Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 32, Number 1, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 February 1886 — Page 7

THE INDIANA BTATE SENTINEL WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 0 1839.

LOS. AI .AIX.

"I t"i'-:i sici a year ago W:ta li!i'us fever." 'Mr doctor ronouncel me cured, but I xt fcickaain, vita terrible rains in my back and sides, and I trot so l-al I Could not move! I shn-nk! 1'roiu 2-'- to 12"' I had been doctoring for t y liver, b;tt It lil me no good. I did not expect to live more than three month'. I U iran to Hop Hitters. T'ireetly my p'-titp returned. m3 pains left me, my entire system teemed renewed &s if by magic, and aitOT tisiur several bottles, 1 ani not on J y a" sound as a sovereign, but weigh more tl:ri 1 did bewre. To Hop Litters I owe mv life." It. FitPatrick. JUiK:::, June C, l-.-l. fHAPir.r. ir. 4'M:.l?n. Mas-.. ih. 1, l-0. Gentlemen I h j'J.'.wi with a:ut i-.i hi ru-aiiu-he." 2k"ecral:a. female trouble, for years ia the most terrtV.e antl excruciating manner. No n:r.f ine or doctor could give me relief or cure, v.ntil I used Hup Bitters. 'The f;.--t lottle. "Nearly cured nie;" The second made me as well and strong as -when a child. "And I have been ?o to thi? day. My ht .-band was a:i invalid for twenty year w:la a serious "KiJuer, liver and urinary complaint. 'rronf'ünced lv Doston's, beat physicians 'Incuralde!" Seven S'Otties of your Hitters cured him, and I krowof the "Lives o: eicht ier"ns" In iuy n?ihiorleXHl that have been saved by your bi iters, And many more are using them with great eoetit. "They almost lK miracles V" Mrs. K. I). Slack. llnw tu t-rr Sn k. Kxpose yourself day nnl yisht: e.t Vo siuch without exercise: work too inrd wi;.ii)'.it rest; d'Hto- art the time; tnke all the vile Ti'.tr,im; aflvert;Hl. and then you will ant to know- how to jfrt ueil. which is answered in three words Take Hop Hilters! WNo:i t-enntne w-tbo'-.t a bunch, of green Hops on tlie white label, linn all the vile, potaouous std wita "Hod"' or HodV' la their name. a THE )l?V MV mim. A WKEKI.Y NEWSPAPER. Iveccinmended by the Cardinal and Bishops. THE CATHOLIC REVIEW should find a place in every Catholic tl American home. It has Dten iuuiiucu to Micugin en and enliven Catholic zeal, to refute slanders, and to aid in creating a Catholic public opinion. Its success in doing this has won the favor of the late Cardinal Archbishop of New York, theArchbishops, Bishops, Clergy and Religious Orders. Even the Holy Father. LeoXm.. has honored the labors of The Catholic Review for the ood cause. Fair-play suggests that non-Catholics Tead The Catholic Review, to learn something of the church they so Ireely condemn. Now is the time to subscribe for THE CATHOLIC REVIEW. Price, $3 20 per annum, postage paid; $1.60 for six months. Specimens and circulars sent on -application. THE CATHOLIC REVIEW, II tardav St., New York. a kX ft ÜUV LaciR Tor 15 yttn at 37 Court T'-ace, now at -A rlacajnl ll rnllr lua'.iflrt pbyaiciaa aOL m oat hwVj1, ' T-racu: will fJCrrM 11 forms of PRIVATE, CHRONIC nd SOUAL DLSl EASES. Sprmatorrlie and ImpoteDCT aatr-M't f Mi'-abaM 1b mutii, ainal ai.nva la B m Tfrt. mr Hthmr cmw, wl p.-"l'-it f tb i Tin fciT-rr'rit. &m!nl t ninraci. frtrhi trr 1-nm. Dimsw of .iiit, IKKUr Ur', Thy. -mli, rwaut '-, aTah-jf O?fäo ' ky-u. Im of iul rr, fee, idmn MC; tu-. SYPHIL IS p"1I5 v4 OLE ET. Pt-iCruT, Oaliiti. rui lc auvun w-jmmitf diimn, tmiinc itMavii mu J T. -Q in rm UÜL phTuaiM!' w'Mi,f,1 Bo-MSi ta at er. Vtn it latCKix M MH'brMMt. BHbiMnl W priMj Mtsbltlf ml ntmi u?Mn. Cam GMraaW La aUl VW Caarat reaCaaW oJ corm;dra:c tricüj vtüiA iat, PRIVATE COUNSULCm. x npi, ait any aiMr. anir(y !!, for tbtr m. mt üjr .id l rni - .L adtm sa aora. aacfctA.M.tt M. BBaa.atr.ia. MMiMptToI. I aav a ii;t'. rdy i jr tha bot J;a ; by it thaaaaat af faaH ff ra weft :i'l a? f 1""C o bava Id1 . ao 'rn c 1 ir t ' t h ln-itaitTeary laat I w i -ni two fcoTTI.H ( KU. i. r-' r wttb a TAUCAILf TaSlT!."ca thl1.a. t aT ic-r !a a . . vi. iTiii'ru in 12 w I.Imm1 hi rl v ii iil;ir. 'vi . J:i. The f.i.io v i'i.' .'..r.c!:!i;riy :r.u;nr. :nl in tin- I'n'.i-li aii'U,i'f. was i ran!attl tl?.b tuoruni. ;-i-irl:;ii t ilie la!!y New. Siini.ar ii( s ha l .!: '-atvre-i U'KMis the ii ui f-l Iht- -oi tli'tni-'hrtiit Iii . ;tr. f.ui H ilc j'l-l !it:i :j't : in m'k-t arrv il aii' !.' -t . n i-v. ttiat h .-i J.a'i to l.i-ll t; -viiiiir. lue r.iem:anM rc to piav ismih! Iii i) äff n.Ü rc f!wt II ;i!;.in hl" rilnl fc. inl Ms. '1 Iiis iti'icl ont vu tt i- c;rc .'.iir I iii t(-t itte I y iiiwpc. It iinrlfrlirfMi ti'it in riii Tin- .K-cui line ' t iaiijt at t Ti-.-t!r j .irt .. r--Mit IIa., .u ! 8f me link-:.: .:;- I i.trv t Ihtiinu.j.- ': 'W irl fi' :i. n'v 1 nc ;a n ti l'.irTur H.iin.ii. th J'b-r:i:JM turatr- :' Ti-r -ir.vt will vi' a jj.i.i:,r.i Ui'.I i'-T ' the j.iirw.-.- ., Sit Taunus t : ;r :r .. i'. 1 i-ro-trammc iMits taat tlicr- w i.l V,- a .'rnii.l i!.-j- ay "r:-otri. anl ia tin- pr-Tiimrn; ine juriivs baw 1 jii)t-l t!;c Mnrinn.u : r.r nt!re untrv. rvi;'ne tlum in "nfinpfi''-i an-l vilülyinij ttrfi-. Mi tl n. wer., n. a. ttu-m ;:nl tii( ir in-st-. the lri .'i vt- o( cjMiii-'. an.l iliCTi fclio tiit-in rii.iiH- -xrii-i(rr..'' We tli'iT1 ore mhi1-! nii .k.r :i in j-wir irrtiM-tan'f oMiO u;. in lull Inn.- t'-n:-fit nt ire Hx.l. m-f -iit-n- .hir.i 1 tLt th y rniK rv n ti. ir iniil'." Klxlina; h 4.lint Slorj. Mil"'! HU':; Mrs.. .Inn. A n-; tet of !( -Tnark-t t iüaxe tonu forward with ti.e t'ol'ouin ;" xp!ariHt!on of the Muttix k. s liool-boue uh.-t that J:ia king anch a M.!".' !on : "I will give you an cxp? a ration that I think Vkill bcarc th t;h(t. He ma le h:i ppf arance abiit lf yiara ao. At fiit time there was ;t whj.e I'lDf .!yOr laid ia the en'rr. At the en -f the entry ncs n-t the "rk nsini there i a hol In tlie -(-ihnir '.of the tx-il rof" to thriu:b. When eit'a r !r ai i-n. tin- injif--ht nhiiiiui; r. tr.! poor wonid rrileet the na.iw. ne f tbe c!iiiilrtn jroinir in tfcere one day a very mu.h ir, eUU.ricd at f'eihif the ?xo. rlto lold the n:ho:ars. ho. of i iir. iniiriaed Ihey about evervthirg that wi whostij:, a t!8oj uor, rrd eye, and witn liorn. lb? children were thoroushlr f-ared. 'nie day a yontig man and I went down tbre, but -vtetwi.ld had nothine. Another day a youn: jrtüti pTit t thef hool and told a cbolar to ui .i of V.eir nnmber In the rntnr. not Icttine bim kuvr ti. one Jeeted. II? eaüilr nataed the

KV

v K

f 11 W

i.id, ui Lavaca yi? witw vw ia?

YOUR COMING.

I nor -.10', !ovc. lijw trst ycm foaad n?, '.vhar in:':3''t !el yon here; I kno th wor!-.l ha rhaueeJ arT.stt I m .-i:i o:ne jou Cime t-it near. 1 yiel 1 n t!ioiti1 c-iaimü t' nourish tlii-t, .t !;st the ile rest hof', the nearest tie; Ai' lo.'ki.ii uttoyiu f.r La;piiiC". Happy am I. Hew Il.'Utly passcl the inui'leu lei-nrir Thai o;ith and frt-tli'iii C'Mf.e. 1 lie CHreies tlays of pence ami pieavire. The uilits tf"r"r rep'! S) swift a t.'ii h ror.M se tii- tune anii."s! So )rifi" n sha'l;w lJot the HKirnmj; sky! Vet if the heart l3 nm.Ie ior hapiiic. Happy am 1. O love, your if mins taucht ni tru'! "our partiiiK laiiKlit me pain. My breat'i sn-w quirk, my ii-od ran lotiMe it iiai-e! in every vein. Yet. ah! has tune out-lone th'- l.ivei'a k;s. 'J ne .ooii the itirni:it; look the low replj If tu.-.-e be ail lie liohls of happiues?, Happy am 1. Y u Ie:il to eart!i a vajrue eiiioti;; straniter seems; Your gla-ire is mixcl witli sky an-t cced:i : Your voire i heard in .re.tni. Tbe pol i chtwe is weiitheii with that I i'i! My ;.l.ti l.i;;j;hier inateil with a suh. And n.'.'V :'.'. vüy ia j o ir happiae. lldppy am I. Harper's Ma .ja 'ine. RELIGIOUS, INTELLIGENCE AND INCIDENT. - This worM's uo phi'.e for weivil.ih ebs of funcies ?raal. Uut ior ßrui will achieving Hi','h crKse with stron.; haa 1. Nor dream, nor lor.lt. but .st'ni'.ly 'ihe task that nearest lies l'irionn, and wait devoutly Ou 'Od, who helps the wie. The Episcoal Sunday-schools in Utah contain over ö1 children of Mormon parentage. Fruitless is sorrow for havinz done amiss if it issue not In resolution to do so no more. Uishop Home. Lvman Ablott says that every home otuht t be a church. True, an.l every cburcli ou'ht to be a home. Johnny (just after Snndaj--schci.l) Say, Jack, what is a socklol:i.t:tr? Jack V!iy, don't you know? It's what they sinjr in church when they pet ready to "home. Bishop AVattersOii. of Columbus, (., says that the statute forbiddinjr Catholic societies to hold night dances if the same in Iiis diccse as in Cincinnati, aud it was made not to be a dead letter, but to be observed. AVhile the average projortion of churches to the jopu'ation in the CnitM States is one church t: every öl: people, it is in IJftstoti one to ini"ev York onetc .1"". in St. Louis one to while in some cities it is but one to every öj.f0. In January, lT:i. there were seven Kpisco1al churches among the tnree triles of ndians in Niobrara; now there are thirtysix churc he-. four boarding schools, and last year the Indians contributed 1, " towani the sui'iort of these institutions. At the recent presiding elder.-, convention in New York, a member narrated a tale of two boys in his district: A donkey was painr by Said one boy to another: 4'lVyou know what is?" "Why, yes," he answered ; "that is a donkey. I have seen lots of them in thf theological garden Among the branches of I'lytnouth (,'hurch is a Sunday-school in the somewhat remote town of Tirumanalani in the Madura district ol India. The building in which the S(1kkj1 assen.blit'S was paid tor cntirelv by scl'olars of Hymouth school ia Jlruoklyu, and it is sii.Kjrted by them. Uishop Warren, of the Methodist Kpi-cu-t 1 Church, says I'tah is the hardest missionary Held tue church ha.s. l,Vc liave had fifty missionaries, who have frm time trone there full of zeal, full of faith and the lioly (;hot. One by one they have been discouraged. '.ut the new day has dawned; th-overii-inent isass rting its jwer." Tlie Uai'tist mi ionaric in India are much worried that the omv Scriptures available for circulation among the natives are the translations made by the l'resbyterian mission in J.odiana. In these, the word fur baj-ti-m used may mean sprinklin.tr as w 11 as immersion. It is now propoHil to use '"pasters!'' containing the word for "immerse" over the ohjectioiiable word in the l'resbvterian Jhble. A little Swedish -rirl. walkin" with her father on a starrv niht, was so attracted bthe brilliancy of the sky, all lit up with twinkling stars from one end to the other, that she seemed tobe quite loit in herthnikimr. Jfer father aked her what she was thinking of so intently. Her answer was: 1 was iust thinking if the wrorii side o lieaven is so irlorlons w hat must tlie rizht lebe:-' To abide in Chri-t i the secret of perse verance in weil-loinir. Wonc. once taken no earnestly and enteren uihii w ith li";--. wh.ch e.Ti erience show s to have been too saturnine. t.allsby deirress uiion the taste, becomes irksome, and at lat it becomes discontinued. So it will be, so it nuM be, where it is either taken ut from lower motives, or where we do not habitually realize that it is tiod's work we are doine. Itev. Ir. l'igou. The Methodist Ileview does not wholly pJTove the diction and ortji"graphy ot the 'ritish (.'on panies f JJible- llevisers, remarking with naivete: "The lUerary World, on this nie oi in -Atlantic at least, win certainly rejrretthe Hritisli obstinacy in most of these peculiarities. It is not wise to ditigure the sav red page unnecessarily, nor to lav causeless stiwuOlnm-i'Ux ks in the way ot the common rea.h-r. It briiiir the Hible into discredit when its lamruae is made dissolaut with the rules tJl decency and orthog raphy. A new s et called Je.reeiues has sprun-r tin m Jvciit. it is learned that tneir ioiinuer was a James White, who gave hiu.sclf out to be a mervn -er of .od. and tok the name of lezreel. He died last March. J lis followers ttvle tlicznsel ves The New and Latter House of Israel." and teacn that for theni a higher state of 1'Iiss is reserved than for other Christ ians. Their creed in a strange combination of the law and jrooel, and thev have bought at fiillmgliam twenty acres oi ground on which thev have l-eun the erection of an assemolv ball and other biiildinzs widt h will t Obt A 1 "".(. The most remarkable revival in pro,-re-s m Ihe World is going on in theTelun Island-. The missionary wrk umong these iebigus lias been attended with marvelous siu-ces. the baritims in each venr bein numbered by tlie tlio'isands. Nov the idiatoM seek to vet ev-n with the r.nsionaries and win the leoj.Je back to the faith of their fathers, Thev i'o among the Christian converts l-enr-in.' on bamboo- j-olei small idol hyiws. They n.ake a Teat noise with drums and shoutings ) : 1 gei.erally attract crowds of eople. I he missionaries ny that there hps not in halt a century been such a revival of idolatry. The Herald of Health thinks that kissing ti e Hible by jurors and w itnesses, when they aie sworn. i a very wronz use ot the boo-i It is kissed by all sorts of tK-oule, clean ami ui.c'eati. and n becomes sodden with jrrea-e and foul w it li tilth, and dangerous to the health of those who put their lips to it "such a us, ot if. it seems to us. is unwar rantable. 1 he Uilde savs, 'Swear not at all ; neither bv the heaven, for it is the throne of (iod: nor by the earth, for it is the footstool of His fei-t; nor by. Jerusalem, for it is the city of the great King. Neither halt thou swear by thy head, for thott cant not make one hair white or black. Hut let yoursi-eech be Yea. via: NaT. nav: and whatsoever in more than these cometh of tbe evil one.' ' The Index. M.r Cliildrrn .o X.-trrfoot Wttliont Injur).' iTlie Lancet. 1 This question is every now and again pro jKsel for discussion; and when It i so, we are compelled to give the same answer. On iLvsiolo-jical ltouiiJs. it is manifestly a sound practice to acoustoui children to develoje the circulatory and rousctilar systems of the lower exkemities, precisely as those of the hand are developed, by free use and extonre. It is not supposed to be either iiwefcsarr or desirable that children tho ill , t a ... -ri. ' wear cioves ior nysrienu; iniriooe!. nu,ci tkc hwte Qlih act tUu Ueoorated,

ls, the parental idea Li confessed to pire them W.Lat is conventionally resarded as genteel appearance. No one thinks a child ought to be protected from the weather, so far as its Laa Jj are concerned. On the contrary, it is recognized that the upper extremities should be kept warm by exercise and habitual exposure. Precisely tbe same view holds pool with regard t-j the lower extremities. Contact with bodies that abstract heat, even more than the earth abstract it, is an almost constant condition ot childlife. In short, it i entirely in deference to fashion and the usages" of society that children wear foot coverings. There is much to be said in favor of a more natural practice. The foot an organ of wondrous complexity, regarded as a bony an J muscular apparatus. It is. moreover, provided with nerves and blood vessels of especial intricacy. The softest and most t'.exible shoe to a very great extent, and a boot almost entire! y. reduces this ovcraii t the character of a jointed block with little self-movement. Obviously thh? reduction must detract not only from the e:Cc:ency of the foot, but ot the organism as a whole. If the blood vessels of the foot and leg are fully ieve.oped, as they can only be when the foot I habitually exposed, the quantity of blood which the lower extremities can be made to receive, and, if need be, attract for a time, is very considerable. We can only say that children who are allowed to go barefooted

enjoy almost perfect immunity from the dan ger ot "cold by accidental ciuli'ns of the feet, and thev are altogether healthier and happier than those who. in obedience to the usages oi social life, have their lower ex tremities permanently invalided, aud, soto ay. caretully swathed and put away in rigid case. As regards the poorer classes ot children, there can be no sort of doubt in the mind of any one that it is incomparably l-ctier that they should Lfi barefooted than wear boots that let in the wet and stockings that are nearly always damp and foul. r HE HAD NERVE. Tbe Traveling 1'rinter aud an Iowa Town. I New York Sun. I had been devil in The Bugler oüice, in a town in Iowa, about four months, when the editor was one day called away. The man who was acting as comtositor, pressman. job piinter, collector, solicitor, etc., seized the opportunity to go oil on a spree, and I as thus left in sole charye. Just after dinner, as I was washing the roller and cleaning up generally, in walked the first old "printer bum" I had ever seen. The duds on Iiis back weren't worth a silver quarter, his hair was long and unkempt, Iiis lace covered with dirt ant bristies, and lws breath scented tlie room. He was ragged, dirty, homeless, and enniless, and had been let out oi tbe county ia;l, eivht miles away, that morning. I I'vIIowdy, boy," lie said as he came"in, and without a second plance at me he took a s?at at tbe lest and attacked tlie remains of mv lunch. When lie had eaten the last crumb he picked his teeth with the editorial pen, pee.ed off his old coat, and commanded : lky, hunt me up a job stick." I obeyed, and as he took it he walked over to the rack, blun.tr in two or three lines of display tvi-e, an. then stepted to the small pica case and set up tiie body of a circular reading: He Has Arrived. The AVorld-iJenowned Prof. Peters! Ventriloquist ! Mesmerist? Phrenologist! I rot. I eters has engaged Snvder s Hall for the evening of Sept. lsu.s (to-morrow evening, and will give the citizen of Carmer City an exhibition of his wonderful wers in ventnloouism. mesmerism, and phten- . v a r . . . e ilt1 oo3'. win imitate the notes oi a;i in ras; will sjfak to you in sixteen languages: will wager loo to .. that be can mesmerize any person in the audience; can read your charcter iv b-enrnr vour neaa: w in lorieu . unf it he fails in a single case. Medals from all the crowned heads of I -lu rope. Cluttering press notices from tlie leading ncwspajers of the world. Kvervbodv turu out. Admission onlv -" cents, t hildren free. He. placed this matter on a galley, pulled a j too f and corrected it. and then cut a lot of print paper to tlie rigiit size and said to me: 'Oct up the roller and roll tor me. I complied, and he worked olf 'Jon of the circulars. He was not onlv a -.rood composi tor, hut he wrestled that old hand-press around like a man who had never done any thing else. When we had finished he said: lake the tin pail and get meaiiartof beer. Tell 'em to charge n to theoüice. I was afraid of the man. and 1 rot the beer and paid for it out of mvoirn monev. Jle drank th? whole ouart with onlv one breath. Now, iht li. take these circulars out and listribute "em." he siid as he put away the pTi:. "r.e a irooa y ami i n give you two tickets to thi great entertainment." That was an inducement, and In two hours witli the help of another boy, 1 had billed the tow ii. When I returned the "bum" had washed up, combed his hair, and had on a new suit of clothes. He had uone to a clothier's and bought them and had them charged to the oilice, claiming that he had been engaged as foreman. 1 urlher than that, he had been and enquired tlie hall. I had leen "back only live minutes when the boo.v compositor came in. He hail scarcely entere l the uoorwheii the "bum rose up. v: ;itd him bat k, ami tragically exclaimed: Co hence! This js no place for the de praved. How dare vou enter mv oilice in your pre-ent condition'.'" I he "comp backed down stairs drunker than ever, and after the stranger had questioned me as to when the editor would re turn h" went u the hotel and en--'a--e.l toe best room. I had heard that somebody held a mortgage on the oilice, and it struck ie that thij? must be the man s atrei.t. 1 was young and green, and had never seen a display of tramp printers' gal!. Next morning he took possession ol the rl.ee. When the now si bered comiositor arrived the bum selected copy br mm and nossed him around, and there vtj-i no rebellion. He w rote and se t vp ver.il ed itorials himself, made up the outsid page: of tbe paT in a neat lii-nner. and Worked oil two jobs lor which .7" rash was paid in. jhinng the day two subscribers paid in 1, and all the monev went into the stranrrr's pocket. J he editor was to be gone two days, and the man took such complete possession that we believed in his ritht, and did not kick. I hiring the day lie got a hat and a new pair ot oootstiie same wav he got the domes. ami he drank three quart of beer at o'ir ex pense. l rolessor 1 eters circulars Idled Snvder s Hall that evening to oversowing, and it was the old bum w ho stood at the dor and took the money. When the last person had passed in the door-keeper had slid into the d.irk in-ss, and the people sat there Ior half an hour befon: thev realized that they had been iuisl. Then a grand man-hunt was organ ized, but it was too late. The bum had tolcn a skill and dropi'd down the river, just about sl.l ahead of our town, .. M. I. v alking down 1 (roadway is very pleasant when vou feci well, and J K never felt better than when his friend asked him now he cot over that severe c-oiiirh ot his so -pcedilv. "Ali, my boy." said T , "(I M. H. did it.'" And his frieml wondered what (J. M. D. meant. He knew it dul not mean a tiool Many Ioctors, for T K had tried a doen in vain. "I hare it," said be, iut hitting the nail on the bead, "vou mean Dr. Tierce's '(iolden Medical Discove ry, or i old Medal Pesened, a mv Iriend J S always dubs it." Sold by dm-: gists. IToroford'a Arid I'bo-pbate i nk.i Ai.r.i. Dr. lt. M. Alexander, Fannettsbnrgh, Pa.. savs: 1 think itorsiord 9 Acitt l'hosphate is not eeinalcd in any other proparation of phosphorus." Allen's Train Foöi 'arresU all involuntary discharge", removes mental aespondency, and restores wonderful power to th ceneraorgans. . $1 ; 0 for $. pnigisft or by mail Croix J, H. Allen, MT 1$ ftre., , x

SOCIAL GOSSIP.

The motto of the Clover club of Philadel- i p:i:ais: "W!j;e we live. w live in eiover; Wneu we die. we die n'.l over." Iluskin has written to the rail-Mail Gazette a letter on the Irish question, m which he pays: "As Scott is authority for the Scotch character, Maria rdgeworth" is authority for the Irish, and her three stories of 'Ormond.' 'Ennui,' and 'The Absentees.' contain more essential truths about irelanel than can be learned from anv other source whatsoever." Mr. James Kusseil Lowell, m cousiderin? the poet Oray at Concord, regarded him as the most conscientious of artists. "If there be any pure well of English midefiled. it is to be found in him and his master. Irvden. They are still the .standards of what mäy be called classical Knslish. neither archaic nor modern, and as far removed from tedantrv as vulgarity." An innovation at the White House this winter haa been presenting the dinner guests with badges of wide while satin ribbon stamped with pictures of the "White House, names, dates, coat-oforms. and red white and blue stripes. Thev are rather formidablelooking sashes, and ouiteenual in size and show to the broad ribbons that tliplotnate sport on state oei asions. There's a mat little stro'-c- In the February installment of "f ha.-b-s Pgl-ert Craddock's" new Atlantic story. "In the clouds." Says one of the characters, speaking of the hero- I ine, " "Lethe 'pears ter think the Lord Lev app'inted the rockv wav.- the be alwavs adoin' of what's the hardest. An' she can't quit nowhar this sideo' mithin' ! Kf ever the s condemned ter Jorment she 11 kerrv a little kind! in along, fur fear the lire won't he het up hot enough ter burn her fur her sins." 'Tis net the crime, with clown or prince, 1 hat makes the llirtiugdame dejected; l:ut 'tis tlie shame tlwt inakes her wince, To !ind the i-riiiic has been detected! Mandolin playing is coming into fashion in England, lue little tinkling notes make a very prettj accompaniment for the voice. esjKcially if be a voice of light calibre. What can be more charming than a lieantiful wo man, graceiully hoYiing the mandolin in her white arni9. while her slender lingers touch the wires, and her sweet voice warbles some Spanish love ditty or Italian folk song? The belles of to-day see what a mistake . their mother made in givim: up harp", C'itars and mandolins such 'becoming instruments and accordingly they are all returning to favor. senator Kvart's library in his house in New York is full of costly books, engravings, pic tures and works of art. He had a visit there some time ago from one of his law c!ients. who had always supposed the senator to be not any too luxuriously supplied with this world's goods. He looked the room over with critical eye and remarked that he did not see how the senator could allord so many line and costly things. The senator mentioned the remark to a lawyer friend a day or two afterwards, with the elrv comment: "lie will know when I send hint my bill." Ilocheste-r I'nion. I r. Holmes' new novel. "A Mortal Anti pathy," concerns a young man w'ij, in cansequence of an accident m childhoo!. is aHiicted. up to the age of twenty-live, with a Uistres-ing antipathv to young women. It is not a mere unrcasertiabie re pugnance, but a nervous disorder w hich place his life in imminent danger so long as he remains near the e-.timr cause. The phvsiolotrical explana tion ol the malady is given with a particularity and clearness capable of mystifying the most skeptical reader: and'we'ean imagine th Doctor's delight in thinking what a puzzle he has left to be solved. The enued bird tliHt hi Hie Htitiiimi dav ln ili:el dwi-lis wlirii fails I iu-:i li tuiim eve Seeks l.ow its liberty it may achieve, ivatsai i tic wires and its poor wings cloth tray; r or now icire oi iniirrnnt ckaa"c holds swav: This Müntner-vacaui land it longs to leave. While iis free iccrs on tireless pinions cleave The haunted twiliuhl. siveding south their w.iv. Not otherwise thaii as tlie prisoned bird e here dwell careless of our nt.tivc site I lit 1 1 vihl dwindles, mid the enr grows late. And answering noie to note no more Is heard : '1 hen. our loed fellows !lovn. the soul is stirred To follow them w here si i mine r 1ms no .1h te. -Il-lith M. Thomas Miss e;enevieve Ward, by two lerfonnances of "Antigone m .Mcllourne. Australia. raised the unprecedented sum of tw elve thouaml dollars and more for the Lying-in Hos pital, a needy and worthy chanty of that citv. Some of the foremost citizens paid ten pounds, and ail others a sovereign each for seats. At tbe close of tbe terforiiiances. HI tlie presence of the vice-regal party. Sir forge Vcrdoii presented to Mis. Ward a magnificent diamond star subscribed for by ive shillings lrom almost every inhabitant. ami a life governorship in the institution. The mayor then prented her with a superb goM-ciusped nibu i ii containing an illumin ated address, to which s.e ehxiuentlv re sponded. Miss Ward has been treated with irrealer hor.or in Australia than was ever be fore bestowed Uo!i any woman -or artist, and has been re-engaged until the original "six wee ks'' of h r st;i in Melbourne has been piolonged to nearly a year. The publication of a series of letters from Thiukcrav to an intimate friend is again talked ed in Kngland. Thackeray's da tighter. Mrs. Kitchie. om-e gave her consent to the publication, but subsequently she asked that it be jMistpoix d. The letters are said to reveal Tha keray's inner character with exceptional trankness. They deal largely with bis domestic allairs. and especially wan the insanity ol his wile, ami show heroic ami sclf-sacri(icing trails. He complains that he rives the world only tbe best that be can. He never hail a chance to bring out Ins full lower, owing t his private cares, ine ad mirers oi lbackeray s writings, and their name is h-gion, would read these letters with :rtat interest, 'e wih to know more of the man who so clearly saw the motives of human action, and so skilfully dissected human c haracter. We wish to see further into the hie of him who, while with merci less satire lie pictured a reeky Sharp, could s'il'Ialso picture that grand type of tlie true t;. MO mnn. t oionel .Ncwcomc. GEN. FITZ LEE'S INDIAN FIGHT. An Incident hi the I. lie f l.uvernor Ire. "Tlie onlv trouble about Fit. Lee." said attain 11. M. Haves, the famous Indian lighter, and an old friend of fiovenior Lee, to a Iticbnioud (Va. l State reporter, who was seated in the reading-rooms of the l-lxchange Hotel attf nti.vcly listening to 1 aptain ilaye rc-late sonn-of the c-arlv adventures and thrilling escapes of cieneral I'itzhugli 1 e, when that gallant .Virginian won his brst military honors uion the battle-grounds of the far West, "is that he is too modest." Do von think so'' asked Hon. I'd ward Fe hoi, who occupied a chair near by. 1 know 11 is so, faiu 1 ni'i 1111 iiayt-?, "l it, for that is what we called him when lie was lighting Indians In the West, isone oi the bravest men 1 e ver saw in my lite, and 1 have seen many brave ones, coming down in the train yesterdav 1 told Coii.'resjiinaiiO'Ferrall about l'it.'s hand-to-hand tight Willi atl Indian, and how bravely Kit, acte I on that occasion. l iU'.v iwi iuouc-si 10 ici of Iiis ow n extloits, and his most intimate friends hardly know anything about hi early military life." "What al-out the hand-to-hand frbt w ith an Indian V interrupted the reporter. "I'll tell you," Captain Hayes relied, as a smile ,lavel over his lace ami iiistoiiineii ance lit up with recolles tions of earlier clays ' he n he and I were together in on 11 west em iexas, lighting m me muiau war, this hand-to-hand light took place. e were roaming ab -ut the forest together one lay. when we Mucd a buck Indian, as soon as lie saw us he gave ATr.r.MKXMl W'lt WllOOl" and galloped through the woods ou his pony. l-itz and 1 lollowca nisraii a r close behind.him. Sometimes we would get s.l . I . JÄ Ä . : m a -wl 4.A wimin tweqiynve yaru? OA iii", -- be would dash'o.T and leave us in the rear. W Tnresseil .Kim bard, and fjnallT he was forced, on account of the thickness of the

hrjsh. lie jumped Iiis pony down an eightfoot embankment into a stream, and for a while we lost his traih Fitz w ent down on one side of the stream and I went down on the other. I couldn't lind the trail, but presently I looked over to the other side and saw l'itz pick up an Indian blanket, and throwing it over hi3 shoulders, lie walked along as big as life. 1 warned him to look out, for that blanket meant that the Indian was near. He walked ahead as brave a- a lion, and it turned out that tlie Indian was concealed behind a hedge of the rocks, almost under Fit's no-e. Fitz didn't ee him, though, and stood there awhile, looking up the stream. I was some twenty yards away, and all at once I heard a cry

that caused mv blool to run cold. and to make me jump . about two feet in the air. It was the Indian. and Lis war-whoop startled Fit as much as it did me. The Indian sprang from behind the rocks and grabbed Fit as e-iiiek as lightning. He was a big fellow, much larger than Fit, and was six feet tall, lief ore Fitz iuew it the Indian had him down, and a scuiHe followed. The Indian had a long lance and a bow fastened to hi back. Fitz had a pistol and a carbine. In the scuttle the carbine was dropped, and the Indian's lance also leu from its owner s back before ie could use it. A HOT si tnui. "It was a hot scufile. The Indian was too ttrong for Fitz, and linally threw him to the ground. In falling Fitz lost his pistol, and the weapon went sailing beyond the reach of either J-itz or the Indian. 'The scuille continued. The Indian had Fitz down, but he could not do anything with him. because Fitz was working so hard to turn him. They rolled about ujon the ground, and I cottier hear Fit, say some plain Knglish. but the Indian didn't heed it, and continued in his effort to get the better of Lis opponent. All this occurred while I was on the op posite side of the creek, and in less time than it takes me to tell it. I was trying to cross the stream while Fitz was lighting for 11s life, but before I got over I saw that Fitz lad turned the Indian and was on top choking him. Fitz had his left hand utoii the Indian's throat, and the Indian with joth hands tried to break the strong hold Fitz had upon him. In rolling over the rround, strange to say, the two men went back to where the scuille began, and when ltz got on ton his eves fell upon his PistoL which was lying near the Indian's head. Fitz reached out for the pistol, and the In dian evidently dieln't know what Fitz was after. He succeeded in getting k-old of the weapon without the Indian's knowing it, and holding the pistol close to the ground ie fired. Ihe bullet went crashing through the Indian's chee k, passing ont on the opposite side. The Indian then made another desperate attempt to turn Fit and get possession of the pistol. A 1SATT I.K I NTO PI ATI1. "Lach man fought with suKrhuman strength, and each man knew it was a battle UUtO death. Just as I reached Fitz lie tired igain, and this time the ball struck the In dian's heart and killed him. Fitz then got up, and I said to him, 'that was a close call, Fitz.' He replied, 'Ytis: 1 thought I was gone. "Afterward I askel l'itz how- in the world ie managed to turn the heavy Indian. Fitz, in Lis own peculiar way, replied: 'I tell you what saved me, .lack (the name he call- nie.l It was the old Virginia back heel. When I was a boy at school in Virginia,' he explained. 1 iearne.1 a little trick 111 wrestling that the Loys called the ü;-ck heel, and the thought struck me when the fellow had me down that if I tried that Virginia back heel on him I would get him. I trie d it, and I got him.' " hat did vou do with the bodv." asked the repcTter. "l-itz ana I held a little counci. of war to determine whether we would take the fel low's scalp. We decided not tn take il. and so we left the body in the i'orest." "I tell vou what, aptam I laves conclud ed just as a gentleman came to call 1 i 1 11 off. "I-itz Le e is a brave man. I it. Lee is a won derful man, and I ierdi:;t that lie will make one of the best (lovcrtiois Virginia ever had." blether' Koom. I New Orleans Times Ik-iikh nit. The dear old room with its windows open to the west. There we children would stand tiptoe, aud watch the cloud-ships sailing over phantom seas to a lar-oit tairy land, w hither we, too, would some dav vovage. And tlie sheen of that wonderful sea of purple and gold cast a rosy gleam Uon the white walls, plaved at hide ami seek amid tlie lights anl shadows thrown by the ar tist, around Shakespeare and his mends, laughed at the solemn clock em the mantelpiece, ami rested like an aureol uton the mother's brown hair. It wa.s a homely reom. At odds and ends of lormer times ia,j a wonderful knack of collecting there. Lads and lassies were tp-ver banished to the nurterv in those davs, so the curpct was alwavs faded, oftentimes patched, tlmt the childien might romp over if as they pleased. 1 be Hior was strewn with armless ragdolls, worn-out balls, blow-gun, bits of twine. bhieMnick spelling-books, and the other worldly possessions of old-fashioned children. The chairsl "Well, no such chairs can be found cow in upholsterer's shops. There was the capacious arm-chair, with its Worn green lining, which we dubbed "Sleepy Hollow," and fur which there was ahvays a scrabble in father's absence. Mother's favoiite seat was a low rocking-chair by the south w indow, overlooking the bed 01 violets and heartsease, s'plit-bottomed chairs, with and without rocker-?, invited the we.iry to seek rest, .v home-made, chintz covered lounge sat in the corner, while pnaint little stools, gay with patch-work covers, tried to hide themselves iu every nook. That room was the see :ie of all the sad and bitter incidents of our home-life. There baby Carry closed her bine eyes to open them no more upon a mother's face. They a; rayed her in white, folded her fragile fingers upon ti.e la-t spring blos-oms, and in tl.e nilit lime w e c-du.'ht the rustling of the angel's wings who had come t b-vir her away to the bo-oin of the dear 1 'hrist. It was there that Mary broutrbt her lover, one summer's day, when she found that his he art was her home. The tears gathered in m -the r's eyes and dropied upon their clasped hanN, but she gave the m her blessing and the da-tghter went oil' t a distant land. Little c hildren play around tier knee now, but she often writes with a homesick yearniiur for mother's room. The autumu aunlight streamed In with a golden glow, th- evening we heard that Charley," our soldier boy. was killed. Cum raues wrote that he die'd like a brave man, aud Iiis pra'-e was 0:1 every t ngue. Hut alas! what comfort can fame bring in the first sharp hours of bereavement? "I'.ring my boy in hen," said nnjiher. faint and tearless, and the pall bearers ; passed by the uraiid parlor and set their burden döwn, where she had wept on his neck at parting. The home once gav with childish voices is now reol'led with ghosts. Their garment rustle in dimly liehted IihIN, their footsteps echo on untrodden stairways, their voio-es muriner in deserted chambers, and when the evening firelight tin kers on the walls fhey come trooping into mother's room, all, w ho are cone, the dead and the living. The dear old folks see these ghosts; for often when I come in at the twilight hour mother will call me Charley, or father will say he thought it wa Mary s step upon the threshold. They. too. will toon be gone. In the tair mansion to which they hasten will there be one room homelike and -ccsir, where the erring children will gather and find comfort as they did of yore in mther'a room? Juke Keel, colored, who recently reecke! seveal thousand peniou niw-y, is mbsine from fcowlingUrcen.Ky. When liest keen be was lolnr c hased by Frank Caldwell, colored, with dfawu piotol and knlle, toward U.0 river. The two bad fuu!;htalKnt , wcHln Caletl i; tinker ur-

CURIOUS, USEFUL. AND SCIENTIFIC.

M. A. Villiers has extracted from the remains of two cholera patients a welr characterired alkaloid. Its reactions and the exper-' ir.ients made with it lie describes: In treating fregs with it the most prominent result was flight and temporary decrease in the number of beats of the heart, (iuinc-a pigs yielded to its iniluence in the course of four days. In the Pacific Medical Journal the case is reported of a A-outh who swallowed an open penknife measuring three and a half inches. A common and unwise treatment in such cases is to give castor oil, but Dr. I lutchings. who had charge 01 the case, administered icarty meals of mush and buckwheat cakes. which impacted the instrument, and it was recovered without having caused the least injury. Tlie Triboulet system of photographing all the country as seen from a captive balloon has succeeded well. A very small balloon carries up the necessary height the photographic apparatus, the panoramic obiectglass of which is provided w ith a valve which can be opened through an electric current managed by. the oi-erator, who remains on the ground. The impressions obtained are useful for military purposes. In order to settle thenuestioti as the prot-er treatment for iersons who have been frozen. Dr. Lnptchinkski has made a series of very careful experiments upon logs. IIa found that of twenty animals treated oy the method of gradual resuscitation in a cold room, four teen perished: of twenty placed at once 111 a warm room, eight dicid," while twenty put immediately into a hot bath recovered jnickly and without accident. In a lecture on the microscoie at the So ciety of Arts, Mr. John Mayali said that his torians were almost unanimous in asserting the great antiouity of the instrument, but he thought the claim would have to Ik abandoned. After carefully reyjcwim: the .evi nce he found that "it was certain that the invention of the microscope was not anterior to the latter part of the sixteenth century." The lecturer exhibited over two hundred miroseopes of various forms. People who are slender and nervous some times express a dread of the elfect that "shock" mieLt have upon them in cae of accident. At a men t meeting of the NewYork State Medical Association. Ir. ('. W. llrown, referring to individual-susceptibility 10 snocK, saiu tnai "some persons 0x iteshy jahit and apparent health will succumb sooner to a minor injury producing 'shock than some others of delicate habits ancLtiervous temperament, the nervous system in the atter giving wav less readilv." Also, shock is less in jersons su Hering from chronic disease than in healthy teople, though the former are less likely to make complete re coveries. As a breeder of diseases there are few things that excel the average farm-house cellar, it underlies the whole house, with nothing to prevent its exhalations rising into the upper rooms except a thin board lioor. in this" cellar all manner of things for family use ar kept the season round. Meat, vegetables, milk, butter, bread, pastry, preserves, pickles and fruit are stored in1 theirfvarioiis recepta cles. There is verv seldom anvthin-' to senarate the fruit and vegetables from the. other parts of the cellar, and there Ls usually more or less decaying vegetable matter to load the air with potsonous germs. At various seasons of fhe vear the cellar walls collect dampness or small pools of water lie under their loose board Hoors. sending up malarious odors into the rooms above. Among the interesting results of submarine or deep-sea explorations conducted under the auspices of the London Cieographical society arethoe ia referenceto the Atlantic sea belt. It would seem that the bottom of the North Atlantic is occupied by two vallevs, the east ern extending from ten to thirty degree? west longitude, and traceable as far as the equator. with an extreme eieptn 01 less than 1. ., fee t, while tlie western vallev reaches from the thirtieth to the fiftieth degree of w-t longitude. The two are separated by a ridge in thirty degrees west longitude, alongwhich the average depth is oniy 1,MK fathoms, and which can be traced northward t Iceland and southward to the Azores; it is volcanic in character at both extremes. Its extreme breadth is somewhat less than 0O0 miles, and the depth of the water increases ou iKth sides of it according to the distance of the axis. A l air Attorney. Alas' the world iissgone away .s-inee c ousin Lillian entered c-olleife, J-'or she lm.s rown so lt-amc-d 1 lt tremble at her wcmilrons kunwledge. Vt 'he-ne'er I dare to woo her now, she frowns that I should so aauoy hr. And tlieu proclaims, with loft brow. Her mission is to be a lawyer. Lite "'.ides no more ou golden winus. A mi liny waif from i:i Horndo: I've learned bow true the ixxst bintrs. That coming sorrow cn..ts its shador. When tutti-frutti lost i;s spell. I n it s,.me hidden grief impended: Wliezi slit; dceihicd a cnrnmci. 1 kni-w my roy dream liud ended. she paints no more oa china plagues. With lints that would have cracd Murilto Strange birds that never plumed their backs When halber Noah braved the billow, ller imiey limns, w ith brighter brush. ' The spUinoid triumph that await lier W hen, iu the i-ou:i, a breatliK-ss hush dives liomnj:e to the keen debater. 'Tis !-ml to meet Mich crushing noes From ee ui- blue as Seoitisn heather: "1 is sad a maid with cheeks of rose .should have her heart bound " in leather. 'Tis md to keep one's i-sioti h ut. 'I hou'.'h l'ailas' arms the l-'air Kuvinui : l'.iH worse to have her juoting Kent When one i fondly bieavkiu I'.ro:i. When Lillian's licensed at the 'aw Her fame, oc sure, will live lore vor: No barrister will pick a flaw In loj.'ie so extremely rtcver. The fchcritf will lortrotlds nap To least upou the loely vision. Aiide'eii the Judge will set Jvscno .t her. ml d reu m of love l.'ysian. saiauel Minturn 1'ccV. in the Century. Tn. ie total hiii-orts of Men JiHudiK' at the port of N urk iliinnr liio past week were , 1;J. !.'., ol drv -.i-(iii sj.sci.f .'s. New Hlid Take cure of your Liver. A great number of the diseases to which mankind are liable arise from a disordered condition of this organ. Keep it in sound aud l'oalthy condition and you can de fy disease, l'rickly Ash Ih'uers are csj-ecially adapted for the puriH se, being comtose-d of drugs which act on the Liver, giving it tone and strength to withstand malaria. The ti'tnl cx'wirts f HK-t-it- fron tlie j-n t ) New Yoik iiurni the m-U eck were '-.I.'.'.mi. vi this niiii'uut tlie cxrts to Knroc were M".j..'"u in sil-M-rarul ?l 'o.'Hiy ia oi.l. The -xpirtf to IlavHt-a were l-1'.l'.T iu ;oM mi.l sl.:'J in -il er. The liu- tc'lal imports oi -ic at the htrin the weit wen- ,4l.:;s.,1 Ma. JA MLS KM.T.KV. wrt-.i f..vmn V. AM. K. lt., Vt ili.lt-, Jli.o, U l not tie-lit fur ir ?'. Iiis nfbr:n fr.'m Xmiralira iJ KO-(. Tlirtr"!'"'! A-im'iHOkonciirnlbtiu. ..praViu. t'iiiu-h ct.-e i-f 1r- ineU isnrimn and tn.ist j auibil f 'I-khm-i. Iw luffed ail uisliol Ä;ATHL0PH0R0S"i:;l,i iiiiM, U" i't nute rui-iiiV.-!e. Athlophoros m rii.v uti-t oiuKi.r rnn-t.it. Tin Mt- u--t, tlioiirhatrtiii. in warrauted by the facta. Tla-Os-ands havp P-sh-d it viliu- and TccominMid it u th -osi.r rrtiit-ly that t-riiii-a relief. For ladi" tubje-t neiir6l,na or nt-rvuu laaai-la a it ia illdiTseil-a4. AthlOptlOfO cu'itams noornim. luorphiiM. er otla-r dai-.-rotw iu-nd;i tit. It ih M)aolutel' hainiU-wiamlcimverBalljr fcrv-cwaful in tlie i roniet cur cf tuia 1 a.l.fil dl!. Ak yonr dmrri-t for Athlophoroa. 1' cannot Ct it of bin w will enJ it fippi-- pam wript of rttiiar 1n.- tl.OO lr lmtl. W pwiffT tliat yi it t-at nr rini.lsl.tl I )i haunt it do bo persi. Jd b tr w.-t.t!un " ei, bnt otdr at fce fro: a i a cbmcost. THLÜf HOWS CO., 112 WLl ST.. EVI YOM,

Dil, JOHN BULL'S

ältftlÖfliCOT

FOR THE CURE OF FEVER and AGUE Or CHILLS and FEVER, . AND ALL MALARIAL DISEASES. The proprietor of this celebr&tod mediciat justly claimi for it superiority ortr all rem ediet ever offered to the public for the 8A.FE, CERTAIN, SPEEDY and PESMAKEJTT cmr of Ague and Feyer.or Chilli and Fe ve r.wtether of short or long itanding. He re fen to th entire Western and Southern country to betr him testimony to the truth of the Msertiom that in so eise whaterer will it fail to care if the directionsare strictly followedand carried out. In a great many cases a single dos haa beun sufficient for a cure, aci whole familie have been cured by a single bottle, tri th a perfect restoration of the general health. It is. however, prudent, and in every case more certain to cure, if its use is continued in smaller doses for a week or two after the disease haa been checked. more especially in dirSoult aai long-standing cases. Usually this meiieia will not require any ail to keep the bowels ia good order. Should the patient, however, raquireacathartic medicine, after having take three or four doses cf the Tonic, a single dM of KENT'S VEGETABLE FAMILY PILI will be sufficient. Use no other. DR. JOHN BULL'S SMITH'S TONIC SYRUP, BULL'S SARSAPARILLA, BULL'S WORM DESTROYER, Th Popular Remedies of thst Day. Principal OUlrs, v-,i JUl. St., I.onsriM.air. A STANDARD MEDICAL WORK FOR TOUXG 1D MIDDLE. AGED Ml 0'tT S1 liX 3IAIL, POST-rAtD. Illustrative Sample Mailed Free to All, KHOW THYSELF. A Great Medlral TTork em Mad hood, Hihansted Vitality, Perrons ana riiTirna öeMiit FrematTire Decline in Man, Errors of Youth, and the untold miseries resulting from indiscretions or excesses. A book for every man, ronn?, middleRed and old. It contains 125 prescriptions for all a me and chronic diseasea, each one of w'aieli in invaluable, bo fonnd by the author, wboe ex,', rience for twenty-three years is 6uch prorabIy never before fell to the kit of any ih j-viwian. Thre hundred ra pes, bound in beautifnl i'rench must lin, embossed covers, full Rilt, guaranteed to be a finer work ia every sense mechanical, literary aud prok-ssional than auy other -wort nld in tbia country for tbO, or the money wiH be refunded lta every instance, hrice only tl by mail, post-paid. Illustrative samples 6 cents. Serwi now. Göll medal awarded the author by the Katioual Bfedlcal Association, to the ITef-ident of which. Hon. R. A. Fissell, and associate officers of the board the reader is respectfully referred. The K-ience s l.iu- hhonid be rwd by the younjr for instrnetie, and by the afflicted for relieL il w ill benefit all. London Lancet. There is no emberof aocletrto whon the Science of Life will not be tisefcl. whether youtla. parent, guardian, instructor or clerjrymaa. Argonaut. Addrcws the Peabo.W Medical Institute, Of Dr, W. H. I'arker, No. 4 B1 finch street, oton, Mas., who mir be consulted on all diseases requiring skill and experience. Chronic and obstinate dieas that have baffled the. f-kill of other pirn!clans a specialty. Kirh treated snoceRsfu'Jy wuliout an instance of fauure. Mt-ntiou this pper. NEXyOUSOCSfUTY Uavaajno w üuim Dmiiidnmini ooaoaiwdiMaa. bXfiins tha akillad br iMim twwiitS favam HAT?,T?Ty V? roc Uifu! lcdlsciwäoa. Soofra tndaUaBo. oe OTartiraia work. Aaoi r the l2ipoli;c9 ol pmta Umi twaadic fee lSm A Radical Curs for vV Circular and Tral Pack ra,ail lean tmpotial lat-il twTors ttklitftraat mrnt fwhrr. Taka H'HE Rich cdt that ua Cl'ftl'O ttouaa4a. not loterlef wuJa arms KERVOUS , PEBrLiryJ Kl erf s::e mwess SPHYSICÄL v secat. lion to buiinrss, or paiAor taeoaa iaasia mc n! ftc iMdiaaljprtBrl pies. By direct i Dp. jtawn to stax of laimm a jwt As iBfiatso is a4 without 0Uy. Tt.t aat ural fanetwna of tt fc. iraaonraniani ta ma InYounsr ft Middle rESTTDroaj SCVTM I'EARSBtUSSlNMAlir IHOUSANOCASCfe lha aiumattns' rTtTATMXVT. of life, whira rs barri wmMrd arrriwa bHcaa4 CVnoKonta. OC fuland rapidif caiw tMiCa 9.001 atrrncrli aadaaaiairir)C. HARRIS REMEDY CO.. WnCtDOZl mSOOH W. ImUa Bt ST. lAoXS. 2CO, I QTUREO PERSONSINot m Truss, Ak fortermsef onr Applitic. iwaa Givii yitm f r 1 t v tv CatatirH ELY'S CREIM BUS, ft m when applied latoth nostrils w ill t ahwraed jClVcctually cleansing the licid of catarrh al viril, ciutiag in? healthy K-cretiona. It hilars iitSammation. protects the membrane Af the naal iaisaj;ea fro::i H!diliO!al colds completely heals tAe sores a ud restores seuasj r1 taste aud smeil. Not a Liquid or SaaflT. APpiv tiHrt! oi the Balm into eacsi oot-triL A few applicsv HAYFtYL . aa ä " mM A HAY-FEVER Uons rcneve. Arm-able to A tnoruneti treatment will enra. use. sjenu for t'rcular. Frtca 60 cents by or at Drunrist, tLY BKuIU&t Drut(fit.t&.OweR0.K T. f'tW ''V?i M,i.i T I -Ii PENNYROYAL PILLS "CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH.". The Oriclnnl na Only S-itnlsic. Bk ' Bo'iiir. K-arK.r wortaWa SmltaU.wtm. lrd-.M 1 LADIES. J"1" if"aHa4 hllletaaTll talr oo mr. ar n,jwa r.fw.-,., j I., i...- : rivii'-- .1 u.'trr hr rflam aiaii. NAME PAPER. KWkMrr kri.l'.l 4. V.H H, r. rm. aJ kr Drura-ir-t errylirre. -k to- hVfceatrr'a tlaclUi,' IVimrajal I'Ula. 1 1 wo w 4. Cure Guaranteed Th e Fleet r G a 1 vaalc napfTwery llel r4ss Ii i vr uraJariNensn lcbiltf y,lial f UwV SVenltinni. l'irmalureUdAsr,AT.Atvim . toward i-anf if every Holt wo de not nra rpur.uieKlectnccurrerit, lxicrdaeedto9.. Vt'r sen lie't we send a written rnarantw to rotura ioa fnii amount iaid it it Aom notuako a tvpim' elf. rtM-iiim .na frre. FJ-ECialt HKlr Aüi.NC.c.c.l oiil'i i-u A.v. Ji ssaae ir..i. ro-ts-a STOPPED FREE tlmm't twrtst. laiifS Pkss Dr.KLIKE S CÄSXT NerveRestoreä IMFALLISLB if 7CbJJ,.'ull '-. TKs. a-1 ti fl l(Jt KltlatB if M"V M.revrlirysoa "'5 r--i. SfU'l ninis, p. o. ''t aaT.ltte 1 Pn.KL.1 s t "i i-i,,'',f.I?f lfi' i-i. J.- I AX .d'i."t"' r n nm r m orrT.T. a o-ivv. is-vmI I ft Ii I tVitiorlt''fc'-tJW,lw." I Mai " I u,i:'B-WaVii. l araary. I V. . J i L I 1mi.n'..l'..f. SVk a it 4U 1 iM lUaat. rn.Mky;vv''.C

rüfire

I I

u