Bloomington Progress, Volume 19, Number 50, Bloomington, Monroe County, 10 February 1886 — Page 4

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BAIXWAf. -

SoW Daily Train (each way) between CINCINNATI AND ST. LOUIS. Solid Daily Trains (each way) between CINCINNATI AND LOUISVILLE. Solid Daily Trains (each way) between 531 LOUIS AND LOUISVILLE.

HO Change of Cars for AMY Class r PassB;era. Rrai Ciata, Second Class am Emigrant Passengers, all earned oa Fast Express Truing cemsixting of Patact Sleeping Can, elegant Parlor Coaches and comfortabU Dag CbncAes, all running THROUGH WITHOUT CHANGE. Only 10 Honrs Time Hitmen Cincinnati and St. Louis, or St. Lamm mnd Louiaoille. But Four Hours tmf-Betujeen Cincinnati and Louisville. fefte OBI ti NlHalaMpal R'way is the only Line between St. Xovtte and Cincinnati Under one management, running all Ua trains through "SOLID," and in consequence is the only recognized first clan route between those cities, its Easy Grade, Its Splendid Motif Vomer, SUel Rails, Straight Track, and Solid Road Bed Unable he O. fc M. to make faster average time than any other Western Bond. KwTAsk for Tickets via O. & M. B'y.Tfjg For sale by Agents of connecting lines East, West, North and South. V. V. PEABODT, President and Oen. Weft. W. B. SHATTUC, Oen. Pass, Act. CINCINNATI, OHIO:

AUK YOU GOIXG WEST? To those who contemplate trip to the) West or Northwest this coming spring, we desire to suggest the advisability of making some inquiry as to the route they should take. In this connection wo wish to call the attention of those interested to the real inducements offered by the Direct VAJtDAiiiA Line in the way of quick time, prompt connections and un equaled facilities for the safe and comfortable transportation of passengers of all classes. By this routs yon are carried over the safest and best Railroad in the Wast. Too an landed in Union Depots and escape all annoying Omnibus transfers. Yon can purchase tickets and bare your baggage checked through to destination, avoiding all vexations while en route. If you are going to travel it is to your advantage to secure the best; and if you are ticketed vi the Vajtdaua Shout Line yon are sure to get it. He si dents of Bloomington and vicinity desiring to visit Indianapolis will find tha V and alia Routs via Greencastle Junction the safest, the quickest, and the beat. Application for rates of fine, time tables, etc, should be made to the nearest Ticket Agent or to H. R. DKRING, A Sainton t General Passenger Agent, ISDIANAPOIJS, ISD.

ORCHARD HOUSE !

S. M. Orchard St Son PROPRIETORS.

Oppasitetke Depot, BtoomimgtM,

' JbAswaSt

Two Daily Fast Express Trains In Sack lMrertioa Betwtea Chicago and Louisville, Connecting ctosIy with the night and day trains out of Chicago oa the Groat Through Trunk Line Weft and Northwest, and with tho morning and avenirg through train a out of Louisville on tha Great Southern and Southwestern Uses. This Popular Bonte now zona the must eonv fcrtablo coaches and Parlor Can on day trains, and Pullman Sleepers on night trains, and has onlj one change of cars to all the principal towns and cSea in the North, South, East, or west. Sail Through Tickets over all the various cross ing and connecting railroad lines, end cheek bagSge through to passengers' destination, avoiding e diaagreaeble annoyances of rocheckmg. the danger of missing direct connections, and the expenae and worry of tiresome lay-over on tho journey. Low -rate, land "Explorers', and round-trip "Winter and Smnmer Tourists' Exemsion Tickets on sale in their respective seasons. Will cheerfully give travelers full information in regard to the best connections, the fewest and easiest changes, and the most comfortable and pleasnnt roots; and will famish Bail road "tape, Tune-Tables and-- ? elder, containing moon naeful iniormation to tra velars, an application to

Wis. S. BALDWIN, CARTER PERKING,

oen. raai. agsns, Marion rasa.

Chicago. HI.

Resident Dentist.

Dr. J. W.

CRA.N.

Office in the New Block, up-staira. over

Cole". Book Store. All work warranted.

Braoder Gab'rs Biggest Little Sfa. Brother Gabriel, & good and sensible old man, has charge of one of the colored congregations in New Orleans. Here is a portion of an exhortation which X heard him deliver at a class meeting: "BUBDDBEN AN' SlSTESX IN HE L-VWD Der is big sins an' dere is little sins stcalin", lyin, killin' tm' sech; dem is big sins reirlar busters, an' de deb-

bel's got his speshel fryin'-pan all het up an' retldy for dem kine ter pitch rite in an' sizzul. Brit drn agin, dere's sneakiness an' enssin' ait' backbifcin', dat ole Mas' Deb'l ain't quite so ferce on; dese is mo' littler sins. TVInngst de bigges' ob dese little sins is one you's all parf eck uster ; yes. my breddren in de LaviL liar's ole Unkl Peter in dat

dark cornder, 'bout ter fall inter it dis blessed minnit. (Unkl Peter tries to

took solemn and sits bolt upright.) I

mean de sin ob gwine ter sleep in

meet in . whiles 1 is raamn wid satan for yore pore mizzerbul souls, yon is

takin' good, comferbnl little cat-naps

rite in de tempul ob de Lawd, an' 'fore dese eyee, wat is streernin' wid tears at resin' on sech despot wickedness. Be-

war ! my breddren an sistern in de

Lawd, lea yon dnz, lak de giddy gal in de Testament, whar de grate Postle

Pan! wuz a-preachin' an' a-strivin' wid

de Spent in de tear story ob a high baildin'; an' a giddy gal projeckin' Tyout couldn't set in her seat lak fokes God made, bnt mus' highst shesel, up in de winder sill, crittin' one eye at de b'ys an' todder at de preacher, an' lettin' her min' gad "bout, an' so she 'gan ter nod, an' faV thing everybody know'd

she wuz fas' ter sleep, an' km' her bal-

nnz, an tumble plum ont'n de tent story winder down onto de banket (ban

quette) nnderneaf, an' lo an' beholes,

wen de great 'Postle Paul an' de res' ob de breddren got down ilar they picked up twelve tnxkitsob defragments! "Dis, my belubed breddren an' sis-

tern, is de awful condishnn demll fin'

dwselves in w at take de Lawd's tern

pnl for a bodiu' house. "-JMlroU Free

rrm. .. . . ... . .

THE LADIES.

Gossip and Gleanings About Matters Relating to the Tender Sex.

THE DITTY THAT MAttGERT SINGSs

A Visit to a Woman's Gymnasium An Explanation Conversation of Wt men, StC: Mb.

Margrry Daw rm In tove, but I've never told her, Never told the maiden Hove; I lie in the long green grass and behold her Aa she sings all day in the boughs above, Tm a student with toil o'er!aden, And a student ever should books prefer, But she's such a darling, dainty maiden, My thoughts go swinging away wita Hen Seesaw) Margery Saw I Up to the apple-treo Margery swings. And I, lying under. Watch her, and wonder What Is the ditty that Margery sings. And she goes swinging ; and I go slaving. Turning the leaves ot a mnsty book, Bnt surely that was her white hand waving, And surely that wan my darling's look, A perfect fortress of books I sit in. Ethics, economy, politics, law, But all the pages I vow were written By that little philosopher, Margery Daw. See saw! Margery Taw! Up in the apple-treo Margery swings; And I, lying under. Watch her, and wonder What is the ditty that Margery sings. The light is fading, the day grows older, And now the westering sun is gone. And Margery, I no more behold her; In the deep cool grass I lie alone. Vor Margery she was it sunbeam only, And I was a fool for all my pain. Bat whenever Tm sad and whenever I'm lonely Bask eomes Margery, baek again. Bee saw! Margery Daw I Up In the apple-trie Margery stags; For "Life's a dream. And lore's a shadow," And that Is the ditty that Margery stags.

Jiare Convenient.

"Do yon ever sweep under the bed?"

inquired a fond mother of her eldest, whose room at college she was looking over. "Oh, yes, often. It's so mnch easier than a dustpan, yon know," replied the hopeful Chicago Bam bier.

A. Reciprocal Spirit. "I cant find my toothbrush any

where," said a Cottage Hill young lady, looking all over the house for the article.

"Fll lea' yon mine," accommodatingly

suggested the colored kitchen girl.

"Oh, no, thanks!" replied the young

lady, turning away.

'Yon needn't hab no combustion

about takin' it, miss," persisted the girl, "for Fs used yours sometimes when I couldn't find mffle." Oil City Derrick. '

Am, Explanation. At a social gathering on Austin

avenue not long since, the subject of

bald heads came up for discussion, and

it was a subject of general mystification that there were so many more .baldheaded men than there were women.

Nobody was able to give a reasonable

explanation for this until old Colonel Swipe, who is balder than a watermelon, and who has buried fire wives, spoke up and said it was perfectly-plain to him why men had less hair on , their

heads than women. '

He was asked to explain, which he

did thus:

"Ton see, gentlemen, when a man

gets mad he pulls his own hair, and

when his wife gets mad she pulls out that which is left of it It is a mystery to me how a married man is able to keep s single hair on his head." Texas Siftings.

As the Woman's ejpnaMtsiaMa. The first thing that impresses one on

entering the woman's gymnasiums is their sir of cheerfulness. Evidently it is a region where no one breaks records, and whose occupants disport themselves with a mind and body equally at ease.

le effect of the gymnastic suits is

rather nondescript, and the spectator is at first constantly startled by

boyish figures in blouse waists

and Turkish trousers, sur

mounted by feminine hairdressing; and to an observer of the costuming of the Harvard Gymnasium, whose only orna

mentation consists of- a pair of eye-

asses, the incongruity is heightened

by an active gymnast with laoe ruffles

on her sleeves and bangles on her well-

developed wrists. The feminine taste for adornment is not to be overcome even by athletics, and more than one pair of Indian clubs are jauntily tied with a ribbon. TKey are swung in the regulation manner, however, and the girls pull chest-weights and swing on

the flying rings with as much skill and much less solemnity than their brothers. They are a pretty sight, with their free,

easy movements and their fresh color heightening -with exercise, and are especially agreeable to the eye because of their infinite improvement upon the sehool-girl of a decade ago. There still

exist schools, such as one we knew,

where, at fortnightly intervals, the

pupils tied their sunbonnets on securely, and, under the care of several teachers, walked down to the entrance gate,

walked back to the gardens, in and out several times through the prim box-bor

dered paths, and then walked into the

house again. At the end of the year they were bleached like so many stalks of celery. It is the good work of the

aryimmsiums to make such institutions

aBachromsms. Boston Journal.

CwMtermatton of Women.

In the art of conversation, woman, if not the queen and victor, is the lawgiver, says Balph Waldo Emerson in one of his essays. If everyone recalled his experience, he might find the best in the speech of superior women which was better than song, and carried ingenuity, character, wise counsel, said affection as easily aa the wit with which it was adorned. They are not only wise themselves; they make us vise. No one can be a master in conversation who has not learned much from women; their presence and inspiration are essential to its success. Steele said of his mistress that "to have loved her was a liberal education." Bhenstone gave no bad account of this influence p his description of the French woman : "There is a quality in which no woman in the world can compete with her it is the power of intel

lectual irritation, Bbo can draw wit

out of a fool. She strikes with such address the chords of self-love that she gives unexpected vigor and agility to fancy, and electrifies a body that Appears non-eleetric." Coleridge esteems cultivated women as the depositaries and guardians of "English tlndefilec'. jH and Luther commends that accomplifihj ment of rtpure German" speech of his wife-. Mrae-. do Stael, by the unanimous consent of all who knew her, was the most extraordinary converser that was known in her time, and it was a time full of eminent men and woniea; she know all distinguished persons in letters or society in England, Germany, and Italy as well as in Franoe, though she said, with characteristic nationality, "Conversation, like talent, (dusts only in Prance." Mme. de Stael valued nothing bnt conversation. When thoy showed her the beautiful Lake Lomiin she exclaimed, "O, for the gutter of tho Buo de Bae!" the street in Paris in which her home stood. And Bhe said one day, seriously, to M. Mole : "If it were not for respect to human opinions I would not open my window to see the Bay of Naples for the first time, whilst I would go 500 leagues to talk with a man of genius whom I had never seen,"

St. Beuve tells us of tho privileged cir

cle of Coppet, that, after making an excursion one day, the pasty returned in two coaches from Chamberry to Aix on the way to Coppet. The last coach

had many rueful accidents io relate a terrible thunder-storm, shocking roads, and danger and gloom to thewhole company. The party in the second coach, on arriving, heard this story with surprise; of Uiunder-storms,

of steeps, of mud,- of danger, thoy

knew nothing ; no, they had forgotten

earth and breathed a pnrer air ; such

a conversation between Mme. de Stael and Mme. Becamier and Benjamin

Constant and Schlegel; they were all

in a state of delight. The intoxication of the conversation had made them insensible to any noti je of weather or rough roads. Mme. de Tesso said: "If

I were Queen I should command Mme.

de Stael to talk to me every day." Conversation fills all gaps, supplies all deficiencies. What a good trait is that

recorded of Mme. de Maintenon, that, during dinner, the servant slipped io her and said: "Please, Madame, one anecdote more, for there is no roast to

day." .

AN EPIDEMIC OF BHTMIX0. The society goes on famously. We

have had a paper presented and rend lately which has greatly amused some of us and provoked a few of the weaker

sort. The writer is that crabbed old

Professor of Belles-Letters at that men's college over there. He is dreadfully hard on the poor "poets," as they call themselves. It seems that a great

many young girls, of whem the Institute has furnished a considerable proportion, have taken to sending him their rhymed productions to be eritacised expecting to be praised, no doubt, every one of them. I must give you one of the spiciest extracts from his paper in his own words :

"It takes half my time to read the

'poems' sent me by young people of

both sexes. They would be more shy of doing it if they knew that I recognize a tendency to rhyming as a common form of mental weakness, and the publication of a thin volume of verse as prima facie evidence of ambitious meliocrity, if not inferiority. Of course there are exceptions to this rule of judgment, but I maintain that the pre

sumption is always against the rhymester as compared with the less pretentious persons about him or her, busy with some useful calling too busy to be tagging rhymed common-places together. Just now there seems to be an epidemic of rhyming as bad as the dancing mania, or the sweating sicknefis. After reading a certain amount of

manuscript verse one is disposed to an

athematize the inventor of homophonous syllabification. This phrase made a great laugh when it was read. This,

that is rhyming, must have been found out very early

Where are you Adam? Here am I, madam ;

but it can never have been habitually practiced until after the fall The intrusion of tintinnabulating termina

tions of conversational intercourse of

men and angels wotua nave spouM Paradise itself. Milton would not have

them in "Paradise Lost," you remem

ber. For my own part, I wish certain rhymes could be declared contraband of written or printed language. Nothing should be allowed to be hurled at the world or whirled with it, or furled upon it, ot curled over it; all eves should be kept awsy

from the skies, in spite of os homitii sublime dedit; youth should be coupled

with all the virtues except truth ; earth

should never be reminded of her birth; death should never be allowed1 to stop mortal's breath, nor the bell to sound his knell, nor flowers from blossoming bowers to wave over his grave or show

their bloom upon his tomb. We have

rhyming dictionaries let us have one from which all rhymes are rigorouidy excluded. The sight of a poor creature grubbing for rhymes to fill up his sonnet, or to cram one of those voracious, rhyme - swallowing rigmaroles which some of our drudging poetical operatives have been exhausting themselves of late to satiate with jingles, makes my head aehe and my stomach rebel. Work, work of some kind, is the business of men and women, not the making of jingles ! No, no, no ! I want to seo the young people in our schools and academies and colleges, and the graduates of these institutions, lifted up out of the little Dismal Swamp of self-con

templating and self-indulging and selfcommiserating emotionalism which is

surfeiting the land with those literary sandwiches thin slices of tinkling sentimentality between two covers looking like hard-baked gilt gingerbread. But what faces these young folks make up at my good advice! They get tipsy on their rhymes. Nothing intoxica-tes one like his or her own verses, and they hold on to their metre-ballad-mon-gering as the fellows that inhale nitrous oxide hold onto the gas-bag." Oliver Wendell Homes, in Atlantic.

THE SILVER QUESTION.

HOW BE CAME TO BB AX AVXT, Grandpa Well. Fred, you're an

uncle now. You ought to be proud

over it.

Little Fred No, I oughtn't to; I

ain't no uncle. Grandpa Why not?

Little Fred 'Cause I'm an aunt; the

new baby's a gixl. lutmlpMa Uall.

The House Requests Secretary Manning to Explain Hid financial Policy.

(Wushingtou spucitil.l Mr. Bland, of Missouri, reported to the House, from the Coinage (VmmUtoe, tm resolution offered by lrim on thv 1st iust., and referred to that committee. Its preamble recites the fact that, ut the convention of the Ament an Hankers" Assoc mtion. held at Chicago, 111., in September. 1HH5, Mr. George S. foe. President of thf American Ktchnj.:e National Hank of New York City, said tht the present administration had taken steps, in oonet rt with the New York Clearing-house committee, to avert financial disaster by ref iuinius from makinj. monthly paymentt on the funded debt ii. order that the surplus revenue might supply means requisite to withdraw a sulficienl amount of silver certificates issued on previous purchases to overcome the excessivi accumulations which so perplexed prior administrations; also the fact that on Feb. 2(1, 1885, the House of Itepresentativeit refused by a decided vote to consider a then pending proposition looking to suspension of coinage of silver dollars. The resolution is as follows: KcMrfrmJ, II v this House, that the Secretary l the Treasury ho ami is hereby requested t inform this House whethvr or not nnv uel BBroomcnt or arrangemont was effort, d by ti management of ti e Treasury Dcyartnient with tho Clearing-House Committee in Now Vcrlt, oi with any othor uesocintiou cr person, as alleged in the address of Mr. "oo ; imd, if so, by what authority of law such arraneenieut wm mailt and carried out; and, further, to inform thi House whnt amount of sil'fsr dollars wereii: the Treasury on the 1th day of March last unrepresented by outstanding certificates, and what amou'it of silver oertinoates were to circnlation, what amount of such lollara ore now in the Treasui-y unrepresented by outstanding cer. tincates, ana what amount of t uch certificates if new in circulation ; also what (mount of silvoi dollars worn in the Treasury on the 4th day ol Uarch btst that could have boon applied in the Saymentoi the interest-hearing debt and othoi ues of the ijOTcrnmont, and what amount ol such dollar) now hold in the Treasury could be applied; also, what amount of silver cert iflo.it tx are hold in the Treasury that could bo reissued also, what omoant of internst-beoring debt i now subject to coll. and will the same policy be pursued in the payment of silver coin and on other public dues in the future an in the past. A motion made by Mr. Hewitt (N. Y.) to recommit the resolution with instructionr to the committee to strike out that portion which f.sks the Secretary of the Treasury tc define the policy of the administration "waf lost by a vote of 88 to 168, and the resolution was adopted. During the discussion of the bill relafiug to the taxation of fractional parts of a gallon of distilled spirits in the committee of the whole house to-day, Mr. Mills (Texas) offered an amendment, providing that all taxes imposed by the act shall be paid in standard silver coin, and, using this nmendment as a text, addressed the committee upon the entire silver question. If silver was stricken down, ht said, then the value of all the products o! labor would decrease just one- half. Whenever prices -were falling, money would go out of circulation. There was no such curse in exis-ence as the contraction of the volume of currency. When this contraction was brought about, then would come sorrow in the bosoms of the people, tears to their cheeks, and hunger, want, and starvation. Tha" was what the advocates of scarce money were asking Congress to do, and to do :z. the interest of the laboring man. In coaclusiou Mr. Mills said: This scours which is sought to bo vl-iited oa the people ol the United States comes from the cold inarblo anil phlegmatic avarice v hich seek to impale the 'rhoi country on the bed of stifle ring in order to gratify its lust for gold. In tbla hour, frangbt with peril to tho wholo country, I anneal to tho tn:vrjhHKOd rerresuntattves of

the Americm people. Tvt us stand up ami call the battle on, and never bave the field until the

peoples nicwy shall be restored to it full value. Loud applause.)

ST1JUCK WITH A CASE.

William G, Thompson, a Prominent Michigan Polili Ian, la Brutally Astaulted by a SaIoonk(tpcr. i Detroit special.

William 6. Thompson, ex-Mayor of this city and distinguished throughout the country during the last Presidential campaign as

the Michigan mugwump, was struck several times on the head by Edward G. Bagard, a saloonkeeper at No. 2b" Lafayelti avenue,

and very badly, if not seriously, injured. It

happened in Tom Swan's saloon on Woodward nvenua, and created ft great, sensation. Thompson and a party of friends, among the number County Auditor Mahoney, were in Swan's when Bagard came in. An instant later Bagard was seen to raise bis heavy cani and strike Thompson several terrible' blows on the head. Thompson wore a tight sealskin cap, and the first blow gave a resounding crack. Those who heard it thought for a moment that Bagard had crushed Thompson's skull. Blood Howed in a stream from the laiter's head, and he sank into the arms of a friend. The injured man was put in a carriage, taken to his residence dn Jefferson avenue, and Dr. J. B, Book called. Eye-witnesses of the rencontre differ in their versions of it, as is usually the case. All are agreed, however, that it wan a brutal affair. The affray, it is said, was the outgrowth of an old feud. Bagard is a powerful man, and has figured in other episodes of this nature. He is a man of fiae education, and was one of the prominent Girondist leaders in Paris, and was forctid to flee from France. Grave fears are entertained for Mr. Thompson's recovery.

A TERRIBLE CONFESSION.

A Physician Presents Some Startling Facts.

fcri tt Be that the Danger Indicated It Universal T

Tho following story which is attracting wide attention from the nrcsa is so remarkable that we cannot oxeuso ourselves if we do not lay it before our readers euliro: To the Editor of the JiocheUer (N. T.) Democrat. 8m: On tho first day of Juno, 1881, I lay at my residence in this city surrounded by my friends and waiting for death. Heaven only knows tho ago,.y I then endured, for words can never describe it And yet if a few years previous any one. had told rje that I was to be brought so low, and by so terrible a disease, I should bare scoffed at tho idea. I had always bean uncommonly strong and healthy, and Weighed over 200 pounds, and hardly knew, in my own experience, what pain or sickness were. Very many people whu wUl read this statement realizo at times they are unusually tired and cannot account for it They feel dull pains in various parts of the bodjaud do not understand why. Or they are exceedingly hungry one day and entirely without appetite the next This was just the way I felt when tho rolentless malady which had fastened itself upon mo first began. Still I thought nothing of it; that probably I had taken a cold which would soon pass away. Shortly after this I noticed a heavy, and at times neuralgic, pain in one aide of my head; but as it Would come one day and be gone the next, I paid little attention to it Then my stomach would get out of order and my food ofteu failed to digest, causing at times great iuconvonienco. Vet, even as a physician, I did not think that these things meant anything serious. I fancied I was Buffering from malaria and doctored myself accordingly. But I got no batter. I next noticed a peculiar color and odor about the fluids I was passing also that there wore large quantities one day and very little the next, and that a persistant froth and scum appeared upon the surface, and a sediment settled. And yet I did not realize my danger; for, indeed, seeing these symptoms continually, I finally became accustomed to them, and my susp cion was wholly disarmed by the fact that I had no pain in the affected organs or in their vicinity. Why 1 should have been so bl.ud I cannot understand! I consulted tho best medical skill in the land. I visited all the famed mineral springs in America and traveled from Maine to California. Bull I grew worse. No two physicians agreed as to my malady. One said I was troubled with spinal irritation; another, dyspepsia; another, heart disease; another, general debility; another, congestion of tho bono of the brain; and so on through a long list of common diseases, the symptoms of many of which I really had. In this way several years passed, during which time I was steadily growing worse. My condition had really become pitiable. The slight symptoms I at first experienced were developed into terrible and constant disorders. My weight had been reduced from 307 to 130 pounds. My life was a burden to myself and friends I could retain no food on my stomach, and lived wholly by injections. I was a living mass of pain. My pulse was uncontrollable. In my agony I frequently fell to the floor and clutched the carpet, and prayed for death! Morphine had little or no effect in deadening the pain. For six days and nights I tial thn drtath.nrmnnnttnrv hircntlodiH onnfitant-

ly! My water was filled with tube-casts and

aiDumen. i was strucguns wnu .unguis

About Bees. Bees have slender pointed hairs upon

their heads. The yellow hairs upon their legs, which wo can see with the

naked eye, turn out to be nurd, Horny sort of combs which they use in the gathering and storing of the pollen of Uowers. Besides this the beesaave two little baskets upon their thighs which are the very perfection" of side Dockets,

just such as we should want for a simi

lar purpose.

Uut what do you think they do tvitn

these pockets? They first tuck their littlo heads into the heart of the rose or lily, or other sweet flower, for honey. In doing so they cover them all over with the yellow dust, which is tho pollen. Then they take their fore feet and brush it very carefully from the hair, and pass it on to the middle l!eet, and on again to the hind feet, when it is safely packed in these littlo pockets on the thighs. As soon as they are loaded down they fly away home and

put it in some secret place.

Home of tho oiien is erven to tneir

babies, and some of it is worked up into

wax. This, you know, is used to niaice the cells. Some of it, called propolis,

they use to punish intruders, giving

them a sortof'tarandfeatnenng." xne

bees are so industrious that in five d ays,

by the use of these pockets, they can

half fill the hive with honey-comb.

Anon.

The survival of the fittest depends

upon what good care the fittest takes of himself. Alice L. Barnard.

"Gentle as the Breeze of Evening." This line of an old hymn Is quite appropri

ate when applied to "Pleasant Purgative Pellets." "1 don't like to take pills if I can avoid It," we often hoar people say, "because they constipate mo bo." Now the "Pell:ts"

never do this, mey are so gentle ana mua that their effect is almost precisely slmiltr to a natural movement of the bowels, and no unpleasant effects are left behind.

Have the faith-cure uooole overlooked tha

fact that John L. Sullivan is a heeler?

FROZEN FISH.

Myriads of Fish In the Oulf of Mexico Killed by the Heoent Cold Weather. New Orleans special. Mr. A. O. Wilson, a well-known civil engineer, has recently arrived here from Florida, vhere he has been engaged in landsurveying:. He states that during the recent cold snap, while he was making a voyage from Tampa to Cedar Keys, the schooner in which ho had embarked was wrecked off Cedar Keys the 8th of January. All hands escaped with their lives, but suffered greatly from tie cold. The Bait water froae on the reef in the Gulf of Mexico upon which the vessel struck, and great numbers of fish, chiefly trout, sheephead, and redfish, were killed by the cold and floated on the water, covering it; surface for miles. Inquiries among fi&hunnen and others elicited the fact that during the same cold spell fish were killed on the Louisiana coast and were then floating by the thousands from the Bigolets to points far to the eastward. Austin (Texas; special. The ca:-p-breeding ponds leased by the State were frozen to the ground iluring the recent cold spell, and 30,000 young carp were frozen to death. The State will probably abandon the breeding of fish.

A Big Investigation Probable. Washington special.) A well- known Senator said to-day that it was very probable that the Senate would conclude to summon before certain of its committees the nominees for prominent Federal positions against whose characters serious charges have been filed. This will necessitate the summoning of a large number of witnesses from almost cycry part of the country, and will lead to ooe of the most extensive investigations ever made by Congress. Committees, by calling upon nominees to answer charges and upon accusers for additional information, simply complicate affairs, and it is thought the best plan will be to call here the accused and accusers, see all parties, and take testimony from their own hps, thereby consulting appearances fcs well as words.

Cincinnati had the first paid fire department in the world, and its first paid engineer, Finley Latta, has just passed away.

Nat Goodwin, the comedian, contemplates building or buying a fine yacht for the coming season.

Mrs. Curtis had her watch stolon from her rooms in New York by a moi scinger boy, but recovered it the next day.

Of the 672 Yale graduate! who died in .bo ten years between 187G and lUSt there ere 371 who were post 70 yrti a g&.

disease of tha Iddnevs in iu but stages!

While suffering thus I received a call from my pastor, the Tlav. Dr. Foote. at that time rector of St Paul's Episcopal Church, of tins city. I felt that it was our last interview, but in the course of conversation Dr. Foote detailed to me the many remarkable cures of cases like my own which had come under his observation. . As & practicing physician and a graduate of the schools, I derided the idea of any medietne outside the regular channels being in the least beneficial. So solicitous, however, va Dr. Foote that I finally promised 1 would waivo mv prejudice. I began its use on the lir.-t day of'June, 18S1 , and took it according to directions. At first it sickened me: but this I thought was a good sign for one in my debilitat-il condition. I continued to take it; tho sU-kcuiug sensation departed, and I was finally able to retain food npon my stomach. In a few days I noticed a decided change for the bettor, as also did my wife and friends. My hiccoughs ceased and I experienced less pain than formerly. I was so rejoiced at mis unproved condition that unon what I had believed but a few days

before was my dying bed, I vowed, in the pres

ence of my l amuy ana tnenae, snouiu x recover I would both publicly and privately make known tins remedy for the good of humanity, wherever and whenever I had an opportunity, and this letter is in fulfillment of that vow. -M- : . rMM , I. .1 ,;mn

and in less than three months I had gained W pounds in flash, becania entirely free from pain, and I believe 1 owe my lifo and present condition wholly to Warner's safe cure, the remedy which I used. Since my recovery I have thoroughly reinvestigated the subject of kidney difficulties and Bright'a disease, and the truths developed are astounding. I therefore state, deliberately, and as a physician, that I believe tmore than one-half the deaths which occur in America are caused by JirighPs dliease of the kidneys. This may sound like a rash statement, but I

am prepared to verity it tuny, unguis uia ease nas no distinctive features of its own (in-

daod. it often devalona without anv Bain what

ever in the kidneys or their vicinity, but lias the symptoms of nearly every other common complaint Hundreds' of people die

daily, whose ouriaia are auuiomea oy

a physicians certificate as occurring from "Heart Disease," "Apoplexy," "Paralysis," "Spinal Complaint,'' "Hhenmatism," "Pneumonia," and me other common com

plaints, when in reality it is irom ungui s ais

ease of the kidneys. .Few physicians, ana fewer people, realize the extent of mis disease or its dangerous and insidioua nature. It steals into the system like a thief, manifests its preaonra if at all hv the commonest svmntoras. and

fastens itself in the constitution before the vic

tim is aware of it. It is nearly as hereditary aa Annniiinntinn nuite oa common and fully aa

fatal. Entire families, inheriting it from their ancestors, have died and yet none of the numVr knew or realized the mysterious

power which was removing them. Instead of common symptoms it often shows none whatever, but brings death suddenly, from convulsions, apoplexy, or heart disease. As one who has suffered, and knows by bitter experience what he says, I imploro every one who reads these words not to neglect the slightest symptoms of kidisey difficulty. No nnn can afford tn hazard such chances.

I make the foregoing statements baaed upon facts which 1 can substantiate to the letter. The welfare of those who may possibly be sufferers suoh as I was is an ample inducement for mo to take the step I have, and if I can successfully warn others from the dangerous oath in which I once walked, I am willing to endure all the professional and personal conse

quences, il. a. tuintun, m. u. Bochesteb, N. Y., Deo. 30.

Tot nnnular old ballad of "Billee

Taylor" is said to have been written in linnnr nf nnn Hannah Snell. who lived

in the last century. . She pursued hqr 1 . i. A.. 1-111 1..-.V, T.i. in flu liim

lUVer, UUli W luu nam, '' 11 u . v" fii-mW tn liAr miron striners. She mar

ried Jim ljuinsac wapping. uuuis w . . .- , i .i .

Uutcn sailor, wno squanuereu riui-

money ana tnen ran on,ana lt-rener. Sl.o Hnnnarl Tnn.n'n nl othinsr and DUrSUed.

enlisting as a. marine, and doing valiant

service m Admiral xsoscowens nees. Learning that her husband had been executed for murder, she returned to Wapping, and long kept a public house

tnere. Prematurely Aged.

Many a woman Is robbed of those charm which the goutler sex value so highly, and .t.. iw .a lmn liv functional ir-

IHBUG V.v. wvw.w , regularities. To such tho bloom of youth

may oe reaiureu uy i uav v. v.m.j which has stood the test of time and which is to-day ackuow.edged to be without an equal .. ., r,- nil tomato weaknesses Dr.

Pierce's "Favorite Prescription." By all

druggists.

Shad jokes are bony-fide humor. i'ASode-

piiui van.

Leadiko physicians testify to the value of

Ayer a imerry l'cctorai, as a spocuic iui ixu

As opera glass the one taken between tbo

acts. uostvu ma.

PiucKLY Asn Bitteru is an unfailing specifio

for all complaints arising from a oeraugemen of tha fnnntnnR of the T.iver. It muiliea the

blood and infuses now life into tho invalid. Pains in the side, ueneral uneasiness, loss of

appetite, headache, bilious attack, Ac., Ac,, aro cum indications that a corrective is needed.

PmraxY Ash Iutteks ib especially adapted for these complaints. It arouses a torpid liver to

action and restores it. to a noaiuy cauuiwio.

The first oyctono happened iu Eden. It was

a perfect hurry-iwn.

One word: one step may make or maj one's

wholo luture. vv. jones uea Clover louio a the proper move when you have dyspepsia, 1 1 1. ...... 1. Ann..).. Am.a .n.f.PI. llU-

Ifuu uioaiM, lulus-, jN, "WH . spirits, headache, or any stomach or liver troubles. 50 cents. "It is hard for an empty bag to stand upright;'' but it is harder for a full man. A natobai, color, that defies detection, is produced by Buckingham's Dye for tho Whiskers. At church women are more apt to consider the texture than the text New York Mail and A'jrprcss. A Happy Uort. What port is sought by every living crea

ture? sup-port Yon cannot well maite u your lunys aro not sound Taylor's Cherokee liuniedy uf Sweet Ouro wul Mullein will make -uut 6 I oure your cough.

Pube Cod Liver Oil. from selected livers on

the seashore, by Caswell, Hazzard Co., "Sew York. Absolutely pure and sweet Patients who have taken it prefer it to all others. Physicians declare it superior to all other oils.

Tax kov to a good situation is not whiskoy.

New Orleans Picayune.

Do as you please when you please to do 'right; and you will alwavs do tho proper thing in taking Bigelow's Positive Cure for coughs, cslds, and all throat and lung troubles. Pleasant to

ake, and cure spoody. 50 cents and tl To an alligator "Thy sweet smile haunts me

till." St. Paul Herald.

Chtuvren's Ailments, such as "constipa

tion" disordered bowels, worms, and many

other diseases so prevalent, can be successfully treated by the occasional use of Wauc-

EB 8 VINEGAR 1HTTE1U5. At la OB Bale HUU certain in its action upon children as upon adults. It acta on the liver and cleanses the blood.

"I noN'T know about vour religious novels."

said Deacon Brownsmitb; "the Bible ia good enough for mo."

Honey Well Spent. Try It. How to Cube a Cold. Til cure any

cough you ever heard of, and with one of the simplest remedies you ever saw, and that remedy is Allen's Lung llalsam. It contains no opium and is perfectly harmless. Mothers can give it to their children for croup with perJsot safety. Price 25 cents, 50 cents, and $1 a bottle; at druggists.

Free to Ministers, Lawyers, Doctors, and

Teachers. I will send two bottles of Wabneb's White Wine op Taii Sxbup best remedy

in the world for Coughs, Colds, Throat and Luna Diseasesif vou will recommend it

to your friends, and get your dealer to order

a dozen bottles trom ms wnotesaie amg-

eist. Send name of your druggist. Map

of Holy Land free with medicine. Address

Dr. C. I). Wabxeh, neuuing, mien. Ait

druggists. Petroleum V. Nasby.

D. It Locke. Petroleum V. Nasby, editor

Toledo lildhr, writes: "I had on a foreficger of my right hand one of those pleasant pets, a

'run-round.' Tho finger became inflamed i:o a

degree unbearable and swollen to nearly twica

its natural size. A friend gave me HENRY'S CABBOLIC SALVE, and in twenty minutes the pain had so much subsided as to give me a

fair night's rest, which I had not had bo: oro for a week. The inflammation left tho finger

in a day. I considor it a most valuable article.

Atbxophobos was magical in its effects upon me. I suffered from rheumatism and cculd not walk, eat, or sleep. I used four bottles 1. . nnf l,. A ,.in tt rhAnmitism ni left

W. B. King, dealer in sewing machines, Fifth

ana iioiumoia ol, AauajBuo, uu.

Straighten your old boots and shoes with V ' I 1 . .V n.l ... n 1. tl,AIY

A "Wise Reform. Tbi bublt of odmiulsteriifg quinine in powisv fu.1 d jseu, as ail antidote to malarial maladies, was sues dangerously common. Happily this practice has undergone a wide reform. Not only tha public, but professional men, have adopted, not wholly, of course, but largely, EoBtitter's Stomach Bitters as a safe botanie substitute for the pernicious alkaloid. The ooasoquonooB of tlUa change are most importaxx. Mow fever and ague sufferers are cured formerly thel'r complaints were only for the time relieved, or half cured the remedy eventually failing to produce any appreciable effect, ex cept the doses were increased. A course of the flitters, persistently followed, breaks up the worst attacks and prevents their return. The evidence In favor of this sterling specific and household medicine" Is of no ambiguous charaotor, but; positive and satisfactory, and the lource whence it proceeds ore very numeroui. Matrimonial Item. "I hoars you has done got married ut last?" "Yes, I married de widdy Snowball " "How de debble did yer come ter marry dat old woman?" "I'll splain hit ter yer. You knows how spensive hit cm ter raise a family ob young niggahs in Austin. Dey neither turns out well. Dey am a constant cause ob anxiety." "Well, whatob dat?" "Yon see by marryin' de widdy Snowball, I sabes mysef de trouble and misery ob raisin a family, bekase her younges son am more den forty yeahsob age. By dis heah marriage I gets a family of growed up childrums widout hailing to pay a cent." Texas Sifting a.

Throw Away Trusses. Cares guaranteed of every case of ruptur'.

undertaken. Book of particulars, 10 cents in stamps. Address, World's Dispensary Medical Astoolat lon, Buffalo, N. Y.

When the heart is full the lisa are Bilant!

when the man is -'ull it is different

Chapped hands, face, nimulea and roneh

skin cured by using Juniper ttoap, made by Caswell, Hazzard k Co., New York.

Tvnc trulv pond nan enter nlaeAS when iha

devil would blush to be seen. Whitehall

Time.

Tip a mnvh dlaturha mar alAnn. tjtirii VtaA'a

Cure for Consumption, and rest well.

nVSPEPSlA

Is a OAnjrerou- aswau as aiirauu4t "jVfTl Jf jtl MloJtHo. it tends, by impairing nutrition, and OaDSatofaie "SSof & ata, to PP tha xar

(or Rapid Decline. .

linn mm hi iss

mm ar j

-THE

BEST TONIC

its forma. II 1'ood, etc.

Qtuoklr and completely Cures Dysnepalai is ail

?Sc It enriches and narifioe te bloodTrtli ache aDDetita. and aids the assimilation of tnod,

ktea tha appetite, and aids the ajMlnUlftion o! Mn nvm W Kn.vv .TiT.fi nf tha Pal:

Areola, hid., suni: " I waa so sorely afflicted Y.'it iiidicestion that I could 01. nothing without dlitr'Sas. Brown'e Iron Bitters bu completely cured me." Mb. Obas. C Baeeji. Fiwolindvillo, Ind , mn: " I need Brawn's Iron Bitters for Dyspepsia wita areator benefit than any medicine I ever used." Mas. Chas. 8. Dimmick, Ohaje, Ind., snjs: " Brown's Iron Bitter entirely cured me of severe case of Dyspepsia. 1 gladly recommend it." Genuine Has above Trade Mark and L-rofaed red lines on wrapper. Take no other. Mado only by llltO U N' "lPtTOl. Ml. Jt','-",MBE,Mllw

ASH 1 R (Si h. O BITTERS mml m CURES lAUDlSMSBOmit 1 LIVER fn awl I KIDNEYS I STOMACH DC I BOWELS. 79 A liBY a Um AIL DRUGGISTS W

I rRicflooiiAJtl

DyBpepsiav, General Deliilityi Jamatdioe, Habitual Constipation, Liver Complaint, Siok Hoa4&ohe Siseaaod Kidneys, Etc., Ete. It contains only the Purest Drugs, among which maybe enumerated rllOXLT AlB 1A1X in BHUZ3, iiajniAZi, BUCHtr, emu, xt. It cleanses the system thoroughly, and as a PUBIFIEBOF THE BIrOOI la TJneqcualeMv. It is not an Intoxicating beverage, nor oa U be used aa suoh, by reason of Its Cathartic Properties. FaSCWLY ASH BITTERS CO. Sole Proprietors, ST. LOUIS AND KANSAS CITY.

STRICTLY PURE.

Contains Xo Opium in Any Foram.

MALT BITTERS, H you wish to be ndlavedoC tins srtMmM

Beae" nebea and that miserable Soar M eh. will, when takra aoordinr t

Hons, earn any aaa or Hear. MS or Soar Stonaaeaw It cleans the 1

awtlan and sal m.i atlima. It

blaol and gives It free alow, thus nutii ment to every par. It the

avecH iicea aura mmi mm ever ii vented for all dtosatae of the at

anaiarer.

raakawwwf

atfanau a

laswana.

J. . Moore, of Farmhwton. Mich., sm: T -1 Z- .w a!aJansaa fiataV

sell was terrible. 0a BoOt of Baps)

and M tit Bitters cured ma.

Do not ret Hop and Malt Janata ona founded with inferior preparation Oa aawaw nam. For sale by all cVnggfata, - BOPS & HALT B1HERS CO, akimw, Isa.

DROPSY mm TREATED FREE. XXl. a. H. GBCETt A ISSOWa, 8ilaaL2 for Thirteen YtnaLust. HT b wtedTiflD j and IU compUcatRH wtrh ttar most 'trondcrful success: uae vegetaUe remsiusa, entirel: barmles. Bcmo all amiptoma of diuasjtt tneigb to twei tr days.

vnra peueuw pronouiicea awveivsai av w .

the first dem tha srmctoBsa lantfllr anaav

ear.aid lnteiioaat tarwthriaat.allyrlv

near, a;

about i;. Bcm.inibtr.ltdo.ia not coat m.IItm (Ii mnrltj, nf tinr tiatmnt 1

tea dam the cnDcnltr of breathing t Balse r ular, the urinary organ nude leir f ill duty, slwsp ia restored, the at

neany rone, vtit atrengutingiijaaw. pnia rood. We are constsnttv conns: cess

mg-ciecBtlut have been tsnpea anoml

ana wipaueut necisrea u Boe south. ww. , full lit tory of cast. Name sc.. haw tons afaicta, how b idly sw illsn and where, are boro eCTttva. have le ra bunted and dripped water. Send for tat

Damyn let, ci in waina Kvuiauam 4uj..wwi .

Tha BEST and CHEAPEST

COM AND GROUP

REMSDT. As iin Expectorant it has bo EtiL ALLEN'S M BALSAM! IN THREE SIZE BOTCHES. Price, 25 cts., 50 cts. and $1 per bottle.

i IB-CDTT BOTTLES ax put np for the

nan ox au wno oesira nmpir a kaj

561 RKUEEY.

bottle. . . .

DUenuans accompany eacn dovsw. jartMLD ax S. Mnpionri rDnaiBS.-w J.N. HARRIS & CO. (Liiitefl),IWrs, C1HCESTJATI, OHIO.

OmMH.,!ll,Lul!I

HAY-FEVER SS2

to cants at drufigista' or by mail. , . ELY BEOTHEB3. Drttirgiet. Owego, N.Y.

membrane. B generally originate In On nasal pa--sages and maintains ia stronghold in the bead. From this point It end forth a potsnnona vim along the membranous lining and throngh the aigosttra organ, corrupting urn blood and prodnetng other tronhleeome aad dangerous symptoms.

Cream Balm ia a nsv

upon a correct

uue oiecawe, panded upon.

Mim

liUrl

HI

A Ufa Bxaarteno. Remarkable and

quick cure. Trial Packages. Send stamp for sealed particulars. Addreas Dr. WARD A CO. Loutslans. Mo.

Ka, l.MXB BA'3LXT, aaoaaa krasaaa O. M. B. , Tlaala. OaK aad awtakt as sat tnrasikbftlaa.taterserateaearrame. trejrm

.1. Th Oiaett Medlcln la

B iirobaMy Dr. Isaac

Ule!efated E

Tale article la a caret aDy

i Km World rs JBk Thompson's U ft Wttell

ai-rinH n. tail haa Wmr In ronaxani naa tar

century, and notwithstanding the many other prep.trUcna (bat nai-e bees Introdueed Into the market, tha

sale of this article is constantly lnnreaalna. If tha dtretSoruiarsfcUowedit wUl nerei tau. parrkaWly invite the attention of tihyaictasa to It menta.

aforsas am J finiwM.i win - u.i . tbdaMiwa-El ' 11111 II) Il II1 II aSa SfflSnrtSS Euspensory AppUances. for the apeedyrehaf and prmiient cure of Ntrvoxu DeeUUy. Immured ntoTua. SS aS kindred tamOae. Also for many other d&V e.,r ConfiiU-W restoration to Health and Vigor gaaranteea. No risk ia incurred, niaatrated paaaphletjn aJd CTiMto..nallod tf. byaresstog VotTAIC BKLT CO.. Mwaall. Wlcblann.

Baa cuni mn ti tt tana. aa B BeMCkinaiiSyrup Teeood. V TM

Skunk, Muskrat, Mink, Raccoon

Shins, ete., bc ught for cash at highest price, seed forolreulaV. S .c!BOIJOHTON,tBOndat.,rtearYOTtx.

Aa aatlT Man ar Woman In

rtl?

iwcountyto sell eor goods. SalarTtla a.atk and Exneewa. Expcas In ad. CanvaMlgfeuttlt raiKl Parliculsn

1 . . r-nw...lt,ff nutSt raiKl Paitirulata

tree, standard Silver-war Co. noaton. Jai

B. S. A A. P. Laobt. Patent Attorneys, Washington, D. Q Iusirnctlous and opinions a

to patentability FRBK. lar t yeara'eiDerienea. 4"IG farm lor sale. 18 acres, house, stable, water. MlJ orchatd, meadow, tlnibcr.garden. 'WOO down. Near county neat. BocloM atamp. ROBiar Bobam, Freirioktown, Mo.

patents;

ft It II Am "Treated ana cured wttboal the knlf I. II Nl.rK Book on treatment sent free. Addrdet llHillf Lli J'.L.POND.M.D.-Aorora.KaneCo..llL

IJBT OP mSSASES ALVi'ATB CBBABIJt BT USING MEXICAN

USTANG LINIMENT.

OF HUMAN FLESH. Blienmatlsm, Burn and Scalda, Stlntt and Bites, Ouli and Brnlsea, Sprain litltohes, Contracted Muscles Stiff Joint, Baokaehe, Eruption, Froit Bites.

OF ANIMALS, Scratches, Sore and Galls, Spavin, Craek.

Serew Worm, Orun, Foot Rot, Hoef S,ll,

Lameaen, Swlnny, FonnderH, Sprain. Strain, Sore Poet, Stlffneaa,

and all external dlseaaeaand eyery hart or aeddont.

tTor general i: ae In family, atable and atoek-yaM. It la

TUK'BEST OP AXL

LINIMENTS.

Ten ay' treatment furnished free by matl.

r.pii epay r lis; pcsainvany wmi.

u ycuorciur

trial, a. nil lOflania

r. if Akixn a an

So Jones Avenoe, Al

poetagi

1

BaiBLrrnir rocano. o.jk

llsSssrUssraSalllr

a.11 DrnarJataanU

Why 8ulfer. ThraPualnrjada t aat ranted to ear iaa ot

liONXT !TtZITIinlED I have titotnandsof teatf-

mijntaiaofpa

jSawl m WtQ4aya,'roai 0W-

awa, IIISI1UIB. ii liawiHB nftleiaa. A new remedy, and should be used twe ryJIan, Woman and ChM wlio anfler she untald atonf that FUea eana. , Directlona': How to prevent Files, on each tube. DooH wait but hare yoaa dnggiat order It foryoo.

Prepaid on raeeipt oral.

O.H.

It. Takaiao

wttfatSS

Tlaw IHWUinltfts

vttal power. I wra, i a

v. Wsl i.iiltiia that aJmiaaAandl

ela.o-ylng healthy and liatnrri

vente r, mi" Htands at the headof all favnU

edles. No house ahouw ever ne wunan ia. j Tl iegmr Bittern curat tUkiiai,alloBa4 other vera, disease c the Heart. Ua aOdni ya, and a hundred ctner paiafnl dnwdavt, aati jl far Aithair of cwjf " ""l tVltrltBJfat

rjCOKlilOr lacies, loriwrawa, aua- aaa.

jaeouni atsiub am aiihiuiiiw, .Y5.y mmtemrrrarceandTobawlItaJ be in tbeaud of eerrobild andattta conn it- . .

Aalr iww ua Mm awiarpo r7j, " Tl

&H. H'ThmM One Oo.,WaifaTton BUK.T. FORCOUCHS, CROUP AHO CONSUMPTION USE i

BeklaC IrisaS

AtaauaLuaast

QFswEinrGiniBiD ttiujH.

T le Sweet Ghrm from a tree of the

gro sing in u oonin, luruoiiwju . fro: a the Hnlleln nlantof theoid

lain

SOLDIER 5

aBKHaBBAADII

'Vm.mamB n a. w wnav kb

SHaaW tWaUiaiap. Battle pai aaa .wnawAVW In wiavMa nanmAafiuiaL a

anal BannnfaPlace to record decease A

wana .awansraycent wo ot arc. i b aaanani' tmi m v Jaanoisi

a beintlfnl picture lor lrnuBrfMssnttsM oaC

will prove an mtenating recnm tor au. ana i 1m. i...l, n wiatrltv . Rlltv ladltfSaWI B

ine iiilitary men. nana who lost soldier I

durii g or since the war, ana emry lng. inn be sure to order one or man

AMf il SOnm reap "Plendid.

awnvaiwaNt.wtas tauacmamam the f oldler'a Uecord an nnegualed.

Soldi ;rs price tUem highly-

eami le outtlt ddreaa. Tle

kM.

Vkwoxom mm

J71 R anklln street, Cmcaifo,

iPOUTZ'S HQ RSC AND CATTLE POWOCM

c bob vtn dt of Oaua Boner &nMf

Foil

lr ssnsani mfffl dta tat IkBUfA Isrjf

ir rounr rowuera are waeu m KaaaiI' i ua ii'Iiii a 111 an le enrt is ssil 111 SB r

V. I'nriliy. win laawait Oawaa B :

To its Powders wul lacreara ttae tnaarfny aa nana

and TtmtwtpeeBaaanaaniaaaaaaarsssm Fo itrt I'owrteri wul cine ci weree alaiM anaav . Diaiiax tc which Horaet and Qua ar nMcC lartn fownaaa wn atva SATtati !? 914 Terywlier. bavxs a. rant, paiat'.

aftfii

Thesa lassos

TOuracont

opposite 1

sines of

B. H. DOUGLASS SO

Capsicum Joag-at fen. Imiirha- Oolda and llnTa 4

All evia tor of Cons uroption, and lieneflt in moat oaaea of oyape

(IEWAH 8F IMITaTBnla.1 . . Botall Heo 1& eeaU yar easntar swan. rg a axe by aix was.

Ebitmta. aat

psWU

All People siiwecim Itwttt Snls. MIDDLESEX INtlCO BLUE FLANNEL SUITS ABB AIX PURR WOOL Aiwa ra look wnll and give long serrtc. CegmttiSm Sent lnj artiole liaTeon "auhajrr. "Satrja. ent i made trcm Middlesex- nanneteliw AShiji. SOL) BY ALL LBIDU& CLOTHIBBS.

stai 4lax haveeeaeate. lalljOljIiliiaaaaiL.

arAWTTFAOTlTREBS deaMna flrnort

111 tlietrfararnrdlna Intrnau nmniwts' s

should have a responsible agent of B years' experience ii the commission bualneea and rrdresndats abrotd and all shipping detail. Trananlpplnc traa

oiwwat. Baeacnaaaa Haar. Bit

Warn, Moik, fWUsa, IM Heah J llaaas. Ban. rntha. aa uMr tnat

JOHN H. WOOOBUst. n X. V

iiaw.A r. Ba'savawaa, BaMieams

awan.

" w. ii..

tk Tssska. aUaa.

S

F. W...

No. X.

When Writing to AdsentUuia plan say

diiitlsiattBt IB taw