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i Caught a Great Eagle P. Marker, who U working out at A. IH. Smith’s sawmill on Rifle Creek, set a ■large trap, thinking to catch a monster Ibear, whose tracks were seen in the [neighborhood. Several days after he (went out to look at his trap, but instead of the bear he found a large eagle, the largest, perhaps, ever seen in the Rocky | Mountains. The eagle had been caught in the powerful jaws of the trap by one leg just above the claws. He had dragged the immense trap, which was secured to a log by a chain, into some brush more than twenty-five feet from the spot where trapped, and was dead. So large and strong was hit leg that it was not broken. The eagle was too large to carry, so the trapper cut both legs off as trophies. He measured the huge bird, and it was twelve feet from tip to tip of its out stretched wings.—Myrtle Point West Oregonian. Mias Mattie A. Cobb, of Providence, R. L Undoubtedly many diseases may be prevented if the blood is kept pure and the general health-tone sustained by the use of Hood’s Sarsaparilla. When this is done, the germs .of La Grippe, Diphtheria Pneumonia, Scarlet and Typhoid Fevers, Malaria, etc., cannot lodge In the system. After all such pros trating diseases Hood’s Sarsaparilla has been found Of Inestimable value In restoring desired health and vigor, and purifying the tainted blood. For example read the following from Miss Mattie k. Cobb, of Providence, R. I., and her mother. Miss Cobb Is a young lady of 18, a Picture of Health tnd Is In the front ranlc In her studies In the High School. Her father Is a well-known police officer: “I write to tell how much good Hood’s Sarsaparilla Has done for me. Sometime ago I had diphtheria and a-as sick fgr a year afterward, being Weak, Blind and Helpless 1 used one bottle of Hood’s Sarsaparilla and It made me real strong.” Mattie A. Cobb, South Chester Avenue, Providence, R. I. “As my daughter wanted to write how well she liked Hood's Sarsaparilla, 1 thought I would say a few words. I think It is the Greatest Blood Purifier ever brought before the people. Some of my friends say‘go a way with your medicine. ’ 1 said the same once, but since my daughter has taken Hood’s Sarsaparilla My opinion has changed considerably.” Mrs. Geo. N. Cobb, Providence, R. I. Hood's Pills are purely vegetable and are the best liver Invigorator and family cathartic. Sheridan s Condition Powders MAKP %ENSr Ik you can’t get It aend to ns. We mail one pack toe. Five $1. A J 1-4 lb. can *1.20. Six, r . Ex. rwvid. fcmltry Raining Guide, free, with SI orders. 8. JOHNSON A OO.. M Custom Pt.. Boston. Maw. R. Re Re DADWAY’S II READY RELIEF. CURES AND PREVENTS Colds, Coughs, Sore Throat, Influenza, Bronchitis, Pneumonia, Swelling of the Joints, Lumbago, Inflammations, Rheumatism, Neuralgia. Frostbites, Chilblains, Headache, Toothache, Asthma, difficult breathing. CURES THE WORST PAINS In from one to twenty minutes. NOT ONE HOUR at—r reading this ad vertisement need any one SUFFER WITH PAIN. Had way’a Heady It cl lei i> a s-ure Cure tor £very Pain, Sprainn, Bruises, Pains lu the Back, Chest or LdNibs. It was the Elrfct and is the Only . FAIN UKMfcli V That Instantly stops the most excruciating pains, allays Indanunatlou, and cures Congestlous,whether of the Lungs, Stomach, Bowels, or other glands or i organs, uy one application. A half to a teaspoouful in half a tumbler of water will In a few minutes cure Cramps Spasms Sour Stomach, Heartburn, . Nervousness Sleeplessness l Sick Headache, Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Colic, Flatu- I lenev and all Internal pains. I There Is not a remedial agent in the world that will I cure Fever and Ague and all other Malarious Bilious land other fevers, aided by HA1)\\ AV’fcs 1*11.1.5s Iso quick as H A1) \V A Y’S itEAOk KEl.lrTt'. iFllty cents per bottle. Sold by Druggists. V BE 8>UKE TO PET RAD WAVS. There is nothing that may [ not happen to a thin baby. There is nothing that may | not happen to a man who is (losing his healthy weight. We say they are “ poor." They are poorer than we at irst suspect. Do you want almost all that is known of the value of plumpness told in a way to :ommendto you careful liv ing—and Scott’s Emulsion of :od-liver oil if you need it. A book on it free. Scott & Bowne, Chemists, 133 South 5th Avenue, lew York. Your druggist keeps Scott’s Emulsion of cod-liver U—all druggists everywhere do. 51. 36 9 Tuffs Tiny Pills 1 The dyspeptic, the debilitated, wheth-1 ' er from excess of work of mind or . hotly or exposure In malarial region's, | will find Tutt’s Pills the mpst genial \ restorative ever offered the invalid. ••••••••• i's Cream Balm WILL. CURE HILDREN OF CATARRH. Iply Balm Into each nostril. 1 BROS., 56 Warren St., N. Y. TLDiNHf frm FOUGHT OYER AGAIN. The Memorable Battle Between Onr Sailors and the Chileans. The Main Incidents of the Brutal Attack Behearsed. The followin* is a condensed account, taken from the New York Herald, of the battle in the streets of Valparaiso between the sailors of the United States warship Bal timore and the Chilean mob: It will be remembered that on the after noon of October 16th Captain Schley, taking* into consideration that his men had been cooped up aboard ship for over five months without liberty, gave shore leave to 117 seamen and petty officers, with special in structions to keep sober. On the morning of October 17th the Herald exclusively gave to the world the startling news that our sailors had been set upon bv a bjoodthirsty mob in the streets of Valpar aiso, beaten, stabbed and viciously maltreated until two of them had been done to death and a number of others more or less des perately wounded. As was told at that time in the Herald our men were absolutely without other means of defence than those furnished them by na ture, and were helpless in the hands of over powering numbers. Only one Chilean was hurt in the affray and his injuries were not fatal. Two distinct investigation of the affray were undertaken almost immediately: one aboard the Baltimore by a Board of Inquiry Instituted by Captain Schley, and the other in the Chilean courts by j udge of Crimes Foster. The testimony adduced before these two tribunals, while differing widely in many respects, aided to rather than substracted from the dramatic interest in the affray which came so near embroiling the United States and Chile in a bloody and costly war. The men landed from the Baltimore, which lay off the passenger mole, at the foot of the Plaza de la Int.ndencia, about two o’clock in the afternoon. They were supplied witn “liberty money,” which they had changed at the money changer’s office, a short distance up the plaza, at Calle de Cochrane. From here the men separated and in small parties rambled through the town sight see ing and amusing themselves, as sailors asnore do. Many of the bluejackets made for that portion of the city known among English speaking seafaring men as the ‘’maintop,” which, roughly speaking, is inclosed between Calle del Clave, the hills, Plaza San Fran cisco and Avenida de Errazuriz. The intendencia, at the Calles de San Augustin and de Serrano, is only about three hundred yards from the centre of this district, where the hardest fighting took place, and the fact which was brought out in both investigations, that it was fully half an hour before the arrival of the police and soldiers, is one of the grounds for the belief expressed on the part of the United States authorities that due diligence was not used in protecting our men. While many warnings had been given to the Baltimore’s sailors, as Captain Schley’s investigation shows, that trouble was in store for them, it was not until nearly six o’clock that the fight really began. Boatswain’s Mate Riggin and Apprentice Talbot were near the True Blue saloon at Calles, Santo Domingo and Matriz, when, according to Talbot's story, a Chilean sailor spat in his face and was promptly knocked u’own. Then the mob attacked the two Ameri cans. They fled down the Plaz 1 de Wheel wright, and on Callo del Coderane, near Calle del Marquez, boarded a street car in order to escape the mob. They were made to leave the car and were again attacked. Talbot made his escape and Riggin struggled along up Calle de Marquez until he reached Calle de Arsenal, whei-e he was found by Seaman Johnson. Assisted by the latter they made their way up Calle de Arsenal a few feet to the place where Riggin was shot, it is alleged by Johnson, by the police or soldiers^ -Rijicdn s body was taken. the drug store, at Plaza Ecinsmrra-flncl Calle de la Matriz. In the meantime there had been, accord ing to the testimony, a general assault on the American sailors. Seaman Turnbull was attacked, beaten and stabbed while on the Plaza Ecbaurren and ran into a place on Calle de San Martin and the plaza to escape from the mob, but was driven out. He was taken to a drug store adjoining that to which Riggins was taken. Seaman Hamilton was attacked on Calle de Marquez, near Calle de Blanoo, and was picked up from the gutter only a few feet away. Seaman Davidson was the victim of a vicious assault at the same place where Riggin was shot, and about the same time. He ran down Calle de Marquez, pursued by a section of the mob, to the water front, and thenca'to the Mole. The mob was close be hind him, and as no boatman would take him to his ship he ran into the wat r ad joining the Mole, where he was made a target for a shower of stones. He stood this as long as possible and then made for the shore again. He succeeded in fighting his way through the crowd, up the Plaza de la Intendencia a few yards to the Prat monument, and fell fainting in the door of a store at the Plaza and Calle de Blanco. He was found here unconscious by a French naval officer and carried to a dry goods store across the street, and from thence was taken in charge by a policeman when be had regained consciousness. The police at the station on the Mole, it is claimed, afforded him no protection, and here, too, while the station was only a couple of hundred yards from the centre of that section of the conflict, it was many minutes before they tried to quell the disturbance, claims Captain Schley. While these stirring scenes were being en acted in the “Maintop” in another section of the city at the Calles de la Esmeralda and de la Concepcion, nearly half a mile away, other American sailors were being attacked. It is this which led Captain Schley to the conclusion that the attacks were preconcert ed and part of a general plan which had t»een well arranged. It was at this p’ace, near the Hotel de Colon, where Sailor Carson was attacked and beaten, and on the opposite side of the street is the cigar store where he sought refuge and was advised to change his uni form and pat on citizens’ clothes, which he did. and was not further molested. The police and soldiers after considerable time succeeded in dispersing the mob and making some arrests, most of the ar rested being American sailors. Although there was a police station at the Mole, only three hundred yards from the troubled districts, the prisoners were taken, it is alleged by Captain Schley and denie l by the Chilean authorities, under cir cumstances of aggravated brutality, to the l>olice station and court in the Plaza de la Victoria, at the other end of the city and nearly a mile away. ATTACKING- THE DOCTORS. Blind Rage ot the Starving Peasants in Russia. Advices received from the Government of Voronezh. Russia, show that affairs in that part of the famine-stricken districts are going from bad to worse. The peasants have become exasperated by their sufferings from hunger and disease, and have turned their resentment against the doctors for the failure of the latter to effect cures. This same course was followed during the cholera epidemics, and the doctors, having before them the memory of the fate of the physicians in the cholera years, have fled in terror from the ignorant peasantry. In man}* villages in Voronezh the military have been called upon to suppress the dis orders. In one instance the Zemski Natchalnik appealed to the military to pre serve order in his district, whereupon the peasants sent a deputation to him. with a intimation that if the soldiers touched a single person vengeance would be wreaked upon M. Natchalnik himself; his house would be burned, and he and the members of his family would be killed. Troops had been sent in response to the request of the Zemski, but the threats of the deputation had such effect upon him thaw he was glad to ask the officer in charge of the troops to depart quietly with his command. The estimated total American capital raised for Mexican undertakings in the past year by individuals and public and private companies was over $100,000,000. THE REPUBLIC OF CHILE. A Narrow Strip of Country With a Population of Nearly 3,000,000. The Republic of Chile, as the gazetter tells us, is a country of South America, bounded on the east by ranges of the Andes and on the west by the Pacific Ocean. To be more precise. Chili includes the narrow strip of land on the west coast of South America, ex tending from Peru on the north nearly to Cape Horn, and bounded on the west by Bolivia and Argentina. In breadth this strip of land varies from 40 to 200 miles, while its length is 2600 miles. jvc/?ry a ruuvrtLj X V *: OCCAM >1 t * lb. i** * c»* v ^ SOUTH AMERICA. Chile has an area of 293,970 square miles, aud its population in 1885 was 2,526,969. From one end to the other it is a country of high mountains, ‘whose tops are snow-clad the year through’ Its coast line affords but few good harbors. The best one is that of Talcabuano,a little town of 2500 inhabitants, in the southern part of the coast line. The most important harbor on the Chilean coast is that of Valparaiso. The town, which has a population of 97,737, is on a bay of semi-circular form, which is capable of accommodating a very large fleet. It is well sheltered on the east, south and west, but toward the north it is exposed. The greater part of the town is built on the sides of hills sloping down to the water’s edge. On the whole it affords as good a tar get for a man-of-war’s guns as can be found on the coast of the continent. On March 31, 1866, it was bombarded by a Spanish squadron under Admiral Nunez and a large part of it was ruined. The loss to the town was estimated at $10,183,000. Chile is a great country for earthquakes. A record of twenty-five months shows 156 separate and distinct shocks. These shocks do not as a rule do much damage, but they frighten the life out of the Chilians for a week. DESPEBATE TRAIN ROiBERS. Locked in a Box Car Figlit Theft Pursu p; A Battle With Winchexers on a Moving Train,! Kso. ted OUR NAVY’S STRENGTH. Complete List of the United States War Ships. The following list comprises the war ships of the United States which at present are either in commission or ci being fitted out with all possible dispatch for active service, the list being corrected up to recent date: Armored Vessels—Double turreted moni tor Miantonomoh, with a crew of 390; single turreted monitors Ajax, Canonicus, Cat- skill, Lehigh, Mahopac, Manhattan, Wyan dotte, Nantucket, Jason, Nahant, Montauk, Passaic and Comanche. Unarmored Vessels—Cruiser Chicago, 383 men; cruiser Boston, 275 men; cruiser At lanta, 275 men; dispatch gunboat Dolphin, 130 men; cruiser Newark, 325 men; cruiser Charleston, 300 men, cruiser Baltimore, 325 men; cruiser San Francisco, 369 men; cruiser Philadelphia, 325 ,men, gunboat cruise* Yorktown, 180 men; gunboat cruiser Con cord, ISO men; gunboat cruiser Bennington, 180 men; gunboat Petrel, 123 men; dynamite cruiser Vesuvius, 80 men; torpedo boat Cushing, 18 men; cor vette Ranger, 130 men; corvetto Alert, 130 men; sloop-of-war Adams, 17a men; torpedo ram Alarm, 60 men; frigate Lancaster, 359 men'; frigate Pensacola, 300 men; frigate Richmond, 300 men; corvette Mohican. 200 men; corvette Marion, 174 men; corvette Iroquois, 175 men; sloop-of- war Kearsage, 20o men; sloop-of-war Alli ance, 200 men; sloop-of-war Essex, 175 men; sloop-of-war Enterprise, 175 men; sloop-of- war Nipsic, 160 men; sloop-of-war Yantic^ 145 men; surveying vessel Thetis, 90 men. In addition to the above, the revenuo steamers Rush, Corwm and Bear, ail at San Francisco, can be made ready for war ser< vice in thirty days’ time. Tne above ves sels are completed ships, and all have seen service. The following list comprises ships under construction, the majority of which cannot be made ready for immediate service: Armored Vessels—Barbette battle ship Puritan, ready for service about Jan uary, 1894; double turreted monitor Am* phitrite, ready for service about July, 1892; double-turreted monitor Monadnock, ready for service about December, 1892;* double- turretted monitor Terror, ready for service about January, 1893; battle ship Texas, ready for service about July, 1893; armored cruiser Maine, ready about January, 1893; coast-defense battle ship Monterey, ready for service about April next; armored cruiser New York, ready by September next; har bor defense Ram. ready about February, 1894; battle ship Massachusetts, ready Jan uary, 1. 1894; battle ship Indiana, same as Massachusetts; battle ship Oregon, ready about July, 1894. Unarmored Vessels—Cruiser No. 6, ready about April, IS 93; cruiser Cincinnati, ready about February, 1893; cruiser Raleigh, ready about May, 1893; cruiser Detroit, ready about November next; cruiser Montgomery, ready about January 1, 1893; cruiser No. 11, ready for service about September, 1893; cruiser No. 12 (Pirate), ready about May, 1893; cruiser No. 13, ready about August, 1893; gunboat Machias, ready about September next; gunboat No. 6, ready abou(| December next; torpedo boat No. 2, ready about January, 1893. _ _ EGYPT’S MEW KHEDIVE. The Career and Attainments of the Young Prince Abbas. The late Khedive of Egpyt, Tewfik Pacha, who died in Cairo on January 7, left four children, two boys and two girls, borne him Dy his only wife. Princess Emineh, whom lie married in 1873. His eldest son, Abbas Bey, the present Khedive, was born on July 14, 1874, and therefore will attain his majority in six months. . „ ^ Abbas Bey was educated by A. 1. fJutiei, vho acted for several years as his tutor, and rho has been fora long while in the service The crew and passengers o bound Missouri Pacific train bad trip through Missouri a few nighi train was “held up” twice, once, ing party that was escorting M ert Hepler from Nevada, Mo., Mo., where they hanged him, ai time by train robbers, who rof press car and its inmates. The tiain had hardly left N tion, where the lynching party session of it, when a danger sij the engineer to slow up again, train came to a standstill, two mi entered the express car and Hie occupants * to hold their hands, keeping them coveed with revolvers, whue the train travel twelve miles to Lamar. The robbrs rifled the pockets of the trainma taking $<o from Baggageman Hull, smal T amounts from Express Messenger Houck a,(i Travel ing Passenger Agent Bardett, *t the Mis souri Pacific, who had Tgone to l e express car to escape annoyance by the mb of lynch ers in the rear cars. The expres^aesaenger was compelled to open the compilation of the Pacific Company’s safe, and that was also rifled. The amount securec’. however was less than $75. * When the train arrived at unar the destination of the mob, the band 3 mingled in the crowd of lynchers and for time were lost sight of. One of the trainma* however soon discovered them boarding a north-bound freight train on the Mem phis Road, and sent the following dispatch to the Sheriff and City Marshal at Fort Scott, Kansas: “Watch fa two men- no baggage; rough appearanceifene some^ what taller than the other, wanted for robbing Pacific expi phey are [Missouri le coming Sco^i* at S. B. Cle- e station. of .the in the dis- Pacific train, here this morning; toward your city on a freight.” The freight train arrived at F< 7 o’clock next morning. Policemi more, colored, was on duty at Two suspicious looking cb description of the robbers givet patch arrived. He halted then when one of the men drew his revolver anc' fi re d. The bullet pierced the policeman’s Lart and he dropped dead on the instant. It so hap pened that by this time the frei; it was just pulling out, and the robbers woarded an empty box car and locked th^nselves in. Shortly afterward the passengei train from Lamar arrived, and on it was De tective Chester, of the Missouri Jaciflc, who was in pursuit of the brandits. He, accom- K mied by United States MarshaJMapes and arshal Abbott, of Fort Scott, Larded the passenger train, which pulled ott immedi ately in pursuit of the freight. At 8 a. m. the freight was ovrtaken, but it was just pulling out for Pleasanton when the passenger train arrived, the rew of the former train having no knowldge of the dangerous freight they were htuling. De tective Chester and his compsiion, how ever, succeeded in boarding he moving freight, and took possessici of the car immediately behind tfe one in which the bandits had take-iT.fuge. The latter had seen their pursud - ™" and immediately opened flre| officers returned the fire, continually exchanged th; the cars all the way to Pi tance of five miles. A dispatch had been sei asking that a posse mi when the freight pulled car was surrounded and t] called upon to surrender, with shots from tbeir the posse returned the imprisoned men fired t|| of the car at random, turned the fire with Wini ers. The fusillade las Finally a shot from a posse struj|f oneof ti ter the car them. The shots were e ends of n, a dis- Pleasanton, train, and he robbers’ were ered and two sides re- evolv- L ur. and kill&ntuu. Tin rendered. He was ^Rriously in the side. He - gave name as Charles Myers,ot Kansas His friend, S. C. Francis, tl who was kill ed, was a cousin of Francis, whom he greatly resemb'-d, nephew of Judge Cowan, of St. 1/ own !y,Kan. ’bandit Jovernor and a He Ltuis. waaheir to an estate near Baltimq-e, Md., bequeathed him in trust by his fither, the proceeds of .which he received. Myeis’s father is a wealthy stockman living tear Ver sailles. Mo. OKLAHOMA’S G0VERJ0B. The Record ol Judge Abrahim Jef ferson Seay. •jf/i \ GOVERNOR ABRAHAM J. SEAT] Judge Abraham J. Seay, the newly ap pointed Governor of Oklahoma, was born in Amherst County, Virginia, November 28, 1832. When he was three years old his parents moved to Osage County, Missouri, and there he grew up on a farm. His early education was very limited, and when tie reached the age of twenty-one he could scarcely more than read and write. He started out with a determination to win. however, and surely he has succeeded. Working by the day he earned sufficient money to pay his way through the Steele- ville (Mo.) Academy, and then studied law in the same town, paying his way by his own exertions. He was admitted to the bar three days beiore the firing on Fort Sumter, and, though most ot his pec- pie sided with the Confederacy, he soon enlisted in the Union army and marched away for four years of hard work and fight ing. He entered as a private, but in August, 18t>4, he was mustered out a Colonel ol the Thirty-second Infantry, Missouri Volun teers. He taen began the practicelof law. and in the course of time was Cotfitv At torney, Circuit Attorney and Circuit Judge, sitting on the bench in the latter tapacity twelve years. All the time he was an active Republican, on the stump in every cam paign, and twice ran for Congress! against Richard Bland, the great silver champion. In May, 1890, he was appointed Associate Justice ot the Supreme Court of Oklahoma, and filled that position until appoiutel Gov ernor of Oklahoma by -President Ifarrisoft. o»| W- PRINCE ABBAS. of the late Khedive. It is this circumstance which has given rise to the too general be lief that the young Prince, having been at first under British tuition, would prove to be an Anglophile to a still greater extent than was his rather, Tewfik. But it is diffi cult to decide that question, for Abbas Bey has not yet had an opportunity to show his sentiments and his opinion about the politi cal affairs of his country. He has spent the last three years at the Oriental Academy of Vienna, and he speaks German and French as well as be speaks English. Nats and Nutrition. A good story is told of Dr. Dio Lewis, who wished to make a marked’impression on the minds of his boarding school girls. They teased for nuts at dinner, and were promised all they wanted. The next day nothing but nuts appeared on the table. “Now, girls,” said Dr. Lewis, “eat all you want and you will be as well off as if you had your usual dinner; but nuts taken after a heavy meal are too much for the stomach to bear, and surely bring on indigestion.” The Plowman says: “Scientists have pronounced nuts an excellent article of diet. In this case they are not to be eaten as a desert, but as tfce main staple of the meal. Nut trees beautify a lawn and serve for utility ind ornament at the same time. The (ost of planting and growing is small. The market for nuts is assured. They may be called one of the staples of com merce.”—New York Herald. La Grippe. On December 19th, 1 was confined to my room with the Grippe. The Treasurer of the “Commercial Advertiser” recommend ed that I should try a bottle of “Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral," as It had cured him of the same complaint. 1 sent for a bottle, and in two days I was able to resume my business, and am now entirely cured. As I took no other remedy, I can but give all the credit to the “Cherry Pectoial,” which I gratefully recommend as r. speedy specific for this disease. Tours very truly, F. T. Harrison. 29 P«-.rk Row, Xew York, N. Y. Not the Merrimac, bat the Yirgiuia. There rover was a Confederate iron clad of uny other ironclad named Merri mac The Confederate ram was the Vir ginia always. She was constructed upon the hulk of an old United States frigate called the Merrimac. Why people should go on calling the Virginia the Merrimac we cannot see. History and fact—not always synonymous—agree in this case. The Confederate ironclad was the Vir ginia, not the Merrimac.—Norfolk (Va.) Landmark. Coughs and Hoarseness.—The irritation which induces coughing immediately re lieved by use of "Brown'* Bronchial Troche*." Sold only in boxes. FITS stopped free by Dr. Kline’s Great Nerve Restorer. No fits after first day’s use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and $2 trial bottle free. Dr. Kline, 931 Arch St„ Phila.. Pa. For investments in Real Estate for manu facturing, for merchandise, for almost any thing, write to the Land and River Improve ment Co.,West Superior.Wisconsin. Valuable Information will be sent those interested. There are ailments that rob young women of both Health and Beauty and make them pre maturely old. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound will restore both if taken in time. — OJVI3 -K3SJOYS Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refresh ing to the taste, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys^ Liver and JBowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head* aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro* duced, pleasing to the taste ano ao* ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from tne most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities com mend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50o and $1 bottles % all leading drug* gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP C0l SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. iOMWma. /CL NEW VORK “German Syrup” Just a bad cold, and a hacking cough. We all suffer that way some times. How to get rid of them is the study. Listen—‘ ‘ I am a Ranch man and Stock Raiser. My life is rough and exposed. I meet all weathers in the Colorado mountains. I sometimes take colds. Often they are severe. I have used German Syrup five years for these. A few doses will cure them at any stage. The last one I had was stopped in 24 hours. It is infallible.” James A. Lee, Jefferson, Col. CD DR. K I i. h/1 C R’S MUEDER'IN A SCHOOL-ROOM, — Four Ptip*l s -^. {lac k the Teacher and Kill Her Young Detendei, John Stephenson, Burt Smith and Wil iam and Charles Spurlock, schoolboy^, whose ages range from twelve to seventeetji years, are in Kenton (Ohio) jail, charged with mur der. i Tneir teacher, Miss McLaughlin, cor rected them for some misdemeanor inj school, whereupon they attached and belt her. Frank,the twelve-year-old teacher’^rother, interfered, and the boys turned beat him into insensibility, inj e ries from whicu he died in a iss Laughiiu was also fatally The imperial Russian ukase^^Bbiting the exportation of wheat from nHRa has thrown 25,000 men out of employment in and near Odessa, and has driven a large amount of shipping frem the Black Sta. .V'« Kidney, Liver and SladderCure Rheumatism, Lumbago, pain in joints or back, brick dust in urine, frequent calls, irritation, intlamation, gravel, ulceration or catarrh of bladder. Disordered Liver, Impaired digestion, gout, billious-headache. 8\V V YIP-KOOT cures kidney difficultiea, X*a Grippe, urinary trouble, bright’s disease. Impure Blood, Scrofula, malaria, gen’l weakness ordebillty. Guarantee—Vne content* of One Bottl*, If not ben- Efited. DniEEists will refund to you the price paid. At Druggists, 50c. Size, $1.00 Size* InTaSdB’ Guide to He»lth"free—Consultation free Dr. KTi.irua & CO., BiNOHAlCXOK, N. Y. Catarrh Can’t be Cared With local applications, as they cannot reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh is a blood or con stitutional disease, and in order to cure it you ha-ee to take internal remedies. Hall's Catarrh Cute is taken internally jmd acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is no quack medicine. It was prescribed bv one of the best phys>i cians in this country for years, and is h regular prescription. It is composed of the best tonics known, combined with the best blood purifiers, acting directly of* the mucous surfaces. The perfect combi nation of the two ingredients is wbat produces such wonderful results in curing catarrh. Send for testimonials free. F. J. Cheney & Co.. Props., Toledo, O. Sold by cmvgist*.-irire 75c. The worst cases of female weakness readily B ’eld to Dr. Swan’s Pastiles. Samples free, r. Swan, Beaver Dam, Wis. Beecham’s Pills cost only 25 cents a box. They are proverbially known throughout the wond to be “worth a guinea a box.’* Mrs. Pinkham’s letters from ladies in all parts of the world average One Hundred per lay. She has never failed them, and her fame is world wide. COhYRiCHT 189) The wrong way, with Catarrh, is to stop it without curing it. The poisonous, irrita ting snuffs, strong caustic solutions, “creams,” balms and the like may, perhaps, palliate for a time. But they niay drive the disease to the lungs. The wrong way is full of danger. The right way is a proved one. It’s with Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Rem edy. It cures, perfectly and per manently, by its mild, soothing, cleansing and healing properties, the worst cases of Chronic Catarrh. It has proved itself right, thou sands 01 times, when everything else has failed. And this makes its proprietors willing to prove that it’s the right thing for you, no matter how had your case or of how long standing. If they can’t cure your Catarrh, they’ll pay you $500 in cash. They mean it. They’re certain of their medi<> cine. _ What Is It? The Magic Rocket Lamp and Cioar Lighter. Gives a bright light from a minute to an hour. Half a million in dally nse. indispensable to the smok er. Fits the vest pocket in size and , price. Sample, express paid, $1.00. PRESSTHtduTio'N.iT Lights l ; . A Free Ticket toa How? Buy onaj Banks, saro “get tha Bankj ope ajiLD's Fair. I £C Pocket | jrou will I .The Ido not be deceived With Fas 1 wiiu wastes. Enamels, and Paints which stain the hands, injure the iron, and 'J 11 ™?”. . The Rising Sun Stove Polish Is Brilliant, Odor less. Durable, and the consumer pays for no tin or glass package with every purchase. Jgl[ ‘ PATENTED . BAM IF You don’t want comfort. It you don’t wish to look well dressed. H you don’t want the best, then you don’t want the Lace Back Suspender. Yourdealer. has It If he is alive. Ifheisn’thesheuldn’t be your dealer We will mail a pair on receipt ot $1.00- None genuine without the stamp ae * b Lace Back Snspender Co., 67 Prince t'treet, N. Y. HOW TO MAKE MONEY. A PROFITABLE BUSINESS ON A LIMITED CAPITAL open to any enterprising party lu every town anil village in the United States in which there is no newsdealer. For particulars address THE AMEIIH’AX NEWS COMPANY, NEW YORK. GIVEN AWAY? I This is the most beau tiful new ROSE of the year wh ich wo give EMTIRELY FREE to onr customers of 1892. If you are interested in FLOWERS send forou* CATALOGUE of the grandest novelties and specialties ever offered. IT WILL PAY YOU. write now. ROBT. SCOTT & SON, Philadelphia, Pa. THE LARGEST gHK’^s': TATE JOUR\ A L in the U. S. only $1 per year. It vi>u want to liuv or sell through its columns, ad dress THE WIDE AWAKE, Des Moines, Iowa. .MAKE MOSEY for you by safe Investments in the pros perous State of Washington. Write us. GAMWELL & WARNER, Investment Bankers, Eairhaven.Wa-sh. WE CAN ITnUP STUO Y, Book-kkhpino, Busineot Forms. U UltfS. i'tmnu ns tup, Arithmius, SlMrt-haiul, etc. U Thoroughly Taught by HA [ L. Circulars fro j llrynnt’* t ollegc. 457 Main sl, Burtalo. X. f PILLOW-SHAM HOLD E It". Agents Wanted. 18J TO 815 A n a y 1W.NUTTING.Brockton,Mass. UA I , .Morphine Habit Cured in 10 toZOdava. No pay till cured. DR. J.STtPHENSs Lebanon,Ohio. DAISY mm rjACoss TRADE ftEMiP%Alhl Cubes Promptly and Permanently Lumbago, Headache, Toothoch®, NEURALGIA. Sore Throat, Swellings, Frost-bltoa* SCIATICA. Sprains, Bruises, Burns, Scalds. THE CHARLES A vnrci kr no.. Betti mere. SC N Y N U—3 psTOBIfts UNEXCELLED l APi’L.lKD EXTERNALLY >OH Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Pains in ths Limas, fiacK or Ciust, Mumps, ion Throat, Colds, Sprains, Bruises, Stings oi insects, Mosquito Bites. TAKEN INTERNALLY It acts like a charm ler Cholera Herbai, Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Colic, Cramps, Nau sea, sick tieaduciie. etc. Warranted perfectly harmless, (rieeeath nccompanying each bottle, also dlrectloaa tor use. Its SOOTHING aad PENETRA TING qualities are telt immediately. Try it and be convinced. Price’-45 aud coats. Sold Or all dra;. plots. DEPOT, 40 MURRAY ST.. NEW YORK \A/b&t Musically, it is of immense importance what one you buy. Its life will be many years; years that will make or mar your musical life. Then don’t make a choice that you will regret all these years. In the Ivers and Pond you not only get a first-class piano; you get all you pay for. We send on approval, at our risk and expense, or di rect you to a dealer who can supply you. Write for Cata logue. Iver? 6r Porjd PlZiT)0 Corrjpaoy, Boston. GOLD MDDAL, PARIS, 187a W7 BAKER & CO.’S Breakfast Cocoa from which the excess of oil has been removed, •„ - * * No Chemicals are used in its preparation, ft has more than three times tha strength of Cocoa mixed with Starch, Arrowroot or Sugar, '!j [l |) and is therefore far more eco- j- I i nomical, costing less than ona i Ji cent a cup. It Is delicious, noor- ishing, strengthening, easily Digested, and admirably adapted for invalids Sb well as for persons in beallh. Sold by Grocers everywhere. W BAKER & C0„ Dorchester, Mass. mimwi'iuiiiim iiiiiimimiiiimiiQ 5 MONEY<*£.«>MUSHROOMS I More rr oney in them for less outlaj- than ( any other crop" .-.ay one with a cellar or sta- § ble can raise them. £ Our Primer & Price- j list tells the whole 1 story. Free. Send 1 lor it. A brick of our I celebrated English 1 Mushroom Spawn I mailed, post-paid,] for 25c. John Gar diner & Co., Seed! Growers, Importers 5 and Dealers, Phila- S delphia, Pa. ( AS-Gardiner’s S»-ds:—New Catalogue for 5 1892 now ready. Free. Send for it. § B 7- 15 .7.7/1 f tp ABO W.TIOKills, \%'n*hln;itoii, IL C. ASuccessfullv Prosecutes Claims. Late Principal Examiner C.8. Pension Bureau. 3 vrsiu last war ISadiudicatlngclaim., atty since. CURED TO STAY CURED. We Warn Nana and! Address of Every ASTHMATIC | P.HaroldHayss.N.D.I BUFFALO. M-Y. a escppujuja A tajtT’8 asthmalene I Uh BwI #%- PliPCn ever fails; send us your iddrcss, wc will mail trial I# W11 £5# bottle P* ■— w THE OR TAfT IROS K. CD ROCtUSTER.N.Y BET f ELL tells now. .50% a year, r K r r Send for sample. Dr. J. H. DYK, Adltor, Butiaio. .N. I'. A HT* f - ’ Vk ( VV. T. Fitzgerald, | | Washington, if. V AGENTS N sample rre •Itl-paxe ouaa tree. make lOOper tl. an t wm 5* t . tASli fittest on mv corset- oelt-.Pr ushe. und me licme- .Territory. Or. Kret^iaao, .173B’wray. V Y Pl io’s Remedy for Catarrh is the Best. FAsiest to Use. and Cheapest. .'-old by druggists or sent by mail. 60c. E. T. Hazeltine, Warren, Pa. COMING INTO A KINGDOM! ii * -* / am owner of the polar light*. Of the conitantstar in the Xorthem height*, Oier^er of husbandry, shipping and trade. Forestry, mining and all things made. Minister, I, to llte wide world’s weal; My messengers, engine* and vessels of steeL * * * The Great and Growing Metropolis at tlie Head o! Lake Superior. For Investments in Real Estate, For Manufacturing, For Loaning Money, For Merchandising, FOR EVERYTHING—The Best Place ia America. Sanenor Real Estate Will Advance 509 Per Cent. In tlie M Ten Years. can onorwr.toto L y D AND RIVER IMPROVEMENT CO., # # West Soperior, Wisconsin So $500.00 ^ WILL BE PAID FOR O A REMEDY THAT ^ WILL CURE % COUGHS, COLDS, CON- <0 SUMPTION, LA g GRIPPE. &c.. g as quickly a* FORESTIXE ^ COUGH SYRUP. Price 25c. L. and 50c. per bottle. Dealers gup- W plied by wholesale druggist* a everywhere.