1, Mid th« fireman, robbing Ui urns, __And otm tt» ilwwl a yank, 1 tbtak bythe way she morta and blows There's not a drop to tbetatakl And nowl would zeally like to eee bMr-MOe MHt hm vamp: Now work It, or else you Jnmp!" f(1 One bound, and the lofty engineer ' - a. A ' Went out of that en cine van, And when he struck. It 4Mnt appear • ' " ; >z - Which was the chief end of man. "I hope," the Mirny fireman said, , .%. As he opened the throttle wide, • $£}i • -w' ONLY A FLIRT. WflEORGIANA FEATHERSTONBAtHWf. The Montrose Hotel, as it stood amid N the gleaming white sand, with its slop- |̂FNG gables and numerous towers, to the JWFEYE of the distant mariner, seemed but dark, irregular mass of rocks keeping ||fawrd over the long line of unbroken Ipeach. It was crowded to its fullest ^CAPACITY at this season. The late arrive RL^LS who pleaded for but a simple cot in fcome corner, were refused even this trifling request, and were obliged to I^|&EEK the more unpretentious quarters of 8#HE hotel half a mile distant. : < «AY PARTIES of tourists, companies of |FACTORS, stopping en route to fulfill en- : jgagements in Western towns, Bohe- tniansft whose unfettered modes of living startled the cliques of conventional ; jnobbism into a chronic state of wonder fcnd disgust. Beauties, too,of the femi nine order--though not profession-, 111, their renown was widespread enough •--vied with one another in dazzl ing t ae • eyes of the men, and heaping tinhappi- liess upon the women whom fate had erdowed with sallow complexions, and {general ugliness. All were gathered , «n masse at this fashionable retreat, to : breathe the salt sea air, plunge daily in the briny surf, flirt, gossip, and indulge ;? ! In all the amusements afforded at a L,. ' Summer resort. But among th-i pleas ure-seeking throng, none was perhaps J . • more deserving of being awarded the J>alm, than was Vivian St. Aburn, and I perhaps no two men came nearer to ;fitter enmity than did Antoin Duvall, the little Frenchman, whose foreign PLANNERS and native esprit, made him a general favorite, and Victor Flushing, >' piis once most intimate friend; and the J f̂ause of all the bitterness had been J; V Vivain St. Aburn, whom many PRO FIT Hounced a heartless flirt, while others ^ t owed that her head had been turned by lier beauty. She was seated atone of " the crowded table d'hote with Antoin £ * F)uvall directly opposite, devoting two- '( 'thirds of his attention to herself, while J the other third of his time was taken ! * %tp with the salad and cold beef. On her right sat her aunt, whose un- tiring devotion mas almost painful, VHILE Victor Flensing occupied a chair I ON her left; but HP was pale, and a de- ! fiant gleam shqne in his steel-gray eyes. L Vivian was also pale and her heart had | HOT ceased its wild beating as she £ thought of the bit of paper hidden in the bosom <©f her evening dress. She had found |t lying just outside of the fining-room door as she entered. She had stopped to peruse its con- tents, indifferently enough at first, but on closer examination was horrified to DISCOVER that it was a challenge from ANTOIN Duvall, to Victor Flushing, the Jfneeting to take place at Poplar grove, •n that night, at midnight. It was Elated a week before, and she was well '•.ware that Victor Flushing was Hot the man to hesitate. He was <#very inch a soldier, and the fire in his «• teel-gray eyes spoke of the bravery of !# heroic nature. This, then, was the iCause of the determination written upon fcis face as he sat, absorbed in thought, ftt her side. She knew the secret of it, and it tfaade her cheek grow pale and her lieart beat convulsively, for she was •also conscious that she was the cause of the existing enmity between these •two frierfd8. "Mon Dieu, Mademoiselle Vivian, you are truly glorious to-night," An toin said, with a jesture, placing his hand upon his heart. Vivian was accustomed to the flat tery always bestowed so lavishly upon L»er by the little Frenchman, but her lace flushed now, and she wondered how he could appear so cheerful and careless with the cruel challenge upon his conscience. Vivian laughed; she felt conscious that all her worklliness must be brought into play at that moment. Her liking for Antoin Duvall had oooled fapidly since the discovery of his de sire for Victor Flushing's blood, and •lie knew the inborn gift of an unerring shot had been bestowed upon Antoia. SHE glanced back at HIM calmly as «K« laughed: "Ah, Monsieur Antoin, it is only the ifeflection of your own countenance in JTOY eyes, that you see; I never look •yell in a pink light, and the sun is just setting in a great ball of fire from THE window at your back." She WAS tnily beautiful as she spoke ^glorious, as the little Frenchman had <aaid. So exquisitely fair, with the pale Saass of yellow hair framing her per- •Jectlyoval face, \while the sheeny fabric <Of her evening, dress seemed to blend :J»erfectly with her ethereal beauty, tihe great knot of purple violets being ithe only, color that stood but in bold ffelief. Vivian turned T̂O Victor, "lain afraid IMR. Flushing is -growing wise," she «aid, looking eagerly into his face as if tto read his thoughts. U1 believe you have not paid me one compliment to- •D&Y, and I am beginning to have faith in the lines, ?here te an am in all our lives, when every dream must lose Its ppell." Victor Flushing looked up quickly at ike beautiful {are. whose lips were say- JUG such cruel things so lightly. There was no irace of agitation upon tus countenance, as his gaze wet her 4»wn, and there was nothing in the tone of his voice that betrayed emotion or > .embarrassment. "No person can pay A oompliaent WITH more grace AND ECLA^ than a F̂renchman, Miss St. Auburn, and, •hould I now try, my meagre attempt 'would sound tame, and lack the finish 4*f your admirer opposite." Vivian forgave the irony, and she pushed back her chair and arose. "You will not forget our ride to-night, Tivian Victor said, as he, too, left his •eat at the table, but not to follow liar. *It may be our last." , The words and his tone struck like a hnell upon her ears. She did like the iitUe Frenchman, BUT SHE felt more II • ' p- i Utto the parlor and "DWFT YON , , .. . M gMlttMW «tag<li*ectlY after eating, it is FAI- ittrions to the digestion, AND I proniMd % Flushing that I WOULD ride out with him this evening. To-morrow, perhaps, 1 will sing for yon." "To-morrow ?" Anton repeated, AND shook his head, as she bowed and left him. "Sons verrons, Mademoiselle Vivian," and he went out upon the piazza. Vivian looked out of her window a few minutes later. She had a haunted feeling. Was she to blame lor it all? How could she ever have dreamed that it would come to this ? And could it be that in a few short hours Victor Flush ing's blood, perhaps, would be staining the green grass at the Poplar grove? She shuddered. "What can I do?" she asked herself, again and again. "If I could but transform Monsieur Antoin into a grasshopper, that he might hop away and be lost in the grass!" She walked to the bureau and looked at the glittering revolver carefully hidden in one corner of the drawer. She turned and rang the bell, and held a consulta tion with the half-grown boy who an swered her summons, after which she laid - a bright piece of money in his hand. The sea was breaking gently upon the white beach below, and the fluttering sails far out upon the deep caught the fading radiance of the dying day. "What have I done?" Vivian asked, as they rode over the stretch of undu lating country--"what have, I done to merit your displeasure to the extent of holding out the threat that this is to be our last ride?" It was a hard thing for her to control her voice as she spoke, and she dared not look at him, but she longed to hear the story of the challenge from his own lips. "Did I say it?" Victor asked, with a look of surprise. "Perhaps I was afraid you might forget, and go off with j Monsieur Antoin, so I was obliged to be J pathetic." | "Ah!" thought Vivian, "he is going to allow Antoin Duvall to kill him, and I am not to know of the affair until all is over." "LET us ride to the iron spring," she said. "I must go once more before I leave the Montrose, and the air is so lovely." "Ten miles there and back! That will be a long ride, I am afraid," Victor replied. He was, no doubt, thinking of what was before him that niglit, and he felt that the time was not his own. Vivian was, too, thinking of the same thing. But she laughed: "I do not call that a very long ride, and, beside, there is a full moon, and we can reach the hotel in good season." The road was smooth and easily trav eled, and the light rain of-the morning had settled the dust. They had been riding along drinking in the calm beauty of all about them, and when the iron spring with its bubbling waters came in sight it had seemed but a short ride. Vivian alighted from the docile white animal, and took up two small iron- stained cups and allowed the water to run over their brims several times be fore filling them to drink. "Here's health and happiness to Vic tor Flushing," she said, holding UP one of the crups toward him as he advanced, after fastening his sorrel, which had be come restless. Victor took the cup, and torched the water-stained brim of the one she had retained with his own. It was a refreshing draught after their long ride, and the cool sparkling water was like nec+ar to their parched throats "How beautiful she is," Victor thought, as she stood there in the moon light, with her hand uplifted, and her tall, slender figure so clearly outlined in the pale light. He threw down the cup, and took her hand, "Vivian!" he cried, "I cannot help it; 1 did nott mean to tell you to night, but I love you, and, if it were not for Monsieur Antoin, I know I could win you for my wife.W Vivian let her hand remain in his, do not uare for Monsieur Duvall," she said, ">but I am not worthy of a love like yours, Victor, and if you knew all you would despise me." He took a step forward, "Promise me, Tivian, that if I am living to-mor- »»W, you will be my wife." •"I will never marry any one but you, Victor," she-said in a scarcely audible voice, "and, if you die to-morrow, I will die to. " N Her words had a covert significance, irot he did not understand them. She looked at her companion. His eyes were heavy, and his face had haggard expression. *"Oome,"«he said, "let us go and rest frpoau the piazza of the little publio bouse ior A-few moments." He turned and followed her, and they sat down upon the porch and listened to <THE bubbling spring and the pawing horses. It was a silent spot, but it was salt ithe death-like stillness that had crept over Poplar Grove an hour and a half later. Nature's igreat amphitheater, lit only by the steady light, of the full-moon as it looked mutely, dawn upon the silent walls of sky which encompassed it. There were :no spectators to witness the eonftest about to be fought beneath the countless stars. The floating mists had bees -suddenly dispelled, and the pene trating lighffrom above brought to view every «daik object. XO WORD passed *4he lips of the silent groupjgathereil upon the spot. It lacked but ten minutes to midnight, and Victor Flushing had not come. The drivers of the »two solitary .carriages leaned wearily J>rer their high seats; the yellow lamps flickered in the wind, and the oc casional rattling of the harness of the restive horses was the icnly noise that disturbed .the unbroken quiet. Antoin JDuvall held his watch in the Ealm of his hand, and noted the minute and move -slowly around the dial. "Ah. craven fool:!" lie muttered, "the thought «f facing a little powder has frightened him. But there are five minutes left (for him to .defend his honor, AND win or lose the iiand of Vivian St. Auburn, or his name shall be flaunted to the world as a coward." The last fleeting moment upon which hung the destiny of Victor Flushing's name and honor had ended, and Antoin Duvall put his watch into his pocket, while a triumphant light o'erspread his whole countenanoe. But it died away suddenlv as his ear caught the sound of horse's fioofs, and in an instant his eyes beheld a rider coming at a mad pace to ward the spot. In a moment Victor Flashing had alighted from his faithful Borrel, whose shining coat was covered with flecks of white foam. Antoin came forward, but Victor drew back and motioned him to take HIS plaoe. His hps refused to speak word to Antoin Duvall; his loath- •.fapri15-- %aft liaaftrthiiivaad tlie wtite signals ol the aeconds were brought forth and for a moment fluttered in the night air. Victor's features were hard and set, but there was no fear visible in the gray eyea as they looked fearlessly down the muscle of the gluing pistol. And WHAT asleader thread for a man's UIE to htng upon! He stretched ont his hand and aimed his deadly weapon at the man who once had been his friend, but who now thirsted for his blood. The white sig nals fluttered to the ground, but as they fell, the weapon in Victor Flush- ing*A hand was pointed upward. When the wreaths of smoke had dis solved and floated off in the air, Victor lay upon the ground, motionless, while Antoin Duvall stood silently upon the spot uninjured. There was a sound in the distance, and before they could lift the fallen man from the earth, a rider, flushed with hard riding, reined up his white horse at the side of the prostrate form. The man dropped the bridle and dis mounted, and by the flood of mellow light which fell upon them the features of Victor Flushing were revealed to the astonished group. He was very pale, and the cold steel of his gray eye3 were filled with mingled scorn AND' hate as they rested upon Antoin. He bent down and lifted the head of the fallen victim, and, as he did so, the great mass of pale yellow hair fell from the small silver comb that fastened it, while upon the ground lay a blonde mustache. Vivian St. Auburn's beautiful face lay upturned toward them. They lifted her up gently. Only a flesh wound in the rounded arm was the result of Antoin Duval's shot. Victor placed her in one of the carriages and was driven to the Montrose Hotel, and one of the party who rode the faithful sorrel found a woman's riding habit snugly tucked beneath the saddle. The little Frenchman took a sudden departure that night, at which many wondered. Dave Sommers, though only an employe who answered the bell- call at the Montrose, could keep a secret, for he never told until years after how he had lent the beautiful Miss Vivian bis best Sunday suit and hat to fight a duel in, and how he had followed her and Mr. Victor Flushing out to* the iron spring, at her request, and brought tjie young man to at mid night from the effects of the drug ad ministered by the fair hands in the cup of iron water, and how Mr. Victor, on coming to himself, and finding his companion and sorrel both gone, had mounted the white horse ajid driven like mad over the silent moonlight country to the Poplar grove.--Chicago Ledger. A Story About Chief Justice Marshall. The Washington correspondent of the Cleveland Leader tells the following story of Chief Justice Marshall: "In- gersollism and Beecherism prevailed under different names in 1830, as they do to-day, and one of the chief subjects discussed in the hotels and in the coffee houses was as to whether there was a God or a hell. One night a party of young lawyers were sitting talking around a fire in a Virginia inn, when an old man drove up in a broken gig. He was plainly clad, his shoe buckles were loose, and he looked like an honest old farmer who did not care much for ap pearance. He entered and took a seat bv the fire, and all through he sat lis tening with the meekness and modesty of a child to the discussion of the young bloods, who were settling all of the great questions pertaining to this world and the next. At last one of them turned to him, and, winking at his companions, said, familiarly: 'Well, old gentleman, what do you think of these things ? Is there a hell, and do vou really think there is a God ?' The old man then opened his mouth, and astonished them by making a most elo quent and unanswerable appeal for the Christian religion. He took up every argument that had been uttered and re futed it. He discussed Hume on mir acles, and sat down finallv, leaving them all dumbfounded with astonish ment. Not a word mure did they say on the subject, and as soon as the old gentleman went off to bed they inquired who he was. They found it TO have been Chief Justice Marshall." In Obstinate Treasurer. Whan an Ohio County Treasurer came to hand in his books AND vouchers for setttement, the Chairman of the committee received them and observed; "Mr. White, we want to get through to-morrow, if possible." "Very well." "And it would greatly facilitate mat ters if you could tell as the exact amount of your embezzlement." "MY embezzlement! Why, sir, you will find my accounts correct to* <cent," was indignant response. "Oh, well, if you wont plead guilty we may as well settle down for a month's •wjork before we discover the amount," sighed the Chairman, and be called the meeting to order.--Wall Street News. He Had Reason for Spelling With aSfgD "Do you spell dog with a capital ID ?" asked Mr, Touzleton, looking *•}> from his desk. "If it's your dog, the black and white one that was loose last niglit, yes," re plied the junior bookkeeper, who was standing up, writing at a desk six inches too high for him. "Spell IT with the biggest D in the alphabet." And he went on with his work, while the old man sat and looked at him over his baleful spectacles for nearly ten minutes, wondering if he knew what the young man meant, and thinking he would -ask his daughter Evelyn about it when he got home. -- BurlimgiOH Hawkey e. > whola •mh*. to IÎ T EITE&DTOD TTON •••Him! M tfa ~ ' andaiaaatt I had TOAVDAD PRETTY TH ̂̂ throughout tha FTWIJK and, with TLW ex- oeptlon of |80 Mr. Yer- planck, of tha til YORK American, wholly at any owna§P«ns«. To defray these expenses 1 had borrowed $280 of of Albany, and $100 ol OFT. WIHPV Cunningham, of Poughkaepaia. I paid the money bor rowed of lir. Benedict, with interest, twelve years afterward, not being able to do so at an earlier day. For the purpose of enabling me to discharge my debt to Mr. Benedict, and to pay my board, my political friends in the Legislature signed a letter addressed to Mr. Fdisha Dorr, of Albany, one of the electors, saying that it was owing to my personal Seal and efforts that an Adams organization had been effected in the State, that I had contributed largely to the union between the Adams and the Clay members of the Legisla ture, a union to which the State and the nation were indebted for the defeat of the Regency and the Crawford party, and asking the Electoral College to ap point me the messenger to carry their votes to Washington. When the electors assembled, the venerable Ebenozer .Sage, of Suffolk county, was absent, and ex-Lieut. Gov ernor John Taylor, of Albany, was ap pointed to supply that vacancy. Gov. Taylor, always distinguished for his hospitalities, gave the electors an en tertainment; and before they left his house, and while under the influence of his oysters, comfits and champagne, Mr. John Taylor Cooper, a grandson of the Lieut. Governor, was announced as a suitable gentleman as messenger to convey the electoral vote to Washing ton. Gov. Taylor, not originally on the electoral ticket, knew nothing of the arrangements with reference to' my self. Mr. Dorr, to whom the letter of the members of the Legislature had been intrusted, had left before young Mr. Cooper was announced as a candi date. Mr. Burnham, of Cayuga, in formed the electors under what circum stances I WAS a candidate; but Gov. Taylor's high standing induced the electors to disregard other considera tions, and by general consent Mr. Cooper's appointment was acquiesced in. On the following day Mr. Dorr produced his letter and endeavored to secure my appointment, but it was too late. Wnen the question was taken the vote of the Adams men was divided between Mr. Cooper and myself. Mr. Russell, of Niagara county, himself an elector, received all the vote of the Crawjird electors. As there was no CL: o'®e on THEY first ballot, Mr. Bussell succeeded by strong personal appeal, in securing a majority on a subsequent ballot, so that the vote of New York in favor of Mr. Adams was carried to Washington, by a Crawford messenger. This disappointment, more crushing to me than the loss of a much more ex alted place, under Other circumstances could have been, was "a blessing in dis guise." As an ofBoeseeker, thencefor ward, I was "discharged cured." To •the qnqption which has been a thousand times asked, but never before responded to,why I never accepted office, this is my answer: From the day that shameful injustice was practMed* I have had an aversion and repugnance to office, which neither time, CHANGE nor conditions have either overcome or weakened. Thurlow Weed*9 Autobiography. The clown is no longer the. MORT im portant person in the circus ring. His name is not printed conspicuously in the bills of the larger traveling shows, he is not permitted to • hawk his song-books, and often he is reduced to pantomime, the remotest rural au- i diences having ceased to laugh at his j hear. A Litife Boston Story of Hearts Made Sad. One day a gentleman residing upon Chestnut street, Boston, was seized with the desire to go out carriage riding with a friend. There is nothing particularly sinful in such a desire, but for some reason or other the gentleman aforesaid, not wishing his father to know his in tention, requested the driver, when the •carriage was ordered, not to stop in front of his house, but to drive up and down the street until he appeared. Another dweller on Chestnut street--A lady--was similarly inspired, and or dered her coachman to bring the car riage to the door at a certain hour. The coachman obeyed orders. In due course of time number one issued forth from his residence, and seeing the vehicle of number two in waiting, imagined it be the conveyance he had ordered from a public stabile. He sent the coachman about his business, and then, taking the reins, departed in a direction that was equivalent to traveling all over creation. By and by the lady, wanting her car riage, came forth to seek it, and learned that it had been driven away by a stranger. Confusion in every directum. Horse and carriage stealing! Detec tives were placed upon the track of the robber, who was eventually brought up with a round turn at an out-of-town hostlery. The detective jumped on the box, and forcing the young MAN to lock arms with him, drove back into the caty. Dismay of the young man of respect able family upon being arrested as a horse-thief. Explanations of no avail. The detective incredulous. All made clear when the driver of the carriage really ordered by the young man vitu perates him for having made HIM drive up and down Chestnut street for over an hour. Happiness, tableau, and fall of the eurtain. Moral: Be sure you're right, then go ahead.--Boston Gcuxftte. Conundrums. Why should the poet have expected the woodman to "spare the tree?" Be cause he thought he was a good feller 1 If a tree were to break a window, what would the window say? Tree- mend-us! What is the best flower for a doctor to cultivate? Sickly-men (Cyclamen). What is the difference between a cloud and a whipped child ? One pours with rain, the other roars with pain. Why is a joint-stock company like a watch ? Because it does not go on after it is wound up. Why would a compliment from a rooster be an insult? Because it would be in fowl language. Why are deaf people KLRO India shawls ? Because you can'T'MAKE them firoaa*'Oopy«laoaMoia-ll |̂toiealMn na. OMOT and tone, down to the exported in great qaan&tiee, all hand- made, to evary i|narter of the gloj>». FTM VAgfttva-Slava Law. In the Constitutional Convention of 1787 Mr.. Plana Butler, a delegate from South Carolina, moved the adop tion of clause 3, section 3, article 4 of tha Constitution, which reads: "No person held to service or labor in one State, under the laws thereof escaping into another, shall, in consequenoa of any law or regulation therein, be dis charged from suoh service or labor, but shall be delivered up on claim of the party to whom such service or la bor may be due." The first law to give effect to this constitutional pro vision was prepared by a committee of the Senate appointed in November, 1792. This committee was composed of Mr. Johnston, of North Carolina; Mr. Cabot, of Massachusetts, and Mr. Bead, of Delaware. In December Mr. Johnston reported a bill which was not entirely satisfactory. Mr. Taylor, of Virginia, and Mr. Sherman, of Con necticut, were added to the committee. On Jan. 3, 1793, Mr. Johnston reported a bill, which, after several days' con sideration, was passed without a dis senting voice. On the 4th of February following, this bill passed the House by a vote of 48 to 7. It gave slave-masters and their agents summary power to seize, hold and return fugitives from slavery to their former bondage, what ever laws the States in which they were found might pass to the contrary, the matter being one under jurisdiction of the United States Courts. How It Increased. "Papa if you will give me a dollar I will show you, to-morrow, how much I can make on it in one day," said a little bov to his father. The father, wishing to encourage the young man, gave him a bran-new dol lar bill. The boy took it and folded it up into a very small space, and tucked it away in the safest part of his clothing. The next day the father asked his son how much money he had. The boy fished out the money are re plied: "Well I am a little ahead." How do you make that out," said the father, "you have only the original capital." "But papa, dont YOU see, that in folding it up into a smalPspaoe, and then in unfolding it you see it In creases.--Carl PreUeVs Weekly. 1 D.viipcpiia. Dyspepsia and sick headache do not re turn to those who have used Great Qertaaa Hop Bitters. Sold by all druggists. A uoMSss was recently sold at auction in Louisville for |10i At* this rate no family need be without a lioness. A Happy fl'lfn. *Mv dear husband, I never slept so soundly as X ao now, after using German Hop Bit ten" Bold by all druggists. Bow to destiny. One of these days des tiny may be polite enough to return the compliment Ladiks and sickly girls requiring a non alcoholic gentle stimulant, will fina Brown's Iron Bitters beneficial. There is a vast diSerenoe between a mint and a mint-julep, although loose change is melted in both. * AYETTKVnXB. Ark. --Rev. T. J.BeUly.says: "I used Browu'H IronlSitters for indigwtten and chillk with entire wlKt'action.* A woman who marries a man because he Is a good match, must not be surprised if he turns out a hicifer. Pinuc blood helps to make a clear con science. Hood's Sarsaparllla purifies the blood. Enough said. Bend us a big bottle. Good taste is the flower of good sense, but It cannot fee purchased by the barrel Personal!--To Men Only! T« Voltaic Belt Co., Marshall. JBeh., will send Dr. Dve's Celebrated Electro- Voltaic Belts and Electric Appliances on trial for tttrty days to men (young or old) who an afiticted with nervous debility, lost vt- taUtyand kindred troubles, guaranteeing apeefly and complete restoration of health and manly vigor. Address as above. N. B.-- Mo risk is incurred, as thirty days' trial is al lowed. Good Iter Man and Braat! Read Thta! Strange but true that the Army and Navy Liniment will cure your rheumatism, neural- £a or croup in less time than any other Lia-ient known. For sale by all drugfMs. , Could I but see Carboline made, ? And view the process o'er. •» * No bald-head pate would make afraid, Nor gray hairs fright me more. As now improved and perfected, No oil was e'er ko sure, All skin disease, of limb or head; It never fails to cure. PtntE CodUver Oil. made from i^feieted livers on the sea-shore, by Carwell, Hakard .A Co., New York. It is absolutely pure and sweet Patients who have once taken it prefer it to all others Plnrsicians have de cided it superior to any or the other oils in market Skinny Men--"Wells'Health Henewer" restores health and vi^or,curen dysi>epsia,imi>otence. (L All our lady friends will be delighted to hear that L L f'ragin A Co.. 1 Hi R 4th &,Phils, are giving first-class Piano Sheet Music, vocal and instrumental, gratia (No advertising on it) Write for catalogue. Mention this paper. Wells' "Rough on Corns."--16c. Ask for it Complete,permanent cure. Corns, w&rts, bunions. Chapped Hands, Face, Pimples, rough pebtab Soap, made Skin, cured by using Junipe by Caswell, Mazakd & Co.. New York. "Buchu-Paiba. "--Quick, complete cure, all annoying Kidney and Urinary Diseases, fl. The habit of running over boots or shoei eorrected with Lyon's Patent Heel Stiifeners WmummmtM, Pa.--a«v. IBliah WUson "Gut ruins geaifci," says an ncbufs but genius. lutas a good deal of gin; so MOM or WATER. Mr. JoaxFH O, Bickxku. lite. M3 MWa Straet, Cam- hridteport. M-- . writes. April X!, MM: 'Ihsrebsen terribly sAfeted lot • arambcrof ymsttk gnml •nd Hdaer iHfss. Xjr udn* ooatHaod brickdust deposits, and at Mum I could not pass my water ex cept in drops and wtlh great pain; and have had to get np as many as Sfteen times during the night. I tried several pbiwlelans; tht<» did sae ao good, but a friend of mias, wbo had used Honrs huiwly, told me to get a bottis and tryit. H» had base «wnda< a severe case similar to mine, and that othtn had used Hunt's Remedy in Cambridge and PPBPoanted it a medicine of real merit. After being 11 nnliidl) III jtil I purchased a bottle, and before I had used all of it I passed a stone as large ss s pea, followed by smaller ones. I hare used iB alt ten bottles, and it has com pletely cured me. My kidneys are in excellent con dition, and for one of my age, (68) sixty-eight years, I caa truly ssy I feel like a yonng man with abeaffth and vitality. My family use the Reimedy, and would not be without it, and never fail to recommend it to our friends and neighbors in Cambridge sad Bsstom, Voa are at liberty to use my name in praite of the best kidney and liver medicine. Hunt's Remedy,* ••Dt» WOMDBRS VOK »•' The above words are from Xr. Lzwn Kror, Xo. 9 Highland Avenue, Maiden, Masa* April X, MB. He says: *1 have been teouMed for years wjfti kMne? and liver complaint, followed by Kravsl. with severe pains in my back and groins. I had gnat trouble in passing water, it being scanty, and aooompaoied by terrible burning, the vessel being coated with brick- dust deposit. I was recommended to use Hunt's Remedy by s friend who had been completely cured of a similar trouble. I purchased a bottle at the drug gist's, and commenced to improve at once. I have used but two bottles, and it has done wonders for me --no more kidney trouble, no more pain. It has given me new life, and I would not be without Hunt's Rem edy at any price. It is all that it is recommended to be, and I cheerfully give this testimony for the benefit of the many- sufferers from kidney disease and gravel." Hostetter** Stomach Bitten meets the requirements of the rational medical pbilcsoifar which st present prevails. It is a perfectly pure vegetable remedy, embracing the three important properties of a pre ventive. a tonic aad an alterative. It fortifies the body against disease, invigorates and revitalises tfcs torpid stomach and liver, and effecta a salutary change in the entire system. ftor sale by all Druggints and foealers generally. ' $175 in gold a month. Agents send 3-cent stamp, no postal, to Goshen Novelty Co., Goshen, Ind. TSTLTNTS»«SR FLORIDA MSRII&»ct $72 A WfiKK* ^ outfit free. Addrets Troe It < ., Augusts, MsEm? 166 Young Men CbMtanfrS. TOKNIOTHKNL «AMn bars and you s situation. JsoesviOe, Wis. .MUBPBOU HABIT. Mo pay-till eured. Ten years established, l.ouo cured. State ease. Dr. Wswh, Quincy. Mich. "THB BUT M CNIAPCtT." ENGINES, TftlDCCUirpCSAWULLS. imhm i nnconcna ̂ muti (fruited to all aectkms.) Write for ram Ills*. Pamphlet acdPrieestsTka inltsma a Tsjrlor Oa, MaatfaU, Ohio. PENSIONS or injury entitles. Bounty. B»ek Pbj of Pension, or IMmcharr/m Procured paid. New Lsws. A. W. MORGAN. ney, P. O. Box, no, Washington, D. C. 'or Solders, Widow*, ats or Children, disesse, wound iy. Increase Horse claims AGENTS WANTED work for which there is always s reiulr market. Send for drculsr and terms to the Twoinbly Knitting MacfailW Co., 163 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass. Aaw«Q«iall SuddeB Oold8, 8We *e„ a table _ water ( warm »r< tack will prove an I much suffering. For HtlUllgll, NMmttlB, falHt ggfgf The Pair-Kiujb resdyandable and at a very ' be founds your toost. unwD be uusat »a» aqptf., --i to Ml tosftMtairawrata <sdrench,asmdrbo«as< molasses »>d water.. It la Urery stables and SSTThs . pothecarie »ut the worl Apothecsries, Grocers snd - Id. m •iM* If nd If. 4 j \ :" If yon are suffering from poor *er languishing on a bed of stcftamfc ' , ! 'take cheer; if you are abnptratfUMb i 'or if you feel weak and dispirited. Without clearly knowing why, HopBit- • tars will surely cure you." "If you are a Minister, and have; u'lltsndl yourself with yonr pastoral duties, or a-Hbifther, 'worn out with care and work, or a man tfknl- ' nees or laborer weakened by the alrsta ot your 'everyday duties, or a man of letters, WWog 'over your midnight work, Hop BittfS* sill 'surely strengthen you." ut' *J'" ••"If' you are goffering « '• ^ Slrora over-eating atm"# 1 j t any India- 3 j-is J "JCretion or dissipation, I- ":;l|pr ar* young and • jrrowlng too fast, as Is v J vf ? 'often the case," T , . .V"Or l f you a re in the workshop ' s* . 'the farm,at the desk,aaywiwrc.aa# ,Tfeel that your system asiate.<$au%> s **i *ing, toning, or stimulating, witttook '*•* - J; "A*intoxicating. If you are old, blood : ... . j * thin and impure, pulse feeble, nerves ; , 'unsteady, faculties waning, Hoj» * . . | " 'Bitters is what you need to give yoa f | 'new l i fe , hea l th and v igor . " • / , , . » If you an oostive or dyspeptta, or 4 . ; er suffering from any other of thef-^|fc:̂ - < numerous diseases of the stomach or .•• 1 ~'•"fcowels, it is your own CMI K yen 1* > * :<femaln l i t < < f a f t . ' * / \ . If you are wasting away with any /' I form of Kidney disease, atop tempt- , ( •; | --log death this moment, and tarafta? - . • ! a cure to Hop Plttars. • * - .j'hSc- *.< I «?•,.. ,B yoaasa ,afek with { " •; Ji- -Shat' tnWt riokMs*.;-, "J , „ ; , j S e r r M M M s a , y * » ^ 1 • / v ; -•« v • f *" II .yea'S?t. > dent ot a mlaaaaatto diMrk*. bant* „ M - cade your system aghast tat •• - ••" . ot «ii ixiiihiiWw nulaila epid bilious and Intermittent feve the use 9t Hop Bt t t e r s . - tv - a caae they will not cure or help. r, bedridden, tb vaHd wtt*. B-J 111*11* Horwiwins t̂ssr YH Bim tfvm Pro $25 MM Mel CUT THIS OUT ! And Return to u, with TEN C«at* Mid you'll Kcalv* Ito ml]. aGoMaaBn«(QM4«,tfcalwtHbring you ta note ta Om Ifaatk tkaa aaythlng <!w In Amcija. Alro- rtaiaty. M. Tang,»» Gmawteh St, Niw VorL | in Texas and Arkansas, price, long, credit. "Bough on Rats"--Clears out rats, mice, fllew, roaches, bed -buift*, ants, vermin, chipmuaKs. il£ time-worn jokes. Atabice often produces opposite effects. T#.ere is an infinite number of people who sacrifice all their property to doubtful and distant expectations; others despise great future advantages io obtain present interests of a trifling nature.--La Boche/oumuld. AS English cotton operator Tinting Fall River recently, said he would rath er have the value of the waste from the cotton-mills than their profits. One of them alone figures its loss at >20,000. . A farm tenant, having covenanted to leave the leased premises as he found them, advertises for 500 rats and ten times that number of weeds, THAT J|». may live np to his agreement In what place did the cock crow so load tlul all the world could hear Wlm ? In the Ark. Why is a printing-press like the for bidden fruit ? Because, FROM it springs a knowledge of good and eviL--Carl Pretzel's Weekly. Where Violins Are Made. XAT one of the mountainous districts of Bavaria there is a town called Mitten- wald, slmt in by snow-clad peaks and dense forssts, in which every yard is crossed by a labyrinth of ropes and poles, on which hundreds of violins are hung up to dry. For a couple of centuries the entire industry of the town has been violin-making, for which the surrounding forests produce the iest of materials. Me&, women and SAVK THE INNOCENTS. In measles, scarlatina, and other diseases of child* hood, when the disease abates and disappears the child may be left with dropsical eff unions, with ulcers in th$ ears, and, where diphtheria has extended to the mouth and lips, at the comers of the mouth. Without tha Wood-purifying effects of Hood's Sarssparilla reeov* ery is very slow, as such ulcers are very obstinate. With it the very best success has been obtained. After diphtheria--Seven children of James H. Bun* «Ess, Middleboro, Mass., had diphtheria the same spring. All survived, out complained of pains, bodily distress and cramps. Five bottles of Hood's Sarsapa. rills cured the whole seven. for five years after he had scarlet fever the little son of James V. A. Pbocdfoot, Chicago, suffered from a foal running son about his ear. Hood's Sarsaparilla eured him. After vaccination--Two children of Mrs. C. L. Tboxpsox, West Warren, Mass., broke out with run ning sores, after vaccination, so dreadful the mother thought she would lose both. They were entirely eured of these sores by Hood's Sarsaparilla. ' HOOD'S SARSAPABHXA. Sold by Druggists. |1; six for $S. Made only by 0.1. HOOD fc 00. Apotheeariea, Lowell. Mass. Very Well Put. Why do you defer till to-morrow what we ahould do to-day? Why do we neglect a cough till it throws as into consumption, and consumption brings us to the grave? Dr. Wm. Hall's Balsam is sure to cure if taken in season. It has never been known to fail, Use it thoroughly according to directions. Persevere till Ilia disesse is conquered, as it is certain to be, even If it should require a dozen bottles. There is no better medicine for Pulmonary disorders. Sold everywhere. Baker's Pain Panacea Is one of the best Liniments pat up. It is a real pain killer, and destroys pain, whether internal or I naL whenever used. It for the past thirty or forty i railroads. FRKK fare to all who purchase land. For maps of Texas, Arkansas. Ksnsas sad Missouri, with all Information, address JNO. E. ENS1S, Pass, and land Agt. Mo. P. Ry. Co, 108 dart St., Chicago, Iuu. SOMETHING ? EVERY LADY OUflHT TO KNOW; . There exists a means of SE- enrlnff A soft anil brilliant Complexion, no matter hot poor It MAY natarally be. HASAN'S Magnolia Balm Is a delicate ana harmless arti cle, which instantly removes Freckles, Tan. Redness, Jtonshness, Eruptions, Ynl- gar Flashings, etc., etc. DO aelicate ana natural are its effects that its use is not susnected Noladi BJ anybody, hi JO lady has the right to present a disfigured face in society when the Magnolia iJ.I.eASET.M.CQ.I "Pwi't ('tasieh." llMkcUriM w ems, FlAX, TIMOTHY, ClOVEj, W TR AOTIOM MSI suoltiiSKSeiV malesth*mwPi-- ttwlfuaw BwSgi* ALL MAONmUV WAMUStSn. " Am Cttritca*. OsaSsMtfAa* ' rŜ SSJff<mSSB3SSS^