• f *• , 'M After &••«» • • •/»§5»«iest. • ^ UlHi employed as scent of tbe Xlotfeaa ;WS2JVS&8SSS- A irss from a&impoverished impure state of blood mj mwi! health was~entirely uBdcnnincd, I oonstnUxi tbs |eadiof phy- •tel&ne of this city and Ann Arbor and all prononneed my case Bright"# disease. Ia October last I began taking Hibbard'j Bheu- matie Symp and nm to-day a well max It affords me pleanare to render suffering; pumanlty any good that I can, and I wish • »ay that 1 think it tbe greatest blood, IMy and liver medicine in the world. E. LABZIT^sbx, , „ , Ajrent M. C. B. R.. Albion, Mich. , H" druggists. Prepared only by The Charles Wright Medicine Company, De troit. Mich. | So Time to Write Letters. Men and women who write for gain are feotjthe best of correspondents. "Because Writing is my trade is no reason why I should be expected to *allow it for pleas ure." saidMark Twain once, and forth with the humorist destroyed several let ters tying before*him on his desk. And this opinion is apparently shared by ltot * few of the famous writers of the day. Bret Harte. for instance, positively re- . ftims to answer any but letters of a nasi* aesR nature or from friends. Tennyson Ignores all letters without discrimination, exceptin rare instances. Robert Lonis Stevenson travels around so much that most of his letters never reach him, and . those that find him receive btit scant at tention. ME. Howelle is not over par ticular with his. correspondence, and James Russell Lowell is and Robert Browning was even less so. "Onida" takes pride in saying that but one letter to a hundred receives reply at her hands. Mrs. Qliphant, the English novelist, is also a poor correspondent except with ker intimate friends. Frank R. Stockton lies recently formed the habit of answer ing letters only after they have been re peated two or three times. George Ban- *ero£t's age prevents him from being Attentive to a miscellaneous correspond ence, while the poets Whittier and Walt - whitman have been compelled for the •nine reason to resort to silence in numer ous cases. lliss LARKINB WM bilious and feeble and sick, 'And It seemed as if nothing would ever re lieve her. ,®€T liver was clogged with impurities thick, . And her stomach was constantly burning with fever. <0f the great G. M. D, she bought a supply. And directions for taking pursued to the letter. . the best thing on earth Bhe could pon ies sibly try, Tf- And soon, very soon, Misa Larkins.was better. * The G. M. D. which she took was Dr. Source's Golden Medical Discovery, the Sreat remedy lor bronchial, throat and tog diseases, sick headache, scrofula, " dyspepsia, and nil diseases that have origin :'tli impure biood and a disordered liver. THE cleansing, antiseptic and heal In? qualities of l>r. bage's Catarrh llemedy are ' Mnequaled. * LIEUTENANT JOHN P. PINIIEY, of the signal service, has compiled a statement iSjftf the nnmber of tornadoes in this coun try for the last seventeen years. While in lfe70 there were only nine, the nnmber has Increased annually, the year 1886 having , been credited with 280. But since that time there has been a gradaal decrease in the number, only forty-two having been recorded in 1889. A MORMON, with two wives and four- children, was recently found living' a hut with one room at Furo, Utah. REMedy"? For Stablemen and Stockmen. CURES Cuts. Swellings, Bruises, Sprains, Galls, Strains, Lameness, Stillness, Cracked Heels, Scratches. 3 Contractions, Flesh Wounds, Strinahalt, Sere- r, Throat, JMstemMC. CeMc. WMliew. Felt E»H» Fistula. Tumors, Splints, Ringbones and Spavin " in their early Stages. Directions with each bottle. AT DRUGGISTS AND DEAURS. THE CHARLES A. VOGELER CO.. Baltlmere. M. Oh, So Tired!" is the cry of thousand* every Spring. For that Tired Feeling % take t ^ , ' , »•» \* Ayer's Sarsaparilla • and recover, •Ah/: Health and It Make® v - V' the Weak Strong*: ^ -Prepared by j <(V Dr. J. C. Ayer & Cosy f: ' . Lowell, Mass. SpESSEZSil ™ tfiUM * • " " ami OtULi~* TBlCrCLLS. _ C. 0. I). A.rc-i r.oa L. U. HPENCSR'Jd farte^. It! W. 8sa4 2c. m»mp to rU. Um StrUb f i CM GIA M JOI<K w.«ioRRn. JRIPIOI wIH wui:htiiei«Bt D.C7 3 yra iu last war, IK adjudicating claims, atty siuoa, i-MflNT8--PEM8IOM8;:S^Qgtt" fwd for dig< i-fc of Pension andHtountr Laws. Send for • Inventors" 'Jut(k> or How to Gee a I'ateiit. PA THICK •'• ^'y.pnw. Attorney at Law, Washington, D. C '£•%: Ely's Cream Bairn . WIU CUIUS C a t a r r h I'rH-e 30 S'oiits. . ^.""jdpply Balm iuto each nostril. • • |LY BK0S.» 66 Warreu St., N. ¥. . ' THE ELKHART CARRIAGE A. HARHETS MFB. CB. Tight bottom ami dash * kr IS Ilia kaw hM t* ron- «iam at WHOMKAUt Pri»«, Una tbe DIUIK8' SM«C Skip AHrWHEUK for maliitlai WW* b«}lB|t. 9»r fr«%ht rttrgN If But • aaiWkctorj. Hamalnj fcr »; Baaglui, San-iris, S[irli>f A Hiuiini. Gl-paf^t'iic FKSB. Address F. It. PK4TT. g«V. ElkkaH. • The Oldest Medicine in the World itfrob*bly DH> ISAAC Tua-nrsoM* . CELEBRATED EYE-WATER, . : Thisarucie wacartltilty prejiared |»n>Mcuin'x pra- ' mriptloa. and has l»e«-n iu constant use for neariv a -fltutury. 'There ai-e i<-\v d^eases to which mankind ate uioject more distressing than sore eyes, and toone, p«riiajis, for wiiicli more remedies have beea triad without success. For all external inflammation at the ayee it Is an Infallible remedy. If the direo- ttonn are followed it will never fail. We particularly •tvite the attent on of physicians to H» wieritt. For •ale by all drusrgl°ts JOHN '» THOMPSON, SONS • « CO., Tboy, S, Y. EitabUlhed 1791. »»* '•> i' HIT IE SAIP IT." BT HARKLET HAKKEB. kflnm daji capital is a ^ "It is the things that 1 did not my thatffive me most satisfaction*" - Such was the remark ;of a well- known public man to me recently. He continued, something like this: "If I am in a controversy with %ny fellow, when I am away from him I' burn with a lot of hot things that I in tend to say when we meet. I catch myself walking along the street and pounding my bitter words into him. I score and Bcorch him. I wither him and shrivel him up. I half kill the ! poor fellow. Well, in due time we i meet. We talk. But I do not say the | hard things I intended to. And I am so glad when we have parted, when I am again walking along the street alone--so pleased to recall the things I didn't say. Hundreds of times I have dreamed, on my bed, that I did say the hard explosives, and awoke, with a start, exclaiming, 'It was a dream. I never said it.' • It set me to thinking. I confess, I have imagined that I would, did actu ally say bitter things. Afterward I have been obliged to examine myself pretty carefully. "Did I, or not say it? I know I thought I would say it.' It burned into my soul so that I can not now, for the life of me, make sure whether I actually said it or not." Curious mental effect! And, oh, how anxious I am till I meet my friend. For I know that his face will tell. If I did say it he will be frowning. If I only imagined I said it, my friend will be as smiling as ever, blissfully ignorant of how near he came to being hit by me with saucy slaps. On the other band, my reader, did you ever imagine pretty and kind tlyngs thit you intended to say? You are go ing to ask a friend's pardon. But you did not do it. You remember that he went West about that time and your heart was sore over a wrong you had done. You went all through the act of asking forgiveness, in your own mind. You wrote him a letter of warm apol ogy, in your mind. You made every amend honorable. Ah, but you never said it. No, no. When your friend returned from the West you insisted on greeting him just as if nothing had happened, or as if you had spoken your apology. But he looked grieved. Ah, and rightly so. For you never said it; you only imagined it. A wayward boy thought he would re turn and kiss his mother's feet. He used to lie on his bed and imagine re turning home, entering the door, fall ing on mother's neck, pouring out his heart's confession of sin and injury. He used to imagine the neXv vows of honor that he made befor6 her dear chair. Sometimes, after one of these troubled nights, he actually felt better, as if be were actually forgiven; and this sense would last him for ilays, till the next eorousal. Well, one day tbe tidings came that his mother was dead. Then, suddenly he awoke with a start of hor ror. "I never said it. I only thought I Would say it. My God! And it is too late!" Like tbe refrain of a requiem it sighs in his tortured ears. "I- never Baid it. I never said it." Nothing is more curious than this ac tion of the mind. Do yon know what you said? Do you know what you did not say? If called upon to witness could yon draw the dividing line? The hot anger of a quarrel blurs the con sciousness. Words come like a torrent "My husband," said a gent}e wife, "I do not think you know what you said to me in that lit of anger. You were be side .Tounetf. If I were only to teH you. If I had kept your cruel words on paper. If a phonograph had only caught them, yon would be yourself shocked." But happy is the man whose gener ous mate forgets, who keeps no phono graph. How a man learns to love her. Yet he is all the more ashamed. Does he learn any better? He is a iool who does not learn that there is no moment, even of bad dreams after lobster salid, so unaccountable as angry moments. Be careful. This is a good rule, "I never said it, for I have a law never even to imagine myself saying a cruel, a mean, a wicked thing. Therefore, I could not have said it aloud." There is a hole in my garden into which I dump dirt and refuse. Th^re is a hole in my soul into which I dump the mean things which I never said. It is a cesspool. I cover up with fresh work, like fresh, purifying earth, lots of things which I was mad enough to say, but never did say. God forbid that they ever see the light of day. It is a great deal better to work off a bad spell than to blow it off, For who can catch a thistle-seed that is once on the wing of high, free winds? To be sure it may never fall ioto the soil and grow; but then it may; at least for all you can do. And then, too, one may change his miud about another. I never was more aihamed of myself than when I once spoke the word "thief--to myself I spoke it about a neighbor--when iu just two Weeks I found the rame man giving the money I thought he bad stolen, every cent 'and more, to the Fresh Air Fund. The unspoken charge does not have to be proved. The unspoken ac cusation needs no retraction. The un spoken slander caunot be prosecuted nor fined. The unspoken stab lets no blood. Shame, sorrow, chagrin, hu miliating apologies, all wait on the word spoken, which afterwards turns out a mistake, If you wish to change your mind, and you have not said any thing, you can do it, and still pass for a wise, far-seeing person. Not so, al ways, when you have to eat your own words. It is with words at (with everything else. There is a time to speak and a time to" keep silent. I suppose we all tfy for this bull's eye; sometimes we miss and sometimes hit it. It is sad to leave a kind, true comforting word un spoken. The world needs the in all. But the misery of the word spoken thatj had better have been silent is so great, so hard to heal--worse than a stab with a blade--that I hug to the law, "Silence is golden," and to the comfort, "I never said it"--New York Weekly. ft life national e one." There is none of fhe luxury at Edge wood that char acterized her life during her father's career. But she is happy, neverthe less, for her children are growing up around her; hejr old friend* are still true to her and she looks on caltnly at the progress of events with a smiling face.--New Tftr/c letter. , . Mothers-ln-Law Take Warning. Here is some good advice for mothers- jn-law who are honestly anxious to see th&ir daughters happy after marriage, and it -comes from an expeot in such matters, if any one\ can be considered an expert in cases of that kiud. It is the advice of the clerk of one of tbe courts in the County Court House. He is now over seventy years old and has been a clerk for almost fifty years. Nearly all of that time he has been in the part of the court where a large ma jority of the divorce cases are tried. Besides this, he has several daughters who are happily married, and he is a keen observer of human nature. A suit for limited divorce was tried in the part in which he is clerk the other day, in which too much mothev-in-law was the principal cause of complaint. After it was finished, he said to the writer: "I'll tel! you what it is, after all that has been said about mothers-in-law as disturbers of domestic happiness among young married couples, not one quarter has been told that might be eaid about the subject. I have watchled the pro ceedings in not only hundreds, but I presume thousands, of divorce cases, and I tell you scores of those cases are brought into court in consequence of mothers-in-law. The trouble is, too, that the mother-in-law often causes the disturbance by actions which she hon estly believes are for the best interests of her daughter, and because she thinks that she is making her child happy bj her conduct Not only that, but she would consider herself derelict in her duty to her offspring if she did not do a9 she often does when she causes the disturbance. A * "This misapprehension^>f h6r duty very often causes serious trouble, if not a divorce suit. When my first daughter was married, d she and her husband came to my house to live and they had not been married a month before they wete quarrelling. I saw how things were going and I bought them a small house in Brooklyn and sent them over there to live. Since that time they have lived happily together aud they have never had a serious quarrel since that time. When my other daughters were married I insisted upon their going away from home immediately, and they are now all living happily with their husbands. "I tell you what, the less a mother- in-law has to do with her daughter during tbe first few years of the daugh ter's married life, tbe better that daugh ter will get along with her husband. It's all right for a mother to visit lier daughter for short periods, of c ourse but she must let young people run their own affairs to suit themselves. From the many ceses which have come under my observation, I know that their is nothing a young man with any spirit resents so quickly as the interference by his mother-in-law in his domestic ar rangements. A young couple will make a great many mistakes, of course, dur ing the first few years of theic married life, but they will learn, by experience, quickly euough, to be practical, and they will be all the more closely bound together in consequence of the experi ence. Whereas, if the mother-in-law thinks it is her doty to teach them, there will be no end of trouble, and their married life is likely to end with a divorce suit before they have really be come acquainted with eWh other."-- New York Tribune. Tho Soft Glow of The TEA ROSE I !• Aoqulred by Ladles Who Use POZZONI'S MEDICATED COMPLEXION POWDER. Ti» FT- 8QI.P iVtWVWHtlH. Glimpse of! a Famous Woman. This woman who sweeps by in tho gay crowd on Broadway was a famous beauty in her day. She is still good looking. Her lace is a trifle stouter, and there are wrinkles on her brow and crows' feet in her cheeks, but it jb still a face that would be noticed in a crowd. It is Mrs. Kate Chase Sprague. This once famous beauty, who wielded more power in American politics perhaps than jiny other American woman has ever done, is going down the hill of life in a quiet, easy way. She comes to New Y°rk occasionally to visit friends, but her home is in Washington. She is no longer the gay butterfly of fashion, and her dresses, while fashionable and well made, have not the dash that made her so much talked about iu ante- How the Sheriff Made His, Deputy Laugh at a Hanging. ^ The train was due at Springfield about 4:30 o'clock. Those who were to get out there were collecting their bag gage. The bustle woke up t£e fat- laced passenger, who turned over atd began to talk to his companion as fol lows : "As I was a-saying, I gave up the job after liill died so unexpectedly. Ike, the Sheriff, I, his deputy* and Bill, the poor lad who was going to be banged for shooting a United States marshal, were boys together. Naturally we wauted him to go as easy and happy as possible. We fed him from our own table, and used to send clear over to the Corners to get him whisky and tobacco. No prisoner ever got treated better than he. "But somehow he didn't want to die. So, about a week afore he was going to be hanged, he asked me to rig a knife or a scythe or something sharp over the cross-bar of the gallows, so that when he dropped his weight would cut the rope and he would drop to the ground. I told him it would be a big fall, and he would be apt to get his legs broken, but he didn't seem to care so long as he wasn't killed, and he argued so warm about it that I consented. "I had the fixing of the rope and all that. Two nights before the execution I fixed a sharp bush Bcvthe into a big block, edge up, and took it up with cross-bar, and brought the bight of the halter right down across the edges. When I told Bill ot it he was tickled enough. He said tbe fall would hurt him so that nobody would try to hang him again, and he would get out in a year or two. "Friday forenoon Ike and I led him from the jail to the gallows. There was a big crowd: I can tell you. Bill whispered to me that it was the best joke he ever heard of, and asked me if I had padded his knees pud legs so he Ajould not be hurt too bad by the fall of forty feet to the ground. I told hifa he could do it like a parachute. "He heard the warrant read, spoke his little piece in good style, and then we put on tbe black cap and noose, and I led him under the oross-bar. Hooked, at Ike. He snapped his fingers. I cut the line holding tbe trap and looked down, expecting to see Bill drop to tbe ground among the crowd. But he didn't. He fell about tep feet, the rope brought up with a snap. "And it held him right there until he was dead. "That dirty Ike of a Sheriff had dropped to onr little game and taken the scythe out the night before. "But it was a terrible good joke on poor Bill. Don't you think so?" "Springfield!" yelled the brakeman, and tbe conversation was dropped.-- Boston Globe. AXONZO PKPPEKS, a Canadian farmer, had a colt which kicked1 at him. He put him in a stall in the barn, and for seven years it has .not been out of the narrow box. Its hoofs have grown so long that the animal is a curiosity worth $500 to a New York museum, but Pep per will not sell .him. He says it will take him tea more jean to get revenge. SAgiiiL HIJ: m Jfttta Whicli Arm' ToM of AM I.-. ,~*Cr««k v>;,. As a class, professional oarsmen ar« the most "amusing critters" in the sporting liiie. Of a list of some twenty- five professional "seat sliders" at least twenty are "characters." Of the lattei number a majority are looked upon at bom wits. Jack Largan, the' English sculler, who beat Pearce and a hall dozen other cracks of the British Isles, and who is now living in Har lem, is considered one of tbe funniest men in the business. ' His jokes arc known to#jvery amateur on the Harlem, and the dry way with which he makes lfght of a serious question has repeat edly placed him in hot water. * One of the best stories about Largar not generally known was told to a re porter the other day. It seems thai Largan saved a number of persons fron: drowning in the Thames at various times before he won a championship a1 the sculls. Some of his friends en con raged him in seeking a medal from the Humane Society. He made appli cation, but because he lacked the nee essarv influence his claims were no recognized. After that he turned very sour on the "Humane crowd," a3 h^ pui it One Saturday afternoon Largan was out on the Thames in a boat much like our Anierican OT Whitehall boat A rowboat containing three men whicb was near him capsized, and before Lar gan reached the scene one of the met wa-t drowned. Largan saved the othei two and . hauled them into his boat When tbe rescued found courage tc talk, one of them said to Largan that hi was a brave Briton and ought to bt given a medal by the Humane So ciety. "it's no go," said Largan, "Thej can't try any of their flabbergast on me. I've been and tried 'em." "Nonsense, man," replied ode of the survivors, "you'll get a reward suire. Why, just see what you have done!,: And the speaker went into a glowing account of the brave rescue. Largscn sat silent throughout, his bubble of im portance getting larger each second a: the speaker progressed, until finally IK began to think that perhaps be had wor a clear right to the medal. The speakei concluded: "Yes, you ave bound t* get that medal. The man who was lost was our boatman: this gentleman here is a 'bobby,' and I'm the Secretary o: the Humane Society." The speaker had uardly finished than Largan dropped the oars with which h< was rowing, jumped to his feet, swort two or three times, and finally said: "So I've saved a'bobby' and one o these Humane people, eh? The Lore .forgive me; what have I done--wha have I done?" " ' Another yarn about Largan I tells hov he once attended a "spread" at one o; the London club houses. There was i little old Scotch woman in charge Of the viands. She was selfish as a 6-montlis old infant There was a. fine piece o: roast-beef on the table, and she startec in to carve it for Largan and a few oth ers. She cut it in t issue paper fashion, so thin that one could almost read l newspaper through each slice. Largar kept his eye on her for a time, anc after she had cut three or four tissue pieces he said: "Look out, ma'm, loot out, the window behind you is open, and some of that beef may blow into m; plate." The honest Scotch woman failed, t understand why everybody within efcr shot " of Largan'a remark laughed. When he saw that his ration was not^t* be increased Lajgg^ shouted again a the little woman: "May someth^nj divine give your arm strength, missus, to cut a decent piece of beef lor t workingman." ^ Ned Hanlau, too, is * funny man The night of the day that he first de feated Trickett in England he was in vited to a club dinner. 0hampago< flowed like water, and as the Cauadiat had pulled off the good thing he fel justified in going in for a little pleasure He became muddled in dne time, aut while in that state was called on by th( 400 or 500 club men present for a speeoh Now, Hanlan had never addressed at audience before iu his life, and he ob jected, but it was no use there, and hat a dozen of his admirers hauled him t< his feet He stood up, dazed and con fused, with the champagne rushing to his very brain,glanced at the small arm^ of faces that met his eyes, tried to stani erect and finally blurted out as hit maiden speech: "You gentlemen knov your business. I also know mine Good night."--New York Mail anc. Exprexs, _ . Friendly "UpR" for the Eulogy. In, the town of B , Me., then lived a man concerning whose meanness trickery, profanity and general poo: qualities a whole volume might b< written, while it was generally consid erod that a carefully conducted micro scopic examination of his moral natur< would fail to discover anything relatet to the virtues. This man finally died and a new and rather vonng minister ii A neighboring town was asked to con duct the funeral services. To gathei some points in regard to the characte' of the departed to engraft upon his dis course, the young minister visited tb< neighborhood the day before the fuiiera and called upon the proprietor of th< solitary grocery store in the place, who hesitatingly and in evident embarrass ment, declared himself as utterly unable to give the desired information. "But I'll fell you what," said he, "yoi go over to that there house over beyonc the corner, and Mr. Li----will foil all about it." The minister bunted up and made known his businesk , Mor< hesitation aid embarrassment. "Wall," said this neighbor, seeing that something must be said, anc blindly falling upon the matter of rela tionship, "this 'ere man had an Aunt Hanner. She was an awful gooc woman. Say," a new idea suddenly oc- curing to him, "you jes' confine your re marks to Aunt Hanner t" It is unfortu nate for our clerical friends that there are not more Aunt Hanners in the world who are "awful good," unless, indeed, we might do away with the senseless fashion of eulogizing the dead at theii burials when we have said all mannei of mean things about them while living. --Lewistovm Journal. ,• Akmalhttl Clo«« fey, 'IM TW sNHtff w' «f jtiM 'sg&t, - could scarcely ata.rt.le tho or linary individual mora tbtn do triflicg noiMM the narvons invalii But once the nerves are braced and tbe system iuvig- Orated with* Hoet«tter's Stomach Bitters, this Abnormal senKlttvmesa is aoooeed^l by a tran quillity not to b® diatuibod by trivial causes. Impaired digestion 1B a fertile < a use of nerve weakness and unnatural menial gloom, and a vigorous renewal ot tbe action of the stomach is one of the surest means of invigorating and quieting the nerves. Insomnia, or elsef lessness, a form of nervous disease. Is unquestionably benefited bv sedatives, when it is prolonged, or 6t frpqu'iit occurrence, but its permanent re moval is more effectually achieved with the Bit ters. '.!his medicine is also signally efficacious for malaria, rbeumatisrn, constipation, HOT complaint, and torpidity of tbe kioneyj and bladder. How Names Grow. : HOW names grow receives an odd illus tration in the Congo country. White people are known in the upper Congo aisfricta as Batendele. Ten dele was as near as the Congo nature could get to the pronunciation of Stanley, "ba" being the common prefix for people, fiatendele is the Congese for white people. In a some what similar way the Indians of the North west const bestowed the title of Boston men on all white people, as ships from. Boston were those most frequently seen by them in the old days when the Oregon coast was a howling wilderness.--Boston Transcript. V. J. CHENEY A £0., Toledo, 0„ Praps, of Ball's Oatarrh Cure, offer 9105 reward for anjr case of catarrh tbat ean not be cored by taking Hall's Catarrh Cure, Bend for testimonial*, free. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Berm ftr Each Otlwr, There are how litlntfm Wasfciagtea a married couple, Paul and Habfaia Hetl- muth, who were- born at Baden, Ger many, in 1847, within fonr miles of each other. Even tbrongh their childhood, plajrtng in the streets and byways of the some town, they were strangers to each other. In the course of events they came across the ocean to the land of promise, and at different times and by different paths they drifted to Washington, where they met and lovad and married. Upon comparing notes to take out their mar- ri ge license they discovered, to their mutual surprise and gratification,, that they were not onlv natives of tbe same plaee bat rejoiced in exactly the same ages to a day. Tb« Excitement Not Ofsr, The rush ou tho druggists still continues, and daily scores of people call for a bottle of Kemp's Balsam for the Throat and Lungs for the cure of Cough9, Colds, Bronchitis. Asthma and Consumption. Kemp's Balsam, the standard family remedy, is sold on a guarantee and never fails to give entire sat isfaction. Pi ice 50c and $1. Tri He Didn't See Her. Singleton (who has been away for two ?ou with Miss Do you Bee much -No, I don't see years)--I haven't seen Blank since my return. of her now? Benedict (sorrowfully) her very bften. Singleton--I thought you and she were engaged. Did she break it oft? Benedict--No. We were married.-- Lavrenre America*. 11,000,000 Acres Fr«e. The Government has recently purchased from the Sioux Indians the rich agricult ural and grazing lands bounded by the Missouri River on the east, the Black Hills on the west, the Cheyenne River on the north, and fhe White River on the south. They lie in Central S»utli Dakota, and are reached by the Chicago and Northwestern Railway. Pierre, the capital of South Da kota, is the gateway to the ceded lands. The Homesteaders' Union, of Pierre, will furnish full information free how to get this Government laud. Write to-day. A>" Americus, Ga„ negro is starving himself to death afler three efforts to kill himself by poisoning, all because bis affections have been trifled with by a dusky damsel of Cuthbert. f •: Says the Southern Medical World: "Mother's Friend" is growing in tavor throughout the South and is highly recom mended by physicians. We consider it in dispensable to those who know they must •ass throuzh the ordeal ot childbirth. Writ> Bradflell Reg. Co.. Atlanta, Ga., for partioulara. Bold by all druggists. i;. rriai size free. Why nearly fcngtrbody si » Hit'fail 81 in the spline Is because at this mm tha apdnils especially snsceptlt.1* V ti>* benefit to lie dertvs* from a reliable preparation like Hoad's °ini>n> rills. In the winter -various impurities a<'cumnlat^ in the blood, the effect of which is moss tett1 spring comes on. in eeneral weakness and Uu The system craves assi«.tan< e to maintain the 1 tone and expel impurities, which If i" T's IISTSSpa rilla readily Kives. Try it. "For Ave rears I was sick ewHj spritur. bat 1m0> year began in Febraary to take Hood's 3araa|»aril]ft» 1 seed eve bottles and'have not Men a atc*4IV' •toweT « W. SI.OAS, Milton, Mass. Hood's^ ,':W SOMEBODY grubbing among the Cana dian state papers in the buildings df the Dominion Parliament has come upon bet ters which amount to an important his torical discovery. It seems that at that eventful period in our colonial history when Cornwallis was beleaguered at Yorktown by French and American ar mies and a French fleet, just before the capitulation which struck the death blow of the English cause in the United States, Vermont, the Union State which bordered the Canadian frontier, was on the very point of joining Canada. HIbbard's Rhenmatic and Liver Pin*. These Pills are scientifically compounded, uniform in action. No griping pain so com monly following the use of pi lis. They are adapted to both adults and children with perfect safety. We guarantee they have no equal in the cure of Sick- Headache. Con stipation. Dyspepsia. Biliousness; and. as an appetiser, they excel any other prepara tion. " EDISON'S latest invention is a load, talking machine, but it is no improve* ment on the original one that was ex hibited some years ago iu the garden of Eden.--Texas Siftino*. t Six Novels Free, will be sent by Cragin & Co.. Philada., Pa., to any one Id the U. 8. or Canada, postage paid, upon receipt of 2) Dobbins' Electric Soap wrappers. Sfee list • of novels on clreulars around each bar. Soap for sale by all grocers. MANY a man confesses in the prayer meeting that he is full of sin,-who would be very sorry to have his customers ad- m that he is right. SUFFERERS FROM COITOHS. PORK THROAT, ctc.. should try "Broiru'a Bronchtal Tro che*," a simple but sure remsdy. Sold only ia boxes. Price, 25 cents. - Fold by all druggis-to. f 1: Rix for$5. by C. I. HOOD & CO., Lowell, Masa ENJOYS | Both the method and results whe^i Syrup of Figs is taken; it ia pleasant and refreshing to the taste, andactii gently yet promptly on the Kidnej% Liver and Bowels, cleanses the 8]^ tem effectually, dispels colds, heatd*- aches and fevers and cures habttnajl constipation. Syrup of Figs Is th% only remedy of its kind ever d u o e d , p l e a s i n g t o t h e t a s t e a n d a < f c and ever pro# r a a NEWSPAPER men naturally get the first ink-ling of the news. BEST, easiest to use and cheapest. Piso'a Remedy tor Catarrh. By drugrista. 600. Blcn, fragrant, fine--"Taas.'il's Punch.* ceptable to the stomach, pmmpt in, T its action and truly beneiicial in ittk . effects, prepared only from the mosfc, ; healthy and agreeable substances^ its many excellent qualities con»» mend it to all and have made iC'« the most popular remedy kttown. v Syrup or Figs Is for sale' in 60fe * and $1 bottles by all leading drng^ 1 gists. Any reliable druggist may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly for any one who* •; wishes to try it. Do not aooepi." any substitute. - , yt. CALIFORNIA Fit SYHW C& SAN FttAHQtSCO, CAt. LOUISVILLE. Kt. Hew Y0.1K. H.t. OPIUM t Habit. Tho only tM'ffc and easy cure. Dr. J. I>, _ _ Stephens. Lebanon. Obit, UKN I ION THIK PAPfCR una WBITW* 1» «W--lb j555iB8w5T5S5HS^S8L mwmON THIS PAP*R «»m™ m If you want peer- pension wititml Setoy, put year claim in thakaaia JkttMMAQfifc AT * FOLKS* Tn*y Mm »• ikbMH.eMMiia m iliw» m Nrtw MtVy ttftli. jpnuu|irtB• wjm t » y M w l . h » . lib Sr.wueox'B SyuiSo Co., mix UOCRAITD'S ORIENTAX.. AM, OR HAUlCAt BEAl'TIFiEB. Remove TM, Tim* pies. Frecklev Mo>?h Patch*#, } Skis L. A-s Iftiv tbe (a p&iientt: &dii» will msk u th ti 1 fiit •tall tlMSktapniK •rations." For sale bv all Dro^ist* and Fancy Geoda Deafen - Us U. SL, Canadas« and Europe; ; FEKP. T. HOPKINS, lTop'r, 8? Owat Jonea GRATEFUL--COMFORTING. * EPFS'S COCOA A LOVELY WOMAN one say of her, "By Heaven, she's painted!" "Yes," retorted sho in dignantly, 51 and by heaven onlu!" Ruddy health mantled her cheek, yet this beautiful lady, once thin and paiq, and Buffering from a ary, hacking cough, night-s*.v6s.ta, ami qpitting of blood, seemed destined to fill a consumptive's grave. After spending hundreds of dollars on physicians, without benefit, she tried Dr. Pierce's Golden Medi cal Discovery; her impiwenieut was soon marked, and in a few months she was plump and rosy again,--a perfect picture Of health and strength. This wonderful "Uolden Medical Dis cover j," now world-famed as a remedy for Consumption, which is really lung-scrofula, k not only an acknowledged remedy for that terribly fatal malady, when taken in time and given a fair trial, but also for all forms of Scrofulous, Skin and Scalp diseases, as White Swellings, Fever-sores, Hip-joint Disease, Salt-rheum, Tetter, Eczema, Boils, Carbuncles, Erysipelas and kindred ail ments. All scaly, crusty, itching, trouble some eruptions yield readily to its curative powers. It invigorates the liver, enriches the blood and promotes all the bodily func tions. It is the only liver, blood and lung remedy, sold by druggists, under a positive guarantee, that it will do all it^is recom mended to, or money paid for it will be promptly refunded. No Ordinary rfetnedy could be sold under such peculiar and drying conditions. To do so would bankrupt its manufacturers. Not so with " Golden Medi cal Discovery" which outsells epery other liver, blood and lung remedy, throughout the civilized world. It's a legitimate med icine, not a beverage; contains no alcohol, to inebriate; no syrup or sugar to derange digestion; as jweuliar in remedial effects as in its composition; it stands alone, tran scendent in curative properties, unique in composition, its sale backed by a substantial forfeit in case of failure to do all that is claimed for it. There's nothing at ail like it, either in composition or curative effects; therefore, don't be induced to take some thing else represented to be " iust as good," that the dealer may make a larger profit. Every dealer knows it's the best and only guaranteed Liver, Blood and Lung Remedy. WORLD'S DISPENSARY MEDICAL ASSO CIATION, Proprietors, No. 663 Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y. , yox Front Five Dollars to Ten Dollars. Clerk--We intend to raise the pricc of these shaving sets next week. Joneson (who has just bought one tc present to Jackson)--Why not raise the price now ? It is marked with pencil, isn't it ? Here's an eraser. Jackson (some time later)--Ten dol lars for this shaving set. I declare that Joneson is the soul of generosity in everything he does. Nothing small about him.--Yankee Blade., < J APANESE chickens with tails from eleven to thirteen feet long aze imported into tUis,uMwt^ , - ^ SIQ:E C HEADACHE, Bilious Headache, Diiziueii, Constipation, Indi(Wa tlon, Mlioua Attacks, and |iil derangements of the eiomach bowels, are promptly relieved and permanently cured by the use at DR. PIERCE'S PELLETS. They are Purely Vegetable and Perfectly HarntSeaa. Aa a 3E»^ZJXJ, Uneqnale*! ONE PELLET A DOSE! *£*55^ PISO'S REMEDY FOR CATAKKU.--Best. Easiest to use. Cheapest. Relief is Immediate. A cure is certain, For Cold tn the Head it has no equal. C A T A R R H it is an Ointment, of which a small particle Is applied to the " " iruggists or sent by mall. E. T. HAZBLTINE, Warren, Pa. nostrils. Price, 60e." Sold by druggists "or sent by Address. ~ BREAKFAST. -Br »thoronKh fcaowledge of tbe natnrsll ties of well-selected Cocoa, onr breakfast tables with a erae* which may save us many ft is by the judiciouB u * --" a constitution may be i enough to resist every ti dreds of subtle maladlea are Soatias aioaBd «iMad?» to attack wherever then n a. wank point. ,W« tiise jgjSBaw - - cr . • Et PATENTED Alio. 10, IS87, Ki4aa> _ diserstiaas ta> . lnfc. ow«r« ELECTRIC INSOLES..™ •**t yeaf a plala wM saTatopa Mention this paper. IMial GWM jcuonuo BELT 4k APPLIAHCS 001" • : 800 XTorth Broadway, ST. LOUEB, M& MS Broadway. SXW YORK CITY. m ^A S T H E LA R G E S T SF . L U R S f" O F BI N D I N G TW I N L T O C O N S U M E R S O R H O U S E . E A R T H W T A S K A L L U S E R S O U R P R I C L S B T F O R F C B U Y I N G w WRITE J^FOR A COPY^OF TWINEATALK NJT 32. OU R S 4 0 P A 6 L BUYERS^GUIDE, IS NQW READY (wtiarrf 2*~LBS.V AND „WILL BE. SENT UPON RECEIPT^ ISrCEKTS T0 PAY POSTAGE.!***-EXPRESSAGTF •jtf * _ Y W. L. DOUGLAS $3 SHOE FOR CENTLEMBCit* BEST IN THE WORLD. '£ 0THEE SPECIALTIES Ju: QXHTLUESS^ OMWjfflDsio. ii6':Micrii6AN Avenue": £HiCAG<f LADIES, MISSES and B0Y& None ^ Stamped on bottom, bold w*eryVh«»rfc ••'Send address on postal for v&taablfe Vv information. '^4^ W. L. Doadaa, Bndrttn, Maes. " I prescribe and hUf >V dorse Bi»r (< as U»a art#®;:"• aperitif forth©certain ol (hU Ulceus*. •" "N® We have s«id Big 6 ... H many years, and U civen the bast ot aaUefe faction. * _ B. It. DYCHEACOt. W. Cbicao*k Ittfe.: si.ee. sold by vtu&mZ: >•«. ̂C. ». V. 1THEN WRITING TO AI>VKHTtSKMU [•fefirsssur7 *** "!** "*f" ft""* ; 3EkV> '4 .. v'( •, ifm, Mi:®? mm&m