-- . '£ • . .I, •,; , ' > '.-&C in Bi^npo cnwix er, n,./*.' together, ""T' When they drtnlr their tee and obsttsc AUakNtOwMMiuul taahioas,-r>. Allaboat their neighbors' pro«pi%,. All about their neighbor*' failing* Alsetattgr tee, the husbands. w- .'tit,-- Of the good old DtMon Bo wen: There *H Major Duff and "inter. Deacon Caator's wife and dausheit ^SSfSfiriS^SSSP :* With his kindly word* and wishes. Wtomi* "kU were well** that evening. (Hoping 1» would find some ailing,-- Thia, hie mental reservation.) til And the young unmarried parson-* Parson Obariiah Potter-- Talking to the maidn and spin sierlj§*'f , Also came the village blacksmith, •* *! With liia wile and children seven: And from achool came lad* and lanes, With them came the young schoolmistress; And, In shert, a goodly number , Dtd assemble at this circle,-- More than thrice the usual numbetr* ',r« Many that did very seldom 7* ̂K-*•• Go to hear the Sundav preaching. ̂ What, tttffk jwt ootUd be the teainaf Wbat oonid be the great attraction? Deacon Boweukspt a boarder. Kept the yonng numatried parson-- Parson Obadiah Potter-- ;i-%( Who was looking: for a partner L f-vr-r 'Monsrst the fair ones of the pariahf.' t , I Boaald Rumor, ever busy, Bu?y with the news a nd gossip. ; i,,?. Just betere the next month's iriHIHig Of the ladies' sewing circle, Parson Potter went, a jonrney,-- ; Journey to his native village. So he came back to his parish, • And was met by all bis people: Not alone he gave them greeting; With him oame a dark-eyed ladjfeiC"4 And the parson called that lady C , \ Si * Mrs. Obadlah Potter. Now the ladles* sewing drote Has about the usual number. --Good Cheer. K Wilkes Booth. Wa<: people. The little, the very litt>. I left behind to clear ltiv n^me, the gov ernment will not allow u> bo printed. So en<la all! For my country I have j^veti np til thatwadehfrvawaptirod holy, brought misery upon lay family, and am sure there is no p.trilon in diamond point, on a pane of glass la one of tht wimlows of his roowi '-'"'; ABE Lmcout . * Departed this life 1 , After "Mr. Lincoln's death by the hand of this man the pane became aa to the collection of relics thai I have described.--Cleveland Herald. the heavens for me since mnn condemns \ ohieci of interest. It was cut out, me so. I have only heard of what lyts I nea,1.v framed, and tent by Miss Mc- been done (except what I «lid myself), j ®e°[y ^ ̂ Vashingtori. It waa added and It fills me with horror! God! try **" ~ " and forgive me and bless my mother. To-night I will once more try the river with the intention to cross, though I have a great desire and almost a mind to return to Washington, and in a measure clear my name, which I feel I can do. I do not repent the blow struck, I may before my God, but not to man. I think I have done well though I am abandoned with the curse of Cain upon me, when, if the world knew my heart, that one blow would have made me great, though I did de sire no greatness. To-night I try to escape those bloodhounds one more. Who, who can read his fate? God's will be done. I have too great a care to die like a criminal. Oh, may He, may He, spare me that and let me die bravely. I bless the entire wo^ld- Have never hated or wronged anyone. Thifc httt was not a wrong, unlese God deems it so, arid it is with Him to damn or bless me. And for this brave boy Harold, with me, who often prays (yes, before and since) with a true and sin cere heart, was it crime in him? If so, why can he pray the game? I do not wish to shed a drop of blood, but I must fight the course. Tis all that's left me." There is a large, villainous-looking 0 Is, •v.;3)S $ome Interesting Belies of the Assassin of Abraham Lincoln--His Final Cap- -- • I . t iptnt a little time in examining with if *'* melancholy interest * some xolioa of J. Wilkes Booth and his fellow-con- Bpirators. They are very carefnlly kept in the office ot Judge Advocate Gen eral Swaim. t First I was Shown the pistol with v which the President was shot. It is a email, old-fashioned derringer, its en tire length being but a trifle more than eix inches, while the barrel is but two v and a half inches. The bore, however, is much larger than that of the weapons of its size of the present day. The fatal bullet taken from the head of Mr. Lincoln, is much battered by its con ,f. tact with the skull, which was said by ' * the surgeons to be unusually thick. In a small glass case are preserved several i fragments of the fractured skull. The silver tipped probe used on that occa sion is also in the collection. There is a doable-edged dirk knife which was taken from the person of Booth after ** his death. It has a large horn handle and a blade about seven inches in length. It is of the kind spokeu of in ordinary parlance as a "Bowie," but the latter, strictly speaking, has but a single edge. One side of the blade is neatly orna mented, and bears the inscription: "America, the Land of the Free and ; the Home of the Brave, Liberty aud In- >fi dependence." It was this knife that the assassin brandished in his hand as he ran across the stage of the theater , after the shooting, shouting, "Sic sem per tyrannis!" The hat worn by Booth .- was picked up in the theater box after the tragedy. It is of dank cloth, finely "quilted," of the style much worn at a * »* that time. There is also a light colored ; "slouch" felt hat which was worn that night by Payne, when he made the mur- derous attack on Secretary Seward. The boot worn by Booth on the broken leg is of the cavalry pattern, and very high, reaching nearly to the hip. At the instep is a slip eight or ten inches 'i long, made by Dr. Mudd while exam- jfe ining Booth's injury, at his house, near Surratsvivle, Md. The fugitive made a brief halt in his flight, seeking relief from the pain in his limb. A very in teresting feature of the collection is a small diary found in Booth's pockets after his death. It is much soiled and r 0 stained, and all the leaves prior to the date of April 14, the day of the mur- . der, had been cut off by himself. Among the articles found in the "pocket" of the book are five photo graphs of young women, presumably >4 actresses a small silver horse-shoe charm, and a Roman Catholic medal or amulet. I copied from the diary the following, written by Booth while try- ' ing to escape from his pursuers. The handwriting was fully identified by his friends after his death: "April 14, Friday, the Ides--TJnti- to-day nothing was ever thought of sacl riflcing to our country's wrongs. For o six months we had worked to capture; but our cause being almost lost, some thing decisive and great must be done. , -i Hut its failure was owing to others who 1 did not strike for tlieir country with a heart. I struck boldly and not as the papers say. I walked with a firm step through a thousand of his friends; was stopped, bnt pushed on. A colonel was at his side. I shouted sic semper before , I lired. In jumping broke my leg. I * « passed all his pickets; rode sixty miles that night with the bone of my leg tearing the flest at every jump. I can never report it- Though we bated to f lull, our country owed ail her troubles to him, and God simply made me the •Instrument. The country is not what itVas. This forced union is not what I have loved. I care not. what becomes of me. I have no desire to outlive my country. This night, before the deed, I wrote a long article and left it for one of the editors of the National Intelli- * gencer, in which I fully set forth our ^ reasons for our proceedings. He or the Sonth." "Friday, 21--After being hunted like a dog 1 li rough mmpi« and woods, and last night being chased bv gun-boats • till I was forced to return wet, cold, aud starving, with every man's hand against me, I am here in despair, and why? For doing what Brutus was honored for--what made Tell a hero. > And yet I, for striking down a greater tyrant than they ever knew, am looked upon as a common cutthroat. My act was purer than either of theirs. One hoped to be great himself; the other had not only his country but his own wrongs to avenge. I hoped for no gain; I knew no private wrong. I struck * for my country and that alone. A * country ground' beneath this tyranny and prayed for this end. and yet now behold the cold hand they extend to me. God cannot pardon me if I have » done wrong. Yet lean not see anv - V - ^ 1 f* " Sfi Before the Hale ft Ifarorooa fight came ofe--this is tnffiiioa jiMtnal there anirod in town a dissipated He waa pretty badly down, apparently, but he wont into a broker's oAoe, and, efter being toH te fet eat as * tramp, he said be tlKinftht e good deal «f Stale Mnife, wtoich was found in the room of Atasrot; after his arrest and identified as belonging to him, and another with wiilcb "I'ayne attacked Mr. Seward. There are also two large navy revolvers, which belonged to Payne and Atzerot. Many will remember that the conspira tors planned the death of the Presi dent, General Grant, Secretary Sew ard, Vice President Johnson, and prob ably others; but, although each was as signed his part in the diabolical tragedy, all of them, for some reason or other, failed, except Booth. It is this failure that Booth alludes to in his diary. Mr. Seward had recently been thrown from his carriage, and by some reason of his injuries was confined to his bed. The surgeons had inclosed his neck with a steel colar, and this doubtless saved his life. At almost the same moment--so carefully were the details of the plot arranged--that Booth entered the DOX occupied by Mr. Lincoln and his friends at Ford's theatre, Payne pre sented himself at the house of Mr. Sew ard. He represented that he was a messenger from the physician, with medicine for the patient, and must see him immediately. His appearance1 aroused the suspicion of the attendants, aud they hesitated to admit him; but brushing them aside, he forced his way in and passed rapidly to Mr. Seward's room, which he entered without cere mony* He attacked the Secretary, as he lay upon the bed, with his knife, en deavoring to cut his throat, but was baffled by the steel collar. Mr. Seward rolled over and off the bed upon the floor on the opposite side. In the meantime Frederick Seward, who was attending him, grappled with the assassin. Payne up to this time had made no use of his revolver, lint now used it as a club, beating his antagonist upon the head very severely, inflicting injuries from which he has never fully recovered. All this had been bnt the work of a moment, but the alarm was rapidly spreading, and Payne, realizing his failure, sought safety in a rapid flight. Strangely enough, he did not leave the city. Forty-eight hours later, at a little before midnight, he called at the house of Mrs. Surratt, which, un known to him, was then under the strictest surveillance. He was dressed as a common laborer, his clothes were bedaubed with mud, and he carried a stick on his shoulder. This implement is kept as one of the historic relics. Confronted by an officer, who asked him who he was, replied that he had been sent to do a job of work for the lady of the house, whose name . he pretended not to know. Mrs. Surratt was in the custody of the officers and was about to be removed. She had asked permission to engage in prayer [she was a Catholic] before leaving the house. Her request was granted, and she was on her knees at the moment of Payne's arrival. An officer conducted him into her presence, and asked her if she knew him. She called God to witness that she had never seen him before. But he was re tained in custody, and proved to be one of the chief conspirators. It was sub sequently proved, by abundant testi mony, that he had dined repeatedly with Mrs. Surratt, at her house. There are also two nine-shooting Spencer carbines, which were taken to Surrattsville by John H. Surratt a short time before the tragedy. They were left at the house of Dr. Mudd, and were intended to assist the assassins in defending themselves--so perfectly had even the route of escape been planned and provided for. Harold, one of the four who were executed, accompanied BoothPin his flight from the alley in the rear of the theater, where the horse was in waiting. At Surrattsville Harold took one of the carbines, but Booth did not, owing to his suffering condition. When at length they were hunted down and surrounded at night in a barn, they were ordered to come forth and surren der. Harold did so but Booth took the c arbine and defied his pursuers, de termined to sell his life as dearly as possible. At length the barn was set on tire, and by the light of the flames Booth could be seen within, seeking aa opportunity to use his weapon. Then Sergt. Boston Corbett put an end to his life by a shot from his revolver. When Booth entered the President's box at the theatre he placed a pine stick al>out three feet long and two inches square, which had been previously pro vided, in such a way as to fasten the door, that no one might follow him into the box. This stick, which is carefully preserved, lav upon the floor as the bleeding President was l>orne out of the box, and several drops of blood fell up on it, the stains being plainly visible. All the details in connection with the theater, necessary to the plan were ar ranged by Booth in person with the as sistance of the stage carpenter, Span- gler who was tried as an abettor of the conspiracy and sentenced to a long im prisonment. The old Ford theater is located on Tenth street, between E and F. Once after the death of the President a theatrical performance was advertised to take phice there, but the government forbade it. The "property was then purchased and is occupied as a National Surgical Museum. In 18G4 a rumor was spread through the country that President Lincoln had died by poison. J. Wilkes Booth was that dav at the McHenry House in Moadville. Pa. After his departure the following was foood A Noted Adventuress. A decided sensation was created at Washington during the Van Buren ad ministration by the appearance there of a handsome and well educated Italian lady, who called herself Americus Ves pucci, and claimed descent from the navigator who gave his name to the continent. Ex-President Adams and Daniel Webster became her, especial friends, and she was soon a welcome guest in the best society. In a few weeks after her arrival, she presented a petition to Congress, asking first to be admitted to the rights of citizenship, and secondly to be given a "corner of land" out of the public domain of the country which bore the name of her an cestor. An adverse report, which was soon made, is one of the curiosities of congressional literature. It eulogized the petitioner as "a young, dignified and graceful lady, with a mind of a brightest intellectual culture, and a heart beating with all our own enthusi asm in the cause of American and hu man liberty." The reasons why the prayer of the petitioner could not be granted were given, but she was com mended to the generosity of the Ameri can people. "The name of Amerioa-- our country's name--should be hon ored, respected and cherished in the person of the interesting exile from whose ancestor we derive the great and glorious title." A subscription waaimmediately open* ed by Mr. Haight, the sergeant-at-arms of the Senate, and judges, congressmen and citizens vied with one another in their contributions. Just then it was whispered that Madame Vespucci had bom an unenviable reputation at Flor ence and at Paris, and had been In duced by a pecuniary consideration to break off an intimacy with the Duke of Orleans, Louis Phillippe's oldest son, and oome to Washington, boon after wards the duke's younger brother, the Prince de Joinville, came to this country and refused to recognize her, which virtually exclud< d her from reputable society. For some years subsequently she resided in luxurious seclusion with a wealthy citizen of New York, in the interior of that State, and after his death she returned to Paris.--Ben: Berly Poore's Bemininsce*. ^ C Beating a Far Western IMtflry* "Did you go into the side show?" I asked of the countryman, at Greeley, Colorado. "No, sir. I studied the oil paintings on the outside, but I didn't go in. I met a handsome looking man there near the side show, though, that seemed to take an interest in me. There was a lottery along with the show, and he wanted me to go and throw for him." "Capper, probably ?" "Perhaps so. Anyhow, he gave me a dollar and told me to go and throw for him," "Why didn't he throw for himself?" "Oh. he said the lottery man knew him and would'nt let him throw." "Of course. Same old story. He saw you were a greeny, and got you to throw for him. He stood in with the game, so thai you drew a big prize for the capper, created a big excitement, and you and the cro^d sailed in and lost all the money you had. Til bet he was a man with a velvet coat and a mustache dyed a dead black and waxed as sharp as a cambric needle." "Yes, that's his description to a dot. I wonder if he really did do that a pur- poic * Well, tell us all aboat it It does me good to hear a blamed fool tell how he lost his money. Don't you see that your awkward ways and general green ness struck the capper the first thing, and you not only threw away your own money, but two or three hundred other wappy-jawed pelicans saw you draw a big prize and thought it was yours, then they deposited what little they had, and everything was lovely." "Well, I'll tell you how it was, if it'll do any good, and save other young men in the future. You see, this cap per, as you call him, gave me a $1 bill to throw for him, and I put it into my vest pocket so, along with the $1 bill that father gave me. I always carry my money in my riglit hand vest pocket. Wall, I sailed up to the game, big as old Jumbo himself, and put a dollar into the game. As you say, I drawed a tlig prize, $20 and a silver cup. The man offered me $5 for the cup, and I took it. Then it flashed over my mind that I might have got my dollar and the othei feller's mixed, so I says to the proprie tor, I will now invest a dollar for a gent.' "Thereupon I took out the other dol lar, and I'll be eternally chastised if ) didn't draw a brass locket worth about two bits a bushel." I did not say anything for a long time. Then I asked him how the capper acted when he got his brass locket. "Well, he seemed pained and grieved about something, and he asked me if I hadn't time to go away into a quiet place where we could talk it over by ourselves, but he had a kind of a cruel insincere look in his eye, and I said no, I believe I didn't care to. and that I was a poor conversationalist anvhow, and so I oame away and left him footing at his brass locket and kicking holes in the ground and using profane language. "Afterward I saw him talking with the proprietor of the lottery and I feel somehow that they &fld lost confidence in me. I heard them speak of me in a jeering tone of voice, and one said as I passed by: "There goes the meek-eyed rural convict now, and he used a horrid oath at tlie same time. "If it hadn't been for that one little qnincidence there would have been nothing to mar the enjoyment of the occasion."--BUI Nne. i » i i is i" • A (ieod Income. "You appear to lie gay and happy," said Gilhooly to Kosciusko Murphy, whom he met at u ball at the residence of Col. Yerger, on Austin avenue. You look well-fed, are well-dressed, and all that. Must have a good income, I presume ?" Oh, yes," replied Kosciuako, "I can't complain. I have my salary, $1,500; then I make $500 a year by my literary labors, that makes $2,000; then I ran in debt $1,000, that makes $8,000. A single man who couldn't subsist on that ought to be ashamed of himself."--- Texati Si/tings. WEIGH not so much what men assert, as what they prove; remembering that truth is simple and naked, and Beads not invention to apparel her comalineaa. wm • •>***•• & Nororoaa aaia ^Nutted to trifling sain in it. Two feel, «t U75, were bought for him, and he save the certificate to the broker, spying that hi wia going to tteltioo praamKsting, and he woua like to leave it beniad to be dealt with aa the broker aaw fit. He waa not heard of lor months. Hale & Norcroaa was up to fl%000 a foot. One morning the linker fannd the di lapidated miner on his doorstep when he came down to business. The miner rose and aaid: . "Well, Pas here. I thought Tdoome and see yon. I B*pose there ain't noth ing left o' that Hale & NorcrOss. I guess you must 'a sold it out, bat Fm down an' aint got a cent. May beyou'd lend me four bits to get a bit of break fast?" The broker looked at him and gave him $5 to go and get a bath and a breakfast, fend presently he returned. "Sit down and wait a minute. Til make up your aooount presently." He left the dilapidated man on the edge of a chah. He an baok with a check and sent hia clerk down to the bank. The eferfc returned w*h a big bag of gold, The poor da-vil watohed ̂ ie pvo- oeedings with a miserable indifference. The gold was stacked upon the counter. "Look here. I've sold your two feet of Hale & Nor cross for $25,000, and here's your money. The miner fell down on the ffoOr'MQd cried like a baby. He could not read or write and had no idejt what the market was. He sent a draft of $2,000 to his mother, The broker bought for him $20,000 worth of registered boilfts, and gave him $2,400 in coin, which he spent in three days. Two bunko men brought him in drunk and tried to get his bonds, but the broke* drove them out, and when the man got sober he came and had the bonds sewed into his clothes and was dispatched East. He has never been heard of since. -- San FrancUeo Chronicle. AXODEBH KEHVTKKECnOK. A WnKtoThat T«ok Plate ta Oar KMst Vslnwwa to the PubUelThe Details ta Dot la Alton. Hon. A. W. Sheldon, AssociateIfiastiee, Supreme Bench of Arizona Tenritoiy, writes as follows: "It affords me great pleasure to say, from my personal observation, and you know the scope of such has been very ex tended, that fit. Jacobs Oil is the great and wonderful conqueror of pain, the sovereign cure for all bodily aches and veins, and I cheerfully bear tins testimony. " IT is a prevalent idea that houseflies especially abound in the neighborhood of stables, and it has often been stated that the housefly lays its egga in the compost of such places. Exact observe tions seem, however, to be scarce, and it is, therefore, interesting to know that Dr. Joseph Leidy has put on record that he observed the swarming of these pests from the compost heap of eatable, and moreover, found that the infested with a brown mite. THOSE fear science live in rnts so deep that they cannot aee over them. The Wrenr Side of the Meridian. On ibe down-bill side ot life, which aa old mediae! writer quaintly terms "the wrong side of the .meridian," when the functions decay and the frame gradually bends under the weight ot yean, the system requires to be sustained under the burden imposed upon it. Innumer able physical ailments and infirmities then press upon it, to which it had been in earlier life a stranger. The sweat and pleaaantest sup port and solace of declining years Is found in Hoatetter'a Stomach Bitters, Ions nooonlsed aa the moat wholesome and agreeable of diffus ible stimulants, the most potent of tonics snd alteratives. The aged and in! plictt oonttdenoe The aged and lnflrm may place lm in thia invigorating elixir, whioh.aptoalT oheofcs thoeemaladie* to which ehnriy (eewms an peculiarly subject, bet In a 1 "i the encroachments at time "The berk went dowia," said tho ague pa tient after he bad swallowed a big dose of quinine. . Farmer*' Folly. 8ome farmers adhere, even against the fell light of fact and discovery, to the old- faFhioned folly of coloring butter with oar- rots, annatto, and Inferior substances, not withstanding the splendid record made by the Improved Butter Color, prepared by Wells, itichardFoa A Co., Burlington, vt. At scores of the beti agricultural fairs it has received the highest award over all com petitors. A SWBBT thing la bcloa-brao • an Igypciaa molasses-Jug. LBADINO Physicians, Eminent Divines,every one who tries it. Indorse Samaritan NervitM. PATERFAMILIAS (reading doctor's bill): "Well, Doctor, I have no objection to pay yon for the andtelne. but 1 will return the visits." Da. L. M. Q. MCPHKETON, of Bloomlngtoe, In*., Writes: "Samaritan Nervine cures fits." PARADOXICAL as it may seem, it is never theless a fsct, that no matter how valuable a diamond ring may be, the hole of it is aat worth a dollar.--Texan Sifting*. A Case Not Beyond Help. Dr. M. H. Hinsdale, Kenawee, 111., advises us of s remarkable case of consumption. He says: "A neighbor's wife was attacked with violent lung disease, and pronounoed beyond help from quick consumption. As a last resort, the family 'was persuaded to try Dr. Wm. Ball's Balaam for the Lungs. To the astonishment of all, by the time she had used one half-dozen bottles she waa e|K>ut the house doing her own work." A Clergyman's Tongue. Rev. R. Priest says tongues cannot express the good that Warner's White Wine of Tar Byrup has doae for me and say family. I have labored In tho cause fifteen years, and have never found anything that will relieve? Hoarseness, and Irritation of the Throat and Uis, like White Wine of Tar Pyrup. Carbo-lines. '<•' Mrtfa br-'egs the bitterness ot Yet -worth the ciown of peaoe i And thousands speak in accents The praises of our Carboline. Ky Wife Md CMiarca. Her. L. A. Dunlsp. of Mt. Vernon, says: My children were afflicted with a oougfc re sulting from Measl *s, my wife with a oounh that had prevented her from sleeping more or less for years, and your White Wine of Tar Syrup has cured tuem all. I HAVE been a revere sufferer from Catarrh fer the past fifteen years, with distressing pain over mi eves. Gradually the disease worked down upon my Inns*. At out a year and a half DUO 1 commenced uflissr Ely a Cream itaim, w.tb mo t tratifyinr results, and am today apparently cured. Z. C. WAKHF.N, Rutland, Vt. Peas CwWJver oil, made from selected livers on the sea shore, by CASWELL, HAZARD & Co., New York. It is absolutely pure and sweet. Patients who have oace taken it prefer it to all others. Physicians have de cided it superior to any of the other oils in market. _______________ Mr daughter and myself, great sufferers from Catarrh, have been cured by Bljr'S Cream Balm. My sense of smell restored and health greatly Improved.--c. M. STAHUtfr, Merchant, Ithaca, N. Y. (Easy to use. Prise (0 cents.) CHAPPCIJ Hands, Face, Amples and rough Skin, cured by using Jtrnmu TAB SOAP, made by CASWKUL, HAZAHO * Co., Mew York. BBWARK of the lDcipientstagaa of Cmntamp- tud. Ptao'» cute w mm*"'* 3 ; [Detroit Free Prasf.) One of the most remarkable occurrences ever given to the public, which took place here in our midtft, fcfi Judt come to our knowledge, and will uadoebtedly awaken as much surprise and attsaet as great attention as It has already in newspaper circles. The facts are, brie By, as follows: Mr. William A. Crombie, a ndg ssaa formerly residing at Biraitagfcaai, a selrarttef DM,andntiw living at nr MMMgan avenue in this etty, can truthfully say that he has looked into the future world and jet returned to this. A representative of this paper has interviewed him upon this important subject, and his ex periences ass given to the public for the first time. He said: "1 had been having most peculiar sensa tions for a long while. My bead felt dull and heavy; my eyesight did not seem so clear as formerly; my appetite was uncertain, and I was unaccountably tired. It waa an,effort to arise In the norahc, and yet I could nit sleep at night. My meath Insist bedly, I had a taint, all-gone saa»ation la the pit of my stomach that food did not satisfy, while my hands and feet felt cold and clammy. I was nervous and irritable, and loetallenthusiasm. At times my head would seem to whirl and my heart palpitated terribly. I had no energy, no ambition, and I seemed indifferent of the present and thoughtless of the future. I tried to (hake the feeling off/and persuade myself it was simply a eon or a little malaria. But it would not go. I was de termined not to give up, and so time passed alon? and all the while I was getting worse. It was about this*time that I notlobd I had teaun to bloat fearfully. My flmbs were Mullen so that by pressing my flagers upon tiMta deep depreSSWQS would pe made. My face also began to enlarge, ana continued to until I could arareely ree oat of toy eyes. One of my friends, describing my appearance atthuttime, ssid: '/Ms an animated some thing, but I should like to know what.' In this condition I passed several weens of the greatest agony. "Finally, one Saturday night, the misery oulminatcd. Nature could endure no more, I became Irrational and apparently insensi ble. Cold sweat gathered on my forehead; my eyes became glased and my throat rattled. I seemed to be in auother sphere and with other surroundings. I knew nothing of vhat occurred around mo, although I have since learned that it was considered as death by these who stood by. It was to mo a quiet state, and yet one of great agony. I was helpless, hopeless, and pain was my only companion. I remember trying to see what was beyond me, but the mist before my eyes was too great. I tried to reason, but I had lost al! power. I felt that it was death, and realized how terrible it was. At last the strain upon my mind gave way and all was a blnnK. How long this continued I do not know, but at last l realized the presence of friends and recognized niy mother. I then thought it was earth, but was not oertaln. I gradually regained consciousness, however, and the pain lessened. I found that my friends had, during my unconsciousness, been giving me a preparation I had never taken before, and the next day, under the influenoe of this treatment, the bloat ing began to disappear, and from that time on I steadily improved, until to-day I am as well as ever before in my life, have no of the terrible acute Bright's dissase, so nearly killed me, and all through the derful instrumentality of Warner's Safe Cure, the remedy that brought me to life after I was virtually in another world." "You have had an unusual experience, Mr. Crombie," said' the writer, who had been breathlessly listening to the recital. "Yes, 1 think I have," was the reply, "and it has been a valuable lesson to me. I am certain, though, there ate thousands of men and women at this very moment who have the same ailmant which came Se near killing me, and they do not know It. I believe kid ney dieeaee is the most deceptive trouble in the world. It comes like a thief in the night. It has no certain symp toms, but seems to attack each one differently. It is quiet, treacherous, and all the more dangerous. It is killing more people to-day than any ether complaint. If I had the power, I would warn the entire world against it. and urge them to remove it from the system before it is too late." One Of the members of the firm of White* head * Mitchell, proprietors of thttlllraiteg- bem teeeentrir, paid a fraternal vMt to thtt oflloe yesUrday, and In the oourse of con versation Mr. Cromble'a name was men tioned. "I knew about his sickness," said tho editor. " and his remarkable recovery. I had his obituary all in type, and announced in the Eccentric that he could not live until Its next issue. It was certainly a most wonder* ful case." Hev. A. R. Bartlett, formerly pastor of the M. B. Church, at Birmingham, and now of Schoolcraft, Mich., in response to a telegram, replied: " Mr. W. A. Crombie was a member of my congregation at the time of hi* sickness. The prayers of the church were requested for aim on two different occasions. I was with him tho day be wes reportedly his fireliiaas as dying, and consider his recovery almost a miracle." Mot one person In a million ever comes so near death as did Mr. Crombie and then re cover, but the men and womea who are drift ing toward the same end are legion. To note the slightest symptoms, to realize their lif- ntflcance, and to meet them in time by the remedy which has been shown to be moat •Relent, is a duty from which there can be escape. They arc fortunate who do this; they aro on the sure road to death who neg lect It. ; SATURDAV always reminds one ot the wooden thing shoemakers use when they make sick folks' shoes. week. SflS --TOJkT SOME TMBCT, QuxvaY.awzxjusaB, l» W t» M daM tt rwpllia I-- r- nmcors AMTTUL ̂DlrMt £3««kj Mn. Tfcai M Mb* 32. •»««, *t BMrBagema, VIL, «riV» AFTO 4, MM, Ika* w^taMlikaMr ikatflMlMtSriwBhH taevibt*. Ha ni •UMVS The only known speeifle for XpDeptle Fits. AIM for Spasms sad Filling PtckM--• No Wesknsss it instantly rcUevmaad cares. Cta Weed sad ttsggfch etrailatian. Ma> Bsss genos of IIUMI aad saves dekxa. Cares iTwant mm agtybietchetaadstfeblmnihioOdcores. Klttaiaatea Bolls, Csrboncles aad Scalds. tyrena»o«iUy aad promptly cures paialysls. Ye*. It U a churning and healthful AperlcBt. Sills Bcratxda «M1 Kiags Em, twiabrochsM. i~h«na»« bed breath to good, remor- uunuH to lunudkHB to tfcv •Mft jAflttnto 4|dM: eontaiaa •sOylaa fiiaar *wml As an Exjeetaraat It has ae Venal. SOLD BT ALL MEDICINE DEALERS. teg ihecsass." Stmts MUorattaAsBdss Mid dear ronipiekloa. •vsaliedbyaeaslathedallriatn of fever. A-chanting molmt aad a laatehlss* lsxatire. It drives 81 ck Headache like the wind. CV~CoDUlnjnodrwtle cathartic or opiates. Believes uu m m It's the lsst ot the The best and oldest medicine for cure of liver diseases is Dr. Sanford's Liver Invigorates Von a cold in the head, there is nothing so good as Fiso's Remedy for Catarrh. os Bats" dears out Bats, Woe. lie. Mother Swan's Worm Syrup, MSengh on Coughs" Troches, l5o; LtqelMoe. WILLS' May-Apple (Liver) Pills, 10o. "Bough on Toothache," Instant relief, lie. -Bacha-psaaC* OieatK^asr sad PriwuyOate. gl. "Bough on OoraatM for Ooraa, Waits, Baaloaa. lie. Waxxs'Heat* The "Rough on" Tooth Powder, elegant, lie. leeirre WANTED to Mil Lubricating. Hanioss,and WKll J fihoeOOs. K. F. Dirraaicaa, CteT«liia<M>. bis MT^r ĵggrttgaai&jSia PATENTS. Send etam latent*. L. BINGHAM. nTD.C. IP for our new book on L. BINGHAM, Patent Lawyer. Washington, $250 A MONTH. „ Agents Wanted. OO beet IBC Villi UfCiff 9 SeudBveita. nump* loraaaiu- Ant TUU nUI ( pie that WiUcare you. Redjeld - • - * " ins Are„ Brooklyn. K.f; Toii'c Powder*, MS Tompkins t M&S Young Men & alahed. Ctocularstree. Talent Watered. Mo. 1 for n, and Stock. Iiatand . A.BEMT. Wbeatea. Ill learn TKUSQBAFBX and earn wagea. Sltaatloaa fur- . Valentine Broa^ Janeerllle.Wla- HAIR Wholesale sad retsg. Jfcndfarprtselsl. OoodaaentC.O.D. Wlga made to order. E. BUBNHAM. 11 State attest, Chicago. WkTi t. Patent _ _ _ „ton.D.C. Full lnatructlona aud Hand-Book of Patent* aent free. PATENTS SEND YOU! ADDRESS f fir a copy of Be v. Mr. CLYMEK'K nnd K-rinon, -FOOD AND MORAL?.* FOWLER WELLS, Broadway. St* York. SV-ASK YOUB NEWSDEALER FOB NUMBEH £XJ£VENo< "THE.. PHILADELPHIA W1ZKLY It contains a. llat of nl vera ot w etlre SM, Sit, wadealer is out of aad we will 8. DA UQIFEY.TM >--* : qbe mm the brain of morbid fancies. Promptly cnreaBliea- matum by routing tt. Restores UtogMag proper- tie* to tho blood, la guaranteed to core all nerroas di(orders. Reliable vhea all opiates faO. Be. frsahas the mind snd tavtBotatcs the body* Cans dyapepcia or money refunded. [waiianBam . Diseases of the blood ewnltaeoameror. Endorsed la writing by over fifty thooaaad wading eitiaaaa clergymen and physicians in U.S. and Karope. i (7*For sale by all leading eraaghta. fL». Ot) For Testimonials and etiealars sead stamp. THif t r tH nu isaHHim l ami Locd, Btoutenburgh *0e, Agspl* Chicago, XJ|. Bantcasd toTMrGraTMl ^ on testimonials written in vil glowing language of some miraculous i made by some largely puffed-up doctor patent medicine has hastened uioussnds te!? their graves; believing in> their almost in* j snneftutb ttttt the same mixaels will b+r "performed on them, and that these testimoi; , nials make the cures, while the so-called' medicine is all (be time hastening them tar* their graves. We have avoided publishing testimonials, as ̂ hey do not make the cuiesg ̂ although we have THOUSANDS UFOX TBOTTSAKD8 ^ of them, of the most wonderful CUMR, *ol#f; untaiily sent us. It is our medknne, Hon ;̂ Bitters, that makes the enres., It has ,nev«f.'!. failed, and never am. We will give reffcrw ence to any one for any disease similar IgT their own if desired, or will refer to an)f, neighbor, as there is nqt a neighborhood is the known world bnt csn show its cures by Bop Bitters. ALosntpjonr. ^ Limr and Tmttj Bemady, Ooinpoundsd from the well known MaM, ITHET COK ITOEPSIl * , AdeptettsUsMraagl «ue ^hsaaistfi.aet allP»H . IrOQBIIIi Iwy IBTWQiwQi nourish, strsogtbse andqplaP the HsTTOUseystssa. As a Teale ther dm no KquaU ffcksaoas tart Baps aad Bait ntltars. I PON SALS BY AU. DIALERS. I b-B,#u ELY BBUlHUitiH, DfUKKilHt «Ms MOT AJLiaVTOoe SKWrr. t fair aoolications rriie**. JTuSrougk trtatmfnl will Agreeabte osa. absoMdrtt<M«nr made, coabtaiag tho vtitaaa cf hops with sats HOP PLASTER rsUsra. Ortak la the B ~~ to** off Jala, SMg Mato Kidney Troubles, BhsaaiaWwa, Hsuslcta, Boc Agsetloaso* thsBsart aad liter, aadailpalas or asfcfts la aagaarteared IsrtiiHIHy the Hasten tWTn a Files S esate er l<* Or |tSk Kallidea reeds!oCpriea. Sold fay all fli assists and matey storaa LAME BAOK tl Hn uusmipaHnn, less of «epsl tenbtOijMMaaMMkaad X4*arPlUa ISeenta. A6ENT8 M TO SPECULATORS. OOm ORA11V* vmo^tsiov c»T£fS^o, indgmeiilMia loir parttentaim. wir« bttweta oram on our asBfgsras"ta' the UCY Generations and sUancli old • - ;si hyatclan of Plttsb lady patient tinned IU- tokingly said: it in earnest and seed the BWIIiia.frosa she obtained remanent health. Bhenow at the doctor for his }oke, btu he ia not SO ~ pleated wiih it, as It cost hla>Ts good psttmt. ms ovnocToaa. The fee ot doctors is an item that many parsons ere interested in. We MP Ueve the schedule for visits is wfeiak would tax a man confined to his bed iuri* year, and in need of a daily visit, ov#* $1,000 a year for medical attendsnee»" s sta#e bottle of Hop Bitten in time would save the $1,000 and all th|| years i iUSflSM. "Oh. how I do wish tar skin was as olssraafp' soft as yours," faid a lady to her fiiend._ "tarn, can easily make it an, answered the ISSsM»f "How?" laeuind the first ladv. "By aalng Hagr Bitter* thM makea pure, rich Mood and bloosS leg health. It did it tor me aa yoe ubsrna 1 ,̂ - orrKKmrnnnnoonHa; M': "Is tt possible that Mr. Oo^RteyiB up i at work, and cured by so simple a remedy "I assure you it is true that he is entt cufed, and wittt nottilng bnt Hop Sit «>d only ton dsys s^o Us doctors gave and said he must die, from Kinney an4< vertrouble 1* , . ... . .... , ̂ ; •%-C* 1 II mMBASannili 585 mSsr- •e an •V DeestasaiilvssO. VBU^JUOMUytMHUI A ~ • X - ill iwt Uiy No security require* 1 best IMM •»« for neumptton Oan Be HALLS LUN6S.BALSA & Coneum OR. WW. FOB IBE OtlfXl. Btand^ M K X I C A N M U » - TAN« LINIMENT, LUS 4OBO more to assuage pain, relief® saffering, aad aare the Uvea of men and beaate than all other linlmeata pat together. Why ! to the wjbl all pata and •rorMd aeeretioaa, and reatov ̂ a - to Dr. C. a Sure Cars. Too win not c.K.n. WM1UW1 to A • sag »e«a mm tke i A w#