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THE DAILY CAIRO B CJLLETIN. s OFFICIAL DIKKCTOHY. t'ty Omcern. Mnyor-N, B. Thistlewood. Trwuunir T. J. Kurth. CItrrk --iit-nnis. ,1. Koley. .''! ir - -Win. II. Gilbert.. MarshalI,. II. Mi-yers, ttinijr Wllllrin Hendricks. mil hi or aluiriiiii. KirM Ward Win. Mc'UIm.V. M . Klmlirougu. H'ii'iiii l Wrd-.le Ilinkln, C N. Hughes. Third Wrl- U. K, Hinko. John Wood. Fourth iAnr.1 -Ciirl.. O. l'stler, Adoiph 6wo- Kiftb Wsrd T. W. lUllldar, Ernest U. Petttt. County Officers. Circuit .I'Hlsfo 1. J.llulo r. Circuit (..'lurk A. H. Irvin. County Judge K. M V'W'im. Coniiiy Clerk s. J. Ilumm. County Atlosney-J . M. Matnron. County Treasurer Milea W. I'arlcer. Sheiltf -John Hodgea. (JoroutrK. Klisgerald County OnmrnLsioiiursT. W. Ualllday, J. Olhbs and I'uWr saup. AIR') UVrTlST. Oornur Tenth and I'oplar J streets; preaching ftrt aud talrd Sundays in cacti moiitli, 11 a m. atd 7::i u. in.; prayer meet ;ioi Thursday, 7: Kip. oi. ; Sunday school, t:30 a.m lt v. A. -I. I1KSS. Pastor. Mll liCH OF TUE KKUKSMEa-(K(ilicocal) Poartei-iilh street; Sunday 7:no m., IJoly Km linrint ; ll;:ll a. m . , Sunday school; 11:01 a.m., Morning 1'iarers; mi'ip. in., Evening t'rayers. F. I'. I'sv.nport, H. T. M. Hector. IMI..-T V1SS10NAHY BAJTIST CHCRCB. V I'r I li.g at lo.i a n... 3 p. m., atid 7:SU p. m. 'abs"i suhmi) at 7 :'M p. m Ret. T. J. Shores, .iL.tor I ITI1 KlUN-Thlrteentb strer. servlcs Bab' I j I ich 1 SO a. m kniippe, past jr. Sunday school J p.m. Kev. RI'IlulJlST-Cur. Eighti and Walnut streets, es l'r Ki-1 blue Sabbath 11 :U0 a. ra. and 7 :" p. m. sundai ncbuol ai a:iW p. m. Itev . J. A. Scarrett, asti r. 1K;:r.VTEK!AS -Eighth street; preaching on 1 Us' lath at ll:t a. in. and 7:3p. m.; prayer net nr W.Mtiesdnv at 7:') p.m.; Sunday bcbsol at in. m. hiv B. Y. Ocorge, paator. Irtvei'll S-tKo:oan Catholic) Corner Croat O a'n! Walnut streets; servlcs Sabbath 10:S0a. u.; h.jii'iav School at p. ra. ; Vespers 3 p. m.; ser rices i -very ily at 8 a. m. Iter. O'Uara, Priest. CT. I'.vrXIt'K'S- Korean Catholic) Corner Slnth O strmt and Washington averiae; s-rvlces Hab :ia'hband 10 a.m.; Vesper p. m.; Sunday School t p. in. arrvicea avtsry day al 6 a.m. Kef. MaU!rJU 11. R. TIME CARD AT CAIRO. ILLINOIS CENTRAL H. R. tiuini imraKT. TRitia akhiti. Mail S:15a.m I tMali .: a.m Acuiru'datlon.lUlo a.m Eivruai 11:10 a. ni Eipro i:w p m I Accnmdatkit..4:i'S pm MI8 CENTRAL R. R. kr M all 4:U.m ItMaiU..- J:flOp.m kEipreM l'l:15a m I tEzururi U :!) a m ST. L. 4 C. R. R (Narrow Gauge ) FKxpri'M lo:4S a.m I Eipmnf 4:H5p.ni Aicom'dall'in. I :i p.m I 'Accora'datoln 12:0s p.m HT L , I. M A H R R. Kxpri; ll:ip.m.KipnM li-V p m r Arcum aation. x.,p m I tAccom datloo u: a m WABASU, ST. LOUS PACIFIC R'YCO. VI! Jt Ki .... 4 41 a.m 'Mali K.... :ai p m Daily eicept Sanday. t Ually. mobile onion n: Vail i:"ria. m. I Mail -....8:S"P. m- SiproH. :0i a. in. I Kxprrtt p. m gT. LOUIS & CAIRO 11. K. TRAIN'S RL'N AS FOLLOWS. Kxpr- M anl MaiU-ave Cairo. ever? day except Sanday. at in..'", a m Arriv.a 4.3.'p. m. lr.mmkl U (in lH Vl'l Bl i:.HJ U. III. parta at I :'J p. tn. NEW AIiVERTlSEMEN'TS. ELECT SCHOOL. Walnut St . near 12th. Sl'MMEKTERM, from -luly 5, 12 weeks VAl.r, TERM, from Oct. 2. 12 weeks Tl'lTION FOR TKRM I'EK M"N I'll WKEK 75 Common School, Ara'lomic and Commurclal Hranclu'C tamrht. IfKNltV l'lOVD.T.uithor. niTXlclAXS. QE01W.E II. LEACH, M. D. Phvu!iJin and Surgeon. an.iot.1 .tt.ii.tion nald to the Homeopathic treat mvnt of mimical llai. aud diaesa of women Oft : 00 1 Uh trea, oppnUo the I'o.t Ofllce. Cairo, 111. DENTISTS. D R, V. (3. JOCKLYN, DENTIST. OFFK'R-Rlirhth Htrwt, near rnmrrerctal Aventlu J)R. B. W. WUITLOCK, Duntal Surgeon. irrirm No. 1M Commercial Avonus, bitwaen Kithlli and Ninth Street" ICE. JOHN SI'ROAT, PROntlKTOR OF BrROAT'8 PATENT Kefrigehator Oars, AND Dealer Vholralo in Ice. ICF I'Y THE CAR LOAD OR TON.WELI rKEi for BiurriNo Oat' OIPFIOKI 1 . - m liui. cu i. -..4 f Anna ur. i weiii'U oit eei nuu uooc, CAIRO, ILLINOIS. ; TU KBUULAR CAIRO AND PADUCAU I'A i u I rAvri KT, WTKAMEIt in GUS P0WLBR.81 ttt HENI1V E. TAYLOR M...tr GEO. JOBES clerk LnivPaducali for Cairo dahy (Sundava xcept pd) at s a.m. and Mound City ut 1 p m.' Rotnrii ing, L"t Cairo al4 p. m. Uound. City at 5p. m. FERRYBOAT CAIRO CITY FERRY CO. FKKKYBOAT THREE 8TATES. On and aftr Monday. Jalv 21. andnmil f,iti,- nolle the ferryboat Three rttaten will run as near m pocelbleon tae fo!lolng timo table: Maria Liana Mliionrl Land g. 7:Ma. m. 9:fi0 " 11:00 " :Jp. m. Laave LliTXI Kentucky Ld g. Foot Fourth it. fl:S0 a. m. V) " 10::t) " f.VO p. m. Leave i 7:1" a. m. :10 " 11 :S) ' 3:(. m. Leave Mlmoarl Land'i;. :1U p.m. Foot Fourth t. Keutarky lA'g. 4:.) p. m 4:tw p. m. On laet trli aet trlpleaviDg Kimturkv landing at 4 :30 o'clock i , the boat wtli go to Rirda Point, makinj coa- m nection with T. & St. L. paa.oneer train for Cairo. Kirn trip at 8:30 a. m. leiivinii r lrn win ,,.,,,,.1 1th T. 4 St. L. train leavlne Cairo. IN8CBAXCE. 1 N" S u R A N G E V! w w PI X cr. 3 t-t 0 3 (A H H -O O 5 C 9 f 75 k-4 n MITI'AL AID SOCIETY. JgUREKA.! EUREKA!! A SUBSTITUTE FOR LIFE ISSUB- ANCE CUMl'ANIES. WIDOWS' & ORPHANS' Mutual Atd Society, OF CAIRO. OrgRnlzi'dJalTlth,1877,Cn(ler tbe Lw 0 the State of Illinois. Copyrighted Jalv 9, 1877, Under Act of Congress. OFFICERS: p n srnrn President 0. T. Rl'DI) Vice Premdunt J. A. (10LDSTINE Treasurer .I.J. GORDON Medical Adviser TtlOMAS LEWIS Secretur JOHN 0. WHITE Assistant Sncrt'taJl KXKCUTIVK COMMITTEE II. LKIOHTON, L. b. THOMAS, J. C. WHITE, W. F. PITCH KK, J , 8. MCUAUE.1 . HOAllD OFMANAGKIW: William Htratton. of Htratton & Bird, wholenilo grocers; Paul O. Hchuh, wholesale and retail driiu Stsi: uaKen ieiKiutin, comiiiinniou iuni lining mh. . McUahev. luniliur dealer: J. J. liordiin. tihvs Iclau ; A. Goldstlne, tifdoUIstlne & Rnseiiwatcr, wholiisale and retail dry goods, em; wm.r . runt, er, general agent; Henry B. Ellis, city printer and hook binder: Choaler Havnes. Cooper: Jn. C, Whits, assistant secretary and solicitor: Albert Lewis, dealer tn tlonr and grain; r. itrnss, presi dent Alexander County Hank : U. W. llulltlrlcks euntractor and builder: Cvrtis Close, general agent; Thomas Lewis, secretary and altornev at law; L. 8, Thomas, broom manufacturer: W. I' agent 0. St. L. N. O. rallaoad; Moses I'hllltps.csr- Hussel. contractor aim Dtuioer i, uuu'i ni,ntnr! 11 . a. 1 nnmii ev. contractor. 1 airo. ins. 1l.iv. .1. Himnriir. alnrirvinan.Ht Lettis. Mo.t J. H Uotlittno.tlrcult clerk. Mississippi county, Chsrles ton, MO.; J. U. Moore , lawver, unmrnercc, nio.' 1). Hlmrletarv. nhvalclan. Arllnirton. Ky.t J. V Tarry, phvalclan, Fultou, Kr. ; Wm. Ryan, farmer, fllerr, BTansvlllo, Ind.;Iko Andersou, secretary Miirrv. kt. : A. nteinnarn. manniaciurer i no toinperintendentC. St. L. N O. railroad, Jack son, Tenn.jJ. 8. Robertson, physician, White llle,Tnn.i ThomaaA. Osborn, harness maker Rollvtr.Ten.t Wm. L. Walker, "DUls Adver tolBff Astncv " Hoi it Bprlacs, Mist CAIKO. ILLINOIS. i'HIDAY M0KNIN0, AUGUST 1, 1882. CHICAGO MARKET REPORT CORRECTED DAILY BY CIIAS. HAM, UKOKLR. CUNNING- ::ii A. M Angtut3, IHcJ. Auguet. September. October. $ . ! 4) 70 (19 Ui 7'IS 75', T4. 3,;S 35'4 35, li:l P. M. $ K5 i0 7S ' 'Mi'i my, 7 ' 7'i 74 -M i V) P. M. Closing. JI M .'J li'i 2l Hn Wf'i W; M "-i 7?i 74' 4 W 35'a Pork What Corn Oat Pork Wheat Corn Oata Pork U hi-at Corn Oata NEW YORK, AUtiUSrj, 183. Wheat R. W. fl 11 16 No 2 IUdl liji Corn No. 2 8S;c. RIVER NEWS. W. F. Lambui, river editor of i'fik IlyLLTiH and steamboat penger a':nt. Orders for all kindaof ateamhoat job printing aolicltod. Office at Planters Hotel, No. M Ohio levee. Tlib Will Kyle from Cincinnati arrived here yesterday morning at 3 o'clock. She had a good trip and added about 250 tons more, which rilled her out flat; and left for New Orleans, at 7 p. m. The damage to tbe VintSliinkle causal by the flood of waters coming out of the Licking river opposite Cincinnati was not so bad as first reported. She left on time Wednesday evening and is dua here to morrow evening. For passenger rates see W. F. Lambdin agt. Tha Golden Crown leaves Cincinnati for New Orleans to-morrow. The Ous Fowler is the regular packet from Paducah to Cairo and returns to-day. The popular Cons Millar with Cupt. C. U. Russel in command, and Mr. Joseph Voris in the office will report here early this morning goes through to Cincinnati. Passengers going up the Oliio, can secure transportation at reasonable rates by getting tickets of W. F. Lambdin agt. offico 54. Oliio Levee. Yesterday was hot and sultry. Busiues3 on the wbarf dull. The Josh V Throap is now running from VuiKuiowu to rvansviuo . 1..-. r, to the Evan9ville Paducah packets. The Silver Cloud is lying up at Evans- ville waiting for something to do. The Paducah Base Ball Club and the Mound City Club will play a match game for one hun lred dollars a side at Mound City to-i.iorrow. The Gus Fowler will bring Paducah Club down. The City of Cairo arrived at St. Louis last tiight and leaves for Vicksburg this morn ing. The City of New Orleans will leave here to day for the Crescent City. The U. P, Schenck from New Orleans arrived here last evening at 7:15. She had 800 tons of frciglit, and departed, for 'Cin cinnati at 8 p. m. The John B. Maude from St. Louis ar rived at 7:10 last evening with a good trip, and departed for Memphis at 9 p. m. The Andy Bum is duo to-morrow for Memphis. A very heavy rain set in last evening at 5 o'clock and lasted over an hour which cooled the atmosphere very much. Hiram D. Brazer, popular steamboat pi lot, kuown well by all prominent river men and recently appointed inspector of hulls for the port of Memphis to fill the place made vacant by S. S. Garrett who has been promoted to supervising in.-pecter, wai passenger from Memphis to Cuiro. Mr. Brazer will return to Memphis to-morrow and will assume charge of his position. The latest information from Cincinnati states that the river is again falling fast at that point. Who c m tell anything about weather, wind, river, or anything, else from the way tho clerk of tho elements is manacinnr affairs. Wo will discontinue prognosticating for the present at loaat 0.3. we do not pretend to copo with Venor. The JohnB. Miude is tho regular An chor line nackct from St. Louis duo here this evoning for Memphis. An effort is being uiado by a number of public spirited young men to raise nion ey enough to charter an engine and conch to take a company ot people from here to Mound City on Suuday afternoon at 1 :30 o'clock, to witness the game of baseball to bo played there between the Riversides and a PuducaH crack nino tor a stake ot ono hundred dollars a side. Tho game will bo an unusually interesting ono, because both clubs aro composed of good players. Peo plo from a number of towns on tho river will bo there, and Cairo should bo well represented. It does not take much to charter tho engine and coach; the neccs Barv amount should bo raised in a few hours. Tho dance of tho Young People's Social Club at new Reform hall Wednes day night wag a delightful little affair, About twenty couplo wcro present who danced and othorwise enjoyed themselves until late in tho night. Shaving From House to House. "I sujiposi- I'm what would ho called an oscillating ton.soml nrli.st. Tho speaker wm a well-dressed nifiii of 30, earn ing hi his hand .1 lit.tlo leather bag. "Haven't you any shop?" asked the reporter. "N', this is in v shop," s;hl tho man, holding up his little Va!Ni Then he opened it and showed its contents, which (unsifted of a dozen razors, a number of bnchiM, am! other paraphernalia be longing to his trade. -Mot (,f my cus tomers live on Walnut, Spruce', and Chestnut street, :t;,I t),,. Inan, 'ami 1 1 1 -majorit v of them are rich, old gentle men, who have retired from business, many of them w ho, in their younger days, shaved themselves, but have grown too infirm. I get all the wav from h tiarier to 7o cents for a shave". I Mart out every morning about H ami wind up about 1 or 2. 1 have a regu lar route to go f.ver," and the b-trber showed a lUtlo book in w hich w i re reg istered the addiv-st's and names of his customer. "I have different custom ers for different days." "How much can you make in n week?" queried the reporier. "In winter I average jO a week, but in summer I don't make so much, as many of my customers go out of town." "Are there any barbers in jour branch in any of the other large cities?" "No, I think not. 1 am the only man in this particular branch. I cak r'to the aristocratic class, and I'm .saving mon ey a' it. It's my own idea, and as a lirt-r!ass artist can't make more than S.'ii n week in a simp, pcr-piisite and pay, I prefer this. l'liila.l, IjJiiii Timet. A Btrange Sight. TJ.o .south-bound freight train on the North Carolina railroad run over a ne gro child about 4 years old, between the Yadkin river bridge ami Salisbury, re cently. The engineer .saw it would be impossible to slop the train before it reached the spot where the child was sitting, and. sw inging himself out of the window, started to crawl along the en gine to its front, with tho intention of picking up the child before the cow catcher struck it. He. would probably have succeeded in this perilous under taking, but a lunge of the engine caus ed him to lose his balance, and he was precipitated down an embankment. He had hardly regained his feet b fore a jiiercing scream was heard, and ho knew the child had been run down. The engine stopped within its length af ter striking the child, and then the hor rible task of pulling the mangled bodv out from under the wheels began. The ly" a? !f "(foiie'wilh'a knife, the head part falling to one side aud the legs to the other. A shudder ran through tho en gineer when he picked up the head and )0(iy 01 inn cnnu, aim me sensations ne expenenceii when it nroKe into a cry were indescribable. He hastily laid it upon the ground, when it uttered the most agonizing screams fur full two minutes before it gave a grasp and died. It was a strange experience to hear a lismcmbered bdy crying, and was well calculated to make the witnesses shud- ler. The body of the child was turned over to its mother, who lived in a cabiu near bv. L'li'irlotU: Uhmrver. About Peanuts. For the ten years 187MKS0, tho pea nut crop in this country was 8,100,000 bushels 4,200.000 from Tennessee. 3, 2i)0,hi0 from Virginia, and 700,000 from North Carolina, lhe crop last year was 2,2'JO.OOO bushels, and the average price was 7 cents per pound, twenty-two rounds to the bushel. U is the retailer that makes the money. Peanuts ure sometimes as low as 3 or b cents a pound, but the consumer finds no atement in the price 01 ins measure of nuts. At 7 cents a pound, a bushel will bring !1.M, which, peddled out at In cents a pint, brings in .ii. 40, or at 6 cents a pint !r;.20-a fair profit to the curbstone dealer. The Abbe Liszt, . the famous pianist, devotes the afternoons of three days each week to giving free instnietioin to young artists. Melville's Wife's Mementoes. Mrs. Melville has preserved a num ber of mementoes of her husband's last hours at home previous to his departure on that terrible Arctic voyage, from which it was doubtful if he would ever return. "Here," said the fond wife, holding in her hands a lined napkin folded mid held by 11 silver ring, ut which sho gazed long and pensively, "is his napkin, just as he left it. after tho lust meal at which tiny of us have ever seen a ftl 1 . . 1 V . I . .111 ... I . . linn. 1 ne nisi, uiing ne urn uciore leav ing tho table was to fold tho napkin, and, laying it down by his plat 0, lie said: 'Perhaps 1 will never fold another lit luinie.' Then lie got up, bade us nil follow him, and went down to the little depot you see out there, said 'Good-bye, ' and we have never seen him since. El sie, here, who is growing up to bo ijuite a big girl, was then not its largo as Ncta, there, who was but n baby. I tell you, when George gets back 1 11111 afraid 'that he won't be able to recognize us all. I expect that Lieut. Daiicnhower has some papers for mo, nit hough as yet ho has not notified us. He can unywnv, tell us all about George." A little rub ber band, which was hanging on the clock in tho dining-room, at this mo ment caught Mrs. Melville's eyes, and she stopped nbrnptly to point it out as another memento. It was placed thcro by her husband the last evening ho spent at home, and it rap winch lie una hung upon n picture-frame the after- noon before Ins departure remains ex actly where ho left It. Although anx ious to sco her husband. Mrs. Melville kiivs that she can n fiord to wait until ho either finds Lieut. Chino mid his crew and restores them in rood health to their families or discovers that they have been lost. "It Is his duty," said she, and George always docs that." W' drtphia Record. Man 8 Eolation to the Lower Animals. Since many writers opposed to the praetieo of experiment. on animals have based their objections entirely on moral (".rounds, and thus made the question of vivisection an ethical one, I have been anxious to know what laws they have discovered for our guidance on this vex ed subject, They discourse on cruelty, on immorality and on the rights of ani mals; but these expressions are so vague that they fail to utlord any basis for legal or public action, or, if there bo any at tempt at delinition, it is w ith tho object of making these terms conform on the very point Under discussion. Thus it is constantly nssertcd that physiologists feel at liberty to torture animals at their pleasure, without regard to tho "higher dictates of humanity." It is thus im plied that there exists among the public some principle of conduct toward the loweranimals which has noplace anion" experimenters. They speak as if, stanrH ing on a higher platform, ami behold ing all creatures from a superior posi tion, they could frame a code of laws which should hare due regard to the l ights of animals, and govern our own conduct in all our relations to them. This position is altogether fallacious; man cannot disconnect himself from the ttnimal world, and cannot define its lights. It must, therefore, be abandon ed as altogether untenable, and tho sub ject discussed from a totally different t.tand-point. Our relation tot he animal world can only in a very "qualified sense be regarded from an ethical point of view; much in the same way as eating nnd drinking may lie spoken of as ques tions of morality when moral considera tions exert their influence over tho amount and kind of food which we con sume; this, however, can not hide from us the fact that the subject of digestion is fundamentally a physiological one. The duty of man toward animals, as an abstract question, is from its very nature insoluble; it can only be partial ly answered on the grounds of expedi ency, and these will vary according to age and nation. We should, rather, a-k what is our relation to the lower an imal world, and in what place in that leiauonsiiip can moral considerations come into force? In endeavoring to form a judgment of this relationship, we must take facts as we find them, for tho at tempt at. an explanation is trying to solve the rid. lie of our existence, "and leaves us still with "the burden of the mystery of all this unintelligible, world." J'Ynn "The Klhksof li'ri.wtion," In l)r. Siimml Wilks, iii papular Srknre Musio as a Mental Discipline, The nature of music is threefold, like that of man to whom it appeals. There fore, it may be regarded as a sensuous art, in that it delights the ear; as a psychological art, in that it records tho emotions, nnd requires mental opera tions on the part of the hearer for its duo appreciation; and, as it involves igrceinents, differences, symmetries, complexities, etc., and order in appar ent disorder, it may be regarded as a branch ol science closely allied to math ematics The distance between the holes of a flute, the tension of a drum-head, the lengths of organ-pipes, tho rapidity of vibrations, the intervals between recur ring accents in fact, all that may bo surveyed and expressed in numbers in this art give evidence of the mental power of the musician, irrespective of all considerations respecting the imag ination or creative power in originating composition. The music of a peoplo may bo con sidered in diivctrelation to their super sensuous natures. From this point alone, strongly marked difference may lie noted; for, by comparing modern Italian music w ith Gcrman.it is ntonco seen that the latter is developed moro highly in au intellectual sense. Our modern music is styled a new art, chiefly because it requires advanced mental powers of a special kind on the part of composers and auditors. In stead of being a succession of mono tones, it is a complex web of many tones, that the hearer must analvzo to understand nnd enjoy. In the ordinary church quartette there aro four such in terwoven threads; in a symphony by Beethoven, many more. An elaborate tonal plexus demands from the listener considerable mental effort, unless ho has acquired by study a "polyphonic ear," or the powVrof perceiving tho re lationships of nil the parts heard simul taneously as clearly nsonelookingdown upon a ball-room scene may perceive the symmetrical forms of a mazy dance. Dr. S. Anxtt'H I'fitm; in Popular Sci. encr. Muiitlilifor July. Talk, Children learn to talk tho lnngtiago heard about them, whether It bo chaste and pure or low and vulgar. Therefore it belioovcs parents to take care of tho manner and substance of what they say before their children, and it Is also very clear that, the silly, nonsensical sluiVtalkcd to children is' not only very silly, but equally injurious. The con versational ability of the young Is being constantly educated by the talk of others. They should bo encouraged to talk. The old idea was that children should have eves and ears, and no tongue." The faculties cannot be cul tivated in that way. Children must talk, and must be guided in their talk and conversation if they are to become expert in the use of language. Women have the faculty in a higher degree than men. They nro greater talkers than men. They have stronger social feelings, which h ad to tho exercise of this faculty! they nro in society moro; they talk more to children. Women nro more eloquent than men, Men are engaged tit business, In thought, nnd depress the faculty by wantol exorcise; while women, by exercising the faculty, aro constantly strengthening It. Natural Fruit Flavors. 3 SPECIE EXTRACTS. Prepared from the choicest Fruitt, with out coloring, poisonous oils, acids or artific ial Essences. Always uniform in strength, without any adulterations or impurities. Have gained their reputation from their perfect purity, superior strength and qual ity. Admitted by all who have used them as the most delicate, grateful and natural for for cakes, puddings, creams, etc. MANUFACTURED BT STEELE & PRICE, Chicago, III., and St. Louis, Mo., laktnof topollm Ynut t, Dr. Prliw'a fmm Biting Pwd.r, MS Ur. I'rlM't lalu Ptrfuaea. JE MAKE N O 8 ECO N DC R APE COOPS. run EQUITABLE LIFE Assurance Society, 120 Broadway, New York, DOES TUB LARGEST BUSINESS of any Life Insurance Company Why? Because It alone Issues Incontestable lolicies stipulating that tho contract of Insurance "shall not be disu'lted'' alter it is three years old, and that such policies shall be Paid Immediately on receipt of satisfactory proofs of death. Becauso Its policy Is cloar aud concise, and contains iNO ARDUOUS CONDITIONS. N. n.-UEAI) YOnt l'OUl'IKS. Compare th short and simple form used by the Kqintnlile with he long and obscuro contractu loaded down with technicalities Issued by other compsutesl Because Its CASH RETURNS to policy holdurs are Unprecedented. N. II. See the many letters from policy holders iprssslug their grali&ratton with tha returns from their Tosriss: Savisns lrt'NU I'uliciws. Beoiiuso of ltsj Financial Strength. Outstanding Insurance 190 MILLIONS. Assets Securely Invested MILLIONS. 8urpluu Securely Invested, nearly 10 MILLIONS. IS. A. UUHNETT. Atfent. Offlca, corner !3ta and Washington. HoTsmberiH, 1H. Ww