The following in a brief resume of the reporte concerning the crops in the die- tricte lying elongeide the Intercoloninl Beilwey, from Levin toBt. Flevie: Levie â€"-'1‘he principal crepe ere onto, yielding 35 bushels to the core. end potetoee. yielding 800bnehele tothe core; very little wheet grown. Ohendiereâ€"Potntoee. crop smell; cute. more proliï¬c then nennl, but back- wheat line proved n lailnrc. 8!. Hennâ€" Potetoee. below the overt-go; one and hey yielded lergely. 8t. Velierâ€"Wheet, 85 Apr cent. better then lent yeer ; barley, 50 per cent. better ; onto. 75 per cent. better :1 rye, 60 per cent. better; potatoes. 75 percent. lees. nud hny 20 r cent. lree enenleet your. 8t.Pierreâ€" otetoeeinler- ior to crop of last you. nvereging 115 hmhele to the core; wheat 15. rye 25. onto 92. pen 30. L‘ inletâ€"Potetoee r. wheet. onto and barley fair. t. Anneâ€"When yielded 16 bnehele per acre; berle . 20; cote, 25; potetoee. poor. River One Ieâ€"Orope reported good ell round. much better then lent your. River do Lon Hey. very light; mom turned out wel; gruin, good. ï¬t. Flame-An ever-ego crop ell round. . {In in for the animal's meol. The ledy allowed ihe couple to their home. and alter allowing I few minutes to elapse followed them iuto lhe house. and woe surprised to discover ï¬ve listle children sitting round 3 we end readily devouring the food taken (mm her pig’e trough. __â€"â€" â€"‘ - vv uvu “WI-I Ilul “yo, ind wu aï¬m'pri'euadr “Bunk :0 so. a mun tad woman upprouch the trough and scoop 29' Elm lax-9nd! pm. which had been -_A 1.. 'he Preteen.- shin... tor Anette-- Chipping. ate source, ssying : “ There was s time. end the greybeuds smong us remember it well, when the hardy descendants of the vikings.whoee sneestors were our own. pointed to the gruelul ships “at best them into every port end said. as pleintively news now reverse their cry: ‘Thnt ship is Americen.’ But the ï¬sg thnt fleets over the steemer's woke to~dsy curries no stars end no stripes; the com- merce o! the world would feel strange under the emblem 0! our liberties; so hshitustsd erewcto the spectsele ct slien triumph “at we do not resent it. The American eeilor in the Snug Berber is most numer- one es s fossilized curiosity; end the Amer- ioeu people. you- by year. by their votes. record their contentment with an interior plece. In peiulul mockery. it would seem. at the slavish spirit of our people, our Dstoemed eontemporery the Herald this morning devotes the better part cf three mnsto e report of en almost exclu- sively British eventâ€"the launch of the new er, the Etrurrn. With coal mines Iitueted below the sun three times deeper then our own; with ironed mined in the Welsh mounteins and mixed with ores treely bought from Sweden, end st e cost in lebor treble that which the American need pay; through meehenies‘ who earn, double the wsgee thst their Americen rivels receive our cousins scross the Atlsn- ticennuslly slide into their wsters such msrvsls oi mecheuism es the Emu-is, sud nhellsuge us to cease our silly boasting. practice honesty. end then see it weesn do us For more than thirty yours Ame- ricen newspepers end their readers hove apered before Christendom as owners of the fleetest pleesure crelt. Yeer otter you British ship-yards turn out such vee- cels es the Alnehe, the Americe, the Oregon end the Etrurie. Yeer by yeer the Ameri- eon people pile up their protective duties in the terifl end mete more remote the pos- sibility of competition. The voyager on the terrybost, glancing with well-directed 11er It the receding monster thnt hes dwindled to e dot before he his well thought these truths over. curses the politician and the monopolist, end executes his British victor. The Union Jack in the herbor of New York is the hedge of Amerieeu servitude to corruption in Ame- rieen politics." mnH-M‘AA-._-â€"â€"i__‘_-__4i__m_ A painful inahnoe of the dire diagram upstionood by some [smilieain Bundexlmd has just been discovered. A Indy who kept I pig in the west pan of the town, huving her auspigionu nonseq. keptwafol! upon her Ib- -â€" -_-- -_‘77 “ Lunch a those who grumble, And b0 merry as you can." ‘Io 1mm true! through life, bu‘ why mu. I dud much of it ?" Oh. the molsncholy croner. With his omk. crouk. oroak, B. an thus to]! a (unenl, But never way :1 Joy: ; - a... L:-__- -7 A Hale mold la: the Towing tan 1 men n agent-uranâ€" 'm l with thl's butter wu done.“ on to the lleldsl'd be turning! " we hurled the unher upnnd down. the former celled with hell-mode trown. “ Churn slowly I " Du't ply the churn no test. my door. It to not good (or the butter. wlll mote your ulna echo. too. I It or, And at you ell ln n flutterâ€" ’31:: lo e rule wherever we turn. 't he in taste. whenever you ohm. Churn slowly. GI! went your butter to come nloe end sweet 33% ohnrn with n nervous jerking. Int ply the dnher slowly end neat- You'll hardly know that you're working. when the butter has come. you'll uy. “Yen, this ls surely the better way â€â€" Churn slowly! 80w. little Iolke. do you think the: you Ale-on on: and in butter ? Don’t be in heete. whntever you do. 02 (ï¬t yonrsell lnn flutter; And w II o you stand at lile's greet churn. lat the tumer's word to you returnâ€" Ohurn elowlyl . -n v-.. vu‘l . B0. in his may comn, Con drive 3 null, no doubt; But with a smiling visage He never drows one can on. the poor, unhappy owner, Like I revolving vane. no summon the weather. ll Inn: in going to rain ; He knows the crops are ru ned. Hie memory he jogs To prove tho; now 6 coon 13 going to the dogs. try . w Will have to did some doy; hope he'll go to Henven And won the golden way; But when the shining pavements 83:me eyes behold, He'll no is hood and mutter, " â€"dâ€"oâ€"n's-bo-lievoâ€"they'rq_â€"-§ R‘WW PIII‘ Food. nun-um our. The Cro- I". Churn slowly. A men in Southern Athenm wrote the following notloe end teoked It on e tree : “ The 'ere le to notily memhente not to ’low mlyuwlle to get nothin' et the: etore on credit I me en but heve pleged quite to: ehe‘e e oeutlon. I lived with at ee long ee I could en' I don't believe she could get elong with e eelnt. this is eleo to not I, loll:- Interested In the came of eddyoetlon thetl em goin' to teke up eehool et the old Beeon pleoe next Hondey. Seven] British nobleman were recently melted in Yellowstone Perk end heavily ï¬ned for chipping of! specimens from curious ledges. which they proposed to entry ewey gith theme Leaning in woulth to the poor, an honor h ‘ho nob. tn dd to the young. und 5 angpgrt 5°33 9211310")? the aged. six of the scoundrels have com- mitted rape in this State within the past eight months. The idea that a beggar should be made to pay for his meals is all right. but it Detroit had twenty places where he could get his dinner by an hour’s work with hammer or saw he would still ï¬nd a thousand suit-hearted wives who would teed him at the kitchen door. The women are more to blame for tramps than all other causes. 80 long as they will feed and clothe these vagahouds under the name of charity so long will the country be over- ‘run with the follows. If it were a punish- able cfl'ence to give one of them tood or‘ :old clothes one year‘s time would see the *last of them. If we had the same law as Ohio and Texas it would not be six months before the State would be entirely clear of them. The tramp deserves arrest on sight and a sentence to prison on general prin- ciples. Not one in a hundred can claim pecuniary lose as a foundation for setting out on their tours. They are fellows who never had anything to lose. Their idea is to get an easy lmng. and as for reforma- tion, it would be wasting sugar to sweeten a bad egg.â€" Detroit Free Preu. About Feeding 'l‘ru-pe. The locel philenthropists who ere edvo- eeting the establishment o! e public stone or wood yerd. where e tremp can breek stone or sew wood for e meel or lodging, should remember thet the thing nee been tried on e smell scale severe! times. end the result proved anything but setis- tectory. Any privete wood yerd in the city Will give e tramp work enough to eern e mesl, but the ï¬rst thing in order is to get the gentlemen of leisure to the spot. This might be eccompliehed by tying him hend ‘end foot end loeding him on e weggcn. but it is doubtful if milder meesuree would succeed. In point or test e tremp ise good-lor-nothing. He is en idler ; he is e loeler ; he is e criminal. I! there wee eny industry in him it is not one time in e thousend thet he would heve to leeve his own town for work. He deliberately sets out on his travels with the idse that the world owee him as living. It he een’t get it b begging he will secure it by steel- ing. Hyestende reedy to chest, lie. steel, rob, commit erson, end no less then This deliccte instrument. only recently invented. in c companion-piece to the accloa in ‘he Asacyer‘a ofï¬ce of the Treasury. by which the weight of a hair is accurately toatod.â€" Washing!†Post. “ By this dial we can see just the thick- ness. By this lever, which is very much like a pair of grocer’s scales, we can tell just what pressure the paper will stand. You see. we have two other movable pieces of iron here. with a hole entirely through both. and a plunger which passes through that hole; Well. we put the paper between those pieces, which, when they are pressed 1 tightly together by this lever, hold it firmly. The plunger, which passes through the opening in the two pieces of iron, encounters ‘ this paper thus ï¬rmly held. To know what the pressure is, we have the plunger attached to a scale lever with a weight attached like an ordinary pair of scales, and by moving this weight" out along the lever until the paper breaks. of course we can see just what the weight is that made it break. See? Very simple after you understand it. Well. that is what the paper-makers thought after they had lost an 880.000 contract by it. It was a new thing to them. but they acknowledged that they were beaten when they saw it.†"IL:_ ;,a9, . V-v_ â€"' â€" rue-o 1 scissors and slipped 03 a hair irom the mustache and placed it in position. The hand stopped at 60. “ 50 16-1.000ths of an inch thick." he said. " That shows the effect of shaving. I measured a hair from the hand 0! a gentleman a iew minutes ago which was 40 16.1.000ths thick. but those in his mustache were precisely the same thickness, the reason being that he had never shaved. Yes. that is the machine that proved that the ï¬rm making our‘ envelopes was not fulï¬lling its contract.†he said. as he fell back admiringly. as D_ AL:, )5 I between a set of butchers' scales and ordi- nary grocers' scales. or rather a combina- tion 0! the two. There is a larger dial. like the face of a clock. with the little hand that flies around the face pomting to the ï¬gures at the side. which are arranged like the ï¬gures on the clock face. with little dots between. “ You see three dots ?" said the gentlemen in charge. inquiringly. “ Well. the space between these indicates one-sixteen-thousandth of an inch. Getting it down pretty ï¬ne. isn't it 7 You see this movable piece of iron here which comes down with a smooth surface upon this other solid surface ? Well. the raising er lowering 0! that moves the pointer which runs round the dial. To test the thickness of a sheet of paper we simply lace it between this movable piece an the solid surlace below. and when the movable piece or iron comes down upon the paper the hand registers jthe true thickness at the paper. Delicate instrument ‘2 Well. I should think so. Just give me a hair from your head, will you 7" Then he took a hair and slipped it deitly between the movable pieces. The hand on the dial followed the motions of the screw until it stepped at the ï¬gures 20. “ Just 20 16~1.000ths of an inch in diame- ter." he said. “ Now let me try a hair from your mustache. They are generally much larger. especially it you have been in the habit of shaving: gs took up a pair n-innAâ€"n nâ€"‘ -I:_ , A Delicate Machine In the Peel-0.00 Dem-ell and III the. A outione little machine in the ofï¬ce of the chief of the nun bureeu o! the poet- cmoe deputmene in t 0 «use 0! the cen- eelletion o! the connect 0! the New Eng- land ï¬rm with the Government for turnieh- inc envelopes to ehe Poet-ofliee Depenmem. It in e queer-looking oonlrivenoeâ€"e one: between e eet of hntohen' eoelee end Oldi- IIAIB’I 'I'IICKNIDU. Timon no '0 land in Italy um m "all. sin on be bind to nu. a man 10:86 on“. Went le eo incredibly moo in Texas am it In reported of two young men In lemming from Ben Antonio with ebome of whlekey am they wereghd to exohenge it for en eqnel emonnt of weter. she aignino'd’iï¬i 256861753} .31}. urge-boned und ill-formed. “mush her hair in glossy Mad nbundnnt, her a)†high... md her color no darker ï¬hm that of an Italian. She is ulao likely to be predisposed to oommmpuon or scrotuls. her pcoph no a? iggorgmpt hygieniq luyn. In manner The Indiun git]. an a rule. is not puny. ny those who hnve neon her a the Gov- grnmgnb whoop,†She Is course-featured. “You; ho was one of my only hun- bmal." Wife-I Ihonld not hsvo done it. love, only I found utter a tow moment’s conversa- tion shut I formerly know him. “ Indeed I" Ohiongo Husbandâ€"I em shocked, my deer, thet you should welt: wieh that etrenger; the idea of letting: man you never saw before put his um around you in 3112:!le; Young Theologueâ€"Yen, we “link you might cleee “ gosh-dam " end " dud biog " ea profane evening. " Gaul ding " may also be considered a eweer word. “ I'm ewizzled " ie enoiher. All eheee worde are the outgrowth of e terrible struggle, e rheological compromise emuged by our Pnrilen ancestors, who recognised with feulsleee epirimel vision end worldly acumen the neceeeity of 5 pure life end e eiuleeu vocebulery, end at ehe some time the utter impossibility of ploughing e New England atone petch wrrhout e clone 01‘ worde derigued to relieve the overburdened} mind and eetcniehed feelings every time the plough-handles broke e men's ribs end exloried every loot drop of vial breesh from his peniing body.â€"Bob Burdetce. Sugar cane grows during about ï¬ve and a halt months. It makes it appearance. say on the 1st of April, and by the 15th of September it has done reaching upward. It that time it grows or ought to grow twelve feet, counting the white joints and the top flag or tuft. 0n the let of July it is some tour feet high, so that from then until the 16th of September it grows ninety- six inches. During August, however, it reaches the largest rate of increase. the ordinary growth during that month under favorable conditions being forty inches. August is known as the " growing month." It is then that cultivation is over and the. ground thoroughly shaded by the loliage. It is then that the daily showers stimulate the process of vegetation until one can almost literally “ see it " shoot upward. It is on clear, still nights during this month -that you can hear that light cracking sound all over a healthy ï¬eld of cans. It is the month when, instead of growing three- fourths of an inch per day. good cane ought to grow one inch and a hall. The Wonder..- Guwlh on ‘ boil he dro an occasional feather from the black cï¬ieohen into the skillet, mumbv ling something which is unintelligible. As soon as the Water boils the pieces of money begin to rise and fall, as they naturally would do. and by a skiliul manipulation of the skillet he brings one of the pieces on top of the otherâ€"the one beneath always being the one named after the enemy of his dupe. For this the dupe is expected to pay according to his meansâ€"ham 81 up to 810. Another vcudoo trick is to pretend to sew a 81 or ’5 bill in the upper band of the pants ‘ to insure good luck. but actually secreting the money and sewing a piece of folded paper in the pants instead. Still another voudoo trick is to bury a small package wrapped in red flannel and get a dupe to dig it up. When the packageis found it is said by the voudoo doctor to be a good omen, for which he charges the dupe a handsome fee. An old vondoo doctor in West Washington recently acquired quite a reputation by his alleged care 0! a colored girl afflicted with rheumatism. his recipe being a decoction oi sassairas. red pepper. ï¬ne and coarse salt, and soap. For a small vial of this he charged 81.50 and for a personal visit 85. The more mysterious the vondoo doctor is. the more patients he obtains. They are seldom arrested, as they enjoin secrecy on their patrons. who generally observe their requests. If a patient survives their treat- meet, the cure is attributed to the vou- dooist. and it he dies his triends are ashamed to confess that they have been viotimized.â€" Washington Port. A Gent-e Whose opportunity to swindle the Negro ls Inst [teem-lug. The street oi Joseph Carol], e “ voudoo doctor.†the other dry. (or swindling en_old colored women, cells to mind some inter- esting iscte shout e superstition which has had estrous hold upon the negro. With the edvence of education among the colored people, the business of the voudoo doctors become less lucretivc. They ï¬nd enough dupes, however. to mske their notorious rectice icld them It pretty good living. he vou co doctor is generelly snold white- hsired negro, who walks with s crooked one end carries something resembling an old army hsverssck slung scross his‘ shoulders. As he walks eloug he occasion- elly stops. looks upward. wsves his stick in speculisr wsy end seems to hold mys- terious converse with the invisible spirits of the err it such there be. All these entice have their rfl'ect upon the super- stitious negro, espocielly those of the female sex, who are the lugcet petrons of the bogus doctor. In his bag or hsverssck he curios e queer assortment, the toeneils of deed men, roots and herbs. curious pieces of iron. hits or wool. etc.. with which he pretends to meke muvellous cures. It wee during sleve time the voudoo doctor ‘flcurished. He did I thriving business smong runewey negroes. who were pro- mised immunity irom punishment in cese of recapture for a smell sum. One of the voudoo doctor's methods of openting is to secure it block chicken and two pieces of silver irom s dupe. He then procures s skillet, which he hell ï¬lls with water. placing the pieces of silver in the skillet opposite eech other. He then requests his dupe to mentally name one of the pieces otter the enemy whom he desires to circumvent. When the wster begins to boil he drops an occasional {nether fmm Chic-'0’. “ old Friends.†«Tn: vounoo macros." (ill-anvil}; Put-ally. VV~ w... â€"â€"v vv-l-Ivll III- e divorce to the Governor of the Stole beoeuee he eeye he dooen’t wieh to give n Inwyer 015 for one. Hue letter oloeee no follow: "Pleue eeo about Me rite ofl end doent you nntil otter I am ded befoor ea wugoe 8216.400. giving en evenge of $4425 each, while in California 1.178 bends received $991,418. being en ever-go of 9246 89.â€"8an Francine Alta. f The conning of [rule and vegeteblee in on lndnelry in which Celitomie end Maine ere both largely engeged. In 1880, the cen- eue you. we lnduetry geve employment to 1.173 persons in Oelltornie, end 4.890 in Heine. The employment ie not- eon-tent In either lStete. fern†eh; oehnnerlee operete on ypeno t eyeer; an e etstiesioe ehow e remerheble dlï¬erenm compel-lean between the two Stem. In Maine 4,899 pereone divided between them A man irom the outside world of reelitiee describes the life of Arkonese so (0110 we : Long days of doing nothing beget little energy. Little food is needed, and lose new clothing. In the toll and winter the crops are gethered and turned over to the merchant, who holds o mortgsge. To sum up the labor of years: I was on the place yesterday and found on old double log-house so nearly rotted down thst it is propped up ell oround ; the wrndowe were without gloss, the door-iromes without doors ; the children could pose out between the logs in my direction; the ledy end friend were sitting in the “ gellery." s spece 1between the two oshine. cn split choirs, contentedly " dipping " snufl'. while the lord and master. in dirty, hegrimed clothes. set under e tree. doing nothing. but loohi happy es the dsy is long. Fences rot down, and icon pigs with “ pokes " on them. two sorry-looking horses trying to pickoliving from short gross. and little children. half s dozen or more, with but I single gsrment on. were lietlessly ploying in the shade. The lends cri inslly poor, with but two or three inches of soil on the prairies. were worn out end ohendoned. “ Tossing the oaber," says a London eon- temporary. is in itself worth ajourney to the far north to View.“ it can be seen performed by Highlanders assembled on their native heath. The oaber. or “ kebar.†as Burns calls it in one of his poems. is simply the stem of a pine tree. perfectly straight. and measuring some ï¬lteen or twenty feet in length. Its weight alone is prodigious. and the eï¬â€™ort of raising the weapon at all is a trying one. The expert Highlander ap- proaches the tree-trunk. which might have served for the walking stick of the Cyclops, and deftly balances it on end; then with a akilful jerk he manages to lift it in the air just high enough to get his hands under it. and next he power: it. staggering under the weight. with the muscles of his brawny arms standing out like whipcordas he holds the bottom or thin end in his clasped hands. In a moment he ate forward. and throwing his hands swif y eut from the body. contrivesâ€"if he is successful in his castâ€"to hurl the point so far away from him that the great le describes a somer- sault in the air. an falls with the pointed end away from him. As a test of strength. and of skill also. this tossing of the caber is a splendid exhibition. but other sports of a like nature. and which are known to the Southron. are combined with it, such as throwing the hammer or putting the stone. These are probably introduced from Engâ€" land. bnt the sport of the caber is exclu- siver Scotch. A. .mm in flapping, G... In. written for V_- f'““"" -uu mvuum threatens you ; it is not loving and tender ; it frowns upon you with great gray rocks ; it never smiles; it soowls with dark ravines and treacherous preci- pices; it terrifles you with blinding logs and driftin mists; it swathes the stony. gorgon h in black clouds and speaks to you in muttering syllables of thunder. You cannot breathe in the narrow passes; you cannot run on the steep. rough, winding paths; you bend your head back until your neck aches to see a little strip of blue sky. But the prairieâ€"boundless. immense, a billowy sea of emerald. dotted with the rank. bright-colored flowers that play with the singing. whistling. whispering winds}; the prairie that seems bounded only by the bending sky and stars; the resin weed gives you the compass and the compass gives you the path; go where you Will and as you please. at a foot pace or a headlong gallop. tree as the tree winds that make the prairie their only home. There is no room for them anywhere else. Idon’t sup- ; pose I will get the commission I am hint- 1ing at. but Iwonld like to go out to the prairies and cool off for about ten minutes. True. the walking is good, butâ€"yes, oh. yes, I can walk. I can walk. I can walk. Oh, yes, I can walk. I don't say I won't. But I will say I hate to. I want to see the prairies. Yes; but under the peculiar circumstances attending this campaign, I believe I Will wait until the prairies come to Ardmore. That’s the way the mountain did with William H. Mohammed. ,,, -_- --_-. --- _..,.. .. year. It rem In your eers now and then like the rush of meny waters ; it sighs and whispers through the tell,swsying grasses; its song is never monotonous; it varies all day long; and, as it sings end whistles. it breethes into your soul s sense of perieet freedom. sueh as you can experienee nowhere else. A mountain is 3 prison oom- persd with the prairie. The mountain I was just thinking I would like to be sent out welt just about now on some oomo miealou tar an able and enterpriaing jour- nal. at a large salary. railroad panel. nothing to do. and two or three of the ho I to hel me do it. “I†Bob Burdette. in t e Brook yn Eagle. just feel a little bit rairie hungry. The western man never oees his love for the prairies. They oall them “ prurries" in Indiana, “ persu‘ee " in Illinois, " praire " in Nebraska. “ perare" in Kentucky and “ puaries †in Boston. but whatever you call them they are all~ the same. I would like to hear the wind blowing some the great plains in Kansas, over the beentilul treelese blufl‘e at Mau- hattsn. or along the great reaches out at Larned. You know the wind never blows anywhere else as it does aoroee the prairies. And there it blows all the time, 365 days a a--- r. u-.. .. _~~ a no but [tom i639 'l‘hr C-‘l-rlcl on Ibo Plan. and the Awlul- Itu on uh: mount-In- Poetical], 00.- Ira-ted. The Gnu-Ill Ind-II". [Ale 1- Ark-Io... Toning the Other. ON THE PB‘IBIIU. .. um IN.\HI|IC no Recognized Medium for Far- Ad- "rum-menu And containment-em than an mhev (Tnnndhn pm may bind. It In: 3.0.000 readersonhe "gm (1:; ADVERTISEMENTS ol “Fanm (M Sale" Ind "Flam Wanted "“Stock"or " Seed to: Save" or "Wanted" Imam! In Tm: Wusxm' MUM)“: mum" whnlea In; . or m»! «am not wovd for flu: hrmwv. n! In Ill! LY AI OI no and a hymn pet and each Insemin- llm or “anus Fm 8m" um “Fauna tum" In the proportion. I? CAUTIONâ€"I have no Agent in the Unitd States, nor are my Medicines sold there. Pu!- chasers should therefore look to the Label on the Pots and Boxes. It the address in not 683 Oxffl Street. London, they are apurioun. Colds, Sore Threats Bronchitis. (ma all 6150M.- of the Throat and Guest, as also Gout. Rheum-b ism, Scrofula. and every kind of Skin Disease. Manufactured only at Professor HOLLOWA“ Establishment, '48 New Oxford St. (law 533 Oxford St.) London. Ind sold at 13. 19d" 28. 0d., 45. 6a., 129., 223.. and 335. each Box and Pot, and in Canada t 36 canto. â€cents. and 01.50 cents, and the larger sizes in mun-HA“ 1350;293an waunns, caucus will be found invaluable in every household h the cure of Open Sores, Hard Tumours, Thousands of persons have testiï¬ed til-m their use alone they have been restored to]: and strength, after every other men: had m ‘1 nunnnnan ‘ '11) 8110 CI Increase the secretory powers of the Liver,_ the nervous system‘ and throw into the cumula- uou the )urest Elements (0: sustaining and lo- pairiug 6 frame. diseases to which humsiiiiyisrfléfr.‘ mms INCOMPARABLE' ï¬fï¬ï¬Ã©iï¬Ã©vhas ae- aured for itself an lipperishnble mmo throughout ï¬lm work; for_t_h9 _a .eviagioq 9nd cure of most A duel between the handsome y coachmnn, Mr. Patrick McGefl’cy. and l‘imothy 0 ’Mearn. driver 0! the pop! gurney No. 4,088. will occur to-mor; morning. The cum belli is said to be affections of a fascinating young lady to ing on Prair ie avenue. unrify, late and improve the quality of tho 2°“- T ey assist the digestive organs, clam no apendini the honeyuidbï¬ '31) 53 Mick. where they will remain until bride‘p father ooola ofl‘. Worth their Weight in Ga Miss Birdie Li Grange eloped witi futhor's ooaohman. Mr. Fritz Beiswa lam Thurggiay. â€Mr, and Mrs. Beinw: some young oo'aohman o! the E3: :11 event which may be expected at Atthe Miohiénn “June lair last day evening the gold-headed cone 1 most popular young man was voted Terry McBride, the dashing young 1 of 3319 09m meroial Hotel. The olopement of one ct our mow ml and uoompliphed ‘bellea with the beautiful young heiress. to , Hodges. 0t Landeau onthera’ liv The engagement 0! Miss Virgik‘ In unnamed. Mr. Hana Sohwillager. ooachma esteemed (allow-townbman. Col. J: Maoey. was the oynoaure of all syn boulevard lutï¬atutday “tel-poop. ALAI III . every ennny uternoon. The heck-drivere' bell c Wedneede evening. By the society belee present it was the moat rechevchc event of the I Muny elnbonto cofl‘urea us the ooaohmen thus adorn t! ovary sunny uternoon. DAILVANP'WEHLY MAIL Adda»- TIIE [all I]. Tom“. Qua AND OINTMENT. STOMAOE and. BOWELS, TunA Mm. M1 bub}; Examine the lode" Rom.