' « - • V *• '• " ' T •' * -r. , -T r < ' 1. VAN SLYtt, McHENKI, TLSJSOJB. Oh, the old boy] tit But daintily drawn from Its hiding at night. Oh, a nest of delight from the foot to the head Was thin queer ittOe, dear little, old trundle hod! Oh, the old trundle bod, where I wondering saw The stars through the window, and listening with awe To the sigh at the winds as they tremblingly crept Through the trees where the robins soreetleesly Where I beard the low murmurous cheep of the wren. And the kvtydid listlessly chirrup again, Till my fancies grew faint and were drowsily led Through the mase of the dreams of the old trnndle bed. Oh, the old trnndle bed! Oh, theoldtnxndlebed! With its plump little pillow and old-fashioned Its snowy-vhtfte sheets, and the blankets above. Smoothed down and tucked round with the touches of love; The voice of my mother to lull me to sleep With the old fury stories my memories keep Still fresh as the Utiles that bloom o'er the head Once bowed with my own o'er the old trundle bed. --'Life. CAREER OF THERAM ARKANSAS. How She Fused Throng a VMe Fed* eral Fleet, Perhaps the construction of the ram Arkansas, together with her brief but astonishing career, furnishes one of the most curious incidents in the history of the Confederate navy. The construc tion of the ram was begun at Memphis, ' but her hull had scarcely been launched when it was found necessary to tow it away to a place offering greater secur ity. One Federal fleet had sailed up the Mississippi almost to Yicksburg, while another was pounding away at Fort Pillow above Memphis, and the skeleton of the Arkansas was towed down the great river and up the Yazoo to be finished. The Yazoo was, for some months, a safe retreat for a con siderable number of vessels, govern- merit and private, but the Arkansas was the only one which the Federal fleet was troubled about. After the upper Federal fleet had captured Memphis and the lower one had reached Yicksburg, the Confeder ates began the work of locking up the Yazoo river. It is a lazy, sluggish stream, its banks low, it bottom a bed of mud and snags and, at that period, when the few plantations up as far as Yazoo City were being deserted and all traffic on the river had ceased, no local ity could have presented a more deso late aspect. The Federals would soon know what was going on up the sluggish stream, and the most active precautions were taken to prevent a visit. Gangs of men were detailed to fell trees and'con struct rafts at various points, little camps of scouts and sharp-shooters were established along the banks, and when the work was declared finished it had been so well done that a Federal gun-boat could not have made her way from the Mississippi to Yazoo City in two weeks' time if allowed to pass un molested. The Yazoo being narrow, the Con federates .had a great advantage to begin with. There was no rapid current to contend with in placing their rafts, and when one was secured in position it could be depended upon to remain there. In one spot in the river near its mouth was an almost solid raft half a mile long and so secured that a hun dred locomotives could not have pulled it apart. All the rafts were of green timber, thus baffling any attempt to burn them out, and the sharp-shooters in the woods could have easily picked off any men landing from a craft try ing to make its way up the river. The Yazoo was securely locked up, but the Federals consoled themselves with the idea that they held the key, They could blockade its mouth and, if they could not go up, the Confederates could not come down. The Arkansas was powerless as long as she was hid den away up the stream, and if she came down she would find a welcome duly prepared for her. The men in the camps scattered along the river were sorely tried. There was a weirdness and desolation that checked any enthusiasm. The stream was full of alligators--great, slimy reptiles, which slept in the summer sun by day and fought and bellowed along the banks by night. The chirp of a bird ( was a rare thing. In place of it was the lonesome scream of the crane as it sailed above the trees, and the angry hiss of the cotton-mouth and moccasin as they found their haunts invaded. The mosquitoes were a plague that at times threatened to drive every camp from the river. Under the dense shade of the banks they knew no rest, but swarmed in great clouds and bit with the fierceness of snakes. Men who oould stand marching and fighting were used up by these pests and had to be relieved from thier posts. It was ex pected that the Federals would nuke attempts to get up the river, but the only expeditions sent out consisted of scout-boats to examine and report on the obstructions. All tilings considered, the further completion of the Arkansas was a mat ter of wonder. A shipyard liad to be improvised, and every spike, bolt, rope, . clamp or piece of iron of any sort mnst be sent away for. The nearest point where any of these things c6uld be ob tained was Yicksburg, and the nearest railroad was at least thirty miles away. To finish the ram, required nails from one point, bolts . from another, iron plates from another, and indeed the whole Confederacy may be said to have ocntribr.ted. Had the Arkansas been built at Charleston or New Orleans, and the designs of the draughtsmen carried out, she would have been a much more for midable craft than the Merrimac and at least the ^qual of the Tennessee. It , was designed to provide her with powerful engines; but, after she had been hurried up the Yazoo, Commo dore Lynch could find nothing better than the engines belonging to a river steamer. While these would drive the steamer ten miles an hour, they would not push the Arkansas over four. Her first weak point was in her speed; the second in her roof and plating. There were a dozen vulnerable spots, and those who looked her over carefully when she was ready to sail declared that she would be sent to the bottom by the first Federal gun-boat whichgot within range. The ram was provided with ten gans, manned by a volunteer crew, and about the middle of July, . was ready to run down the river and make the attempt to reach Yicks- bnrg. She was placed in charge of Lieut. Com. Brown, and he gave the crew to understand that the ram should go to the bottom before hauling dctarn her flag. The crew was then culled over, and sucli as did not take kindly to this desperate proposition were replaced by others. Scoots, deserters and negroes had kept the Federal fleet posted in regard to the progress of the Arkansas, and when $he was ready to drop down the river her reception was likewise ready, An non-dad and two raras had run up the Yazoo about a mile to have the first dash at the Confederate, and just below the mouth of the stream the entire Fed eral fleet, consisting of ten or twelve craft, were drawn up in a double line. If the Arkansas got into the Mississippi she must run the gauntlet through this fleet exposed to the full broadside of each ship at short range. There was a determination to destroy her at every hazard, and no one doubted that she would be blown out of water by the terrible fire that oould be concentrated upon her. The iron-clad Carondelet, assisted by the Tyler and the Queen of the West, was waiting in the Yazoo when one morning the Arkansas was suddenly sighted coming down. ' She had passed the big raft in the night, and the heavy timber along the banks had concealed her smoke until she was close upon the Federals. The fight opened at once, and with great vigor. The Carondelet moved up to meet the ram, firing as she advanced, and her two companion-craft opened fire from their bow. guns and begun a fire of musketry at the port- shutters of the ram. The Carondelet had not fired above four shots when a solic^ shot from the Arkansas disabled her engines. A second entered one of her ports and killed five men, and in less than ten minutes she had fourteen men killed and wounded and was aground on the bank. It is claimed by the Confeder ates aboard the ram, and by others watching the fight from the shore, that the Carondelet struck her flag. This issue is avoided by some Federal his torians and denied by others. She was certainly crippled and run ashore, and her two companions were driven down into the Mississippi. Had the trio pulled down their flags in to'ken of sur render the Arkansas would not have gained a point. Her destination was Yicksburg, and she must reach that point to be of any benefit to the Con federacy. She passed the disabled Carondelet within twenty feet, steaming as fast as she could, and yet not making over five miles an hour, and when she reached the Mississippi she was in plain sight of 10,000 spectators on the bluffs at Yicksburg. The Federal fleet was ready for her, and the Arkansas was to run such a gauntlet as was never before prepared for a vessel. Orders were given the engineer to give her all speed possible, and the ram took the center of the river and steamed ahead. The moment the Confederate ap peared every Federal gun which' oould be brought to bear opened fire, and the ram was hit live or six times before en tering the lines. When the broadsides were brought to bear the effect was tre mendous. It seemed to the crew of the ram as if she was being lifted bodily out of the water by the heavy concus sions. Her speed was so slow that she was retained under fire much longer than an ordinary vessel would have been, and the striking shot and shell had every advantage. When it was seen that the Arkansas was likely to pass through the lrnes un scathed her way was blocked, but she did not deviate from her course an inch. The vessels in her path had to move aside or take the chance of a col lision with her iron beak. When the ram finally opened fire she had plenty of targets all around her, and her guns were worked rapidly and wth telling effect. She entirely disabled another gunboat, beat off two of Ellet's rams, and paid her compliments to almost every vessel in the lines. The fire upon her never slackened for a moment, and even after she had run the gauntlet she was followed and fired upon until safe under the guns of Yicksburg. Her escape was a bitter pill to swal low. She was ungainly, slow, under lire for the first time, and there were pot. twenty men aboard who had ever before assisted to fire a cannon. Mem ber of the crew were repeatedly knocked down by the concussions, and in two in stances became FO terrified tliat they fell down and remained hepless through out the affair. The Arkansas was moored to the banks by chains and ropes, her crew re inforced, damages repaired and then she was ready to take part in the de fense of the city. She had run the gauntlet with three killed and two wounded, and had been penetrated by five or six solid shot, but not materially damaged. The two Federal fleets--the one above aad the other below the city--now planned to destroy the Arkansas at the bank. The one moved down and the other up in the night and suddenly opened a terrific bombardment against the confederate batteries, the object be ing to silence them until the ram could be destroyed. Neither purpose was ac complished. The city was shaken as by an earthquake, and tons of metal were hurled back and forth, but the fleet ultimately withdrew without hav ing accomplished anything, Three or four vessels hurled shot and shell at the ram for more than an hour, and she replied with every gun which would bear, but the conflict added only three or four to her list of killed and wounded, and nothing of account to her damages. Again, on the night of the 22d, the fleets engaged the batteries as before, and Porter made for the Arkansas with the Essex, .believing he could strike her a blow which would crush in her side. He approached with a full head of steam on, made a dash for the monster, and struck a glancing blow which ran the Essex ashore and secured her a ter rific pounding before she got off. The Essex, however, was to be revenged at a later date. When it was realized what the Arkansas had accom plished the Confederates determined to use her to recover possession of Baton Rouge. A land force moved to co operate with her, but from the hour the ram left Yicksburg she was the subject of disaster. First one part and then another of her engines gave out and had to be repaired in a rude way. She got aground several times, sprung a leak twice, and was once on fire. Just above Baton Bouge her engines were again disabled and she had to make fast to the bank. WThile in this condi tion the Essex and other crafts ad vanced upon her and opened a hot fire. The career of the ram was ended. She was at once abandoned, several fires started to consume her, and when the flames were well .under way she was turned cdnft to go to destruction. The Essex had the credit of her destruction, and the monster which had caused so much anxiety for long months was finally out of the way. M. QUAD. The (irowtli of the West. Few stories of industrial develop ment, says an exchange, can compare with that of the Northwestern States of America. Fifty years ago only, Ohio, Michigan and Indiana were com paratively unexplored, while such States and Territories as Wisconsin, California, Kansas, Oregon, Montana, Iowa, Nevada and many other had no existence. From interesting data re cently issued, we find that half a cen tury ago Chicago had but twenty-nine voters; the first house was not yet erected in»St. Paul; San Francisco was but a struggling Mexican settlement; Milwaukee had no place on the map, and Buffalo, which had just been in corporated, was scarcely beginning to feel that commercial impulse, which, following the completion of the Erie canal, was destined to make it one of the most important cities of the union. The commerce of New York was very trifling, and there was no railroad l>e- tween that city and Albany. Now the progress being made in the far North west is surprising, and Oregon Terri tory is, perhaps, advancing more rapid- ly*than any other section. It is twice as large as New York State, having an area of 95,274 square miles. In 1870 its population was only 90,823, but by 1880 the number had increased to 174,- 000. Within ten years the population of Portland, its largest city, had trebled itself. The State raised 12,673,009 bushels of wheat last year, as compared with 3,127,000 bushels ten years ago, thus showing that in the decade the crop had increased fourfold. The sal mon fishery is another important source of revenue in this State. Washington Territory, which was formerly a part of Oregon, is also advancing. It has a good climate and fertile soil. The lumber traffic promises to be very great. Fir, pine, oak, and cedar of superior qualitity and almost unlimited quantity are to be had in the Puget sound dis- ! trict; in fact, it is estimated that this j region of the State alone will yield 160,- 1000,000,000 feet of valuable timber^ One mill there cuts up 180,000 feet' daily; another is preparing for a daily cut of 250,000 feet, while 7,000,000 feet are shipped monthly to foreign ports along the coast. Prices of lumber have advanced, and wages also have risen re cently. Montana is another promising Territory, with an area of 143,776 square miles or about three time the superficies of New York State. The cattle trade is being pushed forward rapidly, and it is expected that dead beef will be. sent through from Montana to New York in refrigerators. Dakota, the largest of all the Territories in the Northwest, is making great, strides in grain culture. The valley of the Red river of the North is being opened up and the use of machinery is so exten sive that even persons of little exper ience in agriculture can find the cult ure profitable. The Yellowstone coun try is another region which will shortly be thrown open to settlers by increased railroad facilities. In Nebraska the yield of wheat last year was nearly 15,- 000.000 bushels, or more than four times the quantity raised in 1873. In deed, the progress of the wheat cult ure in the West and on the Pacific slope is one of the most significant features of the agricultural develope- ment of America. Queer Lapses of the Memory. About three years ago I came to tlar- rieon Square in the cars and mounted my horse for home. After galloping about a mile I suddenly found or im agined I had gone wrong. I could not recall the surroundings. I turned my horse's head back and went near to my starting-place; again turned and rode home over the same familiar road that I had so often traveled. The loss of mind or identity of locality did not last more than twenty minutes. On a pre vious occasion I took the boat for Na- hant at 2 o'clock, dined with a friend, and slept at the house of another friend. The next morning I went home quite well. Awakening the next morning my wife alluded to my visit to Nahant the day before, of which I had given her a full account on my return. I answered that I had not been to Na hant, and stuck to it. The whole thing had left my xneniQry. Being alarmed, my wife sent for the doctor, who came and found me asleep. I awoke and found him feeling my pulse, and I asked him why he had come, and my wife stated the fact of my having denied the visit to Nahant. I replied: "You have been dreaming, I am very well, and do not require the dpctor." The whole details of my visit to Nahant were fresh in my memory, but the fact of my having denied all knowledge of them had become completely blotted out. Many years ago, when navigating a ship through Java Sea, one night about 12 o'clock we passed close to two little islands called the Brothers. I went below to get a map and told an officer of the deck to call me at 2 a. m., when I intended to change the course to clear a shoal of somewhat doubtful locality. I awoke soon after 3 o'clock, wholly unconscious of having been called, and went on deck and scolded the officer for not calling me at 2 o'clock. He answered that he had called me and informed me of the state of the wind and weather as in duty bound, and that I, apparently wide awake, had ordered the course altered two points. When at sea in charge of a ship I had a habit of waking up at al most any hour, and the end of a watch at night generally found me wide awake and preparing to go on deck to see that all was going right.--Cdpt. R. C. For be#, in Boston Traveler. The Ode Duello. The earliest case of dueling fn the United States was that of Edward Doty and Edward Lest=r, two serving-men among the. Puritans of New England. It occurred, says the quaint historian, at Plymouth in 1621. The parties were servants of Stephen Hopkins, and having a dispute they settled it gentle manlike with sword and dagger. Both were wounded. The Puritans assem bled in convention and inflicted the fol lowing just punishment: Doty and Lester were were ordered to l>e tied to gether, heads and feet, for twenty-four hours without food or drink, but the intercession of their master, their <jwn humility and promises procured their speedy release. This was the first duel fought on this continent, and they were disposed of neck and heels, the object of jeers and sneers. The duel as a form of combat is of great antiquity, authorized according to Blackstone in the laws of Gunde- bald, A. D. 501, which are preserved in the Burgundian code, and afterward it was established throughout the mon archies of Europe. It is a rule of the dark ages, which in the present state of civilization cannot btfrjMtifigd. -- phut Jeatanch*,- ' ^ lie 0M Creek ITiiliwtlfc. The skill in beating oat and inlaying gold and other metals to which Homer so often alludes, is attested by the re mains found in the tomba of Myoense, of which perhaps the most Homeric are the designs on theieal&ardsof swords, which at the time when Dr. Schile- mann's book appeared were too much encrusted with rust to be made out, but which have been recently engraved and described by Mr. Koftmanoudes. The subjects represented on these scabbards are a lion hunt, a lion attacking a herd of deer, winged monsters, fish and plants. The manes of the lions are of red gold, their bodies of paler gold, probably electrons. So with the flowers--the stalk, leaves and branches are of gold, the calyxes of electrum. The same distinction of color is observed between the sea and the fish swimming in it, and also in representing the birds--in which the color of the blood flowing from their wounds is dis criminated from the color of their feathers. Further variety is obtained by the use of enamel in the portions of the background. In the description of the plowing on the shield of Achilles, the poet says that the furrow behind the plowman was black, as plowed land is, although being of gold. Probably to produce a change of color, a dark enamel, such as that found in the scab bards, was combined with the gold. Homer, therefore, so far from inventing the shield of Achilles out of his imag ination, as was formerly contended, derived many details both of subject and technical execution from works of art which he had actually seen, and inspired him with a conception of what a work by the god Hephiestos himself might have been. So, again, in regard to the choice of subjects on these scab bards, and throughout the Mycenaean antiquities, they prove that when Hesiod described the crown of Pandora as ornamented with "all manner of creatures such as the sea and the land breed," he borrowed these ornaments from the art of his own time.--C. T. Newton, in the National lieview. Hew to Clean Lace. To clean a white lace veil, boil it fifteen minutes in a solution of white soap and water; put it into a basin of warm suds and keep gently squeezing it until it is clean; do not rub it. Take a basin of cold water, into which put a few drops of blueing; rinse the veil in it; next rinse it in thin rice or gum arabic water. Stretch it out even and pin it to dry on a clean white cloth;' fasten each scallop down with a pin. When dry, lay a thin piece of muslin over it and iron on the wrong side. To clean thread lace, take a lar^e bottle and cover it with clean muslin and wind the face around it, securing the ends with a needle and thread; set the bottle upright in a strong, cold suds and pace it in the sun. Keep it in the sun for a week, changing the lather daily, and always rubbing it slightly when the suds are renewed. At the end of the week, take it off of the bottle, and without rinsing it, pin it backward and forward on a large pillow covered with a tight, clean case. Every scallop must have a separate pin. The plain edge must be pinned well down also. When quite dry, take it off, but do not starch, iron or press it.--Detroit Free Press THE way to gain a good reputation is to endeavor to be what yon desire to ap pear. --Socrates. A Happy Wife. "Mv dear husband, I never slept so soundly as I do now, after using- German Hop Bit ters. " Sold by all druggists »• - • •" • ly-- , . . CAN any one improve his condition by whining? If not, whine not Dyspepsia. Dyspepsia and sick headache do not re fcnrn to those who have used Great German Hap Bitten. Sold by all druggist* WHERE do all the pins go to* They go down if you happen to make a ten strike. Look Well to the NUM. The only genuine German Hop Bitters have the word "German" blown in the bot tle. Hold by all druggists. KNOOKINO a frieud down is a sure way of dropping an acquaintance. it FWtjr fcit ty Three An unusual article fsom the Rodttster (H. Y.) Democrat and Ckronide was published in this paper recently and has been the subject of much conn Bisattou both in professional circles sad on the street Apparently it caused more commotion in Rochester, as the following from the same paper shows: Dr. J. & Henion, who is well known not omy in Rochester, but in nearly every part of America, sent an extended article to this pajier, a few days since, which was duly published, detailing his remarkable experi ence and rescue from what seemed to be certain death It would be impossible to enumerate the, personal Inquiries which have been mad* at oqz office as to the valid ity of the article, but they have been so numerous that farther investigation of the subject was deemed an editorial necessity. With tills end in view a representative of this paper called on Dr. Henion at his resi dence, when the following interview occur red: "That article of yours, doctor, has created quite a whirlwindl Are the statements, about the terrible oondition you were in, and the way you were rescued, such SB you can sustain y "Every one of them and many additional ones. >ew people ever get so near the grave as I did ana then return, and I am not sur prised that the public think it marvelous. It was marvelous." -Mow in the world did yon, a physician, come to be brought so low?" "By neglecting the first and most simple symptoms I did not think I was sick. It is true 1 bad frequent headaches; felt tired most of the t me; could eat nothing one day and was ravenous the next; felt dull, indefi nite pains, and my stomach was out of or der, but I did not think it meant anything seiioua" "But have these common ailment? any thing to do with the fearful Brlght's disease which took so Arm a hold on your" "Anything? Why, they are the sure indi cations of the first stages of ihat dreadful, malady. The fact is, few people know or realise what ails them, and I am sorry to eav that too few physicians do either." "Tim' is a strange statement, doctor." "But it is a true one The medical pro fession have been treating symptoms in stead of diseases for years, and it is high time it ceased We doctors have been clip ping off the twig* when we should strike at the root The symptoms 1 have Just men tioned or any unusual action or irritation of the water channels indicate the approach of Bripht's disease even more than a cough an nounces the coming of consumption. We do not treat the cough, but try to help the lung*. We should not waste our time try ing to relieve the headhche, stomach, pains about the body or other symptoms, out go directly to the kidneys, the source of most of these ailments." "This, then, Is what you meant when you said more than one-half the deaths which occur arise from Bright's disease, is it, doc- toryn Precisely. Thousands of so-called dis eases are torturing people to-day, when in reality it is Bright's disease in some one of its many fcrnis. It is a hvdra-headed monster,' and the slightest symptoms should strike terror to every one who has them, can look back and recall hundreds of deaths which physicians declared at the time were caused by paralysis, apoplexy, heart dis ease, pneumonia, malarial lever and other common complaints which I now see were caused by Uriirht's disease." "And did all these cases have simple symp toms at tirsfcY" "Every one of them, and might have been enred, as I was, by the timeiy use of the same remedy--Warner's Safe Cure. I am getting my eyes thoroughly open in this matter and think I am helping others to see the facts and t>beir possible danger also Why, there are no end of truths bearing on this subject. If you want to know more about it go and see Mr. Warner himself. He was sick, the same as I, and is the healthiest man in Rochester to-day. He has made study of this subject and can give you more facts than I can. Go, too. and see l)r. Latti- more, the chemist, at the University. If you want facts there are any quantity of them, showing the alarming increase of Bright s disease, its simple and deceptive symptoms, and there is but one way by which it can be escaped " Fully satisfied of the truth and force of the doctor's words, the reporter bade him good day and called on Mr. Warner at his estab lishment on Exchange street. At first Mr. Warner was inclined to be reticent; but, learning that the information desired was about the alarming Increase of Bright's dis ease. his manner changed instantly and he spoke very earnestly. '•It is true that Bright's disease has in creased wonderfully, and we find, by reliable statistics, that in "the pust ten years its growth has been 'J50 per cent Look at the prominent men it has carried off: Everett, Sumner, Chase, Wilson, Carpenter, Bishops Haven and Peck, and others. This is terri ble, and shows a greater growth than that of any other known complaint It should be IT'S bard to believe Miss Whittier was cured of Buch terrible sores by Hood's 8ar- eaparilla, but reliable people prove it WHAT is there in a woman which is most suggestive of early death? Ahem! her age A FULL feeling after meals, dyspepsia, heartburn and general ill-health relieved by Brown's Iron Bitters. A TRAMP called his shoes because they had no soles 'corportions, SPABTA, Tenn.-- Dr. W. B. Cummings says: •I am stronglv convinced of the efficacy of Brown's Iron bitters, and recommend them." IT iB something fine to be good; but it is far finer to be good for something. Noted Institutions of Learning. Elsewhere in our educational column will be found a card of the noted institutions of learning, the University of»Notre Dame and fit. Marv's Academy, situated at Notre Dame, Ind. The native grandeur of the surround ing laiidecai e, the magnificent forest trees, beautiful lakes and the winding Ht, Joseph river invite activity and energy; while the quiet seclusion of the :o alit'y, two miles from the city of h'outh Bead, inspire rertec- tion and study. All the courses of study ore taught in these institutions, while the greatest care is exercised over the moral training of pupils. •• Pat Up " at the Ciault Hon nr. The business man or tourist will find firm-class accommodations at the low price of fand -' 0 per day at the Oault House, Chicago, corner Clinton and Madison etreets This far-famed hotel is located in the center of the city, only one block from the Union Depot Elevator; all anpoinments first- class. EL W. HOTT, Proprietor. 1---TO MEA ONLY! THE VOLTAIC BELT CO., Marshall. Mich, will send Dr. Dve's Celebrated Electro- Voltaic Belts and Electric Appliances on trial for thirty days to men (young or old) who are afflicted with nervous debility, lost vi tality and kindred troubles, guaranteeing speedy and complete restoration of health and manly, vigor. Address as above. N. B.-- No risk is incurred, ss thirty days' trial is al lowed rem DYSPEPSIA, mnoBsnoi), depression of spirits and general debility in their various forms; also as a preventive against fever and ague, and other intermittent fevers, the "Ferro-Phosphorated Elixir of Calisaya," made by Caswell, Hanrd & Co., New York, and sold by all druggists, is the best tonic; and for patients recovering from fever or Other sickness it has no equal STICK INO, inltaton, inflammation, all Kidney and Urinary Complaints, cured by "Bnohn- Paibe." $1. ALL our lady friends will be delighted to hear thatL L CraglnACa.lltf & 4th st,Phil*, are giving first-class Piano Sheet Music, vocal and instrumental, gratis (Mo advertising on it) Write for catalogue Mention paper. DON'T die in the house. "Rough on Bats." Clears oat-rats, mice, flips, roaches, bed-bugs. 15c. a young lady quite fair, ble with her hair, THERE Who had much trouble So she bought Carbollne And a sight to be seen Is the head o i of this maiden,11 declare. THAT husband of mine is three times the mn ht was before he began using Wells' Health Renewed 86c buys a pair of Lyon's Patent Heel 8Mff- enera Xakee m boot or shoe last twice as long. watxs* "BOUGH OK COBKS."--IBC. Ask tor it. Complete, permanent cure. Corns, warts, buUoBS. apli plain to eve iv one that something must be done to check this increase or there is no knowing v here it may end " "Ho you th:nk many people are afflicted with it to-diiy who do not r Warner?" not realize it, Mr. iiid frequently The slightest "Hundreds of thousands I have a strik ing example of this truth which has just come tp my notice A prominent Profesor in a New Orleans Medical College was lectur ing before his class ou the subject of Bripht'S disea e. He had various fluids umier micro scopic analysis, and was showing the student* what the indications of this terri ble malady were. In order to show the con trast between iiea'thy and unhealthy fluids, he had provided a vial, the contents Ol which were drawn from his own person. 'And now. gentlemen,' he said, 'as we have seen the unhealthy indications, I will show vou how it appears in a state ot perfect health,' and he submitted his own fluid to the usual t.'st As he watched the results his countenance suddenly changed--his color and command both left him, and in a trem- b.ing voice he said: 'Gentlemen, I have made a painful discovery; I have Bright's disease of the kidneys,' and in less than a year he was dead." "You believe, then, that it has no symp toms of its own and is frequently unknown even bv the person who iB afflicted with it?" "It has no symptoms of its own and very often none at' all. Usually no two people have the same symptoms, and de ith is the first symptom. indication of any kidney difficulty should be enough to strike terror to any one I know what I am talking about fur I have been through all the stages of kidney disease." "You know of Dr. Henion's case?" "Yes, I have both read and heard of lit" "It is very wonderful, is it not?" "A very prominent case, but no more so than a yreat many others that have come to my notice as having been cured by the same means " "You believe, then, that Bright's disease can be cured?" "I know it can I Know it from the ex perience of hundreds of prominent persons who were given up to die by both their phy sicians and friends." ; "You speak of your own experience, what was it "A tea f il one. I hal felt languid and un fitted for business for years. But I did not know what ailed me." When, however, I found it was kidney difficulty. I thought there was little hope, and so did the doctors. I have since learned that one of the phy sicians of this city pointed me out to a gen tleman on the street one day, saving, 'there goes a man who will be dead within a year.' 1 believe his words would have proven true it I had not fortunately secured and used the remedy now known as Warner's Safe Cure." "And this caused you to manufacture ft?" No, it caused me to Investigate. I went to the principal cities, saw physicians pre scribing and usin«r it, and I therefore deter mined, as a duty I owe humanity and the suffeiing, to bring it within their reach and now it is known in every part of America, is sold in every druir store and has become household necessity." The reporter left Mr. Warner, much im pressed with the earnestness and sincerity of his statements and next paid a visit to Dr. S. A. Lattiroore at his residenoeon Prince street. Dr. Lattimore, although busily en gaged upon some matters connected with the State Board of Health, of which he is one of the analysts, courteously answered the questions fcWWt were propounded him: "Did you make a chemical analysis of the case of Mr. H. EL Warner some three ago. Doctor?" "Yes, sir." yean "What did this analysis show you?" "The presence of album in great abundance" Dumen and tube casts "And what did the symptoms indicate!" "A serious disease of the kidneys." "Did you think Mr. Warner oould reeover?* "No, sir. I did not think it possible, It was seldom, indeed, that so pronounced a case had, up to that time, ever been cured "Do yon know anything abont the which cured him?" "Tea, I have chemica&y analysed it aa4 upon critical erawilnarton, find ft entirety free from any poisonous or delaterioit* sub stances* We publish the foregoing statements in view of the commotion which the publicity of DH Henion's article has csmsed ted to meet the nroteatsittons wbieh have been made, The standing of Dc Hratas, Mt Warner and Dr. Lsttimore in th is beyond question and the stat make cannot for a moment _ They conclusively show that Bright's illonsse of the kidneys is one of the most deceptive and dangerous of all diseases, that it is ex ceedingly common, alarmingly increasing and that ft can be cured IT is stated as a fact that many people hear best when their eyes are closed. Think of this in church. Lewisvuuut, Ind--Rev. J. 8. Cain says: "I used Brown's Iron Bitters for nervous pros tration and found it entirely satisfactory." TELEOIUPHT is not such a very old discov ery, but it's a Morse-grown one, neverthe less. mmm W.Oout, Ttoy. K. Y, writes oa free tro SCROFULA, Wlsftw MMerited or Itnloptl by ohensstMess, miifortune or nefriect, if not suppressed, progresses by • frradual, nnobserred and painless process. The glands enlarge, the skin breaks ont in sores and ul cers, the flesh wastes and the bones decay. Th* best remedy for these serious evils is unquestionably Hood's Smrsmarilla. It purifies the blood, restores th* wasted form, drives away that tired which invalids complain of, and infuses energy sad spirit into every fiber. Terrible Sores oa Neck* Miss KKH.IE ITAIXS, BockvUle, Conn, was troubled fortwo years with terrible scrofula sores on her neck. One was as large ss her hand. She tot discouraged, when a friend advised Hood's Bstsspsiffls. She bought a bottle, and another, and a third. After tak ing these the sores healed, and all signs of them have disappeared, she has not been troubled since. SOteMtlMn. When I began to take Hood's BftrsapsriUa I had 10 scrofulous sows on my leg and all over my right foot. I fcsve takes three bottles, sod am on the fourth. I hava but two sores left, and those are getting alosg first mte. I have had these sores for the lsst eight years.--THOMAS W. BABTLKTT. Providence, R. I. Hood's Ssmpsrills 6e*l by drafegitts. ti;*ixfor|5. Prepared only tar C. I. HOOD & CO., apothecaries, Lowell, Msss. Howr to Secure Health. It is strange any one will suffer Atom derangement brought on by impure blood when SooviU's Sarsa- psrilla sad Stillingis or Blood and Liver Syrup wQl restore health to the physical organisation. It is a strengthening syrup, pleasant to take, and the best Blood Purifier ever discovered, curing Scrofula, Scrofulous disorders. Weakness of the Kidneys, Ery sipelas, Malarii, Nervous disorders, Debility, Bilious complaints and diseases of the Blood, Liver, Kidneys, Stomach, Skin, etc. DB. Boo SB'S Vegetable Worn Syrup instantly de stroys Worms and removes the Secretions which canse them. PERRY DAVIS' Pain-Killer A SAFE AND SURE REMEDY FOR AhuuMtin. AND StMt, TNtkads FOR SALS BY ALL DRUGGISTS. hosisters fclTTEff* Ho time should be lost if the stomach, liver and bowels are affected to adopt the sure remedy. Res etter's Stomach Bitters. Diseases of the organs named beget others Sit more serious, and a delay is therefore hazardous. Dyspepsia, liver complaint, chills and fever, early rheumatic twinges, kidney weakness, bring serious bodily trouble if trilled with. Lose no time in using this effective and safe medi- r sale by all Druggists and Dealers srnerally. tT) A WEEK. |13 a day at hnm* easily made. Qosdy •• L outfit free. Address TwnTs Co., Augusta,Maine, n • percent. NATIONALPcBUSKmoCo.,Chicago,M. THB BUT IS ONIAPIIT." .^THRESHERS Clmr llalleri (Salted to oil sections.) Write for ram nios. Pamphlet acd Prices to ThsAeltaua A Taylor Os., Ifauasasld, Okio. purposes for which it Js s<iut|is<. f closing that my wife has used ttvear saesCSiMltl. preventing the attacks of sick hssisehs wtifc wtMs she had been affliclad from youth." Do yon want a pure, bloom* lug Complexion! If so, « few applications of Hagan's MAGNOLIA BiXMwillgrat- ifV yon to yonr heart's con tent It does away with 8al- lowneas, Redness. Pimples, Blotches, and all diseases and imperfections of the skin. It orereomesthe flushed appear ance of heat, fttijgne and ex citement. It mates aladxtf THIBTT appear bnt TWSN- that it fe impossible to detest AUTOST A prominent cUbsn sends tm the foUow*s« sfltifl. teat:-- • "For several years I hses hssa wy SStMlr in flicted witt a very severs long supposed to be lusabs back. Mom lecsnl vere. so much so that it was with i able to get out of bed in the various remedies without sny the earnest sohoitattai of a Maad 11 in* Hunt's Reaoedy aboat three sash's Ma instantaneoushensfltssrs suutaftil.Is I kssthal in iislnir lii MT lurt dim Islli His fcsl Buss <1--. and am relieved from ths jstos, srhss sai esfcflMli- ive weakness, the psinful symptosas flMt.MHNfe' accompany disease of ths kidneys. Aatlenaftpmttr expect to be completely sad puTiismsiMj wwi tier the use ot it. I most chserf-lly leoosnacad Hsaflto Bamedy to all who are attteted wtlh SBJE KktsSyW ltver disease. WKSJMf O. JUHRO&D, . Wsfeaut street, ProvMs*tt*,k.$p Match SB, UBS. THE The The spacious iod wlMieo lhthcmftUMs LAW BBwdOs A thorough commercial eoonw it $lwo A •aratogei c"rainLT'»k to study the Insti' siring Special advantages wUl.i placed within the reach of ' LAW. fTfsiSi? (One mae West School of Art a complete corns of teachers. Muaic Hall and 38 Studio modeled on and Painting commodious: ample Vlipns. For SmMrtur St. Man ass Young MsnSrasSRSIOBSf attnJan&S TALBTTIXM BKO*. f i.lflh ttto. S5 ts S20 ."&%S3.t2S OMUMglP SM£« PATENTS "KV/P 161 South Jrfmm SSSSSSX**. tncrrral 4i My MiMr A SMST. SS IS*, sis1Ure ..ills, •WiHliwa.ilsMiea- ••attts yo% Wtis*% «MM- . sstttls<t. rsMtaa wwiiit where dUcltarg. to 1««. K.wSlarhaiws iSslui W*«r prucania ft or p<trtlal to*. Ham, .ran7 other ran, *r dspaaSaat > dlaehams aad psoslaas pwwws fttrS. is INCKCASKD. sgwtea «atsMi WRAM. Sae¥ pay aad MUI ssllittsd. ( ist>ss all ItlaSa Ad's with aiaaqfci k DR.HOftiFSELECTRIOKLT alyna. inc Belt in America that asndiths setlam through the body, and 1 stant by the jMtieet. Send Stamp for CtaresBF BsWJ. •OKKE, laves tor, 191 Wshaih IN AGRICULTURAL UBSiH! Of Freeh, ths suhjec Moraaew. er «w stoMt volume i lining One Thousand Oss Hi vhunnpams. Hrtdoolyby We WssUwa't ta every BMttee. A liberal discount i udnmlng the pa Sift on * i * co.. cuiMts, m. ' MOST UUBHf ED i«. ; CONSERVATOR! Beautifully Bbntratetl.tt yourself sod maslral MtM *>• HUSIO K.TOUBJKK. •OH C.H.C.