iwtr Knows aad 8«M Tfctags He Don't Kaov About Oliver Cromwell. Oliver P. Cromwell was born si Huntingdon, April 25, 1569. As soon 'pa he hid tested himself a little, he bt~ gaa iolook about him and prepare to potkhii person into a niche in hiatory. . He «M a son of Robert Cromwell, and grandson of Sir Henry Cromwell. He entered Sidney Suasex College < at the age of 17 rears, and began to get ; Solid with the President. At college Mr. Cromwell was noted for his devo tion to his studies and the length of time he could wear his linen without being mobtted. It is said of Cromwell that lie managed to save enough out of his laundry expenses to buy himself a matriculation and a house and lot on the day ot his graduation. In 1620 he married Elizabeth Bour- chier, on which oocasion he and his wife received a triple-plated butter dish, three card receivers, and a photo graph album. They then settled down. Cromwell was a member of Parlia ment for eleven years at one pop, and only made a short speech during all that time. Is it any wonder that Cromwell was beloved by his conistituency ? I trow not. . f, Cromwell was not regarded as a flu ent speaker, and once when he had just made a brief address, in which he had successfully called for the previous question, Lord Digby inquired of Hampden who "that sloven was." Cromwell went into the army in 1642. He soon became a Colonel, and in 1644 commanded the left wing which was so Victorians at Marston Moor on July 2. He did not write an aocount of it for 1publication, with a large portrait of limself on a snertibg war horse, with red nostrils, however, and thus he con tinued to endear himself to the people. Col. Cromwell allied himself with the Independents and against the Pres byterians in the great dissension which occurred at this time. Charles IL resigned as king in May, 1646, owing to brain fag, and in order to secure much needed rest he sur rendered himself to the Scottish army, which turned liim over to Parliament. For awhile Charles seemed to .be on the road most of the time. . Cromwell was down on the Presby terians ;from the word "go," as Macau- lay has it, and in 1648 lie fired forty- one Presbyterian Royalists out of Par liament, Col. Pride doing the ejectment act under Oliver's orders. This was called "Pride's Purge" for many years, and you can still read on some of the old fences around here, TLTUSE PRIDE'S PUBGK. Cromwell was a member of the court which, in January, 1649, tried the King 'and condemned him, giving him sixty days, together witli a fine of $5 and trimmings, with the order that he stand committed till the. fine and costs were fully paid. He then went to Ireland to suppress a small bnt a very.hot rebellion of which Ireland was at that time passion ately fond. The Scotch now espoused the cause of Charles IL, and it became a contest between the Cromwell Close Commun ion Baptists, who wished to immerse the land in gore, 'and the Royal Presby terians. Cromwell was now made com mander-in-chief, with $200 a month and a horse to ride. At Dunbar Gen. Cromwell engaged the royal forces in a hand-to-hand con flict on the 3d of September, 1650, at which time he took 10,000 prisoners. In April, 1653, he dissolved the long Parliament, commonly called the Rump, telling each Rumpist that his services would not be required any longer, and that he had better go home and hoe his corn. A new Parliament was then summoned, and Cromwell be came the lord protector of the common wealth, with an office over the First National Bank. He was offered the job of king on the day shift that fall, but he said no, he preferred the position he then occupied, for he hated the trappings of royalty. It is said th.it he took the ermine off the edges of Charles II. 's reigning robe and made ear tabs for the poor, but this may be untrue. Still he had a great contempt for royalty, never hav ing published a book on that plan. Cromwell was stigmatized of course by the Royalists, but he never lost a day's work or a meal's victuals on that account, as Carlyle puts it. As soon as he found that he was stigmatized he would put a moist chew of tobacco on the place, take a large drink of Scotch wliiaky with a little ginger ale on the side, and you wouldn't know that he had ever been stigmatized. He was long regarded by historians as a man of cruel temper and mediocre talents, but it is now thought that he was extremely otherwise. Col. Crom well had his failings, it is true, and of course by many lie will ever be re garded with loathing, aversion, and other things of that kind, but he was not what might be called a mediocre man, by any means. On the contrary, he thought the world of his wife, and invariably spent his evenings at home. Cromwell died on the 3d day of September, A. D., 1658, -and people came for thirteen miles and brought their dinners in order to attend the funeral and see iwhat kind of a sarco phagus he had. / .~ The Art U Letter Writlag.. °>5 tile ".UtiCSVGrjCf pviui- (ing is generally believed to have .been it lias been gravely argued more than once that it was really an injury to mankind. The chief ground for the con tention is that through the multiplica- ) tion of books and newspapers mankind J has been spared the necessity for origi- { nal inquiry and investigation; and that ' the capacity therefore is gradually but j surely falling. That there is some truth in this is more than possible; bat we do not be lieve that mankind will ever be induced by such arguments to permit the art of printing to fall into disuse. It certainly will not with the consent of the press, and without their consent it cannot. There is one of the kindred arts, how ever, which many a man, and women, too, is often tempted to wish had never been discovered. It is the art of letter writing. It is so easy, so simple a tlung to write a letter; and vet what tremendous consequences often flow from it What hours that might have been profitably spent have been wasted in it. What reams upon reams of paper have been thrown away. What homes have been wrecked. What hopes, politically and matrimonial, have been blasted. What lawsuits have been - engendered. In a word, what untold oonfuaion, discomfort and even misery have been brought upon humanity by the art of correspondence. Yet conscious as mankind Is of these terrible results it will not oonsent to abandon the iniquitous practice of writ ing letters. The papermakers and the unatnflUa fnnat Via Vanf nn I f - r ; ™ J* WW l W raiMd. Th*onljapp«r- ent way ottt i* fittf}>e invention of an ink that wfll endive but for a season, and fading <Mrt leave no vestige behind which photography, the microaoope or tike chemist can tiaee. The man or the women who will make that discovery will rescue mankind from moat of the evils which persistent letter-writing has inflicted and win the blessing of pros perity.- 'Detroit Free Press. The Visiting Dog. The' most interesting and least ap preciated of dogs is the dog that visits. He is usually a liver-colored animal, two-hands high and about twenty-six inches long, with a pink spot on his nose. His ears droop and his tail al most drags on the ground, and his whole make-up is admirably suited to the requirements of his occupation. He appears to have been gotten up ex pressly for purposes of visiting. He is not like other dogs. He is a sort of special dog, as it were, being of an odd pattern throughout, and if any part of him should break it would be impos sible to replace it. This dog has no calling list. He never makes calls. He has neither the time nor inclination to practice cold formalities. As an illus tration of the manner in which he goes visiting we may refer to the experience of which a California avenue man had with him last week. The dog went and sat down on the man's front stoop, about the middle of the afternoon. He did not know anybody in that family, but he wanted to get acquainted. The lady of the house opened the door and told him to go away, but he only wagged his tail, as much as to say: "We will get on nicely together when we come to an understanding." The man of the house came home at 6 o'clock and kicked the dog into the middle of the street. After supper he went out and tried to repeat the operation, but only succeeded in kicking thin air until his leg was lame. The visiting canine was just out of range every time. The gentleman then went into the house and kicked a rocking chair and dis charged the servant on suspicion of having fed the dorp, after which, with the assistance of the two other mem bers of the household, he caught the visitor on the stoop and threw him over the fence. The dog then ran around the lionse and sat on the back door-steps, and wagged his tail in the most pleasing and good-natured man ner. He had come visiting. The man then effered to give the dog to a small boy who was passing the house, but the boy placed his thumb on the side of his nose and said: "I don't want to rob you." The man then told his wife that'he was going to get the dog to fol low him- to a remote part of the city and then lose him. The animal fol lowed, and when the gentleman had walked about two miles he contrived to cut loose from the liver-colored visitor and took a street car for home. When he opened the front gate the visiting do£ came down from off the stoop and wagged his tail and looked happy and contented. He visited there continu ously for several days, and then gathered himself up and went away to make some 6ther family miserable. It is impossible to understand how the visiting dog lives. His meals must be exceedingly irregular. If he gets a mouthful once in two weeks he is in luck. T6 be sure he can eat snow, but at the best this is only a cold bite, and not by any means a square meal. By referring to any reliable table showing the nourishing properties of different kinds of food, it will be seen that snow is at the bottom of the list How does the visiting dog subsist ? The problem is an intricate and difficult one, and ia worthy of the attention of all students bf natural historv.--Rochester Herald. Heedless Children. Though many children are put down as heedless, tbere are very few real heedless children. There ia always some good and sufficient reason for the apparent heedlessness of most of the little ones, and if the parents of these children would take the trouble to ex amine into the cause they would be very soon convinced that the little ones were not to blame. But most parents will not do this; they have firmly set tled it to their own satisfaction that child is heedless, and no amount of argument will convince them to the con trary. Through thoughtlessness or willful heedlessness, which should be applied more properly to such parents tlian to the child, they brand the boy Avitfc a fault which it is very likely he never had. This is certainly wrong. It is unjust to themselves and the child. It is a sad thing, nevertheless it is true, that when such parents sit in judgment on their own child, they are the most cruel of all judges, for they persist in convicting without a particle of evidence but their own biased opinion. The child very soon learns that his own denials do not help him, and quietly submits to the decree, notwithstanding his little heart is sore from the injustice that lias been done to him. "Willie is such a heedless boy," you may hear some of them say. "I have called him twice and he never pretends to hear me, I don't know what to do with him." "But," remarks someone, "perhaps he doesn't hear you." "Oh, he bears me, fast enough, for yeaterday he was twice as far away and he an swered my first call." Such a person never stops to reason or think for a moment that the child may be deaf on Ouc oiuc may affect his hearing some days more than others. These parents are fond of quoting the old adage: "There are none so deaf as those who won't hear," although the companion: "ThereK are none SQ blind as those who woa'Mfee," would be more applicable to them selves. I remember one child branded with this one fault, who was otherwise an in telligent, bright little fellow, with whom you could not think of associat ing the charge of heedlessness, yet his parents being the accusers, it was hard to form an opinion. At the solicitation of a friend of the family, the mother brought him to a well-known aurist for examination, and was horrified to learn that the hearing of one ear had been totally destroyed by a catarrhal trouble which had been wholly overlooked by both parents. This child had been re primanded often, even in the presence of strangers, for a fault which he did not possess, and of which he had no knowledge whatever. Be careful, then, how you oharge a child with heedlessness; be convinoed, not by your own "infallible" opinion, but by competent medical authority, that his hearing is sound ere you a.- use him of this failing. It may seem a little thing to us, but the remembrance of an act of injustice toward a chil . will linger long in the little one'* memory, and is very often never obliterated--• American Cultivator. THIS Utah qrowdad pemtenti over- PHOF. TYNBAIA Jfqgn the sky is in debted for its blu« oo|«r the particles floating in the air. IT is reported that a depth of over 5,200 feet has been reached in boring at Schladerbach, near Hslle. A NF.wXadulteration 6f butter has been invented. By adding gelatine, which absorbs ten times its weight of water, the «Qnsistencv of the butter is retained and the^water adulteration not noticeable. OUT of 15,j)0() earthquakes observed on cpatffltneiC the German seismologist, Kljafge, found that only 124 were ac- panied by Bea waves, although a very large proportion of the shocks had probably originated under the sea. OCT of some 10,000 species of birds recognized by ornithologists, there are 859 species and sub-species which make their home in North America. There are also eighty-two others which find their way to this continent as stragglers from other countries. AN English company has perfected its arrangements for providing sick chambers with telephones. The object is to give persons suffering from con tagious diseases a chance to talk with their friends.- Speaking tubes are in admissible on aecouut of the infectious nature of the breath. IT is stated that the specimens of clay from the Royal Society's borings in the Nile delta have not at present yielded any but "derived" fossils; but beds of gravel found at a depth of 120 feet show that the whole surface was form erly 120 feet higher, and was that of an ordinary river valley. AN English physicist lids, it is said made a perfect pendulum by suspend ing a lead shot by a single fiber ot cocoon silk in a vacuum produoed by a Sprengel pump. The shot, one-six teenth of an inch in diameter, weighs one-third of a gram, is suspended by a two-foot fiber, and is placed in a tube three-quarters of an inch internal dia meter. It has a vibrational range of a quarter of an inch on each side of mid- position, the vacuum being equivalent to one-tenth of a millionth of an atmos phere. M. LKOX ESQUII.LE has perfected a marvelous invention in electricity and photography. By speaking into a photophone transmitter, which consists of a highly-polished diaphragm, reflect ing a ray of light, this ray of light is set into vibration, and a photograph is made of it on a traveling band of sensi tized paper. Now comes the wonder ful part If the imago of th;s photo graph tracing is projected by means of an electric arc or 'oxyhydrogen light upon a selenium receiver, tlio original speech is then heard. It is evident that there is no limit to the development of this peculiar combination of methods. RECEXT weatliejf charts of the British Meteorological Council show that dur ing the entire autumn a permanent area of high barometer is situated in the mid- Atlantic soutli of the parallel of forty degrees. North of this, low-press- ure tracks are very frequent Many of the storms originate over tho United States, and they often gather force after starting on their eastward courso over the Atlantic, sometimes even en tirely crossing the ocean. The vicinity of Newfoundland, where hot and cold waters meet, and there are great differ ences of air-temperature in a very small area, has a great influence upon the weather of the Atlantic and of the Brit ish Islands. Here are formed many storms, while some are here stopped and suddenly broken up. The Marriage of Cousins. From the physician's point of view, the evidence from the animal world is important Here there is almost con sensus, that, while the effect of "in-and- in breeding" is to intensify points, In the long run it ia opposed to vigor of constitution. It is to be remembered that every breeder takes care to ex clude any animals with any known mor bid tendency, while, on the contrary, in the genua homo, as Dr. Clouston remarks, there seems to be "a special tendency for members of neurotic families to intermarry." The result of this will be that in some portions of the population the offspring of such marriages will show the evil results of it to an unusual extent. And thus wo find that in rural, and especially is mountainous districts, where the popu lation is small and fixed, the compara tive amount of idiocy is greater thaw elsewhere. Statistical information is I inadequate on the subject; the motion' to include it in the census returns of England was rejected "amidst the scornful laughter of the House, on the ground that the idle curiosity of specu lative philosophers was not to be gratified." In France the returns have given rise to various estimates (varying from 9-10 to 2$ or 3 per cent.) of the frequency of consanguineous marriages. Mr. G. *H. Darwin came to the con clusion that in London l£ per cent, of all marriages were between first cousins, in suburban districts 2 per cent., and in rural districts 2J per cent If, now, we ascertain the ratio ot idiots and insane patients that are the offspring of such marriages to the total number of patients'in the asylums, we will have some means of estimating the results of consanguinity. From quite an extended series of records it is concluded that the ratio just referred to in the idiot asylums is from 3 to 5 per cent., hence "first-cousin marriages, able to the production of idiot chil-# dren." Bnt this conclusion must be tempered by the consideration that in a large number of such cases of idiocy and imbecility other causes for this condition are present; and this con sideration leads Dr. A. Mitchell to the opinion that "under favorable condi tions of life the apparent ill effects of consanguineous marriages were fre quently almost nil, while, if the chil dren were ill-fed, badly housed and clothed, the evil might become very marked." From snoh facts and figures we may conclude that first-cousin mar riages should, as a rule, be discouraged; but that, if close scrutiny reveals no heritable weakness, neurotic or other wise, the banns need not invariably be forbidden.--Science. Clear Without loaa ct tlm£, i (a blocked up by reason at umt||itlni, eknmto or temporary. It shooid be bome in mind that this ailment ia peon* to beoem# laatiag and ob stinate, and breed other sail worse oomyiaints. Hostetter'a Stomach Bitten is tho precise rem edy to remove the obstruction effectually, bat without drenching or weakening the blockaded bowels, a oonseqneooe always to be appre hended from the use of violent laxatives, which axe among tha most pernicious of tha obeap nostrums swallowed by the credulous and mis informed. The fiat of experience, and or the medical fraternity, sanctions the claims of this •taudard aperient Not only aa a source of re lief and permanent regularity to the bowela, liver, and atomaeh, bat as a means of remedy ing and preventing kidney and Madder troubles aad fever and agne. it ia wtttw* a peer. Birds #f Yesterday. A number of large and interesting birds have become extinct within re cent times. Of these the epiornis, of Madagascar, was probably the largest. Fossil fragments indicate that this creature was at leas! twelve feet in height, with a weight five or six times as great as that of the oatrich. Speci mens of its eggs have been found, and measure nearly thirteen and a half inches in largest diameter by nine inches in smallest diameter, with a ca pacity of nearly eight quarts. The moa/or dinornis, of New Zealand, was also larger than any bird now living, its height having been ten or twelve feet Its "drumstick* was thirty to thirty-two inches long, and its eggs so large that a hat would make a good egg-cup for them. The famous dodo, fitty-pound bird of Mauritius, was once well known to the Dutch, but has not been reported as seen duri: g the last two hundred years. The solitaire is another exterminated bird of the same island. The great auk, of the North Sea, is supposed to have become extinct since 1844. These are a few of the latest disappearances of the bird wdrld; other large species are fast di minishing in numbers, and soon the Australian emu and New Zealand apt- eryx, for example will hare passed away also... OARII OTTO SCHOTSWBICH, Captain Oriole Yacht Club, Biltimors, Md., writ**: "The club, during practice cruise, used St Jacobs Oil, aad it curod several cased of sprains and bruises." Sold bj druggists and dealers everywhere. An Excess ef Pelitenesg. A correspondent of the Philadelphia Be ord tells how a polite physician says good-afternoon to a Mexican seno- ra who thinks she is ill enough to have his professional advice. Here is the dialogue: "Madam! (this by the bedside) I am at your service." •Mil gracias, Senor Doctor." "Madame! (.this at the foot of the bed) know me for your most humble servant" "Good-morning, Senor Doctor, ami- go mio." "Madame! (here he stoops beside a table) I kiss your feet." "Senor Doctor, I kiss your hand." "Madame! (this near the door) mv poor house and all in it, myself, though useless, and all that I have are yours." "Mil gracias, Senor Doctor." He turns around and opens the door, again turning as he does so, Baying, "Adios, madame! Your most humble servant" "Adios, Doctor, amigo mio." He goes out, partly closes the door, but reopens it to put in his head and lire a parting shot: "Adios, madame! at your service." A VBTERAK, Mr. George McKona, Ash- burnham, Mass., writes: "While suffering witu c ronic rheumatism (result of Ander- souvillei, I used St. Jacobs Oil, which gave immediate relief." Sold by druggists and dealers. ' ; ̂ Will Power. j "Do you know, young man, he said, solemnly, "that the constant use of whisky destroys the will power?" "No, sir," replied the youth, incredulously, "it increases the will power. I heard a man say last Sunday morning, as he found a side door locked, that he pro posed to have a drink if he had to try every saloon from Harlem Bridge to Sandy Hook. And he meant it, too. Talk about will power!"--New York Sun. A NOVEL and valuably application of photography has been made by the Century t'ompanv, combining the com plete preservation of valuable copy against accidental loss or in.ury by fit e or otherwise witn the greatest con venience in storage and handling. Over 25,00(» sheets of copy of a work on its way through the press, with interlineations, corrections and addi tions, have been photographed on a reduced scale of only Ijx2 inches to the page, but easily legible upon mag nification. WHAT can be more disagreeable, more dis gusting, than to sit in a room wtth a person who ia troubled with catarrh, and has 10 koi-p coughing and clearing liis or her throat of the mucus which drops iut> itV buch persons are always to be pitied if they try to cure them selves and fsi1. But if tbev get Dr. Hage'a Catarrh Remedy there need be no failure. IT is odd that the wages of sin remain just the some as tbey were when the hoots were shorter. THE bowels may be regulated, aad the stom ach strengthened, *ith Aye.*'a Pilla THE man who loses his footing on a toboggan chute generally becomes a naok- slider. J • ? . r - AJM Cms ef Pthsnlay IsOatof any man or woman sfljeta# wtth dis ease or derangement of Deliver, StWUtin; ~ ------ aooamulatioas ia d»e )Moi acroi iou, sic* hoad«r»ss,aad jmiisns of the kidneys, mags or Matt . These troubles can be cured only by going to the primary caaae, and putting the uverin a healthr conui- tbn. To accomplish tma result speedilr an t effectually nothing has proved it elf so effica cious as Dr. Pierce's "Golden MedfeM Xtiocov enr," wh'ch has nevar failed to do the Wurk claimed for it, and never wiiL A TjAwn party is pleasant enough until it begins to rain. Tnen it be tome* a for lorn party. * * * * Rupture radically cured, also pile tumors and fletvilie. Pamphlet of particulars 10 cent* in stamen. World'a Dispensary Med ical Association | Buffalo, N. Y. THRY are trying to rappnra the whip factories on the ground that they deal in lickers. EVERT one is perfectly satisfied wfco usee Buckingham's Dye for the Whiskirs. A God-tend to Jfty's CVesm D'aim. I had catarrh for three years. My nose wauld bleed. J thought the so ret itould neaer heal Xiy'* Cream Balm hat cured me.--Mr*. M A. Jaekton, Portmnouth, N. I f . A partiele ia applied ir to eacli nostril and ia Price SO cta.at uruiwists: bi Cbclilais&ee. ELY BftoS. E1LK., Cfclc*«e» SH* JONES rmmimmm br m ul. retri-fra t u t ( H r n r o . I WlUlana'Indian FUa OMMMI ure lor .ii Tan author of the saying that "you must always take a man as you find him," was a policeman. XLKKTTTIN THIS RIM C The OLDEST MEDICINE iatfcsWMUUs prehsMyDr. Isaae TheupMs* •teirattl iys V It Is Economy To bar Hood's 8»r««pw-i la, for in it ron net more rsal valne for the money tban in any other medicine. A bottle of Hold's Sanaparill* contains 100 Doses sad la*ta amoith, while others will average to last not over a week, and the superior curative powers o( Hood'a Sarsaparilla ara alao weU known. Hence (or economy, purity, atrangth and health bay Hood'a Samararilla. 'All I ask of any one is to try one bottle of Hood'a BarsapariUa and soe its quick effect. It tikes lees time snd quantity to show its effect than any other preparation 1 ever heard of. I w"uld not be without it in the house* Una. C. A. H. HUBBARD, North Chili. N. T. ; ,.i SII ijm 'J*""* <Dd«artfctois acawtoariweparad ,l:RES8MTAT!Sott. PplUole and absolutely unbreakable .Standard quality. 1.1 rents par >ard; Cloth-covered, 30 cent*: 8atin-covered. 8 cents, for nle everywhere Trv it. W ARK EN FKATHEKBONK tOMPAXY. Three OaksJIieb. ssle of this arttds iscoastauitiy iaeraaaiac. If (bed? reckons arefollowed it wfll never fsil. We Sssliia larly inTitoUas Jska X. Thm atttaHoftoft|yri •fSSf, - ADVERTISERS er«etsra,wno WM to examine tMs pspsf, of obtain estimatss sn advertising (pace when In Chicafo, will find it en file at 4S te 49 Randolph St, the Advwticing Agency of LORDkTMOMS. Hood's Sarsaparilla $1; six for Prepared br Gold by a'l drugtrista. $1; six for |5. Prepared C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass. KK> Doses One Dollar Mranrgt Rind or Meanness. Mean Man--You seem disturbed almut something, Sir. O'Gooligitn ? Mr. O'Gooligan--It just makes me blood boil to hear o' the eviction in Oirland. Moan Man--Then you don't believe in'evicting tenants who won't pay? Mr. O'Gooligan--The bloody land- lourd what ud do that should be dyna mited, that's what Oi say. Mean Man--I am glad you feel that way, Mr. O'Gooligan, because your agent has just rented me one of your houses.--Tid Bits. ZOLA'S ordinary income exceeds $60,000 a year. Thiers sold his history for -- -- liiHme In a live Town. Cash bonus paid to all loads of manufacturing enterprises. Lin man in all kinds of businesses wanted Address BAMS or VALLEY, Valley Douglas Co., Nebraska. A Husband's Greatest Blessing Ia a strong, healthy, vigorous wife, with a clear, handsome complexion. These cm all be acquired by using Dr. Harter'a Iron Tonic. FOB dyspepsia, indigestion, depression of spirits, and general debility in their various forms; also as a preventive against fever and ague and other intermittent fevers, the "Fer- ro-Phosphorated Elixir of Calisaya,* made by Hazard, Hazard & Co., New York, and sold by all druggists, is the best tonic, snd for patients recover.n-r from fever and other siokness it has no equal. EVKBY town of TOO or more inhabitants can support a local newspaper, and should have one. Full particulars regarding cost of mate rial, bow to run the paper, ana make money out of it, will be furni lied any one who will take the trouble to comnmuic&te with FBAO- TICAL PBINTEB, Box 497, Chicago, IlL Piso's Remedy for Catarrh is agreeably to asa. It lyot a liquid or a snuff. COc. What Good the Mosquito Does, A writer in the Springfield Repub lican claims to have found ont the use ful point of the mosquito. He says: "I found out the real mission of the pest by putting a lot of the wigglers into a hogshead of water and filling another hogshead, into which no wigglers were put. The second body of water soon became foul, while the first remained sweet,, showing that our swamps would more often become sources of disease were they not infested with mos- quitoe*-* vi THC ^ CHEAPEST r! AND BEST . MEDICINE FUR FAMILY TM IN THE WORLD! CURES ALL PAINS Internal or] ROe a Bottle. SOLD SX DBCOOIStS. DR. RADWAYS PILLS Sor the mire of all dlaerde- s of the Stomach, Liver, owels. Kidneys. Bladder, Nervous Diasases, Loss of Appetite. Headi.che.CoetlveiieM, Indigestion.BUioua- nes«. Fever, inflammation of the Bowel*, Piles, aad all derangements of the Internal viscera. Purely vegetable, containing no mercury, minerals, or dels- serious d ruffs. Price, S6 cents per box. Sold by all druggist?. DYSPEPSIA! DR. MBVm HLLS store strength to the atomaeh and enable It t" perform its functions. The gyrnvtomaof Dyraepaiadisappear, and with them the liability of the amSi to eoetosw ZLAJ3W, SARSAPARILLIAN RESOLVENT, A positive cure for Scrofula and all Blood and Sttl Diseases. RAD WAV A CO.. N. Y. $5 to M m Any. Sample* worth SI ja fftn. Lines not under the horse's test. AUNM Brewster's Safety lie in Holder, Holly, Mica. OLD CMOMC nUt~S£Si£42^ eases cured l»y measures mUd,ssfe.aud certain. Writs tor references. M. DILI., M.D.JN8 N .Clark St, Chicago. AMATEUR PHOT0CRAPHY. Abras -mounted mahopanv Caman.Fold'nirTripod an I complete Outflt for nu king 5x8 Photographs for VIS. Best thing out. DescripUve circular free. Sam ple Photo*, toe BAT STATC CUMKKA CO. Bokion.Mass DETECTIVES Wanted In tm; County. FbnwJ awn te set ander «• las'iai tinstla oar Secret Serriee. XtptrisnnaotnsBif Serr. Seed >)*ino fur particular*. QBANNAN DBfw TltTB BUBEAU. 44 Arcade. Ci»eiaaaU.p. CH(CHESTER'S ENGLISH PENNYROYAL PILLS tl» Original «m Onhr OMtuina s»*5«n2: SStS MED ISM HASIA --!ehe» Take ao ather PERCHERON NORSES. 200 Imported firoOfl Mares Of CUDtMSftltatiUM. UBOBHtmnii All ASM, both Bum, IN SVQCK. breed of France posasastag a stnd book that luui ae posasastag a stnd book that has ths support and endorsement of the Prenck Government. Send for 120-page Catalogue, illustiettana by Base M. W. DUNHAM, Wayna, DuFaft CoM Illinois. Cmw NMnrifia, tarw. Worn*, ON _ SMWI TiK ML NMTEIMIMME M«tt. 111 Vatenrat M >s*a rtSSm SasSfl * iwMM»wtth«ittk*^Mk Biand" tra«»aMrk. ICTiStrafd Cs>ale«aa ft**. H.ttwr.lHa, Mat BMWS tkeeatlrssaMl*. SawaraeMstfteHoa* BaseawMasawtthaet LIVER, BLOOD AND LUNG DISEASES Vn. MABY A. McCbraa. CWtaabtM, rant, writes: ** 1 addrewedyou in November, 1884, in regard to my health, beta* afflicted with liver dlseaao. heart trouble, ana female weak- neaa. I was advised to use Dr. Pieroe's GoMtoa Medioal Dissoverjr, Favorite Pre scription snd Pellets. I used one bottle of the 'Prescription,' five ot the 'Discov ery,' aad four of the4 Pleasant Purgative Pellets.' Mjr health be gan to improve under the use of four medicine, snd mjr strength Same back. Mjr difficulties have all disappeared. 1 can work hard Lna feutt p HuirTBWNi.1 aliday.orwslk four or five miles a day, and stand it well; and when Ibegon using the medicine 1 oould scarooly walk across tho room, most of the time, a I have a little baby _ delicate in size ana appearanoe, she is healthy. ng tae . ios£ of tho time, and I did not think I oould ever feel well sasin. girt eight months old. Although she is a little , . .... . . . . - ...1*1 ve your reme dies all tbe c red it for curing me, us I took no other treatment aftor beginning their use. I am very grateful for your kindness, and thank God and tlinrtk you that I am ss well as I am after years of suffering." Mrs. L V. WBBBBB, of YorktMre, Cattaraugm Co., Jf. writes: " I wish to soy a few words l|i praise of your "Golden Medioal Discovery' and * Pleasunt Purgative Pellets.' For five yean previous to taking them I wss a great sufferer; I had a severe pain In my right side continually; was unable to do my own work. I am happy to ssy I am now well and strong, thanks to your medicines. Chronic Diarrhea Cared.--D. LASEARKX, Esq., *76 and t77 totm* Street, New Orleant, La- writes: " 1 used three bottles of * Golden Medioal Disoovery,' and it has cured me of ehronio " jwels an now regular." Mrs. PABMIIJA Bummq, of MI lack Lockport, If. Y. writea: " I chills, nervous sad general sore throat, and mjr was trouble with My liver was inaoUve.qpd 11 Medical Disoowy^SnS" *P«U*L ailments aad I cannot sir enough soy a word fn reference to your 'FBrortte neral debUity, wtti mouth wsf nadljr vand I sufeeed • hss proven Itself a most ex< r enough, tathrir medicinetenSkS JeUeot It hss been used in my family with axoeUsnt results ̂ Dyspepsia.--JAxas L. Gounr, _ Minn- writes: MI wss troubled with heartily and grow Door at tae same tim sour stomsch,iu>dmany other disagreeaUe'symptoms wsinna to that disorder. I commenced taktasr yowr - . 'Golden Medical Disoovery' snd 'PeUeta^aaf. \ > I am now entirely free from the d>s|wpslB. and -- to kMwter than,,! five years. I wen one bandied and awenty? one snd ons-bsn pounds, and have doae a# much work the past summer ss I have evestf done in the ssme length of time in my life. I neves took a ImWTES TKSRTOL medicine that seemed to tone up the muscles aad invigorate the whole system equal to your 'Discovery' aad * Pellets. Dyspepsia.--TraaaBA A. CASS, of "I was troubled one year with liver complaint, sleeplessness, but your 'Golden Medioal Disoovery' cured me. Chills and rever*--liev. H. S. Mosunr, Jfowtwtprsnet, & C# F23W «THE BLOOD IS THE LIFE." m Thoroughly cleanse the blood, which Is the fountain of health, by using Dr. Pieroe's Golden Medical Discovery, aad goo& digestion, a skin, buoyant spirits, snd bodily health snd vigor will be established. k Golden Medical Discovery cures all humors, from the common pimple, blotch, or eruption, to the worst Berotfuls. or blood* Especially has it proven its efficacy in eurlag Salt-rheum or Iwtter, Fever-sores, Hip-joint Disease, Scrofulous Boss#: poison. . . and Swellings, Enlarged Glands, and Bating Ulcers. BLOTCHES. blotches began to arise on the surface of the skin, aud I experienced a tired feeling ana dullness. I began the use of Dr. Pieroe's Golden Medical Disoovery ss directed by him for suoh complaints, and In oae weers time I begaa to fed like a now man, and am now sound snd well. The' Plossant Purgative Pellets' are the best remedy for bilious or sick beudiiche, or tightness about the chest, and bad taste in the mouth, that I trave ever used. My wife could not walk across the floor when B!IC began to take your 'Golden Medical Discovery.' Mow sho can walk quite n little ways, and do some light work." Mrs. IDA M. STRONG, of Aimworth, IRNL, writes ' My little boy had been troubled with hip-joint disease for two years. When he commenced the use of your 'Golden Medical Discovery' and ' Pellets,' be was confined to his bed, and could not bompved without suffering great pain. But How, th«nlM to your' D|Jbovcry,' ho is able to be up all the time, HIP-JOIIT and can walk with the help of crutches. He does not pain, and can eat and sleep as well ss awr one. It has about three months since he commenced usini I cannot find words with which to express my beneflt he hss received through you." Skin Dlseasa*--The "Democrstsnd Wews," Of Cambridge, Maryland, says: " Mis. Bus* Ami POOLS, wife of Leonard Pool* of IW4 Hamtburg, Dorchester Co* MtL, hss been cured of a bad esse of Eczema by using Dr. Pteros Golden Medical Dlaoovery. Tbe f peared irst in her ffcet, extended to covering the whole of the lower limbs from net to 1 attacked the elbows and became so severe ss to prostrate After being treated by several physicians for a year or ' commenced the use of the nsealclne named above. began to mend and is now well snd hearty. Mrs. P the medicine has saved her life snd prolonged her days' Mr. T. A. Arsa^of Mad Nam JftnM,Dankmttr CbmKb CONSUMPTION, WEAK LUNGS, SPITTING OF BLOOD, GOLOSH MEDICAL DiscovsaT_cur«g Consumption ( which ta Scrofula of the Lun|s)̂ by tts wonderful Mood-purtfying, lav ttn« and nutritive properties, and kindred sffections, it is For Weak Lungs, Spitting of Blood, Shortness of Breath, Bronchitis. Severe Coughs, Asth a sovereign remedy. While it promptly cures the severest Coughs n strengthens the Sysl and nnriftrs the blood.. - - - - •?. ~~ ii rapidly builds up the system, and Increases tbe flesh and weight of those reduced below the usual standard of health tat.. "wasting diseases.' Consumption.--Mm. EDWARD NKWTOK, of HarrowsmUh, Ont., writes: " You will ever be praised by me for the remarka ble cure in my case. I was so reduced that my friends had all given me up, and I had also been given up by two doctors. I tk went to the best doctor In those parts. He told me that medic then treat me. only a punishment in my esse, and would not undertake to treat me. He said I might try Cod liver oil if 1 liked, as that was tbe only thing that oould possi bly have any curative power over consumption so far advanoed. I tried the Cod liver oil as a last treatment, but I was so weak I oould not keep it on my stomach. My husband, not feeling satisfied to give me up yet, though he had bought for me everything he saw advertised for my complaint, procured a quan tity of your * Golden Medical Discovery.' I took only four bottles, and, to the surprise of everybody, am to-day doing my own work. tlty of your * Golden Medical Discovery.' 1 took only four bottles, and, to the surprise of everybody, am to-day doing my own work, anil am entirely free from that terrible couplj which barrassed me night and d&v. I have been afflicted with rheumatism for a number or years, and now feel so mucb better that I believe, with a con tinuation of your * Golden Medical Discovery,' I will be restored to perfect health. I would ssy to those who are falling a prey to taring and be restored to health at onee. Any person who is Still in doubt, need but write me. inclosing a stamped, self- pddresBQd envelope for reply, when the foregoing statement will fully substantiated by me." Ulcer Cnr*d.--ISAAC R. Dowas, Ssq. of Spring FODSL Qockland Co* X. F. (P. O. Box SB), writes: xTbe 'Golden Medi- Medkftl Dtaearerjr !• Sold by Drnpgrlsts. WASTED TO t SKELHM. >r« Dissaae*--WI also wkh to cure you have effected in ray rase, us I sad suffered from that teni* cal Discovery5 has on the thigh. After try procured three bottles perfectly.". Mr. Downs continues: Consumption and Heart thank you for the remarkable cun For three years ] bis dlseasr, consumption, and heart dlsesss.. Before consulting you I had wssted awsy tot <•-,', - ' a skeleton: could not sleqp nor rest, and menxv ,,' / times wished to die to be out of my misery. »*•- ; then consulted yon, sod you toM me yoa hopes of curing m&but ft would take time. A.Vc , took five months* treatment in all. Hie first two months 1 was. almost discouraged: could not perceive any favorable symc but the third month I began to pick u> la Den aad ' cannot now recite how, step by step, the signs and returning health gradually but surely developed To-day I tip the scsles at one hundred and strong." , M Our principal reliance In eurtag lna was tbe '* Golden Medical Dlsoovssy. FVOMLOWS. aad sixty, and am tanftla disoon tinned tbe lungs before die commenced using your 'Golden Medical Discovery,' «>• k-- »E! since its ase. been feeling so Iter • Price $1.00 par Battle, or Six Bottka flMr ' lifi'i'l i fti'f ' Win •ORLO'S DISPENSARY HCOICAL ASSOCIATION, pr^FAio. N. v. • .pA For a woman to say she does not use Procter & Gamble's Lenox Soap, is to ^dmit she is "behind the times.' Nobody uses ordinpix Bpp fan get M Lenox." .it EctecHc sauna »<fiUrsSjJfeyown«. Mead M«I. JSSMSS HM OWN«. AND iorHrcala s. W. Oiirt St.. <XU> «*i MAMOM TM TAH> »-- ¥sT i a----a, att.v. K«.as-ai tatliCeapssw if MM*