. ' k f . -i ^ --"i ^ ^ ar'1'^u 1 "* •" ?W~ 7 l> PIONEER DATS Ef OHIO. 4n Aged w« -ll» Wow H«tf fWlMr W,in«ot C W. t, ^IgliAr df JKdan-T'o*, known to the present pioneer-history reading nem i-atk/,1 as Adam Poe, the Indian fighter, is the oldest person living in Wayne County, Ohio, writes a corres pondent of the Cincinnati Enattiirer. Si? IP n^1yi®f> ye*» <*f age,"lh»vis#li of^iext montn being the first clay of her ninety-sixth year. She is in full pos session of all her faculties. She lives alone in the little village of Congress, in the northeastern part of the county, where . she, kaa resided for a number pf years. % ; .. .; :f.;k Aunt Sallie Cuffle, a name by which she is known to all acquaintances, is the youngest child of Adam Poe. She was_ from - July- 115, •» 4791-; in ^ Washington County, Pennsyl vania. At the age of 18 she was married to Adam Cuffle. His death occurred seventeen years ago. To them M ere born twelve children. Since her husband's death slie has kept house by herself. About three years ago she received her second sight, and could read>ffea print. She has been a regu- laiv attendant at the village church, walking a mile in order to be present at the semi-monthly meetings. Her present residence is a homestead left her by her husband, and the house be ing too large fpr.her alone, a family oc- cup*w one par#, although she lives apart from them. Her father, Adam Poe, whose life has been chronicled by different historians, and who occupies a conspicuous position in the border strife of the Buckeye State, resided in Wooster in 1813, and worked at shoemnking. Affip?>Cq|He relates the following in re- "'gard to liis death: A political meeting was m progress in Massillon. The crowd being informed that Adam Poe, the slayer of Bigfoot, the celebrated Indian chieftian, resided in the vicinity, eent a delegation after him. He was brought and carried on the shoulders of the admiring throng. Although past 90 years of age he enjoyed the sport, but several days after he became pros trated and died soon after. Mrs. Cuffle resided at Congress at the time, and hearing of her father's illness she mounted a horse and rode through the night to her father, reaching his bed side just before he died. She was then 47 years of age. In speaking of the conflict with Bigfoot she states that her Atherts account of the light differs from iheWfcomit giveti l»y historians, who wrote that her father, Adam Poe had the encounter with Bigfoot, when she says that her father always told that his brother, Andrew Poe, hail the hand-to- ,l<ajid <iul)t with the Indian chief, while he, Adam,' shot a fid killed the Indian. •'Ife#' T^cital'df her father's account is as follows: "A body of seven Wyandots made a raid upon a white settlement on the Ohio River, near Fort Pitt, and killed an old man who was alone i^t cabin. The news of the murder soon spread, and my father and Uncle An dre^, witli some neighbors, set out to capurfe * a$di Jfutish the murderers. Tffer" ftfllftwifd the Indians all night, and next morning found a trail leading to the liver. My Uncle Andrew did not go direct]}- to the river, but left father and the others and went through the .thicket. He stole down to the bank ftilrt1 discovered Bigfoot and a little Indian with guns ready waiting for the puMu*Ki£ party. Uncle Andrew con- shortt BigfOot, and raised his gun and pulled the trigger. The gun only snapped and did not discharge. The snapping attracted the attention of the Indians and they discovered Andrew, who saw it was too late for him to run, coglre sprang toward the Indians. He cafcght' them both and threw them d<»vn.,* lUm little Iudian got IOOSQ and drew his tomahawk to kill Andrew, who kicked backward and knocked the toma hawk from the little Indian's hand. Meanwhile Andrew was holding Big foot. He finally released himself and, seizing a . gun belonging to the Indians, shot ^the little Indian. Bigfoot again grabbed Andrew and they rolled into the water, and Andrew got Bigfoot's head under the water, aud supposing the Indian was drowned, he released his hold. His supposition was not correct, and they both started for shore. Big foot reached the shore first and picked up the gun with which Andrew had shot the little IndjUifi... At this time my fatlicv appeaietl on the scene, attracted tflqr©4>y the" feport of the gun. His gun happened to be empty, and both he and Hip'foot started on a race to load. In his hurry Bigfoot jerked his ramrod out too far, and it-fell out of his hand. My father loaded fii'st, and shot Bigfoot just as the Indian was raising his gun. ; Seeing Andrew in the water ray father looked after him, and found that he had been wounded in the wrist by the little Indian's tomahawk. Andrew called to father that he could help himself, but father was anxious for his safety and went to his assistance, while Bigfoot, in his dying struggles, rolled into the river, an^inH'iwdy was carried off by the cur rent*- eemnider of the pursuing party came up, and seeing Andrew in the water took him for an Indian and shot him in the shoulder, but he soon recov ered. The other Indians were over taken and killed, and in that fight my father was wounded." Systems of Numeration. I don't kuo.w,how the Damaras th«tjAs£»rtn; co«|t.?'i Th# Chiqttif** of America, a very low Indian tribe, can't count beyond one. For any lai'ger sum than that tlipir simple lan guage used terms of cwhparison alone --sg mtmr-ss one's eyes, as many as a crow's toes, as man}* as the fingers on one hand, and so forth up .to six or seven. The T&snianians^ could get is far as two. that they stopped short. Theft- simple scheme of nulner- iftion was merely this: One, two, a great many. The Australian black fellows in Queensland go a step further^ they reckon thus: "One, two, two-one (3), t®y-t\vo (4)," and after that they say v tlinrt foiir, * meaning thereby an nUmln-r. One South African 4 ̂ ajrily'Sjeats.tfcfe rudimentary rcsc- aud* laurtf s haw to count up to ten. But eleven, or both hands and one over, it regards as the ne plus ultra of human computation. When a British detach ment once m&xrlied against it, the scouts brought in word to the elders of the tribe that an immense army was coming t# light theni--"an immense1 army; eleven white soldiers!" On the other hand, some savages have really very advanced systems of numeration; for example, the Tongans, whose native numerals go up as far as 100,000. Even this degree of proficiency, however, did not quite satisfy the devouring mathe matical passion of Labillardiere, who asked them what they called ten times that number, and so on, until he had finally made thetai give names for all the subsequent decimal changes, up even to one thousand billions. The po lite Tongans-, anxious to oblige a benev olent and generous scientific gentleman in so^filmartant a matte;*, proceeded at ofcro*t^tti>pfvfiiln Tvith WoVds, which the unsuspecting explorer immediately wrote down, and dqly^rmtrf as mathe matical terms is the ncAoiiKS of his trafel. But, was for wfgduftlicity and unwruputousnesi of savages: The sup posed numerals in their higher ranges were really the rudest and naughtiest words in the Tongan language, with which, as missionaries sub^ra«ntK dis covered, the AilyneAins had KUC«erefuifr imposeck oil Itlm-Jnand and childlike innocence of a scientific stranger. Such are the dangers of leading questions addressed in an iru- perfectly-understood tongue to the wicked minds of the children of nature. The children of nature jroantlv re spond in the pr«ri*e spirit mf m East- lad Arab.--The Comhill Mogaiine. • Horses lOst com One of the most constant sources of surprise to those accustomed to use? horses in the city, as well as to new comers in the State used to seeing the greatest care bestowed among Eastern I farmers in the matter of shoeing their ? horses, is in the almost universal prev alence in California of . the practice of j allowing horses to r^naln l'awpfooted \ for all ordinary farm Work?* M-is the I exception and not the rule in the rural districts here to see a farm team kept shpd. The absence of cold weather, with its attendant frozen earth and ice. is of course in a large measure respon sible for this practice. There are many reasons, however, why Hie "ofttam is a good one, and should be more generally adopted where climatic conditions per mit. ' The first consideration among settlers of limited means is, of course, that a very large item of expense is t saved and much t^e' othezirii^ gained. Nine-tenths of the injuries" which horses are subject are caused l»v improper shoeing. It is the exception and not the rule to find a blacksmith who thoroughly understands his busi ness, and who does not burn and pare the hoofs of tliO -horses left to liis tender mercies until they «*B irreparably in jured. Hundreds of valuable horses are ruined every year from being shod by some cross-roads blacksmith who barely knows how to drive a nail'. 'On this account, then, whenever it is prac ticable, the horses may just a# WdUbe left unshod. Their hoofs will "require a little trimming or rasping every month or six weeks, but otherwise they will keep themselves in good condition. Where the animals are to be used on ordinary* roads and at ordinary farm work no shoes are necessary. Of course, if they are to be ridden or driven over rocky mountain trails and roads it will be necessary to protect their feet, but oftentimes it will be ^fbtind suthdent simply to shoe the forq feet,; yfkQTQ most of the strain comes; j . , ; Where horses are raised, as'they are largely in this State, in hilly or moun tainous regions, their hoofs at an early date become toughened and hard, and can stand much more without being shod than the liorses raised on tl*e soft ground of the valley. ;Af ilistipefxon should always he iuo<ie.t]}eB, .saiau fthe question of shoeing arises, between horses raised on soft ground and those brought up on gravelly or rocky soil. A good example is afforded by the Indian horses. They are never shod, and yet will travel distances over the tractors roughest sort of country at high. speed that would completely break 'down a "civilized" horse, no matter how care fully shod. Even when the ground freezes it may be that for ordinary pur poses it will be found that no ahoeiag is needed. This of course is not sus ceptible of demonstration here. What is claimed in California is that for all farm work, except eorftinuaT travel ov rocky roads, it is not necessary, bfltr the contrary i9 a positive benefit hot shoe the horses. Many instances might be cited of horses that have been worked until they died of old age, who had never known a slioe^and probably would not have done half tm well or lived nearly as long if tbiey < had been given them." Another" consiaeration not without some weight is that when a horse kicks,, as kick the^ will some times, it does not hurt half as badly to receive a blow from an unshod as from a shod hoof. Actual experience prompts the offering of this suggestion.--San Francisco Chronicle. An Egyptian City of the Dead. tjr M. Maspero, the conservator of the K§fefi6<'Poi44 #8 i®* seat an in- WWstfng acWunt of lottie recent arch- ffiological discoveries he has lately made at Akhmim. The following is his account of the hidden life so strangely revealed in these lonely hills above the Nile. Never did a cemetery deserve t!»e name of necropolis better than this of AkhmStn; it is really a town, whose inhabitants are counted by thousands, each day adding to their numbers, without any sign of nearing the end after the labor of fifteen I have, explored the hill over nt <ff4it tr*st two miles in length, I have fouid it covered rgnjhiriH. Hat only is it ith pits and chambers, but all the natural fissures have l>een utilized to deposit corpses there. These pits are from forty-five to sixty feet deep, and have several floors, contain- iug^froai eight te ten small chambers piled or e above t^e • other, to admit a dozen coffins. The first impression was that these were family vaults; but the titles and genealogies inscribed on the lids indicate almost as many different families as there art mummies, and the successive generations of the satue race are disseminated over the differ* eut quarters. The grottoes in par* tieular, have the' appearance of common burial-grounds. The simple mummies, swathed but not coffined, are piled up in layers on the ground, like stacks of wood in a timber yard. Above those ttie eardlwaid mummies have ^en'fcfaged up to the ceiling--all the ot)jects belonging to them, such as tools, pillows, shoes, perfume-boxes, eye- salve vases, etc., are thrown pellmell in the thickness of the layers; and, to lose none of the space, the last coffins were thrust in between the ceiling and the (fety:-iuntilq£eA jnass, without any regard ^ tUoir being damaged or not. The first mummies discovered were those of the Greek epoch, and I thought, in consequence, that the entire necropolis belonged to the period of the Lower Empire. But as the explorations con- tiM6d, '%^e£k>oun$ergiA more and more ancient tombs; one af the sixth dyiiasty, several of the eighteenth, and even of ^the heretic kings, These latter had been violated from ancient times, and presented the appearance of a charnel- house. The inhabitant of Akhmim, like those of "fhebei, mid*' no scruple of disposessing the mummies, and' the extinct families, to gain possession of their tombs. Most of the chambers must have changed masters ten times beforp .receiving their -present occu- pann. S'<| stun Jjp, Jtfcis was a fertie-, f^ry of smsfll people flower classes) ^ ell-to-do citizens, priests of the inferior rank, and tradesmen. The heaping up of the bodies, and the small care with which these wera treated, would not be easihr explained,,were it not that con- teinmjrtrJ" llrn-ftrfMIt* furnished us with the most precise information as to the manner in which the preservation and worship of the dead were regulated. Only the rich had the privilege of oc cupying a separate chamber, and of en suring, by pious foundations, the pravers of a special priest; people of fortune, and belonging to the middle dflMes, intrusted the mummies of their defunct relatives to undertakers or con- clergy, who stored the bodies in their premises, and for the p^y*uepfc o,f an annual rent, or a lump sum, undertook to look after their preservation, and celebrate the canonical ceremonies on the days ap- lent DIET. CoiveettM mt IOM* Prevalent T. .L'.Wt., That there u may nut tea made from extracts. There is none •whatever. That gelatine is nutritions. It will not keep ft o»t alive. Beef-tea aud gelatine, however, possess a certain reparative power ; we know not what. l hat an egg is equal to a pound of meat, and that every sick person can eat them. Many, especially those of nervous or bilious temperament, can not eat them, and to such eggs are in jurious. milk i4 must f< t a pointed by the ecclesiastical law; Kyen the animals had their hypogea, mixed with those of human beings; here are hawks in hundreds in wooden boxes; there we find jackals piled up in Holes. The truth is, Egypt is far from being exhausted; its soil contains enough ty pccupa" twenty generations of ^-orkejftvaad what ha* come to light is as nothing.--Living Age. eJuni-i^ I that ir horse- ; In n^aay^ parts oi the notion has fong prevailed th hairs be placed in a brook andleft there, they will after a time become endowed with life; in short, tha| .thV^ ill turn into eeis. Very r^cdlitiy, I a cor respondence on this subject was pub lished in the columns of a prominent Scotch newspaper, between an apom inous writer and Dr. Andrew Wilson, of the Edinburg School' of Medicine; the former alleging that a friend in Shetlaifd had succeeded in effecting the transformation of ha^rs into."hair-eels," the latter denying that any such "spontaneous generation" of living be ings was possible. THe life his tar v of the GoriHtts dqtitttinls, tWr flirtrifcifists name the hair-eel, is perfectly well- known. It paRses the earlier stages of its existence as a parasite lying coiled up within the body of an insert? stfch as the grasshopper; the worm exceed ing its host many times in length. In this condition it . is iretaitstum^ alul lias no power of reproducing its kind. Whein mature it leaves the body of the insect and seeks water, being found in summer at the breeding season in thou sands in some localities. There tjiie eggs are laid in long stririgs, kn<T from each is developed a thin embryo or young gordius, which gains a3intttan2S~ to an insect host, there to lie quiescent for a time, and soon to repeat the history off its parent. ', / It is plain that in $uoJi | life history there is neither room nor need for the supposition that hair-eels are de veloped in an unnatural fashion, and at the will of man. The fallacy that liair-eels are transformed hairs arises frequently from imperfect obserratfm j often from pret-onoeivod nfetilifaS M«j from an inability.- to perpeivj ffqetrbi-/ littturaPnatutoat the suppogiti6i|. a>| reason out the procedure adoptf<r Tcr' produce the liair-eels. Thus, for in stance, it would be an absurd supposi tion were anv one to maintain that hair- eels could only be formed arti filially from hairs, lit is a perfectly evident truth and a demonstrable fact that they reproduce their kind by means of eggs, and this fact shows us that they posse^1 a natural method of reproduction, and further that the statements woytup- poaed infringement of a natural few should be received with caution and suspicion.--Chambers' Journal. . -- h mil. , To Polish Plate-tilats. t > To polish plate-glass and re»ov« slight scratches, rub the surfacegentlj first with a clean pad of white cotton wool, and afterward with a similar pad covered over with cotton velvet'which has been charged with fine rcuge. The surface will under this treatment acquire a polish of great brilliancy, quite free from'any scratches. Native Houses of Alaska. . The houses of the natives are much the same' in at! divisions of Alaska. The dwellings are thus described: A cir cular mound of earth, grass-grown and littered with all sorts of household utensils, a small spiral coil of smoke rising from the apex, dogs crouching, children climbing up or rolling down, stray morsels of food'Teft from -one meai to the otlier^nd a soft mixture of mud and offal surrounding it ail. The entrance to this house is a low, irregu lar, square aperture, through which the inmate stoops, and passes down a foot or two through a short low passage on to the earthen floor within. The interior generally consists of an irregu larly-shaped square circle, twelve or fifteen feet in diameter, receiving its only light from without through the . small smoke-opening at the apex of the roof, which rises, tent-like, from the fioojr. The fireplace is directly under this opening./" liudA be&i or couches of skin and grass ma$s q}e lgid, slightly raised abdve- me flortr, upon clumsy ; frippes .made, of sticks and saplings or rt»a^h-ien n ^>l«inki. and sometimes on little elevations built up of peat or sod. Sometimes a small hallway with bulging sides- is erected over the entrance, whefe by this expansion roOm is af forded for the koejHing of utensils and water vessels, and ns a shelter for dogs. adjoining. iu«9t of theso 'htfTSsSs" wifirbe found a 'small summer 'kiLcb&i^ au .liitk jutoik^ftatue. waUed in and covered over with sods, with an Opening at the top to give vent to the jsiaotes# These are entirely above ground^ Vtrife QZ six feet in dian| W*" fi^ered with filth and oflm jtttltm kinds; serving also as a kefngjg fol^lte <logs from the inclement WeafflHr. Tn the Interior regions, where both fuel and building material are tnore^alpunditnt, the houses change somewhttf in ap]if>e/!uiee aiid construc tion; tik?.e.xe*vation 6tlhecoast houses, Siade for the purpose of saving both, isappears, and gives way to log struc tures above the ground, but still covered with nods. Living within convenient distarice of timbeor, the people (inland) do not depend so much upon the natural warmth of mother earth.-- Chambers* Journal. • • • iH %c -So "Why, Clara, where have yon been ?" exclaimed gushing Ida as the two former schoolmates met on Summit avenue. "Let me see, the last time I remember seeing you was at the skat- ipg rink, where your skating was gen- : Orally admired. Do you skate now?'" Clara. "Ulai lias become of tliat dear little professor w ho used to skate around with us lipre? You remembej; him, don't you , "Perfectly," said Clarn. "He's my ,l)us\iapd. - We ran off and got • mar ried, " "Oh, how romantic. Tell me all about it! Did he prove a nobleman ?" "JTo. You see, the skating rinks soon went put of style. Fred and I are on a visit to papa's. How long have we Ueen iat hoiiSe? Oh, alxuht a yeto, I fjiess."--St. Paul Globe. Wi: ' A, J That beaa article of a patient. Fi endure will act That arrowroot is nutritious. It simply starch and water, useful M restorative, quicklj prepared. That cheese is injurious j It is, as a rale, c6n$ra-indicat4<v usually indigestible; but trated nutriment atld a ^s»te-)Tei ' and often craved. That the cravings of k, whims and should be de(ii< stomach often needs, crate# tSjr^fend digests articles not laid dmui' tn any dietary. Such are, for example, fruit, pickles, jams, cake, ham, or bacon, with fat, cheese, butter, and milk. That an inflexible diet m&y be marked out which shall apply to eve; Choice of a given list of Artiel able in a given case must'be by the epinion of the stomach. The stomach is right and theory wrong, and the judgment admits no appeal. A diet which would keep a healthy man healthy might kill a sick matt,* ami a diet sufficient to sustaia a si<tkmti»r wou'd not keep a well man a Jive, In creased quantity of fo«d, «4|i<4oial liquids, does not mean jjy ment; rather decrease, tion is overtaxed and weakened, KTTIVI to give the food in as concentrated a form as possible. Consult the patient's stoma -h iu preference to " and if the stomach rejects a c article do not enforce it. e-oelTOeif lly of & When; Important. yoaT^jf WJyTark aty, save 0 #|uSR« Nre, and •top at the Ctsal Valoa Hetel, opposite Grand Central Depot 613 rooms, fitted np at a eost of one million The Lfme-Kiln Clab. < When the lights had been turned up strong, and Elder Toots had eoughea a peanut-shpek ,ont ol .his throat, Brother GaraftArafose nnrsaid: "I find heah on my desk a heap of mottoes, watchwords, and maxims wliioh hev bin gathered together by de couim ttee en judiaiuy wid a view of retfacin' df Jt6«k now hangin* op d# n keeflkQ/ ̂ ohsid^ria' . mind w^w^lk ^>ar, an' I doan like de ideah of a change. De pusson who can't stick to one motto fur mo' dan six months can't be de pended on to stick by a job fur mo' dan am but I might furnish de world wid some watchwords and sarin's, but it would hev to be under some Bich sarcum- stances. About a month ago I begun tradin* wid a butcher who had hung up in his shop de motUft 'Live and Let Live.' It struck ixuMat de ideah was a good one. He wanftl his dues, an' he would grant de fyule to odders. In about a week he slipped a plugged quarter into my change; two days later my two pounds of beef was short three ounces; de nex' week he charged me up wid 48 cents' worf of pork which I nebber mo', an •dropped A ii|v 'bout a y'ar ago, bnrd cotches de time 1 missed my hoe. otto was: *lTe~ airly worm.' In a leetle Den de buck- Big Pajr for Antyflig, , During the early days of tie Aew York Ledger Mr. itohert Brmxrar mar noted for giving large sums of money to authors whose , unices- w«re consid ered of more tnlue thAi the Imount of printed matter wliicji itA$ tljll result of their pens. Many of the writers to whom he paid what might appear to be almost fabulous sums were then not so well known, by ntmie as Mr. (,lad is to-day; but Shpy. "wefel enough for Mr. i!pu»ec fef» they should be reeognkeid as contribu tors to his periodical. On one occasion he paid to Mr. Tennyson, now poet laureate of England, the large sum of $5,000 for a poem wbi«U onlf JtdTde twenty lines m that pt^Ci TnR^vas at the rate of $2o0 a line--a price that would almost seem to be beyond the value of any written production. The same publisher, anxious to secure as a contributor the late Charles 1 <ickens, paid him $:*,000 for a sketchy story which barely filled six columns of the Ledger. This was at about the rate o $10 per litie, and although the was not the equal of many others wine the author has had printed, with his name attached, in the English periodi cal All the Year lion m/t rtfrgfnoney paid was not considered to? onJbh for the work of an author whos^ nttfne had become so popular. Edward Everett was secured as an exclusive writer fpr the same periodical for ?ne ye.ir at the rate of $10,000. Ho was only required to famish one article ea h Week. This contribution rarely filled a column when stet up in the bold type of. that jierfitlf cal. Bev. Henry Ward Beechpr^jfes paid $30,000 for "Norwood." Mr. Beecher at that time was a very popular preacher, and his name in connection with the work made it much desired by readers of serial stories. T)ther" Jess popular writers, whoge, names were not So prominently befdfft^hfe jmJjbQ^ w ere also paid high prices KT j^ra^Mbories of merit, on conditjM^Mjipp^Wiould write exclusively fo# 4 special publish er. Book-writers have been engaged by serial-story publishers, merely for the purpose of gettfUfetheir names as sociated With mp|jf|ii i i li iiln Al though tlte exact jnifh paid the war generals and naval Officers who have been writing historical sketches of the late war in a leading magazine is not known, it is said that all received far more per line for their contribu tions than the "generous offer" made to Mr. Gladstone.--New York Mail and Express. ' The President's Money. The President of the United States always uses new money. He never gets any old notes, except in change when making purcli^e^ His salary is paid him in jhonthlyldnitallnKnts--$1,- 16C.G6 on the last dar of ea<*jp month-- and the Treasurer afwtfvs "makes it a point to send him notes pLth/latesfcfcjr sue. Mr. Cleveland,' is nis predeces sors have done, keeps a private bank account with Kiggs &;Co.<, dud; %aw went. Den older nayburs' loose piepertfr-tnegnrfrtfr go. We got a po; atch roved' hrid de motto. He was de airlieet burd ion dat hull street, an' de way he took in dt worms was sad fur us. ons had b oace."--De connexun tss. L -rr-E virrn pwtuillions ihKe ev great Prom d way, pages, sent for 10 eenta in WORLD'S DIKPKXSAXT MxmciX. ABSOCXATIQIL 663 Main atreet, Buffalo, N. Z thesun^" (crying): all disrj for book. t't yon troublesyon." 'Cause I got here tint.* ptaret pie tamoro, fistal* and for book. Addresa, World's DiapMwuv Med' teal Association, 663 Main street, Buffalo, N. Y. nI'K stuck on you," as the man said who . fell off a haystack and impaled himsalf j; a pitchfork handle.--St. Paul Herald. | j PETSB THE GREAT was crowned one fine morning. What time was it? The be ginning of a rei may' not like hoteV keepen^ but ws . have to put up with them. ..ii.rn PED-BUGsTrU**. \t! >() Flies, roaches, anto, Iwd-bupa, water-bnff% moths, rats,tnice.Kparrows, jack mbhiM.gopMra, chipmunks, cleared out by "Koughon Rats." loo. RUCHC-PAIRA. TBglTWSBK-fiiiiii. ROUGH ON RATS ulmMil VUui'Me SKeWM CPEMICA& « at to bakwMbOity nkimmtnie ̂ •UVCJII IfCnw tt«« f f m . f t ahttiM «i>mtfs|i; , /-? 1 cle&A'OQL rat •Rougho» Corns" hard or goftcoms,bunions. 180 "Rough on Toothache." Instant relief. 15a on tdy«iti»ing igac* wh«i in Otieagp, wi{i f"K^ it I 4S to 49 "Randolph St., | tKfc <>i»rcy at | CHAPPED hands, face pimples, and rough skin cured by using Juniper's Tar Soap, made by Caswell, Hazard k Co., New York. . . • • | j -- •< TIfIN FEOPtK. / j , j , "Wells' Health Itenewor" resioree bealCfa, and vigor,cure- D>>p !i>sia.MRl«ri!i,Ir»roteiicp,Nevv- OUB Debility. Consumption, Wasting Diseases, Doi^l^iw^ , Itjtias fiured UIOUAWMIh, wjjl yaa.. j " 1IKAKT I'AINS. ; Palpitation,DropBical Swellings,Dizziness,In- •diKeBttQU^ RiShdatne. Ague. and tajpi&e*? E^ait xd&ic <or Aalits tuMamir j lilFIi i'HESEHVKK. j l f Jjou aroloaiug your grip on lite in^WeBa' jSeuUi KeUcWer. Ooes direct to weak spots. .Great Appetizer, anil aid to Digestion, rirfaftg : |l^angtU to stomach, liver, kidneys, bowela,. . , | 1 Qttr Dron's Itotent Heel Stiffeaersappliedta i new boots and shoea tK^fore you we^r theat o|t^. | i O // HOW' t« Stwuro Health. : i1 i • $_ i SCOVILL'S , ^ArRMjk.PiH[I.I,A AKW > or , iBIood snd liver Syruu, will restore perfect he#!th to the physical onnmizaHon. It is, liulenti, a strentrth- SO^OOO* mVlSN AWAY « V ' U *i.- 4886.'* October iliir synip, pleaMUit to take, «»<1 h«f oftapi proyfd it<jr » » Ivlualf ninfiJfBi porfflJi, ayphilitit WsoWer* odf* m»» «in« tiiuo the taess of tlie Kidneys. Ery*i|>e:*«, Mal«ris, all Nervous aii l l>ebUitv, Bilious Complainta. and .all indU-atinif sit iinvMr>"rondit-'6n of rtlodd. Ijy«r( Klrlpfyfk. SfauiiarU.'etn. It corrects lttiU4*3tiin, espc<-ially wheu U^e-eoiuphiut is»£ an cxftatfKtivi na- tiire. feivinjr a 'tim»h»ncjr to tessen the'VlK^r of the b n t a a a t l i n i H w u s C M t e i u j t : * i ; : J 1 T*< «4vedin«Uie tiiuo the t.y say (Hat it is **ut>er1> pi t'tiie* liout i Ml' •ST ft* a deposit the first of every serving enotigh from his sa...v ... current expenses and settiig k example by putting tlier^Stosidefo^ ai rainy day.. ram %:>ld that his account has shown abalance as large as $35,- 000, aa be iiaa an his official salary. While he has never been a money-getter his profession all ho Mr. Cleveland has an sition and no luxi immediate pred) entered public ltf% ing from §10,0^0 Cb his practice and cotdd have live4 liKtfA lord, his expenses, I am ,toHf owere never more than a yWivwra Aa enjoyed life as uu<t as most S&jjp.&OA His frugal lialnti^were &eqjiiro(f in youth, golden or even a silver qpoon mm mouth, and he has fo A "Reporter inent ihit you^ewsp® " ing your e STOpp* piies, who a terns of the Community, did you Hear that Smith had skipped toCftnadfkf Fact. HtJ made i|7f»,0b0 ^»y( it. Jones' , wife ka^. ejLopgi with Brown, t have' it on good aulhoj;^, but dou't mention my name." : With these and divers other Pointers iiven him by the Prominent Citizen, itx iriucn lie scooped some Esteemed Contemporaries was painful to Behold. :But the Prominent Citizen, when he «aw what had been Published, sajd. to his " We Shall have to stop the paper. This invasion of Private life is infamous. There should be laws to regulated these matters."--Omaha Herald. * i$ said of Rf»d Star Conph Cu,-e l).v Dr. S. , Cox, D. D., Analytic Chemist, Washing- u, D. C. Price, twenty-five cents. 14 i Doorkeeper--You don't want to go ih now, I guess. The show is nearly over. Slydogg&Hlftff I jus' ant a p--programme. Doorkeeper--Now, what in the world o you want of a programme? vi, i i f W i i » nk s i n » w , j < » 1 i ; • -•i fq 4:mm" Jiiw itiiottoq.i> :i •i^t OR EiHBODtoBJKr-lOv .JMsstiHdl "SzmmMvmvMt „ HAYlN^A-B0TrLP-r*lS m Wci.i feb. tit. ttBS.--Tear 8o1diers* Heo>^® I (M iaat hand,^a<||« tha ftrirl atwt cn)r «n* I h mr Men tUt I would Keep or .frame. Alnn st L tdkUtr v«a a lurid: *h «B¥*en6<3md hititt eolt>r» are ww pi Ikaau is nnkt w>d aMpropkitt^.' soraJs and .Lincoln arfuratew ileaMng and *ati»f»ctory. - It vcitb great favor and a larm mk. S. B. OABOL.L, , ilicb. Commander Poet 156, St. Johns, >e Record ro« a«ut. and aa biyhlr pk llMMBf and MTTkM A I reeeiVed1* biyhlr pleaard With I the and think lt,i« mperior battle •c*n>iT ire #ell troi gpod. The i>f»'or iwllrtwi and Ni'ilw _ r larire enoivb. K\ety soldier sliovid- ha»» e»f, it l>eine the bent way of preserving a history of UM> pait„ taken by himself in the nival civil war. and alio aaaa" portraits '• fully ^ IT IS-A-5AF£'^i5PEEDI' P.f.C. Oraud Army Uler. A COLD WATER, Mich., man, seventy Seat'* j Wh< When We Demoralize the Stomach By ozcenseR or imprudence in eating, wo cannot Siccutub to abuses o£ that important function, ut supposing that we have been foolish enough (6 en.'oeble the itomach, it the damage irrepar- able? Hv no meauBt only tf do two thlnsHBoWwi^A 1W# uB(in&P»eoovery. laid adopt an easily digestible diet. niOUtfe, he ghouTd adopt __cond, be should use with regularity nn l per is stence Hoatetter's Klomiwh Hitters, the lead- iSK giuitric invigorant of the agr. The liialti- torni ayiuptonu of dvajiepsia.^^uil Alio uluaaat iBV rlably attandanvdarirdeia, lifci #sueH8 fcd tieaufwerfl me IboveBa'tvic-e il istAdetMo. Wfeb^MCtMh *fr*ed t£b torinenfttftafCBidHlc [digestion inflicts will neglect to take advan ce of a remedy which, if tha most positive ev* ' trofession and the pubUo ue credence, is an abao- lite specific for the complaint. 4;4:#stl7/E*9rr<lM«t' <] Z h "I vould like to know very much," marked Mose Schaumberg to Oil- Iv^ "if nij,-"%|i;dder Sam was sil i •flr^^rWhow to fiiu/ oltt if he is honest or not," responded Gilliooly. "Next time vou go off on the train take , „ , . - ..i hicft trlon^ to the d^pot, ftnrf just before i Lritf train leaves give him a ten-dollftt- """"" " ' " bill and tell him to change it. If he comes hack with the change, then he is elliM ziatooW criaenaR^ i«M' Keeord to »t hand,§mII kfalto you forthbaame. Iproti ELY'S GKM ,LLi.u IUM Owego, K. Y. The Piper I haw itsed bottles ofEly'tCrtai Balm and considn myself cured. Isuf- •ftred X0 yfars Jtof' catarrh q«tf3nf<dr/i- cd headache andfAi* it the Jlrst remedy] that afforded lasting] T. 'lliif,] Chicago, 111, ; , ,Al)ffflt>le Mil t6u eye _ protoounoa e Hepqrd-a o£ »Ark<aM>akiD Ml art. aad & reflect* great'honor upon you, aa well as the d*-# xn»r. If is » record »h*t uiMtht to grace every sol- : tor's home and Pout-room oi tne Orsad Anm o£ th# xthly MeeAmend all old souiiers to procure one. I remain your* in Q, »d L.. ADO&FIK T. CAMP AT, J, rat Ueuteaant aad Adjutatit French, h» sa. Department at MichigaB, O. a. JL > ' - To every person who send* as use. Price 50 cts„ by mail or at druc(ri»ts. ular. ELY BROTUEltS, DrungistA Octom^r lfU»6. I>(laer ererv week for NTHS. and ldiers Mablt Cured. Treatment senton trial. Ruia^i^ in the country. Read it i >ur aaa rnon.i atttHlamd. ia the beat Fajn_ One whole page ELECRAPHYLaarn 1 :Writ|« V wT adar be dea Memo Now worth $U90. FRKt : g|ur . Mieh. ! » hard work.-TF«s'ftiwg^ «tg p^mnmaMy honest." The SHBinit of Our ('il|)ni& j| "But yen h^alon't cmne p»ok?" n f Professor Igleslas, of yoTOWCMI® 4®* toei, maintains that tho oarora^tfioal' expei ience. • measurements of Mexiean 'Boa>hsnt<' •"•Sehimuiv grashusl Did you sup- have been form*la|ed"'w^4iiout"3ue aP" !5>®se a ino°UJn*< Mishter Gilhooly, lowance for the inflt^f of the eoasl 1 ̂ '^s mo.^ coast climate, and that .l&rtkt nok Popocatapetl, i«:|^niptxmit of tM? North American It is oer- „ . - £1. tainly the finest mottntam -^F tibe'Me*- *--\Texax Sittings. ican Cordilleras. Its rival humps its broad back above the naked htlle-of the central plateau, while Orizaba lifts its symmetrical curiosity dot I fi^ks "a tfen'tollar pjUl?" "kou oati try with a'quarter/*" « Mavbe so, but nofc i •! Soodpay. Situations I ftyalftpjl valntlms fro#.. JaaesrtU^. sia dar- Saroplea wort . •a lapt undsr the liora>'*« f« t. A iwster's ^afety lieiu Holder, liollv, SUch. aiid tteryhiae WafcH Poi ' 10 days. Ker< r «o in allpaits Br. Marsh, Uaiaey, Rope to Cut Off Horses* Mane*. >lebrated «JKCL1PSK' IUL1 D BBLILEMUBLDTD,! •pt be Slipped by any horse. Suinple Baiter to any part of l!. P. free, o Iptof $1. Soldhj'allSiid^-ry, every w«ok by coutnfewtiaw trom «ld aolSi-TR. ... Tuion and Confederate armies, giving true ia- ai«« aid oo the field of battle, reading TBKUUXiEB. hare been aurpriaett to see the uaiiifn ot old army comrades, who werr supposed to the list of contriDutor» to the - War £.UQIITHOUSElRoch<»ter,I.Y HKNTION THIS PAfKK »»•» on"' RUPTURE oiier. ti< or l>. t u- -- •Ultdtion free. At SUudish H' U ft Conimereial Hotel, Clik d in 10 iL'iat 6u«r«nteed both _ eidents of life in ri Everybody euje Many dead. amoUK niory" dew .low w tout ur name and m li t hold nd in' 'tie Inotiey onier. fU)d addreaq TH» fixe It la too late, f r tliia (er October t, iffiB. attr^Mke or napress >. town, aad State plainly, tCAQO &EDGE&, XLE GRE1SE. :> |>r, J.'li. Mayer. Ar«h St. Phila„ _ .Ka^e at I'UCC.XO u-iiudN cuivd. C'on- , I>-t oit.i.ii-li.. 11 • T. 1 urfi %a li«» aaitthait thton rsMra f *»i >«r» 1IIM» M<» U>AI /or FALLING SIcaSlpBe Ml . , . re»wli to enre th* wint asesa. >ssaiiss ethere hava falitd is u j r«>*»oti f»r aow reeelviax a cam. eaadat OUC." fi»r a tr*atks* aad a Free Bottle ef mj tafalBWe pine summits of the coa&t only snow peak wluoh ihe* the Gulf can view in its full graifdc The height exceeds that of W Llanc by at least two thousand feet-- Professor Oswald. t ; THE withering and death of the bay! tree were reckoned a prognostic. of evil, both in ancient and modern times, Fierce s "I DO not like thee, Dr. Fell, The reason why, I cannot te)L" • woiiffcred at, the bad odor tor v|« ffest'Tw the illi d "Pleasant Purgative Pelletl" sugar-coated and no larger than bird-shot, and art quick to do their work. ~ " * St pf Qie liver, , eiflei/. i nts ipoeiAel cent. I just gave my last dollar to my "PRISONEH, have you nothing more to udd to your defense'f* "No, your Honor, a notion to which Shakapeare refers in,., 2®, Richard UI.; . , r- -i Q j fJ ? 'Tis thought the king is rfeatfY wC will riot sta *, 1 Ba4M The bay trees in our country are all withered "* ***""' . - y* , , . .T. . iijiT."TU>»arcacg^.gg|ig. saaoe. wuk i>ceater,ada^M| Is •djiitiif ! itself to all poaltioas et aw i ^ n~,T rrrii i¥ifn For all derange ar.d stomach they lu ; of Piso's Cure for Coaaumptlon. _ ;® c.*.#.1 & • M . , -