f » g ^ w J -* #wl' \'",v -* H*-"" •-.*-* •». > Mr* jaiTin ^CKMM, an; aoa, it i Kettint tM4j for • campaign ttoMhM iid gri«lie«LYdu h»re boaa nading Ml)tnng Dan," "Ik* the IndlasHStajar," "OOL the Griwslr- KiUer,* and other exiting and tiqa* fol atone*, intended to make a boj di»- aatyfied with humdrum life, and your aiad ia made up to go Weak Yon must have an outfit* That can be got vhile waiting for aprim? to opeiu One reason why so many boy-hnr.ters make a failure is because they econo mize too much in the outfit Don't be •ting yia buying guns. It will be all the better if you hare a Spencer carbine and a double-barreled shotgun to go with you? Winchester. Suppose you eame suddenly upon a band of eighteen Apaehe warriors. You oould only kill sixteen of them with your Winchester and two would be left to ride off and alarm the tribe. By having some extra guns along you are sure of the whole crowd, and the tribe won't get onto you. And don't scrimp on bowie-knives. It would be an almost fatal mistake to start out with only two. Buy four, at the least. They are for use at close quarters with grizzlies. Of course one oowie is enough to kill one bear with, but you may be attacked by four bears at once, and four knives would then be in demand. If you don't get but three bowies make up the deficiency with a Spanish stiletto or a Moorish dagger. It will come in handy, not only in a dose fight, but to pick your teeth with at the camp-tire. As for dress, get the fringed buck skin, a coon-skin cap and regular moc- oasins. Such things as shirts, collars, caffs, or hankerchiefs would bo only waste luggage. If you should appear in Miles City with a collar on it would give you away at once. Nobody would suspect that you were the Young Ter ror from the East who was aching for a chance to tie a knot in a grizzly bear's tail. You should take at least 200 pounds of ammunition. You may be corralled somewhere in the Bocky Mountains by 400 fierce and determined Indians, and you don't want to lose your scalp for the want of a few extra cartridges. All the provisions needed is a sack of jerked buffalo meat It doesn't make the least bit of difference whether the buffalo was jerked off his feet over a precipice, or head-over-heels. If the meat is a little fly-blown it will add to your dignity as a hunter. You can chew plug tobacco or not, jast as you feel about it, but it would be wisest to do so. All the champion Terrors chew •] large quantities, and the juice comes \0, handy to spit into a rattlesnakes' eye. I wouldn't take a horse if I were you. He would be a great deal of trouble to • take care of, and most of your hunting will be in a rough country. The true Terror has always gone a-foot and al ways will. Anybody on horsebaok can . make up faces at a grizzly and gallop off out of reach. I should scalp every Indian I shot. It not only looks more business-like to do so, but that's what you've got a scalping knife for, and if you can get about 200 scalp locks you ean make the nicest door mat you ever saw. It doesn't hurt a dead Indian a bit to scalp him, and if you don't take it it will go to waste. « As to tl# best way of killing an In dian I shall not pretend, to advise. Some boys prefer to shoot him, and others believe in sticking him with a knife. If yon can catch hini in a deep gorge yon might drop a big bowlder down on his head. Another way is to catch him by the foot with a lasso and drag him over the earth until his spinal column is worn down to a tooth-pick. In any event the fun will be all on your side. It's a little different with the grizzly bear. He won't be quite so terror- stricken over your sudden appearance, being built on a different plan. You expect some show of resistance, how ever, that you may have opportunity to show your plrfftk. Some of these pale- laced, weak-kneed boys hold a grizzly . off at long range and fill him up with bullets, but yo'i will never sea their wood-cuts in a dime novel. The true Terror will wind his Mexican serapo ' %arouud his left arm, hold it out for the bear to chew on, and, while the beast is busy getting a rnaal, put the bowie- knife into him to the lioart. You will be a trifle nervous with your first bear, but after that it will be as eas/ as climbing a fence. The claws should be separated from the skin and sold in a different lot The latest quotation on bears claws is $16 par bushel, and if you can't average more than two bush els per day you will still make a good ^,jttting.of it--AL Quad, Detroit Free | The Time It Takes to Think. We can determine the interval be tween the production of some external change which excites mental processes and a movement mado after these pro- oesses have taken place. Thus, if peo ple join hands in a circle, and one of them. A, presses the hand of hui neigh bor, B, and as soon as possible after ward, the hand of C, and so on ronnd and round, the second pressure will be felt by each of the persons at an inter val after the first, the time depending on the number of people in tke circle. After the hand of one of the persons lias been pressed an interval, very nearly constant in length, passes before £ he can press the hand of his neighbor. This interval, which we may call the reaction time, is made up of a number of factors. A period elapses before the pressure is changed into a nervous * message or impulse. This time is very short in the case of touch; but liglit working on the retina seems to effect <&cmical changes in it, and these take up some little time, probably 1-uO second. After a nervous impulse has been generated it moves along the nerve and spinal cord to the brain, not traveling with immense rapidity like light, bat at the rate of au express train. In the brain it must move on to a center having to do with sensation, where changes are brought about through which a further impulse is sent on to a center having to do with motion, and a motor impulse having been prepared there is sent down to the hand. Another pause, 1-200 to 1-100 second now occurs, while the mus cle is being excited, after which the fingers are contracted and the reaction is complete. The entire time required is usually from 1-10 to 1-5 second. The reaction varies in length with different individuals and for the several senses, but as long as the conditions remain the same the times.are very constant, only varying a few thousandths of a second from each othec. One may won der how it is possible to measure such short times and with such great accu racy. It wotild not be euy if we had not the aid of electricity, btit when it is called to mind that a movement made in London is almost instantaeonsly reg istered in fidinburg, it will not seem in- ft thowndth of a seeoad the sartftat* stimulus is prolooed and the in- a movement is made. The time between these two events can red by letting a tuning fork write on a revolving drum. The toning fork can Ije regulated to vibrate with great exactness, say 500 times a seeoind; it writes a wavy line on the drum, each undulation long enough to be divided into twenty equal parts, and thus time can be measured to the ten-thousandth of a second.--Nineteenth Century. Washington Society. The executive circle of which the President and his wife are the center, regulates the revolntion of all the oth ers. When the great circle begins to revolve on New Year's day, with the White House reception, the little wheels adjust their cogs to move with the gre^t one while the season lasts. And so there are Cabinet days, Justices' days, days for Senators and Represen tatives. for army and navy people, and for subordinate lofflcers in the civil service. The circle that has the Justices of Supreme Court for a center is not lack ing in the dignity of the court Hold ing their places for life, the justices are serene, with a tendency to exclusive- ness, indiffarent to the concern elective officers feel about the impressions they make. Questions of precedence dis tress them not Their placa is undis puted. Even the junior clerks in the department of state concede that. The army and navy peopfc speak of themselves as a circle. But there are wheels within wheels even here. If there is anything like an aristocratic feeling iu Washington society, the stranger will fancy that he detects it fir3t when he comes in contact with the uniformed employes of the Govern ment--those who serve it in the army and in the navy. But the land soldier has a better opinion of himself than he has of the sea soldier. The military academy looks askance at the ambitious man who has fought, his way to offi cial and social distinction. The naval officer of the line, like his brother line officer of the army, regards the staff with distrust These causes of rivalry sometimes add piquancy to the small talk of the army and navy circle. One hears of a diplomatic cirole, but there is soarcely a social circle of diplo matic representatives. The diplomatic people are not gregarious. Most of the representatives of foreign countries cultivate society in all the circles and some of them more successfully thsn others. The Chinese minister, who cannot speak English, but who has a long purse and gives superb entertain ments, is very popular. The British minister's "list" is smaller than that of the Chinese minister, but his recep tions are apt to be freer from disorder. Some of the attaches of the legation in "society" betray a fondness for the lunch table, and a zeal in reaching it, that sometimes awakens surprise in the untutored western breast If it were not European it would be voted rude. As it is, it is only strange. Senators and Representatives in Congress, have each their ciablo, but they are found in all other circles. They are the con trollers of the purse. The district people cultivate them, for upon the generosity of the Senate and House de pends the development of the beauty that attracts more btrangers to the city year by year.--25. G. Bunnell, in the Epoch. The BnsfUak Crteketarnt lakeratan. Wellington said that Waterloo was won on tfie crickiet-field of Eton. He referred to the gallantry of his officers, mauy of whom had been trained by the games and sports of that famous schooL An illustration of the effect of such training in developing a man's limbs and wind wa3 given at Inkerman, one of the most stubbornly fought battles of the Crimean war: A young officer who had learned at Eton not much from books but a good deal from its sports, had hot work on that eventful night His sergeant fell at his side. Seizing the dead man's rifle, he fired it, emptied his own re volver, drove his sword through a Rus sian officer, was surrounded and made prisoner. While going to the rear in oharge of two stalwart Russians, he looked at their long coats and said to himself: "They can't run." Watching his opportunity, he knocked one soldier heels over head, threw the other by a wrestler's trick into the mud, and took to his heels. Before his gnardians Ware on their legs and could fire he had got over a good piece of ground. A Russian lancer made at him; he ran as if leading an Eton foot-race and cleared a good-sized fence. Thelanoer cleared it after him, and with lance fixed pressed the fugitive hard. A swollen brook, running fiercely, barred his way. It was seventeen feet wide, but the old Etonian had won the "long jump" when at school, having cleared nineteen feet over Chalvey ditch. He now jumped the brook; the lanoer refased to follow, aud the officer ran l>ack into the English lines. "Hurrah for Eton!" he shouted, as a school-fellow shook his hand--recalling the school where he had learned to shoot, to fence, the art of boxing, the wrestling dodge, the high jump, the long jump, and the use of hi# jagg- -- Youth's Companion. < Education of Women. '*• Ink and paper to a vast amount and no contemptible mass of gray-matter continue to be daily consumed" in dis cussing the amount of book-learning it is proper to administer to girls. It is a worthy topic, and vociferations about it make as good copy as most other dis cussions, but it is amusing to notice tbe propensity of most writers who deal with the subject to generalize, as though girls were receptacles which would hold so much learning, which may or may not bo emptied into them according as a sound policy dictates. When you come down from the gen eral to the particular. Life suspects that few parents have much dfficulty in deciding how much their daughters shall learn. There are practical con siderations that govern these matters, health, the capacity of the parent to pay for schooling, and, more than any thing, the appetite of the girl for learn ing. The idea that girls are not to learn too much is funny. It is as if the horsemen discussed whether mares should be allowed to trot faster than 2:20. If the mare can trot in 2:15, and gets a chance to show her speed, let lifer out, by all means. There is no special wisdom in cramping her. But, if the filly belongs to the three-minute class, don't try to crowd her. Three- minute mares are mighty convenient to have, and it is folly, and wicked be- sides, to break them down by urging them too far. Give the young women room accord ing to their strength and speed. That is as near to a general rule as you can oame.-->i«ift ,>, „ - >• • f . ... v, , '• * ViSb.s: *1 rf..iE2j*L3l. Li-* WAYS OF «r the ruHimn Wk® OHWNt ttwlMtfltll «Mll ABBOrttMli ' [Contemporary Baview.] The Afghans have a noble maxim, worthy of any stoic: "If thou hast, Mtfif thou hast not, die." Unfortu nately, they do not live up to it, end in practice it becomes; "If thou hast, eat; if thou hast not, take." The ideal of a man is to live upon, his neighbor. The Afridis of the Khaiber pass lived for centuries upon the plunder of the caravans, till the British Government enlisted these hereditary robbers. as regular gendarmes and compounded for their right of plunder by a regular annuity. The Gnilzais, who are just now making life rather uneasy to the emir, proudly interpret their name as "son of robber," and live according to the etymology. When a child is born his mother bores a hole through the mud wall of the hut, and makes it pass through, saying: "Ghal zai--be a good robber, my child." The Kash miris, who were for seventy years un der the Afghan yoke, have described in one line the morals of those strict est among Mussulmans and worst among plnnderers: "To pray is piety (garz), to prey is duty (farz)." In the British territory, though the idea of law and order has made remarkable progress, and people who formerly were wont to settle their quarrels according to the prescriptions of the Nangi Pukhtana, are not seldom willing to have them brought t > Kacli- ehri, yet the Klept is still a national hero and a favorite subject with popu lar poets. One died three or four years ago whose name is still ou the lips of all. This is the story as it was told to me: Nairn Shah was born near Cherat, a military station in the~Khatak Mountains. His brother was insulted by the Sikh Phul Singh, who was kotval or chief of the police station at Naushehra, an important cantonment on the Cabal River, with two regi ments. He lodged a complaint with the British commandant; the complaint was discarded; then he applied for justice to his brother. Nairn Shah wrote to the kotval, saying: "You have harmed my brother, I will harm you." The kotval and the general laughed; but on the same night Nairn Shah broke into the town with 100 men, looted it, entered the kotvali, sat as a judge and had time to have one of his enemies sentenced and shot. The noise awakens the commandant, who arrives from the distant cantonment just in time to see him fleeiug down the river. He pursues him there for hours in vain. "Nairn Shah was not a fish to1 hide himself in the river." He was a man of the mountain, and was already safe in his Khatak den while they were still hunting him down the river. Once upon a time N dm Shah met the "Gen. Sab." The General was one of his great admirers; he said to him: "Willyou enter my service?" "With pleasure,* was the answer; "but you must first put to death the kotval of Naushehra." The General objectedto the condi tion, and the negotiation was stopped; but he sent him as a token of esteem, a gun, a sword, a pistol, 200 rupees, and a milch cow. Nairn Shah was touched with the proceedings; but this did not prevent his slaughtering an entire picket at Chahkot; he retired peace fully. carrying with him some twenty Martini gans--nuite a fortune for a poor Afghan robber. The Government at last hal recourse to the unfailing 'method; it put a prize of 3,009 rupees on his head. Maim Shah, taken by surprise while asleep at Eohi, was wounded to death before he c^uld do- lend himself. '•' > A Story About Sunset CtaU Although nearlv CO years of age, "Sunset" Cox is still nearly as jolly as he used to be. He has been a quarter of a century in the lower House of Con- .gress, and in his timo has been a little wildj and ne?d®d more fuji and excite ment than his own wticiems and the debates of the House afforded him. But he has changed his habits in this re spect, and is taking much better care, of his health than he used to da Cox married a comely woman with a hand some fortune, and never likes to do anything to displease her. He has no children and is wrapped up in those domestic relations which his wife alone affords him. But he used to want to have a good time, away from the re straining influences of domestio mat ters, about once a week. "Cox used to get out of his house at night by a very novel and character istic excuse," said one of his old chums. "When be intended to make a night of it he would invariably go home at an early hour, dress himself in his slippers and smoking coat, crawl well down into a comfortable chair, draw himself up in front of the grate, read to his wife, and congratulate himself in audi ble tones on his ability to get away from the cares of public life. He gen erally expressed himself as not feeling first-rate and crawled into bed before 11 o'clock. About midnight the orowd down at the club, who were to enjoy the society of the funny statesman, as per arrange ment, would send a delegate tc Cox's residence, He would rap gently on the door, and the statesman would com plain bitterly at being disturbed, al though lie hal been resting with one eye open and his mind bent on the good time in waiting. He generally felt too badly to go to the door and Mrs. Cox would kindly consent to go her self! The delegate from the crowd always wore a very serious look, and spoke in a tone of great importance and appre hension. He would tell Mrs Cox there was a carcus on hand at which her hus band was to preside. He always dep recated the fact that the business of the caucus could not proceed unless her husband was there, and no one could conduct the proceedings without the information he carried in his head. Cox would first hear this statement and would groan like a boy who had gorged himself with green apples. When Mrs. Cox returned to the bed and informed him of what was wanted lie appeared to be in the greatest ag ony, and would threaten to resign his place in Congress if this thing kept up. Then he would go to the door with Mrs. Cox and beg like a good fellow to be let off. But the messenger would be immovable, and would declare that his absence from the caucus would en tail untold inconvenience. Then Cox would dress himself, and in going out of the house would express consider able discomfiture in suppressing his laughter over the accomplished man ner in which the scheme was worked When he returned to the house in time for breakfast next day his prolonged absence would always be on account of the lateness of the hour at which the caucus adjourned and his dislike to awaken the good housewife."--Chicago Herald. . ..... . DECUNKD with thanks--An objeo- tfottftbla dish at taMpb • •< xifci'. J5TSTT. ft Wat iMhi* ffca jrmac ma Ml M! Afriiai had painted a wWw at Ma *B* (Ma'tkaow it waa Madadl" We fttaa hear it atatod that a man ts not re fer what ijMS sot know, lb* kaowtelfte, ana therefore i who exctuas cr>ms by had only known" ku often be«n in uafSrtoaate maa's apology for HBM «TI1 uakaowtafty wrought, but in a nutter or gaaasal tuterort--as, for inataaoo, that lauda num is a »otaaa, that naphtha is a deadly ox- plooiTQ, that tha blood i» heari.y chmrg«d witti a winter's accumulations of the waote of Ura Byatem--41 is oaa's duty to know tho fact tn i tuo oonaequonoM thsraof. Our good oil grandmother* know, for iastanoa, that tho opening of apriag was the mo«t perilotu pe riod of tho year. Why? Beeauae then the blood stream is Blugeish and chilled by the cold weather, and if not thinned a goad deal and made to flow quickly aad healthfully through the arteries and rein a, it is impoeaibie to have gooi viror the raat of tbe year. Hene\ without moeptioa, what ia known aa Waraer'a Log Cabin 8arl aaparilla, waa plentifully made and religious ly given to every member of the family regu larly through March, April, Mav aud June. It is a matter of record that this prudential preventive and restorative custom savad many a flt of stcknes*. prolonged life aad happiness to a vigiroua old age, and did away with heavy medical expenditures. Mm. Maggie Kerchwal, Lexington, Ky., oaed Warner's Log Cabin Haraaparilia "for nervous aiok headache, of which 1 bad been a sufferer for yean. It lias been a great benefit to ma" Captain Hugh Harkiue, 1114 South Fifteenth atreet, Philadelphia, Pa., sava "it purified my blood and removed the b otches from my akin." Mrs. Aarea Smith, Top ton, Berks County, P*., aaya she "was entirely cured of a Bltiu disease of the worst kind," by Lo^ Cabin Sareaparilla. Bad akin iudicatea a very bad condition of the blood. If you would live and ba well, go to your drug^i^t to-day and get Warner's Log Cabin K&rsaparilla, and take no other -- thore'a A FlU 4a TtaSy Sftvc^iriae t XfePfaroaPs ftaasaat rwgative Fallete are Itfva, A few of prrraative as well, i these *little OiaaK" taken at tht tUht tiwv. with little expanse and no iuooav«nieno% wiu accomplish what many dollar* and mush aacrifioe of time will fail to do after Diaaase onoe hold* you w*th M* iron grasp. Consti pation relieved, the Liver regulated, the Blood purified, will fortify against fevers and all ooatagioua diaeaaee. Persona intending tray*!, chauging diet water, aad oUdato, wifi find invaluable Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Purga tive Pallets In vials convenient to carry. "I am your views.** as the constable said when he levied on a stereosoopib Shew.--Texas Sifting*. „ I» a* so-calle I remedies have fails], Dr. Sage's Catarrh Itemedy cures THE statement that " All's fair la lovs" Is repudiated by the brunettes. Tfco People of Lain Coantjr W1M with IxcltnaMt Over Uw Dlaeawy af the ®|kth Wonder of Use World. T. Heffernan, Baldwin, Mich.: I have had rheumatism ail over my body M*<1 limbs for two ywn. H&va dooUred with K>me of the most eminent physiciana ia Grand Rapida; alao apent three months in the Reed City Hospital; during the time I waa unable to go up or down stairs moat of the time. I suffered terribly. By yonr rftfvice I began If*1?* H'bbard'a Rheumatic Syrup, and from the firat itaeemed to touch every place in my body, affecting my whole system. I at once began t3 improve; have taken four bottles and am entirely cured I believe it to be the greatest medicine ia the world for a family CHA*LBS BOWK. July 23, 1887. Every word of the above Is true, and the man is aever dona talking .about vonr medi cine and the wonderful cure it has effected, lours respectfully, T. HEFKKRNAN. 'M*/- )>"•** Hood's 8arsaparllla d tar aB translate. $1; atztorfS. PraeareS far O.L HOOD ft 00, ApoOtacertea, Lowell. Maaa. IOO Doses One Dollar and blood Kaw, reader. Kwi it. Take * Tea vflt Sad a •* IS teaspooafnla. Hr wu wffl Aad that Ike of different agee Is leas Thna tbe eTidtnoe of economy of Hood'e SaraaEanflla a iianrlriaHS SSft aaaaaweraUe. "ftoeltas 1 antra Id and dizzy, kaving aoappeMS Mad ao ambition to work, I took Hood's SartBsaaflfe. wflk - - -iS' the beat result*. As a health tavlsoaaler jMl la* ceneral debility I think it antwrlor to aDytbf&jr alee * A. A. Kino. Uttca. N. Y. •My wife aad myself were both generally mat down. Hood's Sarsaparilla brenuM aa out ef teat tired feeling, and made na feel Uke ywa^ SeSSfe again, it l.a< done mora forna than all oiharaseAt. riaaa together.' Ricaaao 11m anaaij iaaagkb., ../f .fcoag bland. N.Y. Hood's 8arsaparllla Bold by all droggiata. «1; aizfor «S. ftrependealr ky C. I. BpOD S 00„ Apo&ecarim, LoweB. Maa* IOO Doses One Dollar , , Ax o'd colored minister invariably b«- nothiiiR liko it or as j»ood--and completely | his sermons with this sentono; renovate your impaired system with this ann- --- pie, old-fashioned preparation of roots aud herbs. Warner, who wakes tho famous Sare Care, put* it up, and that is a guarantee of excel lences all over th# known world. Take it yourself and give it to tho other meuilvrB of the family, including the children. You will be astonished at its health-giving and iife- prolouging powers. We say this editoria "y with perfect confidence, because we have heard pood things of it everywhere, and its eermon is basted on tho name is a guarantee that it every particular. first class in Wbtn to Feel the Sick. Except when in s stupor from exhaus tion, as sometimes occurs in typhoid fever, an invalid should not be wakened to be fe^. according to Good Iloutifkeeping. During a long sleep food should be i re- ?ared in readiness to be given at once on pmking. A convalescent ehould take some light uourishment, as a glass of warm milk tho last thing at night. Persons who are very ill should be fed in the esrly •morning, from 3 o'clock until f>. The Vowers of life are then at their lowest ebb and ought to be re-enforced. If necessary, an extra covering must be added lo the bed and a hot water bottle put to the feet. The Whole Vital Machinery Dcjtenda for the fuel, which la the origin of ita propulaory force, upon the atomoch. In that hidden alembic tho fojd undergoes tbe chem ical changes which transmute it int.) blood, from which t'ae system draws tne material that reimburses it for ita daily loasos of tissue. These, of course,greatly augmented in disease. If the r to mac ti, therefore, is weak- eiiad or ditoriiered, ttio system is deprive 1 of austou&uce. Hosteler's Htomach B.tc r» cuu be relied upou to facilitate ana retievr diges tion wh -n that function line been interrupted by weakness of the stomach, liiliousnes*, or a diversion of the bile from ita proper channel, wliioh causes constipation, ia al<w> remedied by it. Heartburn, wind on tha stomach, tick headache, fur upou tho tongue, and it'n r aymptoina of stomach and liver disorder, it speedily removes Malarial complaints of every sort, Kidney and bladder trouble-*, constipate n. rljeuwatiaai. and neurtliaa yield when it ts uaed regularly aud persistently. Protect 1he Baby'n E Let fhe transitions--in early n --from darkness to light, from objects sear at hand to those at n distance, or vice versa, be graduul, tuid screen the tender orb4, whenever it is pof-s ble, from the direct rays of any brightly illumined body. "Yes," said Algernon Tracy <o the young lady wilh whom he was chatting, "it in use less to complain at what can't be helped. Man proposes and God disposes." "As to the latter part of the remark," she replied, "I'm not prepared to epi nk, but as to the first part I can only Bay that sotm some don't."--Merchant Trawler. k Woman's Confcsjion. % "Do you know, Mary, I once actually con templated suicide?" "Xou horrify me, Mra. B. Tell me about ii* "1 was suffering front ctaronio weakness. I believed myself the mo-ft unhappv woman in the world. I looked ten years older than 1 really was, and 1 felt twenty. Lifo soemad to have nothing in it Worth liv.ng for." "I have * experienced all those symptoms myself. Well?" "Well, I was saved at the eleventh hour from the com mission of a deed which I shudder to think of. A friend advised ma to take Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. I did so. In an in- crcdiblv short time I felt like a new being. Tho 'Prescription' cured me, and 1 owe Dr. Pieroe a debt of gratitude which I can never repay.* HE (ardently)--RD give a thousand mill ions to win yonr love, Adelaide. She- Cash? SOMETHING WORTH READING. "Brethren, mv following text." "Consumption Can Be Cured.** Dr. J. 8. COMBS, Owensville, Ohio, have givon IScott's Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil with Uypophosphites to four patients with better Jesuits than seemed possible with any remedy. All wero hereditary asm of Lung disease, and advanced to that stage when Coughs, pain in the chest, frequent breath ing, frequent pulse, fever and Emaciation. All these cases have increased in weight from 16 to 28 lbs., and are j.ot now neediu any medicine." W NOAH'S voyage is scarcely mors famous I than the widow s creuse.--Texas Siftings. NuflVrcrn from troughs, Sore Throat, etc., should try "/irown'a Bron chial Tro'hes* a simple but sure remedy. Hold only in ooxrs. I'rica cts. 13M BEWABB Wm tta alMfcaf Tkta •» la a* A LOST HlMafts tkaa tMeamctt««w«rhiml'rf Ua aacaM •o*wnine«ti*t?t> tV«tkh*att,tWfcariktlltaa*M tka M award yea Saw »• aharaa ft* aaa af% ttOiacMb. If 1 MT1>SWKSTMA<SI|}MK,M4LKDIITH|LIAEK. IFWT4*NL Fatally JHTUL la feet, acwBflatatuany pipar aa4 thanM tala amy AMtteaa' clmm. Nawa aad addranoi cf wlann «<U ka MUUiad la th. i«nr, Pattfrtwa, M Sarfsat Sqmr*, HartrblU, Mwa., 950, Mra. M. A. r.wi.*, 11 DUbl. St.. PaatBTy, Cp»« . t ii, W. A. Howe, HunWiil., Ala., tia, Conf1*1* Cwaa«rtU»a---it am Me.far « frtatak, alanaUy tllmant* IS ] wU* atiflaal atari*, maty |-- taa, alanat Ith atfiaal iUiMlkim aa wwlf»a anil-- bli PRIZE WINNERSEfe Comrtoi* fct 1 A CMmne* COTNT, af «tlx i 5 « aad verify ourVf&UnMata. Tfce \ •cot for & ct*. Writ® to the Winners, * sunp for r*pi?» •w&rued absolutely ftaa. You rereira the worth of your money So tbe rnvtr seat. For aa outUy of Wcaste yan mity a t a a c * . S U u n p - i U k e a I f y o u c a a n o t g e V a f o r t * ! N o t e . T h e C b i m n f t y ^ D U T b f f l f T B f t t . 1 vaX Wmai 0 1 PISH <ma fanataa aaltn upa« with tka aboTtl HUBI MARK. LICKER ErerMaie. . Don't waste yonr money on a f«m or rubber ecat. Tha FISH ItRAKO 8UCKU Is absolutely tetter and «nVlra©or, and will keep yon dir In tha hardaat atona Ask for tlia"KISH BRAND" aucasaantttakano other. If rU'i ha "rim aiuirp". tend forde^crlmivaratolo pwSi>w>a^«rjia A COMELY figure in a woman has its charms. But it is the incomely figure that influences the wife-huntcr. LOOK YOUNG, prevent tendency to wrinkles or agfitig of th) skin by using IxiUKtLLlOm. Preserves a youthful, plnni'\freah couilition of the fcftturosL A transparent alabaster akin, 91. Druggists orexp. E. K Wells, Jersey City, N.J. Consumption Sifrely Cared. To the Editor: -l'ieaae inform yonr rea'lara that 1 have a positive remedy fair tbe above- n.insed (li8ea««. By ita timely UHO thousands of liopeler.s casea have been permanently cured. I ahall be (jlmi to goud two bottles of my remedy PUKE to any of your readers who have consump tion if tney will aond me their Kxpreaa and P. O. addreaa. Knsp'>ctfnllv, T. A. 81.0CUM. M. C.. 1SI Peart St.. N. Y. TOUGH ON 1TCIT Ointmmt cnros Skis Hu mors. Pim pie-*, Flesh Worms, It 112 Worm, Tetter, Salt Mi-urn, Frosted Fe>t, Chilblain*, Itch, Ivy Poison, Barber's Itch, Sjald head,Eczema fiOa Druggists or mail. El S. Wells, Jersey City, N. J. Farmers and othera who have a little leisure time for the nest few months will find it their interest to write to 15. !•'. Johnson & Co., of Rich mond, whose advertisement appears in another column. Thfty offer groat inducements toper- sons to work for them all or part of their tuuei ROUGH ON PILESL Quick, complete enre. BOc. BUCIIU-I'AIBA, Great Kidney Itemedy. |L WELLS' HEALTH liENEWEK for weak men. WELLS' HAIR BALSAM. If gray, gradually restores oolor; ologaut tonic dressiug. 50a GOLD la worth $ v00 per pound. Pettit's Eye Salve but is sold at 25 cents a box by dealers. IUIITION THIS rAPKR •«> •lira, t» .a.avruaaa. PE2TSX02TS H/SldAt?y?W^angt<»r MENTION THIS PAFKK raaa vimna to soti "OUR DEPORTMENT." - That rraud baok, over 470,009 copies sold and tha Sanaa* continue*. LIBERAL TERMS t* aetata r. B. P1CKBKSON A CO., Detroit, >11 ck. PiSQ'S CURE FOR CONSUMPTION ABfiuaiATzs: Corroborative and Conclusive Testimony. Lowall, Kus., Jaly 1,1MT. SaatWwaa :--Mr. tawti Sanala has J art aalUS •pan me, aad iibrni aia that tha boy Oris lotti- -i aaa, who waa a poor crlppla as eratchaa, aaA wat earai by St. Jacoba Oil la 1811; tba cars bat raailuiil pamanaat. Tba younu naa baa boaa aad ia aaw at work at manual labor; tha aaat cortaialy prevaj tha etteacjr of St. Jacob* OIL OS. SEO. 0. OSGOOD, It. D. Sirfd by Druggists and Jkaltn Everywhere. t*he Charles A. VotralarCo., RiHn,,M. Xxtract from tbe New York World--A Moat Wonderful Remedy, "NEW YOEK. March 23, 188a t have been a sufferer from iienrouanesa and nervous prostration for years, und have tried mjuiy tniiigs, but without tlieJenst good. Uearii.K no rniioi about Dr. (iieeut 's Nervura Nirv. Touic fmui ml trieiids »ud others whom it cured, 1 at last deride! to take it. Its effects are really almost magical, tor it immediate y takes awav that nervous, restless, an<l weak feeling or sense ot eihaustioa, and rcitores one to a perfect condition ot health. It is a great boon and a wonderful lilessinic to nervous people. "Lucxit WEENEB." This wonderful remedy, WHOSO praise ia upon everybody's lipa, must be the most mar velous in ita curative powers of any remedy ever discovered We hear every day of re markable cures of nervousness, ferrous weakness, exhaustion, paralysis, or other nervous diseases effected by this great nerve tonic and restorative. Here a person rescued from the grave, aa waa Mrs. Aunie JDonovan, of Attawaugan, Conn.; there a case saved from that terrible disease, insanity, as was Mr. W. C. Miles, of 40 Blue Hill avenue, Bos ton, Ma?& ; again, cures of paralysis of years' •tauding, like that of Mr. Alexander Horn, of the Marine Asylum, Philadelphia, Pa., who had not been able to walk before for years; or restoration from the severest neuralgia and rheumatism, like the case of Mr. James Bewn, of 27 Market atreet. New York City. Cures of sleeplessness, with nervous and phyaical exhaustion, are very frequent^ the wonderful cure of Mrs. W. F. Alibe, of 19 Affleck street, Hartford, Conn., being only one among thousands. Altogether, the re markable powers of Dr. Greene's Nervura Nerve Tonic in curing all forms of nervous dissases like the above, and restoring to health sufferers from nervousness, nervous weakness, nervous debility, despondencr, de pression of mind, headache, trembling, numbness, dyspepsia, indigestion, constipa tion, the opium or chloral habit, etc., have demonstrated it to be a remedy of wonderful powers, and at times of almost miraculoua effects in curing disease. It is not to be won dered at, therefore, that drug stores every where are overwhelmed with ordors for this remarkable remedy, and it is almost imposai- ble to supply the demands from the hundreds of thousands of sufferers from nervous dis eases. All druggists keep the remedy at 91 per bottle, and its low pneo places it within the reach of all If your druggist does not have it, he will get it for you. •ROUGH ON RATS," for rata, mice, bugs 15& "BOUGH ON CATABBH." Only absolute cura 50a "BOUGH ON COBNS." Hard or soft corns 15a "JKotnn on TOOTHACHE. " Instant reliel 15a Half Bates Sooth. and Eastern II April 9th and 'iCth the Chicago and Eas Illinois Railroad (Evansville lioute) w.l' round-trip excursion tickets to all points Son ih at one fare, tickets good going on date of sale, with privilege of stopping ovar ten days at SBints south of the Ohio River. Returning, ckets will be good thirty days from date of issue. For further information addresa F. E. Scott City Pasaenger and licket Agent, 64 Clark street, Chicago, or William Hill, Gen eral Passenger and Ticket Agent, 501 First National Bank, Chicago. * • Is- afflicted with Sore Eyes, use Ok Isaac Tharrnwoji's Wstefr Druggists sell it ELY'S C.1EAM BALM IS SURE TO CURE COLD IN HEAD QUICKLY. Aptdr Balm into each nostril. :t.V BROS., SS5 Greaawlch St, W. V Uve as home Md meke*#re meaey vrtrfctagfbrsttfcMi 01 at anything el*# in fh« iNrid Kitker ni CMlljMtftt Tc*iu» rus. Ailinw, TlVI 4 Co. MS. CMilmifll HIBBARD'S RHEUMATIC SYRUP PLASTERS. No remedies known, so highly endorsed by its borne people, in the treatment of K E E P M A T I S M and oil Blood dis ease a. Cur Med- .ieal Pamphlet ' sent free on ap plication, RHEUMATIC SYRUP COMPANY, Jackson, Mich. $J5 SOU!) GOLD WITCH FREE! . Thi«»p1«adidf 'i<1 jrold, huntin^-ense waich, ia n^wsoid fof $85; fct that pticr it is the be®£ barirainin America; aotti lately it could not be puiv-iuwd f«<r tbao We Kara both la<» dtM* •ndrenta' ¥tith workB and casta of tqnal ?e!u®e ONE PKRHOV in each lot'Ality can secure ono of thaaa al^gant watches absolutely FUKK. Thea« wa tcbeamay b« depended on, do! only as scliil poid. but as staudirg- amonf th* nott perfect. rorr»ct and reliable tiraf keepers in the warld. Von •ik liowia tliit wonderful otfer puesiblt 'i' Wf answer--we want ©nt -ptrson in each locality to ke**^ ia their homaa, aad show t@ thoae who cnll, a coinpWta line o( our valuable and wry useftil SAUFLKS; THESE aamples. AS well aa Ilia watcfa, wa send ABsoi.t'TCLT ki;ek, aud after you bare kept them la rrmr home for 2 month&9 aud rhovra them to thow who maf Kara called, (hey become eufir^ly your own prtMrtr; H is pea* tibia to make tliis great effer. a^sdinf tba flUllM field VFateh and Hn© of valuable samples 2^11, ftrtlit reaaou that the showing of tba aamplea la any locality, always results in e large trad® for us; after our aamplea kavibsep hs t VnilMA aara Learn Te'emraphy bnre and we 1 tlURU IWCHa will liclp you to poo<lpositlmjs. Addrrsa An>tr!canHoHoolo( T .•lefrranhv,Mvi8»ii.Wta UKNTION THIS rtm mow vutiaa la iMMmui. to K8 m day. Hamplen worth tUV), FRFB. lines not under the horae'n leet. Write _ lire water Safety Item Holder Co., Holly, Micta ES'nON THIS FAPJUl rw mmni n *»va By rptnm mail. Foil 1>«>J Moody's N«- w Tailor 8y st iCutting. MOODY k CO.. ~~ [ON THIS FAFSR waaa wamas l RU Bncs. Bend Tidies, chine for late E. RO I - - iPeumann hand, etc., tliornutrlvlv tan free. BKYANT'H UITSINRHS AGENTS WANTED tedo, Ohio. $100 to $300 made ^•rwtfEinii' far «s. Agents preferred who can fnrninh their own borsrts aud «iv« their whole time to the bttaineaa. Spara nionirrits may be profitably employed alao. A few vacancies in lowna and rltiei. It. f. dOHN- SuN Si CO.. 1013 Main bt.. Klchuiond. Via. application fa^ST'panSfon^B of luog trouble which he had ed during hts service in the During the examination Into bll the examiner was struck with culiar exactness with which the cant recalled the very day upon he caught the cold from tha ef which his trouble was claimed to originated. "How ia it," asked 1 'that yon are se sure that yea eaij a cold on Feb. 21, 1863? Yoa ' 11 fttions Headache, labclnesa, Court I pa- on, ludiseatiAU. (Hop* Attacks,and all lerangcmenta of the stom ach and bowele, are prompt ly relieved and permanently cured bv tbe use of Dr. Pierce** Pleasant PartaliTt PalMa In cxplnrmt.ion of the remedial power of the-- Pellets over so great a variety of dlman, K may trutiitully be said that their action uataa. the system is universal, cot a flfiaad or I escapui(T their nanutivo Influence; Sold drup-^isif. "5cvnts a vi:d. ManilfacUtred at< Chemical L«tK)r«tory of WORMt'B Dl MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, Buffalo, N." "Ov. RECEIPT BOOK Aad ROtSEHOLD PHYSICIAN. The NEW " Memorial" edition, by the greatest author and ban> efactor that ever lived. B65 pages. Immense sales. niK Tarma to Aijunta. MANTTOH THIS rAFaa. F. 15. DICKKR8ON A CO., Detroit, Mich. $500SS j>'r£ ual jSaj»a»i»«ur faltk wa caacun j«a,terl ••aSinriwawillaiaUasoaahtaaoaTtBet.l |<>aa> B. a. bmauai A Oa, HmwMuj SWITZERLAND, ">• Favorite Rfndn-Voni Places of American Travalera and Tourlata: ABTH - RIGI - BAHN. -- Thia mountain railroad offers to T-turUta the moat majeotic ?>«noriima. By r»'l from Zurich or Lucerne, orl K>uta ro-n Lucerne ai;d ZouK. Circular ticketa available oy Vitzuau KiRi liail. /CONSTANCE. --Hotels and Pensions, Insel Hotel and C instanznrkof--firat-claaa, mamiifl- cent situation borJeriair Uie l*ke?^ •"•gum T^INSIEDELN. --Pjacock Hotel and Pan- XJ 8ion. H)jl.->tidid wav ou the railways; delicious air; M09 metres above tlie t-ea; celebrated < ^nirch and Monastery; post, teU'ftraph, electri.i iiijht in the house; omnibus at tlie station. K. GYIiZANNER, proprietor. r^ENEVA. --Grand Hotel de la Pair VX class. lift, electric llsht. ta FREUKBIG WEB l It Proprietor. First- Beat poaition. is offered by the era of Dr. Sage Remedy, lor _ Chronic Nasal Catarrh vhhth they cannot cure SYMPTOMS OF CATARBH.H heavy headjtche. obstruction of passages, dicebiirgcs faliins from into the throat, sometimes pro! and acrid, at others, thick, tenseioi purulent, likwd.v and putrid; tt weak, watery, end in (lamed; there' iu tbo Oiiie, deafness, hacking' or cc „ clear the throat, e*pectoi*tion of o! piatter, together with scabs lrom uleers; the Voice is changed and has n nasal twang; the tireath is offensive; smell and taste tne im paired ; there is a senpjitiori of dinhMKB, mental depression, a hacking1 eoueh and era! debility. Only a few of the above-named •ymptoma are likely to be present in any oate ease. Thoiitw:i<is of caees annually, without Bianifoeting- half of tbe above (tvnmtnm* m suit in consumption, and end Ko disease ia so common, more danjrerous, or less understood by phyaicii Ity its mild, soothinar, and healing propc Dr. SuRvj's Catarrh itemed; i^HE FALLS OF THE 1SHINE at Neu- -- bauson, near Schaffhause,.. ti c urt-ateat water fall in Knropa: rrand an I ?-tri»!ii" scenerj*. HOTE1, SCHWIRZEBDOF-deliehtfu! r m uate 1 on a tilCx- tiful hill oppoKite to and comiuaudin^«pJetiflid views of the ralla and mouutnins. One ot the larscat and most excellent Swiss hotels in Switzerland; exten sively patronized by the beat ciaaa ot Americans; church service. CASTLE OF LAUFEN.--Close to tha Falls o( the Rhine: contains a collection of oil paint-inga by oelebrated artiste; 8wisp wood carvinea: ivory work and otter articles for sale. Fromtbe Caaue and the ground belonging to it the best vlewa of the cataract are to be had. Galleriea built closo to and ahnoat over tbe toaming waters. F. WKUEN- ' Proprietor. ST. GOTHAItD The most direct, rapid, picturea<)i ful route to Italy. Express from Lucerne to Milan RAILWAY, Switzerland -- The most direct. rapid, pictureaiiue. and delight- in eight hours. Eicursions to the Bi^i bv Mountain Rfdlway from Arth station, ot the Gothard line. Throuph-proiuu sleepin: l ar* from intend to Milan; balcony carriages; aa:ety brakes. Tickets at all cor responding railway stations, aad at Cook's and Uaze'a offices. TTETLIBERG, NEAR ZURICH. --1,000 U metres: unrivaled summer resort; meat com fortable home ; pure, fresh and dry Alpine air; grand panoramic view. M ountain Hailway; Pension, «IJ0. A. LANDRY, Proprietor. ZURICH, GRAND HOTEL VICTORIA.-- MJ Orp jiite railway depot. First-claaa house; par- tieu'arJy patronized by American families; every modern comfort; elevator; moderate charges. L BOLLER k SONS, Proprietors. prietor. ^URICH.--A fine, liealthv. ., aii'l gay city, and favorite 'summer resort; a charming resi dence ; good IK M; tine promenade; excellent achools. Sleeping and parlor cars from Paris to Zurich. GENERAL INQUIRY OFFICE. -- information about Excursions and Journeys in Switzerland; the curiosities of tlie city and vicinity; schools, trade, iudustry, etc. Verbal or by It tt :r. NO we nsaally get Toandlng conatry. T~ ntim 1 was writ* (Will receive B (rr»nt lMB«atftoae<|rnil^ai^Mirotk )«caltty for a montta $A.U)Uin trade fV-«m the and trouble. This, the men remarkable aad kaowa. is made In urdcr that our valuable Huacbgll Samplaa nay be placed ai mrt whrre th*r caa be aaea, all aver Amri. ca; reader. It will lie hardly any trouble for yau toehaw them to tkeee who nay rail at ? our home, audyoartaward will be meet aatiefectorr. A poetul card,on whi'b ta wrtteaa, caata bat 1. eent, end if, nflrr you know ell, you doaet aara to go further, why no him U done. Hut If you So aendyoar addrcu at cnre.yoo rnneocur*. rRKK, txKi.csin'WS, SOLID GOLD, BLKHNU-CAST WATCH end our large, eomaletn llnoof valu able IIOI'KHOI.D #»IIF1IS. We ^yjjraayreea &«igbl,ata. Addfaee, fcrissoir kl'o., lloa STEKETEE'S DryBitters! Make your own Bitters Why pay a Dollar for a bottle of Stomach Bitters, containing more poor 'whiskey than medicine, when the undersigned will send you by mail one 4 OT. package ot ROOTS. HERBS and BERRIES, whichwill make ONE OA LLON of the beat TONIC anyone ever used. The use of this Tonic has cured INDIGESTION, DYSPEPSIA, FEVKK and AGUE; aa an appetiser none better; acts on the Kidneys and ceneral debility, and gives Tone to the Stomach; In fact I challenge all other Tonics It is far tha Tonic known. One pack age will equal one doren bottles of ordinary Bit ters sold atOao Dollar par bottla. Full directi- tions on every package. Ask yeur Druggie t for "STEKETEE'S DRYBITTHM." If your drug gist doae not keep them on sale, then sen* to tho undersigned. 1 will send eae package to any ad dress within th* U. 8, o> receipt of £&e> V. t NEURALGIA DROPS iaeluM. Address, 6 BO. O. CTMIttK, Grand Rapida, Kich. 7se STBKETKE'B Pm WORM vSmOYMM, ' t < l .-i.'.jikASif.a'ji,': Uae MoiM • iK&r. a'W* A; I CURE FITS.! When I say cure I do not mean merely to stop tnem for a time and then have them return again. I mean a radical cure. 1 have made tha diseaae oi FiTS. EPI- tJPSV or FALLING SICKNKHri a Uie-lon«r «tudy. I warrant my remedy to cure tbe worst cases. Becanae othera have failed ia no reaaon for not now reviving a cure. Bend at race for a treatise and a Free Botue o, By infallible raraedy. Giva Express and Post OfBi*. . G^JBOOT, M. CM lSIPaariBt, New York. NORTHERN PACIFIC tt LtW NICE UILROHO UIDI ff FREE Government LAND8. OrailXMSS m tam ot eau-h In Minnesota. Worth Dakota, Montana, Idaho, We»Mn«rton and Or*gg£ MHl BAB PnWIeattons with Maps ^riblngTW •epD r Ull ass* AarHcnltunU, arasing and Tim ber Laada now orwn to Settlers Sent Free. Aiklisas CHS. B. LUDOEI,1-ST! BMY BMBIMCS We make * specialty of manufao* turing Buby Carriages to sell di rect to private partlea. Toa can therefore dn better with us than with a dealer. We send car- rlajtes to all poinu within 600 railea ofChicaaoft*echarge. Mad for caialogno free. CHtS. RAISER, Mfr.) _ CietCljkHnan./tkmia CTWLea writing, mention this pap«r.-%* I prescribe and fslly S«- dorie Big U as tba only apecittc forthacartalaeaura w« bar* sold te 4 m^STbSea«,e Mdhy tedy etires tbe rasi-s of Catarrbe Mcola In the hem Coryza* and Catarrhal Headache* Sold by druggists everywhere; 80 cents. "*Tutold Agony from Catarrh.** Prof. W. HArs.Mit, the famous mesroerMk of Ithaca, N. 1'., writes: "Some ten yearsaM I suffered untold agony from chronio mad catarrh. My family physlciaii gave me up ai tncurablc, and said I must die. My ease wat such a bad one, that every day, towards mpM eot. my voi'-o would become so hoarse I douu barely speak above H whisper. In the morals# my coughing and clearing of my throat wouw almost strangle me. By the uae of Dr. SacelK Catarrh Itemedy, in three months, I was a Veil man, and the cure has been permanent." "Constantly Hawking aad 8plUla|^ THOMAS J. RUSHING, Esq., S009 Pine , St. Louis, Mo., writes: " I was a groat i from catarrh for three years. At times hardly breathe, and was constantly I and spitting, and for the last, eight . .. could not breathe through the nostrils, thought nothing could be done forme ily, I waa advSed to try Dr. Sage's Kennedy, and I ant now a well man. It to be the only sure remedy for cat manufactured, and one has only to'give tt a fair trial to experience astounding result* and a permanent cure." ~ \ . Three Bottles Cave Caiaralu ELI ROBBINS, Rtwjfan P. O., OhftnMa (h> Pa., says: ">ly daughter bad catarrh whef she wus Ave years old. very badly. I saw Ik% Sage's Catarrh Remedy advertised, and pn cured a bottle for her, and eooa saw tbat; helped her; a third bottle effected a per Bent cure. She is now eighteen years Old i sound and hearty." i'Ola r/if-L.. v.,.,. WB,! I Sure relief <M|n| 1. trrieeaSra-t.awlOwla^ XOebyma; qptHSfrs i'0 Well Drills | FOR CVCRY PUHI*O«K ? SOLDONTRUL* -V ttal tanrl logos' paKtealar*. [ MannfactuMd hr GOULDS ft MISTIHf 167 A IM LAKE^rr. : OglOAQO,. TT.T.raim^ - ^ f4,< " > HMraifla. Catarrh, Back, 8t» Jtiats, Sprain, M ffM. Woeate, 0M Sara* mt 1 w* claim for this nlault rallevas tha SAS^T C.JT.IT. VUNW TO