7 and '» First r- built tigl __:*?rk Alban# MMP «pad, chartered jfl£j ^flllfcMrk and Hudson. W 8«pt. 12. 1831. It wag in 1847 «#a®e w»s changed to the A1 , v octiioetady. Nine other small I; „„ ^f°nso»datedwith this road in 1853, form- the NewYork Oenfcil The Hudson Ktver Railroad consolidated with it in ISS/" This formed what is knofrn as the Central Hudson Railroad. A very few hundred passengers rode on the Mohawk ^ ' and Hudson In 1831; last year the Cen tral Hudson carried over 18,000,000* v '/ 'f '> '#•' " You Bad a Friend ^ , • About to viait tome section ol country where disease, either In the form of chills ' v- an<^ fever or bilious remittent wu particularly ^ei what would be about the best advice you < eould give him? We will tell you--to carry -'tsts -H'onGr or procure on arriving, that potent me dicinal safeguard, Hostetter's Stomach Bittern, 5, wn throughout malaria-plagued regions, " **»* wad in othar ootrotxiw,, the surest means r , < of disarming the miasmatic scourge, and rob- 'V-. Mn* it of its fell dee tractive influence. Not - f < .-.tooly does it fortify the system by increasing its MP^jrttaina, but ovwcon.es irregularity of dlges- v., Jj1®! the liver and the bowels, *nd counteracts K:JOm unfavorable effect* of cuer-exertion, bodily ' ladiMnttl nposar* in rough weather, or oo- , , •>".*«pall©n too sedentary or laborious loss of *t* ^sipsfcto), and excess! voncrvoneiiess. The func- v^.ttons of alimentation, bilious secretion, apd v , r in it * meat powerful aiul setiable $ \ tl * -- ----i. Optra by Telephone. -> • . > A novel method of heatfnjif opora, -.Which the readeis of Edward Bellamy's . '^Looking Backward" will recollect as '4 ' ^'e one *n vogue in the year of grace y. i, - '2000, has just been instituted at the • " Castle of Rhonstock. The Royal Opera ^ vHouse at Berlin was connected by tele- pbone with the music room in the castle fiat Rhonstock. In the evening the Era* •* *« V^erors of Germany and Austria, the • . King of Saxony and the rest of the royal party assembled in that room arid heard f •*': : the opera of "Les Huguenots," which ^ _ v Iras performed in Berlin. Irff-"!' We quoted a current item abont the $K Experience of Dr. Alanus with a vege- t f Parian diet, and his attributing disease '*>f the blood vessels to his use of that ,^i:«diet. We expressed doubt of any re- • f\-py> lation of cause and effect between ,l $uch diet and softening arteries. Now ; "5Dr. Holbrook writes that probably it alfijfjls a "fake" item, since the German '~ t'f vegetarians never heard of Dr. Alanus, r'."X land no such name appears in their s * i-f 'jmedical directories. -- Dr. Footed > Health Monthly. ;; * - > v ' ' ' • | . | ' Denvef. " ' • " >* Thirty years ago Denver, Colo., con- Isisted of a miners' camp and one saloon; ,.-liow it is talking about the time in the •^v£\,, .near future when it will be a bigger city '.4';$" *ban Chicago. It covers an area of fif- teen miles square, or 225 square miles, and has a population of nearly 150,000. has an unusually large number of •,1j;'i«plendid buildings, and its prosperity is the most solid character. Its citizens • 1 point to the fact that many Eastern cap- . . ftalists are making permanent invest- • ^1 inents In it as evidence that its growth is J?' fliot of a mushroom character. ,ch., 7,1890. bottle of aluablo St. Jacobs dmeof rheu- and rheu- swelling of the It is the best In iniverse." M. L. PORTER. •SfSv.Jf Neuralgia. Holers town, Md., April 21,1890. "I,and others of my ikmlly, have used St. Jacobs. Oil ibr neu ralgia and found it a speedy, effectlv* ctire." Mrs. Agnes Kellet. IT MAS NO EQUAL. You, G E N T L E R E A D E R . , If yon taw Dyspepsia, you hsiw fcetrttara with paia in the stomach ~«r eatlm«, yon have headache, are loiu at Itama, y6ar bowels are eoa> atipated, year skin in yellow, your .;«M«ae is coated, yon hive dark etr» >( , #»e* ateand yonr eye*, yon can not •4Mt what yen like, yam do not sleep 1 • *re11, yon are rf. USEI> UP GENEB11LT. ; ; ; «®t a bottle of DR. WHITE'S pANDELION ALTERATIVE. It will enre yon. Ton &»&- <aat what •on llko, yon will sleep like a child, onr akin will get clear, yonr eyes rill |»t bright, yon will get FLESH OH T4VVTK BOWKS susd will feel wisor> ! is esosgh to take anything yon can y yonr hands on. Tory large bottle r *1, and every bottle warranted. •.r- ' 5^" . , • 'v'l. ' ' \ I"": "'Mi! : #V EMULSION OOBS CURE COHSUMPTMH In its First Stag READY RELIEF. mAl CONQUEROR OF PAIR, v?^' m ^ *T ^ - ?£# "' <* 7 wv. im „;JPor Sprains, Braises. Backache, Pain In the f:l»«t or Sides, Headache, Toothache, «r «w itha iclii ml mIxu a few applications rubbod biodi^Uto di»sk\«au«in* the pain ' tn liislanllj stop. foe ConsesUons, Coklit, Bronchitis, Pnea> Inoilla, Rheumatism. Netiru, «da, Xmnbaco, HciaUoa. more thorbuirh aai • '• misted spplksfiMU are necessary. . Internal Pains. Diarrhea, Colic, Spasm* ;... Wan sea, Fainting Spells, Nervousness, sleep* Isssnsss are relieved instantly, and <iuUUJ» fomd bjr taking inwardly SO to 6© drops to " half a tombler ot water. 50c. a bottle. All VjP'RIggistM. DADWAY'S n PILLS, ::Aa WWlhrt anil nilld Catliurtiv. Furaly WSgtlWlhle. The Safest and best Medlcins $m tts world for the Care ol' all Disorders UYER STOMACH OR BOWELS. Mfese according to dlreettoas they wffl tsrtore health and renew vitality. 86 ot«. a Boot. Sold by all Ihrttggirtfc <• ,v - ** : . .* J* A. V RAW MATERIAL FOR HfSTORY-- .. RECORD OF A YBAH^.v;-.. Tletfms of 8«eams|ilp Wreelu. Mfcm, Fire ttwiw-, Boiler KipMonv Collisions and KpMemic di». loods or the Year -Iuei- dents or Each Month. The year 1890 opened in auspiciously as far as aoeKtonts were concerned, seta the national ad ministration, outside of polities, was singu larly unfortunate early in the winter. At the begi nning of the social season ih' Washinrton «>» ^MMent suffered an«^ van in the loss <of her aister. Then Of-Walker Blaine, the eldest flon Of ^ chief member of the Cabinet. Within a tort- night Mr. Blaine mourned the loss of his eldest ,Mrs; CoPPinger, and them came the terrible calamity t hat befell the family of Sec- r^iry Tracy. From the standpoint of the Ptr^°*?Rv0T' the attentive reader will observe that neither we alth nor high official station ex empts anybody from the ilia of human life. tt LJ? estimate;! that the railroads at the United States lose 82,000,000 yearly byfaund- somniSn KW,0?,.b^ floo<i8> by lire, and #8,000,000 by collisions. Important occurrenoes follow, with dates s _ „ JANUARY. 7. Bereml horses killed »t St. Louis, Mo., and many small Bros started by electric wires which •w ere broken by a storm. 9. Announcement made of the discovery of Cleo. patra's tomb in Egypt. 11. Fire at Ijesington, Ky., cremated thirty-flve valuable hoi'Bes, among them the trotter Bell Boy, for-which $51,00J had been paid, and whose owner bad once refused §1UC . 003 for him ; total loss, $350,0m>. IS. Number of cases of influenza (or "la gr'ppe*) in Berlin to date, estimated at 400,000; number of deaths due to th,e disease, 650. Dmnkeimesa greatly increased s,t Paris, because physicians prescribed alcoholic drink as a preventive. 15. The Pope issued an order that in countries where the government is opposed to Ca tholicism Catholics must obey the state Where such a course does not entail dis obedience to the divine laws; also, they ma»; not tie the church to any politiciu party The South Dakota Legislature passed its first biJl--to provide for refund ing the indebtedness of the State. About a thousand fishing boats wrecked off the Bosnu cofest, Japan; nearly all on board, between 2,500 and 3.000, perished, 22. Incoming steamers at New York reported the worst weather ever before known on the Atlantic Ocean. SB. Andrew Charter (colored), aged 8 years, re ceived at the Nashville penitentiary, to •erve one year or larceny. 9B. Near Cascade, Cal., the tracks of the Central Pacific Itoad were covered by snow to a depth of fifty feet; trains in the Sierrat were snow-bound and passengers lived oh canned goods for a fortnight. FEBRUARY, 5. Burning of the residence of Secretary of the Navy Tracy at Washington; Mrs. Tracy, her daughter Mary, and a French maio, Josephine Morrell, lose their lives, t Celebration at New York of the centennial Of the United States Supreme Bench: ad dresses made by ex-President Cleveland, Associate Justice Field, and others. 6, Explosion in Abasycham colliery, near New- _ port, Wales; 170 lives lost, llfc In the municipal election at t?alt Lake City the Gentiles were successful by over 830 majority, the event being considered the virtual overthrow of Mormon rule in Utah. 19, Dead-lock in Iowa House of Bepreaentativea ended by compromise, having lasted over five weeks. 22- Sixty persons drowned by the giving way of a great reservoir at Prescott, Arizona. 85. beventy bodies of murdered infants fonnd on the premises of a midwife named Sko- biski, whose house was burned at War saw, Poland. 88. Loss of the steamer Quetta in Australian waters; 113 persons drowned. MARCH. St Near Chapel Hill, Texas, a hailfall to the depth of eighteen inches to two feet was reported. 10. Explosion in the Morsa colliery, Glamorgan shire, Wfiles ; 83 miners perished. 17, Prince Bismarck, Chancellor of the German Empire, tendered his resignation and re tired to private life, 91. Louisville, Ky., swept by a cyclone; 103 per sons killed. Along the line of the storm in Kentucky, outside Louisville, 150 per sons were killed; at Clay the dead num bered twenty-three. 80. Strikes reported spreading in Europe; throughout Catalonia, in bpain, 40,000 fao- tory employes and 20,000 shoemakers in :v England qnit work, and the colliers at St. Elo, trance, demanded an advance in wages Levees along the Mississippi itiver broke, and a vast amount of damage resulted; the town of Skipwitb, near Vicksburg, was •wept out of sight by tbe water from a huge crevasse, and in Desha County, Ar kansas, a section of land '20,000 acres in extent was covered by the flood, the set tlers living on the tops of houses and in trees and suffering for food. MAY. 8. At Laurel Fork, W. Va., James Bevate, aged 101, and.Mrs. Terence, aged 83, were mar ried ; the groomsman was 81 and the bridesmaid 78 .Hermit, the winner of the sensational Epsom Derby of 1807, when . 66 to 1 was bet against hiin, died of old age; he wag the property of Henry Chap lin, Minister of Agriculture of England, who won a fortune on him. 6. Fire in Longue Pointe Lunatic Asylum, near Montreal, Quebec; over 160 lives lost Burning of the Singer sewing machine fao- tory at Elizabethport, N. J.; loss, S3,- 000,000. 18. Powder explosion at Havana, Cuba, results in loss of thirty-four lives. 24. ElliB Island, New York harbor, turned over to the United States Government as a landing place for immigrants Report that New York lawyers entered into an agnseerncnt to refuse answering questions of census enumerators touching acut© or chronic diseases, or defects of mind or body. JUNK. & Brsdshaw, a .Nebraska town, laid In rains by a cyclone. 11. Democrats of the Fourth District, of In diana unanimously renominated Con gressman William S. Holrnan--the nine teenth time he has been stmihurly honored by his party. 13. Cholar- ir.^rio its appearance at Valencia and Malaga, in Spain. 16. Explosion of fire-damp in a eoal mine at Dunbar, Pa.; thirty-four killed. 95. The lower house of the Louisiana Legis lature passed a bill extending the fraoK ohise or the lottery company twenty-five s ; the company is to pay into the itate Treasury $1,'250,000 yearly In a match race at Sheepshead "Bay,"Long Isl and, the four-year-old colt Salvator es tablished a record that is likely to remain unbeaten for many years--hehaving ran a mile and a quarter in 2:05. JULY. 4. The President signed the bill admitting Idaho to the Union, and the forty-third 6tar on the American flag was adde d. 7. Discovery of gold, the richest "strike" on rec ord, reported near Tin Cup, Colo Far go, North Dakota, swept by a cyclone, al most laying the town in ruins. 8. Seven hundred persons killed by a cyclone in Muscat, a province of Arabia. 10. The President approved the act for the ad mission of Wyoming to the Federal Union State Senator J. Fisher Smith, of Louisiana died soon after the passage of the lottery bill by a two-third s vote; he had been ailing, but was carried to his seat, as his vote was necessary to over ride tlie Governor's veto. 11. Explosion of gas on the steamer Tioga, in the Chicago River; forty stevedores and 'longshoremen hurled to instant death. IS. Lake City, Minn., swept by a cyclone which capsized the Bteamer Sea Wing on Lake Pepin, the latter being crowded with ex cursionists ; 130 lives lost. The same storm swept on its wav through the ming summer resorts of Northern nesota, adding scores more of victim! is fury, besides wounding a great num. ber and destroying much valuable prop erty. 10. White Star steamer Teutonic made the passage from Queenstown to New York in S days 13 hourB bo* on record. M. Explosion of fire-damp in coal-pit at St. Etionne, France; 120 miners reported years State killed. AUGUST. 4. Bailway accideut near Innsbruck, In tbe Tyrol; 1'20 people perished. JX Bridget Doody died at Mineral Point, Wis., aged 120 years; she was born in Ire. land, and the parish record shows the date of her birth. 13. Explosion in government powder mill at Canton, China; 290 houses destroyed and over 1,000 lives lost. 19. 'Wilkesbarre. Pa., and terrible cyclone; loss of life* In dei district exoeeded 100. 23. Wreck on the Old Colony Bailroad at Quin- cy. Mass.; twenty-two persons perished. 25. Tokay, Hungary's famous wine-producing town, wiped out by fire; only thirteen houses were left in the plase Great rejoicing marked the practical com pletion of the Canada-United States tun nel under the St. Clair River at Port Huron, Mich. 9B. The Grand Master of Missouri Odd Fellows declared that the Grand Lodge had no au thority to dismiss saloonkeepers from the order. 28. On the straight coarse at Monmouth, X. J., tbe horse Salvator ran a mile in 1:3S)$. SEPTKMBEB. 0. Great floods In Central Europe; 40,800pers(Hjs made homeless by the overflowing of the Drave. Elbe and Danube rivers. ft Twenty men killed by a premature blast at Spokane Falls, Wash. 9. California celebrated the fortieth anniver sary of tbe admission of that State into the Union. 11. First snow fall of the season in the United States reported from Fort Assinaboina, Montana. 12. Four million people rendered homeless la onej^rovice ol China by t%e Yellow Rivet M, Mining disaster at St. Wcodel, Germany; 100 IS, ^persons killed. '"iMSfS'S: B «amp»t.«iid interest* very lives lost by an explosion at the t powder-woi" he shock was plainly felt at and chtstwTfiu. Miiivilie cn. j.>, ethw point* thirty t» thirty-flve miles away. . ^ . w 10. W*eik of tbe Spanish steamer Vfecaya off Barnegat, N. J.; tttnsty-seven lives lost. • HOVKacann. ' 10. British cruiser Uatyent founders at sea, off the coast of Spsin; 278 lives lost. DECEMBER, < 12. Cholera, ravaging the Stats of Guatemala; 1,300 deaths in the city of Guatemala in seven days. XL At Cordova,, in the Argentine Republic, the canal burst its embankments; 100 lives lost and hundreds of houses de- % among other th 21. stooyed. President Harrison issued ft. .Tu proclamation inviting all the nations of the earth to participate in the Columbian Exposition at Chicago in 1883. THE DISTINGUISHED DKJti&r ^ _ JANUARY. ' 2. Hon. George H. Boker, poet, playwright, and ex-Minister to Turkey and Kuggia; Phila delphia. aged 06. 7. Augusta, once Empress of Germany and Seen of Prussia, agad 78. a Win. D. Kelley, the father of the House of Itepresentativee; Washington. D. C., aged 73. IP. Dr. DoelUnger, head of tbe "Old Cathollo" movement in Southern Germany. lft, Lord Robert Cornelius Napier of Maodala: Bondon, England, aged SO. 15. Walker Blaine, eldest son of the Secretary of State; Washington, D. C., aged 8ii. 18. Prince _ Ama-'eo, Duke of Aosta, brother of the fling, and formerly King of Spain. 28. Adam i'ovepauoh, the veteran showman. 24. Ex-Senator H. H. Riddleberger, of Virginia. 27. Ex-Lieut. Gov. Bross, of Illinois....Rev. Father Stroup, head of tbe Catholic Order of the Holy Ghost in America, FEBRUARY. ' 2. Mrs. Alice Coppinger, eldest fl».wgiit« at Secretary Blaine. , < 7. Captain General J. Salamanca, of Cuba. 8. Cardinal Pecci, brother of the Pope... .Will iam Goldthwaite, one of the old-time bill iard players ; New York, aged 47. 18. Count Julius Andrasay, states man. 19. Joseph Gillis Biggar, M. P., well-known - hoine-ruler. 22. John Jacob Astor, grandson of the man' of that name, and the richest man in Ameri ca ; New York, aged 70. 21. Mrs. Lovel Greeley, sister of the late Horace Greeley; Spring Creek, Pa., aged76. MARCH. & Ex-Gov. James E. English of Connecticut. & Abraham Lincoln, 17-year-old son of United States Minister Robert T. Lincoln, at Lon don, England, & Matilda Ruley, at Rsywick, Ky., aged 128 years, 11. Ex-Congressman Wm. Preston Taulbee, of Kentucky, who was shot by Chas. E. Kin- caid, a newspaper man, at the Capitol, Feb. 11, 21. Major General George Crook, U. 8. A. 29. Geu. Robert C. Schenek, ex-Minister to En gland At Salinas, Cel., "Old Gabriel," an Indian, aged 151 years. 25. Prof. Richard Dale Owen, scientist; New i Harmony, Ind., aged 80. 26. Archbishop Michael Heiss of the Catholic diocese of La Crosse, Wis Justice James V. Campbell, of the Michigan Su preme Court. 8a David Dows, a NewYork millionaire who during the war rendered great service to the Government in organising the national- bank system. 81. Vice Admiral Stephsn Rowan, U. 8. N. APRIL. 2. Gen. Thomas C. Anderson, prominent Re publican politician and a member of the famous Louisiana Returning Board of 1874 to 1876. 7. William Galloway, who ran the first locomo tive on the Baltimore and Ohio Hood, and probably the oldest railroad engineer in the world; Baltimore, aged 81. 9. Aristides Welch, a widely known breeder of famous horset); Philadelphia, aged 79. 11. George B, Stuart, organizer of the U. 8. Christian Commission; Philadelphia, aged 74. 13. Samuel Jackson Randall, Pennsylvania's well-known Democratic statesman. 21. Captain William L. Couch, a leader of the Oklahoma boomers.' HAY. 2. Bishop Borgess, of the Catholic Diooese of Michigan. 8. U. S. Senator James B. Beck of Kentucky; Washington, D. C., aged 68. 5. Ex-Lieut. Gov. Andrew Shuman, of Illinois, 16. Ex-Judge Thomas Drummond, of the U. 8. Circuit Court, Seventh Judicial District; Wheaton, 111., aged 80. JUNE. 2. Matthew Morgan, the famous artist. 8. Alfred T. Pemne, the inventor of the gatling at the Cincinnati city Hospital, in gun; ay, a Scotchman, known as the King;" Bolivia, South America, 11. John Penn; "Silver aged 58 Mrs. Henry Jaha, the last survivor of the Nipuck tribe ol Indians; Webster, Mass., aged 76. 28. Hon. George W. McCrary, ex-Secretary of War. JDZiT* 4. Hon. Beverly Tucker, a noted politician of Virginia. 8. Ex-Congressman P. D. Wlggtntsn, of Call- • fornia; candidate of the American party for the Presidency in tbe last ea,mj>aign. 9, Gen. Clinton B. Fisk, a wise counselor and a sagacious leader of the Prohibition Ix-Senat tucky. 11. Ex-Senator Thomas B. MoCreary, ion party. , of Ken- 18. Gen. John C. Fremont, first Republican can didate for President; New York Oity, aged 77. 19. Congressman James P. Walker, of Missouri J. W. W. Watson, literary man and author of "Beautiful Snow;" New York, aged 67. 28. Judge a 8. Marshall, one of the Illinois Democracy's ablest" ' AUGUST. 10l John Boyle O'Reilly, soldier, revolutionist, .d -- " aged 46. exile, poet, and editor; Hull, Mass. vages; during the Indian trouble* he ,ved the lives of many whites. Watson, off Pemxffyl- 11. Cardinal John Henry Newman, eminent En- glish Catholic divine. 18. Noar Sandusky. Ohio, Margaret Soloman, the last of the teifec of Wyandotte In dians At the Standing Rock Agency, N. D.. George Faribault, chief of the Indian police; he was the Daniel Boone of Minnesota, and, being himself a quar ter-breed, had great influence among the ing the Indian U " saved the lives of many whites. 25. Congressman Lewis F. vania. SEPTEMBER. 4. Gen. E. F. Noyes, jurist, diplomatist, and ex-Governor of Ohio, 8. Hon. I. P. Christiancy, ex-U. S. Senator from Michigan. 18. Dion Boucicault, playwright and actcc, . / • 2L Gov. C. C. Stevenson, of Nevada, OCTOBER. 2. Ex-Gov. Philip Francis Thomas, of Mary land. 12. Geu. W. W. Belknap, ex-Secretary of War. 13. Associate Justice S. F. Miller, of U. S. Su preme Court. « 21. At the Columbus (Ohio) penitentiary, Pete McCartney, the noted counterfeiter. NOVEMBER. 23. King William III. of Holland. 24. August Beliuont, leading financier and In fluential Democrat of NewYork. 25. Benjamin P. Shillaber ("Mrs. Partington"), veteran humorist and author. DECEMBER. 6. Joe Coburn, the once famous pugilist. 8. Washington McLoan, formerly a leading politician of Ohio. 9. Gen. George C. Ginty, distinguished mem ber of the Wisconsin press. 15. Sitting Bull, the Sioux chief--slain while ' resisting arrest. 16. Gen. Alfred H. Terry, U. 8. A. (retired)^ LEGAL EXECUTIONS. W bus, 17. James Maxwell TheS^a mambcrs of ̂ 14. John RegisaM I 81. Jack Staples, at Trt.5, Miss, .rdered nine afc Parry, Ga. at Woodstock, Ont. ' Teton. T 1. Ellis Millar, atOolccmbss, Ohio. ^ 12. William w. Blaaudiard. at Sherbmoks. Chit. 18. Arthur H. Day, at Welland, Ont.; Elmer Sharkey and Henry Popp, at Columbus, Ohio. 1% Four Indians--Lallscee, Pierre Paul, Antley, VICTIMS or JUDGE LYNCH. ITJ|OAIT. t at Crawfordsvill^, Ark. ing at Prinoeton, ' rM'k-. JANUARY. 3. Calvin Morris at Houma, La. 17. James Holcombe at St. John, Tjk. ; Isaiah and Charles Dent at Clinton, La. FEBRUARY. 14. Wong Ah Hing at San Francisoo, CaL 18. Eli'ison Mounts at l'ikeville, Ky. 20. William Seeley Hopkins at Bellefonte, Pa; Schoope and Coles at Philadelphia. 21. Rev. Henry Duncan at Ozark, Ala. 2S. G. A. Black at Laramie, Wyoming; George Clarke at Wavnesburg, Pa. 2S. Dick Hawes at Birmingham, Ala, MAItCH. ••• '•< 7. Felix Camp at Charleston, W. fit,., 14. Robert Raines at Hartzell's, Ala. 19. M. J. Cheatham at Grenada, Miss. 21. Prince Saunders at I'laquemine, la APRII,. 8. Robert McCoy and William Hioks at Hbmsr- ville, Ga. 9. Alfred Andrews at Bellefonte, Pa.; William H. Bartholomew at Easton, Pa.; Zach Taylor at Waynesburg, Pa ; William Car ter at Ebensburg, Pa. 11. Charles Simmons at Mount PlsasaBt, 8, C 16. Martin Futrell at Hernando, Miss. 18. Ben Elsey at Birmingham, Ala, MAY. 1. James Palmer at Concord, N. H. 9, Bob Hill at Augusta, Ga ; Sandy Jones at Birmingham. Ala.; William^,Davis at Union, B. C. JUNE. 90. Josiah Potts and Elizabeth, his wife, at Elko, Nev.; Peter E. Davis at Belleville, ' Ontario; Fritz Dubois at Quebeo. 24. Harry Ballard, Parker Harris, Edward Carr, and Frank brennish at Memphis, Tenn. 27. William Brodker at Pino City, Minn. JUI.Y. 9. John Stansberry at Fort Smith, Ark. 80. Harry Bivins, alias Dudley, at Scrantosi, Miss. . 81. Kelly Stewart at Live Oak, Fla. AUGUST. 1. Rachel Cateo and William Clyburn at Lao- caster, Pa c 15. John Phillips at Boynton, Vi 13. Geoqte Corvett .. 27. Brown Washington near Madison, Gft " ' MSBCSfc* 8. Allen and W t tberford Irvit W. Va. 15. Amos Stanton at Bromfleld, Nehu 16. Henry Willisms at Gadsden, Tenn. 19. Benjamin Grewel at Robinson Station. Ky. 21, Robert Mosley near Hnntsville, Ala. .MAT. 4. C. M. Miles in Indian Territory. 10. Ed Bonnett at Hearae, Uaxsis. 10. George GNrayss at East Feliciana, Zat, juijy, <a 17. Green Jackson at Fort White, Fla* AVQVJft. 9. William Beaver near Warren, Ark. IS. Charles Pratt a.% Blair, Neb. 17. Thomas Woodward at Humboldt, Tenn. 2. Thomas Smith at Poplar Bluff, Ma. > •OCTOBER. 2. Ernest Humphreys at Psrineeton. Kjv <* , H. Frank Wooden at Earner. La. ' 17. Bill Singleton at Macuc, Ga. 30. Near Valdosta, Ga.,, Pals Am v .. NOV1BMBSK • 14. Ned Stevens at Savannah, Ten DBCSMBBR. 9. Moses Lemon at Roebuck. Miss^ 10. Dan Williams, near Qulncy, Pistil's 21. At Boyd town, Va, live negroes who were in Jail for m urder. • 22. Near Huntington, Oregon, three unknown tramps--by railroad men. Victimised Reporters. Among the amusing pranks played by reporters, the practical joke played on his colleagues by Peter Finnerty, the oldtimc Parliamentary reporter, remains one of the best on record. The special victim in this case was a reporter named Morgan O'Suilivan who, feeling too drowsy during a dull debate to keep his eyes open, asfced Finnerty to supply him with any important speeches made dur ing his nap, and then went to sleep. When he awoke, Finnerty gravely In formed him that during his nap there had been an important specch delivered by Mr. Wilberforce on the virtues of the Irish potato. Morgan, never pausing to think that the subject had a suggestion of the ludicrous, would-not be pacified until the speech had been dictated to him by Finnerty. The speech, entirely Fin- nerty's concoction, made Wilberforce say: "Had It been my lot to bo born and reared in Ireland, where my food would have principally consisted of the potato --the most nutritious and salubrious root--instead of being the poor, infirm, stunted creature you, sir, and honorable gentlemen, now behold me, I should have been a tall, stout, athletic man; and able to carry an enormous weight. I hold that root to be invaluable, and the man who first cultivated it in Ireland I regard as a benefactor of the first magnitude to his country." Morgan took all this in, and so delighted was he with the speech that he gave it to his colleagues, with the result that next morning every paper of note (except Finnerty's paper, the Morning (Jhrdnlclc) had this amazing re port of Wilberforco's great speech on the potato.' • , : . A Groat Glass. 1 A distinguished assemblage of mathe maticians fend Scientists gathered enthu siastically around a plain packing-box in Cambridge, Mass., a few days ago to look at a piece of glass. It was ten feet in circumference and some three inches thick, but as it lay in its bed of excelsior its value exceeded $60,000, and the spec tators regarded it with the greatest af fection. The place was the office of Alvan Clark, the noted telescope maker, and the gla?s was the lens for the new tele scope to be erected on Wilson Peak, in the Sierra Madre Mountains, near Los Angeles, 6,000 feet above the sea, for the University of Southern California. It' will be the largest telescope in the world, the object glass being 3 feet 4 inches in diameter, or live inches more than the famous Lick telescope. The tube will be sixty-five feet long, and the moon will be brought by it within one hundred miles of the earth. The whole is the gift of E. F. Spence, President of the First National Bank of Los Angeles. The glass was cast in Paris, after no less than 110 attempts, and is insured for its full value in two Boston companies. It will take fully two years yet to grind and polish it to the required locus, and, when to all appearances complete, the human fingers will be called into play to finish its surface. It is ground down with red oxide of iron and polished with beeswax. When in position the telescope is ex pected to perform wonders. It will have a photographic outfit which will be three times larger than any now in existence. It will cost $3,000 to transport the glass to Los Angeles. A few t»«a«HaK*. A bMlwtar, being pressed to give his •ana* for not marrying, answered: "I h*T8 enough for myself only; bur girls are not as a rule sent to their husbands witfk ft dowry. Under the best of cir- comstances real married happiness is ranted to few; poverty is its death blow, do not wish to ruin two lives, so am doomed to a life of celibacy." Does it not seem strange that in America, where woman is petted and indulged from the cradle to the grave, she should in this matter of dowry be treated so shabbily? Every woman who marries from a house- hold of large or even moderate means ^hould carry with her a dowry which Would bring her in at least as much pocket Inoney as she has been accustomed to >pend on clothes and private charities. 'It is not Just to let marriage be such a one-sided bargain, where the young husband has to furnish all the money. The reason for tills custom Is probably to be found in the fact that society in this country is still in certain respects in a primitive condition. Paterfamilias, having married a poor girl when young and worked his way up, expects his daughter to be married to a man who will work his way up. But in the mean time he Indulges his child with every luxury and totally unfits her to be the wife of a poor man.. By and by, when a worthy suitor comes and offers a modest ^income ho is told with scorn: "That Jwould not pay for my daughter's shoes!" The result is much unhappiness and •broken-liear tedness that could have been ^easily avoided by a settlement from the 'father. Indeed some fathers look for ward to their daughter's marriage as a * f time when they can reduce expenses. Perhaps they are living beyond their means to get them married. Contrast with this the prudent Frenchman or German--in all ranks--saving in every way before the girl's wedding in order to provide for her comfort afterward.' Statu of Ohio, City of Toledo, I „ Lucas Covntt, i Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he Is the senior partner of the firm of F. J. Chxnky & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of Catarhii that cannot be cured by the use of Hall's Catarrh Cvuk. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presenoe, this 6th day of December, A. D. 1880. , --"-- , A. W. GLEASON, •J skaIm > Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Curs Is taken internally, and acts direotly on the blood siud mucous surfaces rathe system. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, a 4trSold by druggists, 75c. Very Free with His--Time. Mr. Closely--Mabel, I must be very fond of you; just think how mUQli t^me I spend in your company. * " ' M a b e l -- Y e s , a n d t h a t ' s a l l . * > - 6n|i% i$jj$g£jbf Germany, as pe*r, |5§M*$p:'iol Sowing: The firstlfcip- of a sfeimship told a querist laughingly how sorry he woufd be if the island was ceded to Germany. "Because," he said, "we shall get no more champagne treats from the young couples going to Heligo land to get married. When the parents won't allow a marriage, the young peo ple have only to go over to Heligoland, where they don't waht any license or papers. We always spot them," he add ed, "and when they come back they have to treat us to a bottle of champagne. Last year ninety-three couples went across to be married at Heligoland. We shall lose all that little extra now.* (• f ' v *- * Hints to Folks Who Gtre Big Dinners. I have a hint for you people who fcive big dinners, and I get it straight from the other side of the ocean, says a New York correspondent ol the Boston Her ald. This winter the candelabra with wax tapers and tiny paper shades'will not be so modish, and the reason is that they prevent the use of flowers. The dictum now is: No dinner without flow ers in the wildest profusion. This is offi cial. What may be served is a second ary consideration. The %>wers now are the proof of the pudding. • Well, as to the promised hint. You secure five very large and very elegant lamps, and these you place, one at the center of the table and one at each cor ner, and between the center lamp and the corner ones you swing silken ham mocks in aesthetic tints, These you fill to overflowing with natural flowers, tum bled in and tumbling out in artistic dis order. But, mark you, a profusion of them, for without this you're lost. The effect is said to be indiscribably beauti ful, for the huge lamps, too, are inter twined with them, and you seem to be in a land of bloom and fragrance,In a bower of enchantment. Yes, it is rather expensive. That's the only objection. But folly is always high priced, and yet people seem to think it pays. Another objection to so ma,ny flowers is that the stifling odor takes away allf desire ta cat. Eat? Why. bless your simple mind, you must eat before you leave the house. Business always before pleasure. What a Cow risked Up. Thomas Addison, of Fairfax County, Virginia, took from the hoof of an old family cow the other day, it is related, a handsome gold finger ring, with a large green stone setting. On the seal was engraved a Mexican coat of arms, and on the inside was the name of D. J. Hoyt and a Mexican cipher, and dates show ing the ring to have been in the Mexican war. How it got on his farm and in the hoof of hl8 cow, Mr.. Addison does not know. • - When vou hear that a man has passed in iiis checks, it is not always safe to infer that he is dead; he may only havs overdrawn his bank account. Some men are so far-seeing stumble over their insi all tho brains out of Standard time has been fully ac cepted in Asia by not less than 40,MhtOOO people; in Europe by almost an equal number, and in Amefica by more than 00,000,000. What is now thought an es sential is a standard unit of measure- ment Mediocbttt always copies superiority. Dobbins* Electric Soap has been imitated more than any soap. Ask your grocer for Dobbins' Electric Soap: all other Electrics, Electricity, Magnetics, etc., are imitations. If you want to please a woman, praise her baby. If you want to please a Ken- tucklan, speak well of his horse. Rheumatism IS of two kinds, scute and chronic. The former is accompanied by high fever, and in the swollen joints there is intense ®,*in, which often suddenly changes from one part of tbe body to another. Chronic rheumatism is without fever and not so severe, but more continuous, and liable to come on at every storm or after slight exposure. Rheumatism is known to be a disease of tho blood and Hood's Sarsaparilla has bad great suc cess in curing it. This medicine possesses Quali ties which neutralise acidity, and purity, enrich, and vitalize the blood. Hood's Sarsaparilla Sold by all druggists, f 1; els for *3. Prepared only 1)7 C. 1. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries. Lowell, 1 IOO Doses One Dollar V SHILOH'S CONSUMPTION CURE. nactiMS of this Great Coagfi Cam is without a parallel in the history of medicine. All druggists are authorized to sell it on a pos itive guarantee, a test that no other cure can suc cessfully stand. That it may become known, the Proprietors, at an enormous expense, are placing a Sample Bottle Free into every home in the United States and Canada. If you have a Cough, Sore Throat, or Bronchitis, use it, for it will cure you. If your child has the Croup, or Whooping Cough, use it promptly, and relief is sure. If you dread that insidious disease Consumption, use it. Ask your Druggist for SHlLOii'S CURE, Price 10 cts., 50 cU. and $1.00. Ifvour Langs are sore or Hack It use Shiloh*s Porous Piaster, Price 25 cts. Tourists, Whether Oh ||easure bent •* boiineas. should take on every trip a bottle of Syrup* of Figs, as it acts most pleasantly and ef fectually on the kidneys, liver, and bowels.; preventing fevers, headaches, and otfat^r forms of sickness. For sale in 50c and $1 bottled by all leading druggists. m From Different Standpoints. ' Ethel--Oh, at last! It has been years Alphonse, since I saw you. Alphonse--Oh, my own Ethel, it has been centuries. , Ethel's Father (up in the library)-- Maggie, who was that you just let in? Maggie--It was Mr. Camlots, sir. Ethel's Father--Great guns, this is the i ninth time lie's been here this week. He might as well live here. Husband and WHfc Have more than once been saved by the timely use of Kemp's Balsam for the throat and lungs, after all other remedies have been tried in vain. The Balsam stops decay of the lungs and cures influenza and acute and chronic coughs. There is no other medicine in the world that acts so promptly, certainly none that does its work so thor oughly as Kemp's Balsam. All druggists sell it. Large bottles 50c and $1.' A Coatksville, Pa., farmer raised a pumpkin that is so big that he cannot get it into his cellar. It is cruel to neglect symptoms of worms in a ohild. Many cases of epileptie fits can be traced to this source. You do yonr duty when you give it Dr. Bull's Worm Destroy ers. It will save the child. TWENTY MILLION acres of the land of the United States are held by foreigners. A COUGH, COLD OR SORE THROAT should not .be neglected. Brown's Bron chial Troches are a simple remedy, and give prompt relief. 25 cts. a box. A SUGAR-CUBE® "ham"--Poor actor made well by homeopathic pills. Bbbcbam's Pills act like maglo on a Weak Stomach. * SOME men will work harder to get a divorce than they ever did to support a family.--Ram's Horn. "When slovens get tidy they polish the bottoms of the pans." When servants are given SAPOLIQ they are never tired of cleaning up! No Opium In Piso's Cure for Consumption. Cures where other remedies fail. 25c. T18AII1 SlOSte »1,000 r«r*f!ill,T Urc.tfd !.»r« 1AI1S. I AUvnM ferinv ANNVALLY from TWKNTV !• I8U7 1W mu TiCOMA IKVSSraSNT ! <>•. TAUMt, WASH. PATENTS 10TJB MOSEY, OB Y01TB UFBt : Tills question is a "pert" one, fcotWS-- mean it. Will you sacrifice a fewpaltry dollars, and save your life? orwBl youu allow your blood to become tainted^ an# your system run-down, until, fintllyiyoa are laid away in the grave? Better 5* in time, and "hold up" your haalt Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery*.; ;.:£ a guaranteed remedy for all scrofnkNB*} and other blood-taints, from whatefgg' • f\ cause arising. It cures all Skin and' !§f| Scalp Diseases, Ulcers, Sores, Swelling*' and kindred ailments. It is power fully tonic as well as alterative, or ;vj] blood-cleansing, in its effects, hcnce It; , 3 strengthens the system and restores.' vitality, thereby dispelling all those' languid, "tired feelings" experienced- t-,; by the debilitated. Especially has it manifested its potency in curing Tetter,, Salt-rheum. Eczema," Erysipelas, Boils, t ^ Carbuncles, Sore Eyes, Goitre, or Thick.' ' ^ Neck, and Enlarged Glands. WorlcP* J| Dispensary Medical Association, Mak- era. No. 663 Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y. WllTriHMf" T» tkavmu VeWlia. •MILU tosioo a month and enenses. Ad*. '?•. law Stohx a wkluxotom. sfU^Srwis. rSr laws STpW •*Tg» VOTT Malaria or Piles, Slek HnAM^CwMa Bowels, Dnmb Akum, Soar Wlnssiwli jWtij Bdektei lfyowrfood doMBstaaMrta ritiTKb win wrt thees ^tesMw. Prtos» M UK MKAT OMLiM BEECHAM'S u W«0i a Mbm a Bnc" tat «tt 1fof» 25 Cents, by all mroecmrip^ MIWTIOM THIS PAHta m __ _ I We want reliab'e men in all parte Wil uaa references-M nftbeconstry who are already trsv- _ pling talesmen to t-arry our lubri- ttamples aa a side line ; uimio terrltoiy nces-MANurAOTuaxBs OIL COCleveland,O PATENTS!! PATRICK OTABBELL. Atfy at Law. Washinct^UDjo. Disability nil Is a law tied. now aeaenaeni whoeo If you pro®- MCINTOSH Battery * Optical Cs. STEREOPTICOHS MAGIC LANTERNS. CHICAGO. ILL. HOW A R E Y O U R Cures cold or tender FEET, PEDINE CmaDer Shoe* may be worn with St i'EDINB CO., Wosu> Buiuxno, Nsw Yokc, . fort. Price, 50 cts, Stores, or by mail. Trial Package and illustrated DETECTIVES Vaattd Id emy C«»lj to u: s® tbe SnmlirilM ante •attroetlMt ton C»pt. Oi*p»m. es-Chter «f DmmiItm •( ClaalDBsU. liHritm a* aMMurjr. Partkatu* fn*. AMraas Inius VcMettva Birau I'®,, u Araada. CUtsiaaatt, 0. We want to seenre permanent I ber of Orphan Babes sad CbUdmn. parties who want to adopt a bright welHirown child are Invited to o CKIUlRKX'g AID HOCHSTI Street. Chlcaco. HI. ILLUsTBATED CATlOn, 1PIT8 ington and Ore- " "" Son, tb« ftes Gov ernment and Cheap NORTHERN PACIFIC R. ft. ZZaST'iSSThSt e>u a uaa. tw am. f. r. a «, tt. Beet YOUR BOY WANT* 1 r forms for application and fall information WM. W. DUDLEY, MTK COMMISSIONER OF PBNSION8, Attorney at Law, Wsahlnifton, P. ft (Mention this Paper J Oar lUaetrat«Ml CATAt.O««msir SarSend atamp tor war Jfa. Sr^ Catatosne. THE JOHN WILKI«SM CO, era a *n 9M» tt, GWcses. in. If You Want to K»ow M EMORY Mind wandering eared. Bookit«&rned In one reading. Testimonials from all parte of the globe. Prospectus l WsJStaHSSSiir' TA* Oldtit Medicine in tkt World itprotablj >ff»8 1KB. ISAAC THOMPSON'* Thl?frfcwSXosXfu!^ j^ep^BO^pft-SSS's pre SeordoufiesSSl'l HEDICAL SENSE AND aKMSOHM^ .. ^ M. Hll.f. PPBCft.»li«taatt. l»W l«lk :•-iQ FOTAi RIVOLTBB ! purchase one of the cele brated SMITH Jt WESSON ansa The finest amaU arms ever mantifactarM sad Um action. Safi" I Hednced 16 to SSpoundsper month by bamifcss hemi L remedies. No Etarvine, no ' Sneonvecienco. "nnflrtwil 18c. for circulars and tiwtlmonials. Address. DB. O. W. » . BM'DtB, 243 Stale St., CUsas* Hb Name this paper when yon writs. are auDject more distreaaing than aore eyee, and ; manawi none, perhaps, for which more remedies have been durabfl tried without Bocceas. For all external Inflammation of the eyes it ta an Infallible remedy. If the direc tions are followed It will never fall. We particular!} invite the attention of physicians to Its merlte. sale by all druggists ~ a CO., TKOY, S. Y. Shvgicians to its mensB. OlHN L. TH0MP30N, Established 1797. Ca T H E P O S I T I V E C U R E . ELY BKOTHKR3, M Warraa BU, New York. Price 60 < Best Cough Medicine. Recommended by Physicians. Cozes where all else fails. Pleasant and agreeable to the taste. Children take it without objection. By druggists. l.oanfn^T j they are onrivilcdi in: „ cc«ra«y, Ponotsed onlv hum WESSOH Bevorms are i relB with firm's name. «*i and sn naraatee4 tnrfect iantqr^ Bist uponTMving the gennine artkdn. i dealer cannot anpply yon an ocdw mm below will receive prompt and carefc_ _ Jtescriptive oatalogne and prioee furnished op«aa a plication. SMITfi & WESSON, £ Kr^Mmttanthia paper. Kass^ GRATEFUL--COMFORTINd. EPFS S COCOA BREAKFAST. "By s thorough knowledge of the natural laws whltti govern the operations of digestion aad nutrl- , tloo, and by a carolia appUc atioa of the flns ! ties of weli^clected Cocoa. Mr. Kpoa baa m our bresikfaat tables with a delicately 1 , eragewhtoh may save us maay heavy itntnwri I It is by the jadloloua use of such arttetai «t 4Mt that aooastitution may be gr dually I wilt SBSMU|' 1 strong enough to resist every Tisifisay toONM, Hundreds of subUe maladies are Moating iwsrto ready to attack whkrevar that* la a wesfc pMM.: may eecape maay a fatal abaft by ksa*McasB«! selves well forti^ei with pare blood and a property nourished frsma"--"Ototf Harstas Quanta,f teiles, i bexes n«ftled with blue rlbtoM, _ Ail pill. ID puteboard Mass, pink wrapper*, ut lasnmaiMaatsrMta A1 Dror*i«w,. ff," I'LIt""': "adaKwials, aa<( "BAf IWrJUadlea," to Utter by retara MalL »«.»«•I TMUnwBiai. A*M* PTF*R. CMICMCSTCR CMCMICAI. Co.. Madkaii S«jsam Md by all LmsI Ihrsgglsls i 1, A ISKtj'ltlji, rH EVE*r WATERPROOF COLLAR or THAT CAM BB RBLIEO QM NOt to THE MARK Sputl Not to Discolor l BBAR^ THIS MARKf' Hade slmpiy witu boiliag water or aSk. only in dalf-pouQ.i tins '>y Orocew. JABI8 SPFS &CO -Losdox, Eimuum. -VASEUME- FOB AOKE-DOUAR BIU neatMllr^ we will deliver, free of alt chanter, to any pasi in la the Unitjk^ Stated ail of the following agttSaa-OK*- > ttoe two-onnc® bott'e of Pnrc- Vaselins-.^..,. IScSa,' One two-ounoe bottle ot Va»eHne Fomane . , . v J9 * i One ]Wa4! Vaiscli' e Cold Cream » r" One cue of Vaselm© i*au«phorIc«. iake< " of VaMrliuo tuisceated. •cvaieii *,*• "W-- n-.-""'ir < marki neaheof Va»#lineSoa»^xquiieitejjr«c< i two-ounce bottle ol White TaMOae. Or, for pottage stomos. any Mn0t0 OrtM»m «*» jw-fea. named. On m account M ptnma&ed > your Oruagitt amu VOMJUU or t utile** labeled tcitk'Hurmtriit.l ^ leant* a* imiituiom »i. OlMMbroagh Co.. S* Mat* 8UJS.fi NEEDS NO LAUNDERING. OAN BB WIPED CLEAN IN A MOMENT. TH* ONLY LINEN-LINED WATERPROOF, dors# WHEN WK1 i^raS\r*