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amU bod, V A.4of Ukholds Ai winds of dawu. A stper's Miagaden. - Gambling. -- be no limit to the re for avibling. The developd he artisan and the business a biakeh of civilization. The Speculation has seized upon -and all degrees, from the 6 nwho toss pennies in the e church deacons who man at the charity fairs. It will with astonishment, however, staid, sober old State of Penn has promoted a. species of which exceeds in grotesque of the kind that has yet, ered. A stroll through blo.aley," in Chicago, which is S a confusion of Boards of ftket-shops' and pool-rooms, of checks from neighbor feno banks, would lead one gambling had there been art, and that the most ative spirit or the most desperate sport could be with every possible va Sgamig. But the Quaker State h eWted a new scheme. It is known &ith-bed insurance, but might be r sonratelyd signated ha graveyard 'A-The orig this now system of hwably th assessment of lwhidh has led to organise o various associations erea t4 a th, railroad men and ther- trade for the payment upon the death of any ers. This payment is 6n assessment levied upon g members. It has been t ork satisfactorily for a time, tthe ystei is peculiarly exposed to n r. It has finally been seized upon ~'iiPebnsylvania by professional experts, S4ho run the busmness very much after te manner of "policy-shops." Death ~ ed insurance is described as follows : company formed for the purpose, ora decayed life-insurance company, adopts the assessment principle of lite i*nsurmce. All the policyholders are assessed at a certain fixed rate upon the *~4ahof any person whose life has been ~' Isurd, or example, whenever a OOtievery person owning a 000OO, usually :upon the life So~nohez' on, is assessed $1.25, hodr in proportion. efrnr ho has a neighbor, B, ~ ~eaerliybelieved to be at the point of ~de~h,1owif A can take out mn some oommodatig company a policy of *i00on B'slie, and B dies after, say, oIyten deaths have occurred in the com~zpany, A will have p aid $12.50 in as Spessus. And can collect #1,000, get ~..~tl aery handsome return on his in S It appears that there is a set of gh'ouls a wo make a busjess of growling about ,honses, dicy~fgthe sick, aged or in ~,1rm, anid takig~ ot policies on the lives ;N ok .hpesn In other' words, the~y tor chace ofacertain person's WithIh a few weeks. If their sr"urwties after the payment of a taon, the graveyard gain rtheir subject as a bad in rd allow the policy to be If death ooiours within the they have determined to ~yrealize $1,000 upon the .4~ enterprising and courageous M~ ill probably take on a large 91 mn a few small-pox cases, ~'to Apththeria patients, and, VUAPerhaih, risk a love-sick peto, we will say, de ' "oshort " on twenty-five ~$~~~ohBright's disease of the ~**cdyspepsia, alcoholism,. jl;old age and general de ~4et leading features of the Sestimates that by the time out ten assessments of $1 on twehty-fve riaks, or $250 in ' haUbve aooo ead on which $10. If temarket S4d he has no cadavers - e 1a down " and forfeits - ulators in grain and yrecognise the simi - -op erations anid the business.-CMoago 2;" eaodent of the War. iWard once said he " would dfor his ountry, but, if it was to the country, hie would okiage." An amusing an ~vshows that Artemus' p hi. entrtanedistold b oreof the who wore 4th btte oftfrsoo' Rnos of both armies - squiet seelu in front of the Con wes bondng wn -- s ~rest, raw 20t Was cele Oourageud~ of 1 ingwm-1 bitose his wif and mI Lh 4ad ed P Mrs. Livermore replied that she wrote so many letters during the war, , under similar .circumstanoes, that she could not redall any particular case. The woman drew a letter from her pooket that had been torn into pieces in the tolds of the note and was then stitched together with fine sewing cotton. "I Do you remember this letter?" she asked. Mrs. Ivermore recognized her pen manship and admitted her authorahip to the letter. The first four pages were written to his wife and mother, at the dictation of a young soldier who had been shot through the lungs, and was dying of the wound. Then she 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 weary-looking woman. " It comforted us both, and by-and- b, when we heard of other women similarl, aflioted, we sent them the letter to re , till it was torn in pieces. Then we sewed the pieces together and maoge copies 0 the letter, which we sent to those of oni acquaintance whom the war bereft. "But Annie, my son's wife, never goi over John's death. She kept about, ani worked and went to church but the lift had gone out of her. Eight years ag< she !o gastric fever. One day, i little. before her death, she said "Mother, if you ever find Mrs. Liver, more, or hear of her, I wish you would -ive her my wedding-ring, which ham never been off my finger since John pui it there, and which will not be taken of] till I am dead. Ask her to wear it foi John's 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 acoopt it.' Deeply affected by this touching nar rative, not a particular of which she if able to recall, Mrs. Livermore extended her hand, and the widowed and childlese woman put the ring on her finger, wit: a fervently uttered benediction. rhe " Smartness " of Worms and Fish. " I have made some of my most in teresting studie~s of nature in the morn ing," said Beth Green. " That is the time to see the insects at their best-tc see the mud wasps stinging the spiders without killing them, and packing them away where they are kept alive for weeks to be used when needed. I h ave seen a small green worm banging down~ ont 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 wormh 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 the Jimb above. What does Mr. Ant do?~ Give it up ? No, sir; I have seen him go up the trunk of that tree, crawl out on to the same limb and go to work again pulling up the same web. Then after another battle I have known the aut to get the better of the fight and lug the worm off to his hole, three rods "WVhy, talk about reasoning *powers ! The perseverance 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 pains to study fish-or who will remembher 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 and ,peered down. The salmon would sail up and lock at the minnow. Then, with a quick dart, he would close his teeth around one-half the minnow and open them again like a flasi). He did not attempt to cat 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 dropped my hook and felt the quick bite of the trout I let out enough line to send the hook to the bot toto, -and the result was that when the salmon went down for his meal he was fooled and I had him."- Utfoa Obserer. Aneut Mexico. Readers who know anything of Central America-Yucatan, part of Mexico, pna~ Gautemala, and the wonderful rums ol temples and towns built in ages long, lon6 --wll hear with pleasure that a senoarchusological expedition is tc be sent under the authority of France and the United States, to make furthei explorations in that mysterious country. The cbief promoter of the expedition is Mr. 'eter Lrlrd, of New York, by whom the reater atof the oostmenl nothin will be lacking; casts of the im otaIbas-reliefsand inscriptions will etaken, whereby scholars in all parts of the world will be enabled to study relies of oitilisation not less interesting than the ld onuments of Esi~ and it Is suthat the builders ofths j~sa itntiakrelationjs withCam ndava, If the~y uge as g0 s IS6 Iin h the intervals .r iniammi that e fatedvi in rGM% *a 1at for s* or, moIn good oonition. dSgeo, Iso-rdin to~ nt. nsvl soete o "Out S~~~~~40r~m .s Alie htri~te .I--ts mor In good co"dtcom dyspepsia, Tan locomotives on some Rumssan ril. roads are heated with crude .h%.4 which is introduced into the tender s comes from the wells. TUNg9Of Agat-pe,gho id by W& to for~mthe A mr of #ib-oe -so that the gnat-boat, lk l*1f-ot ha eroperty of rightingi tself when' GAsas from the furnaces in iron dis tricts re very In Urious to trees in the negbrood. r url o acid con taed in the gases is aobed by th leaves. Tun gleam of falling water attracts certain insWot as Powerfully as does artifilal ht. In Icelmd, moth after moth hav beenseen flying deliberately into a waterfall, where they disappear. ToDoDomme rubber, cover the articles with charcoal dust, place them in a closed vessel and raise the temperature to 94*1 . Let them remain for several hours and they will be found free from all odor. BY 33BRATMG for some moments on a glass goblet previously moistened with water, and next rinsing tire ass in pure distilled water, this liquid will be found, by the usual tests, to contain amimoifa and nitric acid. Tim tsetee fly of Afric, whose bite proves fatal to domestic aln 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. Tan Chinese pharmoopceia contains instruction for making various kinds of wine known as mutton, deer, dog or snake wine. The ingredients of mutton wine are a sheep, milk, brown sugar, honey, raiss and various drugs. PnA0IMG one or two bits of roast meat on the leaves of the drosera rotundefolia shows that the leaves fed were of a. brighter green than those starved. The suppy of nitrogen had evidently assis in the production of ohlorophyl. A Nnw use of the micro-telephone is~ that of finding underground water-' courses. The micro-phones are buried im the soil on a hillside, and each con neoted with a separate battr and telephone. By listening at the telephone at night, the fntest murmur or gurgling of water can be detected. Not Fit to Travel. As a traveler of some experieince gathered during the progress of ten an nual tours in Europe, with the advan tage of a knowlege of all continental languages and many years' sojourn in European capitals, I should like to say, at tho very outset of my story, that some persons are not fitted to travel at all. I refer, in the first place, to the aged and ailing, who hope to derive improve ment in health from an ocean voyage and who, in nine cases out of ten, are worn out by the discomforts of an ocean journey ; in the second place, to men and women who, for a lif-time, having. led what I may call a provincial exist ence, are unsuited to the variety, the singular usages and (to them) Bohemian ism of certaim phases of foreign life ; in the .third place, to wealthy sybarites, who will miss, in the most splendid ho tels of Europe, a thousand-and-one tri fles to which they are used at home, and which not even money will command' abroad. The averge American In Eu-j rope exacts all the surroundings he has1 had in the New World and all the glories of the Old, to give the environment charm and novelty. No wonder the reality falls short of what his lively imagination has depicted, and I can readily pardon the ill- humor he shows just be oeembarking. I met a typical person of this description on the wa from Paris to London. ie hailed from te glorious West, was apprntl a man about 50 years of age, intelligent well-s ken, and thoroughly disgusted with Europe. He stood at te btgfet at Amiens, seized upon some pastry, tossed a ten-franc piece at the waitress, and >~ocketed the change without oognting it. I entered into conversation wit him, and he promptly relieved his feel ingsim respeot of hais uopa tour. " Yes, sir," said lie; "I lanedtwo weeks agand have see all I wranted to see of these parts. s I shall zr up to Scotland for a week, and then sail for home. I've heard a good deal of 'routes for tourists ' since I've been in the old country, but I've only just now hit the right route. It's London, Llvroo, Nw York, Detroit, and thank Gd1 Ne~w York 7Ynee Cbresondnt. Goiag Out to See a Man. This expression, which is often heard~ was originated byArte~mus Ward.'I The story of Its incept'on was as fol lows: Once the lamente humorist was engaged to fill an evening in the lecture course of a pouar literary institution of a New Engln ct.During the lect ure an individual who occupied a seat on one of the front benches seemed de terrained to resist the speakee's efforto to make him laugh. Artemus soon discov ered both the listener and his inatten tion, and concentrated all his powers on him. For a long time it seemed as if the man had thebet of it, but by and byone of Browne's queer conceits took eec.The obstinate fellow gave wy and lauged and kicked like a soo-' boy. Areus oelebrated his victory by ] coolly annoulng to his audiene: "Lalsand getee, this will tere. ininate the frtact, and we will drpthe curtain for a few moments ; wiethe ceeyis being m edfor the next Act, helocturer wiltk the 406io10 I toout to-se a mai," adwih per. frid ldthe 4tomfor ~efeae&him *a l~~S old Bi our. O ~.~tbe hestt" yugman writes.,N re hnestfor pay, see honest mrl I na ema fel of ie 5ilk Wo4l ini a st it the condit to flimstt ton of infats;ot like mother's milk, Utprodos rhea, which is the cOef Oause of the e cessive morality. e Cnsierst fort should be made to seoure muera sucklig (except in very rare case M.Jul~,e nrmk wbl A~en the prevalence of Infanle diarrhe oc siders that more attention should be pa to adaptation of ow's milk, and, In a noial lactation, to the digsve powe of the child. He had often obeery< that infants fed with god cow's milk h diarrhea, because the milk was t strong or given in too great quantity. BATHING OHDiu.--4ome mothe think when their children t beyo, two or three years of age te freque entire bath can be dispensed with. some of the main facts of physlolog were well known and understood eve one would perceive that cleanliness the skin is one of the conditions of go health. It happens when bathing I d regarded that the lungs, kidneys or bo els have more than their own apportic ment of work. If they are atong ai healthy they may bear the tax wtho apparent ill, but, in most cases, a low( ing of the vitality and tone of the sy tem ensues. Large bath tubs 'are co; venient and pleasant, but not indisper able for proper cleaning of the skin. speedy sponging of the body in pu water, followed by frietion in pure, a is all that is necessay. When disi dlined to use water a thorough applic tion of the flesh brush to the"whole son is an excellent substitute; es on retiring, It relieves nervousnes equalizes the circulation, and induo quiet sleep. Mothers, above all, shou see that their children are well bathe If their skins are kept active andhealt there will not be half the danger Lro tever, colds and eruptions. If your litt one is cross and troublesome, and fn no occupation thab pleases him, ,try ti effectij of a bath; sometimes It -is mas cal, and if tired he willtgo to sleeD ai awake bright, cheerful and. happy.~ I not, as some people do, plunge a chi in cold water when he screanms ai shrinks from it, thinking you are doli a good deed. Naturenmust be the gld If your child has a nervous constihiti< a shock of this kind is only exhaustii and injurious. The Task of Writing. Readers in general little know wJ pains writers and actors take and wh troubles they endure in order to gi them amusement or information. Thac eray's troubles cropped out in his wr mngs, and no one who has read his Ball of B3ouillabaisse, and read between lines, will forget his noble self-devoti to his suffering wile and little daughtM How Torn Hood wrote his best things his bed when almost dying, andh< Grimaldi, when suftering from mela cholia, was advised to go and see th funny rogue, Grimaldi, are a few i dents that have let the public behli the scenes somewhat, but the pai and tronbles of the majbrity, who a denounced as stupid or mere fools wh< their work had been done under ciront stances which call for' sympathy, w remain a sealed book. An instan< which illustrates this patience and eidu ance of writers has just been made pul lic. There are few newspaper readers the United States who have not read at laughed with aching sides at the real hi mor of him who is known as the Bui Iington Hawkeye man; and the majorli have probably imapined him as a r un< rosy-cheeked disciple of Momu#wl kept his humor on- tap all'the time at turned it on for the amusement of ti public just as the freak seized him. [etter of his declining an invitation to sollge reunion ha'i just found its wa Lto te press whic~h "Vi1 put the matte n a different light; He says: Mrs. Burdett's health-If the poor li le sufferer's combination of aches ati ains and helplessness may be designate ysuch a sarcastic appellation-has bet tadily failing all minter, and we ha' eome down to this seagirt isld to si If Old Ocean and Its breezes may what the doctors and mountains at prairies have failed to do. And here wea: waiting. "Her little serene highnes. in utter helplessness, nable to staz alone (for years she has been unable walk), her helpless hands folded in h lap; she must be dressed, carried aboui oared for like a baby, suffering fro3 courwtless pains and'aches day and nIgh ajid I cannot leave her even for a fe days. No one at Chautauqua will fe the disappointment as we do, for we ha planned to go there tog ether. If sh could go with me, I would be glad enoug to creep to Chautauqua on my knees Her life'has been a fountain osteng to me. In ten long years I have neve seen the look of pain out of her eyes, an for more than half so long I hav seen her sitting In patient helplessnest mnd I have never heard a con plaining murmur from her lip while sh ias served as those who oiy stand an rait, never questioning end never doubl ng the wisdom and the godess of th !ather whose hand had beplaid p ter so heavily. The .~nu a~n sf her life has been a eqstt tebuk nyonipteIad in ler suffering [aesenadkonad believed tE 610,.. that knows no fear" and the faib hat "knows no doubt.". Such a letter needs no comment; olls its own story.-Philatelphija Prese flakag Paint of flummles. startedat the sight of severu dead bodies. eyhad been dead to over 2,000 yasthywee mummli Where did they come from? Wwao Thebes. Are mocre comipg? Ye There to b are l*~ugbt the the ? tu o these w*ith-the bright. eet baby in the world4 other very youngand very Mbaby; its grandmoer, who never her eyes from its ic oounte its ualeanf an con. andsevralunrelated p. tom the geat privilege of g baby have its rst picture taken was voeuhsed. When the Rhotograph mn came onit of lis den-very muh oed, with a piec of black Inhishand, with-beveral spots on it ded for eyes, noser, and .mouth, and a pudgy out e of rotqud cheeks, each one gazed at it with awe and amtion. "06 like the little darling I" "The sweetest thing I ever saw." "Isnt it prfeotl wonderful, his very eieeon.-eo wie andk'-and---sen4 X-sibs " ,j "One dosen cabinet size W' said the SYP1g father L a 'business like tone, He could vye hugged the photographer, the baby, d the company, he Vas. so j happy and proud; but a man does not i like to express all he thinks, so he kept ti' witn bounds. re Then they squeezed the baby seve'al D hundred times, and put on his cloak and mittens and a comforter, and more com Do forters, and an afgand leggings, and when he looked like a- little qskuimau rs they all fied after him, one with his Ad carriage cushions, andther carrying his nt toys, and all the rest with some badge If of slavery that belonged to him. And 1Y who, seeing them, could help saying, ry "It's love, love, love that makes the of world go round ?"--Detroit Free Press4 xl _ _ _ _ _ [a A Uaf Dollaw Trial. Mr. Ernest King, editor of the Fall River (Mass.) Sun, thus discourses upon ut the merits of St. Jacobs Oil: "Suffering with rheumatio pains I was Didymus as to remedies. I read of St. Jacobs Oil . and said here goes for a half dollar trisl. I bought a bottle and before it was half A used the screw-wrench pains had gone .e and troubled me no longer." Ttamn are a variety of little oircum.. - stances in life which, like pins in a r lady's dress, are necessary for keepin [ it together, and giving it neatness ang legance.-Beecher. A, ha ! So the old man has noticed 'em too. However, d the above was written before the inven tion of the blessed safety pins, we have no doubt.-PeA's Suan. COx,. 0. W. Hnur,'.of the Forest ePark Bestaurant, St. Louis Mo., was en Stirely cured of rheumatism by St. Jacobs 8Oil, says the St. LouisPost-Dispatch. Br SOnrIs for children used to begin : d " One upon a time there lived-" id kow they begin : "'Vengeance, blood, ig death,' shouted Battlesnake, Jim," or e Words to that effect. g Thrnat, Dronebeal, and Lung Dsmease's . a ty.Sendtwo stamps for large treatise rzas~n ManrA SSOCIATION, uffalo, ti. Y. at A BON VIVAN~T one evening toldi one of at his bottle-companions that he intended ye to leave a sum of money to be spent at k- his funeral. .His companion asked, It- "Whe hah isid money was to be ad spent in Wgor returning ?" and was Lis answered:. " ' g, to be sure ;for when rn you return you know I shan't be with 's. you.'" _______ wTwo-Third. er a nottle Cures. n- Dn. 1n. V. PrznDs, Blufalo. N. Y.: Dear Bir at I have been taking your "Favorite Prescrip * taken it two days I began to feel stronger. I have id taken but two-thirds of a bottle and believe I is amn cured. Gratefully, lins. H. 0. LoYarrT re Watseka, Ill. in a. Ma. JoiiN BnIGUT Is saldito be very lii charitable in an unobtrusive way.. The se most conspicuous thn in his modest r. home by the faailym'lis the librryof y. 1,200 volumes, woih was presente to him by his admirers after the passage o of h corn laws. The library -cost i.. 625.000. ________ r- 1BrIC and bilious headache, and all derange 'Y7 ments of stomaah and bowels cured by Dr. I, IPierce's "Pellets"--or anti-bibious granules. 0 o 25 cents a vial. No cheap boxes to allow waste ' of virtues. By druggists. LeI & BDSn rise from the ground most easily a facing the wind, r , Au Editer's Uratitude. . .W r 0o:ir.itohefaithful ust of your Safe Kidney and Liver Our. I attribute the aent adpgatfyg cure o anu strio of the uretha. whobias afflicted my son n Ifor seven longyears. Every other known remedy re hasbeen trie buthad failed. A. A.WAKEII. ogTin death of two centenarians is an dnoun ed. Mar Welch, 107 years of .e age, died at Syour, Ot. William n" Bolster, whb die at Oppenheim, Fulton d county, N. Y., would have reached his a 102d year next hristmas. ar SzrnxzNT or mucous in tlle urine is a sure t, Indication of disease. Take Kidney-Wort. t, A PairA raHrAN has champagno w served hot for soup at his company'n 31 uers. hayM. e "Well's Health Benewer" restores health h and vior, cures Dyspepuia, Impotence, Sexual .Debility. *4. Druggists. Send for pamphlet h to E..Wara, Jerney 04y,N. J. *Txu aspirations of some ministers p prw hire and hire every year. --Sten ,, oetille Jierakd. e GSIRRAr. DbUI lessness, Depression &l jgestion and pnal Weskness, cured by la .Pinkhams Vegetable Qompotund. AR umbrella andi a dime novel are the * usual1 bag e which the girl of the per o riod takes thhr *cameeting. S dysepsia Indlehton depreuoa of fornus; aso a vntattve agais fever and and i tiet feersthe "Fesro' Lt Bpoat lixir of Oall *a, made b Hasrd Co, Nw Y and sold b all is i th bsttoio n ;b a 1 3,000,000 CABBAGE IPLAN 6 @ Iowa, dh the 219t of December last, I was seized with a sudderl attack of lieuralgia in the chitl giving me oxcruciafing pain and alxnt Prcvcnt ing breathing. My pultSd, tisually 80, fell to 25; intense nausea of the stomach ucteeded, and a cold, dlammy sveat covered my sntile body. The attending physician could do noth fig to re lieve me. After - sufiering for threo hours, I ;hought-as I had been using ST. JACOns Or, with ood effect for rheumatic pains-[ would t it, saturated a piece of flannel, large enoug 1 to cover my chest, wyith the 11, and applied it. The relief was nimost instantaneous. In one hour I was entirely free from pa-n, and would have taken tho train to fill an appointment *that ni hgt it1411eigh boring town had my friends not disa d me. As It was. I took the irht train fot 'ny Iomeill St. Lotds; and have not been troubled since. STOMACH ITER The feeble and emaciated, sufibring from dyspepsla or Indigestion in any form, arc advised, for the sake of their Own bodily and mental comfort, to try Hostetter's stoma ach Bittors. Laadles of the most delicate constitution ten tifyv to its harmlessness and its restorative properties. P'hysicians everywhere, 2disgusted with the.aduteratea ligqtora of commerce, presacriba y as the safest and most reliable of all stomachies. For sale by all D~rggists and Dealers _____________ generally. .res ....v..tvre Pilno ~fw tem he p aoiit A ar esn erpe~ anger, i De..ea Address~ Taos o., ADeta, T A THON.H'4r 'd."Ts " JSl . IROH ',AR fDlo'y, t a frnd e Pscdoit n7l boe s mas n ciah h-ei ou d awltak f at, s Xda o phan, Tenu h oheridan . htssd re arek wothlare ab te e Adby mail f r U8~ let0 oat' ?cI. . JOe $5sto Mas., fprery anore Mape. ot f ~1 mA D AND NOT EN diysE tiNe I have E ddhT.TE R O _____ ToXde tnecno ha enn AnEnsh i Ve 1 haf y streo an o i, eels e rasignti couTE tr says ta n pret of b o an CatIr egiv soldr oheae ortlstadlesy atuhrdal' Coea tio owersae boltoyp he is Ie rans onditoPwdr.Dsts tapofl tooe tlgof ener odat eywer 1ot 1,Mas, fomrl Bofr e. * ie rsrin O NDa Powes ad Ipetnce -0nincPaoy aso exte brouh a erio lsevrl ont Vt.1 ~asa hati~o ls~ic sm fouret min n t 00 40 6 r~ FRTHE, PE MAN ,.d oftet disenso is:'o prevalent i soe bW at oS.We end ras ron~ b" nall-ed th& *te Vait cuTeoeUi caon I ep= Whom a~ '4,c~i. Tend ' io "~ b io ___mpicte .od ivinconaya on, ad ,C '4*?1% ;Avobfor ci dd, i-Vlct h nhaeither et those treblvi PRIC $t. US D I 3 6' A LBeMARLE FEMALE IR41.8 T, Onan UAWWSOVA iT, VA. - - Able Faculty. Healf.hful nn4 beaUti1UW loc1 ion Instrction thorough. Tornie lo'. Sessloa beg'n Sept. 20th ordmtui alogae. Jmv. A. hsUBAN ,AU A.s WM -P. DICKuNSlN, STRONG'SPrinigals STRONG'S PECTORAL PIL A SWUMRE MDY tle COLDS AND RHEUMATISM N - Ensure healthy appetite, good digestion, regularity o the bowels. A cx btOA V2xA.1s, - soothing nd brncing the nerr u9g andging and health to every fibio of the bioZ. hiDruglj For PamphletA address P. 0. Box o, l T. t HEALTH IS WEAL.TH DR. E. 0. WVAs's Naiva AND BaAx TaUAYM R; - specidc for Hysteria, Disziness, Convulsions, Neriout Headache Mental Depression, Lose of Memory, Premae ture Old Age, caused by over-exertion, which 'leads te mhisery, decaty and deat. On. box will cure r'eene e ssem, Veicbhrx contains one anohh's treatment. One diollar a b~ox or six boxes for five dollar.; Bent by mail prepaid on rece'pt of price. We guarantee six bo~le. to -eure sph ense. With each order neceied by us for six boxem me. comnienld with five doliars, we will send the pure chas.,r our written guaraatee to return She money f ths - ~ treatment does not effet 4 cure. Guarantees ss oaly by (A. J. .RA1 N, OCsartemge. S. C. Orders by etailoromptlattenedto TAKE TEEE Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton 'RAILR..A ' Which ls the BEST ROUTE betwoen Toledo, Detroit ? Canadas, And all points In ilte NORTIRWEST. IN9D a.A APO)L~s, miT; LO4US And all poInt. in the WEST, PUT '~~ SLEEPERS ON NIGHT TRAINS SAM'L. STEVENSON, General Ticket Agent, CINOINNIATI,0 SAmILLL~ H IRES$ rPROvED ROOT 3 Es ' package make. 6 ions efe ri ttadlietoos.whiotesom a~s fingR - erU c bee s ordrueyater seS AGENTS WANTED FORt TIfF Embaaing full and authenieacons f l nt of anet and modern limes, and includinj ahto @ tho rise and fall the Gree ndton __ middlethudes,bC th1e fedlsstem; therrm ' 11ca, the daseevery and settletment Jl the New -~ft, etc., etc. .Itcontains #2Ti Ane historicat engravings and lau614 most comiplete H istory of the World ever publshed. 8.ond for specimen p es and extra trms to Agent. liFl8 3IIIlVI) UllI0ULAII SAW MILL1. With-tiniversal Log -: $end ros' Joamn. lyoubie Ee.. i-. CritCULAlt8 centric Fristia - Inamotn by 8A LEM IRON WORKS, SA&IV.R Atlanta Ga. Ono of the lest practiord 1otW n f iv c1,untry. Circulars mailed DnEnr Publishers' Uion, Atlanta, Ga......Twety-Siz.-J4 PAINLESS EYE WAIER R ELIEVE8 AT ONOB. Oures inflamed, ad we le Eyes In a few hours. Give. NO I*AIN. NIEST REleIE IS in the world for granulated lido. Price 30 CENTS a bottle. Ask for it,. Hae no other.* -.A I J E , BRISTOL, TJE~~ i tUse D)ANDRIFUUE for the hairy a alaabl N O1t fl hysicin a 6 lei ino p - gQrcarat 10..7~ I 8'A E ItE 00.. 213.N,'AN8. MusICMa IN TALlAN MUSICAt EXPO~f~ )S? 'ryXT ORbflNART COLI - - f ilbatrtig the atM p torda. A06e h 4* n N rtopee m ms ea httdAnofbse yAid ettlmpoyFg