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fly 1 M t ? T.VO LM,M)MU1 FINANCIAL PANICS THE SL'C JLCT LAST SUNDAY, from the Frvontrrntti Chapter of Oer mUh. Vr.e 11 Iho Uftnenoeiit of Life and I'unecensary i:ieiu of tin Horn unit Fauo'.ly Live Economically CopyrlgM. 1301. Louis Klopseh, N. Y. Washington, July 14. In this dUs course Dr. Talmaga shows toe causes of groat financial disturbances which take place every few years and ar raigns the people who live beyond their mean.-; text, Jeremiah xvli, 11, ""As the patridse Bitteth on egs.s and tatcheth them not, bo he that getteth riches, and not by right, shall leave tbem in the midst of hU days and at &ls end ehnll be a fool." Allubion is here made to a well known fact in natural history. If a jiatridge or a quail or a robin brood the eggs of another speciea, the young will not stay with the one that happen ed to brood them, but at the first op portunity will assoit with their own epecies; These of us who have been brought up In tho country have seen the dismay of tho farmyard hen, hav ing brooded aquatic fowls, when af ter awhile they tumble Into their nat ural element, the water. Bo my text uggst3 that a man may gather under his wings the property of ethers, but 1t will after awhile escape. It will leave the man in a sorry predicament and make him feel very silly. Iitruvaganre Ctase Kalu. What hss caused all the black days of financial disasters for the last CO years? Some say It is the credit sys tem. Something back of that. Some say It Is the spirit of gambling ever and non becoming epidemic. Something back of that. Some say It Is the sudden shrinkage in the value of securities, which even the most honest and Intel ligent men could not have foreseen. Something back of that. I will give you the primal cause of all these disturb ances. It is tho extravagance of modern society which impels a man to spend more money than ho can honestly make, and ho goes into wild specula tion in order to get the means for In ordinate dplay, and sometimes the man is to blame and sometime his wife nd oftener both. Five thousand dol lars Income, 110,000, $20,000 income, is cot enougli for a man to keep up the style of living he proposes, and there fore he steers his bark toward the maelstrom. Other men have suddenly snatched up $30,000 or $100,000. Why cot he? The present Income of the man cot being large enough, he must move earth and hell to catch up with his ceighbors. Others have a country ssat; tso must he. Others have an extrava gant caterer; so must he. Others have a palatial residence; so must he. Extravagance Is the cause of all the defalcations of the last GO years, and, If you will go through the history of all the great ranic3 and tho great financial disturbances, no sooner have you found the story than right back of It you will find tho story of how many "horses the man had, how many car riages the man had, how many resi dences in the country the man had, "how many banquets tho man gave al ways, and not one exception for the last GO yearj. either directly or Indl .rectly extravagance tho cause. , The neGuemenU of Life. Kow for the elegances and the re finements and the decorations of life. I cast my vote. While I am consider ing this subject a basket of flowers is handed in flowers paradisiacal In their b'.-auty. White calla with a green background of begonia. A cluster of leliotropes nestling in some geranium. Sepal and perianth bearing on them the marks of God's finger. When I see that basket of flowers, they persuade ;me that God loves beauty and adorn ment and decoration. God might have made tho earth so as to supply the gross demands of sense, but left it without adornment or attraction. In stead of tho variegated colors of the seasons the earth might have worn an unchanging dull brown. The tree might have put forth its fruit without the prophecy of leaf or blossom. Nia gara might have come down in gradual descent without thunder and winged spray. Look out of your window any morn ing after there has been a dew and see whether God loves jewels. Put a crystal of snow under a microscope and fcee what God thinks of architecture. God commanded the priest of olden time to have his robe adorned with a wreath of gold and the hem of his garment to be embroidered In pomegranate. The earth sleeps, and God blankets It with the brilliants of the night sky. The world wakes, and God washes It from th burnished laver of the sunrise. So I have not much patience with a man who talks as though decoration and adornment and the elegances of life aro a sin when they are divinely recom mended. But there Is a lino to be drawn between adornment and decora tions that we can afford and those we cannot afford, and when a man crosses tho line he becomes culpable. I cannot tell you what Is extravagant for you Tou cannot tell me what is extravagant for me. What is right for a queen may be squandering for a duchess. What may 1)e economical for you, a man with larger Income, will be wicked waste i for me, with smaller Income. Thero is -no Iron rule on this subject. Every j anan before God and on his knees must ! Judge what is extravagance, and when a man goes Into expenditures beyond I Ms means he is extravagant. Sleeting One' Obligation. Of course sometimes men aro flung ; of misfoi tunes and they cannot pay. I ! .know men who are just as honest In having failed as other men aro honest In succeeding. I ;ippo:;e there U hardly A man who has gone through life but there hava'been cone times when h has been bo hurt of misfortune he could cot meet his obligations, but all that I put ueide. There are a multi tude of peopla who buy that which they never Intend to pay for, for which there 13 no reasonable expvctatbn they will ever be able to psy. Now, if you have become oblivious of honesty and mean to defraud, why not save the merchant as much as you can? Why not go some day to hl3 store and when nobody i3 looking just shoulder a ham or the spareil) and In modest silence steal away? That would be lets crim inal, because In tho other way you take not only the man's goods, but you taue the time of 'the merchant and the time of his accountant, and you tako the time of the messenger who brought you the goods. Now, If you must steal, stcsl iu a way to do as little daniago to the trader as possible. John Randolph arose in the Ameri can senate when a question of national finance was being discussed, and, stretching himself to hLs full height, in a ehrill voice he cried out, "Mr. Chairman, I have discovered the phil osopher's stone, which turns every thing into gold pay as you go!" So ciety has got to be reconstructed on this subject or the seasons of defalca tion will continue to repeat themselves. You have no right to ride in a carriage for which you are hopelessly in debt to the wheelwright who furnished the landau, and to the horse dealer who provided the blooded span, and to the harness maker who ca prisoned the gay 6teeds, and to tho liveryman who has provided tho stabling, and to tho driv er, who, with rosetted hat, sits on the coach box. Oh, I am so glad it Is not the abso lute necessities of life which send peo ple out into dishonesties and fling them into misfortunes. It Is almost always the superfluities. God has promised us a house, but not a palace; raiment, but not chinchilla; food, but not canvasback duck. I am yet to see one of theso great defalcations which Is not connected In some way with extravagance. Extravagance accounts for tho dis turbance of national finances. Aggre gations aro made up of units, and when one-half of the people of this country owe tho other half how can we expect financial prosperity? Again and again at tho national election we have had a spasm of virtue, and we said, "Out with one administration and In with another and let us have a new deal of things and then we will get over our perturbation." I do not care who is president or who Is sec retary of the treasury or how much breadstuffs go out of the country or how much gold Is Imported until we learn to pay our debts and It becomes a general theory In this country that men must buy no more than they can pay for. Until that time comes there will be no permanent prosperity. Look at tho pernicious extravagance. Take the ono fact that New York every year pays $3,000,000 for theatrical amusements. While once In a while a Henry Irving or an Edwin Booth or a Joseph Jefferson thrills a great audi ence with tragedy, you know as well as I do that the vast majority of the theaters are as debased as debased they can be, as unclean as unclean they can be and as damnable as damnable they can be. Three million dollars, the vast majority of those dollars going in tho wrong direction. Harmful and I'ntHTessary Ktprnsn. Over a hundred millions paid In this country for cigars and tobacco a year. About $2,000,000,000 paid for strong drink In one year In this country. With such extravagance, pernicious extravagance, can there be any perma nent prosperity? Business men, cool' headed business men, is such a thing a possibility? These extravagances also account, as I have already hinted, for tho positive crimes, the forgeries, the abscondingsof the officers of the banks. The store on the business street Bwamped by the resldenca on the fash ionable avenue. The father's, the hus band's craft capsized by carrying too much domestic sail. That is what springs the leak in the merchant's money till. That Is what cracks the pistols of the suicides. That i3 what tears down the banks. That Is what stops insurance companies. That is what halts this nation again and again in its triumphal march of prosperity. In the presence of the American peo ple so far as I can get their attention I want to arraign this monster curs9 of extravagance, and I want you to pelt It with your scorn and hurl at it your anathema. How many fortunes every year wrecked on the wardrobe. Things have got to such a pass that when we cry over our sins In church we wipe the tears away with a $150 pocket handkerchief! I show you a domestic tragedy, In five acts: Act the first A home, plain and beautiful. Enter newly married pair. Enter contentment. Enter as much happiness as ever get3 In one home. Act the second Enter discontent. Enter desire for' larger expsndlture. Enter envy. Enter Jealousy. Act the third Enter the queenly dress-makers. Enter the French mil liners. Enter all costly plate and all great extravagances. Act the fourth Tiptop of society. Princes and princesses of upper ten dons floating in and out. Everything on a large and magnificent scale. En ter contempt for other people. Act the fifth and last. Enter the as signee. Enter the sheriff. Enter the creditors. Enter humiliation. Enter the wrath of God. Enter the contempt of society. Enter ruin and death. Now drop the ourtain. Tho play is ended and the lights are out. I called It a tragedy. That la a mis nomer. It Is a farce. rroTllln for One's Own. I know It cuts close. I did not know but some of you In high dudgeon would cct up and go out. You stand it well! Some cf you make a great swash In life, and after awhile you will die, and ministers will be sent for to come and stand by your coffin and lie about your excellences. But they will not come. If you send for me, I will tell you what my text will be: "He that provldeth not for his own. and especially for those of his own household, Is worse than an In fidel." And yet we find Christian men, men of large mean3, who sometimes talk eloquently about tho Christian church, and about civilization, expend ing everything on themselves and nothing on the cause of God, and they crack the bacit of their Palais Royal glovo in trying to hide the ono cent they put into the Lord's treasury. What an apportionment! Twenty thou sand dollars for ourselves and one cent for God. Ah, my friends, this ex travagance accounts for a great deal of what. the cause of God suffers. And the desecration goes on, even to the funeral day. You know very well that thero are men who die solvent, but the expenses are so great before they get underground they aro insol vent. There are families that go into penury in wicked response to the de mands of this day. They put In cas ket and tombstone that which they ought to put in bread. God's Canse Impoverished. And then look how the cause of God is impoverished. Men give so much sometimes for their indulgences they have nothing for the cause of God and religion. Twenty-two million dollars expended in this country a year for religious purposes! But what are the twenty-two millions expended for re ligion compared with the hundred mil lions expended on cigars and tobac co and then two thousand millions of dollars spent for rum? So a man who had a fortune of $750,000 or what amounted to that, In London spent it all In indulgences, chiefly in gluttonies, and sent hither and yon for all the delicacies and often had a meal that vould cost $100 or $200 for himself. Then he was reduced to a guinea, with which ho bought a rare bird, had it cooked in best style, ate it, took two hours for digestion, walked out on Westminster bridgo and Jumped, into tho Thames on a large scale what men arc doing on a small scale. Oh, my friends, let us take our stand against the extravagances of society. Do not pay for things that are frivo lous when you may lack the neces sities. Do not put one month's wages or salary into a trinket. Just one trink et Keep your credit good by seldom asking for any. Pay! Do not starve a whole year to afford one Belshaziar's carnival. Do not buy a coat of many colors and then in six months be out at the elbows. Flourish not, as some people I have known, who took apart ments at a fashionable hotel, and had elegant drawing rooms attached and then vanished in the night, not even leaving their compliments for the land lord. I tell you, my friends, in the day of God's Judgment we will not only have to give an account for the way wo made our money, but for the way we spent It. We have got to leave all the things that surround us now. Alas, If any of you In the dying hour felt like the dying actress who asked ; that the casket of jewels be brought to her and then turned them over with her pale hand and said, "Alas, that I have to leave you so soon!" Better in that hour have one treasure of heav en than the bridal trousseau of a Marie Antoinette or to have been s:at ed with Caligula at a banquet which cost its thousands of dollars or to have been carried to our last resting place with senators and princes as pallbear ers. They that consecrate their wealth, their time, their all, to God shall be held In everlasting remembrance, while I have the authority of this book for announcing that the name of tho wicked shall rot. SOUP AND STOCKS. Omens Which ;ye Warning to a Heavy Hpecula'or. A New Yorker in London during the recent time of excitement on the stock exchange attributes his fortunate is sue from a series of heavy speculations to an incident that w-as connected with nothing more occult and super natural than a plate of soup.' He was at dinner when the recent crisis was at its height. The soup was vermi celli, with the customary letters floating in it. In the conversation the New Yorker was contending against the general argument that the existing high prices were not likely to decline but rested on a business basis which made It certain they would be main tained. He was lifting the spoon to his lfps after a very spirited utterance on the subject, when h saw that the four letters in his spoon spelt the word "Sell." He is not a superstitious man, but the Incident set him think ing. He swallowed the omen with out mentioning it. He continued to eat, and the party confined its talk chiefly to the condition of the stock market in this city. When he dipped his spoon in the soup for the last mouthful, the New York Operator saw that only six of the flour letters remained in the plate, but they spelt the word "Unload." This coincidence was too much even for the doubting stock broker, who excused himself from the table and went to the cable office of the hotel. He sent word to his broker to close out all his rail road holdings, and the difference in tlmo brought the message here for the opening of the market on the day of the panic. His broker followed his directions, and be came out a heavy winner. It is not surprising that his favorite soup Is now vermi celli, especially when he is operating heavily in stocks. New York Sun, DAIRY AND POULTHY. NTEHESTINQ, CHAPTERS FOR OUR RURAL READERS. ITow Fnrrestfal Farmers Operate Ttall Department of the Farm A Hint a to (he Care of Live htock and l'oultrr. Iteuovated or rrocet Hatter. Farmers' Bulletin 131, of the Depart ment of Agriculture, says: llenavated or process butter, having been before the public for a few years, is little known as to the methods employed in making it. The better grades of It are made from miscellaneous assort ments of country butter, mainly rolls, produced by farmers' wives remote from creameries and sold or exchanged at tho country stores, thi3 matorlal be ing treated while relatively fresh. The poorer grades result from the treat ment of Inferior raw material; for ex ample, tho aforesaid "country butter" by unfavorable conditions has suffered great deterioration. Experience ha3 shown that only a poor article of ren ovated butter can be produced from rancid stock. The process may do briefly outlined as follows: Melting of the butter and settling of the curd and brine, skim ming off of froth and scum, drawing Off and discarding of the curd and brine, blowing of air through the mol ten fat to remove faulty odors, mixing of milk very thoroughly with the molten fat, rapid cooling and "granu tatlng" of this mixture by running it Into ice-cold water, draining and ripen ing of the granulated mass for a num ber of hours, salting and working out of the excess of milk, packing or mak ing into prints. By this process, when used upon comparatively fresh raw material, butters of low grade aro ma terially Improved, the farmer's reve nue Is Increased, values are enhanced In short, a good thing is done. Harm begins only when the renovated is sold for tho genuine (that Is, the original) article, for they aro not the same thing. While the fats in the two are practically the same chemically, the nitrogenous portions are not. More over, since the article known now and for ages past as "butter" is an article the last step in whose manufacture is the churning of cream, it is evident that the product of an elaborate sub sequent process, a process entirely for eign to the manufacture of "butter," should be designated by a distinctive name. To Tell Butter. Process Butter and Oleomargarine. Several of the states have already enacted laws requiring the distinctive branding or labeling of the new product when offered for sale, and as a consequence chemists have, during the last year or two, devoted considerable study to methods for dis tinguishing between the genuine and the renovated article. The Boiling Test An important means employed in distinguishing be tween genuine and renovated butter is the boiling test This test was first mentioned in scientific literature by Dr. Henry Leffmann, who states that it was shown to him by a Mr. Morris, a detectlvo in oleomargarine prosecu tions. It has been in use about ten years, and was originally used only for the detection of oleomargarine; but after the advent of renovated but ter the test was found to serve almost equally well In distinguishing this product from genuine butter. There fore, this test distinguishes between genuine butter on the one hand and oleomargarine and renovated butter on the other; and, fortunately, It is so Blmple of execution that it can be em ployed In anjr kitchen almost as well as In the laboratory, and requires no special skill on the part of the opera tor. It consists merely in boiling brisk ly a small portion of the sample and observing its behavior the while. In the kitchen the test may be con ducted as follows: Using as the source of heat an ordinary kerosene lamp, turned low and with chimney off, melt the sample to bo tested (a piece the size of a small chestnut) in an ordi nary tablespoon, hastening the process by stirring with a Epllnter of wood (for example, a match). Then in creasing the heat, bring to as brisk a boil as possible, and after the boil ing has begun, stir the contents of the spoon thoroughly, not neglecting tfie outer edges, two or three times at In tervals during the boiling always shortly before the boiling ceases. In the laboratory a test tube, a spoon, or sometimes a small tin dish, is used in making this test From the last named utensils the test is often called the "spoon test," and sometimes the "pan test" A gaa flame, if available, can bo used perhaps more conveniently than a kerosene lamp. Oleomargarine and renovated butter boll noisily, sputtering (more or less) like a mixture of grease and water when boiled, and produce no foam, or but very little. Renovated butter pro duces usually a very small amount Genuine butter boils usually with less noise, and produces an abundance of foam. l'oultrr Hrlefs. It ia said that the interest being manifested in the poultry Industry is greater than ever before. At no time previously in the history of this coun try have so many educated men been engaged in the business. Poultry farms of considerable magnitude are being established in localities where they have never before existed. There are probably more people writing ar ticles on poultry today than ever be fore, and the articles written are bet ter. The poultry business is develop ing enormously. e e e The would-be successful poultryman must be a good feeder. By good feed er we do not mean a heavy feeder but correct feeder. No matter how good the breed may ba or how pure, it will prove a failure without proper fueu ing. Now, perhaps some one will ex pect us to follow that remark with a set of rules for good feeding. But in stead we wish to say that feeding is a science that has to be learned Just like any other science. The inex perienced amateur cannot even carry out rules laid down by others, since their carrying out requires judgment, and correct Judgment comes only with experience. e The following scraps of information may bo Interesting: Hen manure should not be permitted to become very dry, as in that case it will lose much of its nitrogen. It may bo ac cumulated in barrels or boxe3, which should be covered to prevent the dry ing out by the air. Do not mix dry dust with it. When any kind of ma nure is mixed with absolutely dry dust or greatly diluted with water bacterial and chemical actions are set up that are very nearly annlhllatlve in their results. A mean must therefore be followed, and the manure kept slight ly moist and cold. Little change will then take place. In summer tho drop pings from the poultry should be cleaned away often and applied at once to the land. A con temporary assigns as one cause of soft-shelled eggs the over-feeding of meat This may bo so but is not probablo. At least few of our poul trymen can be accused of feeding 60 much meat that the ration is over balanced. Rheumatism in fowls can be to an extent avoided bj giving dry bouse quarters. Reviving Drowning Chick. It Is now the time of year when sud den showers are frequent, and some times a sudden downpour,- and lots of us poultry raisers have found chick ens and poults out on the range, and it Is impossible sometimes for us to get them to shelter without a half hour's warning, says a writer In Poul try Tribune. Before this season we have brought In drowned chicks by the apronful or dozen after one of those showers, somo dead, and others died because I didn't know how to ap ply warmth. I have been taught since by an older head to double a piece of carpet or other thick cloth and cover the bottom of a warm oven with it, put the wet chick on this, and those that seem dead immerse all but their heads in warm water, have it so warm that you can barely hold your hand in It, and hold the chicks there until they can move themselves easily. You will be surprised to see how soon an apparently dead chick will revive, if you have never tried this remedy. But alas, this remedy will not bring a dead chick to life. After you take them from the wa ter, wipe them with a dry cloth and put them In the warm oven to dry. We do not have all this bother with brood er chicks, for their mother is always In the same place, not a gadabout all over the farm, and the chlck3 know which way to run when they need. pro tection. We intend to do away with hens for brooders as soon as possible, because artificial brooders are not half the bother and we raise tho chicks. Kxpclllnff the lAcn. Lice are most always tho cause" of chicks dying seemingly without causes, so to speak, writes a corre spondent of tho Illinois Poultry Ga zette. After the chicks are hatched I leave them under tho hens for about thirty-six hours before feeding them any at all. They require no feed for that length of time, for nature pro vides for their nourishment for that length of time and that length of brooding makes them become strong and vigorous so as to be ready for the battle of coming existence. Usual ly when chicks are two days old I put a wee little speck of fresh lard , or sweet oil on their heads Just back of their little comb, rubbing it in gently, but being sure to not get too much grease on them, as the results might prove fatal and put the little downy balls to sleep forever. Tho sitting hens must be thoroughly dusted with some good insect powder which can bo procured at most any drug storo at a small cost Before I set the hens I paint their nest box with llco killer and put tobacco leaves or stem in bot tom cf box and then fine hay on top of this, but be sure not to let any of the lice medicine touch the eggs. After the hens is on the eggs a few days I place a camphorated ball in the nest By such application, if there happens to be any lice or mites left in the nest box or on the sitter they will mosey out without waiting for a written no tice to vacate the premises in ten days. Diseases of the Feet. The feet of fowls should be looked after, and any serious injury corrected by proper treatment Cuts and cracks may rapidly heal, or they may become centers of inflammation, which cause lameness. Such inflamed spots are hot and swollen. To allay the Inflamma tion hold the foot in water as hot as the bird can bear, then apply to the Injured surface an ointment composed of boric acid 1 part and vaseline 5 parts. The feet of fowls are subject to corns, due largely to narrow perches. See that the latter are broad and flat. Corns become greatly aggravated, pro ducing a condition known as bumble foot The affected part la hot, painful and swollen, or the swelling may sup purate, which when it breaks causes an ugly sore. Soak tho foot In hot water to reduce the inflammation, then apply a flax seed poultice. When the in flammation is reduced apply the boric acid ointment. Keep the foot band aged. If the swelling has formed an abscess, open the same with a sharp, knife previous to the above treatment. Bran Is an excellent egg food, and should bo used largely in the morning feed. DOUGHT FOR 0200,000. Interesting History of Monstor Clarke tireat Copper Mine. Like all rich nilpe3, the United Verde, the greatest copper mine in the world and which is owned by Senator W. A. Clark of Montana, has an in teresting history. Clark bought the mine, which now earn?, $12,000,000 a year profits, from two women for $200,000. This was tho way it came about. Two ranchers in the Verds valley located the property. They sold out for $10,000 to William Murray and former Gov. Trlttle of Arizona. Onj of the ranchers promptly proceeded to drink himself Into delirium trenens with his share of the money. MiA-ray and Trlttle Induced two New pork women cf independent fortune toback them to the extent of $200,000 fn tha development of the mine. This money was nearly all tpont and the pruspecti were bluo when the miners struck a pocket of silver ore that paid $KO,000. Murray died and Trlttlo failed,' to get any more profit out of the mine. It was abandoned for several years. Clark with his foreman came down from Montana looking for raining property. They saw the Verfile, liked it, went to New York, found the wom en only too glad to sell their stock for its face value and got possession. Clark proceeded to develop the mine scientifically and soon found that he was "right on the ore chute," as min ers say. Then ha built a hundred-ton smelter and Bet about taking 6ut the ore that has made him the (copper king of the world. There are about 3,000 shares of stock In tho mining company and Senator Clark owns them all. ( Wonderful Chi a In Indiana. Buck Creek, Ind., July 15th Mrs. Elizabeth Rorlck of this place ilhad Rheumatism. She says: "All the doc tors told mo they could do nothing for mc." She .was very, very bad, And tho pain was so great sho could nvot sleep at night. She used Dodd's Kidney nils, arid she Is well and entirely free from pail or any symptom of the Rheumatism. "Are you still using Dodd's Kidnej Pills?" was asked. "No, I stopped the use of the Pills some time ago, and have not had the slightest return of my old trouble. I am sure I am completely and perma nently cured." Many in Tippecanoe County who have heard of Mrs. Rorick's case and her eyre by Dodd's Kidney Pills, are using the Pills, and all report won derful results. Kangaroo Tendon Valuable. A movement has been started In France which has for Its preservation, or rather the cultivation of the kan garoo, which has been rapidly pro ceeding toward extermination. Dr. Brisson, a French surgeon, says that there is likely soon to bo an excep tional demand for the animals in con sequence of the success attending the use of the kangaroo tendon in the hospitals. It has been employed in scores of instances to tie up the frac tured bones of a man's lej In order that he may use hl3 kneo3 while tho bones are knitting together. Ladlt Can Wear Shop One size smaller alter usinr Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder. It makes tight or new shoes easjr. Cures swollen, hot, sweating, aching' feet, ingrowing nails, corns and bunions. All druggists and shoe stores, 2.1c, Trial package FREIi by mail. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. Carnegie Invitee Johnston, John Johnston is in receipt of a per sonal letter from Andrew Carnegla, in which the multi-millionaire invites tho Milwaukee Scotchman to visit him In Scotland. Mr. Carnegie writes that h.i will give Mr. Johnston a "genuine Highland welcome." Milwaukee WI3 censin. Laundering Thin Dress. To launder the exjuinite creations of mus lin and lace in which this Reason abounds has become quite a problem, yet tho most delicate materials will not be injured if washed with Ivory fcSonp and then dried in the shade, liut little starch need La ELIZA It. PARKER. lemonade Poisons Hnnrfredc Several hundred persons were poi soned at Ada. I. T., by drinking lem onade. Three children aro reported dead' and many seriously ill. No family, shop, ship, camp or per son should bo without Wizard Oil foi every painful accident or emergency. Evpn It ho has nothing, every man likes t say ho has made his own way In the wo'rld. The man who admits he rtoesn"t Jnow It all li wiser than the ono who thinks he does. Mall's Catarrh Cur Is taken Internally. Price, 75c, Whrn a man dissipates, ho feols bndly tbre times longer than he has a Rood time. Turn the Rascals Out We are speaking of the grip microbes Thfi well and strong can resist their poi son, tho sickly and weak are their prey. Unxter's Mandrake Hitters aro na turo's remedy for expelling all poisoc f ro'Q the svstcni. At druccista. In linnir or tablets at 25 cents per bottle or box it umif.ed with ,;-(Thompson's Eya VaUr ore evea. u A FVI-PIm fl Trratawiri t TV. n. Vhclnl Rrnwal Out KmkI, 4n , rrllepM til KrrvnixDfcrair. AMrH HUM'S ISKOWS, tS RrMaw?, Kwkarifc, k.t When answering Ads. pleas mention this pape H kui-ti fchtHt ml lTbnAiiE r Iwi CcstCoutrii Bjrup. Tafie Good. Cn I 111 Intlmw. Pl1 br 1rw1t. I'j Jj&r A FVI-PIm t rrnlMirt .ft. O. VT Vbelm Brows' Great Kraeify fnt