She Centre democrat BELLEFONTE, PA. The Largest, Cheapest nnd Best Paper PUBLtfItIKD IN t'KNTKK COUNTY. From llio Now Yutk Otmorrcr. INTERNATIONAL LESSONS. SfCOiul (Quarter, UT nrv. lItXRT M. UROI T, D. U. MAY 29. Letsun 9. PARABLE OP THE POUNDS. I.URS 19:tt-27. OoLDts TUT "So. lh<-n, .<-rjr on of ua aliiill Kl<" h count of hlnuM-tf to (Jod."—RoOlHlia II : 12. Central Thilh .—Patient fidelity shall, in due time, receive rich reward. This parable is not identical with that of the talents recorded by Matthew. Between the two there are striking re semblance* ; but the points of differ ence are more marked and great. They •were spoken at different times and places, and are unlike in structure and purpose. In his journey to Jerusalem our Sav iour had reaabed Jericho. As he en tered the town ho healed the blind Bar timieus and another blind man whose name is not given, lie visited the house of /.accheus; and it was probably while standing at his door that he spoke the parable of the Pounds. To understand its meaning it is to be noticed that, in his present approach to Jerusalem,our Saviour was accompanied by increasing crowds of expectant peo ple. They saw in him their long-prom sed Deliverer and King. They thought "that the kingdom of God should im mediately appear." Moreover, they had false ideas ot what that kingdom was to be. Kven the disciples looked for per sonal greatness and ease, not for trial and patient and often lowly service. It was to correct these notions that the Saviour now addressed the eager company. The form of the parable was drawn from actual history. It was by no means an unheard-of thing for a prince of noble birth to go to a far coun try (as Herod and his son Archelau* went to Rome) to submit his claims nnd receive a royal title. Jesus himself was the real Nobleman, and heaven the far country to which he was soon to go. He was now in his state of humiliation. Reascending where he was before, he was to receive "dominion and glory and a kingdom." By his Spirit he would always abide with his people, but in his visible person he would tor a time be absent. As ate Vof their fidelity he would commit to his servants, left be hind, important interests. But. having received the kingdom from the Father, he would in due time return. Then to each would he give gracious reward, All judgment having been committed to his bands, he would come to judge. It is to be observed that to each of the servants he gives the same, —namely, a pound. Evidently this does not stand for mental gifts and possessions. For in respect to these (iod's servants greatly differ. More likely it stands tor the grace which is common to all. To know the truth, to be hopefully a disciple, to be accounted God's redeemed child, is a great opportunity for service. It opens the way to honor our Master. It is a ground of great obligation. God calls his own that they may bear witness for him. Thus he tests them. Thus char acter is developed. Thus fidelity is evinced. In this all God's children are espial. Each has his pound. Doubtless the great practical truth of the lesson is, that just according to our use of opportunities to serve shall we be judged. Differing degrees of faith fulness will determine the differing re wards. He who does much for Christ will be the more richly blest. There is great cheer in this for the self-distrustful. Heavenly treasure will not be determined by the talents we possessor the places we fill. Have we been faithful? That will be the all- j important question. There is also a very important lesson here with respect to the nature of the Christian's reward. It will not lie to bask in sunshine, or to give ourselves to beatific visions, or idly to worship and sing. Heaven will lack no pure delight; but here we are taught that the rewards of service wilt mainly consist in enlarg- j ed opportunity. To have been faithful with little will be to be made ruler over much. The spirit which has learned to delight in consecrated service, in loving work, will have so much the wider sphere. This is not the heaven the sensual and the selfish covet. Never * theless it is the true heaven, that "joy of our Ix>rd" on which the faithful are bidden enter. The difference in our future blessedness as compared with the present will largely be, that, togeth er with enlarged being and scope, we shall have escape from weakness and earthly ills. The testing will be over. Character will be established. All con ditions will favor peace and joy. The penalty of the unfaithful will be bitter indeed. Even opportunity is taken away. Unloving, unfit for either service or the companionship of those who delight to serve, nothing is left but separation from the true and good. It is plain that by the "citizens" who would not that Christ should reign over them are meant-those who openly re ject hia service. Defiant and scornful, their punishment is as severe as it is hopeless. PRACTICAL ST'OOISTIONS. 1. Oar great concern should be not to determine just how soon or in what precise manner the Lord will come again. Far more important is it that be should find us ready. 2. The highest human ambition is not to be learned, or rich, or "cultured," to posse** superior attainments, or to fill a conspicuous plaoe. To lie humbly, steadfastly, diligently doing bis work, is far better. Hucn will the King delight to honor. 3. Just to be a Christian—pardoned, renewed, saved,—opens boundless op portunity to do good. To enter the Christian fold is the first step in the highest usefulness. It is to begin ser vice, which may forever widen. 4. It is a great mistake to plead want of talent or opportunity as an excuse for indolence in the Lord's work. The Master expects service from ell. No excuse will appear good when wo give our account. The groat peril of tho Christian is self indulgence. Indeed, a selfish, self pleasing Christian is a contradiction. For such there is no place in heaven. Against such a spirit there is need ol ceaseless vigilance and prayer. 0. The Last Day will be truly a "rev elation of tho righteous judgment of God;" it will reveal tho judgment as righteous, 'hit of their own mouths will thu wicked be condemned. 7. It is sometimes said that it is bet ter to be an open rejecter of God than an unprofitable professor. Such a view is not countenanced in this parable. The idle servant is excluded from all glory and heavenly joy; but the con demnation of those who said, "Wo will not have this man to reign over us," is more startling in its severity. 9. Is it not a great blessing to be still living in the midst of opportunity to make sure the "Well done" ol the Di vine Master? For such may also make sure an exceeding great reward. Even for the saved there will be degrees of glory. Every cup will indeed tie full: but what a difference will there be in the capacity of the cups! "Wave I con sented to Christ's rule?" should be my first eager question. "When the Master comes will he find me in the ranks of the faithlul?" should be the second.; -♦ THE IH KK ir.U MALE. RON ANTIC CARTER OF THE RICHEST or I REM. II I'RISCES. Paris lia-s above all cities an exclusive hierarchy tenacious of caste. Entrance to the Faubourg St. Hnnoro implies six teen quartering* at the least. For a century these great families, the pale spectre of that splendid noblesse that dazzled the courts in tho days of the BourlxiiiH, have lived in exclusion. Dur ing the Empire they held austerely aloof from the parvenu monarch and alluded to the Emperor and Empress as M. and Madame Bonaparte. An event that draws them from their seclusion interests all Paris, and what interests Paris, Victor Hugo says, must necessa rily be of interest to the world. This event was the appearance of the Duke d'Aumale the other day as the master of ceremonies at the academic recep tion of Rousse a* the successor of the late Jules Favre among the immortals. The Duke i the fourth son of the Or leans King Louis Philippe. About bis life there attaches more scandal and piquant on dits than any member of the House of Bourbon since the merry and valorous monarch Henry IN*. The Duke has been for forty years a force in a certain sort in the salons and tho policy of France. He came into notice in scandal and tragedy of tone and incidents in keeping with the lurid annals of bis house. It was the Duke d'Aumale who succeeded to the colo-sal inheritance of the Prince de t'onde, Duke de Bourbon—the last of the great race of I'onde. The Prince's proper ties and revenues exceeded in affluence the Crown revenues and lands. He was an old man when Charles X, was driven front Paris, in IS3O. He had been an exile during the great revolution and on the return of the Bourbon* bis es tates were restored, with accumulated interest, at the national expense. Dor ing his exile lie bad fallen in with an English adventure**, named Daws, whom be c.ius-d to be created Brones so soon as the King was in power. This woman wis nta i for social recog - ed a J I'llileries and the title <--•<. The Baron soon discovered the relations he tween his wife and the Prince and I lew his own brains out. She was none tin less bent upon being the leader of the court of Maria Amelia, mother of the Duke .1' Aumale. The < jueen knowing the woman's bold uiion the old and childless Prince de ' ,'onde, encourage I her hopes, hilt made as the price of recognition the adoption by the oi l Prince of the Duke d'Aumale as bis heir, i'ne morning the Prince de Con de, who had arranged for a grand hunt ing party near his chateau, was found hanging to hi* window, strangled to death. The affair was wrapped in pro found mystery, but a suit brought by certain friends of the Prince left no doubt that lie bad been foully dealt with the very day after lie had been in duced to make a will in favor of the fourth aon of the house of < irleans, which he held in cordial haired. There was no doubt whatever that the mistress had either made way with the last of the Conde* or had admitted the assas sin* to hi* chamber, a* she alone had the keys. The Duke d' Aumale, in spite of the proof of fraud and murder, gained pos session of the estate, lie became at once a potent personage in the mon archy. His excesses were the talk of tho club*, and when, in IMS, the Re public drove hia father, King Ix>ui* Philippe, out, he carried a splendid fortune into exile. He resented a fling made against the vpnality and avari ciousness of his family, as well as against the parsimony of the King, by Prince Napoleon Jerome, the present pretender, and sent him a challenge from Chiswiok, near London, where the Orleans family had established them selves in regal condition*, in the very walks and haunts of Pope. But the Emperor forbade the combat, and H was front thi* that Prince Napoleon derived the character of coward and nickname of "Plon-I'lon," by which he is known to this day. On the fall of the empire d'Aumale returned to Paris. Hi* name had be come known for intrigue* even in Ixn don. but he had bravely become settled in hi* chateau when Paris was agape over hi* escapades, Hi* most widely gossipned liaison was with Madame moiselle Croixette, the rival of Sarah Bernhardt in the Comedie Francaine, whose beauty ten years ago was the reigning theme in the club* and on the boulevard*. But the Duke d'Aumale is a crafty fellow, who hojies to secure the crown one of these bright day*, lie managed to ingratiate himself with Thiers during his presidency nnd was made president of the Basaine court-martial. He was restored to his rank in the French army, and is now Lieutenant General and Inspector General of the forces. He was sure of being Mar Mohan's suc cessor, either as king or dictator, and hitM taken his disappointment with a pood deal of manifest chagrin. Ho tvu elected metnher of the Academy of Franco in 1871, and only figured an a speaker week before la*t at the recep tion of Rouhho. who Hucceod* the great Republican orator, the late •luted Favre. It fell to the lot of the Duko d'Aumale to make the dpeech ot welcome, and with hid tldtml adroitness he Hitcceeded in avoiding any of the burning que*- lion which it would lie diingeroua for a princely person to meddle with in the piedeut democratic efl'erveacenco of the French elector.*. Ah may he inferred, the occniiion wbh one log with importance to the arinto cratic caste. The Faubourg St. tier main was out in such an array as few Parisians remember nince the day of the "King." The "immortals'' of the Academy seem to he the last vestige of the old condition of things, and upon their rare reception the A autt noblcsm turn out to mark their reverence lor the only institution that has survived the sacrilegious hand of revolution and democracy, it was Richelieu, the orig inal and prototype of Rismark, who founded this serene and illustrious San lied run, and the body exists to this day almost on the plan drawn up by the great and unscrupulous prelate, the 'animal King," bh lie was called, quite as much in hate and fear as in awe or reverence. Admission to the "receptions," as the installation of an immortal is called, is no easy matter even lor the elect of the Faubourg. A duchess may bo seen put to the severe shifts and intrigue of an ordinary plebeian in the rare cases where duke* and prinoea are to be seat ed as members or act as masters of the stately ceremonials. The home of the "Immortals" is called tho "Palace of the Institute of France." It is histori cal in the most sinister and picturesque sense. Its foundations are those upon which the mysterious "Tour de Nesle' rested ; from which the profligate Marguerite of Burgundy tlung her lov er* into the Seine when she had no further desire for them. The gabled tower in which her amours were carried on is still shown in prints in the neigh borhood, but the river has been very much narrowed sinco those days, and a wide and sumptuous roadway runs be tween the old tower and the water. The ampilheatre or reception hall of the institution it aliout the *ire of th oM .senate room in Wa-hington ami right under a nunature flonn>, At bet not mora than thraa hundred people can be aqeesed in. A the iHike d'Au inula *,w to figure on thi* occasion a the master of the reremonial and eu logmt of the ni iv mfinUr, in addition to the score* of duchesses and minor nobility there were queen* qml ex queen* and the Marchalede MicMahon. Duchess of Magenta. • ■ —♦ h♦ , iitinky Hoy Marksman Sixty Vftir* Mllff, In Mr. .lo*iah i t 'uinoy's reminiscence* of Washington iit wo find the fol lowing: Another remembered occasion wa* a state dinner of forty ladies and gentle. , men, very splendid and rather stiff My place wa* next a pretty Mi* ft il lett, of Kentucky; but, to aay the truth. ; the conversation rather dragged l twcon u until I discovered that we ha I a mutual fro-nd in I .art Anderson, of Cincinnati. I ha>l known well in college, and rem ember when he ar rive l in Cambridge, a small, flaxen haired boy, accompanied bv two com pan ion* from the distant \Ve*t. They iia I emus all the wav from Kentucky 'ill horehack. their effect* being borne in s eldie b tgs behind tlie rider*. There wa* no public conveyance, the roads were execrable, and tins manly mode ol ti tveiing "as then the only way of get ting to Harvard, Now, I happened to have n storv to tell about our friend Anderson, which I felt sure would grat- | ify the pride of a Kentuckiau: and as I have not recorded a word of what my (air neighbor aid to me, I can only i fall back upon what I said to her, and the substance of rny tale might be written out thus : Oxford street, in Cambridge, is at present a very decorou* thoroughfare, not at all adapted to the wild sport of turkey-shooting, for which purpose the ground it occupies wa* used when I was in college, we stood with our (tack* to the site of Memorial Hall, and di* charged rifle* at long range at a turkey which wa* dimly discernible in the dis tanee. A small fee was demanded for the privilege of shooting, and the turk j ey w as to lie given to any one who could hit it. Itut, except for some chance shot, like that made by Mr. Tupman when out rook shooting, it was safe to predict that nobody would hit it. The usual end of a Harvard turkey shooting wa* the departure of the proprietor of the turkeys with all hi* bird* and all our sixpence*. Still, there was the ex citement of a lottery about it, if nothing else. The ball, if discharged, must strike somewhere; and, if so, why might it not happen to strike the turk ey ? The logic wa* simply irresistible. A fowl of tht magnitude would he * most desirable addition to the meagre fre furnished by the college commons ; and so the rifle* cracked, with small re suits to the students and splendid prof it* to the turkey-man. One day a little tow-headed fellow ap|>eared on the field and desires! to take part in the *port. Though he seemed almost too young to l> trusted with a rifle, the master of the fowls (foreseeing future gains) was quite willing he should try. He mutt first receive proper instructions about the holding and pointing of hi* piece, and then there would really be no danger. Young loirs received the directions with great good nature, raised the rifle, and down went the turkey. The man stared with amusement, and then broke into a smile. "Try it again, foung one," said lie; "most any one can throw sixes once, you know.'' Another bird was procur ed, and the ball flew to the mark with the same result. The law of chances wa* now so overwhelmingly in favor of the turkey-man that a third bird was set up with some confidence. Again the boy raised his rifle, and that third turkey waa added to the banquet upon which his friends would regale. M W ell, where in"— -in the Upited Mutes, let us call it "did you com* from f" exclaim ed the master of the fowls, who began to realise that his occupation waa gone. 1 "I came from the Htate of Kentuoky, sir," answered Lars Anderson, proudly ; "and next time you meet a gentleman from that (State, just remember there's not much you can tell him about a rille. That's all." And thus it ws* that our good friend Anderson broke the ice between pretty Mis Bullet t and myself ut that solemn dinner of high state, nearly fifty live yeses ago. I'KRKKAI. FINAM KS. Src'y Mlmloin (nils In Coupon Flies. holder* can r.xTr.su at rrs < rnt — Tlir. SAME I'RIVII.EOE ACt'OHOED $2.00,- 000,000 REGISTERED EIVES. Washington, May 12.—Secretary Win deiu to-day issued the 10,' id call for bonds, with a provision for the contin uance of ft per cents at .'!} per cent. The cull gives notice that the principal and accrued interest of the five per cent, coupon bonds issued under the acts of duly 14, IN7O, and January 20, 1871, and now outstanding and uncall ed, will ho paid at the Treasury, in Washington, on the 12th ol August, 1881, and that the interest on said bonds will cease on that day, and none of these bonds will hereafter be ex changed for registered bonds bearing per cent, interest -, provided, however, that in case any of the holders ot the said coupon bonds shall request to have their bond* continued during the pleas ure of the Government with interest at the rate of .'JJ |ser cent, per annum in lieu of their payment at the date abo've specified, such request will be granted if the bond* are received by the Secre tary for that purpose <>n or before the first day of July, 1881. The Secretary also announces that until the dote mentioned! July 1.1*81) ho will receive for continuance in like manner, subject to like condition*, any ot tho uncalled f per cent, registered tmnds of tho acta of July if, I*7o, and January 20, I*7l, to an amount not ex ceediog |2'iO,UOO.OOO, tho remainder of the loan being reserved, with a view of it* payment from the surplus revenues. Foreign holders of any of tho !i per cent, bond* above described may have them continued as above provided u|Hin the receipt of the bonds at the Govern rnent agency established for that pur pose at the banking house of Messrs. Morton, Rose A Co., Bartholomew l.ane, I/ondon, Fngland. I"l,n the receipt of bond* to be con tinued as above provided the interest thereon to August 12, I**l, will be pre paid at the rale the bond* now bear. The department will pay no expense of tran*|M>rtation on bond* received under the provision* of tins circular, hut the bond* returned wilt t>e ont by prepaid registered mail unless the owners other wise direct. The amount of the coupon bond* above referred to which are now out standing and covered by tin* call i* about $120,00.000. The total amount of the registered '< torrent, bonds issbout $- >0,000.000. The privilege of extend ing registered per cent* at the reduced rate of interest being limited to f (Ml.ooo. there will remain at least $75,- 000 niinusnce t j„-r cent. There sre known to be aboui sl7,(Mi. ot► I tnore of these bond* now m the Treasurer's office which lists not been acted upon, which will swell the ag gregate amount received lor onntinu snce to more than $170,000,0, leaving hut about #.10.000,000 Vet to tie heard from. No return* have yet been re ceived from the London agency. The Royal Marriage at Vienna. The marriage of the Crown I'rince Rudolph of Austria and the Princess Mechanic of Belgium w*s most imjios ingly solemnised at the Church of .St. Augustine, in Vienna, on Tuesday, the 10th instant. An immense multitude collected in the streets through which the imperial and royal personage* pro ceeded to the church. An hour l>efore the commencement of the ceremony the church was densely crowded by a brilliant and striking assembly. A fan fare of trumpets signalled the arrival of the cortege at the church door, where it was received by Cardinal Von Sell wartenberg at the head of his clergy. Their Majestiea took seats under a canopy over a throne. The bridal pair proceeded to their places before the sanctuary rails, where they offered a short prayer. After a brief address from the Cardinal the marriage cere mony was proceeded with. At the moment the rings were exchanged peals broke forth from the bells of the city, and sslvos of artillery were fired. At the conclusion of the ceremony a Te Deum was sung, after which the llof hurg Choir executed an old German march. Tne newly-married pair, ac companied by the other imperial and royal personages, then returned to the City Paiace of the liofburg. ■ ■ i ■■■ What Is the Itible l,lket It it like a Urge, beautiful tree, which bears sweet fruit for those who are hun gry, and affords shelter and shade for the pilgrims on their way to the king dom of heaven. It is like a cabinet of jewels and pre cinus stones, which are not only to be looked at and admired, but used and worn. It is like a telescope that brings dis tant objects and far off things of the world very near to that we can see something of their beauty and import ance. It is like a treasure-house or a store house for all sorts of value and useful things, and which are to be had without money and without price. •, It is like a deep, broad, calm flowing river, the banks of which are green and flowery, where birds sing and lambs play, and dear little children are loving and happy. That lltil,hell letter. Vrmn th* N. w Vurk HtrsM. ii '.'V Jri'* '".relation to the Garfield lluhhen li tters have not yet been fully published. They are these ; Mr. Jewell wo* constantly complain ing of the backward iichh of the Wash ington people in making contribution* to the campaign fund*, and Present Hayes wa* applied to by the chairmen of the National Kxecutive committee* jointly to use hi* influence with the department* to procure subscription*. I hi* Mr. Hayes cunningly evaded, and Mr. Hubbell then set about working the departments himself. Hi* success was not very encouraging, and at la*t the star route contractors were thought of \ a- a promising placer, the other govern- i ruent contractors having been pretty generally assessed. Brady was ser.t for, i and Hubbell asked him for aid, suggest nig that lie ought to he-able to raise a j largo amount from the star route con tractors who had made so go>>d a thing out of the government. Brady told Hubbell that the star route contractors wore pretty sharp people and that lie would not ask them lor a large contri tuition without having something to show to prove that the request came | frotq Mr.Garfield. It would be useless, he said, to do so, a* they were capable of supposing that lie or lluhbell might ; want the money to put into their own pockets. Mr. Hubbell wrote these facts to Mr. Garfield, who knew what the star route contracts were worth, and urged him to write Brady a letter ask- j ing him to apply to tho contractors for assistance. HuM-ell also complained of the backwardness of the departments in subscribing to the funds, and sug gpsted that it might tie advisable to j ! touch them up a* well. It would be : curious reading if that letter could be , obtained for publication. After the re j I ceipt of Hubbell * communication Mr. j I Garfield bad a conversation with ex | Senator I'orsey, and asked hi* advice j in to the expediency of writing to Brady on the subject of getting contribution* ; (rorn the star route contractors. Mr. j I'orsey in good faith counselled against j It, and suggested that a letter couched in general term* might be addressed to HuObell, which he might show to Brady j and which Brady might, if necessary, j show to the star route people from j whom he was expected to raise money. This advice was followed, and hence the Garfield letter to Hubhvll. which begged assistance from Brady, the head , ; (>l tbe star route service, and inquired "how all the other departments were doing. ' Tin* letter was first carried - round by Hubbell to all the depart j ments to stir them up to activity and j I was then banded to Brady to he used 1 ; to obtain contribution* from the tar ; route contractor* and their "double*.'' ! I hi* is the true hi*lory of that episode j <>f the campaign. A Runaway Train. _____ It < ORES !*IO At. TOON A AT TIIE HATE Or ! TWENTt riVB MILES AN Hot R. A dispatch from Altoona dated May 16, says: "ne of the most miraculous j escapes in the history of railroading j happened here this evening to the Cm- ' I cinnati express, due here at 9 o'clock, ! iu coming down the mountain. The engine lost control of the train by the automatic air brakes becoming unman ageable to hold the large train of twelve i ar. 'The engineer whistled "down brakes" and name into the depot at the rate of twenty-five roilea per hour whistling for clear track, wiurfi had the • •fleet of bringing thousand* to the depot to see tier steaming through at a terrible rale, but fortunately an en j gine which was in waiting at the Ninth street cros.ing was run into and stop |-ed the runaway train. Three engines •site disabled, the cylinder heads being - (down out. The passengers were tern l.ly scared. Never since Altoona was a railroad centre ha an accident occur r< I which created such a | anic. The j engineers, Aaron I'ougherly and Gen. !''a*uly. deserve special mention and credit for remaining at their jtosts. No ; jerson* w-re hurt. . .... f rp Failure in Fngland. The Worht special cable letter say* j that there is every prospect of another had harvest in F.ngland. Drought and ! late frosts have already killed oats and j barley, and the growth of wheat hat j been arrested at the most critical period ■ of the season. A* Mr. Jennings |K>iots out. there has not been a really good j harvest in Britain since 1874, and an other failure will aeriously aggravate the ' stagnation and depression which prevail at the great manufacturing centre*. "It is an ill wind which blow* nobody good," and the Western farmer with his largely increased acreage of cere*'* sown this year will profit by .the misfor tune* of bis sorely beset Knglish brother. Make Home < keerfal. In a recent lecture Rev. I)r. Vincent was unsparing in hi* condemnation of the practice of debarring children from the use ot the house—all parts of it— as their home, and saving the carpet* and furniture at tbe cost of their com fort and the risk of their ruin. If quiet was the great thing wanted, he recom mended the parents to go to the ceme tery ; they were sure to find it there. For his part he wanted his hoy to feel that tbe freest, jolliest place on earth was his father's house. The census of 1881, in Kngland, re veals the startling fact that a decease in the population o7 rural parishes in the west of the country is going on with a rapidity which threatens almost entire depopulation. Towns are becoming villacea and villagee hamlets, while hamlets are passing out of existence. A statement just issued by the board of revision of taxes of tbe valuation of the real and personal property of Phil adelphia for the present year shows an aggregate subject to city taxation of S.V43 t 6<)9,t29, being an increase over 1880 of $7,001,296. A young lady of Madiaon, Wis., re ceived many anonymous poems of an amorous and flatterlug character. She finally submitted thern to an intimata friend, a married lady, who recognised the handwriting m her husband'*, and was a alight stoim in that household. . Set!j Artrrrtiwmetif*. \ \\r K (icxiro to fall t lie* attention of * fmwmn to to M iiMf Jtll'MON j fl"Ql l"~t m,k-r* |,r i• ■ hi* ■ >,(. anil III* I ItoHj t m laflaMw an ■ ■ • , ~, n,* j nutkrl fa, 11,, I. *,ll , , *,.|| u. ',ll lon ll* Iwl .1* J. I,|. 1,*,,,. , 1., Am„* I,„r .Hvk f li,.|*w**i. li. (.ni.lK**. ToS I'IIKTAUI.K EJIOIN I M 11.1.! JjV WAO NK. Adriance Reapers & Mowers, '•RAIN IiRII.I>. HAY KtK K> "His PI.AVTHU. I Hill I All f AcT ORAIN IIHIi.I.- 7111.1 -IUM, MA CHINK*. MIARU nitLLKH F|/m - a , I W > 1, (|,o ,11, I • , 1'.t.l All.l V,. ~*,, i ulil ii*|imi, .iint ii.* ( ,. . i ii, ... •inn* ifcmt in U* iiw- l lm|Ari„FbO ,i. I M i , UIIiFTJ < 1 **lt ilr. l-J 1. UOKDoN A LAMMS, i I*-" BKLI.K.rONTK, KA The Planet Jr. Seed Drills VXI Whwl llw"" ami Iln> Firpflv Plows. X I A\ T K want every one who i- intero*t f ? ivw f i *l 4*lii,t* rtiilit ma. ut* II • *Ubtl if | nftllwd GREEN'S Comp. Syrup of Tar, Honey & Bloodrooi It nrnUin* til th virtu nf Ti' Ifi t fKiftYTttrtH for>. with lb# KXflOiTt*A\T? t4 AJSODYXKX, tb* ho| wiir4 Hli'til tit* aid of HEM-iiL) Y lor iliK>it of tt Thmti t4 UiP Try ot# MtJf tt