3^ V * ,r . ... v- y* •' - * w 1 * •; * ' '^5 r-T^ mmmm wjwm***- v ^ -"I BY BEK: PERLEY PQOBE. JUtaong other anecdotes which hare been handed down at Washington, was one of an incident at the table of President John Adflfms, when Gouv- erneur Morris, then a Senator in Con gress from the State of New York, was one of the invited. It was at the time of the feud existing between the Presi dent and Gen, Hamilton, arising from animadversions of the open the sudden compromise of our differences with the French Republic. Mr. Morris was called on by Mrs. Adams for a toadt. "Madame," said .he, "I will give the health of my Mend Hamflton. The lady indignantly replied: "Sir, that is a toast never drank at this table." "Suppose, then, madame," was the cool rajoinder, "we drink it now for the first time?" "Mr. Morris," exclaimed the excited hostess, "if yon. persist I shall invite the ladies to withdraw!" "Perhaps," retorted the imperturba ble Senator, "it ia time for them to re tire." The signal wa3 given, and as the ladies rose in obedience to it, the Sen ator sprang from his seat and stumped on his wooden leg to the door, threw it wide open, and, with his constitutional boldness, fairly bowed Mrs. Adams and her lady guests' put of the room. Among the many stories told by Thurlow Weed' about Martin Van Buren, was one narrating an incident which occurred on the deck of a Hud son River steamboat, on the way from Albany to New York. The merits of Mr. Van Buren were being discussed .when the boat touched at Kinderhook and "The Little Magician," as he was called, came on board. One of the party had been dwelling upon his non- committalism, and complaining that "a plain answer to a plain question was never yet elicited from him. "I'll wager the champagne for the company, added he, "that one of us shall go down to the cabin and ask Mr. Van Buren the simplest question which can be thought of, and he will evade a direct answer. Yes; and I'll give him leave too, to tell Mr. Van Buren why he asks the question, and that there is a bet depending on his reply." This seemed fair enough. One of the party was deputed to go down and try the experiment. He found Mr. Van Buren, whom he knew well, in the saloon, and said po him: "Mr. Van Buren, some gentlemen on the upper deck have been accusing you of non-committalism, and have just laid a wager that you would not give a plain answer to the simplest question, and deputed me to test the fact. Now, sir, allow me to ask you: Where does the sun rise?" Mr. Van Buren's brow contracted; he hesitated a moment, and then said: "The term east and west ere con ventional, but I--" "That'll do!" interrupted the inter- * rogator, "we've lost the bet!" Abraham Lincoln became acquainted with Mr. Blaine in Illinois during the memorable campaign with Douglas in 1858. Mr. Blaine wa3 corresponding from the scene of contest with his paper in Maine, and in one of his letters ne predicted' that Lincoln would be de feated for Senator by Douglas, but would.beat Douglas for President in I860. The letter was copied in several IJlinota papers,- and Mr. Lincoln cut it out and carried it in his small memo randum book until long after he was inaugurated as President. It naturally laid the foundation of oordial friend ship between the two. Moreover, at the Ghicago Convention in 1860, Mr. Blaine was almost the only New England man who wAs for Lincoln from the start. To his efforts was credited the division of the Maine delegation on the first ballot, and that was "the light in the east" which heralded speedy victory. When the movement was made against Mr. Lincoln the winter preced ing the campaign of 1864, Mr. Blaine was the person with whom Mr. Lincoln constantly conferred about Maine, and I was present at a conference between the two when Mr. Lincoln requested Mr. Blaine to proceed to Maiue and see if there was an adverse movement there. Mr. Blaine reported by tele graph to Mr. Lincoln, and he sent also to me a telegram, which was made pub lic in the Washington papers and through the Associated Press. The Senate passed a resolution in the Pierce administration accepting a por trait of John Hampden, tlie great Eng lish patriot, and directiug it to be placed properly in the Executive Man sion. This portrait was presented by John McGregor, Esq., of London, and was a worthy and acceptable gift. Some uncertainty seemed to be attached to its parentage, but the inquiry was nar- rowel down to the two eminent ?ainters, Anthony Vandyck and Sir 'eter Lely, contemporaries not only of each other, but of Cromwell, Hamp den, and the Charleses. Its fidelity is unquestioned, and it therefore is a rare and precious possession of our Govern ment and people. The circumstances that Sir Peter Lely painted Cromwell, as the latter strictly ordered him, with all the indurations, warts, and pimples on that iron visage, may favor the idea that this picture of Hampden, who was Cromwell's oousin, is also Sir Peter's. Trees. Near an old German castle is a lime which a boy, accused of killing his master, planted with its head in the earth, to attest his innocence if it grew and flourished. Two friends were at tacked by robbers in the wood?, and one of them was killed. The robbers having been put to flight by a flash of lightning, the surviving friend, found kneeling at the side of his dead com panion, was condemned to death foi bis murder. On his way to execution he planted a stick, which he adjured to take root and grow if he was innocent; as, of course, it is proved that he was by the beautiful apple tree that the stick became. Somewhat similar is the account of the Luther elm near Worms. A bigoted old Catholic lady, planting a stick in the ground, declared her resolution not to accept the new faith till that dry stick became green. The fact that it did so proves the in terest taken by trees in the preserva tion of orthodoxy; but it would seem that the elm tree takes a special inter est in matters of this sort, for is not the elm tree the Hymbol of St. Zenobius, when the coffin of that saint was carried past it a dry elm tree suddenly burst into leaf? Another way by which trees reveal their inherent sympathy with humanity is by bleeding. Both Virgil and Ovicl tell the story of Polydore, one of Priam's sons, intrusted to tho care of a king of Thrace, apd by him killed after the taking off Trovfrom his grave tl)ere grew a myrtle, whiSh, when Eneas plucked. ita boughs, bled in a re })uman fashion, much to that diflmftj* The present writer himself has searched for an oak tree in » Surrey wood which was said to show a blood-red sap in memory of a murder committed in its vicinity. At all events, if a deed of blood had been committed near the spot, the tree in question had forgotten all about it, for no blood issued from its wound, and a disbelief in bleeding trees had to add itself to many another negative conclusion. The peculiarities, no less than the existence, of trees admit of mythological explanation; and strangely abused those explanations often are. Here, for instance, is one of the jagged form of the oak leaves, an explanation of the same order as fiiat which traces the minute holes in the leaves of the St. John's wort to the needle with which the devil pricked it as a punishment for its devil dispelling powers. The devil agreed with a man that he should have the latter's soul at the time when the oak leaves fell; but when he came to look at the oak in the autumn he found it still in leaf, nor did it part with its old leaves till the new ones began to sprout. In his rage and dis appointment he scratched the leaves so vehemently that they have been in con sequence jagged ever since.--Gentle man's Magazine. In Central Sondes. In shady nooks sit picturesque groups of natives in all kinds of combinations discussing the news of the day, hag gling over a purchase, or busily en gaged in embroidery or making up of gowns and trousers. This trade, we may note, is here entirely in the hands of men, who ply the needle with much skill. Farther on we meet a courtier gorgeously dressed, looking in his voluminous garments a very Falstaff in bulk, as he goes ambling past on his still more richly decorated horse, bent on a little exercise in the cool of the evening. Of the personal appearance of this aristocrat I shall not now speak, but we may take notice of the horse. By good-luck here hap pens to be one standing waiting to be mounted, so we can more conveniently examine steed and trappings in detail The animal before us is a very fair specimen of a Soudanese horse. It is somewhat lanky, with little beauty of line, but it is fiery-eyed, and its tail and mane, being uncut, give it a some what wild appearance. Soudanese horses are generally very vicious and difficult to manage, stallions alone be ing used for riding purposes. They are specially trained for sudden for ward charges, to stop within their own length when in full gallop, to turn with equal rapidity, and away like the wind out of harm's way. At other times the favorite mode of progression is by making the horse's left legs simul- tanelousy alternate with those of the right side, a method of traveling which is very pleasant and easy. The riders are fond of making their horses prance and plunge about with fierce and fiery action. There is nothing which the central Soudanese is so proud of as his horse, and nothing to which he devotes more time and attention than its ap pearance and trappings. The head gear is almost one mass of brass-plated ornaments, little bells, and a thou sand tassels and flaps of leather in yel low, light blue, or dark red. The beautifully plaited reins would almost hold an elephant for strength, while the bits are perfect instruments of tor ture.--Joseph Thompson, in Harper's Magazine. Apachcs on a Spree. No drink-loving old topers ever en joyed their liquor so much as have the Apaches Whenever they could procure it, a vice, however that is rapidly sub siding as the tribes are concentrated at agencies more directly under the eyes of watchful authorities. Mezcal, made from that plant by the Mexicans, found its way in days gone by when popular tion was scattering and the law lax, into Apache maws with every trade and dealing between the two races. From corn they made a fermented drink called tiz-win, which is not as strong as the corn whisky of civilzation, but their peculiar method of drinking it com pensates for its lack of strength. For some three days before it has reached its highest point of fermentation not a single piece of food is swallowed. At the end of that period they fill them selves to their utmost capacity with the unclarified tiz-win. Although half starved, it takes but a few moments to make them feel as if they has a major general's rations for six months pre vious, while the most conspicuous effect is to swell their bump of combative- ness to an inordinate degree. If a large number have indulged in this liquor, serious outbreaks and disturb ances are almost sure to ensue, espe cially if other bands of Indians pr any whites are near enough for them to reach before this temporary, stimulated combativeness has worn away. In fact after having, when sober, decided to go upon the warpath, by far the most im portant preliminary is the manufacture of hugh quantities of tiz-win. Its pe culiar composition, and the no less pe culiar manner of taking the liquor, gives it a most lasting effect upon the system, and an Indian with his stomach distended with it is said to have ahead of him a six or eight days' "spree," and during all this time his warlike qual ities are sure to be most conspicuous.-- Minneapolis Tribune. A Dumas Story of Palmers ton. Dumas loved to laugh at the expense of English stiffness and reserve. One of his best stories was this:. One day Victor Hugo and I were invited to dine with the duke of Decazes. Among the guests were Lord and Lady Palmerston --of course, this happened before the February revolution. At midnight tea was handed around. Victor Hugo and I were sitting side by side chatting merrily. Lord and Lady Palmerston had arrived very late, and there had consequently been no opportunity to introduce us before dinner; after dinner it seems it was forgotten. English custom, consequently, did not allow ns to be addressed by the illustrous couple. All at once young Decazes comes up to us and says: "My dear Dumas, Lord Palmerston begs you will leave a chair free between you and Victor Hugo." I hastened to do as he wished. We moved awav from each other and placed an empty chair between us. Thereupon enters Lord Palmerston, holding the hand of his wife, leads her up to us and invites her to sit down on the empty chair--all this without saying a word. "My lady," he srt*l to his wife, "what time have you?" She looked at her watch and answered: "Thirty- five past 12. ' "Well, then," said the great minister, "remember well that this day, at thirty-live minutes past 12, vou were sitting between Alexander Dumas and Victor Hugo, an honor which you probably never will enjoy again in your lifetime." Then he offered his arm again to his wife and took her back to her seat without say ing & word to us--l>ecause we had not 'been presented.--Cor. Home Jour mil. FACTS ABOUT FANS. mm of the Host Fuhlonibte and Blah Priced. It was written of an English act- "Aiinme her fashion if yoaean v ' And catch the grace of her fan." _ ^ And what countless numbers of grate ful breeze compellers are now waving over this summer-heated land of ours! "Gauze fans are all the rage this season," said a salesman in one of Bos ton's largest retail stores to a reporter, "and heliotrope is the favorite shade. The tendency is toward still larger fans. Perhaps the most stylish, and at the same time the most showy fan, is one made of ostrich feathers, with a mara bout aigrette in the center. It is called the Langtry fan by some dealers and by others the Mary Anderson, and comes in all colors. It doesn't close up, and the wavy tips of the feathers make it very graceful and pretty." China is called the fatherland of fans, and their use has been traced almost as far back aa history reaches. While they are now made of ivory, wood, leather, silk, paper, feathers, etc., tho earliest fans were probably the leaves of trees or the wings of birds. Fans were introduced into England about the beginning of the sixteenth century. In Shakespeare's day no lady thought of going abroad without a fan, and in speaking of a fop in "Love's Labor Lost," he says: •Oh, a most dainty man t " - To Bee him walk before a lady and bear a fan." When Elizabeth died the royal ward robe contained no less than twenty- seven fans. Fan exhibitions have been given in England, and an opera fan was once brought out in London giving the box, numbers* and names of sub scribers. The Italian fan of the last century was often finely painted after some mythological or sacred subject or one of tlie great masters. The Spanish fan, nicely colored, represented some incident of gallantry or love, the stick being of mother of pearl, gaily carved and gilt. The small Dutch ivory fan was beautifully painted by one of the masters of the Low Countries, and the G erman fan possessed a marked nation ality, with its painted ivory stick some times ingeniously carved a corbeille. In the hand of the Spanish beauty it is well-known that the fan is made to express love, hope, disdain, anger, and other emotions. The "dagger fan" of China is an instrument for the still more powerful expression of the feel ings. It is an elegant imitation in lacquer of the common folding fan, but in reality is the sheath of a deadly blade. The uses of the fan in the Flowery Kingdom, however, are almost endless. Maps are printed on the face and important events are frequently published by its means. At the time of the missionary riots in 1873 at Pekin popular ill-feeling was excited against the missionaries by inflammatory pic tures on fans. All over the Empire the fan is as much used by men as women. The folding fan generally obtains, and it is stuck in the high boot of the full- dresse I Chinaman or at the back of the neck in the coliarless jacket of the coolie. The schoolmaster raps knuckles of unruly boys with it, the beggar holds it out for alms, the higher Chinese circles white stretched tightly over both sides of a narrow frame of a round, sexagonal, octagonal, or polygonal form is con sidered the ne plux ultra of elegant re finement, especially so when some charming study in flowers or landscape, painting appears on one side, and a verse addressed to the friend for whom it is intended, and signed by the author, is written on the other. An ode to the fan by an Oriental poet begins thus: "By thy aid gentle gales perennial blow." According to Chinese etiquette, a Chinaman on horseback or in a sedan chair, meeting au equal of lm acquain tance on foot, must dismount, be it only to make a passing bow; or two friends meeting in chairs should both dismount to salute. But to avoid the inconven ience of frequently stopping to dis mount at the appearance of every friend, it is allowable to hold the fan so as to screen the face from view, and the two may pass without ceremony, or as if they were strangers. Almost every large city, and certainly every division of the Chinese Empire, has its own characteristic fan. the and In silk Singing Sands of the Pacific. In one of the South Pacific island are some wonderful singing sands. These sands are in a small desert In the center of the desert are about a dozen cocoanut trees, and about five miles distant is the ocean. Ka Pule, a native guide, and myself reached tho trees about noon. Our horses, as well as ourselves, were about used up, trav eling through the deep sand under a blazing sun. As we lay stretched at at the root of the towering cocoanuts, the trade wind set in, cool and refresh ing, from the ocean. Notwithstanding the heat and our wearied condition, there was an enchantment about the situation that caused me to think of the beautiful stories I had read in my child hood. I began to feel the soft touch of slumber and all at once I heard a faint musical tinkling as if troops of farieswere coming to greet us as they used to do the enchanted princes in the olden days. I tried to locate the me lodious sounds. In all directions there was nothing but hot, glowing sand. I looked up--there was nothing but the beautiful tropical skv and the tremu lous atmosphere. Still louder sounded the music; it was all around us; it filled the air. I gazed toward the ocean, and there, apparently a short distance, was a beautiful lake, with its waves dashing upon the moss covered stones. It was not there when we first arrived at the place, and I became half convinced that it was the work of enohantment Ka Pule had fallen asleep, and, gazing at the lake and listening to the musio in the air, I rested my head against the rough bark of a tree. As I did so I heard the distant gurgling of a brook. I could plainly hear the water splash ing over the glistening stones and dying away in quiet eddies. I was more and more bewildered, and at length awoke Ka Pule. I told him what I had heard, and directed his attention to the lake. He explained that the seeming lake was a wailiula or mirage; that the sound of gurgling waters came from an underground stream, and that the music was cause ! by the stirring of flinty sands by the wind. Anyway, the whole experience was beautiful, and I have often said that I once made a visit to fairv land.--Stockton Mail. Ax odd practice prevails in regard to mourning for deceased relatives in Corea. Any one who has suffered such a loss goes about for a year wearing a kind of pointed basket on his head, which completely hides his face, and no one is permitted to address or speak to him. It was by adopting the mour ners bonnet as a disguise that the early Jesuit missionaries succeedod in enters ing the country and making thf jr. wft? about unquestioned by anybody. MYSTERIOUS DISAPPEARANCES. Two Cases in England of Historic Interest. • Mysterious disappearances have been far more numerous than hasty readers imagine--some permanent, some tem porary. I do not allude to modern ones within living men's memories, but to some past ones of thfilling interest, and about which very many people do not know much, except those who study and read ephemeral literature. The story of the "Man with the Iron Mask" most have heard of, but what is not BO well known is that though a general notion exists that this indi vidual was Mattheole, Minister of Parma, there is very strong evidence that he was really the Due de Beau fort, with whose mysterious disappear ance, in the latter half of the seven teenth century, we will commence our list. He was the grandson of Henry IV. of France and the fair Gabrielle, Duchess of Beaufort. He was a most adventurous man, and _ ever keeping Louis XIV.'s ministers in "hot water." He was the favorite of the fiery Paris mob, always an important factor in French government. Kidnaping political enemies was a common strata gem then on the Continent. Beaufort went to Canada with the French troops sent there on an expedition, and was never seen publicly again, having been, it was said, killed. But a rumor grew stronger and stronger that he was the mysterious captive who was in the Isle Ste. Marguerite, where he flung the silver dish out, which was picked up by the fisherman who owed his life to never having been taught to read. What made these rumors stronger was the knowledge that the prisoner was treated with all the honor and defer ence shown to royalty. Louis XIV. took great interest *in the veiled cap tive, whoever he was, and who died in the Bastile just twelve years earlier than the Grand Monarch. But the brilliant Due de Heaufort, though sought for by troops of friends, disap peared from all public gaze from the time he reached Canada. Next we will consider a very d'ffer- ent and much humbler person who mysteriously disappeared, and about whose disappearance as little is known now, after immense investigation, as there was 134 years ago. This was Elizabeth Canning, whose case set all England by the ears pro and con. On New Year's Day, 1753, she disappeared in Bishopsgate street, on her way to her mother's shop in Alder- manbury, then a street of small old- fashioned houses. Rewards were of fered, inquiries made, but the ill-lit streets, full of ruffians, and the absence of police, made any outrage possible. Nearly a month passed, when one night a spectral figure tottered into the Al- bermanbury shop, in whose emaciated face and form her mother hardly recog nized Elizabeth Canning. She said she had been imprisoned in a lonely house at Enfield. Two women were tried, convicted, and, under the then Draconian laws, sentenced to death. A reaction came. England wps divided into friends and foes of the girl. The women were pardoned and the girl was tried for perjury, convicted, and trans ported for seven years; but it was a nominal sentence, for she married in the convict settlement, throve, return ed home and died early. Very many considered her a martyr; her princi- {>les and demeanor wera uniformly re-igious, modest and quiet, and her character excellent. Many controver sies have been held, but of that mys terious disappearance we know just as much and just as little as did our an cestors in the reign of George II., who, by the way, took a personal interest in the inquiries.--London Tid-Biis. MILD, soothing, Catarrh Remedy. an£ healing is Dr. Sage's The Circus Wild West. About two weeks ago a Dakota far mer was approached by a stranger, who said: "What will you take for that little short-horned yearling out there in the yard?" "'Bout $15." "Is he gentle?" "Yes." "Never kicks?" "No." "No danger of butting a fellow over with his head ?" "Not a bit--my Children play with him whenever they take a notion." "Well, I guess I'll take him. I*m agent for Hollerwell & Fhowpoor's Anti-European circus, and we need an other buffalo for our 'wild west' depart ment. By the time we put a hump on his shoulders and paint his horns black you wouldn't know your calf. I hope he'll stay gentle, though; the last one we had hooked three of our cow boys off their horses, disabled two Buffalo Bills and drove Texas Jack, theWestern terror, up the center-pole. He acted so we had to tie him up with the elephants, give him a coat of red paint and call him the terrible man- eating joggle-wock, captured in. Cen tral Africa at great expense and loss of life. Do you suppose the calf will drink milk?--the sacred cow gives a little more than the zebra will take. Dakota Hell. ASK your shoe and hardware dealers for Lyou'a Heel Htiffenera; they keep boots and shoes straight All Used Up Strength all gone. Tired out. Overworked. Feeling mean ami miserable.--You must not neglect yourself louger. Belays are dangerous. The downward tendency of your system must be •topped. You need the toning, strengthening, building up pro; erties of Hood's Harsap&rilia to restore you to health, give you an appetite, and make you active, cheerful, and willing to work. "X felt good results fruui the first dose of Hood's BarsaparUla. It seemed to go from my head to my tees. 1 know Hood's SmrsapariUa is a good thing, and on the strength of my own experience I have sold a great deal of it." G. H. HTUATXX/M, 4tuggist, Westfleld. Mass. Hood's Sarsaparllla Bold by all druggists. 11; six for 95. Prepared by C. I. HOOD A CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass. IOO Doaoa One Dollar. DETECTIVES Wasted ia svwy County Phrswd men to act nndar our tMtrnetieaila oarSccrrtflarviM. Kiperwr.eecotn»r»»- nrr. Icid ifimp for particular*' GHANNAN DIIKC* T1TK BUREAU. 44 Arcada. Ciaeiaaati, O. J O N E S 'AYSttaFREICHT 5 Ten Wuos Scales, B Lnen, Steel Boring*. Una w B-- u4 Brut lu to' : 06O. ImrawMk. For fr<« priM IM •IttlM ait Mpcr ui JMU If BINOMANTM, BINOBAJtTON. N. T. Painless Regulation. ft ia no longer a question of d&cbt-- although the contrary was once believed--that medicines which produce violent effect* are ununited to other than desperate emergencies. In other words, that super-potent remedies are calculat ed to weaken and injure the system rather than reform its irregularities. Among medicines of debilitating efTect are cathartics and chola- goirues which copiously and abruptly evacuate the bowels. Because it does not do this, Hos- tetter's Stomach Bitters is preferable to the drenching clas> of purgatives. Painless in its effects, it Is suffloieutly active to remedy chronic constipation. It relieves by invigorat ing the intestines, and enables, not forees, them to perform the duty imposed upon them by nature. Promoting the secretion or bils In normal (Quantities by its healthfully stimulat ing effect upon the liver, it is eminently con ducive to digestion, and contributes in no small degree to keep the bowels regular. WHY should the letter "d" always be in troduced into a family? Because it makes "kin" kind. "Consumption Can Be Cured." Dt J. 8. COHBB, Owensville, Ohio, says: *1 have given Scott's Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil with Hypophoepliitos to four patients with better results than seemed possible with any remedy. AU were hereditary case* of Luug disease, and advanoud to that stage when Cough*, pain in the cheat, frequent bn&th- ing, frequent pulse, fever ana Emaciation. All theee cases have increased m weight from 16 to 28 lbs., and are tot now needing any, medicine." A TOtiNO physician, being asked by a friend why he did not hang out a shingle, replied: "Oh, 1 don't believe in signs, you know." Harrest Excursions. The Burlington Route, C., B. and Q. R R, will sell, on Aug. So, Sept and Oct 11, Harvest Excunuoa Tickets at oue fare for the round trip to principal points m Ne braska, Kansas, Minnesota, and Dakota. Limit, thirty days. For tickets and further information eonommg these excursions, call on tha nearest C., Ii. and Q. Ticket Agjnt The Fall School. The fall school at Gem City Business Col lege. begins 8i>pt 5, with a grand'reunion in the Opera HOUBA, Friday evening. Sept ft A tnil buainusH course,'a Normal lVnniauship course, Shorthand, anil 'lyp?-writing aU taught bv eftu-ietit teachers. Catalogue and full particulars *eut free. Address, D. L. MURBELMAN, A. M., Principal, tiom City Busi ness College, Qumcy, IlL Harvest Kxcuralons. The Great Hock Isiund Route (C., R L and P. By.) will sell Aug. 30, Sept 20 and Oct 11, Harvest Excursion tickets at ONE FARE THK ROUND TKIP to principal points in Kansas, Nebivska, Northwestern Iowa, Minnesota, and Dakota; limit 3) days from date of sale. For tickets or further information, address E. A. HOLBBOOK, General Ticket and Passen ger Apeut, Chicago, IlL R W. Tansill & Co., Chicago: Your "Tausill's Punch" 5c cigars are going off like hot cakes. I intend that they shall be well advertised. Wa F. H. STEPIIENUOK, Buffalo, N. Y. m THOUSANDS sny th»t Ely's Cream Balm cured «hein or HAY-FEVER Apply Balm into each nostril. MARVELOUS MEMORY .... . DIHCOVIOHY. »» holly an I Ike artificial nj-mrme. Anj bonk learned in ene reading. Recomuienilpd by Mark Twain. Kl'-hur.l frootor the Scientist. Hon«. \V. W Aitor. Judah P. Hi'tijamln, Dr. Minor. ot<\ ria»» of lm Columbia law »iu<l»nta« twoclaau'R &K) > *ch nt Vale, University of l'«nn» an at Wellesley College, etc. Prospectus post free. PRO*'. LolaKTlK. 'i.17 KiftU Ave.. New York. . MENTION THIS PAFER mintm VIITINI N> 1STIITMIM, The Poor Little Om?. We oft ?n see children with rei eruptions on face and hands, roiyh, scaly skin, a id often sores on the head. These things indicate a de prave! condit.on of the blood. In the growing period children have need of pure 1,1 JO 1 by which to build up strong aud lica thy bo lieA If Dr. Pierce's "Gulden Medical Discovery" is given the blood is purged of it< bafl otements, and the child's development will ba he i t'i v, and as it i-hould be. H^rofulirtJ^ affeeti >ns, ricket*, lever sore*, hip-joint diieis?, or other grave maladies and suffrtriagi arj sore to result from neglect and lack oF proper at tention to such casea THK tight- laoed woman has alwaja good stay ing power.--Boston Gazette. A Lovely Complexion. "What a love'.y complexion," we oftca hear persons say; "I wonJer what she doe1* for ity" In every ca<e the purity and reaV lorelino^-s of the complexion depend* upon th; blood. Those WHO have sallow, b otchy facaj may make their skin smooth and healUiy by taking enough of Dr. Pierce's "Golden Medical Dis covery" to drive out the humors lurking in the system. IN prohibition State* liquor Nam* to be a drug.-- Washington Post. THK best cough medicine Is Piso'l Cure for Consumption. Sold everywhere. 26c. A SURE CUIUS FOB INDIGESTION and DYSPEPHIA. Ov< r VW Pliyvicians have seat us their approval of DIUIKTYLUf, oating that It ia the bestpiepenlloa for Indifferara that ther have ever used. Weharareverbe'rdof a case of Dypepala Whsie DRiESTYLLN was taken that was not etnl. FOR CH01BU MFMTUN. " i'iS: 3SS.«gS5rX'S5.T^.<». Ii WIIX RELIEVE OORSlTPATiON. For Btimmer Comp aiata and Chroaic Diarrhea. Whitli art' the direct results of Imperfect inHMtion. DIG his TV I. IN Wln effect an immediate core. Take DK.Es l YLIN tor lit pains and disorders of the Ktoniach: they all <*roe Oti* iadlg--ttop. Aafc your druytfixt lor I'KIBBTTLIN (price (I per large bo'tle l. If he dm s not have it, send one dolla- to us and we will vend a bottle to yon. erprsas prepaid. IM ne t hcpitate to send rour money. Oar house is re-liable. Established twenty-Ore yean. WM. F. KJDOKR * CO., M»nnfnrtarln'; Clt'-mitra, 83 Johs 8b. H. T. UrVT'liN TIItv PA era was* -«m.a W a* unnwra muti i •••••••••paaMgwitMa uximoN tub rana PILLS, For the enrr of all disorde s of the Stomach, Titer, Bowela, Kidneys, Bl&iUlt r. Nervous I>iHea(.e<*, Lo*s ot Appetite, lifKiUche, Constipation, OoBtiveuess, Indi gestion. UilioiiNuesx, Fever, inflammation of the Bowel*. KleH. and all derangement* of the internal viscera. Purely vepetai>le. containing no mercury, minerals, or deleterious drujr*. A FINK, SI KK MEIHCINK. RAIVWAT i: Co.--(Jentlemen: Your Pills have often warded off s cknexs-in my tamily. J never think St sate to he without them; tliey are a fine, sure medi cine. Moat respectluliy yours, " HtJSKY KRVWORTH, Cliebante, Iroquois Comity. 111. Wlint * Physician S'nys of Radway's Pills. I am uxitnr your R. R. Relief and your Reeulatinir Pills, and have recoinmsnde I them above all pills, and veil a great many of them. I have them on band always, and use thsui in my praetioe and in my own family, and exijeot to, in preference of all Pills. Yours respectfully, DR. A. C. M1DDLEBROOK. Doraville, (la. OYSPKrSIA. DR. RADWAY'S 1*11.I.S are acurefor this oomrlaint. They restore strength to the stomach and enable it to perform its functions. The symptoms of Dyspepsia disappear, and with them the liability of the system to contract diseases. Dyspepsia of Long Standing Cured. DR. RIIIWAV--1 have for years been t-oubled with Pysi>ei>sta and Liver Complaint, and found but little relief until 1 got your Pills, and they made a perfect cure. They are the best meaicine I ever had in my hie. Your friend forever, WILLIAM NOONAV. Blanchard, Mich. 5rice. *» rents per ho*. Sold by all drusrinst*. KRTION THIS MKT FRAZER AXLE GREASE. • World. Get the msli e hna ear Trade-ark •er'a. HOLD KTKKVW Beet la the World, •ry sarksae Marked Fr* lae. Kv. aa« la llKKK. wim.a «B twnnaa. Cure* Neuralgia, Toothache, Hmdache, Catarrh, Croup, Sere TkrwL . RHEUMATISM, Lame Back, Still Joints, Sprains, BruiiflL ^ Burns, Wounds, Old Sores and All Aches and Pains. The many testimonials received by as more tMMI prove all we claim for this valuable remedy. M n°t only relieves the most severe pains, M H Cutm You. That's th» ld«a I tttrUŝ &liD" H.*- COMIPANY tmiSX PAYNE ENGINES. BOILERS of all Sixes. , i h ̂̂ '• z::~ • _i.", a jv • * 'ii; ft* -H WRITE FOR CIRCUUR AND TEU US kTRBI eb Drawer 1 ISO, WHAT YOU DONS, WANT. ELMSR wt, CHICA Branch Offices: a, nr. f» AGO, 111. --Ufci&'r PELLETS e\\©Vs LITTLE LIVER PILLS. BEWARE OF IMITATIONS! Always ask for Dr. Pisrea's Pallets, ar LHHa Sugar-coated Granules or PIUs. e, BEING ENTIRELY VEGETABLE, Dr. Fierce'e Pellets operate without disturbance to tho afateate ilet, or occupation. Put up In |lau •!«!•» hermetically sealed. Always fresh and reliable. As 2c LAXATIVE, ALTERATIVE, or PURGATIVE, these little Pelleta five the most perfect satisfaction. SICK HEADACHE Bilious Headache, Dlaxiness* Co atlpatlou, lndiaestiou, Bflio Attacks, and all derangements of ' Con» >us Attacks, and all arrangements of the stomach and bowels, are promptly relieved and permanently cured by the use of Dr. Pierce's Pleasant PurKutlve Pelleta. In ex planation of the remedial power of these Pellets over so great a variety of diseases, it may truthfully be said that their adtlon upon the system is universal, not n gland or tissue eeoaplnsr their sanative Influence. Sold hy druggists, for 26 cents a vial. Manufactured at the Chem ical Laboratory of Womld's UIBPKKSART MKUXCAL ASSOCIATION, Buffalo, N. Y. Boils Gubbl WIMAB RAMICH, Esq.. of XfituUn, Kearney County Nehmnha, writes: "1 was troubled with boils for thirty years. Four years ago I wns so afflicted with them that I oould not walk. I bought tiro bottles of Dr. Pierce's Pleaawt Purgative Pellets, and took ono 'Pellet' after each meal, tilt all were gone. By that time I bad no boils, and have had none since. I nave also been troubled with sick headache. When 1 feel it coming on, 1 take one or two ' Pellets,' and am relieved of the headache, Mrs. C. W. BROWN, of Wapakoneta, Ofth says: "Tour 'Pleasant Purgative Pellets' aii without question the best cathartic evar sold. They are also a most efficient remedy for torpor of the liver. We. have used them for yeaia in our family, and keep them la the house all the time." The Best Caturtic. e Cts offered by tto ti FOB A CASE OF CATARRH WHICH THEY CAN NOT CORE. CtTMPTOKS OF CtATARRg. Dull, heavy headache, obstruction of the nasal " "lint * dis charges falling- from the head into the throat, sometimes pro fuse, watery, and acrid, at other®, thick, tenacious, mucous, purulent, bloody and putrid; the eyes are weak, watery, and Inflamed; there is ringing In the ears, deafness, hacking or coughing to clear the throat, expectoration of offensive matter, together with scabs from uloers; the voice is changed and has a nasal twang; the breath is offensive; smell and taste are im paired; there is a sensation of diuiness, with mental depression, a hacking cough and general debility. However, only a few of the above-named symptoms are likely to be present In any one Thousands or esses annually, without manifesting half of the above symptoms, result in consumption, and end in the grave. No disease is so common, more deceptive and dangerous, understood, or more unsuccessfully treated by physicians. By its mild, soothing, and healing properties, DB. SAGE'S CATARRH REMEDY onus TBM WOJiSS CUB or Catarrh. "6oH Ib tlw H«td," Coryia, and Catarrkal Ifeadaekt. BOLD BY DRUGQI8T8 ETBMYWBERB* SO COSMOS. Prof. W. Binm. the famous mesroer- Jat, of Ithaca, N. writes: "Some taa yean ago I suffered untold agony from chronic nasal catarrh. My family physl* dan gave me up as incurable, and said I must die. My case was such, a bad ona that every day, towards sunset, my voice would' become so hoan§ I could barely speak above a whisper. In the morning my oou( - in# and clearing of my throat would almost strangle me. By 1 FMlCATiUL use of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy, in three BMBI »««n, and the cure has been permanent." CDISTMTUr •mm in THOMAS J. RTSHIHQ, BS^., not Pirn Jirrl a was eoai- and for the St. IxmU. Mo„ writes: ferer from catarrh for three times 1 could hardly breathe, stantly hawking and, spitting, last eight months could not breaiae caroun the nostrils. I thought nothing could ti done for me. Luckily. I was advised to Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy, and I am now ajroUmaa. I ^ lieve It to be the only sure remedy for catarrh now man tured. and one has only to give it a fair trial to e* ledy fc and one has only to give it a (| astounding results and a permanent cure. Thee tonus CUK Citimm a permanent and hearty." DfOClltvu m wvwv *vra isaa> www that it helped her; a third bottle , 8be is now eighteen years old and sounl . For si'woman to say she does not use Procter & Gamble's Lenox Soap, i$ to she is "behind the times/8 ^ ordinaiy soap now thty can get "Lenoxr PENSIONS _ law* to IT. 8. FITZGfcKAfJO Indituapoiis, lnd. PATENTS BSC as to patoatoUllty VKKJC. mm . S5 Tium OPIUM P. LACK*. .Washington, D.O. >d« ami opinions yaara" wojerienee. to SS a, tiay. Bampls* worth $1 JO, FRB. . fines not under the_ honw> fejt. Wnl; _ I Bre w*ter Sifety Rein Bolder Oo _ Holly. Mi eh tBNTION THIS r*TER Oared la M r iM-eatcd. iisimoM ma rataa < Dr.^WUUvme* Indian Ptls is a rnwi for Uiad. _ au (IK FSH*. H c. s. u. .No, -411 WHEN WRITING tP.ADVKRTISXM, -iiiffuTir* mw** if^rti'pupn y