy rine Hank av (TEKS atte with The wane end 9 ww ¥ will Allow YE bt TOW AND OST OF OTH SEW, LARGE MIZE, sli *TEEL FEED 1 TORTE 0 Os ¥ Ome JeTEes 3 Ee » Food Dulter ® pow in ase ae the s whet #1 Br? wppenred po Ars BE take wed hold ot, the hersvtor Bleed Towers t Pow carl pee . * ® thaw Sor " Famed rity he Sornighed on the 8 e terens. THESE TERRES CIVE 79 THIS SERIES OF SE ADVERTISENENTS & CASS YALE OF #25. We rbnll offer of tomy wriicies for w Phpse wl vert oi pie eapies of Fa Trak, fo w whili ms we we w EN jut penty © be » Sheed showing ony The rash thems, i part passes). Ope Ww Wwe Tool a wpe r » FEVIRETt pugwovers of» ¢ reed woth t Ww he & "4 vd sfvertismmmetd wa Bee Or auld Frame for forme and eusers’ use Tt 35 8 T POLE SAW WITH PLEFICT SAFETY €T ARDS, " seh bows pover Shan eed inery bugs und has un hetier THIS Bg Saw FRANE WILL BP GIVES FON S18 ASE FItE COPITE CLIPPED AS ABOVE OF ADVERTISE. BERT Se 8 in ives » her we are go spre of i Very a ww ug to make eww wi vet ety + Windmills wanghd of wsivg » wind Ww Tear wwite se af once, stalk og 2 ven think yeu will peed, wiwther Pomp ong or Gesred, und if posite we will maketyou « bers! offer The pout your, though one of upparslivied Bosseis! Sime turbenee and busivess de prowion wer one of grest prosperity to the Aer moter Us, The Past thet (he dermoioy Ca in the past six years Bas he sements in pert § 11 you hinve wny t wifi § Frice har ve Govnded greviiv te lene and bee broad te ite Pactery an enormous volume of business. Even of The very ow prices ot wikioh we wail Bieel Windmills sof Weel Towers, wade i the sont pe fort manner, of The west Tort won. it, and GALYANTZED. AY THE. CORPLI ION, THIS PERFECTLY PROTECTING EVERY PORTION oF THE RETAL, #1 ix possible fo save & fou tenis on serh wat, snd Thess few cents on the suarmeons wawher of evils wre wheily satilactury to Hee Bermoter Or whieh bes alas Bevived move plesvare Trew Use servieor 11 haw ven Gered ou grest wumier of yeoyle sud From She pride takes in deing well whateer # pate ite hands 86, Duan from the money 1 makes from i seletproes. Tho pear, beewuse it bors iin materiel wore chanply ard ee ports En enorteeus intreeee In Re ever growing heise, " Mere Ita patrons & vast incronee bn Ube guaniiiy sed material pploped In (he ronsirastioe of ile Fiend Towers, sopompanying disgrem, 83.222 12 shows the smalion that will be weed by it in the corner poste of Towers sven the 80 wheel, Por De 167 we ws v6 Theneanie of Sone oF amghen for Towern, peldarlivg and very srnighl wad period wre mew being Gelivered at wr works Ofes whe bev a few Sons, wold Tereforen yout's supply, of Sa 0 whoth they are wwing Tor S01. IDF and sven for 100 wheelie, will Fond this puragreph @ith wurpriee nd sorvew, site we have Bot previously given them amg formalin concerning whel we will wwe for 4 The Aermotor Co. proposes te ditrilate $500 IN CASE 3X PRIZES for the bent wasnys written by the wile son or Seger of a arene sr weer of p41) rusaring tne quinn, “WHY SHOULD 1080 AN AERBOTOR 1" For sonditmns in and amounts and rosmbers of prises send Bor to the Serine On, Chines, of te its brane, Prameinon, Kane ony, Linoein, Nob. Sioux Oty, lows, w oeapotin, Dofain, or 8 Park Plies, New York City, bermebonn, Pumping sod Geared sane price, 7 Sued, ofl Gl onsiond 3 Pers Completion. Seiivered Troe om cove 5 Ohieage end shipped 98 way one, anywho, st Vie following prions i 6-t. $20. (2. 550. 10-4. $128, a" 0 SAY WORLD'S ) SAE