Dimend Cat Dfaumni. Wif« (pq^inglj)--¥oa aught to be proud mm$ opinio® folks entertain of you. }«knq^ tndiar to-day remarked to him that ho mast hare a fool for a fatfcsr. Husband--Ofc! I don't mind m little tking like that. Thi poor man has met Su somewhere, my dear, and naturally ferred that the man who married yon waa an idiot.--New York Press. BuTx or OHIO, Cmr OF TOLEDO, ( IiVCAS CoUNTT--SS. f FBAKK J. CHENEY makes oath that ha Ik the Motor nutaar A? the firm of F. J. CHKXKT & Co. 40tagJ>n*iiieas in the City of Toledo, County and 8MU if(meil<l, and that said firm 'will pay t»»e asm of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of CATARRH that cannot be eared by the use of HALL'A CATARRH CUBE. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and mibsetibed in my presence, this BUi day at Deoember, A. D., •m. i -- , A. W. OLEASON, . -j SEAL. j. Notary Public. Hall'* Catarrh Core is taken internally and acta directly on the blood and mucus surfaces Of the system. Send for te&timonialK, free. F. J. CHENEY <Ss CO., Toledo, 0. 4V"8old by Druggists, 75c. - AN exceedingly cheeky thief made his appearance in Boston one day last week. Isle was dressed in overalls. He went mto the office of a life insurance company, pud, while whistling one of the latest •tones, began to unscrew from the walls •f a toifet-room on the fonrth floor a Wirror valued at about $20. Fully twenty 0ccnpants of the building saw the man at work, and everybody thought he had been hired either to repair the glass or clean it. They did not suspect anything was wrong until he left. Then it was learned lie was a thief. The Only Guaranteed Cure for all blood taints and humors, pimples. ; J^lotches. eruptions aud skin diseases of •very name and nature is Dr. Pierce's •<Joldea Medical Discovery. A certificate of fuarantee from a responsible business ouse warrants it to benefit or cure, or Knoney relunded. CHBONIC Nasal Catarrh positively cured .By Dr. Sage's Hemedy. . SO cents, by drug gists. ' • "Pupiii farming" has received a tre- •oendons shook in England on account of fhe disclosures in the Birchell case. Judging from the inquiries that these pupil farmers make of their agents, they *eed a great deal of teaching. One young pian recently wrote to inqaire if cotton t'as grown in a certain locality in Canada, nd the sapient a^ent answered that It Was not, but that so important an indus try could not long escape attention. Entirely Helpless to Healtlp. " The above statement made by Mrs. 8. H. JFord. wile of lieu. Ford, can be vouched lor by nearly the entire population of Cor- t>nna, Mich., her home for years. She was 'for two years a terrible sufferer from rheu matism, being confined to her bed most of tihe time, her feet and limbs belnj so badly Swollen she could scarcely move. She was • Induced to try a bottle of Hibbard's Hheu- » ,jteatic Hyrup. It helped her, and two ad- i j4*tioaal bottles entirely cured her. To-day Vhe is a well woman. First ask your druggist; should he not keep it. we will send on receipt of price, $1 'Bar bottle or six for $5. , I RHEUMATIC STROP Co. Jackson, Mich. THE telegraphic postal card is a great ^H^^Sonvenience 'n F»ris. Open oards of this .kind are delivered anywhere" in Parte ^ %ithin an hour after they are mailed for 6 *Ben£a, closed ones, giving as much room if «s mi ordinarv letter, for 10 cents: A Family Gathering. Ejp. Have you a lather? Have you a mother? * Have you a son or daughter, sister or a 5S jbrother who has not yet taken Kemp's Bal- / Mam for xfie Throat and Lungs, the guaran- teed remedy for the cure of Coughs, Colds, Asthma, Croup and all Throat and Luug troubles? If so. why, when a sample bottle ^ iH gladly given to you free by any druggist. , -fiitl thalarge size costs only fiUc and $1.00? A YOtJNG man writes to inqnire, "Does college education pay?" No, it makes e old man pay. V Six Worsts Fres. will be sent by Cragln & . • to., Philada., Pa., to any one in the U. 8. or ^Canada, postage puld. upon receipt of 25 J&obbins' Electric Soap wrappers. See list Of novels on circulars around each bar. ' J j|oap for sale by all grocers. IT fas the man who couldn't button his coat who hadn't clothes enough to go found. . "BROWN'S BRONCHIALTEOCHKS" are wide- known as an admirable remedy for Bron- hitis. Hoarseness, Coughs, and Throat oubles. Sold only in boxes. ^ \. WHAT is bettor than a promising man? A paying one. BBONCHITIS is enrod by frequent small of Flso's Cure for Consumption. *' IF afflicted with Sore Eyes, use Dr. Isaae Thompson's Eye Water. Druggists sell it 25o. CURES PERMANENTLY RHEUMATISM. The Cripple. The Cure. Lowell, Mass., July 9,I8fc7. The boy Orrln Robiilson, a poor cripple on crutches, who was cured by St. Jacobs Oil of rheumatism in 1881, Is well; the cure has re mained permHuent. He is now at work every day at manual labor. G EO. C. OSGOOD, M. D. AT DBUGGISTS AND DEALERS. TMC CHARLES A. V06ELER CO.. BaWsisn. Nt For Fifty Years the Standard Blood-pu^Pr and Tonic, Ayer's Sarsaparilla ixaa no equpl as a Spring* Medicine. Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. MOTHERS' FRIENtl HSESGHILD BIRTHMI " IP UBBD B«FOW« CONFINEMENT. BOOK TO "MOTHKBS*' MAXJJITCFRXE. D RKCI UTOR CO.. ATLANTA* SJb SOLD BT ALL DaUGGISTS. CATAREIH THE BIST REMEDY * FOR CHILDREN aonrxBixo nox fOLO in HEAD, : SHUFFLES * OB IATIRRK HAY-FEVER A particle 1b applied into each nostril and is a«ree- S0 cents at DrunUts; by mail. Kpiatei«& Warren Street. New York. I FALSE ALARM. Bow a Duel to tl*»> Death Was Pren>M> Saint-Perix went home in a very bad hnraor. He had been utterly cleaned ont at the club. The worst luck--he had not won once in three hours. At uau nui won once in uiret) uuurs. At p~.meo last, he threw down' the cards and left, , 1 swearing that never again would he be found seated at a card table. Ensconced in his coupe, he said to himself, with sullen anger, that all this never would have happened if the Countess had not had a headache--her eternal headaehc--and they would have gone to the opera together and yawned in company throughout the perform ance, as they always did on Fridays. Mechanically he thought of the story they told him of Montescourt one even ing at the club. It was almost a faroe, what with Montescourt's simplicity, his wife's per etual indisposition whenever she was called upon to accompany Ler husband to a ball or the theatre, and the handsome young man--who made the third in the dramatis persona;. Could it possibly be that the Countess was playing the same trick on him to be alone and free for an entire evening* Was not that headache a mere pretext! One by one a thousand forgotten details came back to his memory. He recalled that fashonable kirmess for the benefit of the inundated Madagascans, where, having neither rosebuds nor sachet- bags to sell, Mme de Saint Perix had offered her bare arm to be kissed at twenty-five cents a kiss. The receipts had been enormuus. He remembered the interminable walks she had taken in the country with her cousin Max; a ball where she had danced four waltzes with the same partner; a letter that she had burned, with deep emotion, some days later. All these phantoms dazed and excited him. He thought himself already the object of his friends' contemptuous pity. Was it for this that he had married a young girl just out of a convent school --timid, naive, blushing at the least word ? "Fool "that I am!" he burst out at lost, "the Countess lis an angel in her conduct and she would never--" He shrugged his shoulders and did not finish the sentence. The coupe stopped before his house. Saint-Perix entered. The gas was ex- guished, the servants had evidently one to bed. The house was wrapped in silent peace. "Evidently," said he, "I was not ex pected so early." And lighting a match he proceeded softly to his wife's "Who are they aad why have they those scraps pasted on them?" "They are pictures of the only girls 1 ever loved, and those clippings are their marriage notices." Au original sctome, surely.--JPftiZa- chamber, happy in the thought of .sur prising her in her sleep and feeling a great love for her, a shame at the ab- Burd suspicions which had left a sore spot in his heart. He crossed the ante-chamber, pushed aside the portiere of the boudoir and re- ooiled, startled, livid; as if he had seen a terrible vision. He had seen a man in the Countess' apartment--a sort of Borneo, of aristo cratic bearing. "So," .muttered the husband, "I was not mistaken!" He approached the man, his hands clenched, menacing, yale with anger. "Will you inform me what you are doing here, sir, in my house ?" "I have no reply to make," stammered the other. "Scoundrel! I' find von at night in my wife's apartments-- "I can say you nothing, sir. If you consider yourself aggrirved, I am at your orders*" He extended to Saint-Perix a card, which fell to the floor, and with the other hand drew from his pockct an ele gant little revolver, and *ealuting eave- moniously, he said: "Whenever you choose the Baron San-Leone, Hotel Bristol. It is too late to prolong the conversation--so farewell, till we meet again." And he hastened from the house without awaiting Saict-Perix's reply. The latter, stupefied, leaned with both hands upon a chair to keepTrom falling. All seemed red before his eyes. He felt that he would go mad--a terrible sense of desolation seemed to crush him down. "I shall kill him," he said at length; "as for her, I shall attend to her later." He picked up the card and hastened to the club to choose his second*, \ "A duel to the 'death," he told them, "and the sooner the better." • * « * * * The next afternoon, at four o'clock, Sherman's Idea of Brarery. When in the mood, there is no more delightful story-teller in the world than Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman. Unfortunately he is not often in the mood. But when some of his old com rades are about him he sometimes falls into a reminiscent mood and tells story after story of his experience in the Florida war, again in California in the days of the Argonauts, and, finally, throughout the civil war. He does not much believe iu the mad, barnrascarum, devil-may-care sort of courage. Beck- less action is sometimes costly, and prudence and courage, in the General's opinion, should go together. In 1B53, when Gen. Sherman was journeying on the side-wheel steamer Brother Jonathan, on his way to New York, Lieut. Baldwin, of the United States Navy, was the Captain. Off the ooast of Lower California Sherman was standing on the hurricane deck, when a commotion arose on the spar deck be low. Presently a stout man with a rope around his neck was shoved forwanJ. One of the men below shinned up the jackstaff at the bow where there win a croasjack, over which the end of the rope was passed. Every one knew what that meant It meant a hanging bee, and he was a brave man who interfered in one ol those social events.' But Capt. Bald win, handspike in hand, jumped to the lower deck, knocked down several of the ringleaders and ordered the others to fall back. One of the passengers said: "Captain, this man is a gambler, a rascal, a thief duly convicted, and we mean to hang him." "This is a United States ship," Capt. Baldwin retorted, "and ho violence shall be done to one of my passengers with out my consent. Take off that rope and I'll hear the charge." Capt. Baldwin held the mod off until his crew came to help him rescue the man. He had been guilty of the trick of raffling off a large piece of lead coated with gold by electricity, and by eelliug a large number of chances had cleared quite a sum. The winner and chief victim was a young boy, who had put up the money he was taking home to his mother, in the hope of gaining the big nngget. Capt. Baldwin had the man fairly tried. The result was that he was sen tenced to give up the money and to be whipped when the boat reached Nicaragua. ' Have Ton a Xnlling Iron? A young man who rejoices in the fact that, though we cannot eat unless we are hungry, we can drink when we are not thirsty, started out the other day to buy a mulling iron. He began at "the hardware stores in the Bowery. - "I would like to get a mulling iron," he said in the first place visited. "I beg pardon." said the salesman. "A mulling iron." "I will asjc the proprietor." The proprietor came forward. "Will you please tell me what a mail ing iron is," he said "It is an iron that is heated red hot in a fire and then used to scorch beer-- stir up the growler, you know." "N--yum! I should think it would be good, but I never heard of such a thing." At the next plaoe tbe requent vu re peated. "What is it for? Curling hair?* "No--heat it red hot and stir up the growler." "Whew! Good, eh? Where'd you learn that? Won't a soldering copper do?" In one only of six places visited did any one know what a mulling iron was, and that clerk said he didn't believe there was one in stock in town. In Sixth avenue two men were found who knew the iron. One said that if in stock they were, worth 25 cents each, and he would make one to order for 75 cents. So the young man went on and wststed three dollars' worth of time try ing to find the 25-cent iron. From Sixth avenue he went to Vesev street and thence to Fulton. Last of all he wrote to a friend, who is a Sun repor- SeiiSi iUie a Horse. : A man "with an army gun and a butcher knife went into a South Arkan sas newspaper office, says Opie P. Bead in the St. Louis Magaiine, the other day, and remarked to a man sitting at the table,-- "Are you the editor?" > , "No sir, I am the proprietor. Can I do anything for you?" "I wanted to see the editor." "On very particular business,?* "No, not very. I simply wanted to kill him for publishing an article about me last week. "Is your other business so pressing that you have to kill him this week?" "If its an accommodation I can wait a few days." "I wish you would, fpr I sold him a calf some time ago, and he owes five dollars on it. If you kill him now I'll never get my money." "But you could take the calf back and make what he has already paid clear of all expenses." "That's a fact,. said the proprietor, musing. "I'll send a boy after him. No; that would be taking advantage of him, aad he might not like it. Call around next week aud I'll have him here." The man left, and the newspaper man remarked to himself, "So much for disobeying my wife. She told me not to forget my pistols. If I hadn't played proprietor that fellow would have shot me with that old Yankee gun. Next week, just ab^ut the time I'm busy, the fellow will come around with lis stal wart field piece. If he'd only came around with an Arkansaw pistol, I wouldn't mind it, but it would be an eternal disgrace to be shot with*such a gun. After this I shall obey my wife. That woman's got horse sense, an# looks into the future like a inule." the seconds came to give an account of i ter, to see what he could do in the mat- their mission to the unhappy husband. "We presented ourselves," said one of Of them, "at the hotel indicated on the card of your Baron San-Leone. He had left by the first train in the morning." "The coward," cried Saint-Perix, "I would give a hundred thousand francs to find him again!" At this moment there was a discreet knock and the Countess' maid half opened the door. ter. The reporter visited three stores where sportsmen's goods are sold, two pawnbrokers, and one well-posted bar tender. The mixer of drinks sniffed when the mulling iron was mentioned. "It won't do," he said. "It's bad enough to have to sell ten cents worth of beer for seven cents without keeping irons hot to mull it. I wouldn't tell you where to get an iron if I knew, for "Madame begs that Monsieur will see | it might start a bad habit. See? Mull her for a moment," she said. fag jg played out."--New York Sun. "Very well," he replied shortly, "you may go." Scarcely had he pronunced these curt words when the Countess, her eyes red with weeping, her face pale and drawn, entered the salon. "Henri, Henri, what is the. matter with you to-day," she cried, "that you avid me and close your door to me ?" "You shall learn presently, madame, since you seem not to know," replied Saint-Perix, in measured toiics of bitter irony," "at present, as you see, my oc cupation pretents me from--" "But I must speak with you," she in terrupted quickly; "I must speak with you now. Do you know what happened in my boudoir last night ?" *'I know only too well, madame." "What! You know that while I was asleep some one broke open the sandal wood box in which I keep my dia mond- -" Saint-Perix had risen. He gasped, and seiziug the Countess' hands in his own, he repeated, anxiously "Some one broke open your box ?" "Yes, and the robber has left nothing, not even my engagement ring, that I prized so much." "Gentlemen, all is explained!" cried the Count, triumphantly; "it is a good lesson, do yon not think so ?--and one which I merited. Our San-Leone was a common sneak thief.. Well, so much the better. Your jewels, fortunately can be replaced." "And the Saint-Perixs' began a sec ond honeymoon which was quite as lender as the first.--[Translated from the French of liene Maizeroy. The Ouly Girl He Ever Loved. A lady who was recently visiting the rooms of a gay bachelor of this city was struck by the decoration over his sit ting-room mantel. A large frame was filled with photographs of girls and women, most of them pretty and all of them members of respectable society. At the bottom of each picture was pasted a newspaper clipping. "Why, Mr. Brown, what do thef mean?" asked the . astonished lady. The Wandering Jews. It is remarkable that Emin Pasha should be a, Jew by birth, and one of his rescuers--Yita Hassen--a Jew by profession, says the Jewiah Chronicle. But the presence of these Jews in equatorial Africa does not stand alone. From the time of Abraham downward the migratory instinct has been domi nant in the race. Mesopotamia, Canaan, Egypt, Canaan once more, Assyria, Babylonia, Persia, Canaan a third time, and then the world at large--such are the successive stages of Isreal's national migration. The Jews, indeed, have ever been the "tribe of the wandering foot." I» an age when movement from one country to another was a rare and hazardous proceeding--in the twelfth century, to wit, Benjamin of Tudela and Petachia of Batisbon traveled through a great part of Europe, Asia, and Africa, and were thereby able to make considerable additions to the world's knowledge. The second Ben jamin and Halevv, who explored the Falashas, may also be mentioned. The existence of Jews in out-of-the-way cor ners of the globe, the Felashas and Beni-Israel and the Cochin Jews has only been made possible by the migra tory tendency of the race. The four young men who kept last Yom Kippur in so queer, yet touching, a fashion in the wilds of South Africa, are among the latest illustiations of the tendency. No doubt the wandering instinct has been strengthened by persecutions, but now that peace and quietness are his in greater measure, the Jew still re tains his predilection for travel. The Passion Even Unto Death. Weeping- Spouse-- I shall erect a monument to you, dearest, when you are gone. I shall have "Loving hus band" engraved at the bottom of the column. Dying Advertiser--Good Heavens, Pauline, that will never do! Top of column, eighth page, next reading matter--or--I refuse to diel -- JJry Goods Chronicle. Don't Stand ou "Tour Sights." An old and successful merchant re lates the following anecdote: When I was quite an old clerk--that is, old for the years I had been clerk ing, though only 20 years' of Bge--I was told bv the head clerk one morn ing that the senior member of the firm had directed me to be sent to his resi dence as soon as I appeared. "The porter is to go with you," said the head clerk. Something in his face made me think that he knew what I wM "Wanted for, so I asked: "What's to pay?" "He wants you and Bill to take up and shake his carpets," was the answer, given with a peculiar smile. For a second I thought of my rights. I had hired out to be entry-clerk and book-keeper, and here I was expected to go down to the residence of the pro prietor and beat carpets! I was troubled with as much pride as the average young man of 20 possesses, and that is no small amount. I dou't remember Anything more distasteful ever offering itself to me, but I said: "All right; 1 am ready when Bill is, •We went to our task. I didn't pout, or sulk, or assume an aggrieved air, but went on my knees pulling up the carpet as cheerfully as I could. We had a day of it; tiie carpets to take up, be beaten, and then put back. The proprietor was chatty, his wife was sociable, and I made the most of my opportunity; it never harmed me I had evidence afterward that my work that day was a stepping'stone in my career, and I might almost call it one of the turning-points in my life Jewelry Clerks. » A jewelry clerk becomes so skilled in time that it becomes almost impossi ble to rob him. For instance, suppose you wish to purchase a diamond ring. It is not necessary in such a case for you to look at diamond necklaces; so the clerk simply places one tray of rings before you. As soon as a piece of jewelry is sold it is replaced bjr a duplicate. As each tray is filled and' the faculties of the salesman aro made acute by many years of experience, it is almost impossible to rob him. As a further test of the employes of Tiffany & Co., an account of stock is taken each morning. This is done by the salesman who has charge of a de partment. It is possible under these circumstances to discover whether or not anything i» missing half an hour after the store opens for business, Each article, be it ever so small, is en tered and must be accounted for. If it is sold the books show that such is the case. If, on the contrary, it has been stolen--well, then there is an investiga tion and the store detective force is set to work. The three or four quiet, unostenta tious gentlemen who stand idly about, sometimes with and sometimes without their hats and overcoats on, are the de tectives. They are lynx-eyed, and nothing escapes their notice. In addi tion to the regular staff a number ol other Hawkshaws are employed during the holidays.--New York Morning Journal. The Quarrel of the Cities, Seattle--We've got the biggest Wash in the Union. Jackson--And we the prettiest Miss. Philadelphia--And we the wealthiest Pa. Hot Springs--But we are the most an cient; we have got the Ark. Bangor--And what's the matter with Me? New York--Hush, children, about your foibles; yon will made little Chi cago 111 with envy. A Massachusetts Dog Story. A Boston gentleman, to test his dogs understanding, read aloud to him from the newspaper an article to the effect that our worthy legislators had aban doned the attempt to muzzle the dogs. Thereupon the |oy of the St. Bernard know no bounds. He barked, leaped into the air, ran aronnd the room, and even became so excited that he ran up and down stairs until restrained by force. A WKBTERN sheep-raiser wa3 convey ing 500 of his stock on a lake schooner toward a railway station, on their way East. As the Captain was turning aod twisting the wheel, to keep the schooner on her course, the old ram who headed the flock, taking umbrage at his mo tions, came up behind him, and at one fell swoop, butted him over the wheel. The enraged Captain seized his woolly assailant and threw him overboard, when, presto! away Went the whole flock, popping over the rail, one after another, into the sea. \3 " ' NOT to return one good office for an other, is inhuman; bnt to return-evil for good is diabolical. There are too many even of this sort, who, the more they owe, the more they hate. There is nothing mpre dangerous than to oblige these people, for when they are conscious of not paying the debt, .£ho£ wish the creditor out of tile t ^ » .rial Tou* ajtpn>t*x flatulence, heartburn, op- {o«ntf« hillwH of the stoinacb are the inevl- 1* aaqmaeM of hid of the knife and fork. To way of ldm that be gratifies the cravings of appetite -would be genuine satire. He only ap- pttMi them. Is relief attainable? Certainly, and by the use of a ylfaaant as well as thorough ntneay, Hostettev'g btomach Miters. Will it cnre immediately ? Certainly not--it does not effect miracle*. i.ut it. does give prompt awl unspeakable relief, and will, it persisted in, prodnvn <a ultimate cure. Not onlv does it Im part. relish to the food but promotes its con version l»y the stomach into rich, health and strength Buatajning blood. SnpernensitivenesB of the nerves, mt ntal depression, and i nquiet •lumber, produced by interruption of the diges tive functions, are also ieuiedied by it. It is the finest preventive and curative of malarial disorders, and relieves constipation, rbeuuuw tlniu, kidney and bladder ailments, and liver Complaint. REV. WAYUAND HOTT hits off the pes simists Ly telling of an individual n imed Stewart, who kept the people of his town in an extremely nervous condition by prophesying tlie end of the world. Ore day an unbeliever asked Mrs. Stewart, the prophet's wife, if she really believed the world was coming to an end on Ihe date he had named. "Well. I don't know," she replied, "but I do hopo it will, for it will do Mr. Stewart so much good." Hibbard's Rheumatic and Liver Pill*. These Pills are scientifically compounded..: uniform in Hctiou. No griping pain so coin-g monly following tho use of mils. They arcj. adapted to both adults and children with perfect safety. We nuaranteo they have no equiil in the cure ot lleadacrie. Con stipation. Dy.-ptpsia. Biliousness; and. as an appetizer, they excel any other prepara tion. ONE of Stanley's Akka dwarfs will bf put on exhibition in London as soon a# , the weather is mild enough to suit hi# tropical constitution. ' • {Prom th# St. Louis Bulletin.] ST. Louis, MO.. Feb. 26.1887. Dr. A. Owen is the most successful in- veiltdT stnd manufacturor in tho country of electrical appliances lor the cure ot acute, chronic, and nervous diseases. They have received tho unqualifie I indorsement of physicians of htsh standing, as well as thousands of sufferers who have been cured by tliero. The following indorsement, for instance. Is absolu'ely convincing, and the writer is professor of the theory and prac tice of medfc'ne in the American College of £t. Louis: ST. LOUIS.Mo.. .Tune 10. 1886, I take pleasure in statins that 1 have ex amined und tested Dr. Owen's Electro- Gnlvnnic Belt and Appliance, and do not hesitate to say that it is tho most practical acid efficient of all the galvanic belts I have used in my p aetice. It is a very useful device, and whenever electric belts or shields can be of any benefit, this will more than tak* tho place of anythiag of the kind I have ever seen. OEOKOB C. PrrzKH. M. D.. Fro'es^or of the Theory and Practice ot Medicine in the American Oolleie. St. Louis; Clinical Lecturer at the City Hos pital, St. Louis: Editor of the American Medical Journal: Author of "Electricity in Medicine and Surgery." and Author of "Direct Medication." See their advt. in this papor. Cheap Kx ours Ions to Atalla, Alabama. The Monon route will, on April 26, 27, 29. and 29. sell tickets at reduced rates to At- alla. Ala., and return, for tho great land sale April 28, 29. and 90, tickets good until May 10, with privilege of stopping over at Chattanooga, Lookout Mountain, return ing. Don't miss the opportunity to visit the New South. Express trains daily to Cincinnati, con necting with ihe Qu< en and Cresent route. Atalla is the natural eastein gateway of tho great mture iron manufacturing district of North Alabuma, in the center ot the rich, soft red and brown ore belt, with coal and lime stone in easy reach, has four (4) rail roads, line water power, three (3) furnaces, car works, cotton oompress, oil well and planing mills. But three years ago a village ot 40:>, now a thriving city ot 2,00a The sale is under the auspices of the Atalla Iron and Steel Company, and consists of choice manufac turing business and residence lots within the corporation limits o( the elty and ad joining the vast coal and iron fields. Free Homes. Last chanoe for line agricultural land free. ' The gi oat Sioux Reservation of 11,- 000.000 acres now open for settlement, lying In the Missouri valtey. Is equal to any State in the Union for fertility and productive ness. Pierre is the key ̂ this land, and the coming large city of South Dakota. For full information, free of charge, write to the Alliance Committee, Pierre, South Dakota. Asx your dealer for "Tanstll's Punch." Xkst Heed's SanapuiUa does ponsa-- curative power Peculiar to Itself is conclusively shown by the wonderful cures it has effected, unsurpassed lnthe hiatorr of medicine. This absolute merit it possesses brreaeoa of the fact that it in prepared br a Comhi--tfon. Proportion and Process Pecu liar to Hood's SanapariMa. known to no, other medi cine, aad br which the full medicinal power of all the ingredients used is retained. Hood's Sarsapa rilla is a hichly concentrated extract of SarBeparUla, Dandelion. Mandrake, Dock. Juniper Berries and other well known vegetable rem idles, it has won Hood's Sarsaparilla its way to the leading place among medicines by its own intrinsic, undisputed merit, and has now a larger sale than any other similar preparation in the country. If you have never taken Hood's Sarsa parilla. a fair trial will ooavince you of its excel lence and merits. Tske it this season. "I have for a long time been using Hood's Sarsa parilla, and bslieve me, I would not be without it. As a spring medicine it is invaluable." X. A. RHODES, I» Ontario Street, Chicago, Dl. 1 feel very unreh indebted to Hood's nxmttmgBib. for I believe it isto the use of this medietas thaSl owe my present health. In the spring 1 Slut SO MSS^- pletely run down that I could not eat rr llnep. aajt all the dreaded diseases of life seemed to have a mortgage on my symtem. I was obliged to nlraniliai my worft. and after seeking medical treatment aaA spending over |30 for different preparations. I ioooS mysell no better. Then my wife persuaded met*, try abittle of Hood's Sarsaparilla. Before the bottle was gone I began to amend. X have now UM4| two bottles and hare gaiped 22 pounds, fasaelsap. ' The Spring ! Medicine ttiaa without it hurting me; my dyspepsia Mfe' biliousness hare gone. I never telt better life, am at work again and consider myself a wH& man. Those two bottles were worth $130 to me,* W. V. KCLOWS, Lincoln, IU. "Hood's Sarsaparilla purified my blood, gavs strength, and overcame the headache and dizzioesa^ so that now I am able to work again." LuiuaSk MASON, 68 Church 8L. toweU. Mass. X. B. Be sun to set Hood's Sarsaparilla. :4 Hood's Sarsaparilla Fold by druggists. »1: six for »5. Prepared oalr I Bold by all druggists. |l; six for Prepared hy C. 1. HOOD & CO.. Lowell. Mass. • | by C. I. HOOD 4c CO. Lowell, Mass. . i IOO Doses One Dollar ' lOp Doses One PpUar • on® nzsjcr&m Both the method aud results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers and cures habitual I A m ETO Who Value a Refined Complexion Must Use pozzowrs MEDICATED COMPLEXION POWDER. FWhhfefDra;gi*U£FFT«cy Good* Drain* tlNfihn CO^VRICHT 16AQ A CASE OF MISTAKEN IDENTITY. "Yon certainly are mistaken,'* said one young man to another at an evening party, " but that cannot be the young lady I met last winter, though the name is the same. Judge for yourself. This girl has a glori ous complexion, while the other young lady--Good heavenB, what a skin she had ! Covered with blotches and red-headed pimpleB; it was like a nutmeg grater. Oh no, this cannot be the young lady." But it was, though, and Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery had worked the miracle. As a remedy for pimples, blotches, eruptions and all Skin and Scalp diseases, it is the most wonderful medicine extant. Of all the many blood-purifiers and remedies for skin diseases, "Golden Medical Discovery " is the only one guarantied to do all that's claimed for it, or money promptly refunded / Especially has it manifested its potency in curing Salt-rheum, Tetter, Erysipelas, Eczema, Boils, and Carbuncles. In all Scrofulous Sores and Swellings, "Fever-sores," "Hip-joint Dis ease " and all impurities of the blood, no matter from whatever cause arising, it effects the most marvelous cures.' WOJUJJ'B DISPBNSABT MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, Manufacturers, 663 Main Street, Buffalo, N. T. for an incurable case of •"»««»«•«imi CeMt'rh in the Head by. the proprietors of DR. «AGE'S CATARRH REMEDY. SflHPTOMS OF CATARRH.--Heada~he, obstruction of nose, dischargee falling- into throat, sometimes profuse, watery, and acrid, at others, thick, tenacious, mucous, purulent, bloody, putrid and offensive; eyes weak riiur- ingf in ears, deafness; offensive breath : smell and taste impaired, and gen eral debility. Only a lew of these symptoms likely to be present at once. Dr. Stare's Remedy cures the worst cases. Only 50 cents. Sold bv drumri«t«. everywhere. DISC'S KEMKDY FOB CATAKKJLL--jbest. IDLEST to USE. Cheapest. Kclief is immediate. A cure is cci Uiiii. hoi Cold in the Head it haa no equal. It is an Ointment, of which a small particle Is applied to the •ddraaa. ILXHAZEUIXB, Warns,Fl PENSIONS 'sSftUSSSS*1 rataicm O'FAKEEW,, Atty.at Law,Washing too, M|, Habit. The only nrtakb and easy cure. Dr. .1 t. Stephens, Lebanon. Ohi<y OPIUM Mk.N HON TiilS PAPKR «rkh wamasTo torsi tENSION"*0""'" *101 FI L r v o o v s i * W n R l i i f l g t o n , D . < f c T 3 J 3 yrs iu last war, 15 adjudicating claims, r.tty si! ISnTerffiiff • KIPPERS PA8TILlE8i;S'aS?^ ' xiestov,n, Macs. MENTION THIS PAPVA WKTWI » AO'RTRMGK. If yon ivant pension witkeaft delay, put claimin thohaMk of JOSEPH n. nVMTEB, AMorMIt Waahlegtoa, D. C. PENSIONS • '..I.' r H fell. H A T * F O L K S # fall. Sold b* ever?whpr#*or mail. ai>n(mJcd)«e. Bf.WlltSS'l Splits Cc., ?&;!»., ceptahle to tho stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneiicial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities com mend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Svrup or Figs ia for sale in 50o and $1 bottles by nil leading drug gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIB SfRUP CO. 9AM nUUKMOO. CAU tamVIUE. Kt. HEW rOKK. 0.f, j Burlington! i Route ! HALF RATES -TO TUB- --OF TH1-- FARMING Regions WEST, SOUTHWEST, NORTHWEST* For particular* call on your Ticket Afrrn? or a&dNNtt » P. S. £L'STi&» Uen'i rass. AgU C. V. JSC <}. XL " pfi MTLH PRESSES yi -ANB- Printers' Materials Of all kinds for sale at lowest market , •in and full particulars address Newspaper outfit# a specialty. For estii: CHICAGO NKWSPAPKn T'MOV, 271 and 273 Franklin St, Chicago*. _DR OWEN'S ELECTRIC BELT AJPSRXJ STMPXUVBOXIT. PATENTED Auc. 16, 1887, iMMnvEDJuivSO.lSSf. KB. 0WS1PS EUCTSO- GALVANIC BODY BJOX AND fcUSfSHSO&Y *tl» ««« All Bbeumatio Cem- »t»,lumhat».Q«a«ral. ana Ke voua DeUUtjr. Cectfteness, Xilii}- DiituH, ImiuniH, Trent liagi 8exual &- hauathra. Watting ef •MM eaoscd hy iBdiwretieas FAK. •K8FOX8IBM PAIHM*OVW<EAT8 NUL DR. Owen'S ELECTRIC IHSOLESITRURW Also an Cleotrie Truss and Belt Combdwi^ Bead 8c. palin for tmaa illut'd book, K4 page*, wbtafc wink* •tat yoa In plan raid ranlaiw Mntiw tbU pafwr. iMiea I'outh.Af* 0 ./"SKSTTO TRY A PAID OWXH fJ-EOTOTO BELT * AWMAKCS < 300 North Broadway. ST. LOUIS, Hj W Broadway. MEW YOHX CITY. CRATE F U L-COM FO RTINO. j i EPPS'S COCOA BREAKFAST, "By uttseroufrih kiwwWgp of the naturallawap which K"vrn the operations of difreetlon and nutri tion. and by s% earpnil application of the Use] ties of Avell-Ki'locttyl Ox-oa. our InvaVf&Ht taMca with a delical era*" which ntay save nn many he It if. by tlip ju.ii.-iotiK use of such artfclea of diet thu4 a constitution may l»- gradually huiltupuutUstronci enough to roeint «• ^ " "" Mr. Epge ^haa pfoyfdetS aoct< •a of punt . , .. -- .wind as i to attack wherever there m a weik point We flavoured I octora'bi " rtt , •&«. drcdrt of subtle inuladir* are tlvattng around apwrailp beavT doctora'billa. i artfclea of diet thufc „ . . built ui» until strong pry tendency to diaeaea Hun- escape many R fatal ehaft by keej>in(F our elvc« waffv forunf-l with pure blood and a properly nouziakM j frame." I'ii il Srrrln Gatttt*. Made simply witn boiling water or milk, Solfti . . . F W. L. DOUGLAS $3 SHOE QKNTLEMKN. BEST IN THE WORLD. OTHER SPECIALTIES for GXXTLZXE^ LADIES, KISSES and B0Y& None genuine unless name and pries an* stamped on bottom. Sold everywhers. - ^ s > *a~Send address oa postal for valuable , '• * information. , ? rj W. I* Uondsi. BraektM. Masai',. ; Paper, Envelopes, Flu Book nd Writing Papers, Cover Paptr% Liien and Manila Papers, Letter Heads, I, Note Heads, Bill Heads, State- mots Mi Ruled Pipors W H O L E S A By the CASE or CAR LOAD§ For Samples and Prices address CHICAGO NEWSPAPER 1X10% 271 & 273 Franklin St., ( kifare. I prescribe and full* «t»»* orse Big t* as ihe onl» ?ecific for the certain caiw Ihi* disease. O. U. INt; KA11 AM. M X»w Amsterdam, S. YS, We have sold Bie G f< many years, anj is I _ . Kiven the beat ot sai Otwrtnnlt,^MBI faction. Ohio. JM 1J. It- DYCHF Jt CO.. V Chicago, Sl.OOl Bold by D 1-." N U. Mraaava? QoUeslfe. h 7 'C' C>' l'S: WHEN WRITING TO AI>VI IkfifSuVr*1 «• *** J#1 / : '..*41 Jl