mgnc. am: only um next morning ms (greet throw themsolvos against. the he- noixin` line with moi: fury that in in tow m utes they had captured in imi- tory ind nimout annihilated 3 reuimum; renadllm who were defending it. Un ontho fire of the second investment ii at the Turks W d for fifteen mm- _nt 5 bayonet fig t with the arena- dlerp`, who` hit! assayed to":-cnptum the bntte y and may men were killed. Tito x\u worn finlliy driven back. but t 0 rttio. which ind un at` scion o'olqc ma continued an I l!.lI.\vInn both side: ceased tiring. Halt tn hour intor Ounua Pubs cent word that he was Vmllnt to aux-mule: can the term: at tnluion was stunned in (it- toen ants. In half an hour the Turn Ind laid down their ulna. It Md bun tl ht tint Oman Puhnh in min 0 out in wsy t h lluy or but t van tint ha ha! on with run n9wn_.gA -_--.,.. _..._..--__i. A cure for Illloupnou fut LIVER In the uunune." Instead of Lorcingtlm fighting Osman` Plunhn continued to furlity l`lavn:\. The our at once ordered to the front 120.000 T rnculurs. 180,000 militia, and W) pxaoea | of drtillery us reinfurcelnan-ts. Tho 'l`L'rki-sh nnny In the tleld. in three (hVl- sions. cunsisled of l5'),0\I0 man. of wh nu about 50.0) wvro nt. Plnvna. Hy they end of August the Rm-sinn fun-es \vuru in such numbers that 90,000 Ih.-xsi-xns Ill-tl I{uum.unIa\n<. with M0 guns. 5-.-t nut to: umtl-or xulx-unce on l`ievr.\, -.vh~.-In it was estimated Usnmn I -mm Ind 56,- li unnu A nnnltnunnc Mnrnlunvlrhruxnl culnaumoea no was pmcea. He went. into the Russian war in 1877 in command of the Fifth nu-my cm` 3. At Scnlevitzc he auiferoti da- foo. Then he umrunched himself at Piovnn. 'l`hc Russiuns had made un- upectod pr ross over the Dnnulm, cnlnpimz on t a southern side uur|' in July. nndxaoonnufror hul panned the hi- klns. At Plevnu they received their first re ulna. Orders had been won to the Igussinn army to occupy I who on noon on possiblo, hut. Osnmn riuulo that time u long wuy off. Gen. Schil- d Schulxlnor undertook the mission `it with 0,500 men, but was my ed ` n aupurior toroo before he rune ml the city, and was defeated with it loss . ot nearly 3,000 killed and wounded. Thu Russians got up some reinforce-` mbntb while the Turks want on at rengthaning I`ievnn. and on July first another assault wus made by the ho- aeigorn. who met ouothor defeat,` im- ing 170 officers and 7,131} men. i`hoy were put on the defensive. "umilv ' fur I-iuum. the ` Turiiiah \\'`0 put me utuenalve. Ht plly for Russia. the Turkish army ml no competent. leader," '1`. W. Km): uys m his `Decisive Imttlea Since \VutaoO.' `"0? the army of the cur might. have been captured or drowuevl in than linnnhn " "HIDE lHIVl' UPQ` in the Danube.` In-I-nut` nf fur that he was an American t|(lVl'lllllr(`r nnnd Clay Crawford. The 'l`url:i;sh mln tor to the United St ate. proclaim- ed that he was a native Turk and made public some ol the [arts of his life. Although Plevna made him world famous. Osman was known as an ahle warrior at ll. much earlier date, l|.l\`in` served in the Crimean war, ttptainst the Cretan insurreutionista and in the Ser- \ian war. He WM: horn in l`uk.tl. Mitt Minor. in 1882. His first edut-.ation he received under the tliru-,tlon of his brother iluasien Isiendi. who was pro- fenor of Arahie in the prt`|mt`ttt0t'_v school at Constantinople. He went. later to the llilii(lIl`_\' at-ndetny at Con- stuntinople. and finished his studio. there Juet in time to go. to the (frime.-it war in 1858, when he was sent to Bhumla as a member ot' the -stall`. Lit- tle was heard ol_ him until the Cretan outbreak, when he was promoted for hravery to the rank of colonel. lie wont early into the Servian war as chief of stall` of the Fourth army corps and captured Snitchnr. When peace we: concluded he was made field mar- Ihal (Mushlr). It was said of him that, wherever he was he won the esteem oi` his superiors. no matter in what air- culnatnneea he was placed. Ha vnmt. inttn that Run.-Iiall war in CF TUHKIY'l FUHUII. AI`:-ilour umnum Ikll_I no pm`.- Qlto `tactics-llow no Iloldl lion llI|II|_|Io II II and Iolnqnlnnn _ or no 0331- jolonlo `rho: Pronou- lilu lair IIIIII. Qln Puho,. who." the deapntclxen 'I'tv-;_tI-c_lwe:1 wilt tn the from `o lis- hvloec at Macedonia, has been nelfhthor an ll detenolvo than no In offqnnln soldier. In defence he hurt pout considered one 01 the grumtost gvndl 61 Europe since the noise of lavas in the Russo-Turkish war. when he held the town for more than four month: inst the Russian: and Rou- mniinns. . e is noted for coolness in his military rations, but not less for braver and t e chnructnrlntlc lunatic- ism 0 the Ottoman soldiery. He is. besides. frugal. He is sixty-seven years oipge, which is not old for n tightin man among the Turks when compare: with Hnlil Pualm. who was killed on Tuesday. after being wounded three times. and who, ulthough eighty-three `earn old, had refused to ainyout oi mttle. The long aeige which Osman Puslm sustained in the Bulgarian town against. enormous armies. while his own force was not 9. very lurge one, led to relnnrknhle stories uhout him Wilivll worn diligently circulated. und which the Turkish ministry in this country had to deny officially and apocillcollv. Myuter surrounded his idontit 2 it was Ml that the commander of `town: wstmnnhal lluimina, who haul det`unt:-.d Mots: that ho was ll. rt-nugmlo Prussian; that he American ndve-nturor -...-.n:I (Yluu nu-n\vl'nri, Till! Tlll`ki.'\il gt. ntltldhem Pubs in the command of- u re V1-_r-U-v-ppvaypyp-3-r *- -u---.--~~.,.v _ .- ....... . . ' bI--%-- {In or TU!-'IKIY'8 roncu. :m`I'~uI.woov`a.umn- - -at ' DQIH IICIOV PIIII. Don`: Him Pill: not on the kidney. Nadir and any organs uly. frhoy qt huh I-inaction. an hcpuhu. :m"""""'*........"E'..".::`;.~..s..""'..- no but u oovurd'timoi1ii:qoTihihT minhtu lit` and the last tow yum. _ \ tho place. it you 0! hh duty _Ubn UIIITIC \ll|0K@ll l IlIIU`II (ETD Ill 1 ton Aug . 86. 1888. Ind at the `IT N was gnduawd from Hanna un vq Ky. no amend the Union run: as captain in the 'lVveu ty-second nu-om-no minn- om-oog 8.1301. Bevrupromotzdtobo mojonthon onloulmnd at the nkgo Port Hudson ho commanded a brigade.` um he won `uppolned In (one!!! undwdibrevumdunajor Mu-M tlowulaouttcndcdmloolycothobndnou of math 3 Inga to`:-tune toruvaul und huhunonlnontly noun- Inuulhnn. 'l'IooIbunuIhuIoMhpuonotuyoon- uldon. Bounce Walnut and on-Vin |'nnIdeutstuuunn,uoicywulIhowI. -[HURT IEIUIII Ill UKC`I' UTIUUIKHUHH. In {)0 Isle: General Paine nu taken I llwly us Impersonal Inlenut. Be In 0 Republican and In ad student of na- tional and Intornutloml nanco. own In Intlmnte Mom! and uaoolltoof 0 lab Professor Francis A. Walker. the nancial authority and exponent of bhnoulllun. Gem-ml Pnlno accompanied Senator `Wol- cott, the bond of the nlnmlalon. pa III leotnt trip of lnvcotlgntlon in In ' Hlnn-In Jnnlnnn Dnlnn-an has-n II En. I-nuwnnau uunnuuno on Inn`-o ml corporations. a director In the Mann- ch uautta Inamuto of Technology nnd hold: Imllnr mom In other orpnlntlonzu In nnlllnn u-natal Dnlnn has hhnn n Clnrlu J. Pnino. 5 Member of tho Now Monetary Commiuion. General Charlos J. Paine of Boston. who has been appointed a membero! the mono- tary commission which in noon tovinit Eu- rope in the interests of international bi- motnilium, is best known in the man who three times defended the America`: cup in the international yacht mom; He was one of tho syndicate which built the Puri- tan, and tho Mayower and Volunteer woro constructed uimout wholly nthh own personal cxpenno. `Inf. \'nnhth\n In An]: Ann nf Olun lrnit. pcriunul L-xpvunu. But yachting in only one of tho divor- Ilons of General Puiue's busy life. By pro- fession he in a lawyer, but in in doubufui it he practices much nowadays. for he isu nriiiiunnlrc, with big rnilroud intoreltl, and Wm ifus i)11ainos`a irons in u dozen other oonnnercinl iims. H0 is a director In the Chicago. Burlington and Quincy Ind nov- i mm in {ormin IIIULI ITWUFIIUU EU Ill! l.llllVUI'lIIIy. In 1886 Dr. Angoll was again sent on a diplomatic mission. He was a pointed by President Clnvolnnd to act wit S ry of state Bayard and Mr. William L: ut- n treaty with Great Brit- ain for tho aett emont 0! the fisheries din- puto. Asa contributor to standard and our rout literature Dr. Angoll in well known. He has contributed several notable articles to various literary Inaguineu, but be has been no nucoentul aaa college executive that he in obiolly known by bi: work in that ileld. -III Ill]l|JUl'lU\I Uy IIIU Full}- In 1370 Dr. Angeli was appointed by President Hayes as minister to China and at the mine time to not as one of tho throo connninaionom to negotiate a now trvuty with the Chinese vormnent in regard to emigration from t M: land. It WEBB dol- ionto tank, but it was nccompiished to the ntiufnction of the Hayes administration in loss than two I onthn. Dr. Angeli ocu- tinued to not an In niatcr for two years and then returned to his univoraity. In IRRI Hr Annnll urn: nnnln mania nn n TO PROMOTE BIM ETALLISM. Wllll l'llI'U IIIII. Then ho was called to tho I'nh'm-any of Vermont us president. nnd for iivo ymrn ho luhorui with grout suncmls to build`-up than inntitution. It was in 1871 than he was made proaidcnc of the Michigan uni- versity M Ann Arbor. This instit.m.inn was nlmoat in an oxperhnenml ntngo when has assumed control. but in the quarter of 0 century during which he has been at its head it has hon bruughh Into tho ih-It rank 0! uuivornltlea and today servos us It model for institutions oi` tho kind which no Iupported by the state. In H170 Hr Annvnll um: nnnnlnfnd hi 1` nu. JANE! 3. menu. from the um-iicso settlers of the stain, Thomas Angeli. his ancestor, being a oom- panion of linger Williams. After being graduated at. Brown univorsity ho tmrelml for two years in tho southern states and in Europe and in 185! returned to his uimn mater to Mcepb the choir of, mudorn inn- guugos. Whiio filling this position he oontributcd to tho cdiwrinl colunxnaoi tho Providence Journal. and in 1800 he re- signed his profosaorahip to take editorial control of this nowspnpc-r. I-lo conilnuod in this position until 1806 and munugetl tho journal througintiioso stirring times with rare skill. II`\.-.. I... um..- .u.II~.`I in Al... 1 ..l..n-_lA.. at 7.-..*..,- W-'--9 - J wL&.m-vT5!.`n'u ..-.alIf.'i.;'T '2" 7` 7' .. o~DhIh;IlIIod cu-nu at Dr. Jan ` I Anson. Dr. Jame: Bnrrlll Angel], who has hon appointed to the Importunt post of United `Shun mama to Turkey. In dmingulnhad nun cgluumr. u whom-. an author and 3 diplomtt. For more than 25 year: he has been pmldont of the Univomy of Michi- gan, and thin In the third time hqhnn been callnd from his pout #0 enter the diplomatic 1 out-vice of his country. DI-. Annnll inn horn Jun. 7. 1899. III the I NETVICI OK I'll! country. Dr. Ansell wan born Jun. 7, 1889, In the can 0! Boltunte, R. 1. He II duoondod wun trip or Invuugnuon in nu Ohm-la Jackson Pulnnwu born in Da- nn Ann QR, lkll Ind n (ha `Ina nl -I .. *.*.':".;.-:'.*"%.".;.:"".'.:*"'......"-..*:..'.."- \ ymngundu at an Iidnqo TO jhxev. GENERAL CHARLES .7. PAIR]. __.,_,.x___. _ _|n_,_.__. n__ .n _ nu (UI"v" rrV-I" """" PC: P'&llt i ...s p'"`P'" ..a -. ..:::.':= "`, -$3,. ~~m.:.`;:*-. 5% moor-su3_`_ "'_`_ .5-pi-5`? In. h.,.`n|l|5" 3`. : an 0"? 3 "",'5".;`'}+[ :3 l UUTIIIK II I Wllo Dr. Williams Pink Pills are It blood builder and nerve restorer. They supply the blood with its life and health-giving properties. thus driving disease from the system. There are numerous pink colored imitations, against. which the ublic is. warned. The genuine Pinlx l`ila can be had only in boxes the wrapper around` which bears the full trade mark. "l)r. Willinms Pink Pills for l'ule People." Refuse all others. `I'll. ll: WINK OK In! ICIR court at Del and torn. Italy. have and uthnuon :2 their open! uldruou to the study lnomnn at crime! moghont lhn nnnnllm. And nnmhlh E thdnlnrmlnn DUO IITDHPOOBI III` VUTY nrlguu lUI' UUIIIPIUVU recover . He has gained twenty pounds in weig hainco be inning the use of 1)r. Williams` Pink PH 9. Mr. Willinma anya : "I can heartily endorse the many good things and (1 these pills in the papers, and strongly recommend them to my one suf- foring no I wu." Hr \ViIlinmn Pin}: Dill. nrn A hinnrl IIII IIUII (0 DUI ll Wlj IIIIO I vrlt Vt rtlllu-y mu on tint he Incl on with lotrrlacltnd rings mmu-y (one. , I `III. it Pub: wb:M|l kw bl. tnnot not-lourlg. a:_-a.:-- I0 "(VIII III III! IIIC`. . But when the alarm canned by the lady`: cries hnd subsided and the menbllahmem, suddenly cnllcd together. had had tlino to swim and qucstloxi tho fright:-nod hnrhor, the explanation of It all mun shnplt enough. 1-` or the put thno months Tom the Harbor had been nccustomcd to stun) Into that room at mm` dawn and to lather and sham: Colonel lcsmlth whether he found that nun-Ior nslovp or awake." Thin mornlng also he had according to cnstoxxl. come chant hls usual business And had got half way through the uhnvlng opentlon. when a sudden and lawful cry ouuuod him On HI ns MI: "Q What Venn A Thin (In I0 `DO M IIICHIE W CHE! Illlulllll the country, and especially to thdnlumlng henna lllho unlit! Jnnnlhulm twenty ears. out no coulu lluo reuuu MIU mmie or an hour or more. In eddi~ tion to his mental trouble. he lied in- tense bodily sullering; pains in the head, across the forehead. in the temples `and behind the ears. across the] lower part of the skull and in the joint of the neck. He had great weakness and pains in the buck, hips and legs. In fact. so mpeh did he suffer that sleep was elmoet an impossibility. and he fell away in weight until he weighed only I45 pounds. By this time. December 1395, he became despondent and felt that if he did not soon obtain relief he would soon bid ndieu to the things of this world. On the 20th of December he read of a cure in the Reformer by Dr. Williams Pink Pills. and being seized with a sudden inspiration at once wrote to Brockville for a supply of that marvellous remedy. Immediate good results followed their use. and he has im- roved wonderfully durln the past year. e has recovered his b ily health and strength. is oomparntivsl free from in and his memory is nearly as good as t ever wssand es the improvemontcontlnuee the prospects are very bright for complete I-smnvnrv. He has mnlnncl twnnlsv nnnnds wrnm lntu nvu, Vvry ilrvu unu Huvpy. . But the calm nvmumnns with which this well roguintul lady dropped oh no sin`; wt-ru uxulxnngul for something very differ om. when, at a very early huur ncxtmorni inn. she woke up nuddvniy to find hull` oi her tam cover! with lather. nnd A tom cionn, hideous looking black, us he nccnmd to her imrrlvd nan`, ninmliug over he) with u nnimi rnmr. about. as she nntumlr ly imagined. tn out her throat from (our tc om`. The .\l(`d(`n;~Etm` shriek to \V'll|(`.h Dhv poor Indy gave utccrunm nous out mend, Tom the llarhur--tnr it was he- ylng out of the room quicker Mun on: in mm in his life. ` :3... ....L... `Ln .1--. ..........I he cl... `nt`i`: V WIIQII I IIICWICII nun I'I!l'lllI Cl ! llllll III!" to them: Ill; The was nl l`omth in new at the buslncnu. A llnlden L|d3"n Htnrtlmj Adventure In Bombay. Forrimxgra may ml It xh1cult~ to lx-Hon that Tom tho Bawlwr oun ahuvo you while i you me M3101 p, without rousing; you from your slnlnlwr. Hut tlxuuo who lmvq npmn ~ thvlr llvos In India know shut it is plum, unvnrnlshul truth nml that It has mom than once lmppvnul to than to wnkv from 0 heavy morning sloop to `nd that Tom ' hm: been and none nnd shaved than whllc I they were comfortably in the Luml of Nod. Concerning Tom the Burbtr an umnsing N story is told. s.\...... 51...... ....n.. l...I.- ..l` .. nnmnln um UUI IN l1\lllI- Smnu thxm ngon lady of a certain um act out fmiu Englnnd lo nmku tho usuu) cold wvmhor trip In lndln. Arrlvvd |x:_ Boxnltuy, shodmw to the hotel that hud hwn I't'(`\$lnlll(`lNll`(| to her and was nlmwn into n l4`u`;.n' and (~nn1furt.nhlv mom. whlvh. , nhvwmv told In nnswor to her Inqulrim. l had loon ow-tlplvd for tho Inst thru munthn by (`olunol Emnith, who had only left that. wry murning to go up country. So `that night after dinner our tmmlcl I turnul into bed, wry (lrvd und slwpy. Thu? Ohn nnhn nnnnnY.|nHi \\`|f.h \\`h|I~h fhll ` ing to church he wished to speak of u await me can to come up niguer. Rev. David Williams, who lives two} miles southwest of Nixon. 0nt., in the township of Windham, Norfolk county, was one of these early days circuit riders. lie was a man of vigorous health and elthou in without many udvnntagee in the way 0 early education he succeeded by dint of hard and constant stud in being admitted to the ministry. le won the iirst bornin the first house built in Glen Williams. near Georgetown, George Ken- nedy, theioundor of Georgetown. being a brother of his mother. Today he is seventy yeersoid, and for the past twenty- six years has lived in this county. For many years he had been a sufferer from kidney and kindred diaeuses. He tried all kinds of remedies, and although some- times temporarily relieved he gru- iiunily grow worse until in Octo- ber. l8iJ.`i, ho was stricken with pmrrr lysis. From this he pnrtiully recovered, and recovered his powers of speech, but his mind vrns bndly wrecked. and his memory was so poor that he `could not re- moinbor the nuino of the person to whom he wished to upeuk without thinking in tently for several minutes. One dny driv- noighbor who lived next to him for twenty ears. but he could not recall the a`-.. A- L:- ...-..n_l a.....|.l.. L. In) in proepereu. Inn I1 xew are W-uuy enjoying a ri old age happy in the knowledge that n shing reward will soon be theire. Most of theee old-timers are not now engaged in active church work, but have been planned I on the euporennueted Hat, and are now living quiet lifein town or on A farm, , free from the come of the world, they await the cell to come up higher. Rnv. lhwhl Williams. who live: two From the Simone Reformer. In the only deye of Mothodiem in Canada the goepel wu rpreed nbroud in the land by t e sotlve exertion: of the circuit rider. It required A man of no ordinary health and etren th : on iron oonetluition end un- tlegging etorminetlon to full theerduoua dutiee incumbent on one who undertook to proech enlvntlon to his fellowmen. It wee no euy teak that these men not themselves to. but they were strong in the faith and hope of ultimate l`GWIl`d. Many fell by the wayside. while others struggled on and prospered. end o few are today enjoying a rim nld non Imnnv in the Irnowledue I X XIII! III! II WING UCOGIIII. III I I , Q no Ian, mun than my thonl ninhhr ctr and for tho Int hm .__._ III: Lilo During the Early buy: or nonm. tlnoullnn In cannula Wu (mm on of (Iron llunlnhlp-`l`ho story of Ono Now I:n.|o.vIng n lllpo Old Age. Fmm the Simone Reformer. In tho mrlu rlnun nl Mnmtlinn in nnntln `CHRISTIANITY OWI8 MUCH TO HIS ZEAL AND ENDURANCE. .:_...j &vtu:v - juotlou of the null: nutwn SHAVED IN HER SLEEP. Ina cmcmr mum up npc. Phonon. Pu-hot. _-I_..... l..-....--3 - rrmzz DAILY wnr. SATURDAY. MAY 1.- 1397. :5`. plan scald envelopi- IDTIIIIIIOII. DIUIIINI I'D!` ID. IIIII ICHI IIIII than an I tow things on such that although they eon nothing so 300 they no worth: brhmo oouono men and noun lifolimo of In `non MI most of no. WI-in to Them cur, Box 197. Kuhn oh. undthoinlormnionwill In III!` 33.; " wu lhntono. but out wit ndlt v .- `DI : (J10 DOIIIIIB 0! my OI PICNIC. " I am not a philnnthogm not do I post as .n ontinuino, but rs an thouaondo of men oulhring the montnl horturoo ol nokonod manhood who would be mind at once oonld they but goo ouch: romody u tlmnnnthnnnnnd mt Dnnnln-vm one! H30 Rudy on how I can nlfotd to par l3.".'.?'.`;.`.... than an n for hhlinn nn WING In DID BU lc I TIRE, one thatvcnrcd mo. Do not try t 0 ft tho I lam that north to uni lumps nocunu `M I but and for it. WHICH CIYRIU) IIIM AFTER IVER!- TIIINU IIJII FAILID. Painful diseases are bad enough. but when a man is slowly wasting away with nervous weakness, tie mental forehodings are ten times worse than the moat severe pain. There is no let up to the mental sulferin day or night. Sleep is almost impoesiglo. and under such a strain men are scamely responsible for what they do. For years the writer rolled and tossed on the troubled sen of sexual weakness until it was a question whether he had not bet- ter tulle a dose of poison and thus end all histroubles. But rovidential inspiration came to his aid in t e shape of a combina- tion of medicines that not only com letely restored the ueneral health. but eu arged his weak, emaciated parts to natural site and vi or, and he now deolaree that any man w will take the trouble to send his name and address may have the method ol this wonderful treatment free. New when I say free. I mean absolute without east. because I want every wea ened man to get the benet of my ex rienoe. ~ I am -ma a nhllanthm i. new sin I non Fm union on anaamnumrrr I FOR WEAKNBSS *0!` THEN. I lU ll. l|ll'. UI` U lllll I. 1. "Yu' snrtinly did. U111. Punk us three l days to run yo` down. But what Iml thla"- 4 II A ...I L... ALI T ....L ...I._.. ._._ _.._A TI... " I Fl, I. |\H\l\\' l||| Hllllo, KHIU Kill` IlIUI'lll lrrltubly. " Hui wlmt a Hunt gun to do with me not lmntln yu` aqunr`?" ` '1`lxut'.~: jvsl wlmt l'm u~uunln tn. Yum um 1, Hill ll:-mlernnn, who stolu fmlr hun.~,-cs---gSvu yn' u thrm (lH)`H' run to git nm-hrung Ix-wk lumlvxl with chain: nml stirred tho hull mwn up, nml thon urtvr all that _\`u' put. 1; mun llkv this In a coil with nu~~:n rllh-r hmught yore furatvulln n huwu! Thlnk n` N-stmlln as lnuvg!" "\\'uul, H1 hudurnod!" ujuoulutcd the shorllf. Who dnrvd to put 11 huwu stuulur In this (`(-11 \\ ith Hill llvmlvraon. tlm fluted lmsu thluf. nr In my jnll 1-lthur? Yo hump rluht nut n` _\'u-rv, yo`, nnd H! (`\`(`l` hmr thm. yo` mm kl In lmuz nruund tmvn thut yu` hml the lmnur u` twin luulmd up with lllll I'll run _\'u` out 0' the lwntryl Hlmu. but this \\':-u u (lu)\\'nI-lum tllsgruvoful-xvuy to mm. yn`, IIIH. lmrnvd If it \\'man`t.I" --Nuw Yul"; Hmulny Journnl. _.. _ 1.11 VIII! *' "Ami how did Iuct when we moi, Jim. Just tell us howl ucbod? Didn't I fight like ummlur und ncuriy wipo out ya`: posse More bvin kntn-in ti?" Yo` did, Hill. Yo fit like I grizzly l1u`r. lint \\'luM IllI.`HlIIti1iR"-- "And my. Jim I" imnrruptod the prison- or nguin. luuk hmv lwam lumlml (lmvn with chuinsz, nml just n-Immlwr how the ~ hull town` mrnul um nnd fulicrvd ua clean up to the jail In git ll luuk nt mu." --\'.~. I L-....... ..n u.... -- ....m .1... nhnll II III UIIC Jilll HI` _``\'\`s. I kxmw: {ma uu\|...o'.. :....s ll'llUi|.'|, llllll UHL` HI I Jim Lnmbort. I war` tho mguurm-IL r try, but! knnw yu` I3-hut, Bill." 5 I II. I....I.|...- ........I III III\` H|`\I(ll\'FlI NIH | III III llI\.' Illlll B"ll` now to he plm-n mam!" staumnorul thu omclnl, luul:lng pumlul. cuultl any one trout yo any uqnnrvr t.hun l`\~o (lum~.V" \',.-z lwt they cuuldl` ` oxululmod the prin- ouor In u;grIo\'u1l tmms. \V'h'. hut. NIH. whnt. hev"- Lnnk n ycro. Jlm," lmxko In tho uthcr with n grunt Rhmv nf Indlpumtlon. "What Wu 1 m'n.-9-`tvd fur nn_\'\vny)" Why. turmvnnu houses of oo sc,"l'o- o.Il.u`I 0|... ..|...-XI`n` Ila `Inn. Innn anus`: [JlIl\I llll` HIIVTHI. . Exactly. went. on the man. "fur atoni- ln hussun. and was kN.(`|lL`(l glttln away with fulir of `um us :1 Hum too! Dld I aim yo` um] yu'r1uznv u tremendous long ohnso to gut. mu. or didn't I?" "Vn' mnvtinlv nlhl HUI 'I`nnlr nn Olu-nn Bill Henderson, lio null Hm b'hI'rlIl' ll While llw aha MIT (11 stulndlmz In {mm uf he \\'I|.~l nturtlul l._\' u lug on hmhlv. and r hut Lu flml lwu M II In u tvrrmu light in : thuy had [won .-spam the nhurhf drmunda l'rm>u.4. um! mm M Lin II II... I .....|.....n I `VH5 I lIl'K'\.'.`l|'ll Ill fur mvu pllml thv H|u'rlfl'. I1`.nu~H\- \\`nl FREE '10 EVERY MAN.` ON HIS DIGNITY. mu, lioraw 'l`hh~l`, F1-It u:-O. Iu~rlIl' Didn't lihuno Him. In uf Whlpunwcuuuty was ml (Inn jun mm morning 111 ;:rcm cmnumtlun (30- . ru.~.hml Into the build- .'u lhu [~rl.-mnurn cxnmmml glut one of mm vvlln. After .-sp.~|mlrd undqulvt rmetmml cnnulldotl the cmisu uf tho m l.hv prinunurs roplled: )ort,I ustur think that yo Nut, slum-ill In the hull km- .- J hu1\`nI A.` I... ..l...... ._.-.... HI v (I fill; II IUUK Ill` IIIU. r ull limb," mid the sheriff ..I...oV.. AI...I. .....A. A.. .|.` --.-.u vvvi-I An old buvhvlnr says, It in all non- nennu to protvnd tlmt. low In bllnd. I nev- er knew us man In law who nllcl not one man tllnvs nu murh In his nwoobllenrt an I dld. " --Phlludulphln Record. An Auldltlonnl Oburvutlon. "'l`ruth (`rushed tnonrth will rise again. " quotmi tho L`IIl`lu`8t mun. Thut '3 truv. " mp! lml Sonntrmr Sorghum, but In numy mu.-w.~t not until nftvr tho h\f-we has cuumul ton."-Washington Star. numuerm izu,uuu men. 1 nore were. {tn-cu of Russians and Rou- munium within three miles ut the city hy Nov. 12th. nnd on thin daty Osman Pasha was cniled upon to surrender. He refuse . decidedly. Ila boastadlh.-it he had p visions enough to last until agring. The people in the oily, how- ever were ilrutrnits and insufl'ivionL h Sits] {militias anti. mlnrge number of oaths in the army msultad in the spread or discuss in any and town. At Int. forty-live d (or the com- plotei vut.mont'oH.h town. sixty d:\_\'s after t o nrrivalorhinlut. supply train. and illi days after his own urrivnl then. Osman Pub: decidod on Sunday evening. Duo. 9. to make A last. sortie. Iidabnndoned tome ot.hia redouluts that night. and only the next morning his {omen throw thnmulnu umingt. nm In. " Mndgo hns hm-n ordurml by her parental to give up Junk nltugoehcr." "Will she do in" "Hhu nny_n ulm cun`t. I10 hrlngs her (I pound of nrumuls every uvonlu3."-Chl- ougo liuconl. I Souldy .Hm-I ml yvr wnt. It`: putty ` tuft` fvr u rrllvr tmwlrnyu his mum] (laugh lu- ' tvr unuu` dvm huxun lur do main plm.-uro of wltnv.-snln hlmnulf gultln licked.-Now York Juurnul. loving Illznmlf u Othel-I Saw Bill. A Remarkable Ours Dpnr Blrn.--.\l_r Moml bomnm lmrmre on human! uf llut In-oxrty fuml I Me In I I We-ullwr. .\IulllIun. mwrny nml nun In-wk mu-. My I-kin I101-mno yr-llu . m In-or was Immw MM lmhl. luv a petite wan no. and tho Inn nml nigh: In ma up mu-M nml mnlloannocl. E mono munllnu trim ulm-torn and pom-n mull- rllmx at I-wry :~nrrl|mnn, but val no In-Iwnl. llelmz mlrlnu-cl by A friend to try Il.|I_I|.. I am maul tn Inn-u the up mm: of lmultylux ln Nun m|nu~11Imn'nII|t. Whnn Nw mm Immu was nnlu my Mum: was Nmmlch-I rmtonwl. I onjuy mod hula mm-. lull has.-3-cl no not slum II ` any mu . ' _ .l. ull.LA.\!:piL. m oak! ~`l\-mono. mvp M` In` 1 any 1. um-oI`u.l .' : .1: uu.'s.+.\!; '5`... an Gouhl -`Donuts. VVUIIHIIUDD IIIIU H DPU'l'IG \lIll\ \-I l\v.-n- RI:-w. I mm hvnrllly l'(\(`uIHllH`VH1 hm!-wk Illmnl Ilium-.-. I-`nr n lupp (In.-v I mm lmnlnlml \\l|h |_\`u|~vp.~I\ n'ud`\\'uu|:I|u-nu. `hr l--ml I-.\:`l'i|nlI wnul-i llrv um um. I um Iml to my. I|n\\v\`I'I`. Hm! _\-mu` ll|l\,H. lmu "n-uU_r |_>.~nvm-ul nu-. runlnu Ihv Il_\`1I|wpuln Inl making mv MI`-mu uml mll. Jl-2.\`.\'ll-I I-2\`.\.\'8. llmqwh-I-, nut. nnIRrwvu.- nnru vr-anmu-M-an-nuzw-wv.-v .--J .-. `_.v -v- -...-..-..`-v nnnr Hlrn,-Al-`nr n Immlwr of yonn I win trmlhlml with lplllonnmuua um] ulrk haml- Iu-Iw mu] mnlnl sun [In rvllvf mull [trial I.H.h. I lmw lulu-u fnur lmnlun. and Inn nnw mmpl--In-Iy mm-I. I um glml to rm-mu-` nu-ml In. [ruin my own l|x|N`|`l`Il(`(`. II me but (`urn for NI Iln-r lmlllilwl. c MRS. Ul~2Ull(lI ll4\l|lN)\V. Wuvkurtonn. Out. I &THC?CTIj Hurt Trlnlo. Improved. THE BLOOD ll . W118 (`SIIIYNIIPG llslnln l"|l'i||B I|il J III,- 001; men A ooniinuous bombardment. from. September 6 lo Siuptember E1. was followed by an assault on the town. which resulied only in the cal tum of mm rodouht (which Gun. Skobe eff hold for one (lay. waiting for reinforoeninnis. which did not gut to him) at a loss of 16.000 to 20,000 men. The Turkish loss was 6.000 less. 'm..-.. on. .....I ..l... ..... |\.\...._ ghn [ It Purifies the Bnod [ygi3cW*fB7E:7iB :] 0hArAA} ` 0959909905`!!!DDDVDDIDDFUDDDURII DDUDIVUDDDFIU 25 Years before the Public.` Thousands . oi Testimonials. Recom- mended by Eminent Physicians. Ladies who will! a Clear Complexion. take * 0110 some. ; 1111146! QIQQQIIQQQIIIQQQI Iifliii QQQQCQQIIIIQIIII Cures all Diseases of the ` Stomach, Blood, Liver, * Kidney, Nervousness, . Sleeplessness. General Deblllty. Blllousnesa, Dyspepsia. Neural_|..l.. When ell. * else hu`talIod try Hop BITTERS Montreal and New York. NORTH A comnnuy cum oomclphuon m-ntlmwlni-I WM lb! QR! NO If tmnlrlnl nun mnnllpnthn. an ,__hv_o pu-nun II mull: II.l\.I\ II Qdtyl OK I _I mpm-I man no am. an VD onlujt ` out-d by lholuootouly In IQIQQII. ID nllln n:|toI!l*,h|\|'I|IiII.brII.In. uelangodvouthhullwlotnlt. W t` ` ill-LA IIOWRIIOM - .4 I I I I 1 u `y u r was mow less. Then the real seige was begun-the eork to starve Osman Pasha out. It took nearly two months to oonnplete tbo investment of the city. On Nov. 3rd all the roads onterinq Plov- n`! were we`; it-d. and the beseiging host. numbered 1 .000 There were. (nu-(`An nf `nn..,:..n.. nwul I)nn_