tW' *• ' •* : mmmnnr njiflifffrflM THE FAULT MCTOH. the Tiiole llM^MiiiKlhak mil trmcf ir_« ' * tiljilp it 1 MM mm erally.iaeaeeofa etna-w theogy to is aft hia monomaniac abort An old liever in ooal oil Mntrnnt Mtoriitd byn eruption rising the MrhM lik<» a virt, rutly « U(t - - - - - mow that baa fallen on QML M JOV ia*** fcrate** oondHioe. •Wry- ntrA Vnrtw eSiiSSiShSSt^esB^ Fit!: • Mf a *r w5l!^»' fro* old women friends veto •go, vuuaoBwuavQBMBirMif calling m her, ©no of tbfa Mid "ilnl bo* Ball In AM Utile poor Trlste :>i: |£glMfc» I*nlMklMMVin'feA hto m ^ * -- Onedeife feecsenter night tbe tntfc' . i'vt AbmMbsdfeetl An mean aad aa'aU ateat. na§bŝ ~~-f: to I »yt - a HiMii withaH Me ndaht, tt, . > 4\ An* to * snowbank. w kii heed, *^ f • ®» dm* to chaaoedteUgfet. 4>t(a.,j *$#*t.; t V4T*i& Ikthi Hidflu' **•' . bin fb& howled Mid xiauKilaMWlWlt Aa'aUlle^ him thro* an thief. i UlljhU%wus.th® proper tta* Theuaarfr . ve he had s level bead, JtthtMnrtnattondNiii Be bounded 1MM* alow the track Te save the nightexprena. *4 ̂ K-* if • "-4 • 'f mA . • '••/,*'! Jffti;;, sf%t»»;V iffrv « ..V* He bealrd the ramble o* the Jtî t efc H hove In *ight Aiwend a corner, a * ridden <ra*t O* wind blew oat his light. t •- j. An' thar be stood, (be wreck IMUB ̂ • • The eomht' ttala before. T• £ A hnnytat' on to Bndden death A hundred livw or more. There big an'bright before hfseyse He #aw (he headlight (I run, Be heard the rattlla' o' the wheel*; The slaela' o* the stream. An' laapto' from the railroad track, lT <e ft is lantern InriaM. It tthilt tike startled en^neea; jAtassM'SittH* Before the fife-box door. Be reeds the letters B. A <Jk Upon the shattered riim. trai^ bef r>n» he ThtpMe he couldn't pasts/ An' Dave, he went to work next in Ji«t es bealwns had. The city papers put him in Dare difl't eare a si lck. Be itttlii toeaktn' on the row BewVs thatyaller shirt, A leetle W.IM for nm perhaps, _An' ruthsrdark with dirt* Ez rare i An' got a cluster dlanion' ring, Hnmpht dtauon'in a hornl • stsny *«*gu0me J. Hall • _i-. .Tea1 ! "BEATRICE CENCf. fl» Time Story *f a Tragedy Tkree Cm turies 0M» for the But hî Bovurinf ,th offcih dAthioAgjUkld Ni lor ttooea di Fetofila waa on N< torrftwy. An inqitwt waa ordered, at the close of which all the baron'a eer- "••nta, and ton îta Ibdii Olym; .. . ns' P** ̂ dearly for their eom plieitT. The flat waa baaely ted, that hi. aeoret uright be "with him; the aeoond felt into the handa of the vfT>litin nnlitw wJ him aa t6BW& attention of the jndgea. Then waa no longer any doubt concerning the mov- der at Beeea di Petrell*. and atrength of these revelation* gnilty family were arrested. BKATBICE'S coxraasiox. All " i ̂ thL the ho. -lnS^te of abaolnte denial. Neither menaoee nor prayers could more her. At last her mother approached the rope by which die was suspended, and which tore the flesh from her wrists and bones of her arms. H proved more effectual. "My poor child, says she,'"let ne not be uselessly tor tured. The sin was committed; noth ing rfJyakiB but to do penanoa to save •fefaand to accept ^rifch courage death we deserve." "Deafli is noth- J*plied Beatrice, cf^^s took of •value disdain on her imither. "I would have submitted to that without flinching, were not the honor of my house involved; hut, since YOU all com bine against me, I surrender." Then, turning toward tfie tribunal, "Sate n* unbound, and submit metoanother ex amination." Her additions were full, and agreed .perfectly with the coafeafions of her *o ( ^ .complices, the deposifeoa of wftpe^es and the proofs and accusations of the prosecution. The result was the crushing, horrible truth. Her advo cates pleaded her cause with energy, soliciting and (Attaining an audience of the Pope, hoping to gain, if not their c^use, at least a pardon. Cardinal Bar- , v.k° *'a« the almost inee|Bitide companion of this Pope, in some lines on this lugubrious history, shows us the struggle which took place in the mind of the aged Pontiff between his sense of duty and love of mercy. The tribunal had already probounoed sen tence, but the Pope gftill temporized in the hope that 8on}6"firay of escape maf offer itself to the guilty. He listens four long hours to the pleading. Hesi tation gives courage to the defenders of such a cause* . Giacopo, Luerezia and ^Beatrice were condemned to death; Bernardo to the galleys for life, and to be carried on (Ae oar with his accomplices to the usnal place of execution, in order to be pres ent at their death. All their wealth was confiscated. The 11th of Septem- K mt 3 .*»3 .*< '» ,. *M feai •i#«i in the Baberini Palace at Borne hangs 4he famous original of that picture, which, in print or color, is familiar to tdl the world. The story of Beatrice Genci, is still of such absorbing and tragic interest that while a few artists luad amateurs may linger to study the portraits of Baphael Sanzio and the jPoroarina which hang in that gallery, the crowd is always to be found be fore the picture of this too celebrated patrician--a crowd as full of sympathy to-dav as nearly three centuries ago, on the day of her execution before the eastle of St. Angelo. Bmoe her death, Beatrice has not lackeid a dvocates to urge her innoeence auod to charge injustice upon the sen tence which condemned her. Both poet and painter have been inspired bv her tragic death, and they have endeavored to place the double crown of virginity and martyrdom on the brow of the il lustrious patrician. Nearly three cen- turfes have pbsaed, and the truth of this matter would be still to discover were it not for Signor A. Bertolotti, who re eently published the second edition of of his "Studies of Francesco Cenei and His Family." This book, says the Catholic World, is a collection of irre fntabIe documents, which when they are analyzed with the skill of an ar- chievist, are more than sufficient to con vince ttje most incredulous and to plaoe this tvafic history on its trie b*sis. Beatrice Cenci is one of the members of this wretched family who excites the a>oet interest, on account of her misfor tunes and of the imaginary halo with which popular tradition has crowned her. The truth in regard to this parri cidal heroine has been so distorted that it has ended in making her an angel of beauty, innooent Mid candor, a o&artyr, a young girl clothed with every virtue; above all, very rich, and a victim of the rapacity of the venerable octogenarian who then filled the office of vicar of Him who pardoned his executioners. It is important to be very accurate as to the date of Beatrice's birth. The archives of the basilica of San Lorenzo in Dsmaso show that she was born on the 12th of February, 1577. She monzited the scaffold the 10th of Sep' tember, 1599. She was, therefore, twen ty-one when her father died, and twen ty-two when her head fell nnder the axe of the executioner. Baron Cenci's family was made up of three children--Bernardo, Paolo and Beatrice. Of these, Paolo alone ap pears to have taken no part in the plot to murder Mm; for, as we have seen, ho died l>efore it occurred. IMa Beat rice who appears as the heroine of this horribfa tragedy. It is she who, by her •mnsaries, finds assassins to undertake the business; it is she who introduces by night, through un derground passages of the castle, the wretches to murder her father; it is she who, aided by her stepmother, Luerezia, cunningly administers to the victim a powerful opiate; it is she who, while Francesco Cenci sleeps the sleep *1 of the -drugged, introduces the assassins <• <-•! into his chaml»er. Even they recoil in presence of this sleeping victim. Bea- •Vf* trifle, this timid young girl, by threat and invective succeeds in quelling their fear and shame, nnd forces fhem to consummate the crime rather than see herself use the sword which she brand ishes over the head of her father. The crime aeoouplnbed, the two murderers flee, leavfcg to the two new Eumeni- des the taak of finiahing their work. Then horrible thing!--the young girl and be* mother sehbe this still bleeding body by the feet, drag it through cham bers and corridors to a window opening on the garden, and hurl it onto an enor- •ota older tree, on the branches of which the corpse lies_hangiag till the n&s the '.T H m i*\S iu following morning. This w&s the sight 8, 1598 mvm ber was the day fixed fov the ex £j On this day from early da mense crowd filled the si leading to the Cas^ Angelo, and the roofs of the su ing buildings were covered with spec tators. The funeral cars which bore the condemned with difficulty xnada their way. HER LAST PRATER. The last moments of Beatrice were quite touching. She rose, dried her eyes, and pronounced with firm and full voice her last prayer: "Oh Christ, my Master! thoucalleat me, and I flee to thee with all my heart. Do not refuse me Thy forgiven ness for the great sin that I haw committed. Since Thou, innocent, didst suffer so" many torments, and even an ignomini ous death, why should I, a sinner, hesi tate to throw myself into the arms of death, and a too easy death wheh my sins are remembered ? I am about to depatt, with a firm hope of Mifig to dwell near Thee in Thy p&radm, br at least in a place of purification and de liverance." Cardinal Baronius relates that on the day of the execution of Beatrice, her mother and brother. Pope Clement lift Koine. Three discharge of cannon announced to him the moment these three heads were about to fall under the sword of justice. The condemned knew that at this moment the Pontiff would raise his hand and bestow on them the apostolic indulgence for the dying. This act of paternal charity ac complished, Clement VIII fell senseless in the arms of the prelates of his court --Ejechange. ' « • * jMUwy- with a ••j® These barst at , - a ^ *"**9 tour IMs Jayt Joy fever is ob served just before the appearance of the eruption, occasionally attended br hsadrthe. iaetfag aot awe thai a "•l̂ e day, ordinarily. Thia demandfi treatmant haracd keeping it about SS It in th* menoement of the fever, a little friction to bring and keep the eruption gnLa little bathing and care of the Md, keeping- the head oool while it achea. No marks or "pits'* are ordi» naxflŷ left by thia disMae.--City and -Anr Treal sen published in Germany Ebstein, Gottingen. He ia not, like the English "savior of the stout," full of overflowing thankfulness for relief from |hS mseaie; hrobablv he had not even huflNU nMa it, for corpulent men are rarely stern and strict. His method also differs from that of Banting. A"> cording to Ehstein, the primary cause of corpulency is the want of. aufficiant eo«0 m vfnounoetipie co-e^Uc <MM>|C- tidH»#f8fi|. ' He flrinlv m«iatali^$ tl|at bLr32ffii cures are altogether condemned by Prof. Ebatein; and while the Banting system tfaohes that "fat makes fat," this doctrine' is directly opposed by Prof. Eb|tdi, in whose ideal of fare for those Suffering from corpulency fat forms a great feature. "The" 250 grammes of bacon," says Prof. Ebstein, "which OUT Emperor ordered to be de livered dafly to all soldiers t<jkfog part in the French campaign of 18W, are, so to speak, an official acknowledgment of the importance of fat in the rational nourishment of a hard-working man." The annexed bill of fare is that pro posed by Prof. Ebstein for an average case of corpulency, the invalid being supposed to be 41 years of age, and having suffered from increasing stout ness twenty-five years. The disease is supposed to be contracted by an insuf ficient bodily exercise, a diet consisting of such things as are hurtful, among which are n»n#*UU sweet dishes ana •hose obtaining ^t%umjlii| and those Se ' " T2" " iose evoid of a stfficlent quantity of fat: "Breakfast--A large oup of black tea without milk or sugar; 50 grammes of white bread or toasted brown bread with pVfcnty M t>*Mer. "Dinner--Soup frequently, with bone marrow); 120 to 180 grammes meat, boiled or roasted, with fat gravy--fat meat being prefer able; a small qurntity of vegetables, particularly liguminous, but also all kinds of cabbage. Turnips are excluded because of the sugar in them; potatoes are altogether excluded. After Cipher some fre î fruit, when in sdrt wine. black tea, without milk and sugar. "Supper--In winter regularly, in sum mer occasionally, a large cup of black tea without milk and sugar. An egg or some fat roast meat, or both, some times fat ham, smoked or fresh fish, about 30 grammes of white bread, with plenty of butter, and occasionally small quantity of cheese ai|d 4on*e fresh trial."-^Health and, lining Qettesis Consistent with Geology. In the arch man age there was bly no life; this was followed by an age in which there were the lowestforms of it, as sponges and worms. Then the regular order fishes, reptilea, small quadrupeds, birds, large quadrupeds, and, last of all, aan. As to these facts there are no geological doabts. When the flat went forth the remit was sot immediately accomplished. The daya were longer than twenty-four hours. The periods of ftheeartfeft rota tion had not then been discovered. There are two great periods, ih» inor ganic and the organic, the aceouat of which is began with the creation of light. Soienoe ahows that light js mo lecular motion, auod if this molecular energy ever begun it was then. The first oieaiion was the universe, the next the separating of the different parts of the system. Then the land rose above the water, and on it a primi tive vegetation grew, which received its light from the dearth's aurora. Then comes the second---the organic era; the creation of th» sun, moan and stars was simply breaking away the clouds which encircled the earth. In the in organic era the principle of life in the lowest kind of plants was begun, and in the organic era this life gradually advances till man in created. The ac count of Genesis and geology accord in a wonderful way. Moses probably did not fully under stand what he wrote, and we cannot but believe that he was inspired when he wrote that which the greatest advance in science has but just enabled man to understand.--Prof. K, H. Dana. • ^V'V; , ,1 Letting Him Bows Easy. -O, Clara," he said, "how l^fafve longed for this happy hoar, when we two should sup together alone. Haven't von, also longed, Clara?" "Yes, very muoh." "And why, darling, have you longed? Do you really think so much"-- "O, yes, Henry, I do think everything or-- "You do?" "Everything in the world of th«a*"- "These happy, blissful moment*?*' "No, theae oysters. They are the first IV* had a ehalwe to bite into sines last season.--Texo* 8ifHngg. 4 x-.ly^y | * --- - r.r* V4 **•' -> .* «/:vf ,. ) ; ' tlM , u - j '} v ^ ' it:' The Germ Theory. JThe germ theory of diseiBe continues Uf be disc^seed, and grfat credit is given to Dr. Rudolph Koch, of Berlin, for his labor in this field of enq liim is doe the method of thebacillusin tubereulacis, wftioh pkany believe fully estihtltbcii the pMrs*itive cause of consutoptfoii. The re^ort from Egypt of the Scientific Commission promises to be of very great im|K>rt- anee. Dr. Koch is at the hettd of this great Commission, and will proceed to India, which affords an exoellent field for the investigation of cholera cases. Not only are the scientists of Germany at work in this direction, but L. Pasteur, Declat, and other eminent French savans, are giving their most earnest attention to the same work, and have been equally successful in discovering the micro-organisms and in demonstrat ing the parasitio origin of the cholera. Dr. Declat and others have been Equally successful in yellow fever. Dr. Cutler, a physician of Chioago, is an earnest advocate of the germ the- Qry. He believes that the Texas cattle fever (or Spanish fever) is of parasitic origin and that the disease can he ren dered innocuous by the innoculation bacilius. Dr. <Ctti|er has had a good deal of experience with cattle. He says: "In I860, as a member of the committee on the part of the Kansas Legislature, I had an opportunity to examine into the disease, then prevail ing at a fearful rate in the southern portion of Iba Btatc, and sweeping off whole herds al native cattle. Although without microeoopie facilities, the man ner of the contagion wad every particu larity of the disease pointed to its par asitic origin. During the war, while United States Indian Agent, and sta tioned in the Indian country, south, I had occasicn to lead vast numbers of cattle, both northern and southern, to the Indians under my charge. The danger of mixing the cattle from the two sections was, of course, great, »n>1 led me to experiment. I found by in noculation. with the blood of an ffle'eted animal I oould ptodnce a diastase jfinilar in every particular, but. nn|lbrtw|lately, fatal "ia many caee*. At thSt term the germ theory of disease wis cothpira tivelv unknown. Had the baeithlt been properly cultivated I am inbrsllv cer tain it would have proved as harmless and as effectual as the same proceokhaa proved in France and Germany." It is said that eharbon is even a more fatal disease than Cattle fever, and it is also believed to be of parasitic origin. The same is thought to be true of swine plague, chicken cholera and other diseases so fatal to domeatic animals. American acientists ahould thoroughly investigate this germ theory, and if they are not the original discoverers, they csn at least determine for them selves how far Dr. Koche's theory is correal, and if they find that in the di rection of the parasite theory disease can be stayed or greatly mitigated, they should assist in bringing the facte to the knowledge of thepnl E>lic. The stock interests of this country are immense, and, the disease with which the cattle, aheep and swine are ened are alarming. It is boi science will be able to stay too OQ$ta- disesses whieh hare created snch wide-spread alann.--WeehbtgiGrt Chronicle. my Johnny's biiQ, makes him ao lamci- )£ *B*theittiw%ooalofl," lady. TQ fuaranteayouitll oureH." Another ono Mid, ^My Sarah haa suchajifcaî t̂ theWs.1' to nib h--tily re- woanan, "1 to ft widHntk e&lnffttMa a day, and it'll core her," marked the old lady. "Well," Mid the thiid aint got nobo f̂ aicka but if a body haant got tremble one way, she's got it in another. HHI ean do I cant get my Jennie to stay at home of evenings." "Bub her with ooal oil," said the old and ril guar- C5ol. B., caticm in Kentucky to a member of the Legialature, MI auppoae we can have your support this winter?" "What fur?" - *011 our edu<*tioniJ fitfiAiti, 6f course. We are tfgiuttang t% question, you know, all over the State.* "Dog on your educational interests. I don't want no more of it in my tea." "My dear Colonel, you surprise me! What makes you talk that iwy ? Are yon not in favor of education!" . "No, siree, I hain't." "Why not?" - - - "Well; because I It makes more work for ma You see, before I was eddicated all I had to do was to make a cross-mark fur my name, but now I've got to wrassel with a pen-pint half an hour, and run my tongue out like a slice of liver, jest because I'm ed dicated and torn sign my mm* Go and try some bf them igfeoNuit mem bers. I'm too well eddicated mjpelf to be fooled any furder. "-r-Merchan i Trawler. A ]Ad who is engaged at flie <*tr* spondent's desk in a large concern sur prised his mother by saying: "Well, mother, Fin in the licker busi ness now." "What's that? You dont mean to say you have given up your plaoe and gone to selling whisky?" , "So, ma'am; bat fa iir~th»ttcksa4>- business all the same." "How? What kind of liquor?" "Why, mamma, dear, I liok the stamps for the letters." , He shut the door just in time.--Mer chant Traveler. The H ultipUcatlo« of Dinaeet •Dtaeaaee mnltiplf. One begets another. A tarlSlag tadMlraattton may, therefore, originate a oompUoation at dangerous maladies. Indl- reetiaB ^aft" far more formidable diseases; a mraltltade N oitettits are traoeable to comiti- pntion; fever and asae unhinge* the entire nervons system, and is, therefore, the Bonroe of the protean ailments which affect that portion of the hnman organism. Ho«tetter's Stomach Bitters, howewer, whether resorted to at the Inception of those disorders of the stomach, bowels, or lirer, which srtve birth to the major ity of diseases and dlsabfUU**,ot takenwhen thev have ripened Into formidable maturity, are alike iwwMUllwa Theproeeeaef reeevery is, of course, longer when the malady has gained headway, bnt it is none the less certain. Dys pepsia, constipation, blllousnew, kidney com plaints, and intermittent fever, invariably yield to the operation of the great alterative anil ia- vigwaat. " WHY fe it that whan. a church la banted, nothing is so difficult to save as the organ? Because the fire engine cannot play upon it. •^OM, who did you eay our friend B. mart risd?" "Well he married £40,000; I forgot her other pame." •- - --1 1 ' • ̂ c»uiiim ao INUfyiawn*. » A«k tm Walls, Kiehardson a Co.'» improved ButaMr C»lar, and take no otlfr, Beware of all inttatidns, sndef all other olt colors, for e vfry.othar one is liable to become rancid and spoil the butter Into which It ttft, write Here and > which ItJa put. If you to ua at BwrTiajrtoQ, Vt., now to get it without ex- wlthout wiadoiwa, at Bia vary the castle, as far hway aa she eonld i get from the stasia* aad laoghiag^ and and all the good ttaaas that were ceaHauallr dark room, whStt WlMMBM would always say, "Would God It ingr and wtoa * waa avwafpt sfca would always say, "Wouli God It wera svariihurl" aadtba^ two rsisrka wera all tha remarks She ever BMda. , i _Qaoe a% ivfl |rf JSdtySSSft and trembling, and har fa<»--wall, If loMnd at It onoe yon did act eare to look •gain. As for tha achea and peine that darted and eriaetaassd sad shnaged through her, ana would aotaupaoee that a little thia body like hers could make room far ao many. Co fktsta stayed la har dark room, made her morning and her evening rea day after day, while Mary Maud and 1 Marian went to the halls and the tonrnaunents and the feasts. Whenever the Bounds of mttk ^waiffVS2?i *§k>F" "*** mo* tha waepiaa aad the were all the am asough to reach Tritta'c roata aMto-tap of ,ti»e oastle, she waMM «krew bar thee Sato her hands aad Making he Wants she _ But after a while tomthiBg wonderful happened. One morning aa TrlMe waa sitting iu her room wishing It was evening, she heard a new sound. It was not the mirth and music, it was not the clumsy-footed servant bring- "ing up the dreadful giwets, it was something ap the artadlMFStairs with a rap- [Mha Ihatapacameo . . . o n , a n d f i n a l l y Trlste's door opened aad a little, old, bent- over woman with a walking-stick came in. The little eld woman's face was white and wrinkled, her hair was white as snow, but eyes were black aad so very bright that they Mt up a space around her like a couple of candles and made Trlste'a dark room quite light. The little old woman tapped three times on the floor with her walking stick and looked round the room. '*1 aa your god- anther," she aaM, when she saw Trlete up in tha corner; " you don't remember me, but I remember you; I didn t forget you, my poor child." "Oh, would God it were evening!" said Trlste, trying to be sociable, and meaning, perhaps, "Good-morniujr," or "How do you do?" or something like that. "Hark ye, goddaughter," said the god* mother, "do you want to go to the tourna ment wdth your sisters? Do you want to sit dowa at tha feasts? Do you want to have the brave young knights and princes, with their snow-white plumes and their coal-black chargers, come riding to woo you as they come to woo your sisters? Do you want to sing? Do you want tolatigh? Do you want to dance?" Then Trlste put her heed into har bands and began to cry by way of varying the so ciability. " Stop your crying, goddaughter," said tha godmother, tapping her three tape on the floor again, and as Trlste raised her head she shone upon her with her beautiful eyes and dried up the tears, and while her eyes wera attain* aha went on fealklagi "I was ropr godmother when you were christened Rosabel. When the Evil Bye struck you and cursed you, and yon wore turned into Trlste the Sad, I did net desert you like the others. I have been wandering over the world ever since to find the Fairy that could take off tha curse or that Evil Fye. I have wandered, wandered--oh, how I have wan dered! I was handsome, and straight as a poplar tree; I am old and crooked, but I do not care.--I have found the Fairy. It ran from me, it flew, it hid, it went up and down, it was never there when 1 put my hand oa it, --but I got it at last." And the godmother tapped her three taps, and laufhed three merry laughs, thnt ran round the wrinkles in har face like streaks ef quicksilver. "I found it, I put it Into a bottle and corked It down tight; 1 have brought It to you." The godmother drew from under the travel- tattered cloak a bottle, in which was a white Fairy, dimpling and eparkHnjr; and making funny little fairy bows and gestures. The godmother laughed her three merry, quick- silvery laughs again as she held it up and looked at it. "R is meek and quiet enough now,'4 she said. "When a Fairy is once caught it gives up. It will perform its mis sion. Do as it bids you and it will take off the curec of that Evil foe." The godmother pteseed the Fairy into Triste's hand, aad before Triste had got over being perfectly daaed at the gift, the gxx! mother was tapping down the winding-stair with her walking-stick, and Triste was left alone with the bottled Fairy. How long it took her to get over being dazed; how soon she released the Fairy from the bottle; what it said and what it did, flrst, second, and last, we can all put into fptry history for s res. However «ud wi cannot . to kriow tra expense. Thousands of tests have beea made, and they always prove it the best. No MATTER how often you may file a mort* gage, it never reduces the amount of the oebt.--Texu# Siftinjt. "Samaritan Nervine cured our child's fits. Ibe doctors failed." Henry Knee, Verrilla, Tana. TWK orchestra, if they care to play with spirit, try to have perfcct run of the bars. "PAHALTSKU persons permanently cured.' ' Guaranteed by proprietors Samaritan NervtMi WREN the aaa swallows a man be beeomea an ooean-ate (a aotionate) fellow.---ATepmaa Independent. ^ Pulmonary Consumption. B|4S SIR---I received the trial bottle ft your White Wine of Tar Syrup which ydti itnt te my address. My wife has been troubled with a kin*: disease for mere thaa eighteen years, and waa- paonounced to helast Jlane- ary in the last stages of Pulmonary CoDSUpijv tttm. She commenced taking your Valuable medleiias aad received relief at ofce. JPhe haa used three tMjtffos since and is now using the fourth, and her health is tatter than for many yeaure. We cheerfuiiy reoommoint It to all athlatcd with any trouble of the.tftroat or lungs. We now get our medicine through John Potter, our merchant at this place. Yours respectfully, JUsv. J. B. 'FTT, Brookiine Station. Mo. SCTSAM K. FLV. . .The Smmrmt vt tivtmg. SooviU'a Sarsapariiia, or Bioed aad Liver Syrup, will cure scrofulous taint, rheumatism, white swelling, gout, goitre, consumption, bronchitis, nervous debility, malaria, aad all diseases arising from an impure coadttloti of the blood. Certificates can be preaeatel teem many leading physicians, ministers, aat heads of families throughout the land, indorsing it in the. highest terms. We are constantly in receipt Of certificates of cures from tha most reliable Sources, and we recommend it ga the beat*OBwn remedy for the cure otAaahaana diseases. CfcHMihu mm* PfrMt BH*a Use Dr. Weaver's Cerate aocordlug to direa* I tlonaemttfMyase cured. Itoavaahf subdu ing Ha inflammation aad brings the parte to their healthy action. £oid bf all druaadsta. oi dollars their the #t and phyaWans.and •d hoptleaa, baa raised MMliSoS victor, aad IXr. Pierce haa the spotls of coat la the way of' " rejolo- J, ttok reader, . the aauaa ktod of 1H* Croat of othefehaure bees relieved by the Golden Medical Discovery, j " You may he other yourfrstem maybe coastructed oa a peculiar --tfftaa. But, after all, it la f̂ctte ptfbbabfc that yea are amde a tend deal like ether folka, and that what will cure Duddhlsta have a pretty fable of a tree, called the red tree or Koumboum, eaclTleaf of which bears In mlief a letter, olt the lettera spelliag out a poem to Budtha, aa* this vegetable poem being beautifully varied year after year as the tree rsaawed Its foliage, if the vegetable We, whaierst H may be, from WhWh Dr. Mroa gets the wonderful remedial agents of Ms GoMeo Medlsal Dlsoovery, were thus to spell out the rejoicing of those It had bleesed, we should have a poem to match that of Che red tree ol Koumboum, like It varying itself sessoa by season as new cases snd causes of rejoicing wore given. Jtmea RITCHIK, of Maryland, has fourteen handsome daughters. Of course they are all angels, for "Uitchies have wings.'*--Terns Sifting*. To Purify the Blood. Dr. Hiarer'i Syrup is warranted superior to any compound now in use. A large share of all the diseases with which the human family are afflicted originate ia Humors of the Blood. This remedy is purely vegetable aad designed tor Humors. Sold by all druggists. 4 HAIR-ORE&SINOS should be free from ran* cidliy, should neither gum nor dry the hair, and ahould be of such a nature that the hair bulbs would receive strength. CSrbollne is the only one that seems to fill the bill. StTRKCcacroa RmnnansM.--cure guar anteed. Use Perry Davis' Vegetable Pain Killer according to directions, aad ttwtU cure Bhiety-nlne cases out of every hundred. Try It; it surely will not hurt you. "Boughon Rats" olearsout Rata ̂Mlea If* Mother Swan's Worm Syrup, taatolsas. tla. "Rough oa Oougfaa" Trochea, He; Liqul|,50a. Waixs' Msy- Apple (Liver) Pills, 10c. "Rough on Toothache," Instant relief, lie, sa4 P»te*»yChMe. ft. "ROACH ON Ooras,naerOons, Warts, BOBIOM. MS. , WELLS' Health I The "Rough on" Toeth Powder, elegant. ISo. imm WAKTBDto sell iAMeaHtag. UPCBIa aaoaOBa. K. P. Urastcm, BIBMtSrW&l Itrns 'Ohio. A8PBOIFKIFOR - ^i. Scndstamp (orcinmlsrs. Ool. h. ltlNOHAM, Attorney, Washiiwrton. 1>. C. Young niahsd. OUcSlaisfrse. Valentine Bro« Teuton APHT andean Situatioaa far* , Janes villa.Wls- PATEITS. DRILLS k lOBS, invented and Rosabel!" tweenthe FOB BWOTFsra, «awasnoa,aspseselaB of spirits, and general debility to 'their various forms; aim, Sao pSevenUveagainst fever and ague, ana ether intermittent fevers, the " Ferro-Pbosphorated Bllxlr of Osllrsya," made by CaswalL Hasard * Co., of New York, and sold I* au druggists, is the and far patients recovering other Stehaess K hasoo equal. Chjc AF Obwoar.--What acmnfort ft is to know that in case any ot your children are attacked at nigh* with croun, yop have the khaal la ukg lfelsam. Do- perfectly Keep it on hand. the beat tonic: namedyeshaad ia AUen'7La&/£lMuia! penduponlt, mothers, * perlfe pure aad harmless. Keep it on hand. git Afws la immedtaUrty re l̂e^^e l̂ by the use of Plso's Remedy for Catarrh. Am you looking for a good strengthening benefit they have distributed anMag the ™«n- lonscan be traoed In numberless instances; they are certainly the tonic yon want, aad eaa be procured at any drug store. Fw sickhesdaetonamseaanddlsKinase, Dr. Ban ford'g Liver lnvigoraior has no equal. Ii- a cough disturbs your sleep, one does ef Plaa'a Cur® will giro you a night's rest. . _ . * . SI .IW'I? » » *» t 1 * (M f ' • 1 j , . ever the ways and means, it Is certain that those frelioaoaie aches snd pains, whieh had made of Triste their exercise grounds aid camping places, wore routed out, hip and tbtgh, little and big. She stopped making her two remarks aad learned some new ones. And she began to tire of her room without windows; and she got so orave and strong that she would sometimes at night, when tbe garden was still and dark, wrap herself all round and steal down the winding stair, tc walk under the'traes,and to look at the star* aad the moon.- - ; • From looking at the stars and the mooa aba waatcd<to loot at the sun. And one glad day, right In the very brightest sunshine, Triste walked boldly into the garden. The birds were singing, the flowers were bloom ing, the Iskea, the trees, the fountain*--every thing was glorious and wonderful. Sho walked on with a strange brightness and easi ness, aad aa happy she did not know wheth er It was the birds she heard singing, or some kind or music within herseir. She stopped beside a fountain, snd as she arlnn'-eri In. the stiver water smiled back to her with a fresh, happy fene--each a faeeh, happy face, ao free from those old deformities and marks of the Evil Eye, that Trlste cried out for Joy; and yet shah a wonderful change it waa, she did not half believe it was her own reflection she saw in the water. did not half believe it until the old | ther came front behind some Shrub bery, laughing her quickeilvery laughs fast andloud. and saying, "Ho! ho! hoi Roaabrl! ~~ whenever she got a chance be- laughs. And Mary Maud and Maud Marian, who happened to be walking In the warden, heard tbe laughing and eame to the fountain, and when they saw and understood they pressed Triste in their arms, crying for Joy»over her, and calling her their beautiful And so It was ever afterwards, Mary Maud, Maud Marian, and Rosabel were the three sisters thst lived in the oastle. Triste the Sad was never more heard from. The little room at the top of the castle waa locked up, and the key lest forever. When Rosabel weat up to take a last look at her old room she round that the dear little Fairy had de- I, but on tha deserted bottle had left Its --Dr. R. V. Pierce's Golden Medical Dlsoovery. The shove Is perfectly true in nil but the thia varnish of its.setting forth, and, indeed, not sll know sad afflicted ones, to whom life tt a curse on account of painful and deform* ing d s a*e? Restless, discouraged souls, who say la the morning; "Would God tt were evening;" and in the evening, "Would God it were morning;" dragging out their wears days with no expectation or anything better this side of the crave. If Dr. Pierce*! Golden Medical Discovery will do what ftt elatme to 4o it is surely a golden gift to buaahally; that It will do ea> actly what It clalma hardly admits ef a douhi if we take Into oca Side, atlen the reeponal- bility and position of Its voucher, and the thousands of meat trustworthy a Hassans to Its wonderful power la their indtvlduaU eases. Dr. Pisroe is well hatuWru to the acestal pub lic, not only Mr his Golden tweeavery. but also in o sary and author ol eal Adv practical virtue; and aa originator and pro prietor ef several apeciac reaaedlea, one of whioh, the alteraMva"Pletve's Meesant Purr- attvePSUeta," aarfl Ma preat "GeMea Medical as alWesln the cure HelsaphyaManof large aCMMMM) former me fc»sras«B *r»HN «r»>M hoai7Hi« amoagyoarl einb otdar tor ear rtolo Xte„at mnchloww thaehaspestTsa Hj ~ naitnatoMdit., MO. AOtiliK rit« * l XX.-NOTICE.-XX. At BLUE FUUHKL larasatt Of Iafarior QwOity of Goods to protect their that hereafter " WWt MML .50 per M*. TbeO*.S.A. at. yeeeiiilv FO« SMLLBV AU, i tt sets sa the 1 "W"U>biHS Jrss?' , orta : . _ . trwu^HMwari » wiub amaaQr ctnta1 OOMTIPATION, MIB9, I VOUMAI raaea, s>. uqamea aat, aaap an Meetpt ot the 'BILK Agaate to sll parties •e*e*e*s*e*e*»*e*e*e*e* SHARPI^^ DAIUfi Itidaaai GRAIN * tTOCK BROKKJ t t* at. ffsssissesssssSiSS HOP PLASTER e*e»e»e*»*«*»Ve*»*.S*«*.**«e •sease ea«aS terMeai lei's aisaMsa aaSIiiiiiiran^acSa mjaaiana. Mr. A II. WOOD, O< iKIa tm.1 tattoo of bdag the largest aaif ator iu the Northwiwt, and to their i^ustoniei* arc I«rv<" SSTOorrniiuondence soli HONEY •,U h An Open Secret, SIM Par TO SPEC0hiTCtt& flat the SBXICAIt BUS. TAHO LDUHKNT It bj ftt extmwlQtr WHJ IWOMM II "«PE» Mcnt"vhmveexiUi that flesh ni uaisr tta aaoet fa- vorableelrmanaSaaneafaraushatady; and the "Discovery" iathereaultof mut̂ obaervatfo ̂ experiment and reeearoh. He does not daim that it will cure everything, or that there ard not individual cases beyond Its reach; but he doea elaua that it te a powerful remedy foe chronic dlscaaes of the liver, blood aad langg, aad that from thcee as root diaeasee spring •' iw;«5•mmmJ r * to the ray tone, renoTinc all' ^fliMaM M4 AMWMM. )!• «ther ifari- •wat torn f •ther it eo ' , ik,, " - : , - ' - f -