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PC.. la a b &To) tdplqs *afvers ~1e d piozta 4t yumber of festaate ~ro noe of Mendsa,~~o~~b - nt1U 3 immnzes~ p~ o ba eo wrriter that M VI Ift soWO times 8c three stages of i each i y the a n of a new toria d instrument. E n4r -OPiuA alkaloids do not =63 menad ObMnIL. Ax a ti ,~ ftld man is specially sensitve to i 'e, while animals are onliy affect- -N i when adminIstered m large * 4 uNCR naturalUt has shown that one-sixth Mlimetres in length$ b 6omplete anatomioal orgazima. b mouth, stomach, aliment - akin, and even a well-defied i dsystem. G i far more widely distributed h -Iaf formerly -supposed. Man ontain it in appreciable quan ~1 "ll a Virginia god mine, $160,000 - of pure gold was recently taken a behce of three square feet. IMP., H&RATING, of the Univrsitof of -.Utrecht, made some years ago, mesmerie phnents on fowls, pigeons and rab If the experiments wre seveial times repeated On the same animal its nerVOus system was much shaken. biervations on light yield result that the sun is in i eaU* blue color, and would I p tAop the eye were it not for the < ",the li ht rays through our I ere whic blends them into t M Ni ETNA has changed its entire I *a t since the last eruption. Its pres. I en heighth is but 3 280 metres, it having v lost twelve at that time, while the inter- 1 mal orater, but a few months ago only 1 1.800 metres in circumference, is now t 1,800.' t Tnus city of Aurora, Ill., is lighted by ~ the .electric tower plan. The system ' irnrods and network, each 1150 feeta high. They are crowned with electrio I lamps of 2000-candle power each, or I equal to 125 gas jets.. Chili salgetre, common salt and potas- ' sium chloride have all, when app ied to the soil, a depressing effect on the ab- ' soption of ammonia and potassa. Prof, ~ Tuxen nays that they convey these con stiInents of plant food lower down into ~ the earth, and prevent their a propria * tion bythe arable layer. On t e other hand, phosphoric acid is retained in the soil to a greater extent in the presence of sodium and potassium salts. Goon work'from humAn beings, just ~ ~KI~*machinery,, requires good treat. ~ r' ds eia:r the qulty and the 1 the quantity of the -work .the must be the outlay. Build facs. .1 'y ores that supplypure air, and employes, *vill predade more ; but they will ask g re pabecause the will con su.' r fo, and cannot live on low s.A donkey can exist on thistles, of course, and give a donkey return i 7 ~but a race-horse cannot be placed oxn the same fare with nroflt to any one. A pesson from Immigrants. A patient waiting for results through a srmiyours is not a eharacteristi o 3 fAhrmaus. " Quick sales a~nd small profits" is tlie motto not of the enter prising yxnmtry store-keeper alone; it appears~ .a one form or another over a1 tniost every business announcement throughout the oountry. To its being -aoted upon, however, is undoubtedly due 4 tje irrepresuible push which edi. ~~'bguihes the American from all man To it is undoubtedly due the rapid ~ Iubatitution of mahiner-y for hand r ~ abor; t~ interminable divisions of ~ abow jii every branch of industry ; to it ~ c Sduestheo "manufacture" of farm pro- ~ K neutaganud to it is due the striking dim lxeli.1ation, manifest everywhere, of the 1 ~ averageAmerican to enter upon a gen- ~ ira l an for money making, which in- ' vovs patient waiting through a series ~ Therapid destruction of available estateqt has for some time attracted the serious attention, of the Government and of individuals Interested in forestry, and 1 9 many iiducements have been held out. to on wi would undertake the go mn of useful trees. But thus far not mn ofthe natives have been at tracted bythe offers, and it has re y p~p~led for the sober industrious, and ~ E~tenh em' te, 6ermans, Swedes, Nra~dorw , -to set us awise ex 'he Federal Government offers to give t1 O ~man who is the head of a family udre and sixty acres of land,, i a 11& wlpant twenty acres of it in forest j, '. S. Oana young 'man afford to ac ptthis offer and wait' for his trees to WThere is no doubt of it--but j ?1he Bullegn recently alluded arkable scaiolty of black wal tfee fourisle in many of t~t Sate epeoaly fi Iowa,' a4disonsin. On ~fif Iad as could be obtained tress 0ould be planted ; ~*sold they would be 1 r00 when thirty " bortli *20'a tree, sadthat' sery year, .*~.~ela the nots I aii aga4 toIO . - v\ ~ f~tt~ &AU 0194 to 1oll tW~ud ath yare, SO i aS~ SUEp b g W The'uestion ol Atle withthe Soio was no ting 9 savage and -it was ought, was onily bolg bko -dogs war un1il Btsanvii deoision was Nard. A mee was caled, at which antz~nl be heard. He is de ibed as g been 4ressed in well bting clothes th patent leather boots straw-olorUd neoktie iound a i yron oollar. There is some doubt as hether this latter adjunct of civilisa on was linen or paper. As an excuse r human error, we are to suppose it as paper. Bantsani be an to speak in slow, Inanimate way. Hewas talking the advan of and all 1t iould'do for people Lions only are to fight and are miserable, but be. old the sheep, how happy they are." 'hen his shirt collar hurt him and he Iade an effort to open it. "Our chil ren go to the feld and carry books and nprove their little minds, instead of resting their time in wild-bird catch ag." Then his shirt stud jammed into "is neck. " Peop 1-wild people-the afirs call this bondage-nevertheless, he happy quietude of this life, which eads to contentment, has pleased me, )Ut-but-" here the sh p, unyielding mnifeblade-like edge of M collar sawed nto his swelling neok. Then he yelled: 'I am tired of this imposture I These lothes confine my limbs once unfettered >y any of the trammels of this civilized world I am trying to praise." Then, vith a mighty effort, he tore the collar rom his throat and trampled on it. In reasing in violent gestures he Rung off Lid coat, his suspenders, cast aside his rousers, and in an instant was stark aked. Before him lay in one disordered Leap his clothes. He danced on them. to rushed to a fire, seized a brand and rith- his own hand set fire to the sohool ouse, and as it blaMed, gras ing a rifde e at on@e became the ghting chief of lie Basutos. Some time afterward, at Le battle of Timi, almost alone, " he efended with desperate courage a iountain path. Since his relapse -he as become more and more savage, and, lthough he is fairly well off, and .still samitains a carriage and horses, yet his leasures sie pagan, and he is a thief ,nd a liar." How much off this falling >ff from grace may be due to that paper ollar fuiture philosophers aleo can Letermine. Finely invented descrip ions of the natural instincts Qf his race eally pale before this actual narration hf facts.-New YorkTimnes. To Paris by Rlail.* To-those who object to visit Europe on ,ocount of sea sickness, the proposition o build a railroad by which one can go romi New York to Paris in fifteen days, y an all-rail route, except forty miles on Ssteamer, or two hour's ride, will be in oraig It hardly seems possible that much a thing can be done, unitil ydi read ~he scheme, which is as follows : " His ine of route, starting from the com norcial capital of the States, passes bhrough Canada, New Georgia and laska to Cape Prince of Wales, whence ~he passengers are to be conveyed by teamer to East Cape, on the olposite sintic coast of Behring's Straits and listant about forty miles from the north wrestern extremity- of the American con inont. From Last Cape the iron road ~o be constructed will cross Russian ter itory in Northerni Asia until it joins the siberian railway system, already in di. eet connection, throughi Moscow and St. Petersburg, with all the European sapital~s. Mr. Gregory calculates that he distance -from New York to Paris, ho American paradise, can be tray reed by ithis route in 372 hours, and at a ost of about thirty puunds to each pas enger." The thing seems feasible and vill llo away with two weeks' sea sick iess, but probably the danger from rail oad accidents and corns from fifteen Lays' riding in the cars would more than >vorcomle the objection to ocean travel. Itill, the chances of - discovering the forth Polo, by rail, would be worth omething." The cost of the proposed 'airoad n uld be more millions of dol a~rs than could be carried on all the cars f tho present railroads, but that is iothing. People who are thinking of toing to Europe, though, should not wait or tho new road, as it may not* be com >leted for some months-Peck's Sun. HUMORS OF THE DAY. IN A lottery you pay your money, but ou have no choice. WirsN is a horse like a business man in rouble ? When he bresks. Dwo it ever occur to you that a swan's p-side side is never down ? Do NOT provok'e a fight with an un ertaker ; remember, he is noted for iying peoplo out, Ozis of the medical journals says: There is no limit to tleingenuity of a yaterical woman whof once she comn iences to deceive." A NEw YonK young woman fainted rhile she was getting married, because person who was acting as usher was be man she really loved. Mn. SWING says " thatea nov'el is the world's truth, with a. beautiful woman ralking through it." Generally, we may dd, wth a man after her. A OmoQAGo woman, while touring in )regon, frightened of? a bear simply by ihaking hier skirts at'him. The motion bbybrought her feet Into view. Txarn Is an article going the rounds beama4 "Who Kissed Away That reeslwe we supos it is as-wel to 16 ret as last,' It Is a ~5B~ti na ahdhat won't kiss away i-i, ~ t#' 4w am ate, .ykam Bfty s~ *., a~eddomwea1M , Lok IL was thie most famins diig Af 1ano4 since the days of. Saint Io md a* uired the titl f "Father of Tan oldest brieli building in Englas toept those built by the Romans, is 04 tob a castle in Sussex, built by De FleniIes treasurer oi Henry VL Ax neraumsaxe Arohaeolal so gress has reoently been held at Tidio which was attended by about dih hundred persons, nearly all from Buuil and Cauoasus. IN ' time of Alexander the Gres' Interest in natural curiosities was so fa developed that he used to send baok fron bis expeditions such objects to . hil teacher Aristotle. JuSTmII raised Theodoria, a the atrical performer, to the throne of th Roman Empire. If Gibbon's accoun of her be true, she was in many respect her husband's suporior. AN IMPORTANT classical discovery is re ported from Athens. It is a manuscrip of Homer, dating from the 11'1th Olym piad, 808 B. C. It was found byFrof Rokos, in an Athenian monastry. Jom AYIMEn says of Q9een Eliza both that-" when all the ladies went witi their hair frounced, .durled and doubl, eurled. she altered nothing, but kept he: old maidenly shamefacedness." SUcU was the public feeling agains Roman Catholics during the reign o Charles II. that members of Parliamen were required to make a declaratioi against transubstantiation, which ex eluded Roman Catholics from their seate THE publication of a new tale b Tourgenieff is an event in the world o Russian letters; for the reader know beforehand that in it will be found th %tatement and examination of som burnihg problem of contenporary Rtu slan life and politics. Anecdotes of Mr. Longfellow. Mr. Appleton told the story of "H3 perion," and called attention to one c the incidents aescribed as follows: Hi father, Mr. Nathan Appletoiq, and M Longfellow, were ttraveling in Switzei land. They reached Zurich, where th landlord chartged very exorbitant pricc for their entertainment. Mr. Appleto wrote his namo on the books and pai< while demurring at the price charged. " I have not put my name on th books," said Mr. Longfellow, "and you will allow me I will treat the int keeper as he deserves." Tename of the inn was the " Raven. He took the book away and soon re turned with these lines : " Bewareoft the Rlaven of ZuiI. 'Tis a bird of omen ill, With a~n ugly, unclean nest A nd a very, very long bill." Mr. Longfellow had a very keen sens of the humorous, and many a witty in promptu was occasioned by somte sligh imcident or accident. Ono summe twenty years ago, when the Appleton were living in Lynn, the poet's 50r Charles, who was very fond of Bailing boat, and wl. has since become a famou yachtman, ~me in his boat one day t make a- call. The surf was high and th boat was capsized and he was throw. into the waters . He was wet through,c course, and was compelled to make a entire change of clothing. Captain Na than Appleton, in place of shoes, loano him a pair of slippers, which he wor home. Mr. Longfellow, the poet, r< turned the slippers a few days af terwari done up in a neat package, with this lii tie stanza : "Sippers that perhaps another, SallIng o'er the nay of Lynn, A forlorn or shipwreckod nephew, Seeing, may purloin again." The mother of Captain Appleton" wa a Mrs. Sumner before she married Mi Appleton and before Mr. Long fello' married his wife. One day, when h came from Portland to call upon her, h1 wore a pair of new boots, which wer very noisy. When he 'we'nt away tbi next day he left a little poem written o a card, which Captain Appleton sti holds. It is as follows : I knew by the boots that so terribly creaked Along the front entry a stranger was neatr. I sai d, "If there's grease to be found In the worl My friend from the Eaststands iu need of it hecre. Amateur Brass Braads. Forty-lyve or fity years ago a humor ous reporter in a litile town way dowi East-Massachusetts.-bewailed the fac that an amateur brass band had been or ganized. He declared that his slumber were disturbed by the incessant tooting of the organization, and he savagely an nounced that if the thing continued miuel longer he would start out with his fin Ioak musket and make an example o: two. He wrote merely in fun. In fact he was a member of that very band, an< spent half his income in keeping it go ing. But his contemporaries did no know this. They seized upon his item and made it apply to the brass bandR o their own towns. Since then it has an nually made the round of the press a the United States. It is now a staple The reporter who has not made fin o: the 'nrass band is not up to the standard At Tiaat four-fifths of the reporters wh< dernounce amateur bands as a bore do 5< simply because it is expected of thorn We haven't hauler our organization ovei the coals to any extent yet, but shall ij they don't get to work and practice morc regularly, even though we admit that ii is wrong to do it. Fact is, an amatemi band is not a nuisance. After three oi four weeks it plays so welli that half the citizens turn out to its rehearsals and uxn qunalifledly declare that it has made won. derful progress. The pride and boast ol iost towns is the brass band. .Yet the tooal paper is expected to efer to it in sneering terms.-Larmie OIg oor' Who to Marry. If you can not find age'ntleman t< nmarry, girls, do not marry at all. B' that term 'we do not mean a man who above the need of wrk; he msay be any thing but a gentleman but 'a man wi knows how to work, wiio has self-reep eouhto keep him from low habit both .f sp h and ation -whots courte ones and hoorable' who is iot afraid c soiling his hands; ihe fathet, the blaob as~th tlc arpenter, aymag z2gy be aan unde dnnstaiA ana an P.2 LCI the edifioa tion1as tha utno ohe place was" being a mealous lifn detVrpu1 the services for a iort whge haps, then some fearing erson might attend. H is patioe vs re. warded, for in a few 2A1Qmeita a, nanu dripping wet from the rain' etered, ari b modestly took a sea6 on the bak beneh. * One might think .he came only seeking shelter from the pouribn~ rain, a all the taverns-were closed it being the custom k throughout EnglanA'to close them all on Sunday. Now'thls spiritual 4dviser was not only a zealous but a conscientious man as well, apd he determined, there fore, even before one w6rshipper, to re der the service from beginning to .end. r He read with care and deliberation i r portlon of the Soriptures and the Liturgy throughont, and influenced probably by L the pety and devotion of the worsrhpper before him, took occasion to suggest that the unfavorable weather had certil deterred the usual visitors from attend ing the service- and that he would nQt preach a serngon, but close the morning's. exercise with a rew remarks. The wor shipper begged him to continue the entire service, expressing at the same time a desire to hear the sermon. This . degire for instruction on the part of the attentive listener gratified the man of God, and, flattered not a little, h de termined to fulfill the request. He so lected a proper text and eloquently en larged upon its firstly, secondly, thirdly, fourthly, and finally conclude with " f few words more.' The single wor a shipper proved most attentive and when .* the services were finally conciuded, our zealous preacher descended from the e pulpit, and, approaching the devout wor a shipper warmly pressed his hand as he ii thanked him for the attendance and care I ful attention bestowed upon the dis *course. The gratitude of the worthy e divine was, however, not so ardent when I he discovered that .the attentive wor -shipper was-the driver, who demanded half a crown more for waiting during the 'entire service. .In the BlIack Forest. Fringes of pines displayed themselves in the immediate neighborhood, each one distinct and detached fromn the othe.r, a but beyond, and far, away- as the eye -could follow, the black mountains acou t mulated in dense dark masses and out r lines. Stretches of velvety fields and a slopes here and there relieved the gloom. White roads twisted snake-lie about a the vast scone. To the right st'etched a great uninteresting plains, thie fiowing o. Rhine, a conspicuous object, b here * not more romantie thi the tarniest a rivers. in the distanco rose ths -long ,f chain of the Vosges Mountahs, with a their-soft, wavy, grao'eiu undulations, .though too far off' to be very conspicuous a or interesting. Small streams ran their e course and villages dotted the plain, -. their red roofs rising in contrast with ,the somber pines. The wind swept .great white clouds across the sky, bring ing out the blue beyond in deep relief, while they cast huge shadows upon. the plai that chased each other and dissolved as the clouds died- out in space. One tree, one stream, one flel4, one hill, may S resemble another, but a thousand times -multiplied, and a thousand times seen, Vthe last look is as fresh and beautiful to> C the mind, as invigorating to'the spirit as e the flrat. The only sad spot was the 0 ruin itself, which spoke so loudly of an o age and generation when other eyes were a gazing upon these scenes, as, in turn, liohecyes again will gaze ~when these days have long passed into iistory. ntablng It one,. b THE editor of the COuilr, Mr. W. F. Cook, was seized a few months ago by a - terrible pain in the left shoulder and Sneck. Having been favorably impressed for some time with the vir tue of an article Irecommended for all sudden painis, and SIespecially rheumatism, we rubbed the offending part, and in less tinle than we wrie t, elefcame. ~That article is St. JcobsOi.-Canafohsar'i (N. Y.) - C'ourier. hThe Boy at the Natural Bridge, Va. The-name of the boy, who climbed the side of the .Natural Biridge, Virginia, and-carved his name above all his pre decessors, and came so hear losing his life, was James Piper. On the abutments of the bridge there are many names carved in the rock byv persons who have climgbed as high as they dared on the face of the precipice. Highest of all, for nearly three-quarters of a century, was that of George Wash mngton, who, when a youth, ascended to a pomnt never before rea~hecd.lBut this foat was surpassed in 1818 byJames Piper, a student in Washington Cllege, who climbed from the foot tothe top o'f the rock.____ No MAN with money about his clothes Ishould ever retire withiou having a woman with him, a wife, ofcourse, to frighten off the burglars. A reformed thief yesterday told us that a burglar would sooner enter a room containing four men and twice as many revolvers as one having only one woknan in lt,-for neither the men inor the revolvers can squeal like a womrn. -KentuoA~ 6egie Journal. " I wumtva St. Jacobs Oil to be the very best remedy known to mankind," sas r obrsbZ snlli mana of thsp r-Miwake Wis.) Sent el W wn a Chinam~ngt raytohe~ he get *eady to ptthhI he1 fTuv tas friend to al f&in *Itb;ds adOoneghta Dr. DuR's Oongh jp wil Salways help and iw never o og so Wih *foot 4r1oxeinthi4 bastd1tone-like shell. After 4a4 Vand the cavities of the a f dle'd with quicksilver for the , of pteservingte body. Ap ade was then plaoed in each nostr d ear sad in one hand, while a piece of b.*d1 t wasVlaced in the other. The tod tuspro p ed was put on a layer ofmewciwy ;withi the cofin ; the latter was xWaled and the whole committed to its tlas kesting-place. When some of these aWophagi were opened after the pse of centuries the bodies were found a wonderful state of preservation, but they crumbled t6 dust on exposure to the; air. _______ Sugar and Teeth. Lu a previous number it was stated that pure su and candies, having no residue, cou d not, by lodgment about the teeth, injure them; and that if used in taoderatiob, neither sugar nor candies were prejudicial .to the teeth or health of young children or, grown persons; that there was more or less sugar in all vege table foo4, but as concentrations were -liable to abuse, we advised that they should be taken at regular Vneals. The Medical Journal, of Oharleston, South Carolina, states the conclusions* of M. Larez: "1st. Befinede ugarinjures teeth, either by immediate cotant, or by gas devel oped in the stomach. "2d. That a tooth soaked in sugar water becomes jolly-like, from the sugar combining with the lime of the tooth." .-Hall's Joumal qf Hralth. No Trouble to swallow Dr. Pierce's "Pellets" (the orliinal "little livei pills") and no pain or griping. Cure sick or bilious headache, sour stomach, and cleanse the'system and bowels. 25 Cents a vial. Tim White House has had no-general overhauling since it was rebuilt in 1815, after it bad been destroyed by fire by the British troops, on the occasion of their raid upon Washington in the war of 1812. Ward Lunaps Is nrfeat. Da. R. V. Piaa, Buffalo, N. Y.: Dear ir I wrote you sometime ago that I thought I had a cancer. There was a large lump in my breast as largeas a walnut, and had been there four ihonths. I commenced taking your " Golden Medical Discovery" "F vorito Prescription" and " Pellets " in June, the lunip is gone. Yours gratefully, Mus. R. R. CI~hnE, Irvinigton, Mich. INDItA smoke the pipe of peace, while white men ~smoke the piece of a pipe. _______ *'Bream. sound and wel.." B. V. Pirna.- M. D.: Dear Bir-My wife who had been ill for over two years, and had tried many other medicines, became sound and well by using your " Favorite Proscription." My neice was also cured by its use, after several physicians had failed to do her any good. Yours truly, THomAs 3. METHYIN, Hatcher's Station, Ga. Moanh helpfunl'than all wisdom is one draghi ofhuman-pity that will not far KIDEY-ORTe eive etsat the same timec on kidneys, liver and bowels. Th HEcommercial value of all lands in Italy is estimated at ?90,000,000, upon whichi there are ?1G,000,000 mortgaged. THF. moat stubborn cases of female weakness yield when tho.patient takes Lydia E. Pink-. Iam's VegetableCompound.' PAWNanORZnS do not"get "much from servant girls, as the principal thing they put up is the, olothes line. D~eelne of Jifan. Nervous Weakness, Dyspopsia, Impotence, Sexual Debility, cured by "Wells' Health Re newer." $1. Druggists. Bend for pamphlet to E. 83. WEILs, Jersey City, N. J . A ROMAN lady, named Fabiola, in the fourth century, founded at Rome ais an act of penanice, the first public hospital. liEsuAN's peptonized beef tonic, the only preparation of beef containing its entire nufrH tious properlfes. It contains .bloodl-ning, force generating and life-sustaining properties ; invaluable for indigestion, dyspepmia, nervous prostration, and all forms of general debility4; also, in all enfeebled conditions, whethe~r the result of exhauation, nervous prostration, over wrork or acute disease, particularly if resulting from pulmonary complaints. Caswell, Ilazard 4 Cjo., proprietors, Now York. Sold by druggiat. A ,Matter or' lnierest. A medicine must of necessity stanti upon 'ts muerits. ]f it does not possess healing iualities of value to suffering humanity, po :imount of advertising .sull prevent its beibg branded a fraud by the public. Among the proprietary mnedicines advertisec d n the pa pers there ar'e none that I old a higher rank than thaose o'f TurE Dnr. }TARTER MEDICYNE COMi-ANY, St. Louis. Dr. .Ilarter's Iron fonite is winning special flavor, each bottle usedl p:-oving its wouderful bene'ficent eIlecte, an adv'ertisement which sells may additional bo~ttles. 'The testimonials whitch the Dr. Harter Company are able to produce in proof of the moerils of their medicine will convert the most sr-spicious to its-use. Read heir edvertisemnent, and if suffering from *any of the dis.ases mientioned n riteothem, or ask your druggist for their miedicines. A MAN who gives weight to what he says by an oath, pledges his simple word to be light, unworthy of belief. He lacks the character to swear by himself, and so goes about to find something more stable than he himself is to which ho can nail his assertion so that it will stay. An oath is a trellis, without Which the assertion would fall to the ground. From MiselssIppi, CORINTH, MISS., April 2, 1877.' Capt. W. P. Ellis, Bailey Springs,. Ala.: Dear Sir-It gives me pleasure to state the, resalt of the use Tof Bailey waters inIny case. I had for several years been the 'victim of Cha'onic Di-. arrhaa. The exhausting discharges, and absence of assimilation of food, with painful uleeration of the bowels, hlad re duced me~from vigorous health to an al most hopeless condition. My physician advised a tdia of te celebrated, alley waters. XnaAw y after uyI ial the ftintiots of th iver anid K nys woeh a dI WIou IT Ist' V"1 dren. They are' willow to form a ba4ivr more easily than Cudin& ,fluenoed i ht waysb Thiey canbe ashioned as n be a n on the potfa wb* Time Testers and Burden Bearers Fromn time inmen orlal the borse basbeetd Man's beat frind. but a few ears back we can all remember'the comipartl il y little attention paid to this most Indispensa of animals. we say comparatively little attention, for the horse h was as well groomed,.&-* certainly as well fed,a4 N now ; 4ad a wreaU, e rings-agricultural shows-you see ide or tne county and State stables and fa asserbled. But there was eLconspicuous want of noble draught horses, an as or speeders-well, 2:40 was the reat ultimate limit that owners 1i those day lesired to strive for. But now a 2:40 animal-I esteemed a fir roadster, and fine apimals only deserve the name when the can shade the fi quarteroftbe .irdminute. There lmvebeeni mensestrides lbrwardintherightdevelopmentof horsefiesh in thcivilised countries of theworld -as shown by the time-records of theracers and draughtcapacItyofthe humbler but really more useti work-hrse. Manythi haveconired --i aouo tebrei . Anths a aahy cae~it h nhumnla~n realy mayre bavo buee n the ediot atioand ovn sieo sodr apnt aimalnd ssttutn reatiol menaur, onforelifsedn. Amneti ao of theiol etroad one ndoid ay, ne, i ST. Jca rr,, thec Iua d yally hsavae useitasn eercaionn oree for phe betenrsut tamnt andar iuting acrativenor rmeae natreoe Intned. Suchmien ftrer and thiorenen and Aritnes oed Esq owErsn breedern, farmer Pa.; Cn the Proestry ormer uhae it asr. eoetoner' tock, remew fork h ain tnss of ersn trok genrut y th een behoe reoult thne areonrt e ltof 'uaieo fned thoorands of thescy thogof te cont y. B S 0SE The feecbte and emnetaceds sufibring from dygpepsta es .ndilgestlojn in aniy form, are advIaed, for the sake of thetj own bodily and mea'atal comfort, to try Hlostetter's Stoe' ach Blitters. Ladlos of the unonit delicate constitultion te2. tify to its. harmlesaness and its i.astorative propstleis, Phtysicians every where, idisgusted with' the adulterat.( iquors of commerce, prescribe it as the wafest and mest reliable of all stomnachica. ,For sale by all Druggiat.eand Dealets generally. - tiDIMON a e* a 5 EVERY ONEee Will get valuable infowlsatiota TIIEU by snding for ciclars to 2. TOURJBB ostner,3fcas, fEGE'8 IUPAIVtED 0J1JLARI SAW huLAM. ' ~Send for lem4 ioboo. l~O CItCtJLARS cenitri Victiom INHE MAKE HKST *vw12 this 0ed01-r syso -,W' stole' se $gre- h tat ihoridan's Con ;loa PWs one ity ke vaeridae.'s -Wokdi on laspooiuful to eatot of flod ant by mali for 4 letter stampe. O utLon, Mass., formerly Bangor, e" Strong's Santive am-wa LIVE - A speedy cure for liver compla >owels,ptrlfying the blood,clean n -- k prieot cure for sick beadache, o eeo -t Iy psiepe. 6old by MlI leading Druggist. - udaltnaaa&oo with hill Paittulars, kd~rs.. 20 50, Now York Cit. found in the soidt -, JEWELSLnthracite'o "'L ul for orameeal and jewelers purp ... tow being placed in costly rings, ebir teIt Pey perfectly resemble oubes of goltfts Ad teceive a few samples loy x.ail. torrespondence solicited. W. UC1i t 32152, Shenandoah, 8chuylklll Count . a Leo d1LayV. NipA o1 a. .5 ?,- totl~~ w, b'W-__~ BPI"~~~~c M m .. rvcc~ ENCINESSWI WrIte Tm q AA TAYLOR 00. M ,. Stoute's Female 1is ,ure' all Female Diseases, Ealarged '1'. te. The best Female Pill in the world.'$ ' Rt per box. I will aleo'send rnyChl d iAver Pad, which cures all Lly'edla#,' Yarranted to cure chills in fifteen ztin 4 ~rice $1.25 by mail. Addness X. . TOUTR, Oxford, Miss. 90B. packae maks ous peranace bevers .Ag your drugist,eraqieh~~ r et 25e~. 0. E.1{IRE8, 48 N4. Do la Ave., Pbifda. ~4fo $1 AET.-UIES~ Fusa.. Pw' go y I xesystem in tke ToSs take ene pille ht 1 ~toredto-sound h ifu r. s. OOetn m $03 Pese Week can be made inany Bomftrre.rethin~ entirey new for gn J 4 MVIANL I' WA I3DImNs . Csseeassassi,O. PA YA 1Bl iVIOORE'S 4. USNS UNIVER~$fT% Atlantat. On. On8 of the bestpm 4 AGENTS WANTED FORTff HITOIAZW0 Emrahi fllad authen:Jeout WO I e - fe ael and modern tinies, and includ ag he rise and f~i of the Greek and Romat mprs~ aiddle ages, te erusades, the feudal system, the refoh~m'~ ion, thle discovery and settlement of the Neoir:~ Icontains 67 2One historicAl engravinad most coinplete He isor y of the World over I TId or specien pag.. and exr terins to 4gen . Ylansanspro psy. or P'hone.tle,3tn . Cataogue of worka., with Phonorgraphio alp4e~ "BZN IITMAN, C *ui,*at.0.'*' *-' * -- IE ALTH IS WAT Dx. E. 0. W a' Nana Awn j n -p4 ecifih for Hysteria, Dissiteso, CausoOvj caac en a De reslin, Lessof)eorpq tieOdgcue over-exet on, --a~im W irery Odea andl4ath. One box wll ours rou ach boxcontaains-one mnonib's treatment. Oase p~pA ii or six bozesfor dve dollars ; sent rwy tal prepql eceipt ofvrice. We guarantee six boxes to as.,. With each order received by as fot sig x l ompanied with five dollare, we will send1 - - baer our written gnarmartee to return thes -ug eatnmnt doca not erect, a curo. $urR4~1 sai promj-Ly attended to. - Seea ween in your .wan sewa/ Te S freAddess . esanc FOR THE PERMANIENT CONSTUPA T9 N~o otherdisease 140nsn fry~oiztpattional no s'o ae thro -edv~3 Hce.'Iai V..the auso, ~io cures flhinda bfila es wha. y~tiiouchays dithesl5, mo so. U. id't" S PbioEr'11 4t deltug r pesA ks mn uemnmmemm m- - V"WMg'? Al~ .MM Im =