THE PirTSBTTRG- DISPATCH, MONDAY, JULY 6, 1891. 3 MXSTERY OF THE BEL. Dr. Talmage Talks Learnedly Upon, the Topics of the Weather. IS THERE A FATHER FOR RAIN? llinisters Forget That God Ordains Moist ure, Also Salvation. .A6TROX05IICAL VIEW OP THE SUBJECT Brooklyn, X. T., July 5. Dr. Tal Snage's sermon to-day ison a kind of Gos pel in wjiich few people believe. The weather is a common object of complaint nnd fault-finding, but Dr. Talmage finds a Gospel in it, which to-day he proclaims from the text. "Hath the rain a father?" Job xxxviii., 2fl: This Book of Job has been the subject of unbounded theological wrangle. Jleu have made it the ring in which to display their ecclesiastical pugilism. Some say that the Book of Job is a true history; others, that it is an allegory; others, that it is an epic poem; others, that it is a drama. Some say that Job lived eighteen hundred years be fore Christ, others say that he never lived at alL Some say- that the author of this book was Job; others, David; others. Solomon. The discussion has landed some in blank in fidelity. Xow, I have no trouble with the Book of Job or Kevelation the two most mysterious books in the Bible because of a rule I adopted pome years ago. J. waae aown into a oenpture passage as long as I can touch bot tom, and when I cannot, then I wade out. I used to wade in until it was over my head, and then I got drowned. I study a passage of scripture so long as it is a comfort and help to my soul; but w hen it becomes a perplexity and a spiritual up turning, I quit. In other words, we ought to wade in up to our heart, but never wade in until it is over oujr head. Xo man should ever expect to swim across this great ocean of divine truth. I go down into that ocean as I go down into the Atlantic Ocean at East Hampton, L. L, just far enough to bathe- then I come out". I never had anv idea that with my weak hand and foot 1 could strike my way clear over to Liver pool. I suppose you understand your family genealogy. You know something about your parents, your grandparents,your great grandparents. Perhaps you know where they were born, or where" they died. Have you ever studied the parentage of the thouer: "Hath the rain a father?" This question is not asked by a poetaster or a scientist, but by the head of the universe. Conundrums Proposed to Job. To humble and to save lob. God asks liin 14 questions; about the world's archi tecture, about the refraction of the sun's ravs, about the tides, about the snow crys tal, about the lightnings, and then he ar raigns him w itlfthc interrogation of the text: "Hath the rain a father?" With the scientific wonders of the rain I have noth ing to do. A minister gets through with that kind of sermons within the first three years, and if he has piety enough he gets through with it in the first three months. A sermon has come to me to mean one word of four letters: "help!" You all know that the rain is not an orphan. You "know it is not cast out of the gates of heaven a foundling. You would answer the question of my text in the affirmative. Safelv housed during the storm, you hear the rain beating against the window pane, and you find it searching all the crevices of the window sill. It first comes down in solitary drops, pattering the dust, and then it deluges the fields and angers the mountain torrents, and makes the traveler implore shelter. You know that the rain is not an accident of tlie world's economy. Yon know it was born of the cloud. You know it was rocked in the cradle of the wind. You know it was sting to sleep by the storm. You know it is the flying evangel from heaven to earth. You know it is the Gospel of the weather. You know that God is its father. If this be true, then how wicked is our mourning after climatic changes. The first 11 Sabbaths after I entered the ministry it Etormed. Thiough the week it was e'ear weather, but on the Sabbath the old country meeting house looked like Noah's ark be fore it landed. A lew drenched people sat before a drenched pastor; but most of the fanners stayed at home and thanked God that what was bad for the church was good for the crops. I committed a good deal of Bin in those days in denouncing the weather. Ministers Fret About Stormy Sabbaths. Ministers of the Gospel sometimes fret about stormy Sabbaths, or hot Sabbaths, or inclement Sabbaths. They forget the fact that the same God who ordained the Sab bath and sent forth His ministers to an nounce salvation, also ordained the weather. "Hath the rain a father?" Merchants, also, with their stores filled with new goods, and their clerks hanging idly around the counters, commit the same transgression. There have been seasons when the whole spring and fall trade has been ruined by protracted wet w eather. The merchants then examined the "weather probabilities" with more interest than they read their Bibles. They watched for a patch of blue sky. They went complaining to the store, and came complaining home again. In all that season of wet feet, and dripping garment", and impassable streets, they never once asked the question: 'Hath the rain a father?" So agriculturalists commit this sin. There is nothing more annoying than to have planted corn rot in the ground because of too much moisture, or hay all ready for the mow dashed of a shower, or wheat almost ready for the sickle spoiled with the rust. Howhard it is to bear the agricultural dis appointments. God has infinite resources, but I do not think he has capacity to make . weather to please all the farmers. Some times itis too hot, or is too cold; it is too wet, or is too dry; it is too carlv, or it is too late. They forget tliat the God who prom ised seed time and harvest, summer and winter, cold and heat, also ordained all the climatic chances. There is one question xiuii uuii io nc written on every Darn, on every fence, on eery haystack, on every farmhouse. "Hath the rim a father." A Big Undertaking to Frovide Weather. If we only knew what a vast enterprise It is to provide appropriate weather for this world, we would not be so critical of the l,ord. Isaac Watts, at 10 years ot age, com plained that he did not like the hvmns that were Ming in the English Chapel. " "Well," said his father, "Isaac, instead of your coin plaining about the hymns, go and make hymns that are better."" And he did go and make hymns that were better. Xow, I say to you, if you do not like the weather company, and have a. president, and a secre tnn, and a treasurer, and a board of direct or", ami 510,000,000 of stock, then pro vide weather tnat will suit all of u There is a man who has a weak head, and he cannot stand the glare of the sun. You incst have a cloud always hovering o er him. I like the sunshine; 1 cannot live without plenty of sunlight, so you must al ways liave enough light for me. Two ships uicci iu uim-Auanuc. ine one is going to Southampton, and the other is coming to 2sew York. Provide weather that, while it is abaft for one ship, it is not a head wind for the other. There is a farm that is dried up for the lack of rain, and here is a pleas ure part) going out for a field excursion. Provide weather that will suit the dry larni and the pleasure excursion. No, "sirs, I will not take Si of stock in your weather company. There is only one "Being in the universe who knows enough to provide the right kind of weather for this world. "Hath the rain a father"" My text also suggests God's minute sa pervisaL You see the Divine Sonship in every drop of rain. The jewels of the shower are not flung away by a spendthrift who knows not how many he throws or where they fall. They are all shining princes of heaven. They all have an eter nal lineage. They arc all the children of a king. "Hath the rain a father?" Well, then, I say if God takes notice of every minute raindrop, He will take notice of the "most insignificant affair of my life. The Astronomical View of the Thine. It is the astronomical view of things that "bothers me, We look up into the night heavens, and we say: "Worlds! worlds!" and how insignificant we feel! We stand at the foot of Mount Washington or Mount Blanc, and we feel that we are only insects, and then we say to ourselves "Though the world is so large, the sun is 1,400,000 timeslarger." "O!" we say. "it is no use, if God wheels that great machinery through immensity, he will not take the trouble to look down at me." Infidel conclusion. SatiJrn, Mercury and Jupiter are no more rounded, and weighted, and swung by the hand of God than are the globules ofa'lilac bush the morning after a shower. God is no more in magnitude than he is in min utiae If he has scales to weigh the moun tains, he has balances delicate enough to weigh the infinitesimal. You can no more see Him through the telescope that you can see Him through the microscope; no more n hen you look up than when you look down. Are not the hairs of your head all num bered? and if Himalaya has a God, "hath not the rain a father?" I take tins doctrine of a particular Providence, and I thrust it into the very midst of your cvery-day life. If God fathers a raindrop, is there anything so insignificant in your affairs that God will not father that? When Druyse, the gun smith, invented the needle-gun, which de cided the battle of Sadowa, was it a mere accident? When a farmer's boy showed Blucher a short cut by which he could bring his army up soon enough to decide Waterloo for England, was it a mere accident? When Lord Brron took a piece of money and tossed it up to decide whether or not he should be ofhanced to Miss Millbank, was it a mere accident which side of the money was up and which was down? When the Christian army were besieged at Bcziers, and a drunken drummer came in at mid night and rang the alarm bell,not knowing what he was doing, but waking up the host in time to fight their enemies that moment arriving, was it an accident? When, in one of the Irish wars, a starving mother, flying with her starving child, sank down and fainted on the rocks in the night and her hand fell on a warm bottle of milk, did that just happen so? God Is in the Affairs of 3Ien. God is either in the affairs of men, or our religion is worth nothing at all, and you had better take it away from us, and "in stead of this Bib, which teaches the doc trine, give us a secular book, and let us, as the famous Mr. Pox, the member of Parlia ment, in his last hour, cry out: "Bead me the eighth book of Virgil. O! my friends, let us rouse up to an appreciation of the fact that all the affairs of our life are under a King's command, and under a- Father's watch. Alexander's war horse, Bucepha lus, would allow anybody to mount liim when he was unharnessed; but as soon as thev put on that war horse, Bucephalus, the saddle, and the trappings of the conqueror, Jie would allow no one but Alexander to touch him. And if a soulless horse could have so much pride in his owner, shall not we immortals exult in the fact that w e are owned by a King? "Hath the rain a father?" Again, my subject teaches me that God's dealings with us are inexplicable. That was the original force of my text The rain was a great mystery to the ancients. Thry could not understand how the water should get into the cloud, and getting there, how it should be suspended, or falling, why it should come down in drops. Modern science comes alone; and says there are two portions of air of different temperature, and they are charged with moisture, and the one portion of air decreases in temperature so the water may no longer be held in vapor, and it falls. And they tell us that some of the clouds that look to be only as large as a man's hand, and to be almost quiet in the heavens, are great mountains of mist 4,000 feet from base to top, and that they rush miles a min ute. But after all the brilliant experiments of Dr. James Hutton, and Saussure, and other scientists, there is an infinite mvsterv about the rain. Tlie Unfathomable in the Raindrop. There is an ocean of the unfathomable in every raindrop, and God says to-day as he said in the time of Job: "If you cannot un derstand one drop of rain, do not be sur prised if my dealings with you are inexpli cable." Why does that aged man, decrepit, beggared, vicious, sick of the world, and the world sick of him, live on, while here is a man in mid-life, consecrated to God, hard working, usclul in every respect, who dies? Why does that old gossip, gadding along the street about everybody's business but her own, have such j;ood health, while the Christian mother, with a flock of little ones about her whom she is preparing for usefulness and for heaven the mother who you would think could not be spared an hour from that household why does she lie down and die with a cancer? W hy does that man, selfish to the core, go on adding for tune to fortuue, consuming everyt'iing on himself, continue to prosper, while that man, who has been giving 10 per cent of his income to God and the church, goes into bankruptcy? Before we make stark fools of ourselves, let us stop pressing this everlast ing "why." Let us worship where we can not understand. Let a man take that one question "Why?" and follow it far enough, and push it, and he will land in wretched edness and perdition. We want in our theology fewer interrogation marks and more exclamation points. Heaven is the place for explanation. Earth is the place lor trust If you cannot understand so minute a thing as a raindrop, how can you expect to understand God's dealings? "Hath the rain a father?" Tears Are or Divine Origin. Again, my text makes me think that the rain of tears is of divine origin. Great clouds of trouble sometimes hover over us. They are black, and they are gorged and they are thunderous. They are more por tentous than Salvator or Claude eer painted clouds of poverty or persecution or bereavement. They hover over us, and they get darker and blacker, and after awhile a tear starts, and we think by an ex tra pressure of the eyelid to stop it Others follow, andafter awhile there is a shower of tearful emotion: Y'ea, there is a rain of tears. "Hath that rain a father?" "O," you say, "a tear is nothing but a drop of limpid fluid secreted by the lach rymal gland it is only a sign of weak eyes." Great mistake. It is one of the Lord s richest benedictions to the world. "When that tear starts it thrills all heaven. An angel cannot keep his eye off it, and the Church of God assembles around, aud there is a commingling of tears, and God is the Father of that rain, the Lord, long suffer ing, merciful and gracious. "Long live the King!" My friends, you have driven the Lord Jesus Christ, the King of the Church away from your heart; you have been mall treating Him all of these years; but He comes back to-day. He stands in front of the gates of your soul. If you will only pray or His pardon, He will'meet you with His gracious spirit and He will say: "Thy sins and thine iniquities I will remember no more. Open wide the gate; I will take the throne. My peace I give unto you." And then, all through this audience, from the young and from the old, there will be a rain of tears, and God will be the Father of that rain! HORSFOBD'S ACID PHOSPHATE. If You are Nervous, and cannot sleep, try it. B. & B. To-day, 1 inch, 1-inch, 3-inch, rich black silk striped grenadines, 75c that's all that's necessary to say about them; they'll "do the rest" when you see them. V Boggs & Buhl. July- Clearance Sales. White flannel blazers, 510 now ?5. Jos. Horse & Co. Iron Crxx Beer builds up trade. -Wherever placed sold. Telephone, 1180. July Clearance Sales. White flannel blazers. ?10 now $5. Jos. Horse & Co. ' Blaine. PHANTOM SUEPLUS Seems to Be What the New Treasury Statement Aims At. THE GOLD RESERVE IN DANGER. Extravagance of the Last Congress Unmixed With Good. Not THE NEW FINANCIAL POLICY'S EFFECT sfeciai. rttrWnAM to TUErisrATcn. New York, July C Matthew Marshall reviews the financial and speculative situa tion for the Su of to-morrow asfollows: The Secretary of the Treasury has con tributed two important items to the finan cial news of the week. He has changed the form of the monthly Treasury statement so as to make it show a large surplus instead of the deficit which it otherwise might nave presented, and, with the advice and consent of his colleagues of the Cabinet and of the President, he has decided not to pay off the 4 per cent Government bonds maturing September 1, but to extend them at 2 per cent pf the new form of Treasury state ment I have to say only that the adoption of it seems to me to be an unnecessary and useless complication of public accounts. The purpose of the statement is to enable the public to judge of the Nation's relative financial condition from month to month. If the same form is followed every month this judgment is easy, while so far as it de parts from uniformity it confuses its readers. I know that for political purposes it is necessary sometimes to conceal, if not to distort, lacts, but obscuration is not con cealment, and a result which can be reached bv a little figuring is not thereby kept out of sight. Perhaps from my bookkeeping experience I am a little quicker than most people in analyzing a balance sheet, and I certainly shall" be surprised if anyone is induced to believe that there is a dollar more or a dollar less in the Treasury be cause the V figures are arranged one way rather than another. Futility of a Phantom Surplus. A phantom surplus will not pay real debts. I am not one of those who think it correet to say that the Treasury is bankrupt because it has not cash" enough in hand to pay at once all its debts due on demand if payment of them should be demanded. Were this so, then there never was a time since the green backs were first issued when the Treasury was solvent. The 346,000, 000 of greenbacks now outstanding are file remainder an amount once much larger. Until 1879 no provision at all existed for their redemption, and since 1879 there never has been more than 100, 000,000 in coin available for the purpose. Yet the greenbacks by their terms, beine payable on demand, are a demand debt, and it is only because no holder of them wants them paid that they are not presented for payment The same is true of many other elements of the public debt They consist of claims which nobody desires to enforce, and which may, therefore, for practical purposes, be treated as not enforceable. Such, for ex ample, is the undertaking to redeem the surrendered national bank circulation, against which the Government has received the necessary money from the banks, and which, by statute, is no longer reckoned as a liability. The Amount Under Nominal Demand. Of this surrendered currency there is 40, 000,000 outstanding, and on an average only t-'jOOOjOOU ot it comes in eacn montn. xne 5 per cent redemption fund deposited by the national banks for their live circulation is a similar debt, only nominally due on de mand. Except upon the rare occasions when the mutilation or the defacement of the notes require it, no call is made upon this fund. Deposits in national banks, of course, may, with propriety, be counted as available cash. On all these points it is mere finical criticism to find fault with the Secretary's views. A Washington dispatch, accompanying the new statement, hints that hercatter the Secretary will not regard outstanding checks and drafts as demand liabilities. I hope that this is not true. I remember very well that when I first opened my private account with the Bank of New York years ago Mr. Cornelius Heyer, the President, said to me: "Now, young man, I want to warn you that I will not allow any overdrawing. When you give out a check deduct it from your deposits, and whenyou have drawn all the checks that your deposits are good for, don't draw any more. If you do and I find it out you and I will quarrel." Checks on Imaginary Balances. I have never forgotten his injunction from that time to this, and when I hear it suggested that the Secretary of the United States Treasury has the right to draw checks against an imaginary balance I do not like it When a man gives out a .check it seems to me the money it calls for belongs to the holder of the check and not to the drawer of it, and I think that the United States Gov ernment should take the same view of it. One thing must be remembered: The sol vency or insolvency of the nation is not to be decided by the amount of cash it has in its vaults. The poet Addison when re proached with his taciturnity in society, an swered," alluding to his readiness with his Een: "I have not a sixpence in my pocket, ut I can draw for 1,000." So, our Gov ernment, even if it should be temporarily in siraignis ior reauy money, couia always raise what it needs by borrowing or by taxation. Our misfortune is, that owing to the want of control over Congress by the Executive, an adjustment of national receipts to national expenditures, such as obtains in most European States, is not the rule here. We take our financial precau tions, as an Irishman would say, after they are found to be necessary, instead of before it, so that while we are taking them w e are liable to get into trouble: Tlie Gold Reserve In Danger. Of the decision to offer the holders of the maturing li per cent bonds the privilege of extending them at 2 per cent, I think there can be only an approving opinion. As I showed four weeks ago, and as the facts plainly demonstrate now, the Treasury will be put to its trumps to meet the de mands upon it during July and August, without impairing its 100,000,000 gold re serve, anu if, in addition, it undertook to pay the whole of tlie ?51,000,000 of 4U per ccntson September 1, it could not avoid the Impairment I have none of the superstitious rever ence for this golden 5100,000,000 which many have, but I do not see why a part of it might not be used temporarily and then replaced later on. But human nature and its whims must be respected by the states men. A cutting into the ?100,000,000 gold fund would alarm so inauy people that if it can be avoided by the simple expedient of paying 2 per cent interest for a year or so on"?31,000,000, it ought to be. It is a ques tion in my mind whether the measure will succeed, but as 60 days more will settle it, 1 will not discuss the pros and cons of it now. Fignres Show Its Fallacy. As to the idea that, by furnishing a basis for additional bank circulation, it will con siderably increase that circulation, a mere inspection of the figures will show its' fallacy. There is less than $23,000,000 of thebonds available for the purpose alto gether. To buy them the banks mustiay par for them in cash, and when they de posit them in the Treasury they will get notes for only 90 per cent of their face value, besides payine in another 5 per cent to the redemption fund. This will leave only 83 per cent of the in vestment to be used for loans, upon which the tax of 1 per cent per annum on circula tion reduces the profit to less than 7 per cent on the 15 per cent of capital locked up. I doubt very much whether many banks will be anxious to go into the operation, and even if enough of them should do it to utilize the whole ?25,000,000 of bonds, the additional currencv furnished would only 22,500,000.. The Extravagance of Congress. People are very properly dissatisfied with the extravagance of the last Concress, and with the embarrassment into which it has brought the Treasury, but the evil is not entirely unmixed, as I remarked three years ago of the piling up of the surplus, then equally complained of. The. surplus, it is true, was drawn from the circulation, and in that respect was a disturbing element Still its accumulation compelled economy on the part of the people as taxpayers, and much or it went to pay off and cancel the national debt The rest of it has now been returned to the public, and it has supplied .most, if not all, of the gold which Europe has taken from us during the last four months, thereby relieving her without dis tressing us. Besides this, unless I am misinformed, the West and Southwest has been so well supplied with currency, as the result of the recent liberal Treasury disbursements, that the usual drain upon this center for money to move the crops will not be so severe as it otherwise would be. This resource, to be sure, will not avail a second time. The surplus is gone and it will be a long time before we shall have another, but for the present it has averted a great calamity. Hoarded Gold Saved the Market Had it not been for the hoarded gold rwhich the Treasury opportunely poured out our money marKet would nave to auuer jui the benefit of that on the other side of the .Atlantic. Now both are in a comfortable condition. As to the effect upon the stock market and upon business generally of the Govern ment's new financial measures, I know that my readers would like to be informed, and I would like to inform them if I could do it with anything like absolute confidence in the correctness of my judgement The near est I can come to it is to repeat that the probabilities are all in favor of higher E rices and of greater activity. We have ad eight months of inaction and expecta tion, and it is not in human natufe to keep quiet much longer. Let our crops only meet the expectation entertained of them; let the currency .question be settled one way or another no matter which so long as it is settled and the machine will begin to move. Whatever any kind of property or secur ity is really worth at this moment, it will, in my judgment, be worth more next spring. Only be sure that it is really worth what you are going to pay for it be fore you buy it DISCOVERED IK HUE. Three Murderers Almost Leave Ohio's Pen itentiary by John Morgan's Route. CSFECIAI. TELEGRAM TO THE PISPATCH. Columbus, July 5. Warden Dyer, of the Ohio Penitentiary, made a timely dis covery at an early hour this morning, which prevented the escape of three condemned men from the Annex, where they are to be executed. Edward Blair, an escaped pris oner, who murdered a railway agent in Put nam, while out, did the work. AVhile the other prisoners were being given exercise, he would insist on being left in the Annex for quiet rest, and in the absence of the guard, reaching over a mouth's time, cut thiough the stone floor of a vacant cell, a hole 18 inches square, which led to an air flue extending into the yard. A steel case knife had been made into a saw for the purpose. The prisoners had arranged to go out last night, but the guard suspected something wrong and an investigation was instituted. The stone sawed out was two inches thick. The hole was cut into the same air flue through which John Morgan, the famous leader of the Morgan raiders, escaped during the war. The cell occupied by Blair is the one occu pied by Morgan when in prison. Blair will be executed August 21. BATXWAY ABITHMETIC. It Is Very Peculiar, According to the Kan. sas Board of Railroad Assessors. rSPECIAI. TELEGRAM TO THE DISPATCH. . Topeka, Kan., July 5. The popular outcry all over the State against the State Board of Bailroad Assessors for reducing the assessments against the railroad com panies 10,000,000 has resulted in the pub lication of a detailed statement, giving the reasons of the board for its action. Its statement shows that the assessed valuation of railroad property has increased yearly for the past four years, while other assess ments nave decreased until last year it amounted to 17 per cent of the total assessed valuation of State property. The. board defends itself against the charges of the people, but holds the rail road companies responsible for it all, be cause of "their peculiar railway arithme tic." It complains because the companies insist upon adding the yearly expenditures in improvements to the original cost of the road to make its total cost, and adds that there would be as much sense in a farmer including his mortgage bonds and the in terest he had paid to show the total cost of his ranch. THE PBESEDENT AT CHTJECH. He Attends Divine Service Sunday at an Historic Old Meeting House. rSPECIAL TELEGRAM TO TnE DISPATCH. Cape Mat, July 5: President Harrison, 'accompanied by Mrs. Harrison's nieces, Mrs. Lieutenant Parker and Mrs. Dimmick, attended services this morning in the Cold Spring Presbyterian Church, which cele brated its 75th anniversary two years ago, and listened to a sermon by the Kev. Daniel L. Hughes, D. D who preached from the text "And He sayeth unto me write, thrice blessed are they which are called unto the marriase supper of the Lamb," on which he spoke feelingly. The church is four miles from the President's cottage, but its historical importance caused him to visit it again, Tie and Mrs. Harrison having visited it once last summer. The President's presence in the church did not attract so much attention, because he was not expected, and there were but about 80 in the congregation. Mr. Wana inaker attended services at Beadle Memorial Chapel, Cape May Point, this morning. HO PLACE IKE PnTSBTOG, Where a Fourth of July Celebration Is riot a Picnic for Crooks. Chief Brown is highly pleased with the work done by his officers at the Schenley Park celebration. The Chief was not there himself, but the fact that not a case of pocket picking, not a fight, nor any other disorder was reported from the grounds, where such an immense .crowd of people were assembled, satisfied him that the officers w ere there and attended to their business well. Assistant Superintendent O'Mara and Captain Dan Silvis both said yesterday that there was not another city in the country where such a crowd could be handled with out pickpockets reaping a harvest. The opportunity for that sort of work at various points in the park would have been excel lent were it not for the extra vigilance of the police. . The Shark Towed Them. Panama Star and Herald. The singular sight was witnessed in the harbor yesterday morning of a man in a small boat making a cruise with a shark for motive power. Boat after boat went to his assistance, until a string of seven, manned by 12 hands, was in the procession, but the shark's movements increased with the in creased weight, and after leading bis cap tors a merry dance for a long while he suc ceeded in throwing out the harpoon and ef fecting his escape. July Clearance Sales. 35c and 38c Scotch outing 'flannels now 25c Jos. Hokne & Co. MOKE WILDWOOD OIL The Ireland & Hughes Well, on the Comer Farm, Is a Prodncer. ANOTHER GOOD WELL AT M'DONALD A Big Lot of Wells to Get the Sand This Week at Moon and JlcCnrdy. THE OPERATIONS H BUTLER COUNTY There are few more patriotic men than those engaged-in the oil business. They are all Americans and they love to celebrate in the most potent sense of the word. Conse quently there were few walking beams in the Southwest district which were moving Saturday and all of the drillers and tool dressers who could possibly do so flocked to Pittsburg, which has long been the Mecca of the trade in general. 'They fdrgot for the time being all about the temper screws, bits, jars, stems, ropes, casing wrenches, sands.salt water and oil and spent the day in various moods and places. There were a few wells which, owing to the limited time allowed in the leases for their completfon, were kept going. Oil on the Fourth. One of these was the well of Ireland & Hughes, the oil well tool manufacturers, on the Comer farm, at Wildwood. It reached the sand Satuiday, and after drilling sev eral bits in the sand a fair pressure of gas and a good showing of oil were struck. It was then shut down, but not before several good flows placed it among the 100-barrel class at least. The well is located about half a mile west of the 45 line that runs through the Wildwood pool; is directly north of the Kolbar farm, and joins the Bunga farm on the northwest It will probably open a distinct spur of oil producing rock running north west from the Bunga and Kretzer farm pools, which has not before been suspected. Joining the Comer on the west is the Brecht, and west of that is the Anderson property. One report from it late Satur day gave it as doing 80 barrels an hour, but this could not be confirmed. On the County Line. McDonald Mosier & Co.'s well on the Valantour lot got the fifth sand Saturday morning, and will make a good well. It is about 400 feet east of the Boyal Gas Com pany's No. 2, on the Ed McDonald farm. The latter well will be small, probably from 30 to 40 barrels a day. The Wheeling Gas Company got a good gas well Friday at its wildcat, on the Rankin farm, three and one-half miles southwest of McDonald and on a line with the well beine drilled on the McCarty farm, near Primrose, by Mel- ion k w nson. xnese two wells test about four miles of territory. The Bankin farm well is west of the dry holes on the Bussell, McBride and McCamant farms. The latter is the nearest and is about half a mile cast. Clark & Bannister's well on the Butler lot was doing 40 barrels an hour Saturday. William Kuan has made a location on the DeBoy lot, and unknown parties have lo cated on the Sloan lot Both of these are on the south side of the railroad. An innova tion in the field is the location of a rig on the Smith lot bv the McKee Bros. It is in the center of the residence portion of the town, and is just opposite the home of Miss Maggie McDonald, and near the parsonage of the TJ. P. Church. There are half a dozen wells due to get the fifth sand this week. Among the first will be the Boyal Gas Com pany's 2io. 3,Sauters and Ho. 3 Ed McDon ald. More Weils Coming. McCukdy Patterson & Jones' No. 7 well on the McCurdy farm is doing about 40 barrels an hour yet. W. L. Mellon's Jane Kiddle No. 1 and his Scott No. 3 are both due to get the pay this week. Huot & Richards' No.-l on the Cowan farm is on top of the sand, and K. G. Gillespie & Co. 'a. Jane Kiddle No. (i is getting near the sand." Black & Guflev, who have been fishing at their well on the I. nk farm for a couple of months, expect to be on top of the sand to morrow. In the Moon District Moon The Kanawha Oil Company's No. 4 on the Meeks farm was on top of the sand Saturday night and will be drilled in to day. W. L. Mellon's Nos. 4 and 5 on the Meeks are due to get the sand early this week. Small Hundred Foot Weil. Calleky The McCalmont Oil Com pany's No. 1 on the Robert Walters farm had penetrated the 100-foot sand to a depth of 75 feet At 68 feet they got a second Say streak that slightly improved the pro uction, but a small well will be the hnal result after the salt water has been ex hausted. Some eight more locations have been made in the same vicinity,, but all to the northeast. Collins & Heasley are 80 feet in the and with their No'. 1 on the Charles Walters farm. They developed a strong flow of gas but found no oil. This well is located at the mouth of Wolf Run and one-half mile north of the Bodgers & Hoffman well on the Staples farm. The same company's No. 3 on the J. M. Miller farm is 85 leet in the Hundred-foot and still drilling. They have a fair show for an average Hundred footer. Wahl & Bishop's No. 4 on the George Harburger is holding up at 50 bar rels a day. The well drilled by R. W. Mil ler on the John Balfour farm something more than a year ago, and when in the sand stuck the tools, has at last recovered them and the well will be drilled in and shot. It will make a 25-bar-rel well. Redd & Co. have started to pump their well on the Hcspenhide farm, but as yet it has produced nothing but salt water. The Forest Oil Company is 40 feet in the sand on the Barr farm, and it has a strong gas pressure. The same company has tim bers on the ground for No. 3 Wholbert farm. This well is located 300 feet south east of their Longhurst farm. Osborne Bros. & Co.'s Cookson well is not making a very good showing. They have a strong flow pf salt water to overcome. Price & Co.have completed No.2 rig on the Douthett farm, 500 feet east of their No. 2. B. Forst has completed No 4 rig on the Anderson farm. Tne Ballard & Cumming well, on the Kennedy, is making 50 barrels a day. Finished on the Fourth. Lockwood Bowley & Co. have com pleted No. 2 on the English heirs', and it will make a 25-barrel pumper. Alexander No. 2 on the Ripper farm, was shot and is showing for a 25-barrel pro ducer. Phillips Gets a Duster. Great Belt T. W. Phillips has drilled his No. 2 on theBennewitz through the sand and got a duster. His No. 1 on the Kirby is making 75 barrels a day. Hunting An Extension. Sasonbueg Webber Bros, will bring in their wildcat on the Webber farm this week. This well is drilled with a view to finding a connecting link between the old Saxonburg pond and the Thorn Creek ex tension. An Average Welt Peters ville The Forest Oil Company's No. 2, on the Dunbart farm, w ill make an average producer. The McCalmont Oil Com pany's No. 2, John Staples' farm, is down b00 feet The Forest Oil Company are down 1,380 feet oh the Rader with their No. C. Their No. 1, on the Rape farm, is drilling at 800 feet Curtis & Co. are building a rig for No. 3, J. Dambach. Slagle'& Lcntz have finished a 50-barrel ..producer on the J. E Dambach. W. A.. Clark & Co. are building a rig on the Peter Badcr for their No. 18. No. 17 has started to drill. FB0M A THIBD-STORY WINDOW. Thomas Nowak Drops to Death From a v Chair While Sleeping. Thomas Nowak, a Pole, who boarded at 803 Manor street. Southside. was" killed yesterday by falling from a third-story wiuuowatnis Dooming House, lt'appeara he went to his room, and seating himself in a chair by the window fell asleep. About 3 o'clock he is thought to have got up in his sleep and fallen out of the window, where he was found a few minutes later. Meuical aid was called and the injured mail lingered, until 8 o'clock yesterday morning, when he died. The body was re moved to the morgue and will be bnned at the county's expense, the deceased being in poor circumstances. THE RECORD OF A DAY. THE SATURDAY NEWS BOILED DOWN FOR RAPID COMPREHENSION. Telegrams, Cablegrams and Local Items Gathered in Foreign lands. In the Home Country and in Pittsburg A Dictionary of Events AH Over tlie World. The Dispatch of yesterday morning con tained a full and complete record of the events of Saturday, the nation's natal day. The substanceof the record of events has been condensed into small and comprehen sive items'for rapid perusal, as follows: Foreign. Emperor William of Germany was given a grand reception on his nrrlval in England German artisans will not be permitted to interview the Emperor France is try ing to capture Slam The eldest son of Gladstono is dead Minister Lincoln holds a brilliant reception in London American goods are replacing British manufactures in Brazil Forty soldiers are suffering from sunstroke in 'Weiman Luther Cary again defeats foieign runners. ...Socialism dis cussed by the Itoyal Labor Commission .... Mrs. Mackay gives a swell dinner in London ....Russian credit impaired. ...The Vatican disturbed. Domestic. Sixteen killed in n Charleston, W. Va., railroad disaster Three men drowned by an upset skiff at Braddock A 7-year-old girl killed by a rocket at Youngstown.... Conger believes Blaine will write no discour aging letters Ex-President Hannibal Ham lin dies.... A Denver capitalist will have to pay $100,000 for gaining the favor of another man's wife 1 Baltimore belle behaves badly.... Racing at Home wood Patriot ism displayed at Woodstock, Conn.; Mead ville, Bellefonte, Somerset, Youngstown and other places Daniels speaks on the race problem Balloonists killedatNew Lisbon and Elyrla, O.... .Letter carriers erect a monument to the memory of "Sunset"' Cox. President Harrison at Cape Blay.... Ben Butler's company a success Tho North eastern Saengerfest at Newark Irish- Americans encamp on Statcn Island.... Plans for electrical executions The growth of the great desert lake. ...Bal loonists narrowly escape at Meadvllle Boy injured at Lima by a tin can explosion. A Chinese baby born in Washington A gun bursts in a revenne cutter at Chicago. ....Tho raid against the Moquis Fought in Birmingham, Ala., over a keg of beer Coroners light for the possession of a body. Girl shot at Newark by a discarded lover. Chautauqua Assembly opened with cere monies.... A murderer shoots two men at Columbus, Ind... .Nelson Sterret drowned at Chautauqua A strange fever atDoug- lassvillo....A-childish escapade at Craw fordsville, Ind Cut out his tongue in Phil adelphia ... .A girl devoured by a panther. Local. One hundred and twenty-flve thousand people celebrate at Schenloy Park Old soldiers fooled by postal cards Only one Fourth of July Are Original headlines in papers V panic averted on the new bridge The display of fireworks The chapter of accidents Central Park opened with exercises East End Club were victorious The Hebrews will not have a special World's Fair exhibit.... A family thrown irom a buggy Southslders celebrate in dependently Typewriters becoming in dispensable Libby prison celebration during tho war Trade in tents is good Anew plan for furnishing power Benefit for the switchmen.... Families moving to Ellwood Labor Day preparations The newsboys building to be commenced soon The Pittsb'urgs defeated twice. ...Kirk Buffnm found dead A Jealous woman takes rongh on rats. ASLEEP FOE SIXTEEN TEABS. Herman Harms, the Minnesota Sleeper, Has at Last Awakened. St. Paul, July 5. Herman Harms, the Minnesota sleeper, i3 now awake. His case is probably the most peculiar known to the physicians, whose skill it has baffled for the last dozen years. He had slept almost incessantly for the past 16 years. A few days ago he awoke, and has taken only an ordinary amount of sleep since. His recov ery, however, is doubtful. Mr. Harms is now living on a farm, about midway between St. Charles and Quincy, Minn. Some 16 years ago he was attacked by a severe fever and had intense pains shooting tnrougn nis neaa. ne was men in Illinois. His physician advised him to move to a colder climate. He accordingly came to this State. During his stay in Illinois he did not sleep all of the time, but since he came to this State he has never been awake, ex cept for an interval of a year and a half, since 1881 and two months of 1889 and 1890. When he is sleeping he can only be awak ened by his wife touching him on the head. Calling has no effect on him. He takes no nourishment at all to speak of, and then only when aroused from his comatose condi tion. Harms was born in Germany in 1838. He was married to Miss Buzman in 1863. His faithful wife has zealously guarded him through all these vears. FIVE INDIANS TO TWO CHINAMEN. A Race War That Has Been Raging on the Pacific Coast. San Francisco, July 5. It has been learned that the butchery of a Chinaman at Bridgeport,after his acquittal on the charge I ot muruermg an nuiau, was ine last inci dent in a race feud between the Mongolians and Indians which has been waxed in Nevada for five years. The Indians of this coast have always hated the Chinese and this feeling has been returned with interest. Five years ago a Chinese miner was shot by an Indian in a quarrel. His country men tried vainly to have the murderer pun ished. Then they vowed vengeance. They waited till the next Fourth of July, when the Indians all came to Wadsworth to cele brate. The Chinese decoyed four Piutes into a laundry and filled them with gin. When the Indians were helplessly drunk the Chinese poured kerosene over their bodies and over the floor of the shanty and set the place on fire- Only one Indian escaped. He told his story and again there was a prosecfUon. The Chinese followed this up by the torture and murder of a solitary In diartat Candelaria. This last crime, fol lowed by the murder of the Celestial at Bridgeport, brought things to a crisis. The Piutes have been holding pow-wows lately, and it is thought they are planning to bal ance the account by three more Chinese victims. As it now 'stands there are five dead Indians to two Chinamen. JAS. M. SCHOOXJIAKEB, President. JAS. 3ICCTJTCHEON, Vice President. UNION ICE.M'FG COMPANY. Pure Ice made from distilled water for sale. at wholesale only. UNION STORAGE COMPANY, Transfer Agent, Genera!,. Cold, Bonded anH Yard Storage. 3'A ACRES YARD STORAGE. 5 'WAREHOUSES, containing 2,300,000 cubic feet of storage space. Railroad siding to each warehouse. Brick warehouse for exclusive storage of oil. Separate rooms for storage of household goods. Lowest insurance rates. PRINCIPAL OFFICES Corner -SECOND and LIBERTY AVENUES. Jy6-15-KWi All Farm and Garden Prodncfs Are in Plentiful Snpply. THE DRIFT TOWARD LOWER PRICES Prospects of Aoundant Crops Adverse to Bull Movements. GREET HIDES AND CALFSKINS DULL Office op Pittsbuho Dispatch, ) Satvudat, July 4. Farm and garden products have been in plentiful supply the past week, antPgeneral tendency of prices has been toward a lower level. The first home-grown potatoes of the season aro to the front within a few days. Tennessee potatoes are in aoundant snpply, but are lacking in keeping qualities. Asa result of inferior quality, prices are weak and lou er. Two weeks ago Southern pota toes were active at $5 C06 01 perbarr4. Now they are slow at $3 00350 per barrel. With the exception of choice creamery bnt ter.everythlng In the line ofdairy products Is as it has been for a week or two past, slow and weak. Ohio cheese is in supply far above demand, and Pittsburg markets nre pronounced by representatives of the factor ies, a number of whom were heie lately to spy out the land, as relatively lower than any other trade center of the land. New York cheese is fairly steady. All the week there has been a short supply of strictly fresh eggs, and markets are fully 2c per dozen higher than at tho beginning of tho week. Dealers reported sales at 20c per dozen a few days ago. In fruit lines, we note the wane of straw berries and heavy receipts of raspberries. The yield of the latter is reported by gar deners unusually large, and the week to come our markets will no doubt be Hooded with this fruit. Supply of bananas has been light, and prices are advanced. With light receipts came the heavy Fourth of July de mand, so that for the first time this season there were hardly enough bananas to go round. Other tropical Iruits remain un changed. Exceptionally cool weather for a few days past has served to put a check to the upward movement of lemons. As to Cereals. For a month or two past it has been a dole ful time to bull operators in cereal lines. After long waiting and very expensive ex perience an upwnrd movement was inaugurated a day or two before the nation's great holiday, and an advance was main tained above the lowest point of 5c per bushel on wheat, as much on corn and 3c on oats. The upward movement was Inaugurated on the eve of the adjournment of the Chicago Grain Exchange for the Fourth of July. There was no meeting of the exchange on Friday or Saturday, so that it is impossible to tell whether or not this up ward move will continue. Against any per manent upward movement in cereal lines stands the bright prospect for largo incom ing crops. Ot a certainty the outlook is favorable forbears, especially as regards the incoming wheat crop. In this section the wheat crop is leported the largest for years. Western Pennsylvania farmers have been busy wheat harvesting tlie past few days, and that the yield will be immense is an assured fact. Hides and Leather. The situation as to tlje hide market is practically the same as it was a week ago. The depression then noted in this column remains in full force. At Chicago, which is the head center of the green hide trade, an attempt was made by dealers to stiffen prices, but the attempt proved abortive. Tanners could not be brought to pay any nd vanco, as dealers aio carrying large stock. After a short' effort to advance prices, they were forced to an unconditional surrender and old, prices were established. Calf skins are particularly slow in this market. Tallow is dull and w enk, as it is hard to handlo at this season of the year. The loss in weight through leakage uniformly weak ens taliow market during hot weather. Follow tag are prices paid by tanners and hide dealers for stock delivered hero: No. 1 green salted steers. GO His and over. No. 1 Kreen salted cows, all weights No. 1 green salted hides, -Ml to 60 16 No. 1 green salted hides. 25 to 40 lbs No. 1 crreen salted hulls s s 5 fi 4 7 4f 4S 4 a 6 SO No. 1 green salted calfskins., o. 1 srrt en salted veal kips , No. 1 green salted runner Kips IN o. 1 green steers, 0 lbs and over. ?o. 1 green cows, all weights No. 1 green bulls No. 1 green hide:,, 40 to 60 Ins No. 1 green hides. 25 to 40 lbs No. 1 green calfskins No. 1 green veal kips, per piece.... .no. i screen runnerjiips 7a Sheepskins 15cQl 50 Tallow, prime 4 Harness Leather. The movement in this line is free nnd prices aro unchanged. Following are the established rates of Allegheny harness leather tanners: No. 1 trace, 37c t a; B trace, 35c ft B; No. 1 extra heavy, 101 2s. nnd over, 35c $ B; B extra heavy, 203 ?i B; No. 2 extra heavy. 28c $? B: No. 1 heavy, 130 to ISO Bs. 31c B: B heaw, 29c $ B; No. 2 heavy, 27c $1 B; black line, 28c $1 B. THE JUDGES STAND GAVE WAT. Two 'Well-Known Men Injured Internally and Others Hurt. Gap.y, S. D.,July 5. The judges' stand at the races fell yesterday. In dropping the judges fell fully 12 feet. A. Harkins, a one-armed soldier, and A. N. Gray, well known throughout the north west as an auctioneer, were injured inter nally, and their injuries may prove fatal. Two others had bones broken. CAREFUL ! A sere or an ulcer that resists ordi nary treatment is a tery serious mat ter. It is either of a cancerous na ture, or it is the result of a very bad condition of the blood. Don't tam per with it. Take The Great Blood Eemedy andget rid of It. Don't delay. Rev. Jesse H. CamnbelL of Colum- hns. f!a xrritp' A woman with a cancerous ulcer of years standing, and five inches in diameter, has been entirely relieved by 6 bottles of Swift's Specific I consider its effects wonderful almost miraculous." This is the record of S. S. S: Books on Blood and Skin Diseases Free. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atianla, Ga. Pittsburg, Allegheny and Manchester Traction Company 40-year 5 per cent bonds, free of tax, for sale at 103 and interest FIDELITY TITLE & TRUST GO., 121 AXD 123 POUKTil AVEXUE. felI-43-Jiwy SAMUEL BAILEY, Jr., Secretary and Treasurer. lVa, irl WS i ft 9 "S0P-1Y, EDT SHAU HAVE TO LET Y03 GB. Thousands of delicate young ladies are employed in fashionablo Dry Goods, Millinery, and other stores, where through tho long day they aro constantly on their feet. Among this class, some of tho worst cases of female diseases occur. There is no rest, and, when their ill-health becomes apparent, they aro at onco discharged. To such, the aid and sympathy of Jlra. Pinkham aro always available. LYDIAE.PIN!CHAFfScVoTp!, removes at onco thoso pains, aches, and weaknesses, brightens tho spirits, and invigorates tho system. Sold by all Druggists as a standard artlclCjOrsentby mail , in form of Pill3 or Lczengcs, on receipt of S1.00. Send stamp for "Guido to Health and Etiquette," a beautiful illustrated book. Jlrs. Pinkham freely answers letters of inquiry. Encloso stamp for reply. Lydia E. Pinkham Med. Co.. Lynn, Mass. I8KOKEKS-FTNANCIAX. Whitney & Stephenson, 57 Fourth Avenue. ap30-33 PEOPLE'S SAVINGS BANK, SI FOURTH AVENUE. I'anual. 5300,000. Surplus &I.670 20. D. 3IcK. LLOYD. EDWAUD K. DUFF. 4 President. Asst. Sec Treas. per cent interest allowed on time do OOSltS. OC1S40-D John M. Oakley & Co., BANKEES AND BROKERS. Stocks, Bonds, Grain, Petroleum. Private wire to New York and Chicago. 43 SIXTH ST., Pittsburg. MEDICAL. ITTIEK 814 PENN AVENUE, PITTSBUItG, PA. As old residents know and back flies ot Pittsburg papers prove, is the oldest estab lished and most prominent physician in the city, devoting special attention to allchronia Sre-NO FEE UNTIL CURED sponsible MrpVni IQ and mental dis persons. I lL II V UUO eases, physical do cay, nervous debility, lack of energy, ambi tion and hope, impaired memory, disordered sight, self distrust, bushfuiness, dizziness, sleeplessness, pimples, eruptions, impover ished blood, failing powers, organic w eak ness, dyspepsia, constipation, consumption, unfitting the person foruusines'', society and marriage, permanently safely and prtiatelv fnuraau BLOOD AND SKINt eruptions, blotches falhnghair, bones, pains, Glandular swellings, ulcerations of the Tongue, mouth, throat, ulcere, old sores, aro cured lor life, nnd blood poisons thoroughly eradicated from 1 1 D I M A D V kidney and the system. UnllNnn I j bladder do rangements, weak back, gravel, catarrhal dicharges, inflammation and other painful symptoms receive searching treatment; prompt relief and real cures. Dr. whittier's life-long, extensive experi ence insures scientific and reliable treatment on common sense principles. Consultation, free. Patients at a distance as carefully treated as if here. Office hours, 9 A. jr. toi r. if. Sunday, 10 a. m. to 1 r. x. only. DK. WHITTIEK, 81 Penn avenue, Pittsburg, Pa. jaS49-DSuwk "manhood restored.- i"hA Vi'ivo," tie Tvondrrlol spanlsa Remedy. Is sold wita a VrittenGuaranteo to cure all Nervous Dis eases, such as Weak Memory, loss of Brain Power, Headache Wakefulness, Lest Man bood. Nervousness, las sltnde. all drains and loss of power of tho Generative Organs, m either sex. caused by Before & After Use, Photographed from life. over-exertion, youthful lndescretlons. or the excesiva use of tobacco, opium, or stimulants, which ulUmately lead to Infirmity. Consumption and Insanity. Put up In convenient form to carry in the vest poctet Pries tl a pactage. or 6 tor 13. W.th every 15 order we Kivo a written guarantee to cure or refund the money. Sent by mail to any address. Circular free. Hentlon this paper. Address, MADRID CHEMICAL CO., Branch Office for U.S. A. 417 rx-rtioni Strr. fTIICAGO. ILL. FOB SALE IN PITTSBURGH, PA, B? aOS. Fleming & Son. 410 Market St. Cuquesne Pharmiey. 513 Smithfleld St. A. J. Kaercher, 59 Federal St., Allegheny titv. fe2S-Ths WEAK MEN,Y fODK ATTEVriOX IS CALLED TO THE OKEAT EXGUSU ItEMEDT, TUOCMAffK TRAOXMiint Gray's Specific Medicine jFYOU SUFFER ?g oiii Detnmv.W ea.ne9orBodr iEfQRTUiu. juni iizoaanil 3IfmL duenna torrhea. and Impotency, k1 all diseases that arise from over Indulgence antl self-abuse, as Loss of Memorj" ancl Power. Dimness of Vision. Premature Old Aee. and many other diseases thatiri't to Insanity or Consumption and an early grave, write for our pamphlet. Address GRAY3IEDICIXE CO.. Buffalo. 3. Y. The Specific 3Iedlclne Is Mild by all druggists at Si per package, or six packages for $ or sent hy mall Si'ft "rWE.GUARANTEE, order a cure or money refunded. C3On account of counterfeits we have adopted the Yellow Wrapper, the only genuine. Sold In Pittsburg by b. S. HOLLAND, cor. Mnlthfleld and Liberty fata. JeCi-01MwreoSu DOCTORS LAKE SPECIALISTS in all cases re 2 Hiring scientific and confl ential treatment. Dr. S. K. Lake. M. K. C. r.S.. Is the old- sS'Pu'S' ciallst in tlie city. Consulta- i tlon free and strictly confi dential. Office hours 2 to 1 and 7 to 8 p. 3t; bundays, ! to 4 r. m. Consult them person allr, or write. Doctoos Lattt, cor. Penn av. and 4:h St., Pittsburg, PJL Jc3-?2-Disrfc VIGOR OF KV1EN Easily, Quickly, Permanently RESTORED. WEAKNESS. XEKVOUSXESS. DEBILITY, an! all the tralu of evils, the reu!M of overwork, sickness, worry, etc. t till strength, development, ami time fruaranteed In all cases. Simple, uatnr&l method. Immediate improvement seen. Failure Impossible. Z.0OO references. ISook. explanaUom and proofs milled (waled) free. Addresa EISIE MEDICAL CO, 1SETFAI.O, N. Y. lellMS U iramcted to too B 3 ira 5 to. and Ufe to GBA new Toothful color and Ufe to GBA? Hair, line odIt IS. HATS' HIS HE AITH. Most al HAIR HEALTH. Most alactorr llalrirrowf r. mH CTfDlT CoV.K3 B'dwar.N.T. flair book frea SOc. London Sn jplj Co.,K3 R'dwav. HATS- KILL enl-ltA- l4t CCRR ferlsn.. Banlaafc S!M. ;43. E Sold by JOS. ELEMIXG & SONS and dru gists. niy21-51-MTli-E0Su-3 Suffering froia t&o effect! ot Toathfal erron canT aecaT, wasting weakness, ton xnaonooa, etc rly decay, v rill rend a 1 will rend a valuable treatise (waled) c-atalnlng full particulars, for noma euro, FllEB of charge. A splendid medical wort, should ne read rjy every man who Li nrrvon and debfUlatra. Address; ProC P. G. FOWlilUt, moo Una, Coaa UeJ-Sl-wuwk . .-, ?.-ia