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4 ' e ~adwoefing* ewrlike toladpr, or fus hand of Oafo'u Jenarkably'logeIii .S. those of UsiI ofida ihridates of Pontus (57) k" Persia (71)s Alfonso (78) -Froctriak IM'~of (r ' tian IV, of Demark XIV, of France (72), George ad (59), Ferdinand IV, of apa Pro I of Drasil (51' o tUssia was a th when ~Ia on the throne, Mth$iates a boy, a new-bon babe, Alfonso an jv a ears old, Loris nand 8, and Pedro 5, and of h onarohe mentioned only George Mreakhed the age of four score. Po had one King who rerhed the age ot 88, Etatilaa LeesosynAki; but he reigned only Ite years, and survived his throne Afty-six years, living in quiet retirement., We must back to the daysiof antiquity io d William Il royal peers in Age, and the only ones we disoover are Hero I, of Syracuse and Mauninsa of N both of whom ended their reign at e age of aou9. The reign of Ramesses n Pbaraoh of t-the Sesotris of the Greeks--Is beved by some Egyptolo .914ito have lasted about 67 years, and his -]4% 1.about 100, but others reduce and da to normal pro. Thus, no Emperor known to 14~ ng King in Christen Zo Tever ed the ase of William 1. Or boasts of this extraordinary w ~ as it does of the only Pontift ea th~i of Piux IX, which exceeded the term of St. Peter. And Berlin whioh s~ftisees it Emperor King on hoba4 o saw in 1859 Alexan der Von 114Modt give the last touches to hig "4" in his 90th year ; Raui mWr in 'Mited as professor in his 92d ~ arshal Wrangel, in 1877, H a jisusreets in his 94th, and Ranko in 1871, psue the first part of a universal hlstty, intended to embrace eighteen Voluini, in his 86th. Moltke, who is not yet 82, must thus appear to the German capital and nation as a man still available for action for many a year to come. _______ What Ailed Dean Swift. When "the Vandal desecration of monuments" In 1885, exposed Swift's skull to the- phreniologipts, ~the great Dublin aurist might possibly hlave found in the bones of the ear traces of the cause of his giddiness. When Mr. Whiteway examined the brain he might have found the cause of Swift's right sided hemiplegi' and his aphasia. It is enough now tat we can diagnose his lieogdisease as labyrinthine vertigo, andhisinsanity as dementia with a' hasia; the dementia arising from genera decay of the brain from age and diseae, the paralyisand aphasia frora dirnse of one particular part of the brain. With all the tortures -of the life-long ~ease from which he suffered and its bvosefrect upon his temper in his atryears, it is wonderful that Swift did A ye.. reason until, in the seventy s'4O~~mzof his age, he was in all probab 'ty struick down by a new disease a the form of a. localized left side apoplexy or -cerebral softening1 which determined the symptoms of his insan * ity. That Swift's work-emitain no indica tion of insaniity appears to be certain. As well-say that ~3akespeare was mad beoause he wrote a good deal which we think nasty. In the fashion of the day, Swift wss too prone to muake what may called 4xorementitions jokes and gibes. But that perfect gentleman, Antonio, voided his rheum upon Shylock's beard' and the same kind of thing runs throughi our literatue no one objecting, until we er recentl become less natural and nice. Soeof our smaller humor and: c men of letters have criticised get king of humor as if he were hbad and mad, not perceiving that if CAh*ear really insane he must be *eakestofaruettoawihFss inr want o ruet 1uhlann doth mkthemd"There is always weakizess in madness, but there is little sign of this in Swiftts works. There is always somie inoonsequentness or incohe r eno in madness, but there is none of this InSwift. Down to the last letter to Mrs Whitewy he is most wretched, but he isstBi ll ected and wholly himselfj. - oprndar Science Monthly. Gentus Not Hereditary. 1h majority of eminent men have either left no children or their families have ved short lived. Walter Scott snd Danie Webster are almost without dlia escendants, though each had childrn and gadchildren and a long qatmoguof lie eases coudbe made. th fality seems now to have invaded the race of the illustrious Havelock. BiJ eldest son and inheritor of his title has just been attacked by insanity. Sir Henry Havelock Allen-be took the last name as the condition of receiving a 1~*g legcy-as been a prominent Iifljra oliiian, and also one of the ~ f.w tiiedBaptists of Great Bitian. y~ TM avelook line may be continued the younger sons, but i Apnmonrule as followed, few if the descendants of the founder Alasthis tlent. -Scott's children awfrom brilliant, and Webster's , ow4 ather ptation they possessed toj~ef~tthat thywere their father's hil~tu.Xltins descendants were all ~ ~&~~ie~in e, and in the second or -,. mz~~naa~onhad become so poor ~< ~I~w~t relieved by a public sub. soswere rsctable es in which genius of a n o'umerens. The quality boethe result of a peculiar 3d btlathe power of giv. The unon d Eothi itptnemanssanns still less Ghs6 Ite a be here~n Iat*ta "a' dentist an e4ie6y$the w a ntred, whose f geoee iocnov 1erlevi. dence of ain adixture of Oaucan blood. The woman held a bandkpo to her face ntlshe had teksn her seat in. the opisig chiwhen - she re moved te 1thand dpay a counte ;ance inye. Shad been once 'odoku beon the de. gree of eomeliness uaaydsle by the Chinese women one sees i~lfr nia, for hek' cheeks were round and her eyes rather y The disease had, however 'not on~ ~yrvdher of a nose - but hd desupper teeth and lft the bones bare and surrounded by frightful cicatrices that ran h the corners of her mouth and up the b ge of the nose toward the ebo.To make much a face presentahie seemed aen im si , the task was formU adscefy. The% nose an i already been molded in celluloid from a plaster cast of the face, and, having been carefullycolored, pre sented a most lifi-lke appearanoe. The dentist in molding the nose had to de pend entirely on his imagination, and had modeled a thoroughly Asiati one. The artificial lineaments having been prepared, there remained only the inten estmg but difficult feat of attaching them. In supplying artificial noses it is customary to attach them by spectacles, but in the Chinese woman a case such an arrangement would have been impos sible, owing to the great size of the dis fgurement caused by the lose of thd lip and teeth. The diff culty was overcome by attaching a gold spring to the upper jaw in the manner in which single teeth are afrxed. The spring ran uptto where the bridge of the nose should have been and to this spring the artificial nose and lip were attached by an India-rubber loop. The combined pressure of the prmng and the India-rubber drew the celluloid mask so close to the face that, being molded to t the cheeks, it would have looked quite natural but for the lack of that transparency which living tissue possesses. While the woman's countenance was in re ose, the effect of the work was romaal goo and the transformation which it ected in her looks was so great that she eagerly seized the mirror offered by the dentist, and, looking at her reflection, she uttered an exclamation of surprise and delight. She give the practitioner a handful of ten dollar pieces, and trotted off with her half-caste escort, fied with a satisfaction at parting with wealth seldom shiown by Mongolians.-&an Francieco Bulletin. Cash. The word cash is derived from the Italian cassa, the chest in which Italian merchants kept their money as do at the present time the Spaniards in their caja, and the Portuguese in their caxa, and the French in their caisse. The ap plication of the word " cash " to money, is altogether English, it not having a corresponding term in any other Euro pean language. Cash having been so imconsiderately adopted instead of cassa (chest), entries in the cash book (it shoula be ghest book) are made in count.. ing-houses in this unmeaning way : " Cash Dr." and " Cash Cr.," whereas the chest, and not the money, is Dr. to what .is put into it ; and credit for what is taken out. In China cash is the one-thousandth part of a tael, or about one-tenth of an American cent. The earliest public bank in modern Europe was that of Ven ice, founded in 1157. It originated in the financial difllcultiese of the S tate which in order to extricate itself, had recourse to a forced loan from the citi zons, promising them' interest at the rate of four per cent. It is generally be. lieved that the Chinese were the invent ors of bank notes, which are maid to have originated about 119 years B. C. in the reign of the Emperor On-ti, wl'io -hap pened to be in want of money at the time, and hit upon this device " to raise it." About 800 A. D., the Chinese, in the reign of Haintsoung, of the dynasty of Thang, issued true bank notes. They were called feyteien, or flying money. There was a frequent over-issue of these notes, and it was so easy to create this pape curencythat the value declined. Itto 1,000 min, or 15,000 of our dol lars to buiy a cake of rice, and at last the issue ceased. .Two centuries later notes were issued in China, 'under legal re strictions, by joint stock companies, who promised to pay cash for them every three years. In 1824 Sir John Mandeville, who vis ited India, saw the described money made "of lether emprented, or of papyre. "--Troy limtes. Do Not Dust, But Wipe!I Who would believe it ? The duster that peaceful emblem of domestic toil may, under certain circumstances, be come more dangerous to handle than a six-shooter. We are in dead earnest. An eminent scientist declares it to be a fact. Do you know just what you are doing when you brush away dust ?You disseminate in the air, and consequently introduce into your own interior, into your tissues and respirtor organs, all *orts of eggs, sporas, epidemic germs, and murderousvibriones which dust con-. tains. One movement with a feather duster may be enough to poison both you and ;our neighbors-.-to inoculat. you all wth typhus, varioloid, or chol era--strange as it may appear. Instead of a feather duster take a elo~h; wipe away the dust, instead of stirring it up; In short, wipe-...never dust t---Le Vl. Thu Southern joralit who said that aNeirYork gil kisses "saif she were dabbling in a Wall-street ula tion," knows nothing whatever tlit The truth is she goesttaifhewhole lifedepended on the oesemof her emaaketha;that style ofth Megg., keips hek li a. n:1OngUanlu a* 0 fO~ar,.toaabg thak ikini. oor ndbesides," owe she, defes er. ~ w s hension0r by Jenird ofe oBer's wife. After * -m fortunes of war retired the son a ae who ettled his -amav in Wash in In the meantie e lever C U05. had lifted the huaband'bt th 4nlady into km a , and the twi frends mest fil soietystWiter,. Mro Mars could not believe het eyes, so grea was the transformation in the appeai anee of her old acquaintance. Congress looked ten years younger. thai the junior lady. The - maiy ripples c soft auburn hair ; a complexion smoot) and white ; a fashion - of drooping th darkly fringed eyelids, with si fair shading on the under lid, gave to th eyes a marked expression of shynes and languor. Her manner was full:< repose, and strikingly graceful; her fee the perfection of symmetry, in Frenol boots ; the hands had the refinement c pink nails and taper f&igers, and eve: her voice had changed and dropped Wit thoso sweetly moaulated tones whic: pass current for thorough breeding i od society. Poor, mystified Mrs ar looked and wondered, ponderin on all this, asking herself and others " How in the world did she accomplis: such a metamorphosy?" How? Ho, does the winning horse' lap and pas others and reach the hat quarter pole Through training. Money and time ar the great factors to success, and the wa; to succeed is to succeed. -Mrs. Congres has both. Money purchased her beauti ful hair, paid for Turkish baths an cosmetics, securedethe service of a maii who could give proper shading to he eye-lids and teach her the art of droop ing lids. It brought her graceles flgnre into shapely proportions. It pai chiropodists to treat her feet and mani cures to polish her finger nails, whil time and 'mbles tapered the fingers It employed dressmakers and millinero salaried a. master, who instructed he how to enter the room, bow, pose, sea herself and manage her train, all wit] the poetry of motion. The moral neces sity to be beautiful puts incipient wriu kles under the embg of emulsions sent her to bed with her face buried I poultices of Irish oatmeal and mili bandaged feet and pinioned hands i ointment-lined gloves, and put th brakes on a too expansive waist. Me pursue ambition, wealth, and that but ble, reputation ; women march up to th cannon's mouth of p~hysical torture an welcome martyrdom solely to be beauti tul.- Washington Free~ Free,. Becalling Old Times. Fourteen -years ago, when Chester A Arthur was a struggling local politicial in New York of what is known there a the Custom-house variety, he numbere< among his friends the mate of a vessel named Kennedy, whose influence Arthu. had often occasion to use when circum stances required the votes of the floatinj population of the harbor front. Just about that time Arthur made at unsuccessful effort to obtain some mino municipal appointment. The mate con doled with his political friend upon hi disappointment, and soon after saile< for Washington with a cargo of hard ware. While ascending the Potomac block and tackle fell up~on the mate'i head, indenting his skull in such a man nier that the man became practically ai idiot, and was placed in the Distri'et o Columbia Insane Asylum. A short time ao the famous surgeon "Dr. Gross, o Ph'ladelphia, visited the asylum, ex amined the case and straightway per formed an operation invented by himself which resulted in the almost immediat< return of the patient's reason, the inter vening fourteen years being, of course a complete blank. A day or two after his recovery, th< mate walked out, and began strollinj through the Capitol building. Almos the first person he encountered wa President Arthur, who was just leavinj the Executive chamber in the Senat, WThy, how are you, Kennedy ?" said the first citizen, affably extending hi hand. " Glad to. see you." "Howdy, old man," said the sailor " How's thm' gs ? Got a job yet ?' " Well, I believe I have,;' said th Executive, with a smile. " A-pretty bij 'ob,, too. You must come up to th Whte House and see me." " To the White House ?" repeated th amazed mariner. "Yes, just ask for my private secre tary, and he'll show you right in," an< the P'resident walked on. "Poor old Chet 1-clean gone, cleal gone," mused the mate. " Actually be lieves himself to be President of th United States. Smart man once, toe That just shows you, gentlemen," h continued, turning to the bystjndera ".that just shows yoti what politics arm disappointment will bring a man to Poor old Chet 1"--San .rancisco Post A Hlint for Suimmer. The tattle in India, says Chambhera .Tournat, is a large curved or slopin screen, which accurately fits into eac door or window facirng the west, and i made of the roots of the khuskhus graa (Andropogon muricatus), which sm - larly combiipes strength and porosit with the most delicious and ref reshin fragrance. These screens are about a inch in thickns, and, during the hot an dry west wind, are saturated from onteid with water, which immediately conm mences evaporating under the fiercenesl of the blast ;~ and as evaporation alway implies cold, the wind which, in th veranda, would raise the thermometer t 120 degrees Fahr., p asses into the hous at 75 degrees or 80~ degrees, laden with delicious fragrance. lile tattles are i working order all other cooling appli anoes are nnecessary. In the neiglh borhood of Gwalior and Jhansi there i another form of tattle. A small creel lg, torny variety ofthe be (ZizyA t is ooand dried, and at th time the whole west veranda I osed with thorny walls nine to tei inches thick, and these 'being saturate< from the outuseall doors are thro , 6pen, and a delightful temperature i sonea. Tattiae ale o no ume durti .~. .,~ . home with a it is' in-hiso wi ud of Ia er a8 to serve him and '06 h'. The more a man dos 4 is. s - , the more he is e d, partiou f larly by the wolien, ea : :This man surely love hie I in the' W101J43rMov welder, in his Interest American Indians, "I was witiiess to a , remarkable instance of the* disposition of Indians toindulge theiwives - There 0 was a famine inr te land, and a slok ln dian woman expressed great de*e for a. mess of Indian corn.- Rer husband having heard that .a trader of Lower Sandusky, Ohio had a little, set off on horseback for that place one huudred miles distant, and returnedwith as much corn as illed his hat orowia, for which1 he gave his horse in exhrsgg and ieamb home on foot, bringing his saddle back with him. It very seldom happens that r an Indian condescends to quarrel with his wife, or abuse her, though she has ivhi just cause. Insuch a case the man, without re. plying or saying a single word, will take his gun and go into the woods, and re main there a week, or perhaps a fort night, living on the meat he has killed, before he -returns home again, well knowing he cannot inflict a greater pun ishment on his wife for her conduct to him than by absenting- himself for awhile, for she is not only kept in sus. pense, uncertain whether he will return agan, but is soon reported a- bad and quarrelsome woman; for, as on .these occasions, an Indian does not tell his wife on what day or time he Wil return which he never fails to do when on gooA terms, she is at once put to shame by her neighbors, who, soon. supecting something, do not fail to put such ques tions as she canot answer. When at length he does return,. she endeavors to let him see by her atten 'tions that she has repented, though 'neither speak to each other s single word on the subject of what has.passed ; and as his children, if he has any, will. on his retuin, hang about him and soothe him with their caresses, he is, oi their account, ready tg forgive, or at least not to say anything unpleasant to their mother. If these traits in the conduct of the untutored Indians in do mestic life put the mannera of mtore civilized nations to the)Alush, how much more severe Is the reproach to social life contained in the following account : a "In the year 1771," says the author I alread named, "while I wastresiding on the Bi Beaver, I passed by the door of i' an Indian who was.a trader, and had - a quantity of goods in hisousd. H~e r was gomng with his .wife to Pittsburg,. and they were shutting up the house. "As no person remained In du ring their absence, this shutting was nothing -more than putting a large hominy pound i ing-block -outside the door to keep it I olosed. As I was looking at the man with attention whi!e he was so employ a ed, he addressed me in these words': S"'See, my friend, this is an Indian lock tha. I am putting on my door.' "' Well enough,' Ianswered, 'but I E see you leave much property in the house ; are you not afraid those articles ! will be stolen while you are gone ?' "' Stolen iBy whom ?' "'By the Indians, to be sre.' "'No. no.' he replied ; 'no Indian would do such a tlng; and unless a white man or white people~ should hap. en this way, Ishall find alsafe onmy eturn.'"_______ Wolves on a Railroad. A-Toledo man, formerly of the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railroad, Sleft a good psition with a good salary on the Northern Pacific, and returned to SToledo to take the chance of getting. smashed up on one of the railroads here, for less money. When pressed for his reasons for coming back, he rather re. luotantly told the following tale : -"He said that as soon as he got his train started out on his run, and one rnight at a certain station was side-tracked for a train that was following' him. He ordered a brakeman to go to the rear and flag the expected train. -The'brake man turned pale and refused, but de clined to give a reason. Hie tried to in -duce other train men to go, but all re fused. He took a lantern and torpedoes himself and went back some hundred paces. He noon heard a pattering of feet around him in all directions; and 'thought he bad got into a sheep pen, until - suddenly 'his ears were assailed with a chorous of snarles and howls, and he concluded he must be near a farm. house welspplied with dogs, but on raising his lantern, he saw the snow almost black with savage forias whose eyes glared at him like balls of fire. For the first timo ho realized that he was surrounded by ,wolves. His hair stood ereo't and his Stongue cleaved to the roof of his mou~th. g fle hastily placed the torpedoes on the a track and began to beat a retreat. The B howling pack circled raund him and he S yelled to the engineer to back the train -down to him, but his voice was drowned Y amid the demoniac howling of the gaunt i savages which were msapig at his coat Etails. He kept them of with his Ian tern, whirling round, like a Dervish, till a he reached the train. In a few minutes - ho heard the torpedoes explode and the S howls grew more furious, He said the S whole prairie seem~ed alive with the a brutes. He cooceived a brillianit idea. ) He bega to to torpedoes to tm, and S could hear them explode, and4 by the a sounds judged they were deing good i execution. He said he threw.out about - 2,000 torpedoes, when he got orders to run to the next station. When No -5, 5 the traina followg got to the stationi hes -had lef t, she was t~onoff the traok by an obetruction. Wen daylight had ar Srived about 1,000 dead wolves were found m i the cut, all frozen stiff, and it was S this that throwed Ko, 5 from the track. " So," said he, "I made my run bac an I ld the Superintendent I qise dhave~ oge to ex1asI~ Ax ont-*,onen 5Ug8.s.i%.Ie ....-...... tdae, itohd a* e. heard io yerosa o i -a 'prse me"*oncooaWASto , and in pition withvwels at 'rt slowly y ry the duration a no*," shouts an xeoited ex g, ~ " where shal we look for inde' Penidence ?" - Oh, friend and brother, seat hfang d long-suffering fellow-suf 14Wrglook In the kitchen, look in the ktchen t---Buelington Hawkeye6 Sadly AmIeted. My boy was badly aficted with rheoam atis-," said Mr. Barton, of the great stove firm of Redway & Barton, of this city, to one of our reportersk "We doctored him a great deal, but oonld find no cure ;I had heard so much of the effioacy of St. Jacobs Oil that I fnally determined to try it. ,Two bottles of the Oil fully cured him." 0tnoinagi Enquirer. -EVmN the violet his its special enemy, and in Europe at leat is menaced with destruction. An almost. imperceptible spot appears upon the blue of its petals as it blooms, and rapidly extends. The flower soon becomes colorless and dies; and then is discovered the microscopio insect which has been feeding upon it. The provinces of the Rhone are already bereft of their choicest flowers. Tna local editor of the Springfield (Mass.) Republican, Mr. J. H. Mabbitt, says : " We have used St. Jacobs Oil in our family for rheumatism, andefound it to. be a first-class thing."-Boston Herald. - Oun Influence is measured anc ex pressed by our examplo. We can load others no farther-than we go ourselves. " Threw iWrHer supporter." . Dn. PIRgcE:-A neighbor of ours was suffer ing with " female weakuoss," which the doo. .tors told her could not be cured without a supporter. After considerable persuasion my wife induced her to try your " Favorite Pre scription." After using one bottle she threw away the sup re and did a large washing, which she ha not done -in two years~ before. JAMES MILLER 4,240 Jacob Street, Wheeling, W. Va. M:nw and torpedoes are exploded and qunrries blasted 'by passing electricity tb rough platinum wire p~laced in ex plosive substances.. , JwrYoun lungs are almost .wasted by con suniption Dr. Pierce's " Golden Medical Dis coy try " will not cure you, yet as a romesly for severe coughs, and all curable bronch.ial, throat and lang affections, it is unsurpassed. Bend two stamps for Dr. Pierce's large pamphlet treatise on Consumption anid Kindred Affec tions. Addr ess, Wouns DrsPENsABYr MEDICAI, AssocIATIoII. Buffalo, N. Y. KrAT1 .YIED has come to the conclu sion th'it Amarican women' do not dress well, as a rule. Such things console a man who has jufst paid $45 for the build ing of a silk dress. '*Womuan and Ixer Dintnaes. Is the title of a large illustrated treatise, by b3r. RI. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y., sent to any address for three stamps. It teaches successfu] self-treatment. ALL1 creeds andt all guides for img and doing can be safely boiled down to this : Do your best. That covers the whole ground. LIfe-Long'Relier. RIcHonDrw, Va., Jan. 31, 1881. H. H: WARNER & Co.: Sir8-Your Safe Kid noy and Livery Cure has entirely cured me ol Kidney difficulty that had been life-long. - - .Hi. FERGUSON. INorin lady-" What is thre best way to caress a cat ?" (let a meat ax and caress her suddenly across the back ol the neck with it. UsE Kidney-Wort and rejoice in health. Orn package makes six quarts of medicine. A OAsu4 is related of dtelirium tremeni of a peculiar charaoter caused by the e~ cessdive use of tobaceo. "DBuehupaiba" Quick, comnpleto cnrer all annoying Kidney, Bladder and Urinary Diseases. $1. D~ruggist. Send for pamphlet to E1. S. WELLS, Jersey City, N. J. ________ .7rA~ousY is tho sentiment of property but envy is the instinct of theft. MENSMAN's peptonized beef tonic, the oni~ preparation of beef containing itsl entire nedtry Cioue properties. It contains blood-mrak ing, force gnerating and life-sustalining properties. LIavalablo for indigestion, dyspepaia, nervoui prostration, and all forms of genteral diebily also, in all enfeebled conditions, whetheor th< result of exhatistlon, nervous prostration, over work or acute disease, particularly if resulting from pulmo~'nary comiplaints. (Iaswell, Haza r< 4 Co., propvietors, New York. Sold by druggista Blood a~n wil corn tey chnge A in ij HEALTH IS WEALTH D~a. E. C. Wast's Nuava AWDSmt TaNATMuma; I C >.ecific for Hysteria, D~isieue convulsbns, Nervoui I eaneho, Mental De ersalon, L~oss of Mernory, Pr.ema turce Old Age, causedb over-exertion, which 'leads t rnisery, decay and death ,one box will cure recent casea Ea(wh box ennta one month's treatmer. One dollar b .ut r six boxes for five dollars; sent tvg mall prepaid os receipt o~ price. We guarantee six b roe to cure sun ea. Wit i each order received by us for six beres, ao companied .with five-dollar., we vill send the pnr chasr our w ittena goarantee to return lbe mney If thb treatmenx tdoM not affeot a cure. Guaranteese lsaued onl! by (4. J!. .UMNl, Clhaawesteos, &. O, Order. b) ntl rmtlyatede o $2 5A NTH-AGS t ~. SWArJT-s~obes AddessJayBrees, ert. fic Atlanta., G;o one of the ise'i pract~ metbraI FUI/g 1866 e ...ROOFS .~WALLS a CEILINGs -~ - cat a~logueand samples free 644W. H. FAY, Oaradon, N J. ITsenoprelsy rPoet aborthand Ua aogue ofw wok, olth Phonographic alphabet es ghNtai A o bqnr a ,ent on application, Ads (flncina4, 0 Ia e a n=a aaasenss 3OmUW asU. JACOnsOR ,. -ran iho em of tis won. derfl'l isubstance the fIII must Imm the reader:-Hlon. thomasi L. Tames, P amaster ieueral of tb United St ates, when Positmaster of hie City of wio York, concurred InI the following .timonial fom mi. It. Warcin Anst nierail su rinitendlenit Thirdi Mlvfsio nalling MI Di)str butln 'Dlepairtmen-.t New York M'ot 1ce: "1 1 tako p caxumo In advisinthat the! Pam CS Of ST. JACOnS OILrIeft for distr ution among .i,2cerks of this offee, have, Ps far as the have ent tried, proved equatl to all tha~t Is Ctimed .e theO:m. Tihe reports from the Fieverall is" Pe .tmeisand cerks who have i:sed the O1. :1h puralsingr it highly. It has been found lik'encini inl cul1t. btit , soreness and stifniese i the joints and jmuse, emiad affords at readv re er I for rhecumatic complaints." col. Samnuel H. .. vior, Washin rton. Inid.,anr1 ex-Postmaster -of -iberlandl, M,1., wastx eured cf rheumatism by -. JA cons 0 f.. CELEVftATED TA .diestonlOl. n forlm,. e avised, forpt e so ther own' boily admtlcfrt th blo ty oietr' tgs iadBersU. kv Lade. h motdeiates osmutster iyalo to thamsnied ats reotive protis Ph iyolan evrwheork, dosgured wih the adltowng .iqoa fcomr, prsb in. as th argf4stq. an et * relafl suetmachi. hrd1iii~ii~iln Forc " taleyallr Drist nd Dei taters m T Elrk4o A S iR obunace .- 85 Mfrillo poundha ciitred, ipoted qaltoast tat-Pics lowtier *e he :~ than revr.fo e wanted.-Don't .lc~dct~an to tmerk w nd hfor cular.h Oi 10~cI prbsnGod Blk I or asxen fou$d 10 lbs.U~ Fin Black, b uoren~iessd sfr 2. Theint u an club. 'Coicesti Ta in th wread . l's o Anh e rica- c~) l womi~t ol. Sulug~I. Straight businesCf.-Vcurolforisoneyb i.JCI8... Teferl anKdno Comptlaints rad for apell mdgotizxInandirs e ase, or the asotei ach 3te alsiof tion mnt ost ip otntm ittorgan ealings ait to treo fftoprutyln, Plyincion etyimu latgto wiath (coe atn o liuforin frcomere malarie inert ee safs n thes rell you ntme, PRo0" sl. bSOLDugBYsan DRUCeisTS In abndanen,8 aInd eferns ELSU Lo por$d wwtC-el or ciuWltachen 10incnaie Hailac tnx & Daon Cfv g. Np a clh N N .A.. TeaI Ih w LrsTowildoDetrait s C C ana~dasf eit e C~~i ~t:i Azricn-o hlO..O u Otng. Ad all oCints andth NORTWEST INI A IAPOER N. .O~ Ath n all pctoint on thnos EST. t~ InacionetimL~~ Gto eealh Tiet Agent Sotong' Safctn ativeeg~. Plo ills A ypeod cre for live yoplat, rogultating the bosurifigtebodcening from malarialiny-ot1 tint. PSAVE Y1 fOUR CABBRU SCE nucts. This Powder i warate Wof-oralau Or pond A eoIg forZ an orditen adn ; four ar y 1,:3 ; 2,jjh) Q0i1 r ior mnyb Fdree. pr o a., erea <- cc For nmth, t--2% tby & M f 4, nch~rSlt Bond for cireuatr.o HInsurance o Ue PanslldO eininn-t it, Counton, &ig ay nd Pays $2 to 25 heSTrOUw etAplye it Toleend(ome Dotold& Cerman r And ll oins i Co:m W T b M SAIavL uTVESONTE A w ntcd cure yers in medicinn, ratnve tone tt Y~ A althese AW It wlU curentir q the weit forst plaints, all ovarkik troubleg 1maian ion, *slung rw;C Dilaeiant. h spinal Weal.r.cs. ad is pmr ly hange o' A will -*.vo and. ex ptumor hrF1 an 1.a0l stago of dovelopwaildt. Te cerous humorstherito cheeked ves'yspeed7 It removes faintnos, flatuleuncy, dtros for stimulants, and relieves weaknes ot the Lc curon Bloating, cadaches,. Nervous GAe DobUity, Sleepleepneos, Depr10ion e( Jm* That feeling of hearing down, oustig and backache, ia :..lway permanently enred it It will at all tim'o -und underalerunmaiOest harmony with the hwo that govern thetetnsleq For the cure of Kid:'y Complaints of eier sb Compound Is unsurrnse.. LYDIA E. PINiMAU'S VEO!TABLE POUND Is preparoe at 233 and 35 W'stern Aeutkt. Ignn, Mass. Prido 01. Six bottlesfor $. Seut by ae intheform of pills, also In the form of losges. O reeipt of price, $1 per box for either. Mrs. Plnklif A frelyanswers alllettero of inquiry. Send for pWdakh* let.- Address as above. Mention 1We hper. 14 fawny should bo without LYDIA B. PYIM1AW LIVER pLLB. They oure conustipation, biliousnas, and tornidity of the liver. We cents per box. AW 4old by all Drugtlts. 'f .Riuined by'Rum! How many of your acquaint-. ances? Aye, many. 7 BlnowN'S 'IRON BrnITERS is the practical temper- ; 4 ance medicine of the day. Not'composed of liquor, not sold in bar-rooms,4 but a true tonic in every particular.4 If BROWN'S. IRON~ BFr TTERS is taken aCCording to. directions, it wvill not only relieve the intemperate man of the ailments resulting from his excesses, but it will remove all desire for artifia cial stimulants.. BROWN'S IRON BTPrE s will cure Dyspepsia, In. digestion, Weakness, Malaria, decay in the~ liver, kidneys, and diges tive organs. marAs a medicine for diseases - peculiar to women, it is 'without an equial. Price $i.oo. For s'ale by all druggists and dealers in medicine. '' S~i~f5t ?"u.ait * uivan .cse3 . CT . a bei fOt Ma ia al 1N VIGORATE ihe UAIR any where don't be hnmbg + AGENTS WANTED FORTH LHISTORYop inlWOR~i Emrbracing full and authentle accounts of oer Rauie of ancient and modern time;, and includingahty the rise anda fall of the Greek and Roman 3mp o midcdle ages, the crusades, the feudal ,stena, htfr tion, the discovery and settlement ofthe Kt e tli etc., etc. Ii containt 073 flne hIsterical engrawin tb as coplte 11ido of the World ever 35 for specimen pa ea and exira terms to Agents. 3u~'( $ IPrOsVED R(OOT steg. dltous. leomne spatklinq e~ lerane barerete. Ac'k your d a~g orsees nti r 2 0 e . . E . I I R IE 8 , 4 1 N . .a i ., P h i lpd s. (6a week In your own town. Terms anad8 g~otO fe.Add ess I. HALLI?? & Co., Portland, 3to MAKE HERS L AY, An English Veteriaay Surgoen and Chenjt now .rawelin in this country, says tat mon of the son4 Otle Poders sold hee are wor thless trs ay tlk Sheridan's Cond ton Powders are abe6elI et and ltemensel valuabtO. Nothing on earth willi hens hay like Shridan's Conditio P'owders. Dose,. sta Ioutpoonful to one pit of food. Sold av 1wererw sent by mall for 8 letter stamps. Z, . JO~rrrN& (J Bos~ton, Mae., formerly Bangor, Me, onbliushere' Union, Atlanta, Os.... ...,Twent - Ittae HlKGK'S IllPHOTED C11WULAli SAW WILS S Send for Betam , o~lS59 OIRcuLAnS enrtj i aufactured by SA LRM IR0N WOIKS, 4A toasid. a a d a to eo thalt0*U hroat ,a 10e y= eainActtcsua