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eor Hunting. In 18, t he month of April, when encamped at Sirpur, the villagers gave Outran. information of a tiger that had been marked down in the thorny jangal to the north of the village. This part of the country was plain, and there was no ' hill or ravine near. Ontram started on foot, spear in hand, a' follower carrying a rifle, and some six others bows and arrows. The tiger broke ground on their approach. Outram followed him on foot three miles, and eventually speared him to death. This act, it is, affirmed, has never been equaled before or since in Kandesh. On another occasion he stood spear in hand, like a gladiator in the arena of a Roman amphitheater ready for the throwing open of the wild beast's cage. The bushes were set on fire to, and the tiger, by no means relishing the smoke, came, puffing and blowing like a poipoise, every live or six seconds, to get a little fresh air, but, scenting the elephant, he was always fain to retreat again. This sort of work went on for sonic time, and bush after bush blazed away without producing the desired effect. I could not have stood the sus pen1se when life was at stake. At last there was a low, ang growl, and a scuffling rustle in the passage. The tiger sprang out, and down descendedthe long lance into his neck, just behind the dexter ear. With one stroke of his pow erful paw he smashed the spear close to the head. There was a pretty business. Mr. Tiger one stop below, with the steel sticking in his neck, which by no means improved his temper, had gathered his huge hindquarters below him for a des perate spring, and my friend, armed aft er the fashion of the South Sea Island ers, standing on a little mound, breathing defiance and brandishing his bamboo on high. Eventually the tiger was shot by one of the party. Outram had some narrow escapes. Once, while pursuing a tiger on foot, his companion being on horseback, the animal charged, seized Outrai, and rolled down the hill with him. Being released from the claws of the ferocious beast for a moment, Out ram, with great presence of mind, drew a pistol he had with him, and shot the tiger dead. The Bliils, on seeing that he had been injured, were one and all loud in their grief and expressions of re gret; bnut Outram quieted them with the remark: "What do I care for the clawing of a cat I" This speech was rife among the Bhils for many years after ward, and may ho no mitil this day. Tames Outram, a Biography. Interesting Statistical Deductions. Apart from their value to the success ful operation of " friendly societies," as they are called, in England, some statistical laws recently discovered by Dr. Farr, of th offlice of the Register of births, marriages and dleaths, and b)y Mr. A. U. Finalison, the Government Actuary, have a direct interest and significance for everybody connected with life assur ance. In the preparation of ' - known English anor r paid considerable atet& eques tion of the amount of sickness prevailing, and finally propounded the hypothesis since recognized as a law-t4hat the numn b~er of persons constantly sick in any given town is equal to twiee the annual mortality. The main feature sot Mr. Finalison's inquiry took the shape of discriminating between light and heavy labor, with or without exposure to the weather, respectively. The results may be summned up in a few words. Thiose engagedl in light lab~or, while less liable to sickness, experience, when sick, at tacks of greater duration, and die in greater prop)ortions. Hence thephysically weak, probably, systematicallyselec* hlit labor. -London paper. "Solid Comfort." A lady in this city noticed her colored "help " chewing p ins and needles. Thie lady, thinking the amusement was a dangerous one, recommended that she desist. " No, chile, " she said. (The mistress was much younger than the servant.) "In de slabe times I had heab of trouble. I sought comfort in whisky, but dat gib me headache in do mo'nin'. So I tried smokin'. That wvas de berry~ same3. Then chawin' I tried. But that was no good. Haly one mio'nin' I thougt 0ob pins and needles. I puts a buncih of pins or needles in my mouf, chaws them, and they gabe me a heab ob solidI comfort. So now when ever I feel wearied ob do do trials ob de trials of dis wuld I puts pinls and needles in my mouf and chaws them. You hab no idee what solid comfort there is in pins and needles !" "Don't you ever swallow any by ac cident ?" the lady asked. " Guess do, chile, guess do; for some mights I go to sleep with mouf full, and they're all gone in do mno'nin.' "-incin nati GJazette. ___ Tmo I~'idon City~Prcs, remarking up)on the amount of labor and ingenuity expended upon0l the production of Bank of England notes, states that they are still made, as for generations past, 'from pure white linen cuttings only-never from rags that have been wvorn-and, so carefully is the paper prepared, that even the number of dips into the pulp made by each workman is registered on a dial by machinery, and the sheets are care fully counte, and booked to each per son through whose bands they pass. The printing is done by a most curious process--secret o'f course-within the bank building; there is also an elaborate arrangement for providing that no note shall be exactly like any other in exist ence, consequently there never was a duplicate of any of the bank's notes, except by forgery. It has been said that the stock of aid notem*ar seven years is about 94, O,OO( in numaber and that, placedin apile the ma Uwoudhe ag' t A ssemo *th.d agent, in drivigi, Moto: County, Kenatua dr ore cotte and askoda bea e~teen-yer.od boy, standing in the yard,' i his mother was at home. ~. "She is, but she don't live heri," he weed. " I'm theohead ofthis hous' ndnthe boy married, the agent went' desuide ant encountered a chilwho sid was the b as wife, an~d tat when wasmari E6Wbs not enyears 0What on earth m uarry asked the aget. " da thand PFI fIID POINT. FAn-PRToRED-Oolong tea. A BAD habit-A seedy coat. A PooB sick man, with a mustard plaster on him, said : " If I should eat a loaf of bread I'd be a live sandwich." HowEVER dirty a man may be, says the Elmira Advertiser, it is possible for him to keep a clean conscience. IT was on account of his being turned out to grass that he was called Nip-a cud-nezzar.-Philadelphia Bulletin. A LEADING actor declined an invita tion to fight a duel on the ground that he didn't believe he would make a hit. THERE 's a man in Aurora so thin that he had a row of buttons put on his um brella cover and wears it for an ulster. Burlington Hawk-Eye. " Aas you lost, my little fellow ?" asked a gentleman of a 4-Tear-old, one day, in Rochester. "No,' he sobbed in reply, " b-but m-my mother is." JoSH BILLINGS has found one thing that money cannot buy, and that is the wag of a dog's tail. It is an honest ex pression of opinion on the part of the dog. " THERE," said a charming lady, with a naive expression that made her face radiant, pointing to an ebony case of china-ware, " that is my brick-bat cab inet." "WHAT papers off my writing-desk are you burning there ?" cried an author to the servant-girl. " Oh, only the pa per what's all written over, sir. I hain't touched the clean." A MAN gets into trouble by marrying two wives. If he marries only one, he may have trouble; and some men have come to sure tribulation by simply promising to marry one. Trouble any how. Two cOQUETrEs met a gentleman in the street. "What1" said one, "you passed him without bowing I You cer tainly were in love with him yestorday" " Yes, for about an hour. I fancied that he resembled somebody with whom I was in love for a week last year." AN Irish agent, having been instruct ed to raise rents, called a meeting of the tenants, and apprised them of the inten tion. "You can afford it," said he; " see how the prices have risen." Si lence was broken by an old farmer, who said: " Yes ; there is no denying that. It used to ost a pound to get an agent shot, and now 'be jabers, it can't be done under two." The rents have not been raised. A MINIETER was questioning his Sun day-school concerning the story of Eu tychus-the young man who, listening to the preaching of the apostle Paul, fell asleep, and, falling down, was taken up dead. " What " he said, " do we learn from this solemn event ?" when the rep~ly from a little girl came pat and prompt, " Please, sir, ministers should not preach too long sermons." Tux were walking in the fields, and Mary hesitated to pass through a lane that contained a pupnacious-loolgn'g goat. "Why, Mary, said Charles, "come along ; this is the first time you ever refused me 'when I asked you to pay the butter." Upon this appeal, of ecrse she hesitated no longer, especial las she now noticed that William was tiered. rFo-rUtNE-TELLER was arrested in * i, and carried before the Tribunal of Correctional Police. " You know hew to read fortunes ?" said a man of great wit, but rather fond of a joke for a mag istrate. " I do, sir," said the sorcerer. "In that case," said the President, "you know the judgment we intend to pro nounce ?" " Certainly." " What will happen to you?" "Nothings!" "You are sure of that?" "Yes; you will acquit me." "Acquit you?" "There is no doubt about it." " Why ?" " Because, sir, if it had been your intention to con demn me, you would not have added irony to. misfortune." The President, disconcerted, turned to his brother Judges, and the sorcerer was discharged. A Salor's Luck. The captain of a fishing schooner, whose adventures are recounted by the Bangor Wh~ig, believes that there is such a thing as luck in human affairs. He has fished on the Georges seventeen years, and last spring concluded he would go home to Gloucester, sell his little home, pay off the mortgage, and with the proceeds go to Boothibay and live quietly. He got as far as Portland, and had a dory stolen from his vessel. Arrived at Gloucester, he accidentally lost his -right finger. He lifted the mortgage by selling his house, and had $233.50 left. The money he put in an envelope, and the envelope in an inside breastp~ocket. He set sail for Boothbay with his family in his vessel, and on Sat urday last, when off Cape Elizabeth, loaned over the side of the vessel to pull in a rope. As he bent forward the en velope fell from his pocet, and as $1.50 of the money was silver, it sank before his eyes. _______ Why Mr. Rats Changed His Name. The Hartford County Superior Court has granted the petition of Hen Ratz, of Thompsonville. praying that hsname he changed to Ker sites. It was shown b~y the petitioner that his peculiar ukamo was the cause of ab great deal of annoyance to himself and members of his family. Mischievo~us neighbors spoke of him and his wife as the "old rats," and the children as "little rats " some going further and teasing them biy calling them "mice." The neighbor hood will now have a chance to tax its ingenmity upon the new name, which, fortunately for Mr. Raites and the chil (Iron, appears to be one not easily played upon.---Hartorti_6ourant. A Word so or needer'. When you read of a remedy that will cure all liseases, beware of it; but when you read of a pure vegetable compound which claims to cure miy oertain pof this body, and furnishes uigh proof that404 oths,' you can safely try Sand wth the stnee that it will help you. Ijuste whatW Safe Kidney and des. I trouble, of the owut d none others. It e, ear-ache, nor con *your body in a vigor you can enjoy life m .Try it. a of California are ed at making grain sacks, of .chthey are expected to turn out 5, D00,000'this year. The grain product of the State requires about 80,00,000 of these ak. Shall We Meet Again I The following is one of the most brill iant paragraphs ever written by the la mented George D. Prentice: "The flat of death is inexorable. There is no ap peal for relief from the great law which dooms us to dust. We flourish and fade as the leaves of the forest, and the flow ers that bloom, wither and fade in'a day have no frailer hold upon life than the mightiest monarch that ever shook the earth with his footsteps. Generations of men will appear and disappear as the grass, and the multitude tat throng the world to-day will disappear as foot steps on the shore. Men seldom think of the at ever 4 of death until the shadow falls across their own pathway hiding from their eyes the faces of loved ones whose living smile was the sunlight of their existence. Death is the antag onist of life, and the thought of the tomb is the skeleton of all feasts. We do not want to go through the dark val ley, although the dark passage may lead to paradise; we do not want to go down into damp graves even with Prin ces for bed-fellows. In the beautiful drania of 'Ion' the hope of immortality, so eloquently uttered by the death-e voted Greek, finds deep response in ev ery thoughtful soul. When about to yield his life a sacrifice to fate, his Clemanthe asks if they should meet again, to which he responds: I have asked that dreadful question of the hills that look eternal-of the clear streams that flow forever-of stars among whose fields of azure my raised spirits have walked in glory. All are dumb. But as I gaze upon thy living face, I feel that Ltere is something in love that mantles through its beauty that cannot wholly prish. We shall meet again, Juvenile Smokers. A British physician, observing the large number of boys under 15 years of age on the streets with cigars and pipes in their mouths, was prompted to exam ine the breath of this class of smokers, and for that purpose selected thirty eight boys between the ages of 9 and 15. In twenty-two of these cases he found various disorders of the circulation and digestion, palpitation of the heart and more or less marked taste for strong drink. In twelve there was frequent bleeding of the nose, and twelve had slight ulceration of the mouth caused by tobacco. The doctor treated them for their ailments, but with little effect un til the habit of smoking was discon tinued, when breath and strength were soon restored. The effect of tobacco in creating a taste for strong drink is un questionably very great. If the testi mony of some tobacco users and medical men is of any weight, one of the most radical methods of keeping the young from being led to intemperate drnnking is to deny them tobacco.-The Sanita nan.__ __ A Ludicrous Blunder. The Duke of Wellington was once sorely puzzled. He received a letter from a lady to whom he wvas under social obligations, requesting the gift of a pair of his Waterloo breeches9. He read the letter with amazement. What could the lady be thinking of ? What use could she possibly have for his old breeches ? Was she collecting a museum of curiosi ies, and wished this memento of a great battle? He consulted some of her friends as to her mental sanity, but they could recall no evidence of excentricity in her previous life. They were as much puz zied as he at the oddness of her request. The Duke, however, instructed his major-domio to look up his old clothes, and see if anything remained from the Waterloo campaign. But as nothing could be found, he sent a note to the lady, with regrets that the breeches were destroyed, but begging her to ask any other favor within his power to ra. Her perplexity equaled liis own, for had intended 4 ask for Waterloo beech e, a new kind of'enamental tree which the Duke had intr'x~oucd on his estate. IF you are coughing or not, but feel the pres ence of a Cold iri the system, use Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup and feel immiediate relief. Price 25 cents a bottle. MALAB.&IAL fevers can be prevented, also other miasmatic diseases, by occasionally using Dr. Sanfod's Liter Invigorator, the oldest general Family Medicine, which is recommended as a cure for all diseases caused by a disordered Liver. Eighty-age book sent free. Address Dr. Sanford, 12Broadway, New York. DF.AU MAIA-I have saw lots of things sence I cum to Nashville. I went to the circus, and to see the man that makes Coussens Lightning Liniment that cured Jim's sprains. He don't belong to the circus, but his Liniment beats 'em all hollow for curing rhumatiz, ]ame back spains, etc. Yours, Jack. For sale by all YEGETN.-The great success of the Vege tine as a cleanser and purifier of the blood is shown beyond a doubt by the great numbers who have taken it. and received immediate re. lief, with such rem arkable cures. Gur Lyon's Patent Heel stiffeners applied to those new boots be fore~ you run them over. Thae Veltaie Uelt Co, Marsalr, lYact... Will send their Electro-Voltaic Belts to the afflicted upon 80 daya' trial. See their adver tisement in this paper headed, '"bn 80 Days' Trial" _______ a -se . t'r. W lwe. *anet Motrs. Dr. Marchisi's Uteelne Oathsollcon will p tsititive. ly cure Female We.kness. as Failing of the Womnb, .a hites, Chronic latlammations or Ulceritlon of the '. omib, I ncidentati Elemorrhage or Floo~i n e, Pain ful luprensdand Irregular Menstruation, &c. An old and ableremiedy. oind postal cartfo: a pam. phiet, with treatment, curcai aind certisicates from phscasand patients to Howarth & Saliard. Utic, .Y. doM' by all druggist e-8.50 per bottla. D~a. 0. 3.'linoRVAxxa, the wel?-known aern6 mrgeo'i, of Reading, Pa., offers to send by saall, free of charge, a valuable lit t book on deafness and diseases of the ear - spetially on runniag ear and catarrh, and their proper treautment giving references and testiumonminis that wifi satisfy the most .ekeptical. Address as abeve. Dr BUL L0 A CurIous Piece of Horse Flesh. A correspondent at Marion, Ohio, re lates the following: A curious piece of horse flesh was brou ht to town recently by a farmer namad gynder, living in the south part of this county. The animal is destitute of hair, except the tail, which is unusually black and luxuriant. Last winter the' critter was afflicted with an eruptive disease known among country farriers as " aller water," but among more soientito' veterinary surgeons as humid exanthema. This malady caused the complete destruction of the hair bulbs, and the animal began rapidly to shed, leaving the bod as stated above. The skin is remarkab y smooth, glossy, and of a leaden color. The horse was originally a roan. He is sixteen hands high in ood condition, and works reg ulary on *is'owner's farm. Snyder be came disgusted with the appearance of the quadruped and brought him here to dispose of him. Early in the day he would have taken $50, but before night he returned to his home refusing $800. Sumner's Pleasant Memories. Charles Sumner told Anna Hampton Brewster once that among the pleasant eat memories of his life was a solitary summer he spent in Rome in his young manhood, the first he paid to Europe. Such long delicious hours of study he had from earl dawn to late afternoon! then he rambled out on the Campagna, and through the then very picturesque streets of Papal Rome until bodtime. Life seemed to stand still in one blessed moment of peace and rest and high in tellectual reverie. Miss Brewster adds: "I remember well how eloquent he grew over the description of that divine Roman summer. It was the 'Lost Gar den' of his existence, and he quoted some verses from that lovely poem of Mrs. Browning, then more in fashion than now. When I said it was a lotos draught he had drunk, he exclaimed, 'Yes! yes! you are right; it was a true lotos draught. I do not think I have ever been the same man since,' and he re peated as lie could repeat, most music ally, Tennyson's 'Lotos Eaters.'" Vegetine. More to Me than Cold. Kit. H. R. eTavas: WALILru, MAss.,Marek 7, 18N. I wish to inform you wh vseft VSIN done for me. I have been troubled with Bry ipels umor for. mern than thirty years, In my limb and ot part. of my bod1 and ave been a great suerer. I commenced tak. InE~303IM 3oneyear au latt August and can truly say t as done more or me t any O or medicine. Isen? to be perfectly free from this humor and can recommend 5ttoever one. Would not be without this medicine Ul more to me than gold-and I feel it will prove a bless Lag to ethers "s~ has to me. euro, most respaTIfVID CLARK. Ji. BENTLEYs M. D.. says: ft has done more good than all Medica> Treatment. NWA3WnmT, Our., Feb. 9, 1880. Ms. H. R. Stvumu, Doeton, Mass.: Sir--I have sold during the pat year a een.'derable quantity of your Vxurozzs, and I believe in all cases iI has given sauisfaction. Ina one ease, a delicate young lady of about seventeen years was much benefited by ite use. H er pasi nforuem me haI i had lone her more god euely h..es s..jeed. Yeurs respectfuIy,.D Loudly in Eta Praise. Towr=o, Our., Marsh 8, 1880. Dear Str-Considering the hot time thsa vseurrau has been before the public here it sells well as a blood urner and for troubles arlsadom asluggish or torpi loudl Ia 3 pase 1. WRIGT k ae .p Cer. Queen and Elisabeth strede. VECETINE, ?3hIAInn BY 'H. ft. ST EVENS, *oston, Mass. Vegetine__Is_ Sold by all Druggists. ' ~ .BRATED SIT'iERS The accumulated evidence of nearly thirty years show that the Bitters is a certain remedy for malarial disease, as well as its surest preventive ; that it eradicates dyapep sia, constipation, liver complaint and nervousnjess, coun teracts a tendency to gout, t'heumatismu, urinary and uaterine disorders, that it imparts vigor to the feeble, and cheers the mind, while it invigorates the body. For sale by all Druggists and Dealers generally. ARE YOU WEARING OUT? Is your body or rnjiad we.aring cut under excessive Ia. bor, care, grief or old agei Do the Stomach, Liver, Kid. neys or Urinary Organs refuse to perform their flnotions? Are your Lunga Weak, Nerves Unstrung, Blood Pale and Watery, Flesh ThIn, Muscles Flabby and Spirt, gone? It so, then no human agency can restore you lk. Mazr BITYKas, a pure, unfermented Extract of Malt, Hops, Calsaya and Iron, and the greatest NourishIng and 8trengthening Medicine ever called "Bitter s." Beware of r mitations simIlarly named. The gema' Mar. Br-. Tnas bear the COMPANY's SIGNATURR. sold every where. MALT SITTEKs COMPANY, 30oeos, Mass. A1kESMEN WANTE Wa*1'ENTO SEL CIGARS T0 DEALERS. $utth mo cd~eeu ind1 senad it'- i th voniri nplication,alsoa sensd ajc. etasno~ toInsure anitwfr. . efOTE O.e Inherited Tendencles to Diseases. The present article is ba4d on a valu-I %ble paper by Dr. J.RIL Bl~k in the Popular Science Monthly. Beveiftt thousand persons in America yearly die of consumption, most of whom have in herited the disease. Vast numbers in herit a tendency to rheumatis epile sy, insanity, cancer indigestion, - graine, neuralgia, asthbma, and to early loss of sight and hearing. No other cause of grief and suffering compares with that due to organic defects handed down from parent to child. Of our 40, 000,000 of people probably 26,000,000 inherit some constitutional defect. But hitherto little has been done to arrest these tendencies. Physicians are called only to the sick. On the contrary those who have inherited tendencies to dis ease are generally as careless of their health as others, while, in the case of those who already show the tendenc, their friends are apt to pursue just the course most likely to strengthen it. For instance, a consumptive is shut up from the outdoor air and gentle exercise, though these are Ins only hope. More over, the whole influence of our social life and practices encourages the thoughtless squandering of vital re serve. As a consequence, we are degenerat ing as a people. The death-rate and birth-rate are steadily approximating. The difference is already less in New England than in any country of Europe, France alone excepted. Yet there is no inherent difficulty in the way of extri pating hereditary disease. Hygienic care would accomplish it-such care as can come only from a medical expert, and such as we are all ready to resort to in acute diseases. Able physicians have thus beeL able to extirpate tubercular consumption from themselves, their fam ilies and descendants.-Methodet. JkEALTH KEYSTONE HAPPINESS A CM, THEI, BONANZA FOR BOOK AGENTI is .eim our ple4dIdly illutrated book Life of CEN. HANCOCK Any hiAut~ n fri a orn. j. W- FORNEY, aro. Thi work isendorsed bj Gen. fabseock, party leaders, and pre is Io*. p mm nei popular, and t~hnlkewlld-fir pcr .a ir the bee hok, best lersta, ant feall ________ UB ARD BROTENNS, Atlata, Ga -Choicest In the world-Importers' prices Largent comnpany it America staple article a$1as eveybo Tadocontinually icreas ROB'T WELL8, 43 Vesey St., N. Y. P. O. Box 1287. OW TONZ UNITED STATES ATU A~ GcAwOE. A rell woneru aob Interswork. No oneca Ia every county. A sIWX V. TB1haT. SlAn Gt. To Consumptives. L ODER'S EMULsION OF COD LIVER OIL Ail Wild Cherry Bark, the most palatable comubinatici ey these renowned remel extant. An unequled reins which he Cod Liver 0111 combind wth te Wil Cher ry, enables it to be assImilated by the most delicale atom mchi, insures completed sion of the Oil, tone. up thi well-k nown aed alist un fections hias used it ii tener two nr eaes and says "her is no combina sands of eufferers need and desire to take a comibinator of Cod Liver Oil, but have been unable to do so. They w it clent result. Prc ne Dolar pradotyle Six Bottles for Five Dollars ?irculars and valuable in eruo Add allfes ent on free'seceipt of a descrip 0.0G. A. LODER, Manufacturing Chemist. __ 5 Chestnut St., Philadelphia. Pa. BEFORE BUYING OR RENTING AN O RCA N Send for our LATEST IrLUSTLaTZD OATA LooO (32pp.4to), wit NEWESa a r a5 at 5'land upward; orS3~prqr 184 Tremont st., BOSTON' 48 East 14th St., NEW YORK 149 Wabash Ave., CHICAdO. The Oreat Remedy For THE LIVER, T HE BOWE LS, and the KIDNEYS. Thes getem oran o te lNatura cleansersof dect ilf tey become cloggd dreadful d heae abe humors that should have been expeed naturally. E d a e beern cured, and all may he. For sale by allDrupxtit. S TROTHS Lih.Y3~ LANE '& BODLEY CO., CINCIxNATI. KANUFATUER OP STANDARD PLANTATION M ACHINERY, Stiationary and Portable STEAM~1 ENGINES Saw Kills Grist Mills, Shafting Hangs Pulleys, etc. Our mnachinery is strong, aim pIs and welsl made, andi is especialli adape to the wan te ol Farmers and Pl'anters fo*r Onnu ~ 5an Grinding and Jactory use. senJ LAND a DoIrST CO., Jehn a Water Si.., caninnati, 0. and firat-clan gnods to, your customers; we give ao good rou rte frpa alltic ress chre; wre furnish out P' EOP E' 1 chaArg.eox46s. Louis No. NIATRONLA B AB b the best Ia the World. It Is absolutely pure. It is the beet se Medlanl- Purpoesu. It is the best for Baking and eli flamally Uses. Sold by all Druggists and Grooers. PENN'A SALT MANUF. CO.. Phila. BlC valuable kene, a rieD to seek treeles as ever-werked etare erasy age ad seass 1 .....' CH!'Ai1 APONIFi ER Is the "Origans)"Conemttd e soiopaneseCan for sak ndai e ohe r. PENAtAL MANUFACTURINS CO. 110ig &% vDDaMEA Grand Meda) atWParis at h adelphiai Exposition.I This wonderful substance ied throughout the world to he the best rned Dia. for the, eure of Wound. Burn, Rheum der' ever eases, Piles, Catarrh Clilblins o an'der etha botesfr househod use. Otiitflom your druggist, and * will and it superior to anything you have ever used. *I lIodi10llk DrIB 1MIntio kac Speedily cured by DR. BECK'S only known and sure Remedy. NO CIIARGE or treatmnert until cured. Call on or address Dr. J. 0. BECE.112 John St.. CincinnatI. 0, QWARDS *. i e s S an. b ande enrd e v ai ot lt. E $PA D RY MNCT-RN CO.,S ?N30DAS TRIA Electr lianceour i for thir a to los s. Also of h Lier dney umt Pa rThyis, Ac. Afu substacue Is aanwev4- r nOil eN, ddre Vol to Be t o. tSe _ie. Tle Koran, foA ess'ihe to eve n odse and a e aets iuis TH E HKORAN OF MOHAMMEDt) translated fion: the *"onbPilby Catarhe Hialne" 1rmr'l ulsed t&*2.75 n bicheautil type, neat cl th boun edition ;pr oe M vns,eb nd cntI fom ornar " ""'iag taa , ofd any and d sorks, e a bly e pricy ut eve r s trs nIla.,~e arwbr. ==~ sw iusrtie ORGANS I4- TOI S, MUl BAlMM & OCT. COUPLER. OUNG MENT g":' 1"af sure Remdy 0~ CI) ARE E fo treatme uni Ae ial* aan r a nddesi u dree ADr J., DAEF. 2JonAtY. Washirgio, J c b r i a #4 to e : hoa nh wayrn sraom en ttoiaas te r a qad a thucin A nrs a ndoPric a e es fE&ge MAKE MONEYK. ENCYCLPADI N. WoTh I he heat an d to ovper nel whork h ce bfcelule arant ato a e aspeo is. vlu and hwtapa an boo d seop ofered o an exn' at tsre e A en a NA~ir~ioxiat Punressn o ..1I Atana O. Thirsein thehest leoete d riable work AueTe anliess handotand s.onges now topl r all pthvi ous d teflie ad how tape r O M. CO,. a dn Le, N-~ewd Yorhcra. cnan fuW L~AW. T o nnd of th o detrsan er s Aents. Aeted.Psion dATIObALkt diischarge Cor Adeatah. Tm eprsentn th Addr eesth seteie~el m P.b. Th lgert, s h ansms, asrgest Dn. . K. co... ERYidAuguana.ewaYoe. NEW LAW. Thusnd CofSler s ., Phirsd. l'. 8ed teondaebc $20oid:s scha-r.ge:n orde . - 75ied bAdes wlith a m, aa s asm Pro f-. a/ROG. . DetrO, lh of T C aoe nt Odt it Frree2. AdissP H. OOVE, laelphta, Pai. Pun ihes Uno, Ala , Ga............tory-our.--dess EfltBO mN pyyu TO N ITO 0, -....od.........s. had....a $5 to $20s aprove anto :avalids mes t v A fee. S awhsks an deleur tnela, Termiably adatit fru ee. DpepstI.SA, ET Malria et De tla n, heae . 5~Neaadphscans, wornet mse, the w ole .am Pressesi ad gratfit fnigroma3to O vr260sy Publishe s'UinAawnta a....'rw ww.fu......