J. ljf An Exasnsiva tAcantc. m Marshfield. Mass. which was oner he hotnc oi Dame? Webster. and which has always been a prohibition town, jjij voted affirmatively on the license qucs'. tion last week. A member of the de featod Prohibition faction thereupon iniif troduced in the town meeting a resoln. J tion to make the license fee Si.ooo.coo ;/ ami the measure was adopted. None / but a millionaire, therefore, can afford * / to go into the liquor business in Marshfield, and most oi the millionaires ol that town of u.ooo Inhabitants arc otherwise engaged. Lnbor-Savinj? Device. "Arc you the until who answers the / quest lows7" I "Yes, sir. What ran I ilo for you?" "1 would like to ask how you pronounce the word sncrlHeahle'?" is easily settled. May I trouhle you to hand ine that dictionary? Thank you. I am a tritle rheumatic will you please open It at the ri^ht place?" "Certainly. . . . Why. it's accentod on Ihe Vrlf,' isn't if" "Yes." now curious: 1 cmnu nave minted It up at homo. I suppose, Imt it's so mueli trouble to look through tho l?ijr dictionary wlion you want to litul out about a word. Kvor so much obliged to you." "Not at all. tiood day."?Chicago Tribune. From Washington | How a Little Boy Was Saved. Washington, 1). O.? "When our boy was about 16 months old ho broke out with h rnah which was thought to bo measles. In n few days ho had u swelling ou the loft side of his neck and it was decided to be mumps. He was given medical attendance for about three weeks when the doetor said it was scrofula and ordered u salve, lie wanted to iunoe the sore, but I would not lot him and continued giving him medicine fur about four mouths when the bunch broke in two places and became a running sore. Three doctors said it was scrofula aud each ordered a biood medicine. A neighbor told me of a case somewhat like our baby's which was cured by Hood's Barsapnrilla. I decided to give 4t> iu hij Him in 11 nuuri w 1111(3 iiin health improved and his neck healed mo nicely thai I ntopped giving him the medicifle. The sore broke out again, however, whereupon 1 again gave him Hood's Harsaparilla and its persistent use has aecomplished a complete euro." IVJits. Nettie Chase, 47 lv Ht.. N. E. Mo. i:t. Spanish Traditions in Italy. Spanish traditions Ht111 reign in sevH'al of the southern provinces of Italy. iThere are tnauy little towns in the Neapolitan district. for Instance, where the women of the upper and tuhltlle classes cannot go out ou foot ^>y themselves, no matter what their age may be. Falling a male escort husband, brother or friend?they are followed by n duenna! These Castll linn customs are dying out; but even the great centre* of the south, where the habits nud manners of modern life seem well established, they have left their traces, and where even a small modicum of liberty for women is still In dispute, how is the public mind to be persuaded to consider seriously a social transformation having for Its object tho equality of the sexes? The young women of to-day considers herself already fairly well off when she remembers that her mother dared uot walk alone In the streets of Naples. Enjoying ber new Independence, she never thinks of nsplrlug to the dignity of n vote, and her dreams are not troubled by auy deslru to see herself elad Hu \e cap and gown of Portia.?The (Contemporary. Buskin's sixty four books brought liini In $20,000 u year, Happy ?1fomem who have been rat Saved of painful menstruation by Lydla E, Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, are constantly writing grateful letters to SVIrs. Plnkham, cured them, ft always relieves painful periods and no woman who suffers should be without this knowledge. Nearly all the Ills of women result from some derangement of the ivnNHv ur^nniairif rvirsm Pink ham's groat modi" oin o makos woman hoaithy; of this thoro la ovorwhoiming proof* Don't oxporlmentm if you s "iffor got this modSoinc and got Mrs Finkham's froo advico, Hor addrai.c. is Lynn, Massm I Thompson'# Eya Watt* a . IS r l?$im Dr.TALMAGE SERMON [ THE QREAT DIVINE'S ELOQUENT nESSAGE. , J ' i Subject: Drnnit I)l?ru#?l-It ChdiioI Hp ] KupprcRactl?ChvlntlMilty Slvju^il Control ttml Itofnrm I'ublic Am uii>inciilTlie Clturcli Slioulil Go to tlio Thritlvr. j ICoryriRht isou.) I Wahbinoton, D. C.?At n time when the 1 whole country Is in controversy us never 1 before concerning tlio theater and some plays uro being arrested by the police and 1 others are being patronized by Christian poople this sermon of Dr^Tnlmngo is of ] much interest. The text is I Corinthians , vil., 81, "They that use this world us not ] abusing it." I My reason for preaching this discourse is < that I havo been kindly invited by two of the lending newspapers of this country to 1 inspect and report on two of the popular ' i>iu}3 vji inn uuy?10 ku buuiu wrens ago i<> Chicago and see the drama "(Juo Vailis" 1 and criticise it with res poet to its moral of- I foct and to go to Now York and seo tlio drama "Bon-IIur" and write mv opinion of ' it for puldlc use. Instead or doing Hint I I propose in a sermon to discuss wliat wo 1 shall do with the dramatic element which 1 God has implanted In many of our natures ' ?not in ton or 100 or 1000, but In the vnst I majority of the human race. Homo people i speak of the drama as though it were 1 something built up outside of ourselves by i the Cougreves and the Goldsmiths and tho Shukospearos nnd tlio Slieridans of i literature and that then we attune our 1 tastes to correspond with human inveu- 1 tions. Not at all. The drama is an echo ' from tho fooling which God lias implanted in our Immortal souls. It is seen lirst In the domestic circle umoug tho children three i or four years of age playing witli their dolls and their cradles and their carts, seen 1 ten years after iu ttio playhouses of wood, 1 tea years after in tlie parlor charades, after that in tlie elaborate impersonations in tlio ! academies of music. Thespls and .Esehy- I lus and Sophocles and Euripides merely 1 dramatized what was la the Greek heart; i Terence and Plautus and Seneca merely dramatized what was in tho Human heart; ] Congreve and Fur<|tihur merely dramatized ! what was in tho English heart; Kaeine, Goruclllo and Allleri only dramatized what \ was in the French and Italian heart; Shakespeare only dramatized what was in tho great world's heart. Tho dithyrambio and classic drama, tlie sentimental drama, tho romnutio drama, were merely oehoos of tlie human soul. I do not speak of the drama on tin* poetic 1 shelf or of the drama In the playhouse, hut 1 speak of the dramatic element in your soul ami mine. We make men responsible for it. They are not responsible. They urn 1->'?>|iuiibiiiiu luriuu perversion ot 11, out noi for tho original implantation. (led did thai work, and I eupposo Ho know what Ho 1 whh about wliou llo made us. Wo are ' uenrly nil inovoil by tbospectacular. When on Thanksgiving Day wo decorate our churches with thocottou anil tho rice ami tho apples anil the wheat ami tho rye ami tho oats, our gratitude to God i 1 stirred; when on Easter morning we see written in letters of llowors tho inscription. "Ho Is Hlsen," our emotions are stirred. Every parent likes to go to the school exhibition, with its recitations and its dialogues ami its droll costumes. Tho torchlight pro- 1 cession of tho political campaign is merely the dramatization of principles involved, i No intelligent man can look in any secular or religious direction without finding this dramatic element revealing, unrolling, demonstrating itself. What shall wo do with It? Shall we suppress it? You enn as easily 1 suppress its Creator. You may direct it, you may educate it. you may purify if, i you may harness it to inuiti-poteut useful- J uoss, and that it is your duty to do, just as wo cultivate taste for the beautiful ami sublime. Now, I have to toll you not only that God 1 tins implanted this dramatic element in 1 our natures, but I hnvo to tell you in the 1 Scriptures lie cultivates It, He appeals to it, 1 He develops it. I do not cure where you 1 open the Hible, your eye will fall upon a drama. Hero it is in the book of Judges, 1 tho fir tree, the vine, tho olivo tree, the I bramble?they all make speeches. Then at ' tho closo of the scone there Is n corona- ' tlcn, and the bramble Is proclaimed king. 1 That Is a political drama. Hero it is in ' the book of Job. Enter Elipbaz, Ifiidad, ' '/ /1?1i111 - i.uii... .. ...1 'i1,- ? - ? ...... J u u I1J it-III n UCl ' <>t the drama, all darkness; the closing aot of the drama, all sunshine. Mugulil- < coat drama la the book of Job. Iloro it Is in Solomon's Song?tbo region, ' an oriental region: Vineyards, pomogrn- j ualoa, mountain of myrrh, flock of sheep, ' garden of spices, a wooing, a brido, a bride- ! groom, dialogue after dialogue?Intense, > gorgeous, all suggestive drama is the book ' of Solomon's Song. Here it Is In the book 1 of Luke: (lostly mansion in tbo night. All I the widdows bright with illumination. The < floor n-qunko with the dance. Returned 1 son in costly garments which do not very 1 well lit him perhaps, for they wero not 1 j made for him. but be must swiftly loavo off bis old garb niul prepnre for this extemporized levee. Touting son nt tbo back door, too mad to go in, bocuuso they are making such a fuss. Tears of sympathy rupniug down the old man's cheek at the story of his son's wandering and suffering nnd tears of joy at his return. When you heard Murdock recite "The Prodigal San" in one of his readings, you did not know whether to sob or shout. Revivals of religion have started just under the reading tx tuni houi ruTuiunouiEiag uruma 01 tub Prodigal Son." Hero it in In the book of Revelation ? crystalline son, pearly gale, opaline river, amethystine capstone, showering coronets, one vitil poured out lueardtnating tlio waters, onvnlrynien of heaven galloping on while horses, nations In doxology, halleluiahs to tlio right of thoni. halleluiahs to the left of them. A* tho lSihlo opens with the drama of the llrst paradise, so it closes with the And start it out on a grand and a holy un<1 a magnificent mission. Let mo say at this point in my lermon that ttie drama will never he lifted to its rightful sphere by those people who have not sense enough to distinguish between tho drama a .id ttio playhouse, Tho ilrnrna Is no more the theatre than a hymnbook Is a eliureh. I niu not speaking in regard to tho theatre at ail. Tiie drama I* a literary expression of that feeling whleh Cod Implanted In tho hvmun soul. Neither will tho drama ever lie lifted to Its proper sphere by wholesale denunciation of nU drumutists. If you have not known men r am ? n i>mi Minn i???II ?i i < hi nn?l womon connected with the dramii whe J are pure in heart and pure In speech and pure tn ItTe, It is because you have not had very wide acnuuintance. Wholesale denunciation or nil dramatists will never elovato the drama. Youdoi stand n church and a theatre on opposite sides of the street. The church shouts over to the theatre, "You are ail scoundrels!" The theatreahouts back, "You are all hypocrites!" And they both falsify. Dropping ! nil Indiscriminate jeremiads against dra- j mutists and realizing that ti%e drama is not ! necessarily connected with t la Is institution ! or with that, I wuut to show you how tiie | dramatic element in our natures iiiav be : harnessed to the chariot of civilization and i Christianity. Fifty essays ahout the sorrows of the i poor could not affect mo as a little drama 1 of accident and suffering I saw one slip- i pory morning in the streets of l'hiludel- 1 phia. Just ahead of me was n 1ml i imI in apparel, ills limb amputated ?t the ! knee; from the pallor of tins boy's cheek, the amputation not long before. Ho had I 11 package of broken foo?l under his arm ? rood h? bad begged, 1 suppose, at the \ doors. As he passed on over the slippery pavomout, cautiously and carofully, 1 steadied lilm uutll his crutch slipped and \ ho fell. I helped him up as well as 1 could, gathered up the fragments of the package i\s well as I could, put tlieni under ouo urm and tin* crutch under the other arm, but when 1 saw the blood run down his j palo cheek I burst into tears. Fitly essays about tho sufferings of the poor could not touch one like that little drama of accident and suffering. Oh. we want in nil our different departments of usefulness more of the dramatic nlemout and ic*s of t io didaetl*. The 1 tendency in this day is to drone religion, to whine religion, to cant religion, to moan j religion, to croak religion, to sepuleharize religion, when we ought to preseut it in animated and spectacular manner. What we want, mituslors and laymen, is to get our sermons and our exhortations and our prayers out of tiio old rut. The old | hackneyed religious phrases that come snoring down through the centuries will never arrest tho masses. What wo want to-day, you In your sphere, ami 1 in my sphere, is to freshen un. lVonin ?lo nor want in tlii'ir sermons the sham (lowers bought i\t the millinery shop, but tho jnponlcas w??t with tho morning dew. not tho heavy bones of extinct megatherium of past ages, hut tho living reimlcor caught last August at tho edgo of Sehroou l.ake. Wo want to drive out the drowsy and tho prosaic and the tedious and the humdrum and introduce tho brightness ami tin? | vivacity and the holy sarcasm and the ?naotlllod wit and tho epigrammatic power and the Idood red earne-i ness and the lire of religious zeal, and I do not know of any way ot doing it as well as through tho dramatic. Hut now let us turn to the drama aa at: I amusement ami entertainment. llev. I)r. llollovv.-, of New York, many years ago in a very brilliant but much criticised sermon took I lie position that tho theater might lie renovated ami made auxiliary to tho church. Mutiv Christian people are of the same opinion, 1 do not agree with them. I have no idea that success is In that direction. What 1 have said j heretofore on this subject, tis far as i can remember, is my sentiment now. but today I take a step ia advance of my former theory. Christianity is going to take full ! possession of tills world and control its 1 maxims, its laws, its literature, its science i anil its amusements. Shut out from the | realm of Christianity anything and you give it up to sin and death. If Christianity i< mighty enough to f manage everything but the amusements of I lie world, then it is a very defective Chris iiuimy. is it capable of keeping account of t ho tears of the world ami incompetent to make record of its smiles? Is ft good to follow the funeral, bat dumb at the world's play? Can It control all the other elements >f oar nature but the dramatic element? My idea of Christianity is that It can and will conquer everything. Now. what wo want is'to hasten that : time. How will it be done? Hy the church | [joins over to tho theater? It will not go. I IJ.v the theater coming to the church? It will not come. What we want is a reformed imnsoment association in every city and tovvu of tho I'aited States. Ouee announced and explained and illustrated, the Christian and philanthropic capitalist will come forward to establish It, nud there will bo public spirited men every where who will do this work for the drnmntl element nf our natures. Wo need a new Institu:ioa to meet and recognize and develop ind defend the dramatic element of our nature. It needs to be dl-tlnet from everything that Is or has boon. 1 would have this reformed amusement nssoelatlon having In charge this now la- I dilution of the spectacular take possession j >f some hall or academy. It might take a mailer building at the start, but it would ooa need the largest hall, and even that would not hold the peoule. for lie who jpons before Iho dramatic element in human nature nu opportunity of grntillea Lion without compromise untl without lunger does the mightiest thing ot this seuturv, nml the titles or such tin institution would rise us the Atluuth' rises ut Liverpool docks. There tire tens of thousand* of Christian homes whole the sons and daughters are hold hack from dramatic outertalnraent for reasons which some of you would say are good reasons and others would say are poor reasons, but still hold bank. Hut on the establishment of snob an Institution they would feel the arrest of their anxieties and would say on the establishment of this new institution, which 1 have called the spectacular, "Thank, God, this Is what wo have nil been waiting for.'' Now, as 1 bolieva that I make suggestion of an institution wnicli wiser men will develop, I want to give some characteristics of lids new Institution, this spectneular, if It is to he a grand social and moral success. In the first place, its entertainments must bo compressed within an hour and three-quarters. What kills sermons, prayers and lectures and entertainments oT nil sorts is prolixity. At a reasonable hour every night every curtain of public entertainment ought to drop, every church service ought to cense, the Instruments ol orchestras ought to t>o unstrung. On t he plat form of this new institution there will heudrnmn which before renderirilinn 1mm* 11 read, expurgated, abbreviated and passed upon l?y a boar keep her alloat till a boat came to the rescue. The spectators admire*. the boy's promptness anil kiudness of lieart, , hut commented on his recklessness, I which, they said, might have cost ! him his lite. This boy was Garibaldi, and in con- j sidering his life one finds that tkeso were his characteristics all through. He was so alert that tio one could ; tell when he would make an attack , with his red shirted soldiers, so brave and magnanimous that the world rang with his praises, and w ithal so indis- ] I creet as to make his follow patriots j wish ho were in Guinea. A little boy used to crush flowers I to obtain their color, and would then I paint all sorts of pictures on the white ; walls of his father's cottage in the j Tyrol. He hccnuie known to the i world luter on as the great artist What Finder Nnils TclT. Tn days when superstition was more prevalent than it is now, the shape itnl appearance of the linger nails were considered to have reference to one's destiny. To learn the* message of the linger nails it was necessary to rnl> tlietn over with a compound of , wax ami soot, and then to hold them I : so that the sunlight fell fully on them, j ! Then on the horny, transparent suh j stance certain signs and characters i were supposed to appear, from which , 1 the future could lie interpreted. Persons, too. having certain kinds of nails were credited with the possession J of certain characteristics. Thus a man ] with red and spotted nails was sup [ poscil to have a hot temper, while pule, lead colored nails were considered to ! I denote a melancholy temperament, j Narrow nails were supposed to betray ! I ambition and a ipiarrelsonie nature, i while round shaped nails were the dis- i J tinguishing marks of lovers of knowl- I | edge and people of liberal sentiment. Conceited, narrow minded and obsti- \ liate folks were supposed t?? have small nails, indolent people tlcshy nails and those of a gentle, retiring nature broad nails. V very one ?t cxperimv know* that i w heel docs not run as w ell in it-, sec- j ond year a~- in its lirst. I lie hearings are worn and the tires have lost their ' life and the chain and sprockets do not I pull as well because ot wear. These tilings do not show much, but they take ! the rest out ot riding. i llcnuty I.h Uloiiii Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. Nr. ' beauty without it. Cuscaiets. Can?i> I'at liartic dean your blooil and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all iniI unities from the l>od\. begin today to lanish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking : Cascarets, - beauty lor ten ruts. All ding- } gi.it s, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 'Jac, aOe. I Deducting dubious vessels, the com- i plctcd battleships of Kugland now nuns- | ; her .>c. . Business failures in Great Britain dur! inn t>^? were 8,(>oo, against in ! iS<^8. To C'uro I'orc%?*r. Tjlii* ('tiscarffts I'iimlvt'v.thartic. 10<: or C.V\ If C. fall to enr-. tlrunc ts r< funct n. nicy I .a st year 4.700,(100 cubic yards oi material was dredged out <>t the Dulutli' pet ior harbor. DlltAstS j . Atr?.? food Tor tK* f*tta ' BRAIN .NCRVtsJ^^Tj I jHt^LtS-BlQOU,^- CIN S^w"i^A IffsffMLS.^ ?3 M Bent ('ninth Syrup. Taetea (iood. UkpFS m III ilmo S?.Ill by drugiilnu ??1 ^^BS^Z@n2E5Si3EH^iF, Here It Is! Want to learn all about a am Hur*' How lo Pick Ottl a \ OoodOnn? Know Iiiniprfoo-j^^v ^ tlonxand ko Hoard against ^ Fraud? D?twt Diwanraril /*' Id KSrrt a Cnre when ?ame 11 / \ / \ IHiMiible? Tell the Ape by ' V J \ the Teetli? What to call the Different I'art.i of the Anlunil? How to Shoe a Hone Properly? All this md other \ aliiable Information cau lie otitained by reading our IOO-t'A47 Throop Ave., ilrouklyn, N. Y., Nov. I. lHt'4. Mrs. \V iti? low's Soot 11: r i>?\ rup for children teething. M>ft< its tho guuo. reducing inllamaItoli. allays pain cures \\ ind colic ?5c a bottle, VlTAI.ITT low. debilitntivl np??t.,n.t.j bv lir Kline's Inv u'oratlnK Ionic Fhke $1 trial bottle for" woi'kt' irontment Dr. Kline, l.d.. '.31 Arch St., I'lli adulphia. Founded 187L DrnfnrM Cannoi (to Cured by local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased port ion of tin ear. Tbero is only one wa> to cure deafness, and tlint is by constitutional remedies. I >. nfness is caused by an nllanied condit ion of the muri us linin^of tlio Kustacdiian Tube. When tliis tube is intl lined you have a ruinbliiiK sound or imperfect heart up, and when it is entirely closed Deafnessi-the result, and unless the inflammation can be takcu out and this tube restored to its normal condition, hearing will bo destroyt il for. ver. Nine eases out of ten arc roused by cato rrh, which is notliluK but an inllamed ondition of the mucous surfaces. Wowillirivo One Iliindied Dollars for any ease of 1 leafnes- (caused hy catarrh) that cannot be cured l;y Hall's t atarrh i ure. Ssend for circulars, free. K. ,1. i'hr.NF.Y & Co., Toledo. O. Sold by llruiuiints "Ar. Hull's Family Pills arc the boat. Dr Bull's'-!Sf!?srsssf% \t*r i n UL.K VB Iuiiks and i ucipien t Cough SyrupMKfW. 4&$s for childrca. Tastes good. Doses arc small. 23c. "Hotli hit svll'can?t myself have been utitiK CANCAKKTS and they arc the best medicine wo have ever had in thr house. I,ast i weeU iny wife was trantio with headache for I two days, she tried soim of yourCASCAKKTS, I and t tiev relieved the pain In her head almost I immediately. We both recommend Cascarets." ' Cn \s. Si r I'Kt.'UK. 1'itlsburg Sy'e jc Deposit Ca. l'ittsburp, l'a. j CATHARTIC ^ MAWW Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste {Jond. Do Good. Never Sicken. Weaken, or c. 10c. 25c. 50c. ... CURE CON8TIPATION. ... htrrMne Itrmnlr ( cmpany, I Mtiiro, Voilrfkl, New York. 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Saw 31111k, from small I'iantntion Mills to tbo Uearvlest Mills la the market. All kinds of Wood Working Tdachiaeryj Flour and Corn Milliug Maokinerv. Complete Giuniug Syfltoms-Ijunxutus, Van Winkle and Thoiuas, Engines, Boilers, Saws. Gins la stock ?oc <|Ulck delivery. V. C. BADHA.N & CO., IJ26 Main St., j COLUMBIA* ... S. C. HiANOS and ARGANS f DIRFCT FROM THE V? FACTORY ! OOOOOO OOO JI^T : \50TTA- N,|T HOW CHEAP ' ?"' ?W. BIT HOW (iOOl). AVAKKANT1 : IH"?lPiit?i?'iilH I !'< ]>tiro ln|{> uiuraiiic.l ?>> rrptilabln builder* nntf ritclorncd by in.., milking you Dnnhh * < 11 re?l. UOOl), RELIABLE ORtiANS, $3S "P tiOO?>. RELIABLE PIANOS, $17* up Write for i HtaloRiie to, M. A. MALONE, ion .niii t, a. fj (icitoral French, the dashing Rrih cavalry leader in South Africa, is >1 an Irishman, lie conies of a failv loiif* set tied in Dorsetshire, Enghi. that probably generations a^o cJt iroin Cialway, where the French claii' nvnierons. ^|S|! BHKl'M 4TIKM P4IM\ II \i h l.ndKirE. CHOI P aoil ? OMIli *r ii*e<1 It. hy not you? l? 'a the m< lriiKrl"ta nnrf c Mural atora* Mmlo iinlpr UOOSE IJKEANE I.INIMKN1 <,?? kn?M..ko 0. I yd FOR 14 CEMTil! wiih to train thi* year 2(K'^ j | ? MtnToaHtouii'rsand hence oi-' ' ) ^ 1 Pkg. City (Urilrti lie* t, c I ) m m"*! I Pkg l.arl'et Km* rehM ucuiub#r ( ) # tfeM1 " OroM?? Market I?oUuce,^ j i ! F'hVAiJJRiflr * " Htrawberry Melon. *' . ( 1 1 " 11 1>lfcy Radinh. .? * ' r^Avr * " Karly Kipe Cabbage, *h: t 1 * 'm? !i#tv;"v * ' Karly Dinner Onion, yc ( 1 ( IkevM flEfflr * " Brilliant Flower Serd#, ( i I | Worth ll.OO, for 1 4 cr au. -'t' ( > I I v T cS Above 10 Pkga. worth $1.00, w*iH ' 1 I | nft/ m uuil you free, together with jr * 1 I l IH ? great Catalog, telli ng all ahnu' ( ) I 1 r;i ffiI SAIZER S MILLION DOLLAR POT.O < , I i n( QM opon receint ?ftli is nolle? A fc? , , . Kft nfj slainpn. \\ r invite yourtrade/iu , , ' ' iff _ EJ*. know when you one* try Salr/'t . . ( *ou never ilo witltit. J O Prison on Salrer'a IIMiO-?r* 1 1 A est earlieatTomato Ciant on earth. * I I Z JOHN A. nal./KK AWED CO., I.A 1'KOH.Mt, W| ( ) icweeeeefteeMte?i?nM> W. L. DOUGLAS $? & 3.5Q SHOES JVoe. flSyVorth $4 to $6 compared/* v frj\ with other makes. / ? y] \LiiIihnciI l?y over ? - _ fl } l,l?tK>,out) wearers, I m t f/rmiine have \V. L. |? v |*jr houtua' name and price F Jt fy ? \ \ !??W Js Your dealer dijl'' A. VV . ii not. we will -end a f 1 Mt ?on receipt ?l [.r;ce nn< sSBrf/ *t >? J extra lor carnage. State I:iti. ?t leather, VKs'"', and width, i ! tin or an toj Cat. Irer. wStUdTS w- L- DOUGLAS SHOE CO.. Crocfcn, Mas*. Kv~V for OLD SOLD35RS I'tiion soldiers and widows of soldier who marie homestead entries before June Jt.isjjnf les* than it. .acres (no tn ittrr if abandoned oi ismqnished), if they have not sold theit addition.! homestead i itrhts, should address, with full nnrti atlat s , giv uiK district, &c. HS1TB7 IT. CG?F, Wi:S? tea, S. C. ADYSPEPSIA! No Medicine t< Swallow! V^v?fiS?T~? fj < ured hy Ab?orpdir. In ao days. If ImtbrMfluaii m mt latudad. Ro-k free on asp ijaUOB. IiH $l.iv for a PAIl totbe MANNIXO UIKU KHY CO.. Meaaln^ A. C. OI.X AOTM. lOH N. CstR AJtO tJ^, STAMMERING CORRECTED ' V w *i I.KK WtlOIIN Man \ itonlamphU-t at/> partlenlnrt. [ YOU WANTirE F UNIVERSAL KNOWLE DCE, m it n. ItoontaJri* MO pagaa, profane iltaatrated. natal aote or si I rsr. Wken read;* 4 j*an donbtm nnrnu * jm KLurcuiA isa'STiyon. It bM a cotnE* raferred to aa*filr- Thla book rjy EJ Information. ifroneDted In Ml "W ^ w?u worji, t^**y ? many ilob w? Ml tar It. Aatndyof^hU book win lnootlon bit* boon nfjlfrt.-d, wttila ih? rolnma can not readily command the U.aowlcdga they oust. 134 Leonard StV. N. Y. Oltv.