tastnercr aa baanttfal; I had groat or wise tHB be in all tbe world '•̂ ISAnd it"* etOl aMrt < , t h o u g h i t b e -- ,f -anhw"' he sr.co coaM iiiiuk soon thought*, and Mm . write Kttcls wustla to mc. -'•Siftl. -But my poor beanty faded; 'twae the only thing 1 bad. [ wan always weak and fbsUsa, and my whole life grew aad, • the cruel blighting (trer left me pitiful to Wm tne ttaat Beavty •* Inwrtagi) sad my love no more loved ma. 'd have loved him all the man lor that, or any grief bedde; IBnt then he waa so different. Oh, if he had only died! AAnd yet, bow ean I wish him to have Buffered In ,J my steady H think it would have grlved him then to bear tliat I wait dead. 'I have nothing to forgive Mm; still,he very soon forgot. have much to do and think of that we girls have not, man has little thought to spare tor bis own chosen wife; omen's minds are very narrow, aad a girl's love ts her life. say I should forget him, bat I cannot if I would, l3*or sinoe my beanty left me I have tried hard to be good; his name is always on my Hps, when I my to God above-- rarely I may pray for one X eon never osase to love! r . 'j was never fit to be a wife, even when my faoe : . was fair; • • 3fot every one may pray to Heaven; we are all equal there. Jtod God, in bin great mercy, will not pass my IAL pravere by, •*," have one thing left to live fee--4o pray for him till I die. --Calvert's Magazine. ••Wfl ' His Pa Dissecteb.* "I understand your pa has got to iftrfnking again like a fish," says, the •^grocery man to the bad boy, as the |ronth came in the grocery and took a • liandful of dried apples. The boy ate a dried apple and then made up arter«~ |*ible face, and the grocery man asked trim what he was trying to do with his face. The boy caught his breath and then said: "Say, dont yon know any better than to keep dried apples where a boy can get hold of them when he has the lumps? You will kill some boy yet by _ ach dum carelessness. I thought these ' "were sweet dried apples, but they are Bour as a boarding-house keeper, and they make me tired. Didn't you ever liave the mumps ? Gosh, but don't it '.J^burt though ? You have got to be darn careful when you have the mumps, and lu>t go out bob-sledding, or skating, or you will have your neck swell up big- jger'n a milk pail. Pa says he had the , fntunps once when lie was a boy and it Iffioke him all np." "Well, never mind the mumps, how fcbout your pa spveeing it ? Try one of those pickles in the jar there, won't von. ' I always like to have a boy enjoy liim- . self when he comes to see me," said the grocery man, winking to a man who was filling an old fashioned tin bos with tobacco out of the pail, who winked Iback as much as to say "if that boy eats • * pickle on top of them mumps we will liave a circus, sure." "You can't play no piokle on me, not when I have the mumps. Ma passed •lie pickles to me this morning, and I took one mouthful, and like to had the t|ock-jaw. But ma didn't do it 6n pur- . I gness. She never had any tnumps and didn't know how discourag ing a pickle is. Darn if I didn't feel as though I had been struck in the butt of the ear with a brick. But about pa. He has been fuller'n a goose ever since Xew Year's day. I think its wrong for women to tempt feeble-minded per sons with liquor on New Year's. Now me and my chum, we can take a drink and then let it alone. We have got brain, and know when we have got enough, but pa, when he gets to going don't ever stop until he gets so sick that be can't keep his stumniick inside of hisself. It is getting so they look to Jtoe to me to brace pa up every time he rets on a tear, and I guess I fixed him this time so he will never touch liquor •gain. I scared him so his bald-head tinned gray in a single night.** "What under heaven's have you done to him now," says the grocery nisi, in astonishment. "I hope you haven't ekuie anything you will regret in after years." "Regret nothing," mud the boy, as he turned the lid of the cheese-box back and took the knife and sliced off a piece of cheese, and took a few cwickers out of a barrel, and sat down on a soap-box by the stove. "You see ma was an noyed to death with pa. He would come home full, when she had com pany, and lay down on the sofa and anore, and he would smell like a distil lery. It hurt me to see ma cry, and I told her I would break pa of drinking if alie would let me, and she said if I would promise not to hurt pa to go ahead, and I promised not to. Then I got my chum and another boy, quite a big boy, to help, and pa is all right. We went down to the place where they sell arms and legs, to folks who have served in the army, or i saw-mill, or a threshing-machine, and lost their limbs, And we borrowed some arms and legs and fixed up a dissecting room. We fixed a long table in the basement, big enough to lay ffa out on, you know, and then we got false whiskers and mous taches, and when pa came in the house drunk and laid down on the sofa, and got to sleep, we took him and laid him out on the table, and took some trunk straps, and a sircingle and strapped him down to the table. He slept right along all through it, and we had another table with the false arms and legs on, and we rolled up our sleeves, and smoked pipes' just like I read that medical students do when they cut up a man. Well, you'd a dide to see pa look at us when he woke up. I saw him open his eyes, and then we began to talk about cutting up dead men. We put hickory nuts in our mouths so our voices would sound dif ferent, so he wouldu't know us, and I was telling tike other boys about what a time we had catting up the last man we tKraght. 1 said he was awful tough, and when we had got his legs off and had taken out his brain, his friends omne to the dissecting room and claim ed the body, and we had to give it up, but I saved the legs. I looked at pa on the table and he began to turn pale, • and he squirmed around to get up, bat found he was fast. I had pulled his shirt up under his inns, while he was asleep, aad as he ltegan to move I took an icicle, and in tha dim light of the candles, that were sitting on the table in beer bottles, I drew the icicle across pa's stummicfe, and I said to my ahum, 'Doc, I guess we hod better out open this old duffer and see if 1M died from Inflammation of the stommick, from hard drinking, as the coroner said be did.' Pa shuddered • '• iiii (fell i> o*e» US bare_ stngimiek, and he said, 'Kit pod's soke, gentlemen, wliat does tfatsTaean ? I atn not dead.' The other boys botad at pa in astonishment, and I said, 'Weil, WE brought you for dead, and fay the eternal we ain't going to be fooled out of a oorpee when we buy one, are we. Doc ? MY chum said not if he knowed his self, and the other students said, 'Of course he is dead. He thinks he is alive, but he died day before yes terday, r«li dead on the street, and his folks said he had been a nuisance and they wouldn't claim the corpse, and we bought it at the morgue.' Then I drew the icicle across him again, and I said, 'I don't know about this, doctor, I find that blood follows the scalpel as I cut through the cuticle.' Pa began to wiggle around, and we looked at him, and my chum raised .his eye-lid, and looked solemn, and pa said, "Hold on, gentlemen. Dont cut into me any more, and I can explain this matter. This is all a mistake. I was only drunk.' We went in a corner and whispered, and pa kept talking all the time. He said if we would postpone the hog kill ing he could send and get witnesses to prove that he was not dead, but that he was a respectable citizen, and had a family. After we had held a consulta tion I went to pa and told him that what he said about being alive might possibly be true, though we had our doubts. We had found such cases be fore in Offir practice east, where men seemed tp be alive, but it was only tern porarv. Before we had got them cut up they Were dead enough for all prac tical purposes. Then I laid the icicle across pa's abdomen, and went on to tell him that even if he was alive it would be better for him to play that he was dead, because he was such a nui sance to his family that they did not want him, and I was tclliug him that I had heard that in his lifetime he was very cruel to liis boy, a blight little fel low who was at the head of his class in Suiulay-Bchool, and a pet wherever lie was known. When pa interrupted me and said, 'Doctor, please take that carv ing knife off my stomach, far it makes me nervous. As for that boy of mine, he is the condemndist little whelp in this town, and he isn't no pet anywhere Now, you let up on this disscetin' busi ness, and I will make it all right with you ?' We held another consultation and then I told pa that we did not feel that it was doing justice to society to give up the body of a notorious drunkard, after we had paid twenty dollars for the corpse. If there was any hope that he w ould reform and try and lead a differ ent life, it would be different, and I said to the boys, 'Gentlemen,we must do our duty. Doc, you dismember that leg, and I will attend to the stomach and upper part of the body. He will be dead before we are done with him. We must remember that society has some claims on us, and not let our better na tures be worked upon by the post mor tem promises of a dead drunkard. Then I took my icicle and began fumbling around the abdomen portion of pa's re mains, and my chum look a rough piece of ice and began to saw his leg off, while the other boy took hold of the leg and said he would catch it when it dropped off. Well, pa kicked like a steer. He said he wanted to make one more ap peal'to us, and we acted sort of impa tient, but we let up to hear what he had to say. He said it we would turn him loose he would give us ten dollars more than we paid for his body, and that he would never drink a drop as long as he lived. Then we whispered some more and then told him we thought favorably ' " " * " *" l»al he must of his prc|n^}iuou, swear, with his hand on the leg of a corpse we were then dissecting that he would never drink again, and then he must be blindfolded and be conducted several blocks away from the dissecting room, before we would turn him loose. He said that was all right, and so we blindfolded him, and made him take a bloody oath, with his hand on a piece of ice that we told him was a piece of an* other corpse, and then we took him out Of the house, and walked him around the block four time , and left him on a cor ner, after he had promised to send the money to an address that I gave him. We told him to stand still five minutes after we left him, then remove the blind fold, and go home. We watched him, from behind a board fence, and he took off the handkerchief, looked at the name on a street lamp, and found he was not far from home. He started off saving: "That's a pretty narrow escape old man. No more whisky for you." I did not see him again until this morning, and when I asked him where he was last night he shuddered and said 'none your darn business. But I never drink any more, you remember that.' Ma Was tickled, and she told me I was worth my weight in gold. Well, good day.* That cheese is musty." And the boy went and caught on a passing sleigh.--Peck's Sun. How Celors Harmonize With Traits el Character. Purity and guilelessness can best be represented by white, and its stainless snowy atmosphere always gives a sense of coolness also to the eye of the l>o- liolder. Blue, again, is a color of inno cence, and is apt to give an individual an air of delicacy and refinement, while the pale greens are scarcely inferior in the sauie effect; but the rose-color in one of the Lues of coquetry, is an ex pansive blooming color, and renders one, we know not how or why, much easier of approach than any of the colder colors do. Then there are few colors which wrap such an impression of dignity and majesty about one as purple does, especially the purple that inclines to violet, whether because of its royal and churchy association or ol anything inherent, as the way in which it retires into shadow rather than ob trudes, even wlyle maintaining its in tegrity in still self-assertion. One who wears Ted, on the other hand, may wish to express haughtiness or pride, anger or a species of defiance, but certainly nothing of shrinking modesty or of cold repose. And yellow, to conclude, may express a sunny serenity and generosity of nature carried even to its highest power. It is true that yellow, under certain circumstances, confesses injuri ous luxury of character, and ex pi esses exactly the opposite attributes to those which render white and blue appropri ate. Perhaps sonm of us remember a striking picture that was shown in the centennial exhibition some years ago, where, through the opening door of a convent, with its black and white robed nuns, out of the wild storm, a beau tiful woman implores shelter; she is clad in brilliant yellow, and one feel* the strength of the picture iu the con trast between innocence and guilt, the sin of the world seeking sanctuary, sym bolized by the yellow gown of beauty, the black and white of innocence and self-sacrifice.--Harper"ts Bazar. A NEWARK (Ohio) school teacher ket for tobacco and MMpnfV MKi Onsdayla*»ins; ing over a bridge lampreys, «r "lam usually their nesl in MM pan to see two as th< In below searched a BOY'S pockel found three pistols and » dirk-knife. was one of the most curious I ever saw in our stream. They were a few yards belowttto bHd£ts;}uBt where the water breaks from the still pool be neath it, and flows with a rapid current over it roughly paved bottom. They were distinguishable from the yellowish brown and black stones and pebbles amid which tiiey were working only by their motions. Tliey were tug ging away at the small movable stones with great presistence. I went down to the water's edge where they were within reach of my staff, the bet ter to observe them. 'They would run up to the edge of the still water and seize upon the stones with their suction month and drag them back with the cm-rent and drop them upon the nest. I understood at once why their nests, which I had often observed before, were always placed at the beginning of a rift; it is that the fish may avail them selves of the current in building them. The water sweeps them back with the pebble in their mouth, their only effort being in stemming the current to seize it. They are thus enabled to move stones which they could not stir in still water. The stones varied in size from a wal nut. to a goose egg. When one of them was tugging away af a stone too lieavey for it, I would lend a helping hand with my staff; I would move the stone along gently, and the lamprey seemed entire ly unconscious of the fact that it was being helped; it would drop the burden at the proper point, and run up for an other. I-ndeed my aid and presence did not disturb them at all. From time to time, the larger of the two, which was the female, would thrust her tail with great violence down among the pebbles at the bottom of the creek and loosen them up, and set free the mud, which the current quickly carried away. The new material thus plowed up was car ried to the nest. Twice in the course of the lialf-liour that I observed them, the act of spawning took place. Besides helping move the larger stones with my staff, I several times plowed up the bottom Villi its poiut, thus relieving the female of that duty. The fish took it all as a matter of course, and seized upon the pebbles I had loosened with great alacrity. When I thrust my cane beneath them and tried to lift them out of the water, they would suck fast to the stones and prevent me; but they did not manifest any alarm. The lampreys become much exhausted with the spawning and nest building, and large numbers of them die when it is over. In June it is not unusual to find their dead bodies in the streams they inhabit.--John Bur roughs, in the Century. Polish Hospitality. The Poles are extraordinarily hos pitable ; they entertain without grudge. At every table in the large houses some extra places are laid ready for unex pected guests--as they say, "for the traveler that comes over the sea." It is possible in Poland to go uninvited to see vonr friend, taking your children, your servants, and horses, and to stay five or six weeks without receiving any hins to go. The Poles are fond of gayety, of amusement, of society; they love pleasure in all its bright and charming forms. The country houses are constantly full of viaitorn. ami in the winter there is often the "Kulig," a gathering which increases as it goes from house to house. It is taken from a peasant custom, and the nobles, when they get up a "Kulig," wear the peas ant costumes, very beautifully made. They go over the snow in sledges from house to house, dancing for two or three days at one, and then going on to an other, taking the people of the house which they leave with them. At last there are perhaps twenty sledges all full of people, dressed in bright colors and singing the songs of the "Kulig." At every house they dance the charac teristic dances of the occasion--the "Krakomlak," the "Mazur," and the "Oberek." The first is a very pretty and peculiar dance, in which the part ners turn away from each other and then come face to face; the "Mazur" is something like the quadrille, though it is by no means the same ; the "Oberek" resembles a waltz danced the reverse way, and with a very pretty and char acteristic figure, in which the man kneels on one knee and kisses his part ner's hand. They are all most charm ing and pretty, and the Poles dance with enthusiasm as well as grace. They have many national customs and cere monies which are occasions for dancing and pleasure., Then, in the autumn and winter, there is boar hunting. In this way, with these various amuse ments, the time passes in the country houses, and visitors will stay six weeks or perhaps six months. Wolseley'S Ideal Soldier. "What do you think are the most es sential qualities of a soldier and an army, Sir Garnet?" "Esprit de corps and pride. . A sol dier should be proud of his profession, and he should have the greatest inter est and feeling for his individual com mand. He should be dressed well. Even should he incline toward dandy ism that should be encouraged^ The better you dress a soldier the more highly he will be thought of by women, and consequently by himself. The duke of Wellington said of his officers iu Spain that many of the best men were the greatest dandies. Men in the campaigns of the past used to pride themselves on being slovenly. To be unshaved and dirty was supposed to be the sign of a good officer. The spirit ran like wildfire among the army. Whatever the officers think fine the men will think so, too. It is very diffi cult to make an Englishman at any time look like a soldier. He is fond of longish hair and uncut whiskers. In the field no person should wear his hair over have an inch in lenght. It should never be long enough to part. No man can have smart hearing who can part bis hair. Hair is the glory of a woman, but the shame of a man. Men who have never worn beards are apt to think that to wear one saves a good deal of trouble. It does so if you do not clean it, but to wear a long one and keep it clean demands more time and trouble than shaving. On service dis cipline deteriorates when but little at tention is paid to dress, and when the men wear almost what they like. P. T. Bantam i OB for pain. His all one ft A St. Jacobs ion and artists by What It That w nvv A man of tuggfed ttnamon-sense will change his home from the country to a large oity, from simple aad frngfl sur- ronndings to the vicinage of wealth and fashion, and HI meat instances he finds his estimate of me*and things speedily or gradually influenced by his new associations, fie is likely to* depreciate the simple life from which he lately emerged, and to place an exaggerated value on the ostentation and pretension of the new. Tins will occur, too, in spite of the fact, which his experience and judgment teach him, that real man hood and all the higher qualities of character and mind are as likely to ex ist in the one locality as in the other. This remark is true of all except the superior few who are able to judge pf life from their own sufficient conscious ness.--SU Louis Republican. JTTDOK W. T. FILLET, of Pittsfteld, this State, was cured of seven rheumatism by 'St. Jacobs Oil.--SprtHQfleld, Mass., Re publican. „ Liszt as a Confirmed Kisser. Liszt is always surrounded by wom en, writes a correspondent of the Phila delphia Bulletin, who cling to him in a manner that suggests the love-sick maidens. He has the manners of a very young man toward these devoted women, though in one respect he en joys the privilege of old age. He kisses both hands and cheeks whenever he takes the fancy. Nearly every woman who greets him bends low over his hand and kisses it. There is a deal more kissiug done here than one sees in an American drawing-room, nearly all the German ladies kissing the hands of Wagner and Liszt at greeting. A ui>i writes: "Overwork, care, anxie ty, grief sorrow, untcindnew, etc, mads quite an invalid of me. I suffered neat fa tigue and was very "nervous. I)r. Ouysott's Yellow Dock and Sarsaparilla has made me strong- and happy. It has made me feel more able to endure hardships." Moss Paper Wood. * A new industry has recently sprung up in Sweden. In most parts of that country enormous quantities of blanched and bleached mosses are found that grew ages ago. These old mosses are now gathered and made into paper, which is found to be very fine in quali ty. A manufactory of paper from this material has begun operations near Jo- enkoeping, and it is turning out paper in all degrees of excellency, from tissue to three-quarters of an inch in thick ness. These latter are harder than wood. L2? A mort interesting feature of modem Italian life is the pwmteut survival of old manners and customs among peasantry. French influence has n fled the whole life of the upper classes; painters are for the most part content tp follow, the methods in yogue at the Salon; and the dearth of high-class music forms the stodk oomplaint of Englishmen and Germans who sojourn in Italy. But in spite of railways, telegraphs, and half-penny newspapers, the peasant remains much as he has l>een from time immemorial; his pots and pans are still fashioned in Etruscan shapes; his great white oxen are yoked in the simplest conceivable manner to carts of primeval pattern; and only a vear or two ago some friends of mine heard a bevy of Tuscan girls bantering each other in improvised rhymes such as Theocritus might have put into the mouths of Sicilian shepherd IMW, Popular life in Tuscany lias lost little of its brightness or of its individuality, and the peasant's humor is still racy as of old; and this survival of the past into the present gives a lively interest to the investigation of such customs as have dropped out of use, clothing the dry Ixmes of antiquarianism with the sinews and flesh of every-day life. Though the past be dead, there is no need to bury it out of sight; for its death wears the semblance of a sleep, from which it may rise anew, for aught we can see to prevent it, at any moment.--Macmil- lan'8 Magazine. AN elderly English lady of fashion needing a page advertised: "Youth wanted." Next day there came to her a bottle of wrinkle filler and skin tight ener, a pot of "Fairy Bloom," a set of false teeth, a flaxen wig and some pat ent soap. A Cure of Pneumonia. Kr.DwIl.BarDaby.of Owe>ro, New York, aarstbathi* Ikughter was taken with a violent cold whi h terminat- ad with pneumonia, and all the best phyniclans gave the case up and said ulie could not live but a few hour* at most. She was in this condition when a friend rec ommended Dr. Win. Hall'* Balsam for the Lung* and advised her to try it. 8ho accepted it at. a last roaort rlsed t< A New Principle. The principle upon which PUTNAM'S PAB- GOKN EXT 'XTRACTOK acts in eittiratv new. It does not sink deep into the flesh, thereby producing soreness, but acts directly upon the external covering of the corn, neparates it from the under layer, removes the direct pressure from the part, and at once effect# a radical cure, without any pain or disoomfort Let those who are suffering from corns, vet skeptical of treatment, trv it, and by the completeness of the curs they will be ready to recommend Putnam's Painless Corn Ex tractor to others Wholesale, Lord, Stouten- burgh ft Co., Chicago. *Gm ruins genius,* says an exchange. Yes, but genius ruins a good deal of gin, so It's about a stand-off. Indorwed by th« Clergy, We takepleasure in recommending Dr. Warner's White Wine of Tar ffyrup to the public, especially to any way be troubled with thseat or long dis eases REV. M. L BOOHKB, Pastor Presbyterian Church, Reading, Mich. BEV. J. TC IDMNOS, Albion, Mick REV. V. L LOCK WOOD, Ann Arbor, Mich, Sold by all druggists 1 PAXUS are now made of straw. We wonder If that's where all the "straw bail" goes to, of which we hear so much. free to All Ministers of Chnrchet, I will send one bottle of White Wine of Tar Syrup, gratis, to any minister that will n commend it to his friends after giving it fair test, and it proves satisfactory for coughs, colds, throat or lung diseases. Bflspeotfolly, JL>r. O. D. WAKNKB, Beading, Miok> Bold by all druggists to lind tluit it produced a market! j-Jiangc ror tne oetter, and by persevering in its use a twrmanent cure was effected. Mothers, Attention! : Chariea Jonaa, of Elizabeth, Spencer comity, tad* taya: " I have dealt in medicine a number of years, and will aay that Dr. Roper's Vegetable Worm Syrup i* the aaost valuable medicine I ever Hold. MM THE young skipper who takes a party of girls out mailing should content himself with hugging the shore. HOME -- w e are pi testimonials relating to Hood's Sarsaparlila are from New England people, and many are from Lowell, the home of this medicina We are assured that the sale of this article in Lowell, where it is l>est known, is wholly un precedeuted in the annals of proprietary medicines We leave it with you to decide as to the probable merits of an article with such a solid foundation. Sold by druggista FasmoiuBus suits. talk--Novelties in divorce HOOD'S Sarsaparlila is an extract of the best remedies of the vegetable kingdom known as Alteratives and ISlood-Purifiera. A uuh exhibition--A oonflrmed old bach elor. Personal I--T« Men Omljr! THE VOLTAIC BELT Co., Marshall Mich, will send Dr. Dye's Celebrated Electro Voltaic Belts and Electric Appliances on trial for thirty days to men (young or old) who are afflicted with nervous debility, lost vl tality and kindred troubles, guaranteeing speedy and complete restoration of health and manly vigor. Address as above. N. B.-- No risk is incurred, as thirty days' trial is al lowed. Ga&vn BCK Ifoxs, Baltimore Ca, lid. XESKIIS. KEKOCDT & C o . ' The Osrholine Is making young hair come on my bald head. This is a fair sample of the certificates which are received daily at the Pittsburgh oftice. LADIES or genteoutof work furnished with steady, lucrative employment at home Send 3-cent stamp, for particulars, to Agents'Fur nishing Co., P. O. Box No. 1006, Topeka, Kan, THE U. & Government are using large nu bers of The Improved Howe Scales Bordi Selleck A Co., Agents, Chicago. num- en, AT a partv GIVEN not long six * asked since tn Awtin, a gilded yotaih was asked if he had seen Frank Mosvtaunt as "Captain Weathergage," in answer to which ques tion l*s shook his head, and replied with a soft, gentle smile: "I tziake it a rule never to attend a performance for the first time unless I have seetr.it beioxe. --Texan 8\ftingtu 1 25c buys a pair of Lyon's Patent Heel M*. eners. Makes a boot or shoe last twice aw long. Rheutnatiam Quickly curedJ Send stamp forfrce presctipt'n, R. K. Helpbenstine, Washington,D.C. DOSE Cup. Advertisem't in another oolnaiL Tmt the new brand. Spring Toti anon THE STUBBORN, ObaOftafe alfoctfcm known as Scrofula iaatalBt in the blood rcHultbig from deficient nutrition. It is a pow erful disorder, outliving ito victim by appearance in descendants. Few in any community are free from thin corruption, which attacks different organs under different names, and at different times in different pernonn. To meet so deaperate a foe require* a med icine of positive, urgent, forcible qualities. Such is HOOD'S HAKHAl'ABILLA, whose most wonder- ful cores lirove it the most ivliatds remedy. FOR 1WEXTY-ONE YEARS lliomas Bennett, 6 Coventry street, Boston, carried a scrofulous lamp on his le?. It itched intolerably the lsst four years; became a sore so troublesome that he wanted to cut out the lump with his knife. Bethought to carry this torment to his grave. Two bottles of Hood's gar aiHii lUa cured the lump, TWELVE UGLY ULCERS Below the knee of the little son of Henry T. Curtis, of Frankfort, lie., resulted from injudicious swimming in summer water. They discharged bonu «s well as' matter. Be took Hood!*a teroaparUla one Stason, threw away kk 11 nSfciw, which be had used iferee yeant, and now walks a mile to school. RIBTH-BOKN SCROFULA. IT- J. Steams, WUlimaatic. Ct„ «u afflicted iatoncy. Lost mother, aster, brother by it. nevsral bottles of Mood's Saunaparil a, aad sole survivor of his family Took is the IIMHffl'S MAR8APAK1LLA. Backtok*, IMMM TFI Gout, Qwiuf, Son Throat, $*•//- > ttn4 Sprains*Burns mii ScaUs, BensraJ Bodily Pains, Tootk, Ear and Noiufacho, Frostot Foot and Fan, and at! othor Paint and Mckos. Vo preparation on sarth equate Sr. JACOBS OIS as a M/r, sure, timple aad eA--Ji Kztsrnal Brmedy. A trial so tails but the eonpsimtively trifling outlay of ufi Ceati, and every sua sulfating with pain can have cheap aad positlTs prmt of iM claims. * Directions in Eleven Laogaages. * SOLD BY ALL DRU6GI8T8 AID 9EALE18 nr MEDIOIHB, JL VOGELER As CO., Baltimore, Md., V. M. A. •70 A WEEK. $12 a day at himic easily ma' lo. Costly # IX outfit free. Address Turn-: & Co., Au^uRta, Maine. A QA.OO made in one month teaching. Address (JJrirOlTl'lioto Enameling Process Oo^Baraboo.Wifl. TUfii Photos of Beautiful Indies. lOc. TUuntrated 1 If U (' tUiU jn•' Ik J. DIEi'Z, Koa linK. Pa. U A I D Send postal for Dl'st'dCatalog. HULL'S nAllf Hair Store, 384k40 Monroe. Chicago. i 5 tn tQft P"'r day at home. Samples worth (5 free, IU Address HTI.SSON & Co., Port'an l, Maine, AGENTS WANTED tor the Best and Fastest-Selling Pictorial Booka and Bibles Prices reduced M per coat. NATIONAL PUBLISHING CO., Chicago, IlL BO beet -- 0*1 (.Itloh. SAWMILLS THB AULFFMAM A TAYLOB CXX. MisSiid. Ohio. FREE For information aad Maps of Missouri, Kansas. Arkansas »nd Texas, write to JOHN & KNNI8. M Clark Si., Ch.ca|o YOUNG Men Circulars free. VALENTINE BROS., Janasville, Wis. HAIR SSffS 2 reel PATENTS 8™ Also TRj MABK8. etc. report if pat' _ tfree. N.W. 'aahlogton,D.C. SUBUBBAtf LOTS GIVEN AWAY! Agents Wanted Everywhere. Perfect titles. Attracts ind Warranty Deeds furnished. Scud postage for circular to THE BOYAL MINING C< >MPANY. 125 Clark Street, Boom 38, Chicago, in. 200 IT79 Muos! For particulars write to Reed's Teapte of Music, CHICAGO. We Take Fleaaare la Aasmdsc sftoVWMABK TWAIN nrntu "LIFE oitu Miaaiaairn." A rich theme, and the richest, raciest volume of all the Twain series. Characteristic Illustration*. BaSMM cath prim to agents."AworA to the wise 1s sufficient." -- ntOdrOutflU now ready. #1. For par. reusC.B. BcachAOo Chlcasro DOSS OTP * C0EI-3CBEW, the invalid's boon and nurse's delight "tolBIVEN FtlE So DRIFOOTTTS HMLTII MONTHLY to those sending only <a letter stamps for a 3 raxithK' . triau subscription. The Doas CUP O measures accurately ooe drachm and 0 prevents mistakes; the cork-screw l_ prevents breaking corks and knife* X blades; the Healta Monthly prevents S human ills. Address M. HILL Pua. tt CO., Box 188, New York City. thi» amr ELASTIC TRUSS haSs, sli|H Hssirtssil sftfeskstaLWhSstts sZ K CulMtM Tim* (fe, CMecao^ UL, FAMILY RBtEDY! STRICTLY PUIti, WILLIAM p. Dtaaas, writes April 1, UwaBtuw •M Men cwNd; give it a trial. mUmsBuaui Iw ami Ms matter aTtibaam WlLUAK A. OlAIAM * OS Js n e s v U l s , O h i o , w r i t a M t t f l s i VtenniAK. a welHnown dttaea,who write MtCfla cure of ta its worst tin Cor £8.' cured him. sa it hai MBT As an SxfMMtorant it has No Equal. •tolwekyall RCedlcia* Dealefca, weak inyourown town. Terms and Addreas H. HALLMT ft Co., Portland. O PATENT NO FA*. 8. ft A. P.LACEY, Patent teuraers.WaahingtoaJXC Panurrss. at m PATENTS?; /VU In» ntcUtma aad Ha*d-t I will give the best Seed* for the least momgr of any «rm 111 America or refund. Western Seeds are beat. Mine take the lead.C~-'--* Gardeners aay they never ~ paper to print 50000 .. nustratedwithttooo . [ravings. It be** the world, ••i ijaw Prices below fall. I used •««> ma pretty Catalog&esi; worth . ofengrav worth many doll aU.«&.H. 7AY, BockAtrd, M*. tkat lt Is oattatay fcsl **« stasia', •Mw#; H. H. WARNER * CO. •tooHtaTsa. a.v. SOTThis 1 i!iwti<M it mm rtaaftrt* MMMtW the diseases «r awiwa) /»r tike . * «f» a a^i^JLjluaaAkJ tvsia aid flfa JtB ftfSiMsi < |A«| WEEKLY irhich JMWWIM that allditatm FT, FRE <*M GUARS reason of the psirer" wMaki and User Cure j»as»eesBe aaer 1 •j lAfttrrix fiporw of Congress, _ tea Courts. Washington News emonal, Bociety and Local Aflhira, rrass; Government Departments, land repoi United B Political, pondenoe, Sketches. Home Articles, Fashion TelegraphNewsfhavinK ite own wire to Mew Literary Notes, The Markets, etc. Try it. Only ONE DOLLAR A 1'HE WEEKLY STAR, Washington, P. O. Given Away!! Cold Offers a novel list of cash prises for the largest lists of words Out can be formed from the letter* composing the name of "THE PBA1R1E KARMKR." Every com petitor, however, must become a subscriber to flw paper for one year at the regular price of f%M par rear in advance. For full rates and rf gujsHstia, Bund for a copy of the Prairie Farmer, which wffl MMtit to any address on ruceivt of six cauts in aoaMft stamps Address l'KAlIUE FABMEK KBU«ffilW,00„ IM MonraeKT Chicago, 111. XX.--NOTIOBi--XX. AS ILK FUIKIBMIEITS teet their customers and the public, mve notes to protect tostr customers and tne j>i that hereafter all Clothing made frdh TH SBX STANDARD INDIOO CLUB FLAN TACHT OLOTHS. sold bjr all leading clothiers, must bear the "SILK ftAN0Bft8." fttrnislSd by the Settiag Agents to all parties ordering tbe gooda. WENjDELL, FAY * CO., SELLING AQBNYS, MIDDLESEX COMPANY, as and 8S Worth St. New York; ST Franklia At, Boston: S1A Chestnut St. Phllsdslphla, A NOVEL CONTEST. $400.°? IN CASH GIVEN AWAY Tosubacribersof THEPBOPUTBWKBKLYwhosub- uruary. 6REAT SAVIHB TO aiM.ni--1-- wmuNN ceptedby oat MM known thegoe- pel according to 8t verse is the same as or is nearest to it in tbe order of verses, wlH receive the highest price; the one next nearest, tbe second largest pnse; and so on to tbe number of Si prizes. For rules and regulations iroveruinir tbe contest, send ew, and tbe subneriber whom same sa tne one selected by thai individual. 1M Monroe 81. CHICAGO, III. MAGNETIC INSOLES The M etto Insoles contain a series of BMMpata that form mtontekatts ̂ the blood with m CONSEQUENT by their MAGNETIC t mrougc Oenerafe SECURE PERFECT C FEET AND LOWER EXTRCMI1IE Cure Chilblains and remove au and Ankles. Prevent, relieve, and. In all form* of Chronic and £ One MiHiea Pnailatai RaaMaats tf Km Wsalwisrtaf IMa. THOU Are now writhing in Disease, all of whose DA "Keep the fttt warm and the sa at any point in the world's history. Insoles sent postpaid on receipt of SI par pair. To famines < pairs for as whether for lady or gra^wTiisBfi WMCTia •riZTSZi 1h£dfor% TftfWnr and Physioti Chiton. ooaxataiiMr tutiBUttfefa at lgAfiiribrm ̂ --fl MllTtrlanE --Miy cwTMMV. to StsFa? W5 T. hila, aad yat it is aa tray to-dar katNs.*tSMsSt SORT FORBeT--ORtos HKStSTHONORSSS^̂ r̂ IOO STYLES, $22,$30,$5£ %72, $78, $93, $108, $04-, $500, AND UP' MASON *HAMUN ORGAN* P1AN0C0. BOSTON./s*;7a3«v7:̂ NEW Y(PX.¥S£MsmmQ1CAGQwwwsH/ttci W siHSJUi IJ unfailing and infalli. ble in curing Epileptic iFitk. Spasms, Coavul-aions. ft. Vitus' Dance. Akoholism^Opfum Ba HebvTK« SET^SSS employment causes ie«UT>f*"the stomach, bowels nejTi, or who re quire a nerve tonic, ap- iaer or stimulant, mmritan Meiilas invaluable. Ibou- prodaiin a the wonderful In- DM. 8. A. RICHMOND MEDICAL OQ» Sol* Proprietara, St. Jaaapht Ha' . ' •hchae stamp tot Circulate. FRAZER AXLE GREASE. S^BsSstL' C.W. 0. Ne.a-as