BK or QOOO CEEKB. /•'tkoMh storms may com® to *looia ^•' And stfUtlM *r"- ad rndsijr bow And still UM iOMt-btoto* bupr l»r, nd nuMjr bowth* krotylow Ti;»t mnuttvUb so fair rod gay. Be of good cJwet,- Tbe son ia near, irf y,' roon stall sh'ne again, my doar* , 1 shall th» sky once more be bine* '•;| The bird* Khali sweetly slag onoe more, lind. gemmed w th sparkling drops of rata, The flowers look lovell r than befora. Be of good cheer-- The son is near, , , ® en in the darkest home my dear, y 9 Though many Borrow* crowd yonr ... |.i As thi o gh tt>!R rb pn"/ fii! world •«» - 'ihough hope seems dead within yonr -- And love and friendshio careless grow, Be of good cheer-- Tbe snu is near. Hid just behind the clonda, my dear. -And sometime when yonr eyes are full Of team, behold! a rainbow bright 'In all the rarest hues e'er worn By gem or bloom, shall meet yonr Be of ft >od cheer,-- The mn is near, With warmth, and jov, and light, my dear. > --Margaret Eytinge, in Good Cheer. U' |£r ORTHOGRAPHY AND ORTHOEPY. ; 'The bnl'y was not big enough "Who tiled the editor to blongh. The careful housewife taoil<*d a dongh. .And served the dish at twelve o'clongfa. The woman had a dreadful cough. Which caused her sudden taking ongb. 'The farmer found It wa* the chough, 'That ate his corn and Harden tough- 1 The nest was in the pine-tree's bough, " Upon the mountain's rugged brough. The man was far from perfect, thoncb His heart oft bled for others' wough. After the serpent phed his slouch .Bis color was a handsome blongh. Fast to his brand-new patent plough. The farmer bitched liia br.ndle cough* .• •The baker kneaded all his dough, . And at the work he was not slongh. ' Into the -deep tenaofens slough The cattle strayed, though none knew hongb. With the assistance of the Colonel We've made these rhymss for this week's Jolo- nel -Soiuerville Journal. grows, but grows to t: PETER'S, AT St. Peter's Church in Rome is surely the largest and grandest temple of di vine worship on the face of the earth. Gibbon, the historian, has pronounced it "the most glorious structure ever applied to the uso of religion." This most conspicuous building in modern Home stands upon the site of Nero's circus, in the northwestern part of the city. It iB built in the form of a Latin cross, as are most of the great cathe drals of Europe. According to the most reliable figures, its extreme length is over 700 feet, the greatest width f00 feet, and the heighth to the top of the cross 448 feet. The entire building covers an area of more than five acres. But figures givo only a faint idea of the vast dimensions of St. Peter's. Let us make a few compari sons : Thirty good sized churches, such as are generally seen in America, could be put inside the great church and not fill it. Over fifty thousand persons could find standing room in it at once. Three loity church spires, one above the other, would scarcely reach the top of the cross that surmounts the dome. No crowd ever tills its vast ^To human voicecan reach all Opposite Blake's Tni'nitiire Store. V- O. J. HOWARD, MT. D. JLT |>HRSIQIAX AXD STTRGKOX. ! I residence, opposite K. E. Ifollearr. til. •}' PRATT nous a. J A. r*ATT, Proprietor rirsl •«mmod*tioat. Uood Barn in «od JTi- i iLi te. JLUm CTrtmtrr--wwr -J built several times during the thousand years which followed. The foundations of the present structure were laid by Pope Nicholas V. in 1450, but more than three centuries rolled away before it was entirely completed. In 1535 the •work was intrusted to the hands of that greatest of all masters, Michael Angelo, then 72 years of age. The dedication took place in 1C>'2!>, under the pontificate of Pope Urban VIII. The colonnade was built in 1*>77 and the sacristy added in 1780. Thus we see a church founded before Columbus discovered America, dedicated about the time the pilgrim fathers landed in the new world, and finished only a century ago. Forty- three Popes lived, reigned and died while it was building, each one lavish ing great treasure upon it. What it cost nobody on earth can fully tell. At the lowest calculation $50,000,000 has been expended upon it. Besides this enor mous sum, it must be kept in repair at an annual expense of oyer $30,000. Let us linger a moment on the great square, or court, called by the Italians a piazza. No other building in the world has so grand an approach. An army of 100,000 men might gather in this vast inclosure. It is well paved and crossed by marble walks. In its center stands a lofty Egyptian obelisk, which, including the pedestal, is 132 feet high. It was brought from ancient Heliopolis by the Emperor Caligula. This gigantic shaft, ten feet square at the bn«e, is of red granite, and weighs 500 tons. Two grund fountains, one on each side of the obelisk, are continual ly throwing up their thousand jets of bright water, which turn into feathery spray, waving to and fro like plumes in the air, then fall, arched with rainbows, into the immense porphyry basin be low. Sweeping round to the right and left, and partially inclosing the grand square, are the famous imposing semi circle colonades, consisting of 284Doric columns, each one sixty feet high, ar ranged in four parallel rows, and the whole covered with a stone roof. A whole regiment of marble saints are ranged along the battlementa of the roof. An inscription at the entrance tells us that the great artist Bernini built the colonnade "for a shadow in the daytime from the heat, and for a place of "refuge, and- foi* a covert from the storm and from rain." (Isaian iv., 6.) On the higher battlements of the church itself, stand thirteen colossal statutes, representing Christ and his apostles. Passing two giant statues which stand on guard at the foot of the stair way, representing St. Peter and St. Paul, we mount three successive flights of steps and enter a grand vestibule, fifty feet wide, sixty-six feet high and extending across the front of the build ing. At the right and left ends of this groat portal are the gigantic equeistrian statues of Constantino and Charle magne. From the vestibule three great entrances lead into the temple itself. We enter, however, by smaller doorways, for the immense bronze doors are open only on grand occasions. On the extreme right of the "porta santa," or holy door, formerly opened on Christmas eve only once in twenty-five years, and then walled up, to remain closed for another quarter of a century. Now let us lift the heavy, quilted leather curtain which closes the com mon doorway, and enter the church, which surpasses all other churches in the world. What a marvelous temple TUL We are dazzled by its and awed into silence by its and grandeur. Yastaess which 1 harmonize-- All musical in its immensities. It is hard to realize that this is work of man. And it is impossible to com prehend its amazing proportions at first sight. But its colossal size will grow upon you more and more every minute, every hour, every day. Thou sect not all; but piecemeal thou must break. lo separate contemplation, the great whole. The floor formed of rich mosaic work, stretches away like a great plain of variegated marble before us. The lofty paneled vault of the nave, pro fusely adorned with gilding and paint ing, lifts itself 150 feet above us. On every hand are gorgeously decorated altars, marble and alabaster vases of holy water, sacred shrines, before which flame golden lamps; costly statues, beautifully mosaic copies of world-re nowned paintings, sculptured tombs of departed kings, magnificent monuments of dead popes, massive columns, grand arches, colossal piers, golden ceilings, splendid side chapels, each as large as an ordinary church, and, above all, that stupendous dome. The dome! the vast and wondrous dome, To which D.ana's marvel was a celL can we give even a meager outline of the wealth of decoration or the wilderness of architecture in this great- est of all churches. But let us take a rapid walk through the building. -In the center where the transept crosses the nave, immediatetv beneath the dome, stand the "high altar," used only on great occasions, and then only by the Pope or high officials. This al tar is covered by a colossal bronze canopy, nearly a hundred feet high, called the baldacchino. It was designed by Bernina. and made from metal taken from the old Pantheon. In the tribune, which takes the west end of the church, is the famous "chair of St. Peter.*' W« are told it was the identical one in which St. Peter ofliciated as the first Pope. The original chair is inclosei] in a bronze covering, and the four gi« gar tic statues, representing those four great fathers of the church, Augustine, Ambrose, Chrysostom and Athanasius. In the south end of the transept are twelve confessional boxes, designed for the accommodation of strangers in Home. At one and another of these boxes men of all nations may make con- fession and hear the absolution in theii own language. Beneath the high altar is the shrine and tomb of St Peter and St. Paul. A double flight of marble stairs lead down this most sacred spot in the great church. A rich marble balustrade sur rounds the descend, and around it a hundred silver lamps are burning. Be fore the tomb is the l>eautiful statue of Pius VI.. kneeling as if in prayer. There are many other tombs in the crypts below, and many sulphulchra} monuments in the church above, some of them masterpieces of sculpture. Among the tombs of popes it is strange to see the tombs of James III., Charles Hi., and Henry IX., kings of England. Now, if you would gain some just conception of the immense size of St. Peter's, let us take one more look. Come and stand near tho center of thq building. As you gaze upward re member it is over three hundred feet to tiie foot of the dome, and more than four hundred to its summit This vast dome is supported by four stupendous piers of stone, each one of which covers as much space on the floor of St. Peter's a* a good-sized church. And yet, su; h i> tho wonderful symmetry of the structure, its vastness is lost in tbe harmony of its proportions. The grandeur ove whelms thee not; ^ ml why? 11 i -• not 1 - se ed, but thv mind, Kxf.'imdsd liv the genius of th? spot, H is crow.i col sna . A broad, winding staircase leads up to the roof, and so gentle is the asceu| you might ride upon horseback. On the walls as you climb yon see inscript tions telling that the Prince of Wale?, (^ueen of Spain, und Empress of Mexico had ascended the came step*. On thq spacious roof, w hich is nearly flat, are domes and pinnacles rising around th<j great central dome. Before ascending higher let us pause awhile on the cir cular gallery that sweeps around tbq interior base of the dome. It makes one dizzy to look down the frightful di* tance to tho floor Of the church. Thi people walking in the cathedral below seem like creeping pigmies. From thi* point we ascend between the donblq walls of the dometo the "lantern" which surmounts it. From the balcony around the lantern wo have a bird's-eye view of the grant} old city and its surroundings. Thiq panorama is enrapturing. The Rome that is, and the Rome that was, lien spread out like a map beneath us. Close at hand is the Pope's palace and gardens. A little way off is the massive circular castle of St. Angelo. Further on is Pinoion Hill, with its fine view of Rome. Yonder is the tower of the Cap itol and the Pantheon, and still beyond is the Coliseum. Beyond the far-ex tending walls of the city is the vast, desolate, deserted, campagna, across which we can trace the ancient acque- ducts of Rome, more extensive than the water-works of Now York, Boston, and Philadelphia combined. To the west are the lofty Apennines, and to the east, as far as the eye can reach, we see the blue expanse of the Mediterra nean. But we must climb still higher; first to the little room on the top of the lantern, then mounting a vertical iron ladder, at least 400 feet up, we reached our highest point--the copper "ball." The view from this point was not very interesting, consisting, as it did with us, of simply eighteen panting, perspiring men and women, huddled into a space that looked from the ground below no larger than a globe a foot in diameter, --Troy, New York, Times. SUGGESTIONS OF YALtft. The Real "Religious Editor." We are coming gradually to feel that social pleasure with us is only a fading tradition of what once was. As the cares of editorial and pastoral life thicken upon us they exile us from the parlor and keep us on a perpetual stretch. If we are not visiting the sick, or making a sermon, or conducting a prayer-meeting, or taking a collection, or preaching a funeral, or examining packs of letters, or writing to some body, or correcting manuscripts, or reading proof, or tugging at an edi torial, or beating wearily up and down the Baptist lines, or glancing over ex changes, or paying exorbitant gas bills, or fighting book agents, or attending board meetings, or botheiing with com mittees, or receiving advice, or "recom mending anybody" who desires to be recommended, or listening to the visit ing brother, or signing petitions, or something else of this sort, we feel like a culprit for wasting our time. But now and then we break our fetters and pay our court to liberty.--Richmond Religious Herald. THE purest butter ever made may be come tainted and poisoned in one abort hour by objectionable surroundings. A STRING wet in kerosene oil and tied around sugar barrels, lard cans, pre serves, etc., is said to keep away ants. The string should be wet with the oil every few days. SOOT is a good manure, especially for land infested with insects. Soot is good for nearly everything in the kitchen garden. It is also good for a lawn, and it may be used along with any manure. FOR polishing mahogany, walnut, etc., the following is recommended: Dissolve beeswax by heat, in spirits of turpen tine, until the mixture becomes viscid; then apply with a clean cloth and rub thoroughly with a flannel or cloth. To KEEP honey the year round, let it run through a fine sieve, to separate it from the particles of wax, then boil it gently in an earthen vessel, skim off the foam whioh gathers on top, and cool it in jars. Cover tightly and set in a cool place. A NEW fancy in the crazy-quilt line is to have in the exact center of the quilt a block of plain satin with the initials, in monogram or otherwise, of the own er of the quilt. Another new depart ure is to have each block the embodi ment of an idea, or at least to have each block develop method in madness. For example, let one have Kensington work in outline patterns only, another needle-work of different kind, or ap plique, or painting. The foundation of theee blocks must necessarily be of plain colors in silk, satin or velvet. CASE OF CANARY BIRDS.---It is not generally known that draughts of cold air are as unwholesome for a canary bird as for a child. Many a pet bird has drooped and died a mysterious and lamented death for the lack of a little thought on the part of it3 mistress. Many birds suffer also from heat; their cages are hung so high that while the room does not seem too warm for the mistress it is very uncomfortable for the bird. I have known of cages being hung so near a stove that the were be came so heated as to be unpleasant to the touch. If one has not the time to be thoughtful and careful of pets, it is more humane to dispose of them to some one who can be. NEW Remedies gives the following method of bleaching sponges: "Soak the sponges, previously deprived of sand and dirt by beating and washing in 1 per cent, solution of permanganate of potassium. Then remove them, wash them thoroughly with water and press out the water. Next put them in a solution of one-half pound of hyposnl phite of sodium in one gallon of water, to which one ounce of oxalic acid has been added, and leave them in the so lution for fifteen minutes. Finally, take them out and wash them thoroughly By this treatment the sponges are ren dered perfectly white. Many sponges contain a more or less dark-colored brownish core. If treated only with permanganate and acid the core i* either not bleached at all, or if it has been somewhat bleached the tint is apt to grow again darker. By tho above modification every portion of the sponge is rendered white and remains so."- Too Big. Big things are not often useful or profitable. Bulky, unwieldy property that a person can do nothing with, is very forcibly characterized by the phrase, "He has an elephant on his hands." Many great workB of humau skill and boldness, however, that are too big to be profitable, are not to big to be useful, and the following per tinent remarks of the Railway Age are rather suggestive than absolute. Whether the great bridge between New York and Brooklyn will pay even a low rate of interest on its cost, besides the large sum which will be required each year for repairs, is not at all cer tain. It seems as if there was a limit in bize for structures of all kinds, which it is not profitable to over-pass. The Great Eastern steamship, while it was in many respects a mechanical success, was, on the whole, a great failure. Locomotives beyond a certain weight are not profitable. The wide gauge for railways has been abandoned, because the narrower one was found to be best adapted to all the conditions involved The use of driving wheels of very large diameter on passenger locomotives was continued tor only a comparatively short time. Nature herself, while she may produce the immense, does not obtain from it her effective uses. The vast propor tions of the London dray-horse can be profitably employed only in a narrow range of conditions. The giant grenadiers, whom Freder ick I. ransacked all Europe to obtain, were not effective soldiers in the field. It is the man of average size who is en during, alert, adapted to all the varied demands of practical life. In the case of both machines and men the gigantic is not, all things con sidered, the most serviceable. "Kurnel" Smith's Hearty Welcome. There was a party of four of us out from Cheneyville, Louisiana, to look over a sugar plantation, and we had dismounted by the roadside to drink at a spring and rest a bit under the shade, when along came a native on a mule. As he drew up and looked as over, we saw that he was armed with shot-gun, revolver and knife, and the eyes under his old hat had a bad expression. "I reckon vou gents hain't bound over to Kurnel Smith's place!" he said as he surveyed us. "Reckon we justar' that,". answered r spokesman. "How soon!" "Right away.'* "Say, GineraJ, will yoB do me a favor?' "I reckon." "Sot here fur about half an hour, and then don't hurry. 'Ihe Kurnel and I have had a leetlefurse, and I am going to git the drop on him. Reckon yon don't care to mix in?" "Reckon not, and if these gents is agreed we'll give you time." We didn't raise any particular objec tion, and the wayfarer passed on at a gallop. By and by we followed at a slow pace, but made no discovery until we reached Smith's place. The "Kur nel" was at the gate with a rifle!leaning against the fence, and as he came out and shook hands our guide asked: "Been any furse around here, Kur nel?" "Nothin' to speak of, thank ye." "Didn't see a fellow on a mewl come this way ?" "Well, somebody did come along an' fill that 'ere gate post full o* buck-shot, an* I sgnt a bullet through his ole bat to teacn him not to be so keerless; but git off yer bosses an' come in--come • ight in an' make yerselves to hum."-- Detroit Free Press. that There nan which springs only from vanity. This deserves but little sympathy, un less the sufferer be very young; for by the time that maturity is reached a man ought to have got sufficiently rid Of his vanity not to be tortured thereby. Then there is the more rational sensitiveness which proceeds from an exquisite per ception of the proper relation of things, and is united with the most deliwle tact and kindly consideration for oth ers. The man who possesses this kind of sensitiveness will often feel pro foundly for others who do not feel for themselves. He will blush and wince at an indignity offered to a friend, or even to one who has no special claim upon his affection. This subtle psycho logic quality is at once a powerful, a pleasurable, a useful, and a most un happy gift. It is powerful because it is a substitute for that seer-like talent which enables a man to read the souls of his brethren. It is pleasurable be cause it provides the person in whom it inheres with exquisite thrills when any noble thought or action or any grand work of art is presented to his contem plation. It is useful because it bestows a certain knowledge of life and charac ter independent of that acquired by personal experiences. And it is un happy because it compels its possessor to sympathize too universally with the miseries not of friends exclusively, but of all sentient creatures. The sensitiveness of small people is another affair altogether. The woman who quarrels with her friend because the latter received an invitation which the former did not, and men and worn' en in general who cannot endure, with out sharp pangs of envy, some small supremacy, social or professional, ob tained by an acquaintance--these are fair instances of petty sensitiveness. The worst of it is that small natures like these have nobody to educate them, to help to enlarge them. Large nat ures can educate themselves. After years of turbulence and struggle they can attain that supreme and superb calm which nothing ruffles. Not that the grand sensitiveness which renders their perception of misery, small and great, has wholly died out, but that the emotions have become trained by the intellect, and that vast serene resign a- natiou reigns which is born of a recog nition of the inevitable. Possibly re ligious faith may be united with this condition; but, if so, it is not the faith rooted in conventional theology, but that which is the outcome of an intelli gent contemplation of the economy of the universe, so far as we see it.-- Sunday Times. Seven Wise Men Baffled. The New York Morning Journal says that Mrs. F. G. Kellogg, 50 East Eighty- sixth street, was partially paralyzed, and lay for seven days in convulsions. Physi cians were engaged and discharged until seven had failed to help or cure her. She was unable to leave her bed, and was as helpless as a child. After using all sorts of salves, ointments, lotions and plasters, her case was given up as hopeless. She was induced to try St. Jacobs Oil as a last chance. She began to improve from the time the first application was made, and, by its continued use, she has completely re covered. THE absence of all surgical1 attend ance in the field does not add to the satisfaction of service in the Chinese army. The theory advanced to explam this brutality is not so much a callous indifference to human life as a super stition akin to that of "the peculiar people," who refuse all medical advice to their children. The man who gets a bad wound is regarded as one whom the gods mean to die. For a similar cause the Chinese are reluctant to res cue a person drowning. No ONE can be ill If the blood la pure. Tel. low Dock and Sarsaparilla root have long been recognized by physicians as blood puri fiers. Don't be humbugged by the advertise ments of tho many quack bitters, but occa sionally use Dr. (iuysott's Yellow Dock and Sarsaparilla, and you will live to a good old age free from all distress of mind and body. Many of our best citizens who Ions suffered from bad blood, indicated by weak kidneys, indigestion, sores, aches, etc., owe their re covery to the use of this remedy. GRATITUDE is the homage the heart renders to God for His goodness. Christian cheerfulness is the external manifestation of that homage.--*Steele. The Key Note Of halt the infirmities which mar comfort and aggravate one another is a lack of physical ener gy, easily remedied at the outset with a reliable invigorant. As a means of checking premature decay, Hostetter's Stomach Bitters is unrivaled. The functions of digestion and assimilation, always imperfectly performed where there is a loss of vigor and bodily substance, are aided; nervousness and falling off of appetite are speedily remedied through its agency. Consti pation and disorder of the liver are thoroughly relieved by the Bittern, and the kidneys act more effectively in straining impurities from the blood when it is resorted to as a diuretic, lihen- matic complaints are averted, fever and ngue enred and prevented, and the ailments to which the aged are specially subject are mitigated by it. Persons who experience difficulty in sleep ing soundly, will find that a wineglassful swal lowed before retiring will facilitate repose. " I HERD," is the way the cow-boy begins his oonvereation. Dairymen Prefer lk KKSSRS. WILLS, RICHARDSON & Co.: Since the introduction of your Improved Butter Color among my customers, it has given universal satisfaction. The loading dairymen of this section who have used it give it the preference over all other colors, of whatever Dam* or nature. They are especially pleased with the fact that it does not become rancid, like other oil colors, and their product brings highest prices in market. W. 8. NAY, Druggist. Underbill, Vt., April 5, 1H82. TBE more successful the hotel-keeper, the greater ino-ability he shows.--Ttxai Hi/tings. LYMA E. PIKKRAM'S Vegetable Compound was first prepared in liquid form only; but now It can he rent in dry forms by mail to points where no druggist can readily' be reached, and to-day the Compound in lozenges and pills finds its way to the foreign climes of Europe and Asia. "A MODEL woman "--The inanimate frame upon which wraps are displayed. AT.T. pain in the nervous system, wind ooll® •ramps etc., cured by Samaritan Nervine. WHAT man must have his glass before he can do a day's work? A glazier. "YOUR Samaritan Xt rvine cured my son's fits," writes Mrs. S. M. Parkhurst, of Girard, Mich. THE banks generally meet a crisis with re serve, My Six-Year-Old Daughter* Dn. C. D. WARNER: Dear Sir--I received the complimentary bottle of White Wine of Tar Syrup you so kindly sent me. Our little 6-year-old daughter had a very sore throat, badly uk erated, and coughed almost inces santly. We gave tho medicine according to directions, and she began to improve im mediately and soon got Well. Please accept thanks. Mrs. Groves and I have recom mended it to others. I shall want to get some of it at the beginning of winter, as I consider it a very superior medicine. Yours very respectfully, KBV. H. D. GROVES, Ciarksville, Mo. Pastor M. E. Church. MOTHERS, the best dressing for children's hair is CarboUne, made from pure patrol* um, thoroughly deodorized and delightfully per fumed. It makes the little one's hair soft, silky, and glossy; it also eradicates dandruff. nxtomcmm #p KocHESTHu The Mb mt t*m fliim «yM gwa Patafc's VMal Biwp Oae Hi Badness lfows-- Its Or--> HagMMto, The present floods, which am either devss-. tatmg or threatening the country in every direction, are justly cause for apprehension. No matter whether they come suddenly or by slow degrees, they are, in either case, a great evil and much to be dreaded, and yet Amer ica will always be troubled by these spring overflows. Probably one of the most disas trous that was ever known oocurred in Roch ester, «. x., about twenty years ago. 'ine Genesee River, juet above the falls, where Sam Patch made his final and fatal leap, be came completely blockaded by ice, forming an impassable dam, and the water coming down the Genesee River overflowed the prin cipal portion of the city of Rochester. This catastrophe would have been repeated the present year had not the energy and forsight of the city authorities prevent ed it. The writer happened to be in Roches ter at that time and was greatly interested in the manner in which this great catastrophe was averted. Every few moments, a roar like the peals of thunder or the booming of cannon would be heard, and in order to Bee this ice blasting proooes the writer went to the top of the new Warner Building, which overlooks the Genesee Klver. From here hs was not only enabled to see the process uninter ruptedly, but also the magnificent building which has juet been completed. This is un questionably the finest building devoted to business and manufacturing purposes in America, being entirely fireproof, eight stories high, an4 containing over four and a quarter acres of flooring. Mr. Warner treat ed your correspondent very courteously, and in the course of the conversation said: " We arc doing a tremendous business, and are far behind in our orders. This is the season of the year when people, no matter how strong their constitution may be, feel, more or less, tho pain and indisposition, the headachec, colds, neuralgia, rheumatism, dull pains, sore throats, coughs--all the 1,001 ills that flesh is heir to, come thi3 time of year, if at all. It is natural, therefore, that we should be very busy. This is specially true of our Safe Rheumatic Cure, and it is crowding us very sharply for a new rem edy." " Singular, but I had forgotten that you do not advertise to cure all diseases from one bottle, as is done generally by many other medicine men, but 1 supposed Warner's Safe Cure was for the cure of rheuma tism." "And so it has been until our remedy, which was especially for rheumatism and neuralgia, was introduced. We have been three years perfecting this new remedy. Study first taught us there were certain powerful ele ments in Warner's Safe Cure, better known (as Warner's t>afe Kidney and Liver Cure, that made wonderful cures in chronic and acute rheumatism, but during our investiga tion we learned of a remarkable cure at a celebrated springs, and put experts to in vestigate and found that the springs did not contain any valuable properties, but the course of treatment that was being given thero was performing all the benefit. By carefully combining the active principles of this remedy with our Safe Cure, we have pro duced our Safe Rheumatic Cure, and the cures it is affectiug are simply wonderful, and 1 do not doubt it will become as popular as our Safe Cure." "You Fee in to talk freely in regard to your remedies, and appear to have no secrets, Mr. Warner." "None whatever. The physician, with his hundred calls and one hundred diseases, is necessarily compelled to guess at a great deal. We are enabled to follow up and per fect, while physicians can only experiment with 'their hundred patients and hundred diseases. With the ordinary physician, the code binds him down, so that ir be makes a discovery, he is bound to give it to the other physicians, which, of course, discourages in vestigation, to a great extent. This is why the great iscoveries in medfcal science of late years have been mado by chemists and scientists and not by phy«ician«, and it in a measure accounts for the great value of our remedies, also for the remarkable sucoess of all those doctors who make a spocialty of one or two diseases." "And you find that you are curing as great a number of people as ever before?" "Yes, a far greater number. Ws never sold so much of our medicine as now, and never knew of so many remarkable cures." The writer departed after the above inter view, but was greatly impressed, not only by the sincerity of Mr. Warner, but by the vast ness of all he 6aw. Mr. Warner's medicines are used throughout the entire length and breadth of the land, and we doubt not the re sults they are effecting are really as wonder ful u they are related to be. " A DEBT is adorned by payment,' adorned by escapement. Instantly Relieved. Mrs. Ann LaCour, of New Orleans, La., writes: "I have a son who has been siok for two years; be has been attended by our lead ing physicians, but all to no purpose. This morning he had his usual spell of coughing, and wais so greatly prostrated in consequence that death seemed imminent. We had in the bouse a bottle of Dr. Win. Hall's Balsam far the Lungs, purchased by my husband, who noticed your advertisement yesterday. We administered it, and he was Instantly re lieved." . ••Put up" at the Gault House. The business man or tourist will find flrSt- class accommodations at the low price of $2 and $2.50 per day at the Gault House, Chica- go, corner Clinton and Madison.streets. This far-famed hotel is located in the center of the city, only one block from the Union Depot. Elevator; all appointments firet-clasB. H. w. HOVT, Proprietor. Cattle Wanted. 1 Parties having cattle for sale of any olass, please address, giving grade,numbers, age and price, John C. Abbott, Box 2250, Denver, Col FOR twenty-five years I have, been afflicted with catarrh so that I have been confined to my room for two months at a time. I have tried all the humbugs in hopes of relief, but to no success until I met with an old friend who had used Kly's Cream Balm and advised me to try it. 1 procured a bottle to please him, and from the first application 1 found relief. It is tho best remedy 1 have ever tried.--W. C. MATHEWS, Justice of the Peace, Shenan doah, Iowa. v Foil DYSPEPSIA, INDIGESTION, depression of spirits, and general debility in their various forms; also, as a preventive against fever and ague, and other intermittent fevers, the " Ferro-Phosphorated Elixir of Calisaya," made by Caswell, Hazard & Co., of New York, and sold by all druggists, is the best tonic; and for patients recovering from fever or other sickness it has no equal. and un- THE increasing sales of Piso's Cure attest Its claim as the best cough remedy. USE tbe Frazer Axle Grease, 'tis the best in tho world--will wear twice as long as any other. Dr. Sanford's Liver Invigorator--Cathartic, Tonic; will cure when other medicines faiL "Rough on Rats" clears out Itats, Mice. 15c. Mother Swan's Worm Syrup, tasteless. 25o. k "Rough on Coughs" Troches, 15c; Liquid,50c. WELUS' May-Apple (Liver) Pills, 10c. "Rough on Toothache," Instant relief. ISO. "Bneha-paiba,'1 Great Kidney and Urinary Car*. H, "Bough on Corns," for Corns, Wart*, Banion*, lie. WEIXS' Health Renewer enraa Dyapepala, Impotansa "Bough on Dentist" Tooth Powder, 15c. GERMAN Rheumatism, Sciatica, Lumbago, Bsckach*, Headaca*, Tssthachs, ••re Thi^aweIlla(k*mlM,Brat Bant*. ScBMiTrrMt Bltee. }JB .',LL STUBS MWUI PAIRS A» U1K SeUkf DnalM u< D»lenenn*hm IKlJ C*aU* I PirMtleaj in 11 langa*!**- THE CHARLES A. TOfiELEB CO. •<*>.> hhlm, •t.C.tt UUBRKS BT A PBOBIM£3(T HIJB> BOH ODD FELLOW. From the ffudton (jr. r.) RtgUter. MT. John Sting, a faithful Odd Fellow (Past Grand) (Uudenwald,- No. 442), and a member of the Baptist Church, wn: 1 have been, aa moat of my acquaint ances In Hudson know, a sufferer from dyspepsia for ten years. The symptoms of my malady were those •-^oh * mffiiosi oticr smficiwe In the lsad woulfi recognize#* their own. Beginning with indigestion, sour stomach and flatulence, I became so weak that my body became a burden too heavy to carry, and my mind was weighted down by a gloomy despondency. After eating I felt as if I had a ball of glowitig iron in my stomach; my abdomen would bloat, and I was afflicted almost constantly with a sick headache. A lady learning of my condUsten advisrd me to use DR. DA FIB KENNEDY'S FAVORITE REMEDY, telling me what an infinite deal of good it had done her and others whom she knew. I began taking it in the latter part of August, and uaed altogether only three bottles, when it achieved in me the most won derful improTement. I hare now gained flesh, and feel stronger, better and happier than I have in ten year*. FAVORITE RFJtEDY cured my friend. R. F. Hermans, of Ohent, of the lingering remains of malarial fever and of biliousness. Mr. Harvey Thomas, the grocer on Warren street, Juet below the Worth House, says that it has had wonderfully good effects upon him. Scores of my acquaintances Bay that having once tried it they would never again be without it. I have given it to my children, and found it the best medicine I have ever known for regulating their bowels and purifying their blood. The knowl edge of this medicine I deem the greatest lesson of physical life." lien's Lug Balsam, A mm THAT WILL cm j CONSUMPTION, COUGHS, G010S, I ASTHMA, SHdllPs Alt Diseases of the Throat, Lungs and Pulmonary Orpins, ^ •HE LUNC BALSAM Has enred Consumption when c physicians have fafled to effect a col*. •HE LUNC BAL8AM Contains no Opium in any form. "HE LUNG BALSAM Is strictly pure and harmless to tha 1 perron. THE LUNC BALSAM -Is recommended by Physicians. M Nurses. "HE LUNC BAL8AM For Croup ia a late and aure BsiMt try it. THE LUNG BALSAM Should be used at the first Cold or Cough. THE LUNG BALSAM As an Expectorant has no equal. T ELEPHONES.--The best in use for private lines. Address with stamp UNION TEL.Co., Leyden, N.Y. DID SSUTo sell onr robber hand stamps. Tenia Dill rflIiree. Taylor Bros. & Co., Cleveland,Ohio. PENSIONS To soldiers and heirs. Send stamp for circulars. Col. L. BINGHAM. Attorney. Washington, 1). C. AGENTS WANTED for the bMt and faetert . Pictorial Books and Bibles. Prices redu._ per oent. NATIONAL PUBLISHING Co., Clucigo, t-selling luoed_is *go, 111. £ o make money speculate in stocks. 110 and upward. tuts and calls. Explanatory circular sent NATIONAL STOCK CO., 62 Broadway, N. Y. SEND LOC. IN ST AMI'S FOR SPECIMEN BEAD-titul and artistic household ornament to 8. KEYSKIi. 287 Druid Hill Avenue, Baltimore, Md. PATENTS. Send stamp for onr new book on Patents. L. BINGHAM, Patent Lawyer, Washington, D. C. lltfDITCrcUSANPSECUREA CDCC WW Iml I C PAIR OK FINE SHOES, r ITCC J. K. HICKNK1.I. & CO., Itrocktou, Mass. Wholesale and retail. Bend for prioe-Uat, Goodn sent C. O. D. Wigs made to order. E. BUHXH.VM, 71 State street, Chicago. HAIR rfTHK FRENCH NOVELTY CO.. 1»5 and 197 X Fulton St., New York, send all kinds of JEW ELRY. OEMS and NOVELTIES for lowest cash price. Send for catalogue. CARPENTER'S AND .TOINKKS. SENI) FOR Saunderw' Patent Automatic Boring Machine, $6.50. Satisfaction guaranteed. WELLS MANUFACTURING CO.. Ashawav. R. I. WANTED--LADIES TO TAKE OUR NEW FANCY work at their homes, in city or country, and earn S6 to $13 i>er week, making goods for our Spring and Summer traile. S« ml 15o. for sample and par ticulars. HUDSON MFG. CO.. 205 Sixth Avenue, N. Y, PERFECT CAN OPENER (entirely new principle). Selling like wildfire. Exclusive territory sold. Refusal given on purchase of sufficient goods to guarantee push. Samples mailed, 40 cents. MAN HATTAN SPECIALTY CO., 114 Nassau St., New York. TX>U\J) AT I.AST!--TO KEEP EcHlS FRESH ONE M. YEAR. No pickle; no salt: no powder; will not settle: cost, less than h"- per dozen. Send recipe for fl. Fend at once before hot weather. Address A. N. UI.I.NS, Attleboro, Mass. Box 277. COUNTRY NEWSPAPERS Supplied with partiy-printed sheets in tbe moetB&tto- fartory manner. Send for samples and prices to THE NEWSPAPER UNION, Nos. 271 and 273 Franklin 8treet, Chicago. scmp ROOK Leatherette Bound lllust'd Cover Size BH x 10%. By mail oa receipt of lOo. East Bide Agency E. 0. Bart's Fine Shoes, 081 Grand 8t., New York. Please mention this paper. 5 TON JQNESI WAGON SCALES, V*lWllV 1 Im Iihm, IM Smss Tare Seae and les* Boa, $60 and JOMB iMfajs Uutottht--for tnm MM Uit mMUaa Uls paaaraa" •Urns JMfS IF UlttUiTM, »••. M.T< CATAWRH CREAMJALM Causes no Pain. Gins Relief at Once. Thorough Treatment will Cure. Net a Liq uid or Snuff1. Ap ply with Finger, (jive it a Trial. 86 cents at Druirciste'. 80 cents by msil, reg> Druffjciste, Oweito, N.Y. J. N. HARRIS&C0. Limited, Cincinnati, 0» CAUTION.-Be not deceived. C«D Inns Balaam, and take no other, accompany each bottle. MARK* BITTERS LINIMISLOOSMINE&I Liver and Kidney Bamedyf |Compounded from the well known! Curatives Hope, Malt, Buchu, Man drak& Dandelion, Saraapi cara Sagrada, etc., combu agreeable Aromatic Elixir, parilla. lined witbaa Can- | THEY CUBE DYSPEPSIA ft IHDIGESflQI, let «poa tbe Liver Mai aianeye, I RB»T7IIATB"THS BOWELS, | I They cure Rheumatism, and all Uri nary troubles. They invigorate, nourish, strengthen and quM the Nsrvou* System. t Aa a Tonlo they have no Squat. Take none but Bops and Halt Bitters. -- FOR SALE BY ALL DEALERS Hops and Malt BltteraOo* DETROIT, MICH. For Two Generations The good and staunch old stand-by, MEXICAN MUS TANG LINIMENT has done more to assuage pain, relieve suffering, and save the lives of men and beasts than all other liniments put together. Why? Because the Mnstang pene trates through skin and flesh to the very bone, driving mt all pain and soreness and morbid secretions, and restor ing the afflicted part to sound and snpple health. PROPKIETORS. »80U> BT ALL MEDICINE DEALERS." NEVER FAILS. The only known tpedjlc for Epileptic Fits. »B~A1SO for Spasms and Falling 61ckaes*.^jfc Ncrvone Weakness quickly relieved and cured. Eqnallcd-by none in delirium of fever.^Bfc H. JM-Neutr&lixei germs of disease and atckasNf j Cures ugly blotches and etobbwn blood sores, j Cleanses blood, quickens sluggish circulation^ ^ Eliminates Bolls, Carbuncles and Scalds."d S'l as-Permanently and promptly cnresparalyslfc L Yes, It is a charming and healthful Aperient*^ > Kills Scrofula and Kings Evil, twin brothel*. Changea bad breath to geod, removing cauatw * fST"Bout!< biliousness and clears comptol--jL' Charming resolvent and matchless laxative.*Vjp It drives Sick Headache like the wind.^* Contains no drastic cathartic or opiates. " Promptly cures Rheumatism by routing it^aa-'. Bcstorcs life.glvlng properties to the blood."** I» guaraateed to cure all nervou* di*ord*rs.~Ga' (29^Reliable when an opiates , Refreshes the mind and invigorates the body. I Cures dyspepsia or money refnnded.^t* gr Endorsed In writing by over fllty thon»anjp Leading physicians in II. 8. and jhtrope.*^fc • Leading clergymen in U. 8. and lnope.*H - " Diseases of the blood own It a oonqueror.^a • " . For sale by all leading druggists. Sl.fiO.^A For testimonials and circulars send stsmp. Tbe Dr. §. L HM HML St. To«ep2x, ^Ce. Lord, Stontenburgh <fr Co.. A ;?ent.««. Chi«w>, m DOES WONDERFUL CURES OF K1PHEYBU8EA8ES AMD LIVER COMPLAINTS, O Because It acts om the LITER, BOWELS aad KIDNEYS at the same time. Bseauos it cleanses th* system of thspnlsew ous humon that develop® in Kldaay and Tfct- BAXJT Opnsttp^ Hon. Piles, or in Btraumatism, N(o*l|la,H* •oasXMsscdsrsand all Female Complaints. - VTSOLID PROOF Of THIS. IT WELL SUBZLV CUB! CONSTIPATION, PILES, and RHEUMATISM* By eanslnc TUSH ACTION of all th* <n»ans ain/f fanetionfl. thmhr CLEANSING the BLOOD restoring the normal power to throw off disease. THOU8AND8 OP CAMS of the wont forms of these terrible disaassa have been quickly relieved, and in a short time PERFECTLY CURED. FUCK, «1. LIQIIB OR DRY, SOLD BT DBRGGISTB. Dry can bs sent by i WELLS, RICHARDSON & Co., Burlington, Vt. 8 Send stamp (or Diary AlmanM for 1S84. I L? N E Y - W > Crick, Sprains,^Wrenches, Khea. mattsiii, Neuralgia, WiHi% Pleurisy Fains, Stitch in tha Side, Backache, BvoUan Joint% Heart Disease, Bore Knscls* Pain in the Cheat, aad all pains and aches eithsrloealsr SHARP PAINS Extracts, it is iudoed th* beat pain-killing, sMmnlaMnjfc soothing and strengthening Porous Plaster ever nsda Bop Platters are sold l>yall< It cents or live for $1.00. Hailed on receipt of price. Bop Flatter Co., Proprietors and Manu facturer,, Boeton,Mcex. HOP ' PLASTER nrCoated tongue, bad breath, sour stoinsch and lH«a cured by Hawley't Stomach sadLtrer Pgls, »ela Young Men malted. Gimilarsiree. Va LEAM TIUMSAPHT and eaa big wages. Situations fa* VaitiiUiic lirca- JanesriUe.WSh FREE1 CiKKBRHOS. We will send free by mail a sample set of onr laif* (Jenum). Fniioh ami American Chromo Cuds, <Ng tinted and jrold grounds, witb a jirioe-llet of over ! different design*, on reoeuu of antanisi for postal. We will SINO wend free by mail, as samples, ten of onr beautiful Chromos, on receipt of ten cents to pay f packing and pontine: also incline a confident price-lint of our large Oil Chromos. Ageuto w«n' Address F. UIJiASON ft CO oar & 46 Summer Street, Boston, Mass. TO SPECULATORS. B. UNDBLOB & CO., N. G. MULXKR £ COU 5*7 Chamber of « Brosdwar. ^ Oommsroe, Chicago. Msw Tork. GRAIN * PROVISION BROKERS, Members of all prominent Prodnos Exchanges f* Kew York, Chicago, St. Louis and Mil wank ee. We hare exclusive private telegrsph wire betwet •Chicago sod New Yon. Will execute orders on on Judgment when reinjected. Send for circulars conta W particulars. IIOBT. LIXDBLOM k CO.. Chics F00TE ® Original METU01 A| n CVCC It*** »» without doc- OF UUJ EI tv tors, medicine or glasses n A M n fared witho'toperation IIII11 £i or uncomfortable trust. (IRE! RUPTURE DUIIinQK Csrrd without cutting; rnilQUdlO ncw.i>aiules8,safe,sure. NERVOUS «« CHRONIC 'incurable." Address DP. F. B. F00TE, B*X 788, X. Y. City. iiNsuMPim; - bare a positive raaedr tor tho ah*™ diseasejlfcjug t thousands ef caaeeel the wormt kM ap4 «<»« ndtngbarehoencured. Indeed.ss.«tewft.le»j>}t» •fllcacT, that I will asnd TWO •OTTLKSras*. to- r with aVALUAKLB TUATlUen this dlawss,* n«e •tandlni In lta gether witn {sjaaArer UAJJ.I Tl iKanrMSai A.&0GU and 1». O ad lima. _ . t urn WWII A •est Oeogh Syrup. Use in Usas. Sold WHKN WRITING TO AUVKKTISKML _pl--so smr yoa saw Iks siTsroMMi|; In tills ^4'" S'^