sf"'-'4"' #/ I* ha^e worshipped beanty Beheld a womsji't face tonight; H>at thrilled my being Into song aAd<I touched my eoul with sudden light; -Jra yet, perchance, had you been there *ou scarcely would have called it fair. Gray eyes that bold a snbtleehade Of sadnesss that was hatf-expressed, Ifos that for laughter was not made-- l'erhape for pain's white finger pressed To patient silence. All of art , liauk down abashed within my hsert. „ Afc, life baa one high lesson yet 'J bat I have learned of womanfapid-- . "Be when we loee and we forRet ./ ? „ - .The beautiful within the good^f.;r!" - TBB when the senses swoon to t-EFT '•• , *The 8oul"8 burpassiug myBtery1. ' Xikn moonlight comes a calm content •with larger hope and i>urer lova Ayiuemory of the form that bent if ,V. .Through nightn of fevered pain abO»® '• ale cot of childhood. Better so • Tor this brief vision 1 may go. ©lice more into the world like him M'ho has been pardoned. 1 x>! he kneels : Juid murmurs in the cloister dim, "My father, I have Binned!" He feela lie craving of the Rp rit cease, " tbed bv the answer, "Go in peacel* eHUCKER'S DILEMMA. How far is it expedient to t, convert a railway carriage into a dressing-room ia a question which would be qniokly Bolved in the negative in continental countries, where guards walk along the . footboards and collect tickets while the train is in motion. But in England a passenger who likes to change his attire in a Unit-class com partment is, as a rule, pretty secure from interruption. At least, BO thought Mr. Barnaby Chuck er, as he alighted from a hansom •t Paddington and rushed acrosn the platform, holding a railway rug and a carpet-bag, which contained a complete change of raiment--to wit, dress- clothes. Mr. Chueker had received an invita tion to dine at Windsor with aome friend of influential position; but, being a busy man, he had not fouud a time to dress at his office in the city, or at his cham bers at the West End. Stepping into the train, he slipped a shilling into the hand of the guard and said: "Keep this oompartment. I want to dress." "All right, sir," answered the gnard; and the next moment the train started. Mr. Chueker then unlocked his car pet bag and drew out a clean shirt, with other equipments necessary to his bodily adornment. It must not be supposed that he did this without reluctance, for he was a great stickler about all the proprieties of life. Tie objected to seeing things out of season. If he had caught h» best friend changing his pantatoons in a railway carriage he would have thought meanly of him for being of dis orderly habits, and so now judged him self with a candid severity for not hav ing better regulated his time. "If an accident occurred," mused he, as he removed his coat and waistooat, "I wonder what would be thought of me for being half undressed in a train^" Thip reflection made him redden. Hd was a shy, middle-aged man, with large, red ears, and a fat, florid face. The ef fect of pulling off his boots always suf fused his countenance with crimson, and ' it did so now. insomuch that, what with the color that came from physical ex ertion and that which resulted from a troubled conscience. Mr. Barnaby Chueker looked truly distressed. Hav ing removed his boots he denuded him self of his troubers. This was a trying moment, for if an accident had hap pened then. "Why, why, dear me!" ejaculated Mr. Chueker at this stage of his cogitations, "I think the train--no, it cannot be--is stopping." The train was stopping in efleet, as Mr. Chuoker might have foreseen it would do, since he was not traveling by express; but he had been so enwrapped in feel f-upbraiding thoughts that he had not even noticed the first slackening of the engine's speed. He now found himself in the midst of a very disreputable litter of clothes, and with no time to re-dress himself before the train stopped. Be had to decide hastily whether be would steam alongside Ealing platform in his shirt sleeves or miuus hid panta loons. He chose wisely in huddling on his coat, which he buttoned up, while he oovered his lower man with his railway rug. This done, he collected as many of his belongings as he could into his bag, kicked his boots under a seat, and tried to look dignified. The train had come to a stand-still now, and the guard opened the door of the carriage in which our hero was sit ting and cried: "There's room here, sir, for you and this lady." "Hi, guard!" exclaimed Mr. Chueker, leaning out in horror, "you told me I should have this compartment to my self." Unfortunately for our modest friend, the guard to whom he had given the shilling was not the one appointed to travel with the train. These little mis takes often occur and lead to unpleasant consequences. The present guard said bluntly: "I can't give you a compartment to yourself unless you pay for it, sir. It's against the rules. Here, madam, step in please." A lady who looked in very delicate health got into the carriage, and a gen tleman with her. Mr. Barnaby Chueker felt ready to swoon. Before he could inform the guard of his readiness to pay for a whole compartment sooner than • have his privacy intruded upon, the train was off again, and Mr. Chueker fell to reflecting how he should effect his change of carriages at Slough, now that he was in no fit state to step on to a platform. The train in which he traveled was not bound straight for Windsor, but for Birmingham, and Mr. Ghucker would have to change at Slough if he wishea to dine with his friends that evening. Alas! a more urgent difficulty than that involved in a change of carriages soon presented itself to him for no sooner had the train started than the lady who had just stepped in began to moan and to shiver, saying that she felt cold all over. Her husband sought to quiet her, but it was ail of no use, for she was really ill. At last the poor man looked in despair at Mr. Chuoker, and politely said :• _ "Excuse me for taking a great liberty, sir; but would you be so kind as to lend my wife your rug? We started in a hurry and forgot to bring one. As it is not a cold day, perhaps you would not mind obliging us as far as Slough, where 1 shall bo able to buy a mg." "Eh ?" grunted Mr. Chueker, stupi- fied. , The request completely staggered him, and he could find no words in which to reply. "Would you kindly lend this lady your rug? repeated the gentleman nther astonished. "Hoo!" growled Mr. Chueker, in ft voice like a bear's. It had just occurred to him that the safest way out of his difficulties would be to sham being mad. A Frenchman would have quietly heconed the gentleman to the other aide of the carriage and would have ex plained the dilemma with a laugh. But Englishmen are persons full of sticeness, and Mr. Chueker dared not Confess to a stranger that he had no trousers on. He repeated "Hoo!* two or three times over, and his stratagem succeeded perfectly, for both his fellow passen gers became convinoed that they were traveling with a lunatic. The lady began to scream. Her tierves were so unstrung that she could Hot stand this extra shock. And Mr. Chueker made things worse by the fixity with wliioh he stared at her. The gentleman armed himself with an um brella to protect his wife. Mr. Chueker, entering into the spirit fcf his part, caught up his own umbrella 4nd brandished it. The travelers were in their attitude of vigilance and menace when the train once more slackened speed* and Hsn- well was reached. Instantly the gefitlemafU jumped out on the off side of the line, fed as not to pass Mf. Chueker, and he helped out lii|- .wife, whose screams had by this time given place to a fit of shivering. ^ Mr. Chueker thought himself well rid of his mess, for the train would go on again, and he should be able to com plete his dressing. By way of insuring privacy for the remainder of his journey, he began by pulling the car riage blinds down. Alas! he was not to get off BO easily. Already there was a commotion on the platform. The husband of the fainting lady had explained matters to the station master; Rome porters and guards had overheard him, and rumor circulated that there was a lunatic in the train. Some passengers, poking their heads out of the carriage windows, protested against traveling in the company of a man who might commit some mad acts--set the train on fire, throw himself out, or emit awful poises. The station master was obliged to pacify these murmurs by Btriding toward the alleged maniac's carriage. The all-unconscious Mr. Chueker was rudely aroused by the door being suddenly opened and a gruff voice exclaiming: "Now, sir, what's the matter with you?" "Nothing's--the -- the--matter with me," stammered Mr. Chucken "What should there be?" but, so saying, he hugged his rug closer to him with a guilty look. " Would you mind stepping out, sir?" "Why should I? My ticket is for Windsor." "Change here for Windsor, sir," re sponded the guard, who was quite con vinced by this time tiiat he had a queer character to deal with. "Well, man, sinoe you put me to it, I've no trousers on," confessed Mr. Chueker, lowering his voice; where upon the station master echoed in amazement: "No trousers!" and the crowd behind caught up the words: " No trousers!" "He's throwed 'em oat," suggested a porter. "Perhaps he had none on when he got into the train?" suggested the station master. "Of course I had, man. I've two pair with me now. Let me alone, that may put one on," faltered Mr. Chueker, intimidated and disgusted by the sight of so many people staring at him. But while he %as speaking, some low churl, seizing a corner of his rug, gave it a twitch, and abruptly exposed Mr. Chucker's dishabille to view. There was a shout of mingled laugh ter and dismay among the passengers, some of whom, being ladies, deemed it expedient to squeaL "Out you come." roared the blushing Btation master, in a paroxysfn of indig nation, and he clutched Mr. Chueker by the wrist. "Well! but--bat--let me d--dress first," pleaded the victim.as he felt, not only his arms, but his legs in the grasp of different bands. He made a short struggle, but this did not improve his position, for his resistance was ascribed to a maniacal outbreak, and emboldened his aggressors to drag him out of the carriage feet foremost, He tumbled out in a heap, and was then carried across the platform, kicking and roaring in the sight of 100 pairs of astonished or amused eyes. "Oh!" exclaimed the yomg ladies, as he passed. "Poor man 3" cried some older ones. "Hi! Fetch the polioe," chorused some of the porters. Ten minutes later, when Mr. Chueker had been conveyed, under strong escort, to she station master's room, and had been suffered to don his pantaloons, he contrived to get a hearing and to ex plain how ail the trouble had arisen. " Well, but why didn't you tell this before?" cried the non-prossed station master. "Because you wouldn't listen to me, you beast," screamed Mr. Chueker. "Well, you've misted you train and your dinner," said the station master, "and that'll be a lesson to you." "Lesson of what ?" asked Mr. Chueker, exasperated. "Lesson--why--why--lesson not to take off one pair of breecdes until you've put the other on, and that for decency's sake, sir!" answered the 6tation master,* sternly, formulating an axiom which sounded well; though, perha.ps, like some other maxims pro pounded by worldly pbilosoyhy, it is not easy to follow.--London Truth. Moorish Beauty. The Moors have extraordinary ideas concerning female beauty.. They fancy an oily skin, teeth protruding beyond the lips, pointed nails an inch long, and a figure so corpulent that two persons putting their arms around the waist could scarcely make their fingers touch. A woman of modern pretensions to beauty needs a slave under each arm to support her as she walks, and a perfect belle carries weight enough to load a camel. Mothers are so anxious to have their daughters attain this unwieldy size that they make them eat a great quantity of millet pudding and drink several bowles of camel's milk per day. Mungo Park said he had seen a poor girl sit crying for more than an hour with the bowl at her lips, while her mother stood over her with a stick and beat her whenever she perceived that she was not swallowing. The Moors marry at a very early age, and wives are always purchased. The father of the girl cannot refuse an offer unless there is some stain upon the young man's character. If a wife does not become the mother of a son she may be divorced by the husband. The mother of many sons is held in the highest respect and is never suffered to perform any menial •ervice.--Hearth and Hall VaMtloni Bat Fvaad aa •equally Fan ay Mmm. IJU some of the Western grazing re gions the appearance of a railroad train is a pleasant break in the monotony of the cowboy's existence, and the mem bers of that class of rough riders are al ways ready to make the best of the passing excitement which the train brings. They will ride for miles to the track and yell to the engineer, ehout the compliments of the day in a free and airy fashion to the passengers, kiss their hands to any pretty girls to be seen at the car windows, and ride a losing race as long as they are within hail of the train. In Western Kansas there is a long steep grade on the Atchi son, Topeka and Santa Fe, where the ascending trains would toil up so slowly that the cowboys could ride alongside and visit with the train hands for a mile or two. One cowboy they called Bed Pete got to be remarkably fiee in the liberties he took with trainmen and passengers. He would ride up beside the engineer and ask for a chew, he would joke with the brakemen and con ductor, and make fun of the butcher. In summer, when most of the car win dows would be open, and the dust' covered passengers lolling out to catch a breath of vitalized air, Bed Pete would grasp any verdant-looking men by the hand and squeeze it till the owner yelled. To attractive members of the fair sex he was exceedingly lib eral with expressions of devotion, and he seldom paid a visit to a train without inviting some lady to light off and be come the wife of his bosom. One day Pete made some facetious re marks about the personal appearance of a raw-boned miner, with hands nearly the size of a No. 3 coal scoop, who was leaning out of a car window. Pete bore no malice with all his fnn, and, wishing to finish up in a friendly way, he held out his hand to shake with the miner before leaving. The miner grasped Pete's band with won derful cordiality, and displayed extra ordinary interest iu all that "was going on. He wanted to know all about the cattle business, and offered the cow boy a pair of boots for his poney. That being rejected, he tried to establish some other pasis for a trade. Mean while the train had got over the sum mit and was working with speed on the down grade, but the miner clung to the hand of the cowboy and encouraged him to spur up the gait of his pony. The train got beyond the pony's pace, and, following his hand, which was still inclosed in the ample grip of the Eassenger, Bed Pete slipped over the ead of the horse, and hung dangling at the side of the car like a weasel nailed to n barn door. A small creek ran alongside the track, and it still contained pools of slimy water that the heat had failed to lap up. When the miner thought that he had got all the fun out of the oowboy that could be made, he let him drop down so that he rolled softly into one of the slime pud' dies. The last that the trainmen saw of Pete was a statute of mud, with hall a dozen cowboys, who had followed, rolling on their horses' baoks in Jfits of laughter. Bulgaria Fast a«l PrcoMt. There can be no doubt, whatever, as to the general content, and, happiue and prosperity, of the bulk of the popu lation of Bulgaria as oompared with their past under the Turkish rule. A friend at Constantinople, who had re? cently traveled through the greater part of Bulgaria, told me that on his re turn he was asked by a Philo-Turk what difference independence could really have made in the lot of average peasants in Bulgaria, seeing that theii taxes were somewhat higher now than they used to be. My friend in reply, said he had put that very same question to a Bulgarian; the answer was that "it was true they paid more taxes than they did to the Turkish Government, but the difference was that they now got- something in return for them--namely, good roads, good schools and good se curity for property and life; the money paid with one hand was spent by the other for themselves, while under the Turkish rule they got nothing in re turn for their taxes. He and his wife could not, under the old state of things, go out of the town where they lived, to visit a vineyard which they possessed in the neighborhood without being pro tected by thirty or forty well-armed persons. Now they could go there alone in perfect safety. They lived there without fear during the summer, unguarded. Always when there, they rejoiced in their new position; some times they shed tears, thinking it was too good to be true, and that the Turks must be coming back." When we re collect what the Bulgarians endured, and what they have now gained, we cannot wonder that their papers should now and then make severe attacks on the Government of Turkey. The editor of one of these newspapers told my friend that on one occasion an ambassa dor at Constantinople, well known for his sympathies with Turkey, com plained that he had not in his articles dealt with Turkey in a Christian spirit. In reply, the editor said his own expe rience of the Turks was this: he had re ceived a good education at an European university as a doctor of medicine; he had been arrested and imprisoned by the Government four years before the war. He never knew what his offense was. He was sent to St. Jean d'Acre, and remained in close confinement there for eight years; he thus lost the best years of his life. He was released after the war through the efforts of Sir H. Layard, together with forty-six other educated men who had been subjected to the same treatment. It might be ex cusable, he said, if some of these men found it difficult to describe the Turk-" ish system with the same charity as was possible to an ambassador who had succeeded in his career, namely, by his devotion to the Turkish cause.--O. Shaw Lefeverre in the Contemporary Review. Wg Devil-flab In Georgia. The Atlanta (Ga.) Constitution tells of an exciting adventure with a big devil fish by a party of negro fishermen in Madison County, who caught the mon ster in a net in Broad River. When the negroes reached the bank and dis covered what they had captured they fled in terror. One of the negroes was a little slow, and came very near losing his life. The monster gripped him around the leg with his fingers, and he yelled terri bly to companions for assistance. One of them who escaped approached to within ten feet of his unfortunate com panion and threw an ax at the monster. It was thrown with, terrible force, the blade striking the fish on the head, which caused it to relax its hold on the negro, who escaped. The fish appear ed to be in pain and its struggles were terrible. It tangled itself up in the seine and finally rolled into the river, sending forth a fearful shriek of agenj as it disappeared in the water. ORMI Kadta* of Thair shlpaad AtweUttoa. . 'Whoa, Boh--ho--ho,boy--easy,Bob!" It seemed to me it took all the strength of Tommy's arms and all the coaxing tones of his voice to keep the fiery animal under control, and as I am not a horseman myself and knew little of Tommy s horsemanship I held firmly to the side of the biiggy and felt a nerv ous presentiment that we were shortly to figure in a wild runaway with a mashed buggy and tofo damaged travel ers as a result . We fairly flew through the quiet Can adian town and out into the open coun try, where we sped along over the hard, smooth road, Tommy giving his whole attention to Bob, while I gave mine to Bob and Tommy alternately. mHi boy!" Bob heeded the sharp warning and did not break into a run as he was about to da hat he hounded along with increased speed, neverthe less.. I saw that the horse and driver un derstood each other, and I felt suffi ciently at ease to remark that Bob seemed to feel pretty lively. 'He'll quiet down presently," said Tommy, and so he did, for shortly af terward we were going at a steadier pace and Tommy had relaxed his vigilance enough to converse with me. Tommy was a little, lame man. with a meek face and a quiei voice and with nothing "horsey" about him; but that he was a most genuine lover of horse flesh his conversation proved. "I can't bear a slow horse," he sakl, when I remarked that he seemed a hard driver,'"but I never hurt a horse in my life. I think enough of my horses to take better care of 'em than I do of my- Belf. I ought to think a great deal of 'em," he continued, "for' I don't think of anvthing else." ( "Not a family ; v "Yes, I 've got a fumily ^Bf^ pighteen hones," said Tommy. ^ "Any more as good as Bob?" I asked, glancing at the handsome animal with genuine admiration. "I have three just as fast," replied Tommy, "but none that I like to drive so well. It's great sport to drive Bob," he continued. " Why, he'll take me around for half a day without tightening a trace: just pulls the buggy with his mouth.r "Ever run away with you?" "What, Bobl No, no. He'd never run away with me behind him. He knows as muck as a man. See his He knows we are talking about him now." Perhaps he did. If he knew all that was said about him that day he must have been an extremely well satisfied horse, for everywhere people turned to look at him with admiring gaze and when we stopped, his splendid propor tions, his clean cut limbs, bis glossy coat and high mettle all called for words of praise. I found that Tommy and his horses were well known through all that country. "Tommy Horton's rig, eh," people would say, and "Helly; that's Tommy himself." Then there would be a vacating of stores and inns and Tommy would be surrounded by ad miring friends until it was time for us to drive on. "Did you give Bob aome water?" I asked as we were leaving one town, after traveling some twenty miles or so. "I offered him some," said Tommy, "butt he wouldn't driok.- Me must be thirsty, too. It seems funny, but I be lieve Bob knows it ain't good for him to drink when he's warm." And so all day long the evidence ac cumulated to prove that Bob was a per* feet horse, and I believed it as thor oughly as did Tommy liimself. Towards evening we approaohed a town ot considerable size, where we were to remain over night. "See how Bob lifts his head," said Tommy, "he wants to go into town iu good style. Whoa, Bob! ho, ho! boy!" A wagon had come up behind us and Bob was off at a rattling pace down the street that passed through the center of the town. Two farmers who had evidently spent a lively dsy in town were coming to ward us in a big lumbering wagon. They were talking and laughiug bois terously and seemed not to see us until we were close to them; then the be fuddled driver pulled quickly on the wrong rein, his horses turned toward us, the wheels looked, there was a crash, and Tommy and I plunged headlong from the buggy. I scrambled to my feet unhurt and saw Bob dashing madly down the street with the broken buggy. I went over to Tommy, who was. lying ou his back with pale face and set lips, "That J wasn't Bob's fault," he said faintly. "Are you badly hurt?" I asked him. "My leg, niy leg," he said, biting his lip. A crowd had gathered and we were about to^uaove Tommy to a neighboring drug store, when a man oame pushing up to him. "Tommy," said the new oomer, "your horse has broken his leg. Shall we shoot him ?" "Shoot Bob?" cried Tommy, raising himself quickly and looking at the speaker with blazing eyes. Then he writhed with pain and sank back again on the ground. He turned away his face. "Yes," he said huskily a momont later, "you may shoot Bob." And the tears in his eyes were caused by his own broken limb.--Free Press. He Wanted to Know. The big, flat-bottomed western steamer had not mad« a landing, and the captain was deliberating whether it would be advisable for him to do so, when a thin voiea piped off shore: "Say, cap'n, going ter land?" " W ant anything ?" sang out the offioer, going forward. "Wall, yes," came the deliberate re ply, and thinking there was some busi ness to be taken off, the master gave word to the pilot and the ungainly steamer began to swing around for the landing. The lumbering craft slowly obeyed her rudder and in the course of ten minutes her guards were grating the muddy, uncertain banks of the old river. "What do you want?" asked the cap tain, addressing the little man who sauntered up the plant " Whea'r ye goin' back up stream?" he queried,, lookincr over the boat with a critical eye. ' "In two weeks," replied: the captain; "what do you want?" "Oh, I jest wanted to know," came, the ingenuous response, "fer I was thinkin' of going up to Lexington en ( Hxrat a month, an' I thought I'might g6 along."--Free Press. MRS. BIS GO--There! I kne'fr it. Those' moths have got at your dress suit and eaten a hole right through jrotir pocket. Mr. Bingo--Fit t»t they were fbmidef^ motha. A Haw Ariato-raey. The latest novel to create a genuine sensation among the scholarly critics is "Birch Arnold's" "A New Aristocracy. • A lady, under the above nom de plume, is the author. It relates to the social- industrial question, and prophesies the future upbuilding of a new aristocracy, which shall be that of the heart and brain--the heart to feel for the miseries of our fellow-men, and the brain to wisely plan for their relief. The author will hear of no other sort of Christianity, and denies our right to amusement while fellow-creatures are doomed by poverty to a life of toll and suffering. Apart from the sweetness and devotion of its spirit, thip book Is an excellently told- story. The Chicago Herald says: "This is a novel with a purpose, and it may he a very great novel despite what certain critics may say. Through every chapter of certain novels by Dickens and Thackeray, a purpose gleams; and. too, by means of them some very serious evils in law and society were overthrown and the world made happier and better." liar tie tt Publishing Company, New York and Detroit Vmlet ISyra. That tint of the eyes usually called violet, which is blue in the daylight and black at night, ought, really to be termed sapphire, as the sapphire, which is blue j "" in the day. becomes black in appearance • Sell it Oft when night shuts down on the world. Apropos of sapphires--among recent d4s-« coveries--the Montank sapphires are found to be harder than any other of the same stones, and are found In every tint of color known. In brilliancy they equal the diamond, and what is more unusual the stones are brilliant at night, whilst the ordinary sapphire becomes dark at night.--fest Dispatch. Chiidrea E^Jey The pleasant flavor, gentle action ana soothing effects ot Syrup ot Figs, when in need ot a laxative, and It the father or mother be costive or bilious the most (grati fying results follow its use. so that It is the best family remedy known and every family should have a bottle. They Dig for Wa'arw . A Wyoming man has settled the ques tion of how the prairie dogs obtain the water they drink. He says they dig their own wells, each village having pne with a concealed opening. He £ays he knows of several of these wells, from 50 to 200 feet deep, each having a circular stairway leading down to the water. Kaoapa of Prlaonara. The raport that prisoners have bean and are oonstantly escaping from that malignant gaoler, Uver complaint, la fully corroborated by the self-liberated oaptives. Hoatetter's Stomach Bitters are, they say, the means by which they get rid of their fetters. Few alto gether avoid the bondage of this ailment, and few are unacquainted with its signs; via., pain through the right side and shoulder blade, furred tongue, yeltbwnesa of the eyeballs and skin, sour breath, sick headache, dyspepsia and constipation. Hoatetter's Stomach Bitters puts a prompt period to these, and brings them to a full stop in short order. 'Whether the trouble is chronic or temporary, this medicine is eqoally effective, regulatine tbei liver and bowels thor oughly. It is likewise a sovereign remedy for rheumatism, kidney complaint, malaria, heart burn and nervousness. There's a patent medicine which is not a patent medicine •-- paradoxical as that may sound. It's a discovery! the golden discovery of medical science 1 It's the medicine for you--tired, run-down, exhaust ed, nerve - wasted men and women; for you sufferers from diseases of skin or scalp, liver or lungs--it's chance is with every one, it's season always, because it aims to purify the fountain of life--the blood-- upon which all such diseases depend. The medicine is Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. The makers of i^. have enough confidence "§#•• % • to it on trial. r > r That is--you can get it from \your druggist, and il it doesn't do what it's claimed to do, you can get your money back. Flower p verg cent of it. hat's what its makers call faking the risk of their words. Tiny, little, sui granules, are what I Pleasant Pellets are. r-coated r. Pierce's The best Liver Pills ever invented; ac tive, yet mild in operation; cure sick and bilious head aches. One a dose. DADWAY'S 11 READY RELIEF. TBI CHEAPEST AND BEST MEDICHfl rOK FAMILY USE IN THE WORLD. MKVJCK FAILS TO HSLUVS PAIN. >4 Prevent* Oold«, CoBftM, Throat, Inflammation, RlieumatUia, Neuralgia. Heartache. Toothache. Asthma, Difficult Breathing. (HUES THE HOHKI'JJPAINS In ironi ooe to twenty ttiitiuUj. Not one hour afit-r res'line tins advertise ment tind sn«- one M'FFKIi WiTu F&LN. INTKBNAt I.V, a li»l£ to ft te»spo<miul in half a tumbler of wstpr will in a few minutes cure Cramps, Kpasms, hour Stoui act), Sausea-Vumiuuu, Heartburn, NeivouHuestf.KleepleBFnegii.&ick Headache. Diarrhea, Colic. Flatulency, and nil internal pains. 60c. per Bottle. Sold by Druggista. Now TIIAT it leaks out that Bismarck wrote a poem some forty-live years ago, American editors are expressing satis faction that the German Chancellor has at last been overtaken by rheumatism and political defeat.--Texan Sifting* A VAST DIFFERENCE.--It makes a vast dif ference to the average man whether he picks up a carpet tuck with his fingers or his heel. >There Is also a vast difference between Dr. White's Pulmonartu and all other cough remedies. It la entirely unlike any other. It Is perfectly harmless, and acts like magic in curing a cough. Three aicea, 26 cents, 00 cents, and 91, and every bottle warranted. THE virtue which we gather from a fable or an allegory is like the health we get by hunting, as we are engaged In an agreeable pursuit that draws us on with pleasure, and makes us insensible of the fatigues that accompany it. An Excellent and Mild Cathartic. Purely veg etable. The safest and best medicine in tha world for the cure of all disorders of the LIVER, STOMACH OR BOWELS. Taken according to directions, they will restore health and renew vitality. Price. 2Sc. a box. Bold by all druKf ieta, or mailed by HADWAY & CO.. & Warren Street. New York, oa receipt ot prioe. LADIES employed In fashionable stores, whose duties keep them standing all day, should send 2c stamp to I'inkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass., for "Guide to Health and £tlqaette.n THE people of Starlight, Grundy Coan- ty, Mo., complain that the man who car ries the mail to that town puts young pigs, etc.. in the pouch %long with the iovo letters, etc. "TAM time while time ia. fortime will away." Many people have a set tlmi for hou»e- cleaning because o its great diffi cult*. It become* easy at all times with bAVOLIO. WHKX you see a banana peel resting on the sidewalk and a fat man uncon sciously approaching it, the indications point to an early fall MART modest women suffer rather than apply to a phyvlcian; Lydla^E. Pinkbam's Vegetable Compound haft saved thousands- of such from lives ot misery aad early graves. A CHICAGO millionaire has just had. a coat of-arms fixed up, with the motto, "All things come to him who hustles." ,T. C. SIMPSON, Marquess, W. Va.. rays: "Bait's Catarrh Core cured me of a vary had case of catarrh." Oruxgiata sell it, 75c. TAKE care of the poor Indians, and the poor Indians will take hair of you. BKXCHAW'S PXXXS cure Bilious and Nerv ous tiis. • ' - A MAN exercising ho forethought will soon experience present sorrow. THE best cough modlclne Is Plso'S Care for Consumption. Sold everywhere. 25c. DONALD KENNEDY Of Raibory, Mass, says Kennedy's Medical Discovery cures Horrid Old Sores, Deep Seated Ulcers of 40 years' standing, Inward Tumors, and every disease of the skin, ex cept Thunder Humor, and Cancer that has taken root Price #i.5o. Sold by every Druggist m the. U. S» and Canada. I LIKE MY WIFE TO USE 3 CO EOICATED an< MPLEXIOW •QWPEft" »Itlmprovea Her Looks Because It Improves Her Looki idle as Fragrant as Violets, xrvimi ADVICE TO THE AGED. Age brings iuflrmitiex, nueli aa sluggish boireI% weak kidneys and torpid Uver. Tuff's Pills have a specific cttcct on theme organs, stim ulating the bowt-ls, glm natural discharge ea. ana Imparts rigor to the whole system. L OYELY WOMAN. Frrckle*. Pimples, Black heads, Oily Skin .all Skia Diseases cured at once by DH. AMMETT'8 FRENCH ARSENIC tt'AFKHS, perfectly harm less. S!.» per box by mail, sample package. 1 Hidilatoa Sruc; Ce., 74 Sut CertUadt ItrMt. Xiv To . "f M wtfr :: •.•V, A * im 441 inherit some tendency to pepsia from my mother. I suffered two years in this way ; consulted a number of doctors. They did me no good. I then used Relieved in your August Flower and it was just two days when I felt great relief. I soon got so that I could sleep and eat, and ; •;>*-pfv I felt that I was well. That was three years ago, and I am still first- •;> ' class. I am never , Two Days, without a bottle, and v -j if I feel constipated ̂ the least particle a dose or two of „ < August Flower does the work. The beauty of the medicine is, that yoti can stop the use of it without any bad effects on the system. Constipation While I was sick I ̂ felt everything it seemed to me a man could feel. I was of all men most miserable. I can say, in conclusion, that I believe August Flower will cure anyone of e indigestion, if taken Life of Misery with judgment. A. M. Weed, 229 Belle- fontaine St., Indianapolis, Ind." • RASTERS TBATBLEBS Will Be InteresM In the New FAST TRAIN Now in Service LEAVING CHICAGO DAILY AT 10:30 A. M. Arriving at BOSTON NEW YORK NEXT DAY. AM all Ntw York and New England Niril BEFORE DARK. xfor tall information concerning the above.aa< ilX OTHER GOOD TRAINS I SUMMER, TOl'KIST FULDER, (living Routes and B t >s o the Snru"i-r Resorts the E .8 . addrps- V. K. WILIIER. W. P. A., CU* eago, or A. J. SM1TM. <i. P. <V T. A.. Cleveland. O. 3:40 P 2:10 P lor.. I EWIS' 98 LYE % Sj I Powdered and PerftaoMd. , % tl'ATKXrKD I ' • L. •'"% The stronnest and purest lijr*' *1 made. Will make the best pecr» t i fumed Hard Soapin 20mtnit«s« ! ̂without iMiiliiui. apt Beat ior softening vriUvtf , > v cleansing -waste-pipes, diainfeeli* ' , tog sinks, elosetrt, washing hot* ̂ ' '• ties, valuta, trees, ere, , - < : PENM. SKIT HIT'S CO, Geo. Agta., Phiia., Pa. • ̂ It PENN MUTUAL LIFE You can here get more insurance, of a better quality* on easier terms, at leaa cost than elsewhere , Address q * 921-3-5 Chestnut St., PhfladW JDNeswauei --oFUItkY WARRANTED*-- 5TON SCALES $60fngignTlluD '^ONES'f BtH6HAMT0H,NY. Dakota, ington and Ore gon. the Free Gov ernment and Cheap NORTHERN PACIFIC 1.1, ILLVSTSJLTXD FVBLI. CATIOffl, WITH KAI% 4e,Cr,blJ?o«Sl5?aSfeJ Best AgrictUtora'.Gracing and Timber Lands no* open to settlers. Maile t FREE. Address 0UL I. LAXB9UT, Uaft Cia. V. 1.11., It tn!. Vfc*' -TREATED ] Positively Cared with Vegetable I sonced hopeless 1 ret dose symptoms L. ays at leaet ttro-thirdac end lor free book ot s. Tea Tea days treatnient fur EBONS,; WMCM TM DUM<M IA MM<* MMR\ SCARLET reven. OOLOA^ MCAaLCa, CATARNM.AET BTTHK was ARM tMVietauc SOUND DISC , %! Mis* It imwMiri M Mp a *--»• , • niHMMilata* " reaumyie-A •LC.WAM. BfHwyiftsr : R ooM I R E S T H C ' o R f A T T H t A L T H U l v i M f \ . racEftgv BUM » galloon. *|Narfc!',ng 1 q ••U bj ill S*al«c*. A Wwitintt Picture Hoot «:H Canlta III OH MeaiBf 1M1 tiMnas to -f be C. K. H1KK.S CO- Or. SavderV Sides* Balaam <wuss 8»ms»'. •:;» BE0wrm*u< :i Druggists. PricaSUHL «ur«)IAN. HI:K IXSKASES AND TMEUK . , •'£ VV Treatment." A valuable Ulu^triiea book OC • 73 pases seui tree, on receipt of (0 oeac~. to cover ooaV : ot mailing, etc. Address P.O.Box 106j. Phila, i*a "yyHKN lath No. *4-91 ' • WRITING TO ADVERTISERS# ̂ please ear yoa aaw the advertisement fa paper. It Makes Pyre Blood And by so doing Hood's Sarsaparilla cures scrof ula, salt rhenm. and all other blood diseases, aids proper digestion, gives strength to every orgsa of Uie body, and prevents attacks ot that tired feeling or more serious disease. If you will Hood's Barsaparilla now it will put yon in the condition to bear the hot days of gu tuner. Hood's Sarsaparllla Sold by all drugslsts. f 1: sii for *5. Prepared OOlF hjr C. I. HOOD * 00„ Lowell, Mass. IOO Doses One Dollar Medicine Children without objection • The Soap Cleans allpUla lansrturt.bow,pintwntpfw*.m WMkHWa. II Biailm m --gal 4e. ia «ump< for particular* mH»«a«a aaS "KaMP fcrlsillM.* ia ban-, by rHmrm MaS ie.ee* Twin ->-- --- * --- -- •* .lata. M'am* J S*U kr all Laeal »ra--tsts CIMCMcarta CacMicat Co.. »iua TKAADIXMIVF" IS n lessen^ FES BURDEN Lbyaising#!oAP01J 11 is. vsoli d c&ke of-scouring so«|% ^ed foj^ieejiirig purposes What would you give for a Friend who ivould take half your hard work off %tour shoulder* and do it without a murmur ? What wouhl you ffive to find an assistant in your hottsework that would keep your floors and walls clean, and your kitchen bright, a ttd yet never grow ugly over the matter of hard work f Sapolio 4»"Just such a friend and can be bought at all grofr ,:4 "H' J\. >iift • . V fife.. '•v it' w