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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 15 Oct 1890, p. 7

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F v*: $ **£m i» 81BEK SHORES. BT MADIBON t. CAWEK. Th« moan before to |0(htl light! *tla Bight 1 love ua, '1. A*d all the moonflfjirt tangled in the itrMn; liLiOve, lova, my love, and all the stars above us, . ibfi itflJTB above, *acl every star a dream, I®i frtgwnt purine, -where the falling -warble Ol water c&sctdea, and the plutiged foam ' glows, (fcame columned ruin lifts its sculptured marble, < Curled with the chiselled rebeck and the rose. p, lleep, tweet sleep, sleeps at the drifting tiller, "1 And in on* sail the Spirit of the Ralg-- - fjove, love, my love, oh bid thv heart be stiller, ». And hark the music of the staging rain. Vfhtit flowers are these that blow their balm >'£ -onto us? B«w white their brows' aromas, each a flame?-- Ah, child, too kind the love we know, that knew us, ' • That kissed onreyea tkat we might aee the aamel ^ • ...v. .. ,s*Night! night! good night I--no* dream it is to vanish, The temple and the nightingale are there! ' IThe thorniest; roses bruising none to vanish, The moon and this wild poppy to thy hair 1" *Night! night! good night! and Lovq's own star >• before thee, " And l*>ve"s star-Image in the starry seat yes, ah yes! a presence to watch o'er thee! --Night! night! good night [ and good the odstothee!" poltH Journal. .a PEARL'S LOVER. . ^ BY RAY RH^IMOSa Before her eheval mirror pretty Pearl tat, "waiting for her tuaid. The" dainty aveDder morning robe, lined with deli­ cate pink, set off her fair complexion find auburn hair. The silk was laid J§»ck from a beautiful neck, and the . toose Japanese sleeves revealed white, S>anded arms thrown above her head. ier deep violet eyes were shaded by v liark. curling lashes, and she was al- fcnost dropping off into a doze when a bright flash aroused her. She opened those wondrous eyes wide, startled and Surprised, but only her lovely, slightly . flushed face in the glass before her an­ swered back her look. She arose, Showing a wonderful form clad in the painty gown, and, going lazily to the ^window overlooking the court below, ; j>urted the lace curtains and peeped ' out. She started back, a rich blush dyeing her skin, for opposite, not a Jhalf dozen rods away, in a window as high as her own, stood a gentleman, jhandsome and decidedly chic, holding ft hand-mirror, from which he had dex­ terously thrown a ray of light into Pearl's face. His lips parted in * sweet smile as for an instant her eyes looked into his, but Pearl, heated, angry, discomfited, had (shrunk away from the window and did not see it. Her maid with her chocolate created for a moment a diversion of her thoughts. But presently her mind wandered back to herself, aad she said to herself: "I hate him! The audacity of the ^wretch! I shall be ob.iged to keep the blinds down after this. I wonder who he is. He must be a stranger, for I've never before seen him. I wish I had yet to see him, for I'll not forget soon my mortification. How dared he!" And the. violet eyes blazed with indig­ nation. Days of rain and mist kept Pearl "within <?oors, for she was much of a pussy-cat, and dreaded any dampness. But one morning, breaking clear and bright, she arrayed herself in a stylish spring costume and walked"peacefully down to a noted jeweler's, where she made the purchase of a birthday gift. But Pearl was hard to suit, and the obliging clerk placed all his lovely . •wares before her, anxious to please, and happy in the consciousness that he was waiting upon ft lady, and a beautiful one at that. A naughty little frown cut the white forehead about which t,he auburn hair, lite the color of burnished gold, lay so lovely. The dainty head ' was perched, bird-like, on one side. And then on the other, as she considered and reconsidered the advisability of one, the appropriateness of another, or the usefulness of a third article. Pearl's presents were always highly appreci­ ated, just because she gave so much thought to the selection. At last, raising her head with a sigh of relief, she #aid to the smiling clerk: "I will take this freshner," and gaz­ ing past the clerk's head, saw in the mirror back of him, the reflection of her tormentor of a few days back, who, standing at the opposite counter, had evidently been admiring the reflection of her face, in the same mirror. She dropped her eyes betraying no surprise aior displeasure, nnd failed to see the look of almost adoration spread over the gentleman's face as he turned away. But the clerk was very much sur­ prised at the haughty expression on his customer's face, as he handed her th9 parcel, attributing her change of man­ ner to some stupid blunder of his own, and making himself miserable thereby for the rest of the day. Pearl wended her way home, sadly and dejcctedly, for she felt as though an insult had been offered her, and it hurt her sensitive soul immeasurably. The night of the great Van Halsten ball was fast approaching, and Pearl, asrain seated before her mirror was watching the deft fingers of Lizette, -who was piling the reddish gold hair into becoming masses on her shapely head. A large pearl pin was fastened among the meshes and the soft curls clung to her neck at the back of her head. With a pat or two, Lizette said, "Es is all don mamselle." For a moment Pearl gazed critically at the reflection, and then with a satis- lied tone said, "And now my dress, Lizette." The beautiful costume of faintish lavender, and deep violet, made a beau­ tiful picture of Pearl. A string of her namesakes about her neck were her only jewels. Great velvety purple pansies nestled in the corsage, and dainty gloves and slippers finished the ccutume, over which Lizette threw a pale pink wrap. This was Pearl's first season, and al­ though by no means her first ball, she Btill anticipated great pleasure. She chatted gaily and happily with her chaperon, as they drove away. Smiles chased over her face, showing bewitch­ ing dimples in the soft rounded cheeks. The great mansion was ablaze with light, and the air was heavy with fra­ grance of flowers. Pearl, in her beauty and becoming costume, was the center of an adoring group, and dance after dance was given to devoted attendants, •who sought so anxiously for a favor. Her adorable baby face was, turned up saucily to a pair of dark eyes above her, and a gay reply to his earnest question was trembling on her lips, when in the mir­ ror back of him, she again saw the re­ flection of her unknown tormentor. This time she gazed steadily and scorn­ fully back at him, but he, be ding his regal head smiled gloriously at her, and murmured with his lips, "Forgive me." All her displeasure vanished, and she gave back a bri< t answering smile, which, mistaken by the cavalier at her side, for one to himself, warmed his heart, for many days. The music was echoing down the long • corridors and halls, and the ball was at its height. Pearl, dancing lightly and airily, lost none of her pris­ tine freshness, while other girls beside her gave furtive "dry Washes" to their flushed faces. Presently, before the belle cfi the evening. Pearl, bent the most distinguished of all the evening's guests, Randolph Burton, her hero of the mirror. A slow, lazy waltz, full of an undertone of feeling, they had, and after his first whispered "forgive me" ia her ear, they had floated away in silence, the observed of all observers. The Rtrains of the waltz died away, as' he led his partner into the dim fragrant conservatory, seating her under a rose arch, whose flowers touched her cheek. He stood above her until she tipped her rosebud face up to his, under the magnetism of his look. His voioe, deep, cleat and musical, broke the sweet silence, as he said, oalmly, but with an elo­ quent look: "You have not said you had forgiven me, Miss Pearl ?" "Forgive you?" she answered, a slow •mile breaking over her face, and be­ traying shy dimples. "I have nothing to forgive." "But I caused yon annoyance, and perhaps pain, more than once, and un­ intentionally, too. How could I help myself?"--the last very softly, and dan­ gerously tender. Pearl, as though under a spell, could not respond lightly as was her wont. Her eyes drooped shy, aud her smile died away, Sitting down beside her, he clasped the listless fingers in his own, so strong and white, and leaning over her, said: "I love you, Pearl. I have loved yon from afar for weeks and months. Morn­ ings I have watched you in your room, and my heart has gone out to you. Everywhere I have met you as a stranger. You gave me not even a passing glance, and I loved yon so! PearL, tell me, darling, that some day you, too, will love me." What strange, sweet thrill possessed Pearl, she could not tell. Was she yield­ ing to an utter stranger her heart, her love? And still wa* he a stranger? She knew of him, of his greatness, of his goodness, and of his genius, Al­ though she had met him for the first time to-night. Aud that he, so vastly her superior, should love her! A burst of love and tenderness filled her heart, and lifting those shy sweet eyes, to the face above her, she let it shine oat in an unspoken answer. With a clasp, strong and tender, he took her to his heart and kissing her rapturously, murmured: "My darling, my love forever 1" Thought, and Its Calttvnllon. It has been said that it requires more art to be a good listener than a conver­ sationalist. What an incentive to elo­ quence is an attentive listener! What triumphs have come before the foot­ lights through an enthusiastic audi­ ence! What symphonic poems have been sung upon instruments whose swaying bows were guided by sympa­ thetic, silent listeners! How beautiful, indeed, is thought! However hard and mean one's toil, fan­ cies can rise, such as might have had their birth midst woods and flowers. How maby brilliant writers have been utter failures as talkers; aud, alas! how many talkers would have been consid­ ered wise but for the expose their con­ versation makes! Men cannot all be authors, but they can be thinkers. On the street, in the car, we can pursue our silent thought, till time and space become obliviou--till, as Lowell has said: What we long for, that we arc, For one transcendant moment; Until the Present, poor and bare , Can make its sneering comment. Ever superior to adverse circum­ stances, obvious to pain and hardship, can we become by cultivating thought. We all know how subtle is its influence, though a silent worker. The sudden impulse to speak of previously forgot ten subjects has often been traced to the effect of some contiguous mind. The presage of some event is often felt by persons givon to "presentiments. It is only through persistent, untiring thought that grand results are born. All are prone to look upon inventions as spontaneous creations; "but there is no class of men so absorbed in one idea as inventors -- making everything and everybody subservient to their moods, till, at last, the result is given to the wondering world; and the inventor again plunges into seclusion, and the world and its surprise are lost to him as he thinks out another so-called "discov­ ery." Then, in the literary world there have been many inspirations of the moment, but earnest, deep thought has preceded, and, at least, indirectly brought the great production. The supremacy of the mind has be­ come an absorbing movement toward treatment of disease. And every con­ scientious physician knows how great is the subjection of the body to the mind. Through our thoughts we maKe for ourselves a sphere, from which emanates unconsciously a power for good or evil. Life's more than breath and the quick round of hlood. We live in thoughts, not breaths. He moBt lives who thinks most--lives in one hour more than in hours do some. Then, let us think, then speak; think, then act; and life will round^it- self to higher meanings--nobler ends! Cockneys. A fnnnv legend exists about the origin of the term Cockney applied now chiefly to the lowest class of Londoners. An East-end person, who had never been out of London in his lite, had oc­ casion to go into the country, and was detained all night. He was much dis­ turbed by the lowing of the cattle, the grunting of the pigs, and other sounds of country life with which he was not familiar. In particular he was fright- eued by the crowing of a oock. When he rose in the morning he said, in re­ sponse to the inquiries of the farmer, that the sound of the wiid beasts hud kept him awake. Just at that moment the cock crowed agaiu, and the Lon­ doner said: " That's the one; he's been neighing like that for hours!" Since then, it is suggested, London­ ers have beeh called Cockneighs or Cockneys. Camden says that the real origin of the term -is this. The Thames was once called the Cockney, and, therefore, a Cockuev dimply means one who lives on the banks of tho Thames.-- Pick- Me-Up. ' The Methodist Church at Mavville, N. J., has hit upon a novel plan to raise money to pay the church debt. It has established a summer boarding-house | at Chautauqua. All the attendants, j except the cook, give their services free, and eveft the provisioms are donations. GEMS OF THOUCMT^ [From the Rain's Horn.] f ; THE devil is always very polite whan he first comes to you. You will never know men until yon learn to love them. . No MAN can lift himself an inch by thinking about himself. IF young meu did not drink there would be no drunkards. Tri*k wisdom come* from to Him and rests in Him. To KNOW the truth is the gate that opens into the way of life. People who kill, lions learn to shoot by practicing on other things. The preacher who always aims at the head will never hit the heart. Tki'TH is God's eternal straight line, unbendable and unbreakable. THE man who is not religions at home is not religions anywhere, r - ON one side is life and on the other death. On which side are you ? GIVE the right man wings and he will know what to do with them. THE man who never praises his wife deserves to have a poor one. THE hardest battles we fight are the ones we have with ourselves* BEFORE great' victories can be en­ joyed great battles must be fought. It is not (he beginning of wickedness that damns the soul, bat the never stopping. KEEP your eye fixed on the cross and you will be sure to walk straight into heaven. THE devil would rather put a long face on a Christian than sell a barrel of whisky. IF you want to have a good preacher treat the one you have' the best you know how. IF you are willing that God shall use you, you will always have steady em­ ployment. God's hold on a man is uncertain as long as the devil's claws run clear through his pocket-book. No MAN will ever be willing to know the truth about God until he first finds out the truth about himself. IF you want to be a Christian and do not begin to be one at once, it may be that you will never be one. UNLESS your religion makes vou think, love, hepe and act like Christ, there is something wrong about it. THE saddest truth of which it is pos­ sible to conceive is that man is not. will­ ing to find out the truth about God. One of the saddest things of which it is possible to conceive, is that man will not believe what God says about him. It is a blessed thing for a man to get religion in such a way that he don't have to leave his money in the devil's bank. GOLD gives to everything that touches it something of itself, but Christ makes every one He touches like Himself. As Quick as Ughtnlpg. According to the Sau Francisco Ex­ aminer, the quickest thing next to electricity is a snake. Well-behaved serpents are always interesting. But for the unfortunate information that one gave tc Miss Eve before she eloped with Adam when he wa# head gardener of the Eden ranch, there would be snakes iu more respectable families than there are to-day. A Cleveland snake professor says that "hissing pythons and cobras will eat at any time except when they are bliud and shed­ ding their skin. They won't touch any­ thing then. Another queer thing about them is that they won't eat anything but white aqimals. Wait; Pll show you," and taking a young rabbit out of its cage he placed it in the box with the snakes. They did not move for about a minute. Then one of the pythons raised its head and fastened its eyes upon bunny. The rabbit's ears dropped, its eyes eloped and it began to tremble. All at once the snake shot forward, and, seizing it by the back of the neck, coiled itself around it and began crushing out its life, then turning it over began to swallow it. The pythons head under ordianarv circumstances was not larger than a thumb joint on a man's hand, yet when it seized the rabbit its jaws became dislocated in such a way that it was able to start the rabbit's head into its mouth. Then by a peculiar motion it began slowly to swallow its prey. As the snake worked backward and forward its head stretched to many times the natural size, until finally bunny's hind legs dissapeared down the python's mouth. Duelling:. It is almost impossible now for any reader even in the Southern States to understand the condition or opinions of society with regard to dueling fifty years ago. One or two anecdotes told lately by a venerable lawyer from the South will illustrate it A member of Congress from Georgia on his return home fought a duel with an old fr^nd. Both men were seriously wounded and were carried home, as it was feared, to die. "What could induce you to fight with Jones ?" asked a friend of the challenger. "What was th« quarrel about?" "I don't know. Either he was angry because I did not bow to him on the street, or I was angry because he did not bow to me. I forget which." A member of a famous fire-eating family in South Carolina when an old man discovered, while on a visit to Charleston, that the son of a friend, a lad of 16 years, was about to fight a duel. He interfered to prevent it, and succeeded with difficulty. Entering a club-room filled with the leading men of the city that afternoon he said, in a loud voice: "Tom and Jim were going out to­ morrow and I have put a stop to it. I only am to blame, gentlemen. I con­ sider the practice of dueling brutal and barbarous. It ought to be frowned upon by every gentleman. But if any gentleman here differs from me, my I name is Blank, and I am stopping at I Dash Hotel, where I will be ready to j answer for my words at any time' he chooses."--Youth's Companion. For Others. "Yes, gentlemen," he said, as he stood on the steps of the postoffice, "we are being ground into the earth by tax­ ation." "How much property do you own?" asked one of the group. "None, sir." "How much taxes do you pay?* ' "Not a red." "Then what is it to you?" "A great deal, sir. I feel for others. In fact, I am drawing a salary to feel for others, and if I don't leel it will be taken away and I'll have to go to work." --Detroit Free Frets. EVERY mother owns the best boy-*-- the worst one belongs next door every mm -avkhz* j.rrmw :r* v LINCOLN'S His . i V I A'JWi-as* ,aAl l» 'I ',!• M£LANCH6LY. ~ Early Sympathetic. Nature and Bis Misfortune*. Those who saw much of Abraham Lincoln He Grasped the Situation. He was a bashful lover. He scarcely dared touch his lady's hand. He loved her well and she was worthy of his af- I i. A during the later years of .lits life were i fection, for she was modest, intelligent, greatly Impressed with tfc# expression of profound uicl&pchalf hla face always wore in repose. Mr. Lincoln was of a peculiarly sym­ pathetic and kindly nature-. These strong characteristics influenced, very happily, as It proved, his entire political career. They would not seem, at first glance,^to be efficient aids to political success; but in the peculiar emergency which Lincoln, In the providence of God. was called upon to meet, no vessel of common clay could possibly have become the "chosen of the Lord." Those acquainted with him from boyhood kn^w that early griefs tinged his whole life with sadness, ills partner in the grocery bustnens at Salem was "Uncle" Billy Green, of Tallula, 111., who used at night, when the customers were few. to hold the grammar while Lincoln recited his lessons. It Was to his sympathetic ear Lincoln told the story of his love for sweet Ann Rutlidge; and he in return, offered what comfort he could when poor Ann died, and Lincoln's great heart nearly broke. "After Aun died," says "I'nclc" Billy, "on stormy nights when the wind blew the rain against the roof, Abe would *et thar in the grocery, his elbows on his knees, his face in his hands, and the tears runnin' through his fingers. I hated to see him feel bad, an' I'd say, 'Abe don't cry;' an" he'd look up ah' say. 'I can't help it, Bill, the rain's a fallln' on her.' " , There ate many who can sympathise with this overpowering grief, as they think of a lost loved one, when "tho rain's a fallin' on her." What adds poignancy to the grief some times is the thought that the lost, one might have been saved. Fortunate, Indeed./is William Johnson, of Corona, L. I., a builder: Who writes June 28, 1800: "Last February, on ("returning from church one night, my daughter complained of having'a pain in her ankle. The pain gradually extended until her entire limb was swollen and very painful to the touch. We called a physician, who, after careful examination, pronounced it disease of the kidneys of long standing. All we could do did not seem to benefit her until we tried Warner's Safe Cure; from the first she com­ menced to improve. When she commenced taking it she could not turn over in bed, and could just move her hands a little, but to-day she is as well as she ever was. I believe (owe the recovery of my daughter to its use." Fat's Obwllsnce to Orders. Pat was detailed as sentinel when the Seventeenth Maine was near Culpepper, and was told to be very careful and not to let any one or anything fool htm. He took his place and all went well until a o'ejoek the next morning, when he heard the sound of some one approaching. "Halt!" yelled Pat. "Who conies there?* "The officer of tho day," responded tho newcomer, and gave the countersign. "And faith." says Pat, "and what busi­ ness has the officer of the day to be pokin' around at night? Char out or I'll put a bullet hole through yi»r." And the officer had to clear. "IT is not intellectual work that in­ jures the brain," says the London Hos­ pital, "but emotional excitement. Most men can stand the severest thought and study of which their brains are capable, and be none the worse for it; for neither thought nor study interferes with the recuperative influence of sleep. It is ambition, anxiety and disappointment, the hopes and fears, the loves and hates of our lives, that wear out our nervous sys­ tem and endanger the balance of the brain."--Dr. Foote's Health Monthly. PROFESSOR AUSTIN, who Is making an analysis of the Passaic River, New Jer­ sey, water, a few days ago made an in­ teresting experiment. He placed several corks and some deleterious matter in the river at the point where Passaic City sewers empty. In throe hours and fif­ teen minutes the msftter floated down the river to the Newark pumping sta­ tion. Inasmuch as it requires six hours for the tide to run out, the experiment indicates that Passaic's sewage floats miles beyond the pumping statlonif oT Newark and Jersey City. Mover Neglect a Cold. Dr. Aus.tiu Flint says in the Forum: "It is probable that a person with an inherited tandency to consumption would never de­ velop the disease if lie could be protected against infection with the tubercle bacillus. In the light of modern discoveries con­ sumption can no longer be regarded as an incurable disease." It is no exaggeration to say that Kemp's Balsam, when taken in time, has saved many from consumption. At all druggists'; 50c and SI. Sample bottle free. ' A TrscAROBA (T .) newspaper pre­ pares the young nii..d for tho coming of a new school principal by the remark that "the official's teaching weight i's about two hundred and twenty-five pounds avoirdupois, which under certain conditions might be made to approximate a ton." ______ We will give $100 reward for any oase of catarrh that cannot be cured with Hall's Catarrh Core. Taken internally. F. J. CHENEY Je CO., Props., Toledo, Q, Aoain we see the danger of handing the names of illustrious men around pro^ miscuously. Charles Dickens has just broken a window at Red Bank for the purpose of acquiring a lodging in jail and a bite to eat. Scrofula Humor "My little daughter's life was saved, as we beUeve. by Hood's Sarnaparilla. Before t.he wag Bix months old she had seven running scrofula «orea. Two physicians were called, but they gave us no hope. One of thorn advised the amputation »f one of her Angers, to which we refused bsaent. On giving"her Hood's Sareaparilla. marked iinprovepient waa no­ ticed, and by a continued use of it her recovery was complete. She is now seven years old, strong and healthy." B. C. Jones. Alna, Lincoln Co.. Me. Hood's Sarsaparilla by all druggists. $1: six for »5. Prepared only by C. 1. HOOD & CO., Lowell. Mass. IOO Doses One Dollar To enre costkeneMthe medicine mnstb* more than a purgative; It most contain tonic, alterative and cathartic properties. Tutt's Pills pomess these qualities, and speedily re­ store to the bowelfi tli«*ir natural peristaltlO motion, so essential to regularity. RELIEF. THE GREAT CONQUEROR OF PAIN. For Sprains. Bruise-i. ISacltache, I'aln in the Chest or Sides, Heasliwiie, Toothache, or any other external pain, a lew applications rubbed on by IuukI act Uke inajtic, causing the pain to instantly stop. For Congestion*, Cold*. BronclUtis, Pneu­ monia. Inflammations, Rheumatism. Neural­ gia, Lumbago, Sciatica, more thorough aad repeated applications are necessary. All Internal l*ai"*> Diarrhea, Colic, Spasms, Nausea. Fainting Spells, Nervousness, Sleep­ lessness are relieved instantly, anil quickly cured by taking inwardly 20 to 60 drops In half a tumbler of water. 50c. a bottle. All Urugglst*. . r DADWAY '8 n P I L L ! PILLS, An excellent and mild Cathartic. Purely Vegetable. - The Safest and best Mediciue in the world for the Cure or aU Disorders of the LIVER, STOHFIGH OR BOWELS. Taken according to directions they will reatore health ou«l vitality. PrlMWets. aBxs. *#li iff all Brttffiafc sweet and honorable; but like all good women she yearned for the respectful caresses that are the evidences of pure affection." She, however, yearned in vain. Henry worshiped her--he might kiss the hem of her garment, but to kiss her lips or cheek--the very audacity of the thought made him tremble. They sat together by the sea looking out on the track of the moon's light which white-winged yachts were cross­ ing now and then. "It was a witching hour. A scene for love and calm delight." Suddenly she moved slightly away from him. "Please, Henry, don't do that;" she said. "What?" he asked In genuine surprise. "Oh! you needn't tell me," she replied. "You were just going to put your arm around my waist--and you were going to try to kiss me." "Dear Lillie " "Oh! you needn't tell niie different; you w*re going to do it. Well, after all, I suppose you are not to blame. It is just what a lover would do to his sweetheart, and I suppose I must not be offended if you do do it." And Henry grasped the situation and did exactly what Lillie supposed he would do. and the moon grinned, and the stars winked, and the wavelets laughed, and a mosquito that was about to alight on the maiden's cheek flew away and settled on the nose of a grass widow who was sitting near the band stand. The Best Matt In the WorUU Well, it not positively the best, one •( tha Wisest is he who checks disease at the start in bia own system. In preeerving or restoring the heaven-granted gift of health, ha deserves pro­ found consideration. His example is worthy to be imitated. The complaints which afflict us are largely attributable to a want of tone In the stomach, either Inherent or inflicted by our­ selves upon that much abused repository of the food that should nourish us. What ia its re­ quirement in adversity? A wholesome tonio. None so good, if we rely upon experience and t-estimouy, as Hostetter's Stomach Bitters. Unniedicated stimulants won't do. Regulation, as well as invigoration of the digestive viscera. Is not to be effected by these. Through the agency of the stomachic named, strength of the entire system is retrenched--dyspepsia and biliousness overcome. Malarial, kidney, blad­ der. and rheumatic complaints are eradicated by lhis salutary reformer of ill-health. Pkofkrsor Asapii FT all, who has used the big telescope at the United States Observatory in Washington for measure­ ments of Saturn during the last fourteen years, finds the time of rotation of the planet to be about 10 hours 14 minutes •J4 seconds. This i9 nearly fifteen min­ utes less than the period sifted in most of the astronomical text-books published in the latter half of the present century, but is remarkable as being only one hundred seconds less than the period assigned to it by Sir William Berscliel. That astronomer of a century ago ob­ tained his results in this particular by the aid of an« instrument far inferior to qiany of the so-called smaller telescopes of to-day, and the fact is testimony to the wonderful ability of the man whose name was for years given to the planet he discovered, now generally called Uranus. Mant a poor sickly child has been saved from the grave by Ita kind mother riving it Dr. Bull's Worm Destroyer#, which thellt- tle one thought was candy. WABDEX Dukston, of Auburn, has the chair* in which Kemmler was killed. Hence the one on exhibition as such at Mme. Tussaud's, in London, must be slightly apocryphal. It is after he has stolen the apples that a small boy realizes that switchea grew on the same tree. BmcHAK's PuiiiS aot like mwto a Weak Stomach. Wbf.rf. do all the great men live be­ fore they die? CrameadaMe, AU claims not consistent with the high . character of Syrup of Figs are purposely avoided by the Cal. Fig Syrup Company. It acts gently on the kidneys, liver and bow­ els, cleansing the system effectually, but it is not a cure-all and makos no preten­ sions that every bottle will not substan- '• ./ * Certainly He Might, "My object in calling this evening," he began, with a nervous tremble of his chin, "was to ask you, Katie--I may call you Katie, may I not?" "Certainly, Mr. Longripe," said the sweet young girl. "All of papa's elderly friends call me Katie." And he said nothing further abont his object in calling.--Chicago Tribune. An extraordinary advance in the use of cocoa seems to have taken place of late years in England. In the House of Com­ mons. this last session, the Right Hon. 6. J. Goschen, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, called attention to it as a cause for much of the falling off of the use of coffee. He at­ tributed It in a measure, to the position a preparation of cocoa known as "Grateful and Comforting" had taken. In accord with this suggestion. 11 maybe interesting to fol­ low the course cocoa has taken In England since 1832, when the duty, which had been standing at fid. per pound, with an importa­ tion of under half a million pounds, was reduced to 2d. per pound, and not long after we And the homoeopathic doctrine of medicine introduced into the kingdom, and that the use of cocoa was specially ad­ vocated by physicians adopting that mode of practice. Soon after we find the first homoeopathic chemists established In En­ gland (the firm of James Epps & Co.) pro­ duced a special preparation which only needed boiling water or milk to be at once ready for the table, and the superior char­ acter of this production has, no doubt, done much, as the Chancellor of the Exchequer said, to bring about (backed as It was by a further reduction of the duty to Id. per pound) the advance made. Thk oldest and smartest man in Co­ lumbia is Harrison T. Leighton, He is 89 years old, and has done the following amount of labor the past summer: Sawed and split and prepared for the stove fifty-five horseloads of wood in sled lengths; done all of his farming, except the aid of one day's work; planted and sowed peas enough to raise six bushels of pods; milked tho cows and churned the butter. Why npt sat>e your clothes by using the best, purest, most economical soap, Dob­ bins' Eleotric. Made ever since 18S4. Try it once you will use it alumi/s. Your grocer keeps it Look for the name. Bobbins. CHILDREN are like troubles; a man never knows how many of them he is go­ ing to have.--Atchison Qlobe. "One year borrows another year's fool." You didn't use SAI'OLIO last year? Per­ haps you will not this year. Be wise and try it in your house-aleaaing. •* .*7J "mz PSeraefe- A tignal »ervie* to weak womankind is the finding of lost health--the building-ep " a run - down " system. does it so surely as Dr. Favorite Prescription. It cures aU the derangements, irregularities weaknesses peculiar to the sex. ItV the most pcrfect of strength-given^ imparting tone and vigor to th» whole system. For overworked, de­ bilitated teachers, milliners, seam­ stresses, " shop - girls," nunin£ mothers, and feeble women gen­ erally, it ia the greatest exrth}jr boon, beinjjr uncqualed as an appe­ tizing cordial and restorative tonic. " Favorite Prescriptionn gives- satisfaction in every case, or saooey paid for it is promptly refunded. That's the way it's sold; that's th«» way its makers prove their fsuifct in it. Contains no alcohol to ine­ briate ; no syrnp or sugar to range digestion; a legitimate mwK cine, not a beverage. Purely vege­ table and perfectly harmless in nr condition of the system. Woerin. Dispensary Medical Association* Propr's, 663 Main St., Buffalo, • ' -**i,; t t 4. 'WW ".'I ' $ % .i BEECHJUTS PILLS - OUR., SICK, HEADACHE. 95 Cents a Box. OTT AT.Ti DKXJOOiariX, * t •-V2 MEN TO TRATKL. We year W to *100 a month and expenaaa. AA ~ i. ItadUonTWia. STOKK fe WKLLINUTON, W» PATENTS MENTION THO rim w» F. A. LEaum Washtngtrwfc IXjK S«rSt>ndiorcmmet StJacobsOil ^acifAcV* •s1'"ACHES PROMPTLY The Cod That Helps to Cure The Cold. The disagreeable taste of the COD LIVER OIL is dissipated in SCOTT'S EMULSION Of Pure C«wt Liver Oil with HYP® PHOSPHITES OF LIMB .A WB SODA. The patient suffering from C O N S U M P T I O N , BRONCHITIS, C*(TCH, COLD, M > W/Urriftd BUiKASKil, may t«k» Um ( remedy with as much satisfaction as b* | would take milk. Physicians are proacrlb- } hig H everywhere. It it a perfect CMaltUa. 1 a wonderful flcih pro4«<*r. Tnke *io »iher MENTION THIS rAPKR I. TREAT'S Citato™ of w *Mk(. Bmm at Sua«(T pay. Aho, fev.sr.» PffiSIS Thousand*] tinder the Write I , BLANKS for * CO^WaahlnctoaJ T» EVRRTBODY, 1 af tho Boat and Oktmit r Fa««r in the United State naaae and addreas on ao«t»l to iw CHICAGO UEBOJUU CadatttakOU SKI f Dmi Kir; -re«t fo««remedy ler rCUlnlE.jingthc feet SMALMS*, la reHef for cold or perspiring feet. At Dm * sent free on receipt of Shoe Sami or sent only m dims. Maaal trJa1 Pamphlet Free. THE l'fcDINK CO., 338 Broadway, H.T, :NSION^0""W"0, 1 PATENTS® PATRICK OTARKKLL. Atfy at Law.Wi v W '*' * fc 5r forma for application and tall j WM. W. DUDLEY, &AXK COMMISSIONER OF PKNIJldffl. . Attorney at Law. Waalunstoa,IXCB. (Mention this Paper.) r*v DR. SNYDKR. Lock Box 451. ChkaMOU HKKTTON THIS FAK* wimm T« a»T«*ruK*a. PENSIONS! EOEBLE OR THIEF; Is better than the lying scale agent vita i«Qb JVBk as gospel truth that the Jones' $60.5 Ton Wagon Seals ia not a staadard scale, aad equal to any aaife. For free book and price list, address Soldiers disabled sine* >nt widows and pai ed from effects of ara^r The Disability Bill is a law. , the war are entitled. Dependent wldows_and parents now dependent whose sons dle< service are included. If you Uy and succoesfally pros- Seated, addre«s I*te Commissioner of Pensions. WMIIRSTII. I. CL M£NTll>N THIS PAPER wbbn wiirmi v *»v«*rusaa. 'iTii £ Joaes ol Binghamion, Binghamtog, IL "Down With High PricM.** SEWIN6 MACHINES RELIEVES INSTANTLY. BUOTHERS, 66 Warren St, New York. Price SO cts. Best Cough Medicine. Recommended hj Physicians Cures where all else fails. Pleasant and agreeable to tha taste. Children take it without objection. By druggists owto an od We offer you a ready-made medicine for Coughs, Bronchitis, and other diseases of the throat and lungs. Like other so-called Patent Medicines, it is well advertised, and having- merit it has attained to a wide sale. Call it a " Nostrum " if you will, but believe us when we say that at first it was compounded after a prescription by a regular physician, with no idea that it would ever go on the market as a proprietary mQdigine. Why is it not just as good as though costing fifty cents to a dollar for a prescription and an equal sum to have it put up at a drug store ? FROM $40 TO SlOr Prices I/oirer than tfcaliMWta* Buggies, Carts, Sleishs, W»rr>SS% ; f 6.0O Family or Store Seaie, |Ui . A 2«0-lb. Fanuais' Scale SjW ; Farmers, do yoar on Xcyatr*. Forge and Kit of Tool.* 1000 other Articles at Bait Mn, CHICAOO SCALE 00.. C&ic»ce»n^ (StUDIBGCTiaF, PI A N O S B R |U« to lltMUtti to ibsohielr Ptrfcci! Sent for trial in jocr m own home before jron buy. Local A (rents mast sell inferior instrument® or •harge double what we ask. Catak>pue fre. HiMCHAL A SMITH PIANO CO., 88A Eaat iil.i Si.. IF YouTWa.'-t' to KNOVI i 'i mi11 muh-- nin111L Cliin immmi Bjiltim. v ^ Jdalth saittl, disease i t'jnomnce and mdiaa to all forme of 4iaMM, Old Eyn. Rupture, FhimasU, .tpyin Marriegeand have prim f'Poctor'e Droll Jokes, protmelT IUa|M Bend ten ei nts for new Laugh Cur* Book calfcfk MEDICAL SENSE AND NONSENSE, J M. HULL PI B CO., U5> East SStk at. Now Yarifc^ ' CRATEFUL--COMFORTINQ. EPPS'S COCOA BREAKFAST. "By a thorough know [edge of the natural l*vm which govern the operatt >u$ of (ligation and aaM- (ton, and by a careful appllc atlon of the fia« prot**-, ties of weli-«elected C<voa, Mr. Epr a has pwlfcti our breakfast table* with a delicately OaTourad be* erase which may aare us many heavy dootora' blUa^ It Is by the Judicious use of suoh article* at that aoonstitutioa iaay bo gr dually built u strong eaoush to resist every tendency to <1 Hundreds of subtle maladies iuv floating EVERY WATERPROOF COLLAR « CUFF THAT CAN BE RELIED #OM IXTot to Sfetlt! BE UP TO THE MARK to Discolor I BEARS this mark. TRADE ready to attack wherever there Is u weak poiat* We may escape many a fatal shaft by keeping OW" selves well fortified with pure Mooti a-ii a pr<ip«iO~ nourished frame."--"Civil Serviot GaaeCe. " Made simply with uoillsu water or milt. 5*1* only In half-pouatl tu:. v Grocer*. lab«?ll<5<l ttiBS; JAMES vt CO-, Homoeopathic ChtJ IXINDOV. Knoland. "IT TOW WISH A£>= WoTr"™ Imum purchase one cf the cele­ brated SMITH & WESSON arms. The finest small arms ever manutaetrnvd and the first choice of all experts. _ Manufactured in calibres 32.3? and Sin- floor double acii"n. Safety Har.nuerleaa an i _ 'argi-t models. Constnu tfti eBti rely of b»rc «• Ity wrought R'eel, eart'fuliy for w Clanship and stock, ifcey are unrivaled for £»§*] A i - V, manship -durability and accuracy. Dotrnt ^ -eivodl cheap mulM-abie cast-iron imitation* \»t are often sold for the gt'cuiie article sal ire . onlv unreliable, but dsiiwnnis. _ WESSON Ke vol vers area!: stamped upon the! rels with firm's uauie. adc.ress and dates of Iv-M and are guar SISTCJX^U HAVI uarnutrrd perfect ia every detail. Ia~ _ 'hivicy the genuine article^ and if yowr dealer ennnot surs ly you au order sen t to adoMMfc below will receive prompt and catvfui a:teatts»» Bescriptive catalojrue a;ul prices furuifhed plication. SMITH & WESSON, ection this paper. MARK . NEEDS NO LAUNDERING. CAN BE WIPED CLEAN IN A MOMENT. THE ONLY LINEN-LINED WATERPROOF COLLAR IN THE MARKET. Krd Mly by Umi CksalstiOfc Springfield, Haw* 1 prescribe a:«d tally Mh> Bis t» as the only *;xvit!e (or the •. vriainoar» pi (hisdisease. _ O.U.l.ViUAU.VM.lt.^, Amsterdam, Si. T. We fcav« Big G 1ST many years, and Is clven the t en of "u^ DYenK A COu Chicago, UL Sl.M. sold by one***. Xo. 3 ' 'fj

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