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^' f WlEST.M'SCENTENARY One Hundredth Anniversary of l the Founder of Method ifim. A Statue to the Theologian Unveiled in London, England. jonw wcniiRT. The centenary of John Wwl?y'b death win celebrated with appropriate ceremonies ?>7 f Methodist churches generally throughout Europe and America, and tho life ami work r ' ef the apostle of Methodism were eulogised by the ministers in their sermons. In London, England, a statue erectod in his honor was unveiled, in the presence of a large number of people, in front, of the City Road Chapel, the hrndf|uar(ci-s of tho Wesloyatis. The Ilev. Frederick William Farrar, Archdeacon of Westminster, took Krt in the ceremonies attending the unveilgof the Rtntue, and afterward, with ttlr Robert N. Fowler, ono of thn members of Parliament for London City, addressed a meeting in the City Road Chapel, extolling the virtues of Wesley. Archdeacon Farrar delivored a loug ami eloquent eulogy of John Wesley, in the course of which lie snid tliut he regretted, as a Churchman, that the Church, 100 yenrs ago, had not tho wisdom to assimllalo with the fnisrhtv onthusinsui wliinh un?? to the Wealeyan inovoment. It seemed, ahl tho Arohdeacou, shocking and disgraceful In Christians, hound by a oornmon Christianity, to treat each other with mutual coldness. John Wesley himself, he added, net an example of splendid toleranoo. .The Arohdoaooojin eourlusinn.iomindodthe 1 " eonnr#jpitfon of Ww tronb at rViMmom i'mih, that, the humble, ineck, merciful ami just are 11 of one rollgion, and will so recognise one another when In another world, with the mask off. In New York City a numbor of clergymen conncc tod with the Methodist ohuronee assembled at the Slcthotlird, ,ll<k>k Concern to celebrate the . cue hundredth anniversary. in an appropriate (banner. Itev. Dr.' s. Parsons presided at the meeting, which o|H)iied with prayer at 11 ?>'uh>ck, the l?our that John IVosley o*pirod. Itev. .Dr. Jphn Atkiutioh, of JersoyOity, delivered an address, nf$er wliidi Iloy. l>r? ficorge T,arising TnvlbV rend a/pqohi on toe death of Woaley. . Rev. Dr. lMwin Wilson, of tho Unformed Kpiscopnl iChurqh, jjwpsen ted an autograph letter Written li/At reformer in 177U. In Boston, Mass., sorvicm in comraeuiora Ion of the one hundredth ahnivortrtrjrof the famous theologian and rovivsllqt,wore held in WcSloyAu Jlall.' .eororcisos were under .IImS iinppiv?fl .Of JJ^MMthodlsC l?ree'dier?f1 Key. JjOltndbedt rat<ti ironi tlio Moravians in lil*'. V9 || this ho linrt cnimnoiio "1 piynohhiji in lht II ^tho foiinilntJon of tlio Al-:lioilis't.' i,'lii|iT>r. M Prepare 1 P For Spring By Building up Your System So as* to Prevent That Tired Feeling Or Other Illness. Now Take Hood's Sareaparitla TRINITY COllEfiS I Soptembor I, 1891. A CoIIprp of 1'hllosnph.v i? n< I All-; Ar'plh'KP of Coin hhtop: A Collngo of tlit' ." '. ioin'-s; A Pulnlty Kvhool; A School of Tocllllolot: v; IA I Voir -ol; A School of Political Science; A Mrihi .i! !> I. Send for > alahtguf to JOHN V. tlKOWKM,. A. II.. Pic-Mi nl. Trinity Vvlfnjc I'. It., X. ('. Trlnlly High School (i'rcparnit ry) In Itnn lolph county, open August 1. OMl'KSMITIIs Senil *1.1*1 to Vlolor p..I, ilrM. k''"'i'T' <?-. f??l .lllldwt ITi'i tpt f<*r lllltkIlly tb?' Nvd ;H.4l,HiN.rn.x had f ^ ^doctor r. EWCLI&H IREIVSEQYI J for Coughs, Colds and Consumption, Is boyond I ?.ue,*.. " IbajBfestost of all modern remedies.! It wlllstopa Cough Inono night. It will check! a Cold Inndoy. It wilt prevont Croup, relievo* Asthma, and CURE Consumption If taken In* lime. IF THE LITTLE ONES HAVE 2 ] WHOOPING COUGH j | CROUP I 5 W ? mm?& Use 11 PromptlF.: : ^ t will cure: s /w when ever v. : th1nfl else: FAILS. " You! " T 1 / can 4 "Cord to* A 26c. bottle may save 1100 ln<Doctor's b/lls J * ^ r m . . r ?r f ' ? f LIFE. Owr Hfa, our lite to Uktt narrow raft Afloat upon tha hanfry Ma; Harson ii bat a littls spaoa. And all man, eafar for a plaoa, Do tbnut aacb other In the Ma; ^ And aaeb man, aagar for apUoa, Do* throat hla brotfcar In tba saa. And mo our llfa la wan witb faar% And so tha aaa U aalt with taars. I Ah, wall tathaa, tbon artaalaap? , All. WMI I* thM. Ulftn ?rt. ?! ?>' OarUto, our Mfs it Mks a curious play. Whir* each men hideth from himself. "Let us be open na the day," One maak does to the other say. When ho would deeper hide himself. "Let no be open m the day." That he may better hide himself. And so the world goes round and rouad^ Until our life with rest in crowned. Ah, well in thee, thou art asleep! Ah, well is thee, thou art asleep' -77t? PtUh. THE ROOMMATES. nr JOHN B. RAYMOND. Ilenry Hadley und Jolin Anhton had, roomed together for nix inonthn, but hadi never exchanged a word. There was no! quarrel between thctn; they wero not; deaf mutes; they wore normal, every-dny' young men, and one, at leant, longed" ardently to hear the other's voice. \ It came about in this way*Hadley was' a reporter on the Nete*-Herald, where he had filled a certain round of dry-as-dust nnnignmentn for yearn and wan not muchi liked by bin associates. He had a lend-, cncy to drudge; he wore faint "muttonchop" side-whiskers and turned up tho bottoms of his trousers when it rained. Till f Im uroa ronlln n eanSlal fnllem ? I>. l)., wedding. A<U?r jkrotidiiul oxoivinoK Ilov. H. CJ. 8nnldoni.il D./nf t'no Boston University Hchool of l'hoology, and Dr. Ilnnirl Htedo nd?lr?*sso?^ tho guthoriiig on j WchIov'h llfo mid work. ? In l'liiltiilolphin, IVnn., tljo tootji miniver- 1 fti y \vcih cdobrattd by ait ex^teri'Mira meyt- | Iflir of Mr\t\\rnUut. miutul..Mi *.?. ? * ? ffJmpfT^irpsonfc _nt tl?H mooting, anniversary of tho death of thoffrvfttfothnW of their church wus marked by most intercuttag services. \ ' ? \ John Wesloy'n Carc^h John Wesley, tho founder' of thn Methodlst Church, was horn tit K|>i.wnrth, in ICnglutiil, .lime 17, 1703; gniduutcd at Oxford T*ilh disthietion; became a <h*ncou 'in 17-iV, a Fellow of Lincoln's Coliwgsin 1521, nail was ordained u nrie.stof the Church , of Kngianil iii 1W. 11 ? iwirim dolijily impressed with iho neeo-sit-/ for cllftil|fes niu| reforms In religious mall civ, ami at Oxford associated with his brother ami others who from I heir dcvol iu.i )wra termed In derision, "Methodists" add tno "(lodly Club." John Wesley inle|ile-.l habits of great austerity, ninl studie i and fasted tosneh an extent, that bo seriously injured his dmnlth, In 1535 ho went With his lirolher, I'litrrlex "Wesley, to Georgia as a missionary to tin* ? Indians. During th? v?v.^> iv.x-beanie no- j, quninted with a numher fit1 'Moravians j ; with whom he subsequently <a?ci.cralod. Keturuiirf t.i l.nrope,' .bo visited Count Slinwuidorf at liirmifut iu 17;tH, but, owlnj; to some diilyrenes*. sopa MW ?.???-? ? ivuwtt f nmi ill \ spito of his prosiac exterior ho bad a ifttlo romance of Ih'h own. IIo wax on- I gaged to bo married, and Alice Tjlcr t was a girl of whom any one might well < be proud. Hhc wax tho nieco of a friend t of liadley'*, nod when ho proponed to; cl her, nftcr a long, despairing courtship,' n he was astounded to find himself ac-i h cepted. It seemed itieredibio that such h a perfoct croaturo could ever he hiaown, ii but after ho had somewhat recovcrod from his transports his practical nature? a asserted itself, and ho began to retrench L his expenses fn preparation for the event. Thus it wax that ho eventually answered ? au udvortisemont for a room-mate. j It so hap|Huicd that the other occupaut of tho room was also a reporter, although d a very different Htiunp of man. John n Ashton wax a meteoric genius. Ho wan I a waif from dead and gone Bohemia. His forte was the strange, tho mid, and s the grotesque, and his startling and un- i looked-for strokes had gouc far toward making the Chronicle famous. In his i!vld t ho was invaluable, and ho had long sines p killed his chance for promotion hy merit- t ing it too much. d The Nmoa-Iferabt, as everybody knows, , is published in tho afternoon, while tho H Chronicle is a morning daily, and Had- y ley, who hud madn his arrangements f through tho landlady, was disappointed, R when ho awoke early on tho tirst day in ( his new quarters, to tiud thai, his room- ^ ft* whv^iad let Himself in sometinia i 'durifcpy-Jftih.night, was then asleep in tho , * alit/rve.opposite his own. Ho had ! r inuclt pleasure from j t miujk^lnprcd, but the pale, handsome , H faqy And slight form, relaxed in tho Ian- I t guor.pf deep, sleep, prompted him to ( \ dii-Jta as. ipiietly as possible and slip out < without awakening tho other. , < .IV turned out, to lladley's iutlnlto 1 elpigohl, and probably to Ashton's secret ; amusement, that this wns no more acci' tldtU.1 ''The former went to work early ! in the morning and his duties ended Khj/ thc big presses threw out tho first : '"w lo?to?IUiou, at. about dusk. 1 ,As\ton, on, tho otlier liand, aroso a little 1 (ifter noon, lounged about until dark,and 1 jeft? llis desk any timo between one nnd 1 , three -o'ciork at night. Consequently, | < when he reached the room he invariably ; found Hud ley asleep, and when he awoke 1 he was the only occupant. And vlco . 1 vVrsn. Several things conspired to main- , tain' this fantastic relationship. Their olliecs were remote from one another. Their work was essentially different. It ilil not make common resorts or mutual &V - ; vmUU\/VU tauv UJf dnv they nover met. 1 ouch was the curious train of eventf 'which had carried tlicui through one summer and into an autumn that brought to Had Icy many a miserable heartache. A shadow had somehow fallen across tho honest fellow's love affair. It was hard* 1 ly to be defined in terms; that was the worsi of i?*-it was so intangible; so dif. i licult to say just what was wrong. There : was a change iu Alice. She was silent; , she was distraught; her tears came and ; wont like April rain. Yet s'uc proicstod , that nothing was amiss, and met his well-meant questioning with an jtnpationce that surprised nod frightened him; i for he did not know very much of wo- ' men. and her asseverations sounded to his ears liko confessions in disguise. Above all, lie felt a cumbersome untlt- I uess to cope with the situation. It was 1 like a plow-boy essaying to probe a sen- j sitivc wound nn?t nt lomrth he feared to I speak lest he should precipitate some unknown crisis. Thus it w as, when at dusk one autumn lay lie walked from the office to Alice's home to pay one of his customary visits. It was an indolent evening, suave with I lie spell of Indian summer, and through the dreamy haze that wrapped the city even the limn of traffic sounded faint and ' linrm/.niAiio Uk- .. : ? I I?, imc a liii'ii i/i ^laut luoct'io | at lho approach of night. Ho fell into a ; I vague icvoriv as lie walked ou, and when ' he stopped mechanically before the house lie did not ring at once, but sat down upon a liltic bench just within the gnto and masked by lilac-bushes. , The narcotic calm of the seeno and | hour had lulled lum into serenity, and ; I night fell unmarked, until, at length, a i familial voice broke in upon bis medita- ' L tinns He recognized it on the instant J ab Alice Sf Due to wn* n?in^|jpfj with deeper tones that w ere unfamiliar to him. I Although no:word* bad yet detached themselves frbm the tangle of sound, it i seemed to liim that one voice was urging | and one remonstrating. Presently they j came nearer and stopped by the gate. "Oh, I cannot! i cannot!" some one cried. It was Alice's voice, and although i there was not a jot of the spy in Hadley'a ! nature, something in the intonation held , him spell-hound. "But why not?" said the other voice, ! a melodious baritone?low, persuasive, I thrilling. "But w hy not? 11 was a rou- ; ditional promise; the conditions have ' changed and that is '' "No; it is not that," broke in the j girl. She was speaking <]uietly, Lut a 1 * * * ' * *^ T ** i patiictijM. ii?u? quaver rso uirougb her wordi. "Ob, can't you understand! Ha is honest and true, and I could not break bis heart!" A moisture sprang on Had ley's forehead and very slowly be opened and dosed his bands. There was pause, and then the pleasant baritone again: '"Are there no rivers in Damascus? What of ray heart, Alioef" Hadley beard no more. Something seemed to mlTocato him. His breath went no iurtnyr man than his throat, and the dusky web of lilac branches danced in black and shapeless phantasmagoria be-' fore his eves. He was dlralv conscious r>f a patter of feet, a ware of perfume,| snd gush of yellow light as the hall door: clashed often and shut, and then he knew fie was alono again. Alone! A hideous sense of lose, and titter,hopeless desolation, such as he had icver felt and never dreamed of. over- . whelmed him. He did not think; he did { iot dare to think. He staggered to his cet, opened the gate Hnd passed out. To run away, to elude this thing as if t was some sentient, palpable pursuer, vat the first impulse that possessed him, ind he hurried on, blindly, stumbllngly, ic eared not whore. How far he walked bus he had no means of knowing, but vhcn he stopped it was on a thronging horoughfarc, before the window a gieat unporium, aquivcr with otcctrio lights, fo drew a long breath and pulled him>e\f togptUer. Au illuminated dial that punctured the gloom of tlio upper narked after midnight, nnd a faintnoss liegan to assail him, a deadly reaction that turned his knees to water. The careless, alien crowd jarred on him, tho barbaric Hpendor of tho windows smote upon his brain; he wanted to bo alono, *nd presently ho saw the open doorway jf a cafe and entered. A low pcoplo sat at tables horc nnd here,; atifl on one hand were the cur.nincd doorways of a row of little rooms lr stalls. He walked instinctively owsrd one of theso and drew tho Irapury asido. A man within, who was susing, apparently, over a bottle and a ialf eaten meal, turned at the sound, ud the room-mates looked one another 1 d the face. 1 A ah ton woh tho first to recover himclf, and sprang up with outstretched land. ( Why, my dosr follow!"heoxclaimed, , 'Am I indebted to insomnis for this ilcasure?" Ilndlcy took his hand absently, but lid not nt unco roply. What was there [ ibout tliat voice, with its plausible, viirating tiinbro, that thrilled him sol 'I have been a little troubled," ho , aid, hesitatingly, "nnd triod to?walk t off." "Hat And enmo in here, I dare say, o drown it in drink, as the provorb pigs. My word for it, trouble is the hirstiesl thing on eurth. I triod to Irown a small sorrow in drink onco, and vhcn I was under tho table thero was the orrow, sober na a judge. But I'll tell on aomething, Hadley, it won't stand ending. Tho proper thing to drown orrow in is mutton chops and fried po- ' atoos. Suppose wo put it to tho touch. 1 Vaiter!" "Hold!" said lladloy, who burnod to i top this Imdinugc, 4,I am not huugry? i int. in the least. Let mo ait flown a mo- ? ncnt and think." < it the other with a sudden, haggard in- 1 outness. A thought. hail just occurred i 0 hia distracted inind. Why was not i Ida man, so bright., no vcrflatllo, bo selfcontained, so en rapport with the groat world and its usages?why was not he the very man of all men to give him counsel in this predicamentf "Ashton," ho said, "I am in distress. Will you give mo your advicoi" Ashton amilod grimiy. 14You have eoino to a good shop for advice." lio said. ,4My wliolo lifo is moru or less a warning. However, if I can be of any service to you, blato away. Out with it, my hoy 1" Hut llndlcy did not tind tho story so 1 tibj lu U;il. 44I am engaged to bo married," ha said, at length. "Ho! ho!" cried Ashton. ,4I forsce a stern parent, with a prejudice against literary characters." Then something iu tho other's face checked him, and ho dropped his tone of levity. ''Forgive me." he said, gently. "What is this trouble of yours? You need not mention the lady's name, of i.ourso. Make it n hypothetical case." "Oh, no!" said Hadloy, "I can confldo in you. 8ho is tho best girl in the world IIf?r nnmn iq Aliri< Trlnr " Ashton was leaning over the table toying with a glass, but at the words ho rose involuntarily and fixed his eyes upon the other with strange and challenging ittgmu. iiatllcy paused for a moment with a dim and troubled conscience that ho hnd touched some hidden spring; but only for a moment, and then, slowly and incoherently, ho told his story. Ashtou sank back as ho proceeded and heard him in silencn to the end. "Do you know this man?" he asked, when it was done. "No," replied ITadley, gloomily. "What does it matter who he is?" /MA.WU ivi ? ?.* ..fly, ! ? Mimiul lnaf in thought. "Iladloy," he demanded, suddenly, "do you really intend to marry this girl? But pshaw?" lie continued, "you are too honest to boa tritlor. And this fellow ?why, a thousand to one lie is amusing himself looking for a new sensation, and has no more use for a wife than lie would Iiiito for ft bishopric. You must have saved some money, have you not?" '' Yc?," mud iindiey, rather surprised; ' I have a few thousand dollars in hank." 'Well," sighed Ashton, "this is a world of fact, but wo can't nil grasp it. Home men are made for homes and some fire not. I might have ten times youl incomo, and the last chapter would find mo a vagabond. I tell you, Hadley, you havo no real rival. This is a shadow that has already passed, and shadow! leave no trace." "What shall I do?" he asked. "Do? Why, do nothing. For heaven's sako don't distress the girl with questions. " I tell you this belongs to the past. Forget it. Bury it. Act as if nothing had happened, and all will come right in the end. If I were you I would make it convenient to be away foi a few days. She will miss you, depend upon it, and you can begin where you left oil. Can't you arrange to go away?" "I think so," said Hadley. "When had I best go?' "Go to-morrow. You will come back a now man and find her eager to welcome you." i Hadley reflected a moment. "I will take your advice." he said. When he returned houie, at the close boring ci^i JBSbilr ttohtw^k n sagST MjflkiMN^; mined, in of much ofHij Ikwiure, nod looked bare end ttinUR [Ho ontared, almost Hmidl^ewlS|d^ie legend, chalked Alice wm^^^d^sLa wm a brilliant, a?co?o^|l man, with the world before hia, one oeight a07, who pulla up taken all of sodden, goea out Wert, goee to thodoo, and ineidea year winds up in a dwce hall fight with a bullet through hi hand. No, I can't aaj why be did it;|ie nerer mentioned it to me, although ee roomed together orer aix monthe. f'4jWa> LmUfs. {ELECT HITTING A. " The grater portion of the ocean bed ia pitch dpk. 0 Maine's hay crop of the part season wu estimated at 1,000,000 touo. * An Eolith matrimonial agent claims to have iogo%ated 40,000 marriages. An octogewrian who llvea six miles west of Mobary, Mo., was baptized the other day by fys grandson. In some citiea^bere are men hlre<i to atnhp a* crtma to their employers' winrl^s by staring and gazing into them. I An Englisftnan wagered that he and another woul{consume a bushel of potatoes in halfin hour. Ho won the bet. The 4,other"i?as a pig. It has bee determined that as far as tho danger to ships' compassos from magnetic Ici cage from tho dynamo is concerned, it is equally the samu whethci tho ship is d ubloor singled wired. Blankets 1*0 loaned to the poor, during tho winter months, frco of cost, by s kind-hoarted citizen in Brunswick, Germany. Thoyxaro stamped, to prevent them from being sold or pawned, and they are returned at tho close of tho cold weather. An Egyptian scythe, recently unearthed, is exhibited among tho antiqulties in the pfv|7nP .rrof Flinders Potrio, iq Lonc|f*"o? ?? iO.Lui. Tho shaft W^uu^6;"J>poTtiag n row of fllow. saws, which arc securely cemented into it. A monster eg!? is exhibited in tho museum at Budft-Pesth, Hungary. It is nn egg of tho prehistoric bird wpiornis, aud but few museums possess such n specimen; 148 hen's eggs would find room in it and it would hold nearly nine quarts. ]t was found in 1850 In Madagascar. The British Government is placing t tablot in Weakmiustcr Hall, London, tf mark tho spot whero King Charles I stood when ho was on trial for his life Tho moro interesting controversy as to whether the King lay down or knell down to bo beheaded remains to bo settled. Tho word 'guerilla" is Spnnish, and means, literally, a little war, or a bnby war. Honqo its application to partisnr >r irrogular jwarfarc, which is necessarily jarricd on i?.a weak and spasmodic man last intd turfo robbery' narily do iiot have tho courtosios or amenities of war oxtendod to thom. When tho young Siamese Prince, nov in London! England, passed one of hi examinations, somo years ago, he tele graphed theWlad nows to his father, li response th? King of 3iam telegraphed "It is wcli^W Two hundred have beet sacriflcod." Thore has always been con sidorablo doubt whother tho "two hun dred" represented wives, captives or fai bullocks. At a Japanese marriago ceremony noithcr bride nor bridegroom wears any clothing of a purplo color, lest thuii mnrrinrrn ?> h? fJOCH ioSSCd, .? purple ithe color most liable to fade. Anotlici superstition of the Japs is that a roon should never bo swept out immediately after one of the inmates has set out upoi a journey; if so hlo I""'- ha swci> out witJ^Jflm. > *"itt brought to Europe from whero this country received it earliest supplies, were of the poorest an< commonest breed; they were of a goldci color, hence the name for the entir genus; and it will thus be understooi why people speak of black, whito, rc< or blue goldfish. The old-fashione< guiunsh lives now in a wild state in thi country, and is, in fact, counted aiuouj the native fishes of North America. Frost Kills Fishes. One of 'he incidents of a hard and long continued frost if the suffocation of fish and eels in small ponds whore no thoughtful person has broken holes in the ice to permit tho aeration of the water which is necessary for tho continuance of fish life. When ponds are thus hermetically sealed eels appear to suffer more than any other fish. On a holo being broken thoy como to tho surfaoo in a v...VI J yl Ug condition nl aa.ll, caught. At Diglis, near Worcester, a number of eels have been caught in this way, tho instrument of CADturo bcimr a pair of blacksmith's tongs. In tbo pond at Dulwich an enormous ccl has been killed. The water was entirely covered with ice, and, n holo being mule, a great eel came to the surfaco. It appeared to he in a comatose condition and ?a? taken out without much difficulty. It measured thirteen feet lino inches in length, was twelve inch? round the thickest |>nrt and weighed nino pounds, lhit, though eels, along with other fish, sutler from insufficient aeration of the water in small icecovered ponds there is no doubt that they ere peculiarly susceptible to cold as well. Thore are several instances of congoi eels being washed ashore in great numbers during the continuance of sovore frosts, thpjr air bladdors bciug tightly <TTflY!399Hjfrln 1811 great quantities of eels *er4K.*dle<l '? the Hives-Lagan by the Jfoat aitd floated down to the quays at Ueifast^ jTheije are, however, instances of ceh which had been literally fro7.en and qute brittle reviving after an hour or so apont in a tub of water placed in r warm room.?IjOtxdon Graphic. The tpread of womon'a clubs throughout the country has led Mrs. Olivo Thoruo Miller to prepare a practical guide which is to contain directions for organizing a club, suggestions for proper management and a form of constitution roady for use. The manual will be the only one of it* tut extant. 1 4. M 9 ???????? Let's reason together. Here's a firm, one of the l largest the country over, the world over; it has grown, step by step, through the years to greatness?and it sells patent medicines!?ugh f 14 That's enough ! "? Wait a little? I This firm Davs the new*. _ y " papers good money (expensive work, this advertising!) to tell the people that tney i have faith in what they sell, so much faith that if they can't benefit or cure they don t want your money. Their guarantee is not indefinite and relative, but defutile and absolute? if the medicine doesn't help, your money is "on call." Suppose every sick man and every feeble woman tried these medicines and found them worthless, who would be the loser, you or they ? The medicines are Doctor plr.rcc^o " rv? covery," for blood diseases, and his " Favorite Prescription," for woman's peculiar ills. If they help toward health, they cost $1.00 a bottle eacn I If they don't, they cost nothing / jjlSaJ* TEN POUNDS | />wPoTW0 WEEKSj THINKOFIT!! A* a Flesh Prodncor thoro can bo ( no quostion bnt that I SCOTT'S EMULSION! I Of Purs Cod Liver Oil and Hypophospliites \ j Of Llmo and 8oc1a > l I ia without a rival. Many have j : cfajnod a pound a day by tho use i of it. It cures CONSUMPTION, ' } SCROFULA. BRONCHITIS. COUGHS ANO J > 5 COLDS. ANO ALL FORMS OF WASTING IMS- } J EASES. AS FAI..IVA1H.K AS Mil.K. t t iioium (/m( yet the genuine aa there are ! > | poor Imitations. J t KI.Y'A CRKAM BALM Applied Into Noatrlla I* Quickly Awnrlifil, Clean MM tho Hood, KCAtaHwX? 1 Heals Uie Korea nnd (lures HSiDcnijlH^J Itaatorcs Taste and Smell, nutckly llclieTM Cold la Ural and Headache WV at DruKRUta. ^ EI.Y BROS.. 56 Warren St., N. Y. WuZ?JrfT -T ...99*? enotljtn t-'j cover or* ?, tn.\ I JOe.: hest.SSc. I.miarik'bKiijc Mlt.U Little Ferry N. J. |?tv IB M made happy for ?1 a year. RukEJ s ft IB C m-rlbe to the No Nam Masausk. " ft Ms kWtj P Always brlRht and interesting q la W BiB KB Sample copy, one dime. 1*3 fr*' centos. AMERICAN l'tUSSS CO., Baltimore, Md. a AOCHfiTffi? are Coining Money AlsHlV I ?^one agent sold ' fr. , J, .225 IN 16 DAYS 1 . n"irY- I'nillea ?lo tin well sh men. Knyal trillion of tlio r? t?i ic-n Atlitst.f il?o \Vi?rl'l, li.ih l.irfro amp* in color*. Arr urate local lot, of towus.c it icx.riiilronda.ele. Census of |M?>. Kvervbody watttsit. Sella mt Siftht. AeenleClenr KlOper ct. Korlormsa Mn-a t (1ST. CROWKLl, A 11KIP1TRICI.0S7 ChsstnatSi. rhilmirU.S * f? ; Jj^^ADFIELE i i I WORTH 50 DOLL.1 \> Mv (iiLili'li Id' MiifTor#'il fur vpbtu u il.li Vcinuln without relief. I wnn pormmdM to I< t her try e for, ami eho heuRU to improve at once. Kttowi iu I'lMl ? ?* SO (lnil?ra P' T il> Cllmi Illy die; hail failed. Write Bra'Jfiold ll-.-culfttor Co., Atlanta, Qa This Picture, Pinel size, mailed for 4 oeota. J. F. SMITH A CO., Makers of >Bllo Beans," 285 4 257 firtewlch St., N. Y. City. 1 o mm "German Syrup" J. C. Davis, Rector of St. James' Episcopal Church, Eufaula, Ala.: " My son has been badly afflicted with a fearful and threatening cough for several months, and after trying several prescriptions from physicians which failed to relieve him, he has been perfectly restored by the use ol two bottles of BoAn Episcopal schee's German Syrup. I can recomRoctor. mend it without hesitation." Chronic severe, deep-seated coughs like this are as severe teshs as a remertv rnn be subjected to. It is for these longstanding cases that Boschee's German Syrup is made a specialty. Many others afflicted as this lad was, will do well to make a note of this. J. K. Arnold, Montevideo, Minn., writes: I always use German Syrup for a Cold on the Lungs. I have never found an equal to it?far less a superior. (D C. G. GREEN, Sole Man'fr,Woodbury,N.J. VHP S >*' % CmtfTi Un ?r ChareenL The Boston Journal of Gammons* discourse* tho* on tbs oms of charooal: Betide* being valuable ** fuel, it has other use* which make it on* of the most serviceable of aiticloa. When M flat, while cold, oa a bora, it causes the paia to abate; by leaving it on for aa hour, the burn seems almost healed when the wound i* superficial. Tainted Xi-i unuuuucu witn it is sweetened. Strewn over heaps of decomposed pelts or over dead animals, charcoal prevents UQplrwwot ixlon. foul ?Uw U by it. It is s great disinfectant, and sweetens offensive air if placed in shallow trays around apartments. It is so verv ooroua that it absorb* and rnnrf?niM gases rapidly. One cubic iuch of fresh charcoal will absorb nearly one hundred inches of gaseous ammonia. Charcoal forms an excellent poultice for malignant wounds and sores. In cases of what is called proud flush it is invaluable. It gives no disagreeable odor, corrodes no metal, hurts no texture, injures no color, is a simple and safe sweetener and disinfectant. A teaspoonful of charcoal in half a glass of water often relieves sick headache. It absorbs the gases and relieves the distended stomach, pressiug against tbo nerves which extend from the stomach to the head. A Bain of Manna. The sudden appearance upon the ground of a considerable supply of an pie of Asiatic Turkey Wjufttfll It came during a heavy fall of rain between Merdin and Diarbekir, and covered a circular area some six or eight miles in circumference. 8ome of it was gathered up and made into bread, which was of good taste and very digestible. Bpeclmens of the substanco have since been submitted to botanists, who find that it is in form of small grains, yellow outside and white and mealy inside, and that it is a lichen known to occur in some of the arid regfbns of Western Asia. It is supposed that tbo grains were drawn up in a water spout and transported by tho wind at a considerable height in the atmosphere. A French traveler has reported that a similar fall of this liohen occurred in many parts of Porsia in 1828, when it covered the ground to the depth of nearly an iuch, and was eaten by animala and collected hv tho inhabitants. Many other falls are said to have boen mentioned.?Trenton (N. J.) American. Sunday is tlie> favorite weddlig day in hi Kugland. Many persona aro broken down from overwork or household cure*. Brown's Iron Bitters rchuilds the system, olds digestion, removes excess of Idle, and cures malaria. A splendid tonic for women &nd children. To change tho name and not tho letter t chungo for worse and not for better. How'* This t We otter One Hundred Dollars reward for any case of catarrh thnt cannot be cured by taking Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. Ciiicnbt & Co., 1'rope., Toledo. O. We, the undersigned, have known F. .f. Cheney for tho last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions, and financially able to carry out any obligations mado by their linn. Vvicot Thuax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. Wai.dino, Kinnan a Maiivin, Wholesale Druggists,Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken Intornally,acting directly upon tho blood and mucous surfaces of tho system. Testimonials sent freo. Price 75c. per bottle. Bold by all druggists. Live leisurely unless you are anxious t d?e in a burry^ want building up. should Take BrStVn's irtm Bitters. It is pleasant to take, cures Malaria, Indigestion,Biliousness anil Liver Complaints, makes tho ltlood rich aud pure. Bridle the appetite with reason and sav> the stomach. FITS stopped free by Da. Runx's Orrat Nmava Hkstohku. No Fits after first day's uao. Marvelous cures. Troatlso and $3 trial bottlo free. Dr. Kliuc. 931 Aroh Bt.. Phfla_ Pa. If alhloted with soro oyoa uso Dr fhom veil's Kyo wat ?r. Druggist sell at iJ5o per hotflr i'cz ' c> i K~-W * s - ? s* ImBr |ll| WkmM?nin?lin?li Hi ijmiiiIT; T n.',mi^ |T 5 Q PE^ TO I alls P 1MAN. > 0 5 \R8 PER BOTTLE. Diaceae and had the nicdic.il attcntini lie bottle <>f HrmlflrUl's Female llepnla^ int; what I do of the rewdy, * < ;; daughter found and well after all otli r rcincH. 1). Fkatiif.rhtunk, Springfield, Tonn. , for par: ieularf. Bold by driiKKists. CURE Biliousness, Sick Headache, Malaria. BILE BEAMS. 8. N. U 11. ?e chtchcsmes ekbusm, rtnmo> THE ORIGINAL AND OCNUINK ' 41m. Mk Dnaiiil tor CkitkrrKrr Bm k0XM (Mind trita b.L- ribbon. T.k. m All puu I. pvlrU>tn) holM, pluk tru 4o- la tu.p. Ibr ptrtltnltri, MliMW 4W# TwImmIiIi. Hum* Mpprr. M4 ky aU LniI ?CT?r- j Have You a Have Yoi Or Co Taylor's I Sweet WILL CU Aek your Druggist or Msroha tyl Best Cough Medicine. R ?1 Cure* where all else fails. I Em taste. Children take it with jp T , 1 ? ONB ENJOYS ,. Both the method and result* whea Bjrup ofFigsis taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste^and acta gentlyyet promptly on the Kidneys Liver and 1 Jewels, cleanses tb? ays* tem effectually, dispels celds, headaches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is thw only remedy of its kind ever produced, pleasing to the taste ana acceptable to the stomach, prompt ia Its action and truly beneficial in itCi effects, prepared only from the most' bsalthy and agreeable substance^ ' Its many excellent qualities commend it to all and nave ?it the most popular remedy known, j'l Syrup of Figs is for sale ia Me iwd el bottles bv all leadingdmy tiafr toe^ateeirWmAr yrLt yM- -rcure H promptly ibr aay ens wh# wishes to try it Po not acespt any substitute. t CALIFORNIA FIO SYRUP COL . 8AM FMAM0J900, GAL, j tmrmmus. n. he * rose * * * TBEECHAM'S PILLS I R ACI.' IilK'B JVIA.GIC | ON A WEAK STOMACH.! I 25 Cents a Box. I | OF ALL DPUCCIST8. POSITIVE Tannai t ?H?0 ? .r.r.llj I nn ' ncm UTTJT t ,!KirFREE up 1 W 11LL s: v;: msafcBufcfigr iI nUC ?Tl 1? Y. Hook-keeplug, BuiIdm. ForaaM k% vKlk Pcnmnnahlft Arithmetic, Sbort-tkand,oMbI 19 thoroughly taught by MAIL. Circulars trtd Ilrynnl'a Collru., 4.>7 Main St, Buffalo, It 14 " ^ PflSSCd.I W ii?i. >!! i ? - ? aid Fathers ?r? ? ? titled to 613 a no. I'ee 110 w ?r n you gat your moH* W lank* frss. J'JSkril II. KfSVkK. Ittr. W?kl*?t?. ? i DIPPV l/ljrro FOSITIVBI/r ItKMRDIBD.. DAUUI l\ntLLO <ir**'ly 1'Mnt Stretcher , Adopted by students at llurvurd, Amherst, and other. Colleges, nltn, bv professional and business men everywhere. Il not lor sale In your tewn send ?. to It. J. tiltKKbY, 715 Washington Street, Boston. PROF. LOISETTE'S NEW ft'JEMORY BOOKS. Crlflrlsnis on two recent Memory System*. Hearty nlaoit April 1st. KuIt Tilldes of Contents forwarded only to these who send stamped directed envelope. Also Prospectus ITkST FltFKof thn lolwttlan Art of Nover FnrKcttlnif. Adrtress I'rof. IAJ1SF.TTK, 237 Fifth Arc., New York. A MONKY IN CHICKENS. V W Vor ISBo. luo-yatfe book, axperiMM of a practical poultry raiser doalaf W/W lljrtin, It teaohoa bow to datee* TT and oure dlaeaaet to faed Cor >rp? ROOFING KVE11Y MAN IIIS OWN ROOKElt. Tw o and Thn* Fir Rooting, suitable for all rooC? /rrfftre f.Sci r.nw other nuiterial and tw'.re as dortMe. Fire, Wl:?.l and Water Proof, cdtahle for aB Uir.AU'S fttn! e.v.i bo applied by any ono. l>e--crlr>ttr? Cntalo^iM with trawplM of Ilootlrnr, lining a?d Sb.-ai'idiK i'el.er, l'alc!l\ Ac., sent nu regucst. J p Tt \s>< . r/r you to wnrnt us. .??) IN A lt01ITAOK, Richmond, Vn. /;? llir imivrrssl farartecorded Tn.i.taiitiAsT'M petrrf .n?// Socmd Cabbage Sccda load# vOtTW mo to offer a 1*. S. Oroww ?Xt\vmLVVVo Cnlon.f heflnfst Yriloie Olob0 mfLf f / i \ TyW. in rjcitlcnce. To Introduce It Kf 7?lS*'VriSl) \ Wand Bbow It.t capabilities I I I I^Pi I r .Uni I jI' w ill pay $1(0 for the beat FjlTl 4 1 II* Itaf.'.v Ic-ld mined from 1 ounce SMki. of tee.I wlilch I will mall for * v yo eta. Cntalorao free. Isaac F. VMHngbaaf, hjubuku \ uniM ox. 1 frS fcead Dull for C**^ \yii^T/\ y/?BPBCIA|, rln M|Ml aama poode deeirtd. Xf-V? DIUTU1 unno tore. co., m a. su? nu \f ft ?TS* ***!? -1 HflfiMMFOR A ONI-:<n()UiARnil.l. wnl n?<jy nut w# will dellrtr, true or all charter. to any perron IS' the Uult-d Stater, all of Um following &j-Uc1m, carefully packet: One twiMwnix bottle of Pore Taaeltnr, . . lOota. dk One two-ounee bottle of Vaaollne roauale, - 15 a One Jar of Vaacltnp Cold Cream. . ... . 14 One C.- ke of Voae'lne Camphor Ioe, - - - JO" One CaJce of Vamdtne soap, nnnoented, - - M>a One Cake of Vomit no Moan, nquldtrly eoen ted,tt " One two-onnce bottle of White Vaseline, - W til1 Or for poet age Aim pa a?tt eingie article at Uv pried named. On no amount be pcreuaded to accept from gouritruogiet any Vaeeline or preparation therefrom unteea labelled with our name, beooMOt you will eerloWy receive an Imitation which hot ttttle or MMlW ? Cheaebreaih Mfg. tlaM 1M Utata Sc., If. Y. ^ Rta Cross Diamond Brand a lit. ^ Utt ? #k A\ LRU ^ V 1UU^ S.rr, tni r.Uall, Pill tfr .?l?. ^fiF fUt? Mmm4 *rand in llr/i tod iMd admit, \.T vthar kln4. Ktftt, .fuiMtUnlUnt mnd /mUaiiifV ?*7. J " . .T "if 1/%" " V V.'* r D"!1 " ^DniiUUkUinlii Keller far ladles," <? Utter, by ret am lia.lL CHiOHcrrm chemical Co., ^-4it??aa??? . iua, irA. ????????1 Cough? ii a Cold? ( nsumption? Cherokee Remedy of Gum and Mullein RE YOU! nt for It. Take nothing else. iecommcndod by Physicians. g*jjH 'loasant and nRrocablo to tlio g$y| out objection. IJy druggists. K*a aaao^igp 7