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red af ChristI e a" holas fEstat winds of Saw. Maasfta. Vrd Gambling. --- o beuo limit tothe re - - deviges for gambling. The _ 2dustr has developd -'he artisan and the business e~naroh of civilization. The speculation has sehed upon - and all degrees, from the ane who toss pennies in the chuich deacons who man at the charity fairs. It will stonishent, however staid, sbrodSaeo en hpromoted a species of hihexceeds in grotesque-. -hof the kind that has yet. rd. alA stroll through m whoe " in Chicago, which is ~ up '-a confusion of Boards of eshops and pool-rooms. ateof cheks from neighbor itar so banks, would lead one \CeT~llgambling had there been h art, and a-at themost ative spirit or the most Wicd desperate sport could be with every possibleva o f g. But the Quaker State t new scheme. It ' known -bed insurance, but wih be nacourately dsignated ha graveyard P4licy-playing. he origtat this new system of ) latin mbln haby the assessment plof lifeirg whih has led to oran o various associations of met'oa4 ke, railroad men and heitrade for the payment upon the death of any .7 ber.. This payment is a n assessment levied upon aidtin members. It has been -Vr at torily for atime 'le the system is peculiarly exposed to ~ ~ad, ,It has Ainally been seized upon liPelnnsylvania by professional experts, who rUn the business very much after I&thA of "policy-shops." Death Inbed is escribed as follows : " A company formed for the purpose, or a decayed life-insurance company opts the assessment p o i ~ nsurance. All the policyholders are eat acertain xed rate upon the of an person whose life has been W, ssutJ' example, whenever a oerevery prson owning a uisuarlyupon the lfe -T' rso1, is assessed $1.25, ohsa neighor,DB 4~mbeeed to be at the point of ,If A can take out in some tm~company a policy of 990,QQ on B'shf and B dies after, say, by'tndeaths have occurred In the 0mpany, Awll have p aid 612.50 in as.. seessnts. And can sollect $1,000, get nuvergr hanxds e return on his in Iappeaks that there is a set of ghouls whokne a business of prowling about ~ ~inws, iscye~lngthe sick, aged or In ~ i~n talngAt policies on the lives chpe~in Ii, other words, the~y onth obhaces of a certain person's *ithin a few weeks. I their "'s~ties after the payment of a nt, the graveyard gain ntheir subject as a bad in dallow the policy to be I death ooours within the theyhave determined to ea'e 1,000 upon the Anenterprising and courageous will probably take on a large o1 xn, .a few small- pox cases, t~dphtheria patients, and, Sperhalis risk a love-sick - - dcparator, we will say, de ~wlot'Tlht's dies fthe* d1iotyspepsia, alcoholism, 14~,ol age and general de Id~ lading features of the 'estimates that by the time tenassessments of $1 on risks, or $,250 in aready on which *%09 If the market t * has no cadavers asdown''and forfeits - o~ltosin grain and 241recognize the simi aen~aixoperations and the p~fybusiness,..-CMoagio , a 4ent of the War. uWard onice said he " would a~ o ci ountry, but if It was * ~the country, its would lage." An aun an *~lhshows that Artemusp i ~ widentertained, is todby .paa eVmees It neof the who 'were - _ baJ tle of *zesbr' )ueof both armdes to the chea in hw0ct of the Oon. gA0reattt as ele ~Ourage end Mfbl;n bill benA ay lyig ine. at eM h during 1te~ his wife and oeah _ h i sto r h e ror e that she wrote so many letters during the war, -under similar ciroumstanoes that she could not recall any pationlar case The woman drew a letter from her pocket that had been torn into pieces In the folds of the note and was then stitohed together with fine sewing cotton. "Do you remember this letter'?" she asked. Mrs. idvermore recognized her - manahip and admitted her authorship to the lett. The first four pages were written to his wife and mother, at the dictation of a young soldier who had been shot through the ungs, and was dying of the wound. Then he had com pleted the letter by the addition of three pages written by herself, beside the dead husband and son, in which she sought to comfort the lonely and bereaved rela. tives. "I thought my daughter-in-law and I would have died when we heard that John was dead but for this letter," said the worn and wear -looking woman. "It comforted us'bo , and by-and-by, when we heard of other women similarI afflioted, we sent them the letter tore till it was torn in pieces. Then we sewed the pieces together and made copies of the.letter, which we sent to those of our acquaintance who'm the war bereft. "But Annie, my son's wife, never got over John's death. She kept about, and worked and went to church but the life had gone out of her. Eight years ago she dAd of gastric fever. One day, a little . before her death, she said "'Mother, if you ever find Mrs. Liver more, or hear of her, I wish you would .gve her my wedding-ring, which has never been off my finger since John put it there, and which will not be taken off till I am dead. Ask her to wear it for John'a sake and mine, and tell her it was my dying request." "I live eight miles from here," con tinued the woman, " and when I read in 'the papers that you were to lecture here to-night, I decided to drive over and give you the ring, if you will acoept it." Deeply affected by this touching nar rative, not a particular of which she is able to recall, Mrs. Livermore extended her hand, and the widowed and childless woman put the ring on her finger, with a fervently uttered benediction. rhoe " Smartness " of Worms and Fish. " I have made some of my most in teresting studies of nature in the morn ing," said Beth Green. " That is the time to see the insects at their best-to see the mud wasps stinging the spiders without killing Lbhem, and packing them away where they are kept ahve for weeks to be used when needed. I have seen a small green worm hanging down on a web. An ant stationed on the limb above, pulls up the web and, just as the worm comes within reach of his tiny claws, down drops Mr. Worm. The ant pulls up again and again the worm lets out another reef and goes down. This sort of thing continues until finally the ant grapples the worm and both go down together in a grand scramble, in which the worm manages to shake off the ant. This leaves the worm on the ground. His web is so strong that the other end is still fastened tc die limb above. What does Mr. Ant do ? Give it up ? No, sir; I have seen him go up tho trunk of that tree, crawl out on to the _same limb and go to work again pullhng up the same web. Then after another battle I have known the ant to get the better of the fight and lug the worm off to his hoJh, three rods "WVhy, talk about reasoning *powers ! The perseveranco and instinct of these little creatures is wonderful. - People go out to fish. They splash around, stand up in the boat, drop their lines three feet away, and wonder because they don't catch trout. They forget that trout can see. Fish learn the tackle and fish are, as a rule, local in their habitation. - There are not as many gypsies among fish as among men. Any man who will take the pauis to study fish-or who will remember a tithe of what he reads about them, can catch them. They are smart, but our brains will beat them. I remember once of fishing for salmon trout for a long time and taking nothing. Finally I concluded to get down and look into the water, and so, throwing my coat over my head, I got the required shade andpeered down. The salmon would sail up and look at the minnow. Then, with a quick dart, he would close his teeth around one-half the minnow and open them again like a filalj. He did not attempt to eat the minnow, and half of the severed body would drop to the bottom. When it had fallen to the bed of the lake the salmon would go down leisurely and eat it. The next time when I drope my hook and felt the quick bite of te trout I let ont enough line to send the hook to the bot toin, .and the result was that when the salmon went down for his meal he was fooled and I had him. "- Utia Observer. Ancient Mexico. Readers who know anytig of Central America-Yucatan, patof Mexc n Gautemula, and the wonderful ruins of temples and towns built in ages long, long a 6.-wll hear with pleasure that a scientioi archesological expedition is to be sent .nd the authority of France and he U ta, to make further oxpora~nsin that mysterious country. he of pmoter of the expedition is Mr. te Lrillard, of New York, by whom the eater oft cot nhig will be lacking; catateim ~riant bas-r411efsand inscriptions will taken, whereby scholars in all part. of the world will be enabled to study relies of eltilization not less interesting than theol monument. of Egypt and Assydia. what is ahready known, it is anPpc that the builders of the 7nf T~ b -P AM S of the prooess. r is olaimed trailjway g ated in creosote wMi last for twenty years or more in good ooiton. SueAn, socording toanom ent a Tan locomotives on some Russian rl.l roads are heated with crude .aph which is introduced into the'tender as I comes from the well. Tan eggs5 Of ftpUt areplceld~ bysideto fthrm the 1 that the gnat-boat, e the life-boat, h" rhepty Of righV3tiWVlfaheni GAsas from the furnaes In Iron diz tWets re very inurious to trees ! the neighborhood. Tho SulphuiirlObi ~oii taied in the gases ii abed by h leaves.rbdbyIi Tnu gleam of falling water attracts certain insect as werfully as does artifdial light.. In d, moth after moth have been seen flying deliberately into a waterfall, where they disappear. TonoDoomme rubber, cover the articles with charcoal dust, place them in a closed vessel and raise the temperature to 9OP E0. Let them remain for several hours and they will be found free from all odor. BY 13PATMG for some moments on a glass goblet previously moistened with water, and next rinsing tWfe glass in pure distilled water, this liquid will be found by the usual tests, to contain ammo i and nitrio acid. TiA tetse fly of Africs, whose bite proves fatal to domestic ainimals lays its eggs within the flesh at every ite, and the animal which dies from the effect proves to contain myriads of, white worms in Its stomach. Tuu Chinese pharmacopceia contains instruction for making various kinds of wine known as mutton, deer, dog or snake wmie. The ingredients of mutton wine are a sheep, milk, brown sugar, honey, raisins and various drugs. . PrDAMa one or two bits of roast meat on the leaves of the drosera rotundqfolia shows that the leaves fed were of a. brighter green than those starved. The supply of nitrogren had evidently assisted in the production of chlorophyl. A Naw use of the micro-telephone is~ that of finding underground water-i courses, The micro-phones are buried in the soil on a hillside, and each con nected with a separate battery and telephone. By listening at the telephone at night, the faintest murmur or gurgling of water can be detected. Not Fit to Travel. As a traveler of some experiec gathered during the progress of ten an nual tours in Europe, with the advan tage of a knowlego of all continental languages and many years' sojourn in European capitals, I should like to say, at the very outset of my story, that some persons are not fitted to travel at all.] I refer, in the first place, to the aged1 and ailing, who hope to derive improve-1 mont in health from an ocean voyage 4 and who, in nine cases out of ten, are' worn out by the discomforts of an ocean 4 journey ; in the second p lace, to men and women who, for a life-time, havingi led what I may call a provincial exist.-] ence, are unsuited to the variety, the i singular usages and (to them) Bohemian- I4 ism of certain pliases of foreign life ; in <4 the .third place1 to wealthy sybarites, I who will miss, in the most splendid ho-f( tels of Europe, a thousand-and-one triji ties to which they are used at home, ad a which not even money will command i abroad. The averge American in Eu-li rope exacts all the surroundings he has a had in the New World and all the gloriest r of the Old, to give the environment Ii charm and novelty. No wonder the reality falls short of 1 what his lively imagination has depicted, t and I can, readily pardon the ill-humor l1 he shows just before emnbarking. I met m a typical person of this description on lI theway from Paris toLondon, kiehailed la frmte glorious West was apparentl r a man about 50 years 01 age, intelligent k well-spoken, and thoroughly disgusted t with Europe. He stood at the buffet atp Amiens, seized upon some pastry, tossed 1 a ten-franc piece at the waitress, and o gocketed the change without counting ia it. I entered into conversation' with:a him, and ho prompy rleed his feel mnsi respect of MEuopean tour. t1 "es, air," said ie ; " I landed twop weeks ago, and have seo all I wanted to see of these part.. sI shall run upto s' Scotland for a week, and then sail for c home. I've heard a good deal of 'routes ii for tourists 'uince I've been in the old y country, but L've only just now hit the ~ right routes It's London, Liverpool, New York. Detroit, and thank God 1".. 1 New York lAme. Cbrreeponent. Goiag Out to See a Man. This expression, which is often heard was origmnated by"Artemus Ward. 's The story of It inception was as fol lows: Once the lamented humorist was i engaged to fill an evening in the lecture t course of a pouar literary institution of I a New Englndcity. During the lect- C ure an individual who occupied a seat t' on one of the front benches seemed de- I ternmined to resist the speaker's effort, to t< make him laugh. Artemus soon discov- * ered both the listener and his inatten- IC tion, and concentrated all his powers on s< him. For a long time it seemed as If al the man hadth~ejbestof It, but by and P' by one of Browne's queer conceits~ took"h effect. The obstinate fellow gave way, W and laughed and kicked like a whooi.i boy. Artemus .oelpbrated his victoryby coolly annu~. to his aubeye h1 " Ladles and getemen, this will ter- of imaate the frtact, andwe will drop the a curtain for a few momcuet; while the I scenery Is being agenged for the next " ict, the leotatet will tke the Ion a oa ritete at hoaes t idSl no i o me on. OD-At; JLII U,~n . I. lolk beoth e milk~ t whd~e ich i te~ ofte x t sddbe m aordoon, i the ol ad tt should b WARd taon o-(hfgts; o k ineat. ia maother's dt t e ' he whichis the ha e yWie mor~sity. "ht Of loft should be mad t seout materna sucklmng _(exoept InVery tr ,sa0" ff. JTulei (uerifl, 'wde engs the prevalence ot infants m hna siders, that more attention should be pid toaptation ofow's milk- and, Inari ficial lacttdinestit e .Powers of the child. He had 6 oten osved that infants, fed with good OW's milk h9a diarrhea, because tue milk was too strong or given in too great quantity. BATH G CMrMWN.--.Some mothers think when their children t beyond two or three years of age the frequent entire bath can be dispensed with If some of the main facta of physiology were well known and understood every one would perceive that cleanliness of the skin is one of the conditions of good health. It happens when bathings dis regarded that the lungs, kidneys or bow els have more than their own apportion. ment of work. If - they are strono and healthy they may bear the tax without apparent Ill, but, in most cases, a lower ing of the vitality and tone of the sys ten ensues. Large bath tubs are con venient and pleasant, but not indispens able for proper cleaning of the skin. A speedy isonE of the body in pure water, o friction in pure air, [a all that is necesay. When in. olined to use water a uaplioa ion of the flesh brush to theholeper. son in an excellent substitute; es y :n retiring, it relieves nervousness, 3qualizes the circulation, and induces iniet sleep. Mothers,'above al, should ee that their children are well athed. [f their skins are kept actlve and healthy there will not be half the danger from !ever, colds and erpios If your little one is cross and trulsm, and finds no occupation that pleases him, try the effects of a bath; somnetimes It is mnagi-. el, and if tired he wiligo to sleep and awake bright, cheerful and, happy. Do not, as some pepedo, plunge a child in cold water wen he screanas and shrinks from it thinking you are doing a good deed. ~ature must be the gie If your child has a nervous cos to a shock of this kind is only exhausting aind injurious. The Task of Writing. Readers in general little know what paixns writers and actors take and what roubles they endure in order to give ~hem amusement or information. Tak bray's troubles cropped out in his writ ngs, and no one who has read his Ballad >f Bouillabaisse, and read between its ines, will forget his noble self-devotion o his suffering wife and little daughitdrs. Elow Tom Hood wrote his best tings on us bed when alnost dyin, and how 3rimaldi, when suffering frmmelan sholla, was advised to go and see that uinny rogue, Grimaldi, are a few inci Lent that have let the public behind he scenes somewhat, but the pains Lnd tronbles of the majbrity, who are Lenounced as stupid or mere fools when heir work had been done wider ciroum-. tances which call for* sypthy, will emain a sealed book. Aninstance vhich illustrates this patience and enidur ace of writers has just been made pub to. There are few newspaper readers in Lie United States who have not reads ad inghed with aching sides at the real hu ior of him who is known as the Bur ngton Hawke man; and the majorit aveprbbylmpehm asa a~nd sy-cheeked disciple of Momu#who ept hiis humoer on-tap all'the time and irned it on for the amusement of the ublic just as the freak seized him. A ster of his declining an invitation to a ollege reunion has just found its wy ito the presswhich will put the mate a a different Ugt He Bays: Mrs. Burdetts health-if the por l e sufferer's combination of aches an ains and helplessness aybe designated ysuch a sarcastic appellato..4as been eadily failing all wine and we have ame down to this seagr ishgiid to see Old Ocean and its breezes may dol ~hat the doctors and mountains and rairies have failed to do. And here we are rating. "Her little serene highness" ci utter helplessness, unable to stand dlone (for yearg she has been unable to wal her hel less hands folded in her ap; mst edressed, carried about, inred for like a ba, suftering from iountless pains and s day an night, bad I cannot leave her even for a fw Lays., No one at Chautauqua will feel1 he disappointment as we do, for we had >lanned to go there together. If she ould go with me, I would be glad enough I >creep to Chautauqua on my knees. I [er lf 'has been a fountain of strength me. In ten long years I have never ten the look of pain out of her e, audi >r more than half so logI yae i ien her sitting In patient helaessuess, id I have never heard a com Laning murmur from her lie while she hS served as those who cms tand and'i alt, never questinigand ,ee dot. g the wsdomnandth gdesof ta reher whose hand had blaidW upon ir ao hevl. The iatflptenee her life hsbeen a ansteg ebk to own impatiene, a n i w suferins vasn d known and believed th Love. that knows IQfear" and the faith i at "knows no donat% Suoh a letter nes no comment; It ] Eating Pain: of Eummtes. U A gentlsnan, puai throghLn tantedat the sih of several Lea bodies. eyhad bendead for v9(ers mthey ome T~OtCO~? Yes the the of the babyinthe 'l~~iZVery Y" Sold veW_ b; its pum h eyes from its ilioounte ce;its ducleb, and aun and oott. =7 016 eralunrelated person e, hwhom the great privilegeof !bb7hayve its fitst picture taken was When the pbotograph man dame Ot hia den ver much airohed, with. a$ieoe of black -asi in his hand, withieveal spots on it ten for e, nose, aud mouth, and a pudgy one of rotud cheeks, each one gazed at it *Ith awe and admiratiou, "86 like the little darling " "Tlie sweetest thing lever saw." "Isn't itperfeotU wonderful, his very eresdon--o %e and-and-sen& "One dozen cabinet size i" said the ypng' father in a 'business like tone. He could hve hugged the photographer, the baby, dhd the company, he Vaa so happy and proud ; but a man does not like to express all he thinrs, so he kept witl4n bounds. Then they squeezed the baby seveal hundred times, and put on his cloak and mittens and a comforter, and more com forters, and an af han andleggings, and when he looked e ar little Esquimau they all filed after him, one with his carriqge cushions, another carrying his toys and all the rest with some badge of slavery that belonged to him. And who, seeing them, could help saying, "It's love, love, love that makes the world go round ?'--Detroit Free Press. A UIf DoUar Trial. Mr. Ernest King, editor of the Fall River (Mass.) Sn, thus discourses upon the merits of St. Jacobs Oil: "Sufferimg with rheumatic pains I was Didymus as to remedies. I read of St. Jacobs Oil and said here goes for a half dollar tripl. I bought a bottle and before it was half used e screw-wrench pains had gone and troubled me no longer." Tan are a variety of little oircum. stances in life which, like pins in a lady's dress, are necessary for keepin it together, and giving it neatness an) elegance.-Beecher. Ah, ha I So the old man has noticed 'em too. However, the above was written before the inven tion of the blessed safety pins, we have no doubt.-Peo'. Sun. Ooze 0. W. HanwmnT,' of the Forest Park Restaurant, St. Louis Mo., was en tirely cured of rheumatism by St. Jacobs Oil, says the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Sromas for children used to begin : "Once upon a time there lived__." ow they begin : "'Vengeance, blood, death,' shouted Battleonake, Jim," or rords to that effect. 'Bhreat, Brenehtw1, ad Lung Diseases a spcaty. Send two stamps for large treatise givig self-treatment. Address WolD's Di. 12ax nt ExoA. AsoIATxoN, Buffalo, N. Y. A DON VIVANT~ one evening told one of his bottle- companions that he intended to leave a sum of money to be spent at his fnneraL. His companion asked, "Whetej6 isaid money was to be spent in Wgor returning ?" and was answered :" Goig, to be sure ;for when you ,geturn you know I shan't be with you.. Two-Thlrda or a Bottle cures. Dn. B. V. Prsuos, Buffalo, N. Y.: Dear Bir I have been taking your "Favorite Proscrip ion" for "female weakness." Before I had taken It two days I began to feel stronger. I have taken but two-thirds of a bottle and believe I am cured. Gratefully, Mae. HI. C. LoYaTT, Wateka, Ill. Ma. JoHN .UnIGHT 15 saidito be very charitable in an unobtrusive way. The most conspicuous th' in his mddest home by the family1i* is the librryof 1,200 volumes, whch was presente to him by his admirers after the passage of the corn laws. The library -cost 825.000. ________ Sicix and bilious headache, and all derange ments of stomach and bowels cured by Dr. Pierce's "Pellets"--or anti-bijious granules. 25 oents a val. Nocoheapboxes to allow waste of virtues. By druggist. BIrus rise from the ground most easily racing the wind, AmU metees eratntude, BorADtAA Axi.. June 14, 1880. H. H. Wania b o.: Afre--i'othefaithful use of your Safe Eidney and Liver Cure I attribute the erakient and gratif cure of a painful striotureof theuretha, wblbas afflicted my son for seven long years. Every other known remedy baa been tried but had failed. A. A. WAI Kn. Tus death of two centenarians is an nounced. Mar Welch, 107 years of age, died at eyour, (it. William Bolster, 'whb die at Oppenheim, Fulton county, N. Y., would have reached his 102d year next hristmas. BEDImENT or mucous In tihe uritie is a sure Indication of disease. Take Kidney-Wort. A PHIr.ADarLBrAN has champage ierved hot for soup at his company 'in iers. _____________ " Well's Health Benevwer" restores health md viocures Dyspepuia, Impotence, Sexual )ebili . *1. Druggists. Bend for pamphlet o .WILos, Jersey 04y, N. J. Tani aispiratins of some ministers nrow him~ and hire every year.--Steu Gmwaa Deb~i~y Sleeusness, Depression ,d estion and BpnlWeakness, cured by E. Pinkhama' Vegetable Compound. Ax umrella and a dime novel are the amnal baggeg which the girl of the pe los dypepis, Indigestion deprealsof onns ; also ga prentatIvr against fever and and o~l intermittent fevers, the "lewro horated Elixir of Culisaya," made l hIr~ss sthe bsttonie; ad fo~ idnt fr~fever ot other sIckaes, i ,000,000 CABBABR PLA fl IowaL, dfi 6:d 214t of December last. I was see with a suddert attackc of n'eqrala In the e est gving me eruciating pin 1 almost preven I Ing breath ing. Mt puli, usually. 80, fel to 251 Intense nausea of the stomach Auceeded, and cold,Ocamimy sweat coveredl iny sntire bod3 The attendi h ysician could donothi fig to rc 1'* ,ieve me. 1tr' suflering for threo hours, Phought-as I had been usili ST. JAcons O1, wit1 md eet for rheumatic pains-I would ti 11 siaturated a piece of flannel, large enouig t cover my chent, %yith the 011, and a plied it. Th relief was almost Instantaneous. n one hour was entirely free from pd'In, and would hav taken thQ train to fill an appointment 'that ni bi i boring town ha my Mrends not dif at nme. As It was. I took the nxighlt train fo trn - ef11 St. Lotdis; and have not been troublei OSUtp ITER oahBt. flad2~ELE of DTeDmb lasti ai twy it arm nes ac d t etoratanio rpetes liquoo ofcommrcepre ie Mi as temafst andcmow reliabu oflal8s0,mchics to . i Ftor asa of thl Dgstmah Ducelean h ugta Ien belen U s . J econsOL wt god et soun rhuai ps-Iwud r sat.ae ic W of" 'lan'.', ..a.., enogT coermy ..., wihte i.. n plidU reie wa flmos AddaretaTus . Amu onhu wasentrel Add ro m .7i0. ndn Detoldl ,i$,. ,h rinr t o lai ait et. htng 1t$5icihrn tow$0Trg I h*;a d rtctdget eacd n ANDt as oo h N1fh tai ot roefeen i~.ny one t and ano b-eetoublo:> MAKE ENS LAY niEsn Ih ayefrmnarc isu to tnd hse o Oa b ody a m e a ofort to tr Hoe' aln ahterda ad of itheoan Podericae abstlutioy pat y t o r It h r les es a nd I d so av e o er rhysolan eveywhee,:ssd with male. anora0c liqore tha aoney e 1 orib ao i u 1h0,fet n mc __en______t gece .ly. NTLEMEN: I1rg have sd Il. sii~ owrain' veriheduooniethe ood thi me les Ir st atae ballied som oftofr mo minen I ind y pre rI abl? npr ento tD atahuraleasilyhmade.o0sstto Address a m a AC.,Agat, toitu, Prsdto -aisealaCRAd sPw..uer g and lpte ~nc.. ~o.3g t~lt' P~lalt..o $5 to $ZQ l K asan waar woath e 1 * d to CIo., Pbortlndo, Mal Circulnr R T O C,ONSTIPAI ed Const~enmd IV.*o the p ;zt , - ee o2 sndo. ot 'qatrengthiens the *0reai Ma=nedM 1i allve in-ds orTImna evn - - ar C e eies; Mye 'beforo Wild, 3 hdMr 01ther cf the~sao'trema -= PRICE 6 f. US AL MARE E MALE re Able Faulty. Hea ul andbea locat ion Instrnellon thorough, !re t ote. Sesaloa begn Serpt. 200, sVr alogOe. REY. A. MBA p Wu'P. Dicni-ms STRONG'S PECTORAL. PILL$ A NU IREMDY "U3 COLDS AND RHEUMATl8 Ensure healthy appetite#, good digeston, regularity the bowels. A pascroos x0 to but. as s'axArmse soothi and bracing the nor a stced and Ving 1igo ~~ eures ahoiudmotPioe.s ev and healt o ribr o of t bos. . b D For PamnphletA ad essm P. O.B0 d,e. ty. HEALTH IS WEALTH Da. E. 0. WTs's Hath ANf BArx TbaTumt soc for Hysteri, Dliziness, Convulslons, T ervou H Mental Depression, Lose of WemryP 111r. G' PECTORAA L ILL-.A Eure Olthgy capse~ odr-exeton, rhekuladtt - mihery boecay An dacou .One bo wil O&u recnt sse. soathin and cn gt onerohth's tereatment Oin d ollr condedwth tive~ lbola, ofte will nd the pu.~ chaor our writtena aante0 ox retur the mon ity. e by ec.l for HsserN, DChainesstonvl.lo. Orders.oby eadach pr m tal tedeto , -oeo eor'P Cincinnati~g, c Ham yovrrion, &hc Dladstn nc' Whoi ctis one moEs rTeate.edla cswToLeahdDeroitlvdbyu foCaadboas, a cmAnd alwinth ivn dolrshe RTlWenSTept 4~ by A.I LA.UN A.POaf9tiu , 0 . O.40% y malpomyatnde lto.nt in.heWET. Cincnnat, Hailt nOINDAyto, SAW ILL.. "W Whc IMPheDEROE Retee r 25e. D.Eroit,4 . De Coa.da.. E abind aill an nuthnie acOuthWsT. ven the rise and all p o GreInd t oma Empire fo secme pesan Genr eral tic Agent ; Withunivesal*.og i.. lacouswhoeedsakgaa ture bevra.AsLF k yorN dOrggs or bni nO ARENS WANTEED -O T. At ai g oll an ofuthe eoonst prfcti' of?l entt n codenrylIrclars I e:nclui u a-tcy~ Pubrisher'id n A l nthe G a..........Twmn~lesht-8es-. LIEVE AT. ONO.sOresvnmed and .etees fteNw ei Eye cotins a fe hsora Giav PAI enjth most f~ll REMERoY @ the World vr grnlathed - lid.Pres rTCENTL a btleSI. Ao.skflrnt. Ene no oth. Wihu~eslro '-Us DNDiFFG for thei.) -~ul .-~CYWL Al cenbltriaMto - rostratin, eed. Del 14. C mij* gAtaa reonatne of te le pic4 R ELIEVEB AT ONe. ue nlme.adwei no other.