A ffermnylranta Kditor's Rencontre Witt* aa-lraui Mute Her. One of the queerest rencontres ever Wwjorded between an editor and citizen occurred in a quiet village in Pennsyl vania recently; and, strange to say, tlie C0$us belli could neither be attributed •wely to the editor, the proof-reader, •or compositor. It was simply a con catenation of circumstances over which none of these had any control. In fact they didn't know the paper was loaded until it went off and kicked. It aeema that the editor was an industrious local itemizer, nothing ' escaping his •agle eye. He was also a great con denser, seldom giving more than a half „ dozen lines to a subject. One day he •wrote the following local, among others: "--The citizens of this village are mourning the loss of twenty valuable dogs, poisoned by some miscreant." That is a model of conciseness--an important fact stated in good English and with no unnecessary words. Later on he wrote some puffs for his adver tisers. intending to call around as soon as convenient and collect his quarterly bills. Note how the following three- liner conveys an interesting item of news and at the same time eulogizes a home product: "--Butcher Sniegelfritz, on High street, announces that he has just made up a large batch of fine, large Sausages." No objection can be found to this item, except the repetition of the word "large" so near together; that might have been avoided. It would not seem that any man could get offended at this puff, yet such was the case, and it cost the editor a good mauling and the butcher $50 and costs later on for as sault and battery. But this is antici pating. Let us again take up the thread of the narrative. It seems that when the forms were made up, the foreman, as was his cus tom, put in the local items according to size, commencing with the one-liners like: --How's this for cold ? --Remember the Mite Society. ~ - --Bring in your wood while the sleighing is good, etc. And, as the Fates would have it, the item commendatory of the butcher's sausages came next under the one about the dogs having been poisoned--not even a three-em dash separating them. Let the reader place them thus, or im agine the items so placed, when he reads tliem a second time (for which purpose an intermission will now be had); let him also imagine a quick-tempered Teuton who took great pride in the qualitv of the meat he served, and a practical joker who liked to bother the butcher, and the result can be fore shadowed. The joker read the item aloud to the butcher and made com ments calculated to convince him thai the editor really meant to convey the idea that some of those poisoned dogs had been made into succulent sausage. As soon as the butcher grasped tlie thought, a strange light shone in his eyes, he wiped his hands on his apron, kicked his own dog out of doors, took off aud hung up the apron and called his boy: "Here, Shake, you mindt der shop a leetle vile; I goes owid on some peesness." The joker and one or two othe# cronies, to whom hfe had given the wink, followed. All was quiet in the sanctum. The editor, having finished mailing' the week's issue and charged up the ads and paid locals, was taking it easy .reading some of his choicest exchanges in a desultory way, the scissors being within easy reach, the only weapon lie used. Suddenly a quick, heavy step was heard on the stair, the door buret open,c and almost before the editor knew what hurt him, biff! biff! he was knocked over and the irate butcher was k icking the spittoon, waste-basket and other bric-a-brac about the room. Luckily, the forms on the stone escaped his eye, or much damage would have ensued. The editor presently recovered suffi ciently to raiso himself up on one elbow and inquire in a faint voice if anybody was killed by the explosion, when the butcher casually remarked: "You tell some more lies about me mavpe in your baber, don't it? Pv chiminv! auf yon don't mage dot tam lies alius recht next week dot I nod pud dose pizened dogs dat sossage in, I proke your neg, you fer dampt schweinagel!" And he again made a move towards the unlucky editor, and would no doubt have injured him severely, had not the compositors and "devil" grabbed him and shoved liim down stairs. After setting the room to rights, bind ing a piece of raw meat (procured at another shop) over the editor's left eye, scraping the paste off his back, and be ing satisfied that no bones were broken, he and the foreman looked through the local column to find the cause of the outbreak. They found it, and another fight nearly resulted, the editor nat urally being in bad humor--although usually being of a sweet and sunny dis position--he claiming that the foreman should have known better than to put the two items so close together, and the latter retorting that it wasn't his business to read over the matter in type, but to put it in the best shape for the appearance of the paper; which fact the editor presently admitted, and harmony was restored. The matter would probably #fcave Tested here--perhaps the editor would even have called on the butcher and ex plained how it occurred--had not a lawyer friend advised him to sue for damages and sustain the dignity of the Press, assuring him that he could not help receiving a verdict in his favor, and offering his services for nothing in case he should be defeated. So the suit was instituted, and after an inter esting trial, in which the still discolored eye had considerable weight, the jury found for the plaintiff to the amount pf fifty dollars.--Peck's Sun. The Red Cross. The inadequacy of official means to meet the requirements of sick and wounded soldiers in a great war, says a writer in the Nineteenth Century, had long been felt; and, as regards our own army, it was clearly demonstrated dur ing the Crimean war.- The campaign in Italy in 1866 brought this more home to the heart of Europe, and it will ever redound to the honor of the citv of Geneva that within her walls the "first international | conference was held in 186U, with a view to the mitigation of some of the horrors of war. On that occasion the institution of national aid societies was established,. and a few Swiss gentlemen were formed into an intA-national committee for the purpose of acting, on the neutral territory of Switzerland, as a link between the aid societies of all countries. In the fol lowing year a diplomatic conference was h<>ld in the same place, which was attended by the representatives of sev eral states, and the treaty known as "the Geneva convention of the 22d of August, 1864." was then drawn up by the representatives ol sixteen govern ments. Within four months it was signed by eight European states--the English government attached its signa ture in February, 1865--and at the pres ent time it has been accepted by thirty- three states. A second diplomatic con ference was held at Geneva in 1868, and there have also been three other conferences of delegates from the Bed Cross societies--one in Paris in 1867, one in Berlin in April, 1869, and the last at Geneva in September, 1884. The treaty was designed to remove soldiers when sick or wounded from the cate gory of combatants, and to afford them relief and protection without regard to nationality; this protection is also ex tended to all persons officially attached to hospitals or ambulances, and to all houses so long as they contain invalid soldiers. Inhabitants of a country oc cupied by a belligerent army, and who mav be engaged in the care of the sick and wounded, enjoy the same privi leges. Provision is also made for the return of invalid soldiers to their re spective homes. The distinctive mark of hospitals and ambulances is a white flag with a red cross upon it--the colors of Geneva reversed--and individuals wear a white armlet with a red cross. Every red-cross flag must be accom panied in time of war by the national flag of those using it. The Passing of a generation. Beginning with the canvass of 1856 and ending with that of 1880, fifteen candidates contested for the Presidency, who belonged to the generation which brought on or carried through the war. Buchanan and Fillmore; Lincoln, his three rivals in 1860, Douglas, Breckin ridge, and Bell, and his sole opponent in 1864, McClellan; Grant, and the men whom he defeated in 1868 and 1872, Seymour and Greeley; Garfield and Hancock, the candidates in 1880, are all dead. There remain of the whole list only Fremont, no longer a "pathfinderTilden and Hayes. The conspicuous men of Lincoln's Cabinet are mostly dead, like Seward, Chase, and Stanton, or in the retire ment of old age, like Simon Cameron; the "war Governors" are nearly all gone, or where a stray one, like Cui'tin, of Pennsylvania, lingers, no longer powerful; the great leaders in Congress before, during, aud immediately after the war, like Charles Sumner, Henry Wilson, William Pitt Fessenden, "Ben" Wade, Oliver P. Morton, Thomas A Hendricks, *"Thad" Stevens, and Schuyler Colfax, are either dead or re main only as political relics, like N. P. Banks and Lyman Trumbull. In Con gress to-day sit but a few men who sat in that body before the war, and of these few John Sherman and John A Logan alone retain a commanding posi tion. while Secretary Lamar is the only man in the Cabinet whose polit ical record dates back of 1861. There is, something remarkable about the speed with which the political gen eration of the rebellion period has passed from the stage. The contrast with the generation of the Revolution ary era renders it more noteworthy. It is now barely twenty-one years since Ap pomattox, and yet nearly all the leaders in the struggle are physically or polit ically deceased. The Revolution ended in 1783, but it was not until 1825, forty- two years, later, at the expiration of Monroe's second term, that the country ceased to elect Presidents who had en tered public life before or during the long contest which began in 1775. The Senate to which Monroe addressed his last annual message in December, 1824, contained several men who had been soldiers in the Revolutionary army nearly half a century before, like Rufus King, of New York, John Chandler, of Maine, and Nathaniel Macon, of North Carolina, and it is easy to see that the proportion of men still in active polit ical life who were actors in the Revolu tion was, even at that long remove, quite considerable. Tliis was due in no small measure to the youthful precoc ity of these survivors, the Senator Macon, of 1815 to 1S28, having been onlv a boy of 18 when he left Princeton College in 1775 to enlist in the patriot army, and the President Monroe, of 1817 to 1825, but 18 years old when he joined the Revolutionary army. "The fathers" also esc aped the danger of assassination, which removed two of the four Presi dents who were elected between 1860 and 1884.--NeiV York Evening Post Iniquities of Moruiondom. Three years ago,- in response to a pitiful letter of entreaty from the be reaved parents, I made aif^navailing search for two girls who had been brought to Utah by Mormon niission- ai-ies. While looking for these girls I found two young Englishwomen, sisters, who had stolen away from husband and home and joined the latest Mormon immigrant company. They had gone to the sea-port from which this com-- ] any sailed under the pretense of mak ing a visit to a relative, and by the time their husbands began to expect them home they were half way across the Atlantic. Each of the women had brought a little child in her arms, and the husband of one of them, after he ha 1 found out where his wife had gone, wrote to her : "If you are resolved never to come back, if you will not even let, me know why you have left me, at least let the baby make a mark on a sliest of paper aud send it to me, so that I can kiss something lier little hands have touched." Another woman who had all the de tails of her flight arranged for bv the lirssionarv who "converted" her, was hurried away from home by night, h aving a nursing babe behind her. She said she did not realize what she was doing until the ship on which the im migrants embarked had set sail," and then for the time she lost her reason entirely. She became a polygamons wif ' as soon as she reached Utah, thus cutting herself off from all hope of re turning to her home. She surely was not sane at the time of her flight, and she cannot l>e considered so now. She says: "Ever since the dreadful day I set my foot on board that ship I have heard my babv crying. I cannot get the sound out of my ears. I hear it everywhere and always." A woman wli > lived in my familv as a domestic told me she was persuaded to steal away from home in her husband's absence, carrying with her her little boy, their only child. The husband anil father never held up his head after the day he came back to his desolate home, and six months afterward died, as his friends said, of a broken heart.-- Salt Lake Correspondent 0 i "MYfrien's,"saida colored preacher, "a man's character is like a fence--you can't strengthen u it by whitewash, though you can cover up the places where it is worm-eaten." > As MANY as 600 standard English works have been translated into Chi-1 nese. Bntfes and S=spcn:njmtlc% of «b« SurfeMM, ' Few persons upon reading an account of a post-mortem examination stop to consider the importance of the matter, or the time taken up to do the work o! an autopsy. The post-mortem surgeons are important officers, who make all the medico-legal examinations for the city, and are the medical witnesses for the State in cases where post-mortem exam inations are required. There are two post-mortem physicians in Baltimore, Dr. S. V. Hoopman, for the ten lowei wards, and Dr. L. W. Councilman, fox the ten upper wards. A reporter, wishing to witness the post-mortem work, called on Dr Hoop- man, just as he was starting to perform Slich a duty. Arriving at (he house, about twenty medical students were found, who accompanied Dr. Hoopman to the room where the dead body lay. A table was prepared by covering it with an oil-clotli. The clothing was removed from the l»ody, and it was placed on the table. The doctor carefully inspected the corpse and noted all the wounds, which in this case were found to l)€ three, two bullet wounds and one knife gash. The head was first examined. An incision was made from c*ir t i eai over the top of the head, followed by a gash of blood, which made some of tlu spectators remember that thav were needed outsid? for a moment. Tlit- scalp was reflected backward and for ward and the skull exposed. The skull was then sawed around on a line with the eyebrows. When the top of the skull was removed, the doctor took out the brain. That beautiful organ, with its fissures and convolutions, was a mass of blood, the fatal bullet having plowed its way diagonally through it. An in spection of the neck showed that an other bullet had entered at the back, passed through toward the front, sever ing the carotid artery and jugular vein. The next move was to make a long in cision from the chii^down to the navel. The breast bone was dissected, and the heart and lungs taken out for inspec tion. After carefully examining thf heart, the doctor remarked that 44thf colummc carnne, chordae tendinea? and Kuriculo-ventricular and semi-lunai valves are all healthy." The lungs were found healthy. ' A piece thrown in wa ter would not sink, which the doctoi said was a test for healthy lungs. The stomach, liver, spleen, pancreas, and intestines were all in turn carefully re moved and inspected. All this com pleted, the organs were replaced and the incisions carefully sewed up. Sc completely is this done that when thf body is dressed the fact of the post mortem examination having been made is not apparent. "How many post-mortems have yov made during the year?" asked the re porter. "About forty, and about one hundred since I have been making postmor tems." _ ,j. Glancing at the watch it was fount; that four hours had been occupied ir performing the interesting examination. Post-mortem physicians are appointed yearly, their selection being made l\\ the mayor. In each case they file a re port of the autopsy at the health de partment.--Baltimore Sun. About Egyptian Mummies. In a work on the land, of the Pharaohs, the author, Miss Gordon Cummings, shows that it is possible to give a fresh interest even to old subjects, and liei account of the disposal of mummies will be nsw to many readers: "It if strange, indeed, to find a nation such ait Egypt once was--the greatest and most civilized of all peoples--now so liter ally proving herself fas Ezekiel foretold she would become) 'the basest of the nationsthat, not content with convert ing the bones of thousands aud tens oi thousands of her ancestors into charcoal, to be used in refining sugar for tlieii degenerate descendants and their foreign task-masters, she must neetb actually make merchandise of liei dead. These prec ious mummies, whicl. in the days of lier glory were accounted worthy of such exceeding honor thai they were consid< red the very best security on which to lend mone;> inasmuch as the Egyptian who had been driven to pawn his deceased father or mother would sooner die that fail to redeem his pledge, now in thf hour of Egypt's degradation are valued at so much per ton, and sold tc strangers and. aliens as a suitable manure for foreign soil. As you journey toward Memphis, you might very recently have chanced to meet long strings of camels, heavily laden with human bone-dust from the tomlts. Here, too, from these edd Alexandrian catacombs to the merchant vessels in the harbor, barges laden with brown dust ply to and fro. Their cargo is carried on lx>ard in baskets and thrown into the hold; and the vessels deli vet their choice goods in British ports id £6 10s per ton, to be mixed with the guano of Peru, and sold at a consider able profit. Several eye-witnesses have told us how they visited the ancient sepulchres while this work was going on, and saw pieces of human bone, small earthenware lamps, and tear glasses, among the dishonored dust oi these myriad Egyptians, who were t<; be carried over the seas to ftr.'elize English fields. We turned away from Alexandrian catacombs marveling how many generations may elapse before the common race deals thus with England's dead. The bones of bygone generations of old Egyptians are not the only relics with which this present age has dealt ruthlessly. A gentleman told me that a few years ago he had ridden about seven mjles into the plain to the east of Alexandria, a spot rarely visited, where, to his amazement, hie found ruins of buildings, pillars and sepulchres carved in the rock, which lie could only compare .to those of Arabia Petrea. While he stood there, some workmen were employed in dragging forth a sarcophagus carved •with intri cate figures--a treasure for any museum. Its destination, however, was to be cast into a limekiln, as being the easiest way obtain lime for building a mosque.' Artificial Leather. Artificial leather is, according to a French invention recently patented, made by a cotton fabric, the warp threads of which are very slightly twisted, and the weft threads of which are finer than usual. This fabric is serrated on both sides, and immersed ip, preparation consisting of a decoction of linseed, rabbit-skin glue, linseed oil and coloring natter. When the fabrio is impregnated with this preparation, it is stretched upon a polished zinc plate laid upon a steam-heated hot plate, the drying being continued until the aqueous portion is entirely evaporated. It is claimed that this artificial leather is an excellent imitation of the real thing. BJ: cheerful and you are bound to be Tiealthy. The despairing patient is the one who dies.--Chicago Ledger. When you visit or leave New York City, BSTO baggage, exprawmgs, aad *3 ou-riage hire, and . w o p p o s i t e Grand Central Depot 613 rooms, fitted up at a eoetof one million Horse cm, stages. and elevated rail road to all depots. VawUiea can live better for less money at tlie Grand Union Hotel tbiMJMk say other flrst-olaaa hotel in the city, r vj., A Disgusted Showman. "My dear friend," said a long-haired countryman to the biographical ex pounder of a dime museum, "is that unfortunate being really a cannibal ?" and he indicated a South Sea islander from Cork who was sitting on a divan. 44 Yes, sir, that great living curiosity was captured while in the act of roast ing a Presbyterian missionary over a slow fire." "Great heavens!" gasped the coun tryman, "can't you convert him ?* "Convert him!" said the biographer, with disgust. "Co you s'pose the great American public would pay ten cents to see a Christian?"--Pittsburgh Dis patch. The Stomach as a Gasometer. In the (lysjieptic stomach impure gasea are generated, after meals, that distend and distress it, as woll its the bowels. The best carminative for crniii{>s, colicky pain*, and heartburn or bilious eructations, is Ho6tett>r's Stomach Hit lers. Cnrbouato of soda and effervescing aper ients are far inferior to it in efficacy, and, as )>liysicians now uuderstand, impair the tone of the stomach. Copious libations of any sort are iujiirious to tbe stomach, and to dilute its juices Is certainly not the way to increase their diges tive usefulness. Aided by the Bitters, the di« gestive orgnns, when enfeebled and disordered, repiiu their lost tone and regularity, not, of course, luimodiutely, but with a degree of rapid ity highly indicative of the excellence of the remedy. It lias the further effect of regulating tlie lK>wels and liver, protecting the system against malaria, relieving rheumatism and neu- taltfia, and increasing constitutional vigor. Sanitary Precautions on the Rail. "Brakeman," inquired the fat pas senger who rolled and lolled around over two seats near the stove, 44 why do you keep this car so all-fired hot ?"* "That's the orders, sir," replied the brakeman, glancing at the crowded seats across the aisle, "that's orders. You see, there's a heap of trickiuv in the country now, an' our orders is too cook the hogs so the company won't have no damages to pay to passengers what catch 'em.'*--Chicago Herald. The harmful and fatal results attending the upe of cough mixtures containing mor phia, opinm. and other poisons are daily be coming more frequent. It is for this reason that Red Star Cough Cu'e has received the unqualified endorsement of physicians, aud Boards of Health everywhere, as a purely vegetable compound, entirely frea from all naicotics. Price, twenty-five cents. A CHICAGO church, it is s iid, recently put up in the vestibule this sign: "Sal vation is frep, but the pews are not." Neuralgia and kindred diseases, promptly yield to tue immediate action of St. Jacobs Oil, the pain-conqueror. PRQF.H. L. FAIRCHILD, Jn a scien tific lecture in New York/stated' that while we always think of the dry land as the true place of stability, as a mat ter of fact it is the ocean which forever maintains its place, and the laud which is continually oscillating. He informed his auditors that Manhattan Island is gradually sinking, and that if they lived long enough they could find the sea covering the place. With great consideration he relieved their minds by saying that there was time enough to finish the lectnre before the island sank. v , • ----j : * Chronic nasal 'catarrh -- .guaranteed cure--Dr. Sago's Catarrh Remedy. WHEN a miner has been eaten by a Rnzzlv SEX'S, KJ"0 "p"k " •"& *a: Cowtof HMM to Me. TRADE MARK. TAR RK. foUGHIURE Free from Opiates, IBmeHeM and iWwn. IurI: OKcts . PROMPT. A.9 PavaoiSTt 4*® Deal***. THE ClUftLlS A. TOGKLItH BALTIMORE, MP. GErJmrIMOT Cures Rheumatism, Neuralgia, k Tootktclif, For Pain .. . THE CHARLES A. TOGELEK CO.. fti I.TIXOKIr.. KB. Our Northern Boundary. The northern boundary of our coun try is marked by stone cairns, iron pil lars, earth mounds and timber posts. The stone cairns are 7 jxS feet, the earth mounds are 7x14 feet, the iron pillars are 7 feet high, 8 inches s juare at the bottom, and 4 inches at the top; the timber posts are f) feet high and 8 inches square. There are 385 of these marks between the Lake of the Woods and the base of the Hocky Mountains. That part of the boundary which lies east and west of the lied Hiver Valley is marked by cast-iron pillars, at even mile intervals. The British have placed each alternate one of these pil lars, and tbe United States those be tween. Upon one side of each post is cast the inscription, "Convention of London," and on the other side, *4Oct. 20, 1818." Where the line crosses lakes stone heaps have been built in the water, projecting several feet above high-water mark at the surface. In forests the line was first marked by felling the timber a rod wide and clearing away the underbrush. Where this has since been cleared away, posts have been put in its place.--Inter Ocean. -• Reason Enough. "Father, why do they say railroad corporations have no souls ?" "Well, my son, you have often heard of the head of a corporation, but you { never heard of one with a foot. h£t use would a soul be to them under the circumstances ?" "No use, pa,, except to walk over people instead of riding over them as | they do now."--Boston Budget. "Pat up" at the Gaolt House. ' The business man or tourist will find first- class accommodations at the low price of $2 and $2.50 per day at the Gault House, Chica go, corner Clinton and Madison streets. This far-famed hotel is located in the center of the city, only one block from the Union Depot, •levator; all appointments flrstrclasa. HOYT & GATES. Proprietors. At a period of Ufa whan budding woman hood requires all bar straOfftk to meet tbe demands nature Stakes upon ft. many a young woman returns hotqp from the severe mental s train of school with a broken down constitution, and bar functions disarranged, to go to any early grave. If aba had bean wisely counseled and given tbe benefit of Dr. Pierce's "Favorite Prescription" her bodily development might have kept pace with har mental growth,and health and beauty would not have given way to decline and death. THESE are men so anxious to l>e miserable that they will go out and pledge their happi ness as security on which to borrow trouble. Young or middle-aged? men suffering from nervous debility, loss of inemot-y, pre mature old agct, as tbe result of bad habits, should send 10 cents in stamps for targe il lustrated treatise suggesting unfailing cure. Address World's Dispensary Medical Asso ciation, Buffalo, N. Y. THE value of medical treatment is the urico you pay the doctor. A powerful remedy for lung troubles. Safe for young or old. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. PAINT and powder freckles. cover a multitude of using Hall's Hair Sonewer. IF there is a bnstle in the land it never comes to the front THE longest pole knocks the persimmons, and Bigelow's Positive Cure knock* all coughs, colds, croup, lioarseni'ss, bronchitis, asthma, influenza, and consumption. Pleasant for chil dren. Safe aud speedy. 50 cents and $JL. THE New York papers say there is not swell enough now on Broadway to make any one see sick. ' To KEEP THE BIXMD PURE and the bowels will regulated, be careful of your diet; do not use rum or tobacco, aud take occasional doses of VINEGAR BITTERS. Perfect health must fol low such a course. The range of diseases that can ba relioved by the u?e of VINSQAB BITTERS is literally without limit No, JIMMT; peacocks do not lay colored Easter eggs--Maverick. Han a bilious attack and one of those'iade- scnbsble cases of constant weariness Took quinine and other remedies without relief, look Dr. Jones' Red Clover Tonic: am strong and welL ASA THOMPSON, Lojjan. Ohio. DENTISTS are good brokers in the lottery business, as they always draw something, if only a stub. Free to Ministers, Lawyers, Doctors, and Teachers. If yon will get your dealer to order from his wholesale druggist oms dozen bottles WAKNER'S WHITE WINE# TAB SYRUP-- (he best remedy in the. tcorld for Coughs, Colds, Asthma, Catarrh, and Consump tion, I will send two bottles free. Recom mend to yonr frieluls. Send name of druggist who gives the order. Map of Holy Land free with medicine. Address Dr. C. D. WAUNER. Chicago. 111. All druggists. The Great «>ei-man riiysfclan. The remarkable phase in tbe practice of Dr Peter W. Schmidt (frequently called Dr. Poto' is, lie never asked one to dosv-nlio their disease but tells each one their trouble without asking a question. His success is phenomenal. His practice enormous. He is sought after by hun dreds wherever lie goes, because he cures when every other physician and remedy have failed. He lias allowed his great medicines, Golden Seal Bitters and Lung Fond for Consumption, to l>e offered to the suffering, and we assert without fear of successful contradiction that there is no disease they will not cure. Thousands of bottles have been sold Thousands of broken- down and diseouraged invalids saved. Send to Golden Seal Bitters Company, Holland City, Mich., for Facts for the Millioii! Free. ••ROUGH ON ITCH." "Rough on Itch" cures skin humors, ernptions, ring worm, tetter, salt rheum, frostedfeet, chil blains, itch, ivy poison, barter's itch. 5(.ie. jars. "HOUGH ON CATAKKH" corrects offensive odors at once. Complete cure of worst chronic cases; also unequaled as gargle for diphtheria, sor.i throat, foul breath. 50c. "KOUGH ON 1'II.K.S." Why suiter Piles ? Immediate relief and com plete cure gutu-iuiteed. Ask for "Hough on Files." (Sure cure for itching, protruding, bleeding, or any form of Piles. 50o. At DruggiBts' or Mailed. At first I purchased your Athlophoroa by tbe single bottle. Now I order it by the dozen, am In reccipt of splendid testimonials of cures of rheumatism and neuralgia, and am confldcnt^of increased sales. E. S. Uald- wln, druggiat. Warren, 111. "Bough on Bats" dears out Rats, Mioe. 15a "Rough on Corns, "bard or soft corns, bunions, 15c. "Boughon Toothache." Instant relief. 15c. WELl/N HAlIt BAI.KAM, If gray, raptores to original color. An elegant dressing, softens aud beautifies. No oil nor grease. A Tonic Restorative. Stops hair com ing out; strengthens, cleanses, heals scalp, 50c. "HOUGH ON BILK" PILLS start the bile, relieve the bilious stomach, thick, aching head and overloaded bowels. Small gran ules, small dose, big results, pleasant in opera tion, don't disturb tue stomach. 25c. No Opium in Piso's Cure for Consumption. Cures where other remedies fail. 25c. Instantly Relieved. Mrs. Ann Lacour. of New Orleans, La., writes: "I have a son who has been sick for two yean; he has been attended by our leading physicians, but all to no purpose. This morning lie had his usual spell of coughing, and was so givaUy prostrated in conse quence that death seemed imminent. We had in the house a bottle of DH. WM. HALL'S AI ..SAM FOR THE LUNGS, purchased by my busuand, who no ticed your advertisement yesterday. We adminis tered it, and ho was instantly relieved." (• • It L. hoy, lady, or pent, Ka«y w IW V.VT A. Every village and town, C J -M><1 pay. K»ay work, bend s.taiuii. cilLLO'lT. 48 Dey St.. New York. IUMR QC'ICK for Pref. Moody's Hew niu«tr»t«l Book on Making. N>w Polmau, ftnd Mtullo JCuttfnf, etc. A|eobieil 10 • daj. Pref.XuUUY,l1idi«aU,0b YourNewadeaiar for TUE OHJCAUU LELH.KIJ, the UKST STORY PAI-KB in tliH country. Head it. ASK PATENTS as to patentability FI E. A. GILL'S K. S. & A. 1'. LACKY. AttornevH.Washin^ton. L).<'. Instruction!) and oiuniona as to patentability FItK K. *i~ 17 years'experience. SCHOOL OF KCLKCTIO Short-hand and tvi>o-\vritintr. t'nlimiled course, fiO. Send tor Clark i --THE Far weakness. l.amTia'd^'ICiek Eaergv* etc., It HAS NO tQCAUuid is the only Iron medicine that is not Injurloax. It KnncheM the lllood. Invigorates the System, Restores Appetite, Aids Digestion It dues not blacken or injure the teeth, cause head* ache or prodace constipation--Iron Mr M. R. MIL.IJ3 Cbicago. Ill,, " I hav« need Brown's Iron Bitters na atonic for Uebility and Lassitude with ptro^Rtheninjc anti rallying: effect." MBB. II. A. SMITH, Fulton Avo., Davenport; Iowa, any*: ** I have «w>d Brown's Ir>n hitters for general debility aud l«>ss oi appotite with much l>en« •tit. I can truly recommend it for that tired feeling that so ra-aiy overtasked mothors.bufiVr with.'* _ MBA. JANE ANDREWS. St. Helen?*, Mick*., »aya: Buffering from liver complaint, had auch A ]»njruid feeling f.nd no strength. I used Brown's Iron Bitters with frtent bonent, in fact never took anything that (lid me a* much good.'1 Ctamiine hiw above Trad;? Mark and cmswd rod lines on wrapper. Take uo other. Made only by BKOWN CHKMtCAL CO.* M4LTI.MOKK. MD. ELY'S CREAM BALM CatarrH hayfeveb HAY-fever t > oa ;h nostril and in agrpenb.e 1 was cured befort • the second bottle <>f Ely's Cream teas erhnmteO. I to as troubled with c A r o n i c c a t a r r h , gathering fa fu<ul. difficulty fa brent fl ing, and dixchiirtji •• from my earx.--( . J. Curb it), ttSt < hrst-I nut Street, J'hiliHh t phia. A particle la applied int> o«;n nostril ana in air rev to u*e. Price 50 cts., by mail or at riruireixta. Sen ! for circular. KLY BROl HKKS, I>ruKKi8tn,Owejro, N. V. DR. RAD WAY'S Sarsaparillian Resolvent, The Great Blood Purifier, Pen WUPmreof Chronic Disease. Chronic Rhetima- ti»m. Scrotula. Glandular Swellinir, Hacking Dry roiiuh, Cjincerons Affections, Syphilitic Complaints, Bleeding of the Limes. Dyspepsia, Wflter-Hrasli. White' Swelling, Tumors. Hip Diseases, M< lvm-ial Diseases, l eiimle Complaints, Uont, Dropsy, Bronchitis, Uon- BUiuptiuii. tor the cure of SKKV I)ISEASI>i, Eruption* of tlic Face and Rody, riiiiplet, Itlotolies. Salt Khctnii, OI«l Sores, I>r. KiicfNvay's Karsiiparillian Kesolvi lit excels all ivine- agents. It purities the blood, restoring health i:ud NiKor; ciear i-kiii.heautilul complexion s-cured to all. Liver Complaints, lite. Not only does the SarsnpariKian Hesolrent excel all remedial agents in the cure ot ("hr<»'iic Scrofulous, Constitutional and Skin DiNcascs, l>ut it is the only positive cure for Kidney and liladder Complaints, I'linary and Woml> Diseases, (iravel, Diulietes, Dropsy Stoppage of Water, Incontinence of Trine, Rrisnit'a Disease, Albuminuria, and all cases whi re then- aw brick-dust deposits, or the water is thick, cloudy or mixed with substance like the w hite of nil i prn, or thero is a morbid, dark. 1 ilious appearance and white bone- dust depi sits, and w I'ere there is a pricklinfr. burning sensation when passinir w ater, and pain In Uie small of the back and tdnnt? thn loins. Sold by di uj-'insts. Price f I per bottle. RADWAI'S KKAPV KKLIKF, the Great Pain liemedy. DR. KAlfwAY'S PILLS Cure Dyspepsia and all Disorders of tlie Stomach, a n d U o -- " - . . . . . -- Liver i wels. Be sure to ifet Uadway's.-ffik I>K. KADWAY \ t o.. New York. & MALT BITTERS. 8TRIOTLY PURE. cantatas *• Oftai la Mm$ Wmrm. Tt win cure any case of Liver And Kidnr; troubles when properly taken. It Is a perfect renovator and irivitorator. it cleanses the tem of the poisonous humors that develop in E,l vcr, Kidney and Urinary diseases, onr- ryniir iiwnv all poitjonou* matter and re» «t<> riiiat the Blood to a liealthy condition, t-iiricliliig it, refreshing aud invigorating .ti i nd mid Body. It j>rev. nts the growth to NI-IIMI* Illness of a Dnnsrerou* CIH^S of Diseases that be^iu in mere trivial ail ments, aud are too apt tp be neglected as such. THOUSANDS OF OASES of the worst forms of these terrible diseases have been quickly relieved and in a short lime perfectly cured by the use of Hops 4c Plait Bitters. Do not get Hops and malt BJttere con founded with Interior preparations of similar name. Take Nothing but Hops ft Malt Bit. lers if you want a sure Core HOPS i MALT BITTERS CO, DEMIT, Kin. TELEGRAPHY I furnished. Write Valentine G FREE Doxot'uii. iv;«> r.i J(Q WovA.S couM express the agony I ctxlunil from Rheumatism, atift It was all I could do to endure It. Crippled, not able to we.lk or sleep, I took two-thirds of a bottle of ATHLO* PHOROS and in a few day* was well." T F.. Chatfield, 365 11th Avenue. Milwaukee, Wi«. Athlophoron ii the onlj real cure for Hheumaii*m ever dt«eovered. A>k your gist for Athlophoros. If you cannot cet Itof him do not try something else, but order at oucc from ui. W<> will aead It express paid »u receipt of prl<re, $1.00 P«?r bottle. /THTiOPHOKOS CO. 112 Wall St.. New York# learn here nnd earQ ffonri pen . Situation# Bro».. Janciville, Wig, MileF.biff pay .steady work, no talk. I11 uu hour for eitli«r *ei. *14.60 I'len free, henri «tamp and «©. »a |<lpa*artt ftinuwer*H buKin«a«. Merrill Mf'yC'o.iG UiftiChicaizo.Ill, I>U. I'EAKSIEVS (;renrenr urnl most Wonder ful Ilitwovrry of the A(«K 'for .WEN only) mailed fre»- • »f eharpe. Address T. \\\ ewaterM. roll, >11 eta. "A Perfect Sight!" Those "horrid pimples" ore sure to disappear if you will purify your blood by the use of Ayer's Sarsaparilla. A young lady of Dover, X. II., writes tlistt for a number of years her face was covcrod with pimples, ami she was eon- stantlv annoyed by tlieir appe::ranec. Three bottles of Ayer's Sarsaparilla ren dered her skin perfectly clear. " I was troubled, for a long time, with • iiumor, which appeared on my face in ugly pimples and blotches. Ayer's Sar saparilla cured me., I consider it the best blood purifier in the worM."' -- CHAIILCS H. SMITH, North Craftsbui y,Vt. "Wo regard Ayer's Sarsaparilla as a real blessing. For pimples and eruptions of almost every description, it is a posi tive cure. "We have kept it in our familf for the past twenty years/' -- 3Irs. J.W. CoCKKEt.i., Alexandria, Va. "Ayer's Sarsaparilla cured me of piinpics, which literally covered my face. It is the best medicine I ever used."-- JULIA IJKKNARDIX, C'omptou, 111. „ A y e r ' s S a r s a p a r i l l a , Piej-arcil by Dr. J. C. Ayer k Co., Lowell. Masa. Bold by l>ruggUt«. l'rlce $1 ; »Ix botUea, Kone genuine unlet* rtaiuped w!Ui the ifcSVe TRAD* WAR*. Is The Best QI IP If CD Waterproof Coat O LIUIVL It ErerMade. i Don't waste your money on a inim or robber coat. The FIS fl BRA ND SLiCtKBl Is absolutely and vtnrfrBOor. and will keep you dry in the hardest storm Ask for the^'FISH BRAND" sue*** and take no other. If vour storekeeper doe< have the " nsH BRAKP'*, send for descriptive c wtalogueto A J. TOWER. »SlmmonsSt.. Boston. Mass, (JIN The BEST and CHEAPEST COUGH AUD R E M E D Y . As an Expectorant it has M ,.tS LIMi IN THRKK SlZi: BOTTX.ES, Price, 25 cts.. 50 cts. and $1 per bottle.! Tlie 25-CENT BOTTLE•> art? rnt np for tlie a<von»- CTor'l' RK llEDY*!'° de8:re " Coi'<iH or ' a lor CoksUMTTIO!* or;: I.CXLt DIbEASi. should secure tht lunre It# bottles. .> .Uir.ictious accompany e*ch bottle. 49~SOLS BY ALL MKDICIXK DIVLEJIS."IP® J. N. HARRIS & CO. (Lliitei), Prop'rj,' CINCINNATI. OHIO. J JONES HE PAYSthe FREIGHT a Too Wagon Nr» IM. - ft ti. • /#. iron I. St» el K and Beam B* Tare Bt •etion tt:i« paner and wwren io«s or BUMAHTM. . BIN(JHA.ItTON, N. T» Ttao's Remedy for Catarrh la tk* Beat. Eaalcal to Uae, and Cbaapeat. CATARRH Also rood for Cold in tbe Head, Headache, Hay Fever, Ac. SO canto. "Judging from its effect# in my caee.Pino't Remedy for Catarrh ia ' Excelaior.'H. D. KXOWLTOM, Hol land, New York. Plso'n Itemed? for Catarrh Is tha |H Beet. Easiest to Use. and Cheapest. CATARRH Also eond for Cold In the Head, Hettdadbe, Hay Fever, <tr. 60 ceuta. "1'ISO'K Remedy for Catarrh gave me almost imoie- niate relief.'-- F. E. BRAIKKHD. Audtilou, Iowa. Pirn's Remedy for Catarrh It the Best, Easii»t to Use, and Cheapest. iJC ATA R R H Alio Rood for Cold In the Head, Hcadai lie, Hay Fever, <to. SO cents. "I'iRo's Remedy for Caturrh is just the medicine I have been looking for."--W. OUTON', Maysville, Ky. Piso's Remedy for Catanfe It the H| Beet. Easiest to Use, and Cheapest. H CATARRH Also good for Cold In the Head, Headaclie, Hay Fever, Ac. 10 cents. "Pisn'n Remedy for Catarrh has done me more Rood L than anything 1 ever tried."--Miss R. A. STODLXT, ' Cornwall Bridge, Conn. Pirn's Remedy for CWurk ti (he H Beet. Easiest to Use, and Chsapeat. CATARRH _Al»o good for Cold In the Head, Headache, Hay Verer, Ae. tOoente. "Piso's Remedy for Catarrh'is producing favorable results."--GEO. W. WITH AM, PhiladelphtaTPa. Piso's Remedy for Cfctarrh is tfee IB Beet, Easiest to Use, and Cheapest. CATARRH Also rood for Cold In tbe Head, leadacbe, Hay Fsrer, Ac. (0 cents. LIQUID GLUE " MENDS EVERYTHING Wood, leather. Paper. Ivorr (3 la China, Furniture, Bric-u-Hrac, JEC. ! Strong as Iron, Sclid as A &ock> iTho total quantity during th# [past tive yesr* nmount«M to over |BOT«^^MLLS-?SOBV TT. 9 All dealers run sell it. Awarded 'Pronounced Strongest (Slue knows . Send dealer's card and 10c. postage WBtUDS BO Atld. n (or sample can FREE by mail. _BUI>SLACIMU.-T(;O. Gloucester.Maaft MBV<ft6VllAU«l lWlifMSB 111 IDKBILITIWfEBILEJUP DECAl A Life Experience. Remarkable and Quick cures. Trial Packages. Send Btamp for sealed particulars. Address Dr. WARD A CO. Louisiana, Mo. N i:R V O 1,J S' )EBinrATED~m You aro allowed a frtr trial uf thirty day* oi the ?<>*» nae of Dr. DVC'H Celebrated Voltaic B it with Electrte i Kuspennory Appliances, tor the speedy relief and pet* •!:&«* manent cure of Xervou* Pebility. Impaired TttatUf. A"JV and ill kindred trru leu. A'so for many other di*» -" 4 ? eatits Compu te restoration to He ilth and Vigor v- guaranteed. No risk is incurred. Illustrated pam phlet. in nettled envelope, msil' d tree, by addressing Vol.1 AH' Kl.t.T CO., Marshall, Mirlii^n. CONSUMPTION. I haveapotltlveramedjfortheabovedlaeaM-.bylu , a*o th.iu-an-iof ea»e»ol tbe word kind and of ion* SlAndinif h&veJ>©oiicure<l. ImtoM. .oatrnn^is ni falsa la !:< I wl 1 sand TWO B0XTl.i:S F&BS. tegcther wi; n a VA l.r* B1.K T BE ATM* oa 1 hie dlsesse ISaujaaCcror. 41tj«|ir'»nndr O.nddr u. BB. V. A. 6LOC UM. Ut rsarlSt.. K«w Terfe. CORES Coueh time HMgfrWfil aw.u. Xo. 11-M - "^yHKN In WKITING TO ADTKRTISERt ». pleaae aay yon nw the adverti»t-tues this paper. um bv simm ALWATB CtTRABLS BT trsora MEXICAir MUSTANG LINIMENT.'- OF HUMAN FLKSH. RkeusHaiiam, Ban* and Scalda, Stlnsa and Bites, Cats and Bruises, Bpralns «Sc fititchea, Cestractcd Xlldr*, SttflT Joints* Hack ache, Xraptions. Frost Bites* Of Scratches. ft Serea and Spavin, Cracks* Screw Worm, <*•»* Foot Rot. Hoof AiU Lameaeas, j Swinny, F«IB<«%> 3 Sprains, Bttail% S«ra Fsefc SdfktMb * sadaU external diseases, andereiyhiaMrseeiiM^ Ctor geSaral use tn family, stable and stoek-yar&Mi TBS BEST OF ALL LINIMENTS