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?Vv\ t "Ss'iv. ' ' * ' 'A WONDERFUL FARM. "Lucy Baldwin's" Great Ranch in California. A TO-: 7_ Tk T> 4. HTM T jx x lmueiy jltuuicUU, iuurogou lUttiua juuii^f Containing 58,000 Acre3. A letter from California to the St. Louis Globe-Democrat says: Lucky Baldwin's possession from the control of mines 011 the Comstock have gradually grown until now he lias a half a dozen great enterprises under full h.Midway. He owns the largest and finest hotel in San Francisco, with tho single exception of the Palace, and which contains a theatre within it. He has a fine summer hotel 011 Lake Talioe, and ha has shrewdly bought up a large strip of the shore of this beautiful lake, which in a few years will be sought aftcc for villa sites. Finally, he owns the great Santa Anita ranch, / near Los Angeles the breeding place of the string of swift-footed flyers with which he goes East to contest for the prizes on the chief racing circuits, and one of the best general fruit and stock ranches in the State. This pr.ncely domain extends fourteen miles east and west and twelve miles north and south, "A and embraces 53,000 acres, lie shears thousands of sheep every year, raises wheat enough to charter entire ships for convej-ing it to Liverpool, and makes more brandy than any one else in the State, besides turning out a large quantity of wine. rri T. _ 1 .1.1 ii 1 x ue muu wuo are uoaracci on ine rancn get $1 a da}', and the few Chinese who remain?not over a dozen, all told?get $1 a day and board themselves. What adds to the likeness to the Southern plantation is the appearance of young darkies driving carts or herding stock. These are members of a colony of North Carolina negroes whom Baldwin brought out here from their old homes two years ago. He paid their fares and made a contract with them to work for him for a term of years. He built them " neat houses, and here are installed the ten families comprising about sixty members. They have made excellent hands in the field and the orchard, because tac women and children can be counte 1 on for good work in cultivating and picking fruit. The man who has charge of all the practical details of this huge place is J. F. Fulby, a shrewd, energetic Culifornian, who knows wheat growing and fruit culture so thoroughly that lie is a terror to all incompetent hands, and who keeps his small army of workmen under regular military discipline. Judged by the results, his management is the best of any that I saw in the .'outhera country. The wine celler is always an object of curiosity to the average lourist, but even though one enjoys the companionship of the manager and the hospitality of the ranch, it is very dangerous to sample California wines. There is so much strength in the juice of these lusty grapes, ) even when mellow with age, that unless c?ne is a seasoned vessel the chances are iaat he will be overcome before he knows iV. The cellar is piled high with them ten years old. All th: latest machinery r.i*. i.,? ? 1? - ? UlOlllUU^ liUlUf tillll tllU piilCU IS 111 c*\arge of a French export, of life-long experience in wine and brandy making in Ms native country. A.fter one has seen the orange groves, tfcte orchards, vineyards, and the other luatures of the home place, h'i is prepared to extend his observations to the great wheat and sheep ranches on the Santa .& nita. You may drive for miles through itelds wherj the wheat is now knee high ' *ad shows an even stand which would delight the eye of a Dakota wheat grower. Beyond the wheat farm the visitor t comes to the Puento sheep ranch, comprises about 30,000 acre? of gjntly rolling foothill land reaching back to the mountains. The old Scotchman, named Cameron, who has cared for sheep all his life, going from Scotland to New 7* .-aland and from New Zealand coming here. He is a man of wide information, and ho ^ seemed liked an anachronism in this free and easy California life, for he adheres to the Calvinism in which he was bred. An example of the rigid insistence upon his creed was furnished last summer when Baldwin had a party of friends at the ranch. The supply of meat ran out and the millionaire sent over to old Cam - eron to slaughter four sheep. The answer was returned in broad Scotch: . "There will be ua killing of the sheep on the Sawbath," and Baldwin had to send A to town for his meat. Ba'dwin is engaged in splitting up a portion of the ranch into small tracts of from twenty acres upward and selling them to Los Angeles people for summer villas and to Eastern people who wish a winter home in one of the most beautiful vaiieys 01 southern California. A railroad will bo completed through the ranch this fall, and then one may reach T the city of Los Angeles in fifteen min' utes. The only drawback to rapid settlement ot tho ranch is tho price charged for the land. With perpetual water v,- right, $250 per acre is asked for uuimproved land. The majority of those , y who buy this land will be wealthy peo' :"v pie, who gan afford to spend from $10, 000 to $20,000 in laying out and improving'a place. Uniform prices: What the tailor : charges for soldiers' cloths. Tito Sailor's Out lit. <4"\Vliiit is a sailor's outfit for a lorn? ? ? c voyage?" repeated a wcather-bcatoo old B tsr recently, as lie munched a piec-3 of t old navy and gazed respectively into his ^ glass of grog in a Front street saloon. "Why, as for that matter, no two sail- t ors are alike. Ono will go to sea with a n nicj outfit of long togs for nights ashore ^ and a sea rig large enough to start a sec- ? ond-hand clothing store on South street; t and another will lire all his boodle away c in a night's jolilication, and away to sea ' the next day for a voyage around the ? Horn with the suit he stands in and a j ragged suit of oilskins that have weath- t ered both capes and the storms of threo 1 seasons. * "Well, take the average sailor, and i give me an inventory of the contents of t his chest." "I think I will tell you what wo found iu the chest of one of our men who died last voyage; it would hit the mark, perhaps. We had been struck by 1 a squall of Hatteras and had hard work 1 * to ot't fclio tmmlin r>lT tlir? aliin tlm I ? to ? 1' gale which quickly followed hove us to untlcr close-reefed maintopsail. As the men lay down from aloft one of them w;is pitched headlong overboard by the parting of a ratlin, and he was astern and swallowed \ip by the angry waves before any effort could be made to save him. As.is the custom, his chest was brought aft, opened, and an inventory made of his ellects, that might be forwarded to his friends. In addition to the heavy clothes for bad weather, and ( the light ones for use under sunny skies, were found many little presents which the dead man had picked up and was taking to his friends at home. There were dress patterns of rich China silks, pretty toilet boxes, and bits of fancy carving. Each was wrapped up and the address of the recipient written upon it. From letters which wore found in the till of Jack's chest we learned that he hailed from an inland town of Pennsylvania, and the gifts were intended for a mother and sisters there, who will wait 1 ^ i.1.^ i. _ c i.1. ? i . .. 1 n tuny nji iuu ruiuni 01 mcir suuor uuy." < t The Cnban Milkman; \ In a letter from Havana a Chicago * News correspondent says: The lecliero f and his system here are worthy of maga- ? zinc illustration. Milk for the markets i and hotels is brought into the city by j immense ox-carts in cans having the ap- t pcarance of diminutive cylindrical pago- i das, but a large proportion of the inhabi- J tants cling with obstinate conservatism 8 . r to the ancient method of supply. At all hours of the morning I have met on the highways away out in the suburbs sober droves of a half-dozen cows atyompanied by a half-dozen muzzled calves as they * were being leisurely driven into the city by a brown-faced countryman and two i or three of his barefooted boys. Arrived I in Havana these rustic groups became * the traveling milk supply. Almost with- jj out guidance the animals seek the be- f ginning of the "milk route," aud on { reaching the door of the first cus- e tomcr, come to a halt, the cows and J calves taking position with military pre- ^ eision, in single file,-along the flag-stone I footways of the narrow street. Our ' ^uojuu vi (.uuunjriuuu la now IIIU City J lecliero or milkman. The urchins ran | into the customer's house, secures the \ order, and the letchero milks the requir- ' ed quantity there and then before the very eyes of tho housemaid, the portero or el senior himself. In this way from 3 house to house the queer cavalcade 1 passes, until cow after cow is milked clean, when the muzzle is in turn re- < moved from each mother's calf, and the 1 little ternerillas are free to take undis- 1 puted passession of the "strippings." ! The system has obvious advantages, The ' milk is assuredly fresh. It would be 1 difficult for the lecliero to secrete a wa- ] ter-butt about his person. Hooking a Broken Submarine Cable. The ends of broken submarine telegraph cables are picked up with an instrument t called a grapnel iron. It is a stout bar ? of iron about two feet long, with five | prongs or hooks about six inches long at j one end and a swivel at the other. A t rope long enough to lower this grapnel I iron to the bottom of the ocean is at- ' tached to the swivel, and the iron is then dragged along on the bottom by a 1 steamer, which steers directly across the place where the broken cable lies, and * I two or three miles, as near as may be, i from the broken end. By means of two ' wires, which run down the rope and a J simple device on the grapnel iron, an i electric circuit is completed whenever the hook catches on anything and a bell on board the ship begins to ring, and < continues to do so until the strain on ? the hook is relieved. If the hook should j catch on a rock the strain on a dvnam V ometcr attacked to the drag-ropo suddenly increases, and the strain when the cable is hooked gradually increases. I A ship may have to steam across the \ line of a cable many times before success is attained. When the cable is hooked l the end is brought on board the ship , and a dispatch sent to the office on shore j to test that part of the cable. The end \ is then buoyed and sent adrift until the other end is secured. When this is done j a new piece of cable is spliced in between the. two ends and after a thorough testing the whole is lowered over- ( board.?New York Bun. 4 ivory. I Mammoth tusks ot ivory occasionally i oiue to this country from Siberia, but : s these have beeu lying exposed for cenuries, aud probably lor many thousandj if years, and often buried in ire, tho 'nature" has gone out of them and they xe not fit for the cutler's use. Tho eetli of the walrus an 1 hippopotamus ;ro usei iu cousideiahle quantity, and ?einj? of suitable size are used whole for nuking expensive carved haudles. Ivory >f the be^ quality conies from the west nf Afrifii limlnr Hip r. jmipq nf f!nm. fcuv m,,,"vw v* ^""7 | iroon, Angola, and Qaboou ivory. This s brought down from the interior, and etains a larger proportion of the "fat" J >r gelatine, Irora the fact, probably, that t is more recently from the animal. In his state it is c-.dled "green'' ivory. It s more translucent au<i not so white as lie JEgyptiau and other kinds, called "white'* ivory, that have been lying a onger tim*? and in a more sandy region, ind exposed to the heat of the sun until ;hc animal matter has disappeared The jxcellcnce of the ''green" ivory consists nits greater toughness and in its growng whiter by age, instead of yellow, as s the ease with the whiter varieties. Yet myers of cutlery, .through ignorance of hose qualities, usually prefer the whiter cinds, which, on that account, are more n demand for the Sheffield trade, and lave nflnre than doubled in price since 879. The sales of ivory occur every hrcc mouths at London and Liverpool, ind sales arc also lveld t\> a limited extent lad at irregular intervals at Rotterdam. \t liiverpool only ivory of the best qualty ttnd from the Avest coast of Africa is )lfered. Buyers from Germany and franco and agents of American consumes attend these sales, and it is estimated hit about one-quarter of the whole unount goes to Sheffield, another quarter o London, and the other half to Gernany, France and the United States.? Chambers' Journal. The Flow of Metals. In one of his recent interesting lectu'-cs n London, Prof. Roberts-Austen spok ; >f eight prominent points of resemblance jetweeu ihetals and fluids which have ong been known. They arc the rejec ion ui impurities on toiiuincauon, suuuiion, flow under pressure, changes due to :otnpression, absorption of gase*. absorption of liquids, vaporization, and iurface tension. Of tuese properties rjrliaps the most astonishing arc those exhibited by metals wlun compressed. Placing cold powdered meia's in a powjrful press, lJrof. W. Spring, of Lic^e, ja-iscd leid to weld into a solid mass by i pressure of 13 tons per square iir.'h; '.itic, by 19 tons; tin, 82 tons; antimony, $8 tons; aluminum. 38 tons; bismuth, 38 ;ons; copper. 38 tons. At 33 tons per square inch lead actually began to How, Liul at 47 tous tin showed the same phelomenon. "When a pressure of more han 50 tons to the square inch was given, lie metals under experiment flowed hrougli the flne cracks of the compressng chamber like so much treacle; Prof, spring also proved that the crystalline itructurc of metals may be changed by iressure as by fusion; and that it is posible even to build up alloys by pressure Gladstone Preparing His Speeches. We are told, on good authority, this is llr. Gladstone's method of preparing his pccchcs: Lie keeps a box into which hb s in the habit of throwing cuttings from lewspapers and other memoranda of facts >earing upon the subject in hand. On lie morning of the day preceding any jreat onitian lie goes through lus box ind picks out his notes of the particular acts which he wishes to use. These lie nuns in their proper order upon a large iheetof paper and uses them as the posts lpon which the speech itself is to be lung. Then he imagines hims< If actually ipeaking?composes his oration, in fact, u his head. After he is satisfied with it, le dismisses the subject from his mind, md occupies himself unLii the hour for ipoaking comes in?reading ft novel. :Iis memc.*y is so great that his previously composed-sentences come back to liin without effort.?Whitehall JRcview. What He Meant. A young Wall street wag was reccntlv invited to dine with an old gentleman of rather sudden temper. The dining room was or the second floor and the principal 3ish was a fine boiled ham. When the Did gentleman undertook to carve it he found the knife rather dull, and in a sudien passion flung it down stairs after the servant who brought it. Whereupon the young gentleman seized the ham and with admirable dexterity hurled it aftor the knife. "What on earth do you pican?" exclaimed the gentleman as poon as he could speak. *'1 beg youi pardon," was the cool reply, "I thought wui were-ccoinc to dine down stairs." a. man's ucst neip is Himself, his own leart, his resolute purpose?it cannot be lone by proxy. A man's mind may be irouscd by another, but he must mould lis own character. That if a man fails n one thing? Let him try again?he oust quarry his own nature. Let him ry hard, and try again, for he docs not [now what he can do till he tries. Never stop nt the church door to ask about he music. Id choir within. "Good deeds," once said the celebrated Ricliter, "ring clear through Heaven like a sell." One ot the best deeds Is to alleviate tinman sufferings. ''Last fall my daughter was in decline," says Mrs. Mary Hinson, of Montrose, Kansas, "and everybody thought the was going into consumption. Igot her a x>ttle of Dr. K. V. Pierce's 'Favorite Prescripion' and it cured her." Such facta as the above leed no comment. The shoes for milkmen?Pumps. If you feel a? though water was gathering iround the heart (heart-dropsy) or have leart-rheumatlam, palpitation of the heart vith suffocation, sympathetic heart trouble? )r. Kilmer's Ocean-Weed regulates, corrects The prlco of pork?Trichiniasis. i Killing Time* What Is n pleasant way of killing time? Eat- ? nir dates. But sometimes they are Indigestible ind effect the bowehl, which, a dose of Dr. Bigfors' Huckleberry Cordial will cure. The purest, sweetest and best Cod Liver Oil n the world, manufactured from fresh, healthy ivers, upon the seashore. It is absolutely pure tnd sweet. Patients who have once taken it U ?A >11 -?? *? ' * wr >? U1.HC1x njBicians nave deilded it superior to any of the other oils in narket. Made by Caswell, Hazard & Co., New Ifork. Chappkd hands, faco, pimples and rough kin cured by usine Juniper Tar Soap, made by Jasweli, Hazard <fc Co.. New York. A fall trial?A boot at a wrestling match. Soft, pliant, and glossy hair results from the ue of Hairs Hair Reuower. For imparting tone and strength to the. ttomaeh. liver and bowels, take Ajrer's Pill*. , | :'Vy AN OPIUM EATER S STORY. , CrawlttiK Over Red Hut Kara of Iron In. IIIm Kou"rlul Frenzy-A ScieuilUo luvctliI L'aliou UUll iltt ltl'MUltM. Cincinnati Times-Star. , "Opium or death!'' This ln-iof sentence was fairly liissod into the ear of a prominent druggist ou Vino st reet by a per.-on who, a few years ago well oil', is to-day a hopeless wreck! ' One can scarcely realize the sufferings of an opium victim. *De Qui'.icy has vividly i>or.trayed it. Hut who can fitly describe the joy of the rescued vict im f II. C. "Wilson, of Ixiveland, O., formerly with March, Ilarwojd Az Co., manufacturing ,chemists of St. Ixmis, and of the well-known tirm of H. C. Wilson to Co., chemists, for'merly of this citv, gave our reporter yesterday'a bit of thrilling personal experience in (this line. "I have crawled over red hot bars of iron and coals of Are," ho said, "in my agony during an opium l'reuzy. The very thought of uiy sufferings freo/es my blood and chills my houes. I was thou eatiug over thirty grains of opium daily." "How did you contract the hnbit?" "Excessive business cares broke me down and my doctor prescribed opium! That is the wav nine-tenths of cases commence. When 1 determined to stop, however, I found I could not do it. "You may be surprised to know," ho said, "that two-fifths of tho slaves of morphine and opium are physicians. Many of these 1 met. We studied our cases carefully. We found out what thoorgaus were in which the appetite was developed and sustained; that no victim was free from a demoralized condition of these organs; that the hope of cure depended entirely upon the dajree of viyor which could lie imparted to them. I have seen patients, while undergoing treatment, compelled to resort to opium agaiu to deaden the horrible pain in those organs. I marvel how I ever escape i." "Do you meuu to say, Mr. Wilsou, that you have conquered the habitf" "Indeed I have." "Do you object to telling me how?" "No," sir. Studying the matter with several opium-eating physicians, we became satisfied that tho appetite for opium was located in the kidneys and liver. Our next object was to find a specific for restoring those organs to health. The physicians, much against their code, addressed" their attention to a certain remedy aud became thoroughly convinced 0:1 its scientific merits alone that it was the only one that could l>e relied upon in every case of disordered kidneys and liver. 1 thereupon began using it aud, supplementing it wit.li mv iiwn ctuiniol ??< ?? . 0 ..v W..U opwiai ncabUlL'Ut, UUUlljr got fully over the habit. I may Bay that the most important part of the treatment is to get those organs first into good worCing condition, for in them the appetite originates and is sustained, and in them over ninety per cent, of all other human ailments originate." "For the last seven j-ears this positioa ha3 been taken by the proprietors of that remedy, and finally it is becoming an acknowledged scientific truth among the medical profession; many of them, however, do not openly acknowledge it, aud yet, knowing they have no other scientiilc sj)eciiic, their code not allowing them to use it, they buy it upon the quiet aud prescribe it in their own bottles." "As I said before, the opium and morphine habit* can never bo cured until the appetite is routed out of the kidneys and liver. I have tried everything,?experimented with everything, and as the result of my studies and investigation, I can I know nothing can accomplish this result but Warner's safe cure." "Have others tried your treatment?"' "Yes sir, many; and all who have followed it fully have recovered. Several of ,them who did not first treat their kidneys and liver for six or eight weeka, as I advised them, completely failed. This form of treatment is always insisted upon for all patients, whether treated by mail or at the ?ovelana Opium Institute, and supplemented by our special private treatment, it always cures." Mr. Wilson stauds very high wherever known. His experience is only another proof of the wonderful and conceded power of Warner's safe cure over all diseases of 1-2 J 1 * ' * ~ iuu kiaauya, nver ana Diood, and the diseases caused by derangement of those or* gans. We may say that it is very flattering to the proprietors of Warner's safe cure that it has received the highest medical endorsement and, after persistent study, it is admitted by soientists that there is nothing in materia modica for the restoration of those great organs that equals it in power. We take pleasure in publishing the above statements, coming from so reliable a source as Mr. Wilson, and confirming by personal experience 1vhat we have time and again published in our columns. We also extend to the proprietors our hearty congratulations on the results wrought. Ricrao is a tidy affair. Heing entirely vegetable, no particular care Is required while using Dr. Pierce's "Pleasant Purgative Pellets." Tney operate without disturbance to the constitution, diet, or occupation. For sick Headache, constipation, impure blood, dizziness, sour eructatiouu from the stomach, bad ta&te in the mouth, bilieus attacks, pain in region of kidneys, internal fever; bloated feeling al>out stomach, rush of blood to head, take Dr. Pierce's "Pellets." By druggists. ______ Krupp's latest gun kills at nino miles. Asjs-tlie bud with an envious worm," bo Is many a youth cut do^yn by the gnawing worm (xjuiniinption. But it tan be made to release its liold and stop it? gnawing. Dr. Pierce's "Golden Medical Discovery" will, if uiken in time, effect permanent cures, notonlv in consumption, but in all cases of chronic throat, bronchial and lung diseases. Job never asked for anew trial. The Brown Cotton Gin Is *\A No- I." "It is simply perfect." Has all the latest improvements and is delivered free of-all charges at any accessible point. Send to Company at New London. Ct., for catalogue or ask your merchant to order one for you. A Remarkable Tribute. Sidney Ourchundro, of Pittsburg, Pa.,writes: "I have used Dn. Wm. Hall's Balsam for the Dungs many years with the most gratifying results. The relieving influence of Hall's Balsam is wonderful. The pain and rack of the body, incidental to a tight cough, Boon disappear by the use of a spoonful according to directions. My wife frequently sends for Haix's Balsam instead of a physician, and health is speedily restored by its use." Piso's Remedy for Catarrh is agreeable to use. It is not a liquid or a snufT. 00c. Don't scald your tongue in other folk's broth. WOMEN Needl** renewed strength, or who raf?r from Inflrmltte* peculiar U> their Mlt, tkodi try BimS This medicine combine* Iron with pore TMoUblt tonics, and U Id valuable for Dieeaaee peculiar to U'qniCQi and all who lead sedentary llvue. it Kn? rtrhcM and Pnrlfles the Blood* Stimulate* the Appetite, strengthen* the ItloMtei ana" Nerves?in fact, thorough)/ JnTlforatrit. Clear* the oomplexion. and makes the akin smooth. It doss not blaeksn the teeth, eanee headache, or t produce oonstipation?all oiher iron mtdicint6 do. MlM K. J. TaOMPSOM, 81 Columbia At*.. Baltimore Md.. aaje: " 1 have tuffored mstlj with Female Weakness and received no real bejhtit until I used Brown's Iron Bitters. Two bottles hare cured B*. 1 heartily recommsnd It." Mbs, l O. OHapijxe, )m Fourteentli St.. Wheeling, W. Va.. say#: "Iiufferod with Female Weakpee*, and obtained creator relief from the uw> of Brown's Iron Bitten than any medicine I aver used." Genuine ha* above Trade Mark and crossed red li*oe on wiainm. Take no other. Mad* nl; by ' SHOWN C1UCM1CAL CO., BALTUIOkK, Utt. / A. ?>.? ^ vft- SuV i i 0 1]i rllijAhJi %iit 5 I I Relieved at Last! "We know a gentleman In this c~~"?ty who, str months ago, wan almost a hopeless cripple from l * attack or rheumatism. He could scarcely hi>bbl? across the room, used crutches, anil saM himself that he had little If any hope of ever recoveries. We taw hiin Id our town last week, walking nlu.ut lively as any other man, and In the finest health aid spirits. Upon our Inquiry no to what had worked such a wonderful change in Lis condition he replied liat S. S. S. had cured him.. After uslni; a dozen and o half bottles, he has been transformed from a miserable cripple to a happy, healthy man. He is nono other than Mr. E. B. Lambert."?Sylvania Telephone. Treatise on lilood and Skin Diseases mailed free. Thk Swirr SrsciKic Co., Drawer 3, Atlanta, Ga.p or 157 W. Ski St., X. Y. It is THE GREAT SOUTHERN REMEDY for the bowels. It is one of Hie most pleasant and eflicacious remedies. for all summer complaints. At a Beason when violent attacks of the bowels arc eo frequent, tome 8|?eedy relief should be at hand. The wearied mother, losing sleep in nursing the i little one teething, should use this medicine. CO ct?. & bottle. Send 2c. stamp to Walter A. Taylor, Atlanta, tia., for Kiddle Book. Toylor's Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum and Mullein will curc Coughs, Croup and Consumption. Price, 25c. and >1 a bottle. BUSINESS IS BUSINESS! AND ALL PICTURE AGENTS Stand In their own light who do not send for circa lan. to F. M. WILLIAMS & CO., 683 and 685 Brondwny, New York. Plso's Remedy for Catarrh Is the H| Best, Easiest to Use, and Cheapest. Also good for Cold In the Head, IH Headache, Hay Fever. Ac. 50 cents. HQ /^SKGrind bom, f /QimMKLAj "?* Meal, Oyster Sheila, -jHMH^nGKAHAM Floor and Corn ^MMJyjtf'nthl'I^TTATp-OTVrTT.T, (F. WllBon'B Patent). lOO per ' ?. cent, more made in keeping poultry A??o POWER MILLS and FARM PfiEl) MILLS. Circulars and Testimonials sent On application. WILM).\ BHOS., JEaaton, Pa, FRAZERA?K| BEST IN THE WOKLdHHCHO Kh t0~ Get the Genuine. Sold Everywhere. OPIUM MORPHINE III III in li a hit midcn a _ u iinKI I HWHIiUl " w""" A NEW METHOD. PR. J. C. HOFFMAN! Jefferson. Wiaconwr.. WDKBILITI ^^vKnkhKmaF DECAY. AlifMxperieaeo. Bcnubbltul quick nnt. Trial paoai ?ecs. Consultation and Book* by mail FREE. Address Dr. WARD & CO.. LOUISIANA, HO. f A DOLLARS each for New and fdfcfefr I I Perfect SEW IN 6 MACHINES. rSfS^Ed I m Wtfruttd Iit<van.Suti>d triallfd?- PBM I abtM. llujrdlrMtuil nan $15 U>%H. Ornuicirea at pmnluro*. Wrtt? for FREEdr- ya, [\yl cnUr with lOfiO UiKrooutal, trom ?rtry atata. GEO. PAYNE A CO. 44 W.Ho.r?tSI,.<Wrae?. CIO Capital Invested Judiciously Jil # Will earn vou an easy, profitable living W by exhibiting with m&lmprovcd magic: lantern, with 12 views. Kmanuel I. H. Hart, 185 FifU* At*..New York. Mafcea an 8-foot plctare. flDl 11 Sfalrae!*Compondenc* 111* 111 fm aollclted and free (rial of care aeQt u I I LI in boneitlnveaUffator*. Tn* Huvahi ww Ksm*x,x Compxht. Lafayette.Lad. IH JB yvP|| Reliable Salesmen to Travel |HHH I kill andfiell(nthi> tmilu nn?r?i?. WW HIV iill bratcd Civart, Tobm-co, CiKBr?ltrn, Ac. Liberal arrangement*. 8nlary or Oomuilsalon. Addrem immediately,-KKW YORK dc HAVANA CIQARC'O.,No. 1 roarth Av.S.Y THDRSTOITSpe*"ITOOTH POWDER Keeping Teeth Perfect .ml Quw Healthy. H PMH NAMK QUICK Ibr Prof. Moody'. New Illurtrmttd WEjIN U Book on Dreta Making, Now Oolmau, and Mantis Ucuuisii **0. AgtoU Kll 10 mdmj. rraUtOOUK,Ctail?uUiO> AnTITIf *nd WHISK.Y HABITS cured 11IIIII M ?u bottae wit'MntjMilu. Booko? |lfl|| III PRrtlcalarii *emt Pr?e. M.WOOLLKY. 11. D.. Atlanta, Qa AlinP 11for DYSPEPSIA * INDIWllREl n||K|a OE8TION. AddreatJ. M. Oil Ufa UUlifc SHELLY, Charlotte. W. C. AniIIBI and Morphine Habit cared In 10 illlH to 80 day ?. Refer to 1000 pattenta cured VI ivm in all part*. Dr. SUara.Qutn jr, Mich. m losoiaiersstiein. send (tamp PAnftlAne'or Circular*. COU U BINGh I PMI<IMIIH3I HAM. Att'y, Washington, D. O. DU* fA DSIU Great English Gout and Dlall S lIlISi Rheumatic Remedy. Uval ito? al.eot round, 80 ct?. A TCMTC Obtained. Send stamp for pATbll I 9 Inventor*! Onitta. U UmaflHAy^Patent_.{^wxer, WaahlngtoaJP. 0. _ raS??idL 1MT A Tl T TTST Magazlni WtjiwuhW, >? lh? nl^MaW; o> * ;? I, *' tIRv C? iffSEAfftS' /JjWAYS COTULBLB BY USING 1Y1 Ki A1 Li A |>| MUSTANG ! I T.TTrnvnswT.' "i '( OP HUMAN FLESD. OP AXIMAIS* j IMirumniinm, Scratches, Hums ami Scaldn, Sores and Gallf# StiiillN anil ttltco, ,v Mpavln, Crnckn, . Ctitsund UruiMcn, Screw Worm, !<pmitmil:Slitchr?, Foot Rot, Iloof Aif? Contracted Manclcs, L.atncnc?n, Stiff Jointc, Swlnny, I'oiinJcri, Hack ache, j Sprains, Htrains, 3 Eruption*, , Sore Feet, ProHt Bltca, Stiffness, nnd all external diseases, and overy hurt or acc!<fen?." For general use la fi-nilly.Btabloand stock yard, It THE BEST OF ALL' LINIMENTS * . ' S I gSggggg n N U 21 ASK FOR THE W.^ L. DOUGLAS 1 Beit material, perfcct fit, equals nny $5 or $G shoe, every pair warranted. Take none unless stamped " Vf. L. Douglas' $8.00 Shoe, Warranted." Congress. Button and Luce. Boys ank for the W. L* Douglas' ? 82.00 Shoe. Same stylus as ""."flT me ?a.w onoe. 11 you cn.ur.ot -7*3 / get these iIiocb from deal- /t\/ * " *<j| era, send address on postal /*>A/ _ it;* card to W. L. Douglas. .>$> >n Brockton, Mm>. jftyAA/ . "v(I'implen. Dlotcben, Stnly or Oily Sklo, Blominhei< and all Skin Dldcnncfl Cured and Complexion Beautincd by 1 1 Beesos's Aromatic Aloi Sulphur Soap.. i Sold by Druggists or sent b/ mall on receipt of I 25ccnta by WM. DREYDOPPEL, Mnnu- I fuclurer, 208 North Front St, Philadelphia. Pa. I Free Farms sah8!^ Tho most Wonderful Agricultural I\irk in America. Surrounded by prosperous mining and manufacturing towns. Ftirmer's Paradise' Magnificent crops mined In 1885. Tlioima'atfa of Acrca nf Govern* Rtent I,and. subject ttfpreemptionnnd homestead. Lands for Kale to actual settlers at $3.1)0 per Acre. Long Time. Park lrrlgatod by Immense canals. Cheap railroad rateB. Every attention shown settlers. Pot mans, pamphlets, etc., address COLORADO LAND A LOAN CO., Opera House Block, Denver. Col. Bog 239ft BEBU 5 TON .w.mtA-giHi wnuu'l OV/MLL3, HlllrlB9W lm L?*m, 8u*I ItiHan, Bnmb M IvwhI Tar* Iwa ui B??i Bo?? ; Piflill seo? KIKMEnlnVISnH jON*?h? p*j?Ui? fr?itki-fc? MitiMUUillllVli Prie* LtH NoUra thU P*P*r_*Sr awsMMMa "xwziu'xv* BOOK AGENTS WANTED for PLATFORM ECHOES or LIVLNO TIIUTIIS FOR HEAD AND HEART, By John B. Gmigh. ITU last and crowning Ufa work, brim fall of thrffllnp Inter* ?t. Iiumor and pathos. Bright, pure, and good, full of )?uj;htcr and tciri," ItxIU otiigil lo oil. To it u added the Lite and Death of Mr. Cough, by Re*. JL\ MAN ABBOTT. lOOO Agent* Wuntea,?Men and Women. #10? to *200 a month mode. QJ'DiHance no hindrance a? iri give F.'tri Termt and PayVrelgktt. Write foi clrcnlart ti A. I>. WOUTMIKOTON Ss CO., Hartford, Conn. UP|| with small capital make $.1 to $25 per flay HI p M with our amatenr Photo Outfits. No ex. fenl V perlcnce required, everything sold read f forute. It pays big with other business, In mores, shops, at botne.or irouthou-e to house ; affords stca.tr work; pays 300 m percent profit. w? also copy and en- JBgyn iar.ee all stylos and grade* of Por- ll|ll| traits. Work guaranteed, no risk, par- tlculars free, oraO-pas* boo\(,"Jlow to Make Photograph*." and Sample Photo made by Umpire AmateurCamera cent postpaid, fof 12 cm. Write today, name this vjkf AIIFftl uarwr nnd mmmmm _ ? equipment oo.. 331 canul st. vnumcn *ZrmIZ5<3P* step in advance of all others, ? ^fbettcr instrument^ A $400 i^^y^llower price8. s55E5 jf e*%icrtcrm? writerftwlpyw inclosing l/yf id|b*st Stamp roR full particulars. ^gg?i/gggsfi bein bros. & co.^^tejji""*i Salvo CORES DRMEHIESS and Intemperance, not (artuMTj ^9* buuiffectually. The only BdanUfloantt" 49 dote for th? Alcohol Habit sad the Sa only remedy that dare* to sepd bw >* bottles. Highly meat er we mE leal profession end prepared by welW %9 known New York phystrlwns. Bond! stamps for droolers endreCsraeosfc Address "8AJLVO RKjibiD*,* *o.aw?<Mth?C.MowTfrfc I CUR| FITS!. I WlienTiii cure i 40BAqiMa wlytanopimw nt I itimaadjiMnUwttmwenijgl^I eaQwdj tr FALLIWO alCW*M? l(t? ?oof ?t?dy. nmHlT to ear# tb* ?ml MN. J bdWd U bo TMaon nr not , "sllj* . coco for * traatlM ml ? Kh ?o*0? *f M toJUIOIJ Nmidr. aiT* Itpim and Pact Ofle*. I* comU jm fcotblnc tor atrlq), Ni I wIIIojm* ywi. _ .. IddMM Dr. n. o. boot. 1m T?sl h,xtwlm No Hop# to Cut Off HorsnT Manet. II Celebrated 'BXiLIPSK' XIALTBR (tad BBIDIjE (Combined, cannot be Slipped by any bona. Sample #V^iriiW Halter to any part of U. S. free, on #B>4n reoelpt of $1. Sold br all Saddlery. j&j&H #H Hardware and Harueu Dealers.AVSiJn Special dtaoount to the Trade. bend for Price-Mat. 1 V J. C. LIGHTHOUSE, T IF Rechfater. X. Y. i?, ? 1t> heumatic SPECiiiL. Cure fti*r*nt?od. $2.00. O. JtliHiraeman, (JUeml?t,269 Colombia St,, Brooklyn, N.T I0KERM SUCUBbvtmnUd wmtorproof, Ud wfll k?*p you dry In Tb? nrrPOXWCL 8UCUBU k p*rffct rH1t?C co*t, ?nd uUHe. Bew?r? of Imitation*. Bono *?nnl?e without ?b? ,lM?k (. ntoatnU*4 CaUlof it J. Tower, Boston, Km. BK8T IN THE, UM ittuaMfe, I to* mvktU %r7^ * 6 *$**' ffTO^ '?&fJl^lSk ''' ^PlniM