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HIGH-HEELED UUWOE. A Fruitful Source of aeck-Acae am" Kindred In. " Back-ache," says a prominent Now York physician, "is very common among women; more than two-thirds of them suffer from it.. But there is one kind of this trouble, caused by a prevailing fashion, which women ought not to al low themselves to suffer from. 6 A few years ago a fashionable young lady called upon me, saying that her bNck was very lame and had been so for a considerable time; the pain had lately so greatly increased that she had becomo frightened about herself. She had been obliged to shorten her promeuades, so she said, was almost iu capablo of dancing, and hor life was gradually becoming a bnrden. She had 'tried everything,' and taken medicine all the time, but--and then she broke down in such a vay that I began to sus peet hysteria. " She looked tired, and her face bore an e'xpression of pain and despondency which was not coinpatiblo with her years-sho was about 23-nor her evi dences of constitutional force, which I jnudged to be strong. I confess I was it. a lossi to account for her trouble, and close (uestioning gave me no indication for treatment. I at last prescribed a tonic-n general. principles-and asked her to call in aboit a week. When she atppeared again, a glance sufficed to show that she was no better, and I was much puzzled as I saw her walk up and down the oflice in nervous excitement, ex claiming that she would never get well, sho knew she wouldn't, etc. As I looked, at certiaii peculiarity in her walk led me to think that there might be some spinal tirouble, and I commenced a cross-exam ination, which she )rouight to a sudden close by saying: ' Why, doctor, soveral 4)f my friends are suffering just as I am, ut they are not yet, so worn out with the pain; we cannot all have spinal con phiiints, can we?' "1I thought it impossible, of course, nnd thme interview ended by my asking her to call again on the next day, and bring oCne of her friends with her, When I would make another effort to discover the real cause of her trouble. I had, in fact, made up my mind that some pecul iarity in dress was at the root of the diffieulty. The ladies called, and had ]ardly traversed the oflico )efore I ob served in patient No. 2 the same idiosyn crasy in walking that I had seen in the :irst patient. I was not long in discover ing that the real difficulty lay in the high and tapering heels of my patients' gaiters. Closer examination revealed the fact that there was a difference in the height of the boot heels of the two ladies, and I found thait my first patient, who was the greater suterer, was the one whose gaiters )ossessed the higher .heels. T1here was nothing to do butt to prescribe slippers and woolen stockings for a week, to be followed by the wear ing of shmoes having low, broad heels. ''All .signs of lameness disappeared within eleven days, and my first patient of this kind, together with many who( hiavo followed her, ingaine their health und1( strength. Thmere are many phys 3ological reasons why nhue eleva tioni of the heel must cause trouble. It 'will suffice to say that it tends to throw forward the contents of the abdominal cavity, and the muscles, nerves and cords, more or less connect d with, or surrounding the h)ack, are sub1joeted to unusual strain in resisting thme forwardl impulse. Of course, in such cases, lame b)ack is not of itself a dhisease, )umt only the indication of a deep-seated troulie, which is sometimes difhlilt to aleal wvithm. Ladies should( be8 wamrnedl that this fashion in heels is certain to brwincg themu-sooner or later-great trouble." Capturinig an Englishman. " Once I was filling an engagement at ni London theater," said J. K. Emmiet, the actor; " a gentleman with buttoned kiids and( hair parted in the middle oc cupied a priivato) box. Ho coolly stur 'veyed mec through his eyeglass. I was feching pretty good, and was acting with anore than usual freedom. The audience roared wvith laughter, but not a miuscie i his face moved. He stared at me like a Gorgon. I was nettled1, and I do termined to capture him. I did my lbest, but there he sat partially turned toward me in the easiest of positions with the coldest of faces. You could fairly r'ead on his features : ' Well, upon my iuout, 1. expected something pretty bad' you know, but this is perfectly exece 3-able.' I lost my guard, andl made1 no secret of my effort to capture him. The umdience dropped on it, and became dleeply interested1. I warbled ' Wilhel xnina Strauss,' and filled it to the birim wvith grotesqueness, but the fellow sat there like a stone statue entirely un anoved. Apparently nothing would fetch him. And so the porformauce progressed, the audienlce watching the man in the )>OX more thant it did me. At last I made sim impIression. It was in the act where 31 pranced atrolund thce stage with a little child1 astraddle my shoulders. A faint gemile oversp~read the man's face. lie i aised his gloved hands nd~ languidly e'lapped them twice. The aud'ence *creamed with delight, and from that f ime until the close of the performance 31 had every soul in the house with moe. TJhe naivcte of the child, combined with tihe acting, had been too mnch for him, ftnd had brought him clown." * Joan of Arc. It hmas been strongly doubted whether JToan of Arc ever suffered the punish anent that hass made her a mar tyr, though dletails of her execution and last mno iaonts grace the civic records of Riouen. Several boo0ks have been published dis Cnssing the question. A Belgian lawyer is tihe author of one of these. He con tends that the historians---who have done nothing but copy each other in the hiarratives ofther death-err exceedingly in sayimg that it took place on the last dlay of May. 1473, the fact being that she was alive andl well many years after that date.. There are good grounds, too, for believing that the pretty story of Abelard and Reloise is a pure fiction. Is Little Mistake. Merimee in his "Letters to Panizzi," tells a gstory of Mrs. Caroline Nor ten adLord Suffolk, whom she had bantered at a charity fair to purchase some trifle at an exorbitint price. "Don't you know," said his Lordshi, defending himself feebly, "that I am the prodigal son?' " ,"was the answer; "I thought Iou were the fatted calL" ' Some of A. Ward's 'Pranks. I do not remember to have ever seen any notice of Artemus' happy use of pantomime in his humorous moods among his friends and associates. There was an unapproachable eloquence some times in it. He had a way of making quotation marks in the air with his left and right forefingers on occasion that was irresistibly funny. Once he was engaged to fill an evening in the lecture course of a popular literary institution of a Now England city. During the lecture an individual who occuled a seat on one of the front benches seemed determined to resist the speaker's offorts to make him laugh. Artemus soon dis covered both the listener and his inten tien and concentrated all his powers on him. For a long time it seemed as if the man had the best of it, but by-and one of Browne's queer conceits took Liuet. The obstinate fellow gavo way, and laughed and kicked like a delighted school-boy. Artemus celebrated his victory by coolly anuouncing to his audience : " Ladies and gentlemen, this will terminate the first act, and we will drop the curtain for a few moments; while the scenery is being arranged for the next act the lecturer will take occa sion to 'go out to see a man,'" and with perfect sang froid he left the plat form for the ante-room, where he quietly refreshed himself with-weak tea and a cracker, and gleefully told the story of his contest. Half a dozen of his associates were sitting one day in his room at the vil lago hotel where he boarded, when an old woman drove up to the store oppo sito with a pair of donkeys.--a jack and jenny-hitched to a little wngon. Jack was the noisiest brute in the country. He had a voice worso than the handle of ia town-pump on a frosty morning, and was proud of it. In ai minute his tail rose to a horizontal, his nose was thrust forward, his lips parted and the beast blew his infernal blast. A second and third time it was repeated. Artemus quietly thought "1 that that thing might be fixed," and disappeared from the room. Ho went over and appeared to make a careful inspection of the fore wlieels of the wagon, the harness and thl hitch-up, and caine back, saying that t he donkey was all right; the brute must have made a mistake al)out somuetligir. Presently there were indications of a movement on Jack's part; the neck was extended, the lips curled and the tail rose-to the pivotal point and no furth er. The trumpet didn't sound. Jack thought there was a mistake somewhere -hesitated--relecte(d-and tried again. The front part, some of i, was all right; but the equilibrium conld not be reached. After a time another tttemi:t wias made and failed. Jack turned his head aronud to ascertain the cause of the failure, but couldn't see any. The fifth vain attempt to bray was followed bya spiteful kick at Jenny, but it did ni t cut the matter. At last lie gave it up anct stood at the store door, the most neglected-looking, discontenited dlonkey in existence. Meantime, Artemus en joyed the fun and discharged a rattling fusilade of pungent humor that kept the party in a roar and made the whole affair one of the most ludicrous that I ever exporienced. Artemus had at tachied a heavy stone to the donkey's tail, leaving just lplay enough to the cordl to alIlow the beast to get his tail nearly upl to "'concert pitch. "--Rcmjin i ?Cceces inl theC P'orlanl P'ress. Chinese Version of thle Prodigal Son. " A man, lie twoi sons.. Soni speakee to fat her ; father got moniey ; give some lhe ; father he take it all righitee. I just now give you half. He gives him halfh het go long way-likee me come China to New Yorkc. No lie careful of money, use too much ; money all gone ; lhe velly hungly. He went to man. He wvantee work, lie say ; all right ; lie tell him feedeoi pigs. He givee pigs beans ; he eatee with pigs himself. Hoe just now t:Llkee ' My father he lichi man--nmuco monecy. What for me stay here hungry? I want to go back and see my father. I say to hlim), I velly bad, lie knows I bad. Emperor (God) see I bad. No be son, me be0 coolie.' He go back ; hugee way, father see him, lie takee him on the neck. Son say, ' I velly badl, I just nowv no be your son. His father talkee to boy and say, ' Gettee handsome coat; gives he ring, gives he shoes ; brig fat cow--kille cow, give him to eat.' Tihey velly glad. He allee samee dead, jusi now conie back alive ; he lost; ho gel back. Number one son come, lie hiesu music ; he telle coolie, ' What Ioa mnakee music ?' Ho say, ' Your b rothlel conie back ; your father velly glad he ne sick ; he killee fat cow.' Number one son velly angly. Father he comes out. hie say, ' No, no be angly.' Number om11 son say, 'I stay all time b~y father; nevei makee him angly. My father inoeve killee one fat cow for me. My brothej he velly bad ; lio use money too mnuebee: he have fat cow and nmsic.' Fathei say, ' You no sabee ; lie just dead ; hi now comes to life ; he lost ; now comlet back.' TIhey makee music." An Enemy to Shluig Bir-ds. The crow is exterminatong the sin ing birds of New England. IFew are t ho nests that escape his vigilant searebI and~ fewer still the young birds that do not go to satisfy his ravenous appetite and fill his capacious nmaw. I ha,-'e watched and cursed them for years. I have seen them pounce upon the nest of the lark and of the plover; I have secfl them leaving the nest of the robin withl the young in their beaks. For sover~al years If watched the return of a pair of robins to an old apple tree near miy house, where they had built their nieat and reared their young. One morninig I heard the piercing cry of the old birds, forebodin gdanger and dist ress. I ran' to the window just in time to see a crow fly from the tree with a young robin in his mouth. In less than five minutes the crow returned, dived into the tree, and this time the last of my half-grown pot robins was borne away.-Manches,. ter Mirror. The Point Well Taken. "I object, your Honor, to this witness' testimony." " Upon what ground ?" said the Judge. "My point is, your Honor, that evidence from a person oc cupying the professional position of the witness is unreliable." "What did I understandl the witness to say his occupa tion waai?"a'aked the Judge. "Washington correspoA nt of a New York daily pa per," was the reply. "Ahit" said the Judge, "the point is well taken; the uriit stintaina your objection, Mr. Coke stone." A GREAT REVELATION. Some Valuable Thoughts Concerning Human Happiness and Timely aug. gestions About Securitig It, Synopsis of a Leeture Delivered by Din Obas. Craig. Before the Dactroposa. tan Seacatifte AAsoelasen. "The public speaker of the present day la bors under difficulties of which the speakers of the last century never dreamed, for while the audiences of the past received what was said without question, those of the present day are usually the mental equals or superiors of tho ones who address them. Rev. Dr. Tyng, of New York, when a theological student, supplied a church in a neighboring town, and on his wa3 to preach one morning, met an agod colored man. 'Well, Uncle, do you over go to hoar the young preacher?' asked the unfledged Doctor, "No, Massa,' replied the negro, 'dis chilo don't let none o' dem students practis on him.' The darkey had began to think. The free and inde pondent thought of this age accepts statomonts only where they are proven to be truth, while the development of mental power soms equelly great in every other department of life. The valuablo inventions of the day are counted by tiousands. The increase of scientific study is universal. The spirit of inquiry in all fields is so marked as to cause COMMENT ON EVERY SIDE, while people seem investigating and advancing in every direction which can help them morally, mentally or physically. This is specially truo of the human body and everything which concerns it, and the truths which the people have found, even in the last fifty years are simply marvelous. How really ignorant some cultured and suppos ably scientific plCOIel wero only a few yOars ago, as compared with the present (lay, may be bet ter understood from a few illustrativo facts. A prominent writer prepared an elaborate o.say to prove that stoamships cold never cros the Atlantic, and his paimphlet was issued just in time to be carried by the first steamer that went to England. People once believed that (1lo heart was the seat of lire and health. It. is n->w kniow n that this organ is only a pli11l. aianaply keeping inl motion int other and n~o e iimpor tant organs of the body havo created and tranis formed. It was o1100 sipIosod that if a plerson felt a pain in the back, the liver was deranged; if a pamn came in the lower chest the lungs Were affected and consumlption was near; it is now known that a pain in the back indicates diseased kidneys, while troubles in the lower chest arise from a disordered liver, and not imperfect lungs. A severe pain in the head wals on(ce thought to como from som0 partial deranig( ment of the brain; it is now known that troubles in other parts (if the body and away from the head, ense headaches, and that only'by remov ing the cause can the pain be cured. It is a matter of PRIVATE HISTORY that (Ion. Washington was bled to death. His last illness was slight, and caused principally biv wearinoss. A hysician was called wh 'bled him copiously.I Strange to say the pa tient becamo no better. Another Doctor was called, who again took away a largo amount of the vital fluid. 'Thn4 in succession four phy sicians drewv away the life of a great man wfho was intendedl by nature for an old age, and~ who prematurely (died-murdered by malprac tice-bled to death. That was the age of med ical bleeding !" The 5speaker then graphically described all. other period which ecame upon the p~eole, in which they assigned the origin of all diseases to the stomach, andh afte'r showing the falsity of this theory, and that the kidneys and liver were the cause of disease, and that many people are suffering from kidney and liver troubles to-day who do not know it, but who should know it and attend to them at onico, conltinued: " Let us look at this matter a little more closely. The human body is the most perfect and yet the most delioate of all created things. It is calpable of the greatest results and it is liable to the greatest disorders. The slightest causes sometimes seem to throwv its delicate ma chiniery out of order wvhile the most simplle and commnon-sonso care restores and keeps them in perfect cond'itioni. Wheni it is renmembeired that the amount of happiniess or misery we are to have in this world is dependent upon01 a perfect body. Is it not strange that simple precautions and~ care are not exercisedl? This is one of the mo1(st vital qjuestionis of life. People may avoid it for the present, but there is certain to come a time in every one's experience whena it must be faced. "And here pardon me for relating a little personal experience. In the year 1870 I found myself losinig both in strengthi and health. I could assign 1no cause for the (decline, but it con tinued, until finally I called to my aid two prominent physicians. After treating me for some time they declared I was suffering from Bright's disease of the kidneys, and that they could (10 nothing more for mue. At this timie I was so weak I could not raise my head from the pillow and I FAINTED TiEPEATEDLY. My heart beat so rapidly it was with difficulty I could sleep. My lungs were also badly involved; I could retain niothing upon my stomach while the most intense pamns in my back and liowels caused me to long for death as a relief. It was at this crit icaijuncture that a physical longing which I felt (and whlich I most firmly believe was an inspilration) causedl mn to send for the leave*s of a plant I had once known in medical prlact ice. After great difliculty I at last secturedl t hem and1( begani their use ini the form of ten. I not iced a lessening' of the pain at on1cc; I began to mlend rapidly; mn five weeks I was able to be pabout and1( mi two mloniths I became peorfectly well and have so continued to this day. It was onily ntural. that such a result should have c'ausmed me to, investigate miost thoroughly. I carefumlly examm ci fields nni medici no never before erpo! ed. I sought the (cause of p~hysical order ai (dis order, happiness and( flain, and1( I foridt the kid nieys an h11lver to b e the gove ror s, wi ii e nma> tionis regulate thle entire systemi." A ft er describ inig at leinythI thi' ofli'ers of thle kidneys and~ liver, and thaeir imanportanit parlt ini . in lift, the lhoetor went 'In to 5av: "H1a vinlg foun ;d is1 gre at tiut'hi, I saw cearlyV the cai useof my n reco veryv. Tihe si ini1 le vt'e t aIe leaf 1I hadl used wae a f<>oil an~ re( stoer t i my welI-n &igh exbans1 t ed kidneys ancd li ver. It hii comle to themii whlen their life w as iienrly gonoe and byi It. siimpho, yea pow~erful ml~tlen' h1:1d puiied, st remngthenledi and( restoreltd I hem m, ando saved ne froim detath. Jfeenhzing the grea't bentelitr which a knaowledIge oif thlis t rut h would give to the worl I began, in a miodest way, to treat those afflicted, and in every case I found the same HAPPY RESUTdS which I had experienced. Not only this, but manay, who were not conscious of ainy phlysical trouble but who, at my su ggestion, began the use of the remedy which had saved my life, found their health steadily improving and their strength continually' increasinag. Mo universal where used, was this true, that I determined the ent ire world shiould share in its results, and I therefore placed the formula for its prepara tion in the hands of Mr. H. HI. Warner, of Rochester, N. Y., a gentleman whom Ihad cured of a severe kidney disease, and who, by reason oif his personal worth, high standing and lib erality in endlowing the, Astronomical Observa tory and other public enterprises, has become known andI popular to the entire country. This gentleman at once began the manufacture of the remedy on a most extensive scale, and to day, Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Cure, the puro1 remedy that saved my lifea is known and used1( ini all parts of the colatinient. "I am aware a prejudice exists toward piro prietary miedicinles, and that such prejiudico is too often well-founded, hut the value. ad a pureI remedy is no less because it is a p)roprietary mledicine. A justifiable prejudice exists toward quack doctors, but is it righlt that this prejudice should extend towards all the Doctors who are earnestly and Intelligently trving to do their duty? Becanse Warner's Safe kidney and Liver Cure saved my life before it became a proprie tary medicine, is it reasonable to suppose that it will not mure others and kcop still more from sickness nofw that it is sold with a Govarnment I stamp on the wrapper? Buch a theory would ha childish4" The Doctor then paid some high compliments to Amerioan acienco, and closed his lecture as follows: "How to restore the health when broken and how to keep the body perfect and free from disease riust ever be man's highest study. That one of the greatest revelitions of the p resent day has been made in ascertaining the true seat of health to be In the kidneys and liver all scientists now admit, and I can but feel that the discovery which I have been per mitted to make and which I have described to you, is destined to prove the greatest, best and most reliable friend to those who suffer and long for happinoss, as well as to those who do mire to keep the joys they now posses." Statistlcs of Color Blindness. The report of the committee appointed by the Ophthalinological Society of Lon don, to collect statistics of cases of color blindness, presents many features of special interest. The Secretary of the committee, Dr. Brailey, with the assist ance of sixteen colleagues, has examined 18,088 persons of all classes, of whom 1,657 were females. It is at on-3 curi ous and suggestive to find that, while tho average percentage of color defects among men is 4.76, and 3.5 for very pro nounced defects, it falls in woman to the low figure of 0.4. This, if true, remarks the London Lancet, would seem to sug gest a new sphere of labor for women. If women are comparatively free from color blindness, they are so far specially indicated for nmiiy of the less laborious occupations in which good color percep tion is desirable or absolutely indispens able. It is satisfactory to find that these last statistics confirm, in tho nainjthose collected by the late Dr. George Wilson, of Edinburgh, nearly thirty years ago. This is especially noticea-le as regards the comparative frequency of color de fects among members of tho Society of Friends, particularly among the poorer section of them. . Though the members of the Ophthnlmological Society seem either not to have known the fact or to have forgotten it, Dr. Wilson found a considerable number of cases of color blindness among the members of the Society of Friends, and he was of opiln ion that this was not an accidental cir cumstance. He further believed that the largest proportion of cases of color blindness would, on extended examina tion, be found among the less-accom plished male Friends in tholarger cities. - ientifie Anicrican. Tn.. theory that a submerged body ean he raised by firing cannon over it was recently proved in Chicago. A plumber named Leonard had jumped off the wharf and drowned himsu1f, and his friendsgot out the artillery and maised him by firing over tho spot where he had gono down. Ho thoughit it was a water pipe bursting. We le irn timt E'llis & C >.. proprietors of hailey 'Sprir't<, are in ikini.. irepaira number id V, !itioil .~ a t er. Thov alre r'cei; l e : I o r n:iin f .romi afl over the. ',tth inqiin i. rates andi (on tr iets for bt >:rd. i hi i is on ly thier due, for n1)1ot only are they sucecefu hote! I ~ kee pers, bt their place i ini every wayV wothyl of paitrtnae. It.j ~is oe of the e io~e~t, s'i idiiest, breeziest places; the South ; them locamlity andt -airrou nd irsare dlelighit ul; the buillding- sre rom, airy, and con veni en tly a'rrangen ; She cmmiioud it i'ons, fare and at ten tion are Ii rat eias, andiu Sho al C ree(k is thle most) rint ici st reamL anl Ci thees fishe ing water you ever sauw. Add to thai the uniivalledf power oft the ob1 lRock~ Springr in the enre of d ropsy, scratula. h dyspep-ia andi ( disea4es of thi blood, skini anad kidnecys, andl the su mn of at tract ions is i rresistible. If y mi have ev~er Ibeen thern you konvw this isa true. If yont have tnt, try it j usta once You will unever regret it. Addresa Eilis & Co. Bailey Sprints, Ala. CoA1~scrrLas are now manufactured of rub~ber, but when a man gets up in tile still hours of the night to satisfy his wife's anxiety about the front doo'r he ing locked they cani s'tnd him (il his head as neattly nd -1 ty-: iyelv as the old iron ones do.-- ."! -.' No HIospitail Needed. No palatial hosapital neceded for I lop Bit ters pa1tietuis, no r Iart'e salairiedI taulent ed puiffers to tell what hiojn litters~ will (10 or enrei, at they tell1 t heira owno story by their cert~iajin ad iab ~)luIte cures at bioi. -New York Iideptendient. PEOPLE speak carelessly of "b~loatedl aristocracy," as if an aristocrat is always obese. That is wrong. Some of tiie aristocracy of to-day is mighty thin. Ncw Orlean8 Picaiyune. "Thme 4undsI lreup I hose whlo helIp thiemselvies," anrd Natur iniIIva. iab)I~v hilps those who tako Warner's Safo Kid ney an rd ~iver ('uro. Me. vaea ema . b. a abottu **f"dP.a ..,." * *AUUUASTSIBaS TUB .1. HARTER ME DIC 4AN B36 DESTRfb'ED AND) LONDON Teted ad reesmmemde'd byProthr~ee o. v. RIIJv. Jade 1.glsi OemunisuIb, he., at -. Beat, Rafeat. ~Cesape 'em Se. te A. Pea r si.As nrare Boom Effecti 00mnpact, Quaranteed t Who rnn a 3 Horse A Great Enterprise. The Hlop Hitters Manufacturing Com p any is one of Rochester's greatet bus ines enterprises. Their Hcp Bitters hove reached a sale beyond 'all )rece dent, having from their intriisic value found their way into almost every house hold in the land.-Grapbic. PATIrr reords of the live-stock in terests of Texas show a yearly yield of something over 400,00 head of cattle. Eight dollars per head is about the av erage price at Sau Antonio. Ir -rn bo*els are sluggiah and the liver tor pid use Kidney-Wort. THE complete independence of man and wife, where property is concorned, is nowhere carned to such a point as among the Indians of Central Amer ica. Every day the husband buys his meals from his wife, who ptrchases from him raw material for the table. Bed-Dug., Roaches. rats, cats, mice ants, flioe, insects, cleared out by "Rough on Rats." 15c., druggists. HUaTY'4 CARRO19WIC MALLVE I I he 1 LL.N' 6.\I.V P, or Ott., Bruisee, Soree, Uloers. ali Bihouimi , Tetr, Cialpped Hiatict, Chilblai.i, Cr::s. And 'I k: 1.;,1% of skin I-. u ptIiou, Freekle. I ud i'ais1j1 et Ii INibY'd 'CAIBOLlo SALVE, as all othe-as ait counat .C eft,. Price 25'i ec-uts. I, IhIo' h(0 rouzexi oi t y 3pepia, II u 1ti4 , M .h , ioi g..s ion xai Diieass ol' the Blui, f taixe. , I e . ikin, etc. IR ' BO (AT.AltIdU MN FF c .illox * 1 aiAetiox.n of the muen1C11O, u mh11 al.ie oIf the be.t Milm throti , ili.. NoTr's LiVE1i PILLS are thes bal Cathatii INDIoIOsrIoN, dyspepei, nervous prostration and all forms of general debility relieved by taking MENSMAN'S l'EProNiZD BExy ToNio, the only proparation of boef 4ontaining its entire nutri 'outs properties. It aantains blood-mak ing., force jonerating and life-sustaining prop erties; is hivaluable in all enfeebled conditions, whether the result of exhaustion, nervotta pros tration overwork, or acute disease, particularly If resulting from pulmonary complaints, Ca well. Hazard & Co., proprietors, New (ork. PERRY DAV1 A SAFE AND SURE REMEDY FOR Rheumatism, Neiralgia M N Plur ag ,a Cramps, Cholera, Diarrhoea, Dysenter', Sprains I ~ANDI Bruises Burns IVII~ '~AND 6 Scalds, Toothache Headache, Pil E Slbit- Nil taMr *M Uwa NANGUIN A n i..h of f'oruy years throughot ib ou h Itn a rafctic, t ie % Joiul , n isure and kiadred disxte, biIU. Druggists will anu y you va. rehe ME E aXINaOUs aISe Co, Daltiwore and Now York. MILL & FACTORY SUPPLIES OF ALL KINDS. BELTING, HOSE and PACKING, OILS, PUMPS ALL KINDS, IRON PIPE, FIT TINGS, BRASS GOODS, STEAM GAUGES, ENGINE GOVERNORS, &c. Send for Price-list. W. H. DILL1NGHAM & CO. -143 Main Street. LOUISVILLE, KY. YOUNG M EN ''''" T''''hv: Earn 90~f to floi. elics. Addresa VALyNTINE B1RO. .hixesviil. W1, Desdorses 6es4 5e-e w ensded *V Sie esedS-. eat pr toe.s, fee' eaes et of taI ees, ansd CJossnwa o such ani extent that ny labor was exceedingly bur ne much relief, but on the contrarr, was foino bt Ibegathe useofyor IsoN Towro, from whlcb I re il energy retued adI found that my natura i force of the Tonio. since using It have done twioe tho Isa and with double thb ease. Wi6h the tranq.ti nerve it never before enjye. Iftthe Toniohe. oot done the J- P. WATeot, Pastor Ohristian (Ihuro h. Tror. (. INE CO.. S. BsW STE MEl STtti. ST. ill5. CItOPMa *AVECD BY UNIN(J P PU RP LE,, W- 2. JMIe lFt, J 2. P. VIA [1.5, the U. i. Pntomxo. ia %24hleli netd vred, cosisag lealer for pc 'o'le arx, aer wrue. toi Oe Wai.er hrei. N e w Y or k. P. O. Bea dg W/ALTER ENGINE. ve, Simple, Durab61. end Cheap. substantial, lEconlomi(al and rni), Manag.4 Swork tnell and gti' fuLl poster clairm'd. Cotion Gin or Oorn Mill sh.,uld have e*a, is much b'ette~r anid ('etper than hcrse powe.. tSE: 11 10 LW I'RIcIm.. Power Engine, - - $20 ,, - - - - 2M0 ,, 6 - -. - 8;) Iaafoinnra tn 'Mrih pmhe. CELLULOID . E Y5EGw0ASSE S. Representing the oholset selected Trtes Shell and Amber. The lihteeIt hai and strongest knoWu. mol b sla" Jewelers' Made by the UPIN O7~Wa wr "O... to Mades Lima. New Tee. for aeaaY f tp one( boy the ano yur dutlea avolA Wor ,to we stsnulants a n d use a brain nerveand Hop 5itterH. 'o Irvf you atel 7Orm~* suy in. diecr or P disd or Pageo ioung, ou Wr poor health or n n a tn Ue4s, rely on op UStters. Whoever yo0U are Thouanndo die an whanever you [cc nually fro i some that yo u r systen form of d needi f ton. nt na I I wthoutino.rcu ag, by a Miin iesso t a I. opN ltr Bittes IHave yfnt (fu pepsa, kidleey De 10 0 or utrinaryl coin- Is an absolute proint, dI:icaso and 1reeista. ofLo sSociq dlo u r a for lo tbo lrve IO drunkenness, You wilIt be to Daecei or cur .1!( i f you uno narcotLA. Hop Bitter[ !f you arm film- Sold by drug. y NEeER andt Send for F. % trlited, try NEVER c-irca'sar. it i it m ay aOnBTEB saveyour IIfe. It has FA'L a CO., saved hun- 1eebeater, I. r, drods. A Toronto, Out. For Two A Cenerations The good and staunch old stand-by, MEXICAN MUS TANG LINIMENT, has done more to assuage pain, relieve sul'e'rin, and save the lives of mei and beasts than all other li'iinents put together. Whyl A Because the Mustang pene trates through skin and flesh to the very bone, driving out all pain and soreness and morbid secretions, and restor imit the at'lleted )art to sound and suppie healthe 1HEAPESqT 'n 0KUR1 Ti fiff .ioth~gI C$n 4$i bond. fo onl tO vi. ,ew. M AN MIATA BOOKO00,IleW. 14lhU84,N.Y. P.0 3UBa 0 nt. Nation . lagg., Ph hia., Pa. 4r( UNUW ANa.Ofady t heneeatlade86.1Coeny e 4 Outiona free bAdres TaqI 0., Agsa, Me. Ad ws r Emp. i Mai LYON & HEA1, Monroe, cor. of Stata St., Chicago, Will rend prepal to any address, their BAND CATALOCUE, for l"uI, 190 pages, 264 Ensravings of , instrument.. s4uit, Cap BIta. Pomn- -.5 lru n M jra Staff and I tt, Sandy Laisi Outfits, Repairing AlaterLIsh; also In 1chn!-n Jnstruction and, Extere'ins for Amateur tiands. ant a catalo-uu of choice Landj Alusic. Forx Chl1illa and Wel~ear AND ALL OISEASEs Oauned bP Maalas-lal Polsonlng of the Uta. A WARRLANTED CURD. LxIco, B 1.00. r..: r.no,. SOUTHERN STANDARD Over Fifteen Hundred in Use, (i Isn be opra'etI byV latini, hornle, sto0un or Iaar1e41 ft (rst ;-re nint St. Loui4 ineli ( :ut:1 State Fa sir Ass~toio, Austin, l4exas, ISoo, l'ir (I P',n er Press, (coIlplete .- $11to "' " I la ts Power .' - . 1. 4) " "' Iloer I ronis 10 ..g "' "' li.ne Power4V.4 1rons2 a' . . . n- ii for cicula rs. Ausiress Southern Standard Press Co., MERIDIAl'. MISs. B ONTRASTED EDITIONS OF BIBLE REVISION 4t inung?5 i t he (old and 141 new Aortion, in geai3ntle CIng. see tasi. ~. ith be- 't I s~sscheat u t iaratedt edition of the h. ,, wTe-tunut. Mfillions of people are wauting 4) . l,5 I o , no b e''epived b t 1hie(Is.-hen i~ p dhn Inbisiihiers of V*tattelt~t.' ed J4'I~ y1 0 14( oni~ninO I 4i''SP ~T' AtNThat. .Metd for sitettlara, andt ex Address NA TrnJAT. Pons ~isn o o, Atlantn, Ga. Cyclopedia War. The. great itAbrary of IUnIversalI KrsawI.Ag, I5' arp lt ed larg typ e i tio~i iesrl 0 4,(K ~ toric r h5 cer i imn Cihanib.'e,, Fzneyclepoorlia, 101 er cent. Ilat r thuan Appleton's, 20) per 411 ce t urger than .lolrm n, ni nire fiaucion S of ter eost. Iifteen lIargo (P a-*s 5 as uit lo nU Sr l ibrsrv h b nini rd;.;e, $23. Special tran. loths. S 10.000 R EWAR D ,'" ' ng'ntn dii j re. %nd guleIk fo n az 5 j(11 4~ k~ : .-gs Br s*, Aager, 763 hroedway, New York. A 11Y AVs I I' ted ini 'verys tate tinds Cunty for Rubb-hir Ssecitjiies fr lndies. Ou- sls o poits. A ddets 0. hBrmslret hoff, Ih s uito 8E ,b. Publisher.' U~nfon, Atlanita, (i.wat n..7... 81 n MPR ANT * " :-r -'.= tbe is sent FRIEE. Apply o'SOURJE,4Poto,