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A NOTABLE SILVER ANNIVERSARY. With the close of the present year Mr. David C. Cook, of Chicago, will celebrate his first quarter-centennial as editor and publisher of Sunday school literature. Starting twenty-five years ago, without reputation or assur ance of support, he has become one of the most widely and favorably known publishers In this line. Beginning in 1875 with two small publications, his periodicals have grow n in number and favor until there are few schools in this country that do not find it to their interest to use some of his pure and helpful publications, while many in distant lands pay tribute to their mer its. The past quarter of a century has witnessed many changes among Sunday-school publishers, and much less time than this has sufliced for some to outlive their usefulness. On jhe con trary, Mr. Cook is preparing to cele brate the beginningof another quarter century with additional improvements and new publications. Among these may be mentioned the New Century Sunday School Teacher's Monthly, a large and thoroughly up-to-date mag azine for superintendents and teachers, the first issue of which will appear in December. Among the most remark able of his publications is the "foung People's Weekly, which has attained a circulation of nearly a quarter of a million, being a successful attempt to furnish a high grade of religious story reading for boys and girls. To avoid the "goody-goody" story of the Sunday-school, such as we remember in our childhood days, and furnish some thing natural, interesting and en nobling, has been its aim, and wc are not at all surprised at its popularity. The restraining influence of the Christian home and the Sunday-school on our growing community of young people, some of us may not appreciate as we should perhaps because the.se sometimes fail to restrain. This paper should be a most welcome accessory in this work, and one which all should appreciate. Toys and girls will read, and the story book and paper are their first choice. There stems a plentiful supply of religious papers for older people, but this is the first successful atttempt to furnish a non-sectarian re ligious story paper for young people. The paper is profusely illustrated, beautifully printed, and contains as much or more reading matter than the most expensive of secular young peo ple's story papers. The price, seventy live cents per year, should bring it within the reach of every home. Mr. Cook Is now making a special effort to give the paper a wider circulation, and all who send seventy-five cents for a year's subscription before Jan. 1st will receive a beautiful premium pic ture entitled "The Soul's Awakening." It is exactly the same size (13x1S Inches), and style as those on sale at art stores for $1. Orders should be ad dressed to David C. Cook Publishing Co., 30 Washington St.. Chicago. Probably no man living has done so much to improve and cheapen Sunday school literature as has Mr. David C. Cook. Through his aid thousands of schools have been .encouraged, im proved and made self-sustaining. Mr. Cook Is yet a comparatively young man, and it docs not appear at all improbable that his field of usefulness may extend over j'et another quarter-century. Everything a Uliriw, "Doctor, if microbes in food are hurtful, what makes me get so stout?" "Oh, my dear madam, there is a flesh producing microbe, you know." Indianapo lis Journal. Lant'i Family Medicine, Moves the botVel each day. In order to be healthy this is necessary. Acts gently on the Liver and kidneys. Cures sick head ache. Price 25 and 50c. To Care a Cold in One Day Take Laxative liromo Quinine Tablets. All druggists refund money if it tails to cure. 25c. Docs her famtly tree have anything to do with making a woman willowy? Boston Transcript. Plso's Cure for Consumption has saved mo many a doctor's bill S. K. Hardy, Hop kins Place, Baltimore, Md , Deo. si, HM. QRAIN-Q ejVI THE FOOD DRINK. a' Some people can't drink coffee ; everybody can drink Grain-6. It looks and tastes like coffee, but it is made from pure grains. No. coffee in it. Grain-0 is cheaper than coffee ; costs about one quarter asmuch. All grocers ; 15c. and 25c. It Osr OoMa, Ceghs, Bars Threat, Oram, lata mtt, Waeoaiag Otofk. Bronchitis an Asthaa. A r. rfamaumntioa la flrti ltd, . uitian ralisf la ?M0d . Ute at eaes. Tae will M tht ict.Wnt effect after fcnl i rt iota. Bold If dtlt7S '7!W. ?'ie 1m4 Wttmftr WtU. A RIGHTEOUS EARTH. Dr. Talmage Discourses on the World as It Will Be. Improvement In Human Conditions After It Una Iteen Kevolnt Ionised (or (iood Glorlea of the ComloK Century. Copyright, 1S99, by Louis Klopsch. Washington, Dec. 3. By a novel mode Dr. Talmage hi this discourse shows how the world will look nfter it has been revolutionized for good; text, 2 Petr 3:13: "A new earth, wherein dwelleth righteousness." Down In the struggle to make the world better and happier wc sometimes get de prcpscd with the obstacles to be overcome and the work to be accom plished. Will It not be n tonic und an inspiration to look at the world us it will be when It has been brought back to paradisaical condition? So let us for a few moments transport ourselves into the future and put ourselves forward in the centuries and see the world In its rescued and perfected state, us. we will see it If In those times weare permitted to revisit this planet, as 1 am sure wc will. We all want to seethe world after It hasbcen thoroughly Gospelizcd and till wrongs have been righted. We will want to come back, and we will come back to look upon the refulgent consum mation toward which wc have been on larger or smaller scale toiling. Having heard the opening of the orchestra oji whose strings soma discords traveled, we will went to hear the last triumph ant bar of the perfect oratorio. . Having wen the picture as tho priUr drew its first outlines upon ennvnsvwy will want to sec it when it is as complete as Ileu Ih'ii's "Descent from the Cross" or Michael Angelo's "Last Judgment." Having seen the world under the gleam of the star of Hethlchem, we will want to see it when, under the full shining of the sun of righteousness, tho towers snail striKC lam noon. Alighted on the redeemed earth, we arc first accosted by tlu spirit of the twenty-first century, who proposes to guide and show us nil that we desire to see. Without his guidance we would lose our way, for the world i so much changed from the tiwe when we lived In it. First of all, lc points out to us a group of abandoned buildings. We ask this spirit of the twenty-first cen tury: "What are those structures whose walls are fulling down nrd whose gates are rusted ou the hinges'.'" Our est-ort tells us: "Those were once peni tentiaries filled with offenders, but tho crime of the world hus died out. Theft anil arson and fraud and violence have quitted the earth. People have all they want, and why should they appropriate the property of others even if they had the desire? The marauders, the assas sins, the buccaneer, the llerods, the Nana Sahibs, the ruffians, the bandits, are dead or, transformed by the power of the Christian1 religion, ure now up right and beneficent and useful. After passing on amid columns and statues erected in memory of those who have been mighty for goodness in the world's history, the highest and tlu most exquisitely sculptured those in honor of such as have been most . ef fectual in saving life or improving life rather than those renowned for de stroying life, we com upon another group of buildings that must have been transformed from their original shape and adapted to other uses. "What Is all this?" we ask our escort. lie answers: "Those were almshouses and hospitals, but accuracy In making nnd prudence fn running machinery of all sorts have almost abolished the list of casualties, and sobriety and industry have nearly abolished pauperism, so that those buildings which once were hospitals and almshouses have been turner! Into beautiful homes for the less prospered, and If you will look in you will see the poorest table has abundance, nnd the smallest wardrobe luxury, and the harp, waiting to have its strings thrummed, leaning against the piano, waiting fot Its keys to be fingered. "Hospitals und almshouses must have been a necessity once, but they would be useless now. And you see all tliv swamps have been drained, the sewerage of the great towns has been perfected, and the world's climate is so Improved that tnere are no pneumonias to come out of the cold, or rheumatisms out of the dampness, or feversout' of the heat. Consumptions banished, pneumonias banished, diphtheria banished, ophthal mia banished, neuralgia banished. As near as I can tell from what I have read, our atmosphere of this century is u mingling of the two months of May and October of the nineteenth century." And we believe what our escort says, for as we pass on we find health glow ing in every cheek nnd beaming In every eye and springing in every step and articulating in every utterance, nnd you nnd I whisper to each other as our escort has his attention drawn to some new sunrise upon the morning sky, and wc say, each to the other: "Who would believe that this is the world we lived In over 1(10 years ago? Look ot those men and women we pass on the road! How improved the human race!" Such beauty, such strength, such gracefulness, such geniality Faces without the mark of one sorrow! Cheeks that seem never to have bee n wet by one tear!.. A race sublimated if Anew world born!" Hut I say to our escort: "Did all this merely happen so? Aro all the good here spontaneously good? How did you get the old shipwrecked world afloat again, out of the breakers into the smooth sens?" "No, no!" responds our twent.v-flrst century escort. "Do yon see those towers? Those Are the towers of churches, towers of reform atory institutions, towers of Christian schools. Walk with me, and let us enter some of these temples.' We en ter, uid I find that the music Is in the major key and none of It in the Biocr. . ''Gloria In Excelsis" - rising above "Gloria In Excelsis." Tremolo stop in the organ not so much used as the trumpet stop. More of Ariel than of Naomi. More chants than dirges. Not a thin song, the words of which no one understands on' the lip of n soloist, but mighty harmonics that roll from outside door to clinn cel nnd from floor to grained rafter ns though Handel had com out of tho eighteenth ecntnry into the twenty-first und had his foot on tho organ pedal, and Thomas Hastings hud eoino out of the early part of the nineteenth century into the twenty-first nnd were lending the voices. Music that moves the earth niul makes Heaven listen. Hut I say to our twenty-first cen tury escort: "I cannot understand this. Have these worshipers no sor rows, or have they forgotten their sor rows?" Our estort responds: "Sor rows! Why, they had sorrows more than you could count, but by a divine illumination that the eighteenth und nineteenth centuries never enjoyed they understand the uses of sorrow nnd are comforted with n supernatural condolence such us previous centuries ne'cr Experienced." I. nsW ngnin of the interpreter:" "Has death been banished from the world?" The nhswer Is: "No, but people die now only when the physical machine ry is worn out, and they realize it Is time to go nnd that they are certain ly nnd without doubt going into n world where they will be infinitely bet ter off nnd are to live in a mansion that awaits their Immediate occu pancy." "Hut how was all this ef fected?" I nsk our escort. Answer: "P.y floods of Gospel power. You who lived in the nineteenth century never saw a revival of religion to bo com pared with what occurred in the lat ter part of the twentieth and the early part of the twenty-first century. The prophecy has been fulfilled that 'a nation shall be lorn in u day' that is, ten or twenty or forty million people converted in Zi hours. In our church history We read of the great awak ening of 1S57, when SOO.OOU souls were saved. P.ut that was only a drop of the coming showers that since then took into the kingdom of Cod every thing between the Atlantic nnd the Pacific, between the Pyrenees nnd the Himalayas." The evils that good peo ple were in the nineteenth century trying to destroy have been overcome by celestial forces. What human weaponry failed to accomplish has been done by omnipotent thunder bolts. As you and I see in this terres-t rial visitation of the coming cent uries that the church has under (Sod accomplished so much, we nsk uur escort, the spirit of the twenty-first cent ury, to show us the different kinds of churches. So we arc taken in nnd out of the churches of dif ferent denominations, and we find 1 hat they are just nsdifferent in the twenty first century ns they were different in the nineteenth when we worshiped in them. There is unity In them as to the great essentials of salvation. Hut we enter the ltnptist church, and it is bap tismal day, nnd we see the candidates for membership immersed. And we go into u Presbyterian church nr.d see a group of parents around the baptismal font holding up their children for the christening. And wc enter the Episco pal church and hear the solemn roll of her liturgies, nnd her ministers are gowned and surpliced. And we enter the Lutheran church, nnd we hear in the sermon preached the doctrines of the greatest of German reformers. And we go into the Methodist church just in time to sit down at a love feast nnd give audible "Amen" w hen, the service stirs us. At least 50 kinds of churches in the twenty-first century, as there were 150 different kinds of churches in the nine teenth century. 'T.ut what Is yonder row of buildings, majestic for architecture?" The spirit of the twenty-first century says: "Those are our legislative halls and places of public trust, nnd if you would like it I will show you the political cir cles, the modes of preferment, the styles of election, the character of public men in this century." "Thank you," I re ply. "I can easily understand howGos pelization would Improve individual life nr.d social life and commercial life, but I would lWce to sew what it can do fcr political life." "Ix-t me tell you," says the spirit of the twenty-first century, "that I have rend about political chi canery and corruption of more than 11K) yunrs ago the nineteenth century. In which you lived here but the low po litical caucus has gone from the face of the earth, and the stuffed ballot box, and the bribery by money nr.d by prom i;c of office, and the jobs got through li gislatures nnd congresses by lobby ists. We have nothing like a Credit Mo biiier scandal, or those harbor and river appropriations, the most of which never improved the harbors or rivers, or speeches to kill time and prevent avote, or promotion to high place of political accidents, and the only bosses we have now boss because they have more brain nnd purity than those who are bossed. The money barrel to buy votes nnd to decide who shall be elected did not roll into this century. All those In high of fice in township, Mate and ration are men superior for intelligence and sa gacity and moral equipment and fitness for Ihe posts they occupy. All Intrigue and Machinvelism and tcmporlzation arc gone. "The Inst corrupt I judge of election was buried CO years ago, the preacher officiating at the obsequies taking for his text Proverbs 10:7: 'The name of thewicked shall rot,' or Jeremiah 10:22: 'He shall bt buried with the burial of nn ass, drawn nnd cast forth beyond the gates of Jerusalem.' Our laws are good and well executed. Men do not in our century have to wnde chin deep through moral slush In order to gain office. The word politics,' which in your century, the nineteenth, often stood for chicanery and falsehood and billitgsgate nnd moral turpitude and filth, now stands for honor nnd justice and truth and righteousness. Such men as were in your congresses and parliaments nnd reichstngs pointed out us exceptions of statesuiansliJp ana patriotism and public spiritedness and eloquence and moral power would not be pointed out now, for nil our put lie men are thus characterized. Politics has been swept, garnished, glorified, ennobled, until nothing more is to tic desired. Walk through all aldermanici councils and sheriffalities and guber natorial rooms and presidential man sions and find the truth of what I, Che spirit of the twenty-first century, tell you, who were of. the nineteenth cen tury and now come down on terrestrial visitation." Hut we cannot stay long here, for it is almost, time for us to retrace our way heavenwurd. This voluntary caile must soon end. And, passing out, we go through a national museum; where we are fIiowii among the curiosities nn enfield rifle, a howitzer, a hotchklss shell, nn ambulance curiosities of that age, but, alas! no curiosity to us of the nineteenth century, for some of our own kindred went down under their stroke or were carried off the field by those wheels. "Hut," I say to our escort, the spirit of the twrntj first century, nnd.you and I sny to each other, "we must go home now, back again to Heaven. We have staid long enough on Ihis terrestrial visitation to see that all the best things foretold In the Scriptures and which we rend during our earthly residence have come to pass, nnd nil the Davidie, Solomonic r.nd Pnulininn nnd .Tohnn nean prophecies have been fulfilled, nnd that the earth, Instead of beluga ghast ly failure, is the mightiest success in the universe. A star redeemed. A planet rescued! A world saved! It started w ith n garden, and it is going to close with a gardeii. What a happiness that we could have seen thls'old world nfter it was righted and before it burned, for its internal fires have nenr ly burned out to the crust, according to the geologist, making it easy for the theologian to believe in the conflagra tion that the Hible predicts. One ele ment taken from the water and t'hat will burn, nnd another clement taken from the nir nnd that will burn, nnd surrounding planets will watch this eld ship of n world on fire nnd wonder If nil its passengers got safely of?. 15c fore that plain fnry catastrophe, he us l ack to Heaven. Farewell, spirit of the twenty-first century! Thanks for your guidance! We can stay no longer away from doxologies that rover end, in tcmplrs never closed, in a day that has r.o sundown. We must report to I he immortals around the throne the transformations we have seen, the vic tories of truth on hind' nnd wa, the hemispheres irradiated, nnd (Christ on the throne of earth, as He Is on the throne of Heaven." And now you nnd I have let't our es cort as we nscend, for the law of grav itation has no power to detain ascend ing spirits. Up through immensities and by stellar und lunar and solar splendors, which cannot be described by mortal tongue, we rise righcr nnd higher, till we reach the shining gate ns it opens for our return, nnd this questions greet us from nil sides: "What Ktho news? What did you find in thnt earthly tower? What have you to report in this city of the sun?" Prophetic, apostolic, saintly .inquiry. And, standing on the steps of the house of many mansions, we cry aloud the news: "Hear it, all ye glorified Christian workers of all the past cen turies! We found jour work was suc cessful, whether on earth you toiled with knitting needle, or rung a trowel on n rising wall, or smote a shoe last, or endowed a university, or swayed a scepter; whether on earth you gave a cup of cold water in the name of a disciple, or at some Pentecost prenched 3.0CO souls into the kingdom. "In that world we have just visited the deserts are all abloom, and the wil dernesses are bright with fountains. Sin Is extirpated. Crime is reformed. Diseusjc iv cured. The race is. emanci pated. 'The earth is full of the knowl edge of (iod, ns the waters cover the sea.' 'The redeemed of the Lord have come to Ziou with songs and everlast ing joy upon their heuds.' 'The Lord God Omnipotent rcigncth, nnd the kingdoms of the world have become the kingdoms of our Lord Jesus Christ.' Let the harpers of Heaven strike the glad tidings from thestrings of their, harps, and the trumpeters put theni in' the mouth of their trum pets, and the orchestra roll them Into the grand inarch of the eternities, und nil the cathedral towers of tin? great capital of the universe chime them all over Heaven." And now I look up and see the east ing down nt the bejewelcd nnd radiant crowns at the snored feet of the en throned Jesus. Missionary Carey is casting down before those feet the crown of India saved. Missionary Jud sdn is casting down the crown Qf Hur m.i saved. Missionary Abecl- cunting1 down the crow n of China saved. Lnvid Livingston casting down nt those feet the crown of Africa saved. Mris on nry P.rainerd casting down the cVywn of this country's aborigines s:i;cd. Souls that went up from nil the de nominations in America in holy riv alry, seeking which could soonest oast down the crown of this continent at the Saviour's feet, nnd America saved. Hut often yon and I, who were com panlnns in thnt expedition from Heaven to earth, seated on the green bank of the river that rolls through the paradise of: (Sod. will talk over the sceness. we witnessed in that parcn thesii of heavenly bliss, In that vaca tion from the skies, In our terrestrial visitation wc who were early resi dents In the nineteenth century, es cprtcd by the spirit of the twenty first century, when we saw what my text describes- as "a new earth, where in dwelleth righteousness." "Clory bo to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Ghost, as it was In the begin nlng, is now and ever shall be, world without end. Amen." Winter la the Soutn. The season approaches when one's '.ho ij;hti turn toward a place where the in co'iveiiieneca of a Northern wiuler muv be escaped. No section of this country often ucli ideal spot as the Gulf I'oant on the line of the Louisville &. Nunliville Kailroad between .Mobile and New Orleans. It poa esNrs a mild climate, pure uir, even temper ature and facilities for hunting und fishing enjoyed by no other section. Act umniotlu tions for visitors are tin-tcluM, and run he secured at moderate nrire. The L. & N. K. it. it the only line by which it can he I reached in through enr from Northern f cities. Through cur schedules to all points in Florida bv this line are nNo perfect. W'ritn for folder,' etc., to J. K. Kulgily, N. W. P. A., Chicago. HI. A Good Itoad to Cincinnati. The .Motion Jtotita and ('. II. & l. It'y run four limns daily from Cliieugo to Cni inn.iti. 'ill e day trains leave Dearborn Station, Chi cago, nt o:.'ii) a. in. ami 1 1:4.) a. m.. mid are equipped with elegant Parlor ami liming cars. The inght tiauis leave lit H::t() p. m.. und 2:43 a. in. These trains are equipped with elegant sleepers und eompai tmeiit earn, the sleepers on the latter train being ready for oeiupaney at ):.')() i. in. fur tiik- ets via Mriiiou and ('. II. & I). City Ticket Office, 23-' S. Clark St.. Cliieugo. So long a we have the se'f mnde man, there will doubtless be a call for the ready, made ancestry. Detroit Juunial. If you vvuntto build an automohllcenglne, or Intricate lnachiuoof any kind, come to us, we huvo the skilled labor nud tools re quired. Auto Murtrino Works, 217 fcioutu Clluioa Street, Chlcugo, 111. MAMMOTH MAILORDER. MOUSE. SI4.25 iSI4,25 mm ff w mndi. This StvIit Mnohinn hns nil tho la tout Improvements. It makrs s petkrit and uni form LOCK iTH'CH, mi l will do tin) host work on either thn licliteist muslinsor heuvicst cloths. Rcwlnir over scums m! roiiu'h jilnces without skipping eliU-lies. A full art of best steel attachments, nicely nickcl-philed nnd enclosed in a hnnilsomn pUish linrsl inetfil, jap:inie"l Ihx, and it complete assortment ot accessories and book of Instruction l:UKMSMHl I KtU with each machine. fifi n&YS TRIAI Woship tliisiiiachlnoC.O.D.Rnbjert tonpproval.on rocntpfc of two MM UHIO I 111 HL. dollars. f. on cinminution you arn couvineod tiiat we aro aariuu jroufTJjore-K'on aBent s price, pay tho hulancnand freight chnri,-ns then try i tho m ichino. If not satisfied at any time withinGOdnyasotai tho machine back tousat oureipensound wo will refund GjHof fll OU 'After I wsi Induced to try CASCA. IlETH, I will never be without tlteiu In the linuae 11 7 liter was In it Tury buil shape ami my hend ached anil I ha I mum. icli trouble. Now. tlnre lulling- C'wicsreis. I fuel line. My wlfo liucslm utttl theto with beaellclul results for sour noinucu " Jos. KuillLlNU, IX' 1 CoiiKrc" bt., bt. Louis. Mo. Pleasant, r-slntabln. Potent. TnMe Good. Do Good. Neisr Hlcseii. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c. 'iocWc ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... tUrllsf RtmMf t'MBsrif hleir. Matral, K Vsrt. S Mfl-TO Dlfl Sold and sitsrnnterit br ll rtruii I1UIUJAW slats to V II K Tol.srro lUbll. Two famous pictures J tinted In fen colore, ready for raming, will te given free to any person "who will send a quarter Icr Three Months' jiibscripticn to Demorcst's Family Magazine, tte great paper for heme life. Thou sands subscribe lor Derr.orest's as a gift to their daughters. Dcrrio- rcst s is the great et American authorl-g- tycnl'eihicns. Fcr a lrty years it baa been read in the best families cf America, and has done more to educate women in true love of good literature than any other magazine. The special offer of these two great pictures and Three Months' subscription to Demorest's for 25c. is mae'e (cr CO days only. Write at once. Demorest's Family Magazine, Art Department, ilO Fifth Avenue, New York. CHEAP HOLIDAY EXCURSIONS. From CHICAGO Dec. 14, 15. IS and I? Good Returning until Jan. 6, 1900. If you oannol get full particulars from your home Ticket Agent, wrlls to City Tlefcet Agent, Grand Trunk, 340 Clark St., Chicago. , CANDY ff J CATHARTIC T TBAOf MAH BtaiSTIRIP . FrTo SRI MQ1 SvuliullQ. VIRGINIA FARMS for SALE-Good Und, pdod U V -rtV w w WM via Ifc'jiJ , nUKhhlmra. arbools and rkureaea tMntlmt Mild. I r . I H i 1 1 f f hi'iiHur rlonatr, Ire from llr.mn l both Nest and II Xfl-"J4' 1 rold Lnw lirli-ra and .aay trrma. Wrtl. for frrarstsy. I 13 los-ua. H. U CHAt r IN At CO. la.). HlCUau.VU, Va. Dizzy? Then your liver Isn't acting well. You suffer from bilious ness, constipation. Ayer's Pills act directly on the liver. For 60 years the Standard Family Pill. Small 'doses cure. 25c. All druggists. t)llfVlrlf!'JAM'C; nVCfer.the uuuiMiiu.inm uuu Whiskers . p i a ee. i uo iKAti remedy lor 'OU&ri Consumption. Cores e . m . T at ouKh8,Oolda,Grippo, vVl U P Hronchitifl, Hoarse- S neaa. Asthma, Whooping- cough. Croup. Small luca ; quick. aoreresults. l)r .Unit i iMiiCuie CoiMifntmm. Trtal, tooric MM I50 to 66N ((5WIST MAOISON T5 T ,B.est Se"ine iviacn.neon tarcn At the Price, $14.25 for Our r"MELBA" Sewing Kachiaa. A hlah-arm, high-grade mwhine eqnat to wluit others arn asking 2jU) Ut5.U) for. Guaranteed by us for M years from duta of jiurchnHe, Htfainst atiy imperfec tion in material or workmanship. Tba stand is made of the best iron and is nicely I report ioned. The cabinet work is perfect uml is furnished in your rhoico of antique. onk or walnut. It has seven drawers nil hamtsomnly carred and with tiii ki-l )ll'il rin nulls. The mrchan leal construction Is equal to that of any machine reirnrdhet of pricn. All working imrts aro of the best oil-tern-prrc!i tool Menl, eery bearing perfectly titled Mini niljustod so o to mnkn tho running nnlitie ti e Uirhtrst.stoAt per- feet and nearest noiseless tA nuv mMrfiinn rliino the full purehnsn price W I "V Bl 7n which is listed at lowest wholesale price J everything to eat wear and use.is furnish) cd on receipt of only 10? to partly, pay -sDOstatfe or exDressaOe and as cvidencr? good faith the 109 is allowed on first P MONTHLY 6ftQc,EY PRICE UST fWeTlfl If Personally i Conducted I California I Excursions Via the Santa Fe Route. Three times a week f ruin Chicaro and lvuiiMis Citjr. Twice n week from St. Pan! and Minneapolis. Once a week from St. lMiis and liuBtwn. In improved wide-etilialed Pullman tourist sleeping care, Iletter thnn ever before, at lowest possible rates. Experienced excursion coadactors. Ahtoriaitv service between Chicago nml California. Correspondence solicited. T. A. GRADY. i Manasrvr California TowrUt Si ' The Atchison, lopeae A Seat fa tailwar. 9 109 Al am Street. CHICAGO. f!-:'.(st.'Vsm'v.-'rj.ei(ei TVTITiTsXOIr of is.oroM tSii-i''jbvm IZtLill I I.ANIMi now ..)K.ir.l fut ,U ii.m.ii tm scivtm ina. d. Iter, la Brown lhiMale. brstml M I Hard U lii-.t, whirl, brtnra ) hlk-liraf prlrla lit. mark. -tix, l the world Th.tuaantl. .f rat tle sr. fat iriu-d I r ai a rkrt J without tM-h.a frd Ki 'ln, amlwttlmat a flay'a ahrl ter. ife-Ba ror iniurmniion and renin- a free hnmln Wr.lrra Canada. Writi- lbs , Kupri Inirmlent ( Imaaltrratlun. Ottawa, or adilieas lh I'nili'r.i-nrd. who will mnil .ii atlaar, uain l.hletx.ete Irrrvt roat. V. l'Hl.f.V,Sal.t a.f I. ..nil million, Ottawa, fnnadu or to '. J HKOUtill I uK. - Il Minaim,.k Ink . bi'-Sjrn. Ill ; T. 41. I'llUIK. fctrrrn. Point. '... M V. Mi lNSlR. Ko I Morrill Ills., I'l-liolt. I) t'AVKN. Had Air. and J V KH OKI KV K, Mt Plratant, lli h t N. IHHTIIOI oUKW, rut aia Nt.. ! Mulnea, fa , l.v KM kit a Kabts, fort Wajrn.. nd j Battle of Manila l Wabash Ave. 5outh ef Aodlteriaai, Chicago. A wntidto fnl r.-rn.iartioe or tha ereaiOTt naval el. 'nrv In hlatort Itrwty'l iim I row, Hons Kon, i ..froa Ih. t'hlneae wmm A troni.l ,.Mwt MteChtu.ae ; I vphiHin hi ntelit with nw aad plartlin etoetrlra I f ! Irrta. The Amrrlran nert fieaa-iaw th hpaalah bat. I lHtlr at Ih. entranr uf Manila . Tb. Hay ot I Manila hv mnoniiirhi. Tb. wonaVrlal li.htlns- f- Ifi-ls. In Did Manila and Cavil, at aUrhW Troplral .no. i i. t. The ill-ov.ry and romplrt. dvatrtHrtloa ot Ike Svanlub lici t ult Cavil. Uimb froia t a. as. t M p. as. nDnDCVlntw MSCOTMTi give llwr VI I onlrtnltofiaa ram worst PITENTE0 and UPTTt1) foveatloiia beught snd sold Itend for list of Invent lows wanted. Kuieari Pttaat Cosspuj, 12 OUe BC, St. Laaia. A. N. K -A 1790 I iV t I ZIf4. I-veruseitf Voaaboald. CUIUS WntWk AU ilal tA&. I i Beat Couib nrrap. Tawtoa&owd. Cam t,. - ht time, flnld bv erw waa. wsasaw-aa.'