Breath. HmraH c. Falrbniw, HL n j • '«/ l®w been troubled with Btttnlitk in my Jtomach, dizziness and 8hortnewof breath. - "< »V '<> J*80 inward weakness. I had *ery \v;Vv.'-5*® "P®n» with my stomach. Ihadtooalla 'doctor several times, and he gave me only tem- . p°r«T relief. I wanted something that would ^* permanent cure, so my hnsband thought '* *'. ">at I try Hood's Sanaparilla. Before I " $•% *,a<' need one-half bottle I felt like a new pcr- *' parilla HERE THAT; EREST THEM. Sarsa-Hood's Cures • i#°n, end I «m glad that I can say to-day that I *i~*ve not had a bad spell since I oommenced to i|f aire Hood's Sarsaparilla. Formerly my health t * ^was so poor that I was not able to do my house- *. , :>vork; now I am perfectly well. I owe all the Praise to Hood's Sarsaparilla." Mas. SABAH , ; C. TRULLINGEB. Fairburg, Illinois. Hood's Pills are purely vegetable, and do lot pnrge, pain or gripe. Try a box. 26a Agents Wanted Everywhere. i The most unique World's Fair Souvenir. "GENHIN* OITICIAI. BADQB worn by the '. r,'fc«""ers and' employes of the Columbian reposition. Only to be procured of Baker, Pay lor & Co.. 213 State street* Chicago, loom 9. Agents wanted everywhere Send > cents for sample. It: ^; Wall Paper and Candle Light. * jfi Every one knows that when the walls I :#f a room are papered with a light j»aper it looks much more cheerful, but ..We hardly realize the great difference "• between dark and light papering. A JK'ientist has now measured it in a sys- r fematte way. and has come to the fol- "•"•"ibwing results: Suppose the room is Covered with black cloth, and requires *, s#ne hundred.candles to give it a cer- ^tein degree of Jight. If you take away •y$h e lilaotc cloth, and paper the room .With dark-brown paper, eighty-seven candles give the same amount of light. .(With blue paper seventy-two candles *111 do; with fresh yellow paint sixty mndles give as much light, and with ^wean deal-board walls, fifty candles are 'ttfuff cient. But if the room be painted Um. white, fifteen candles make it as iMght as eighty-seven candles with the *,4»rk; brown surroundings The con tusion is evident. Not only is it bad ijfof the eyes to have a sudden contrast Of dark and light, but it is also much „ Jpore expensive to light twelve candles 1 |fhere two or three would be sufficient. -A, • THE richest man is the one who can . |flv® away the most without regret ting it - ' THERE are a million rainbows in a bottle of rum, but they are only rain bows. Woman Shrinks from tellin her physic troubles to men. During the past 20 years thou sands of women throughout the world have written in womanly confi dence to Lydia E. Pinkhatn at Lynn, Mass., and laid bare the life of mis- they endured. They wrote y, Knowing that their letters went straight to the hands of a woman, who not alone understood their sufferings, but whose heart . • *ras full of sympathy with them. ; The experience of thousands has proved how carefully their let ters were studied, and how true sure came the answer and helpfulness. . And also that Lydia £. Pink ham?s Vegt- Compound is woman's great friend. m DR. KILMER'S few* and attention Sfcoeld Be Ohm to the Com Crap How to Make m Two- Wheeled Stone boat--Clover h Saaan Drinias in Para, It seems-to me that corn is being raised with the least thought and many times, with the least care of any of our main farm crops. I have had considerable experience in rais ing it and think tbere are many points in favor of drilling it in rather than planting it in the old way. With the aid of a boy or man I can j drill ten acres in one day. When the corn is up two or three iu. with a smoothing barrow I uro over it ' lengthwise of the rows. This is dis-1 couraging work for a novice, hut in two or three days you wi 1 be sur-! prised at the result--it will have straightened up and grown so much. In a week I repeat this work by dragging it again, which loosens up the ground. It seems to no more good than can be accomplished with a cultivator and in much less time. Last year I left about twenty feet which I did not drasr and the dltter- ence could be plainly seen during the whole season in the summer grass in the row. The difference in cutting hilled or drilled corn is greatly in favor of corn planted in the hill. I pay $i per acre for cutting planted corn and 91.50 for drilled corn. A reaper will work very successfully cutting drilled corn, as the knife never has to cut but one or two stalks at a time. Of course the reaper cannbt be used when pumpkins are raised; but the main difference is when the crop is harvested I can get a much larger yield per acre of grain and fodder. I have often heard my neighbors say, "X should drill my corn this year if I had my drill arranged just rigbt, but I cannot arrange it so as use it satis factorily." Tbe change is a simple one. In the first place, put a narrow strip on the frame oi the driil in f,ont of the wheel, say one in. by two in., large and long enough to reach by the wheel far enough to let the wheel return in the track made by tbe marker to make the row wide enough. We attach a small chain to the end of this projecting piece with an iron weight attached to the other end 3f the chain sufficiently heavy to make the mark to follow. For instance I use a tooth drill with the teeth seven in. apart. Row with the second one from each wheel; that leaves the rows forty-two in. apart, whi?h is about the"right distance. I now flt a board in the grain box, each side of tbe cup that sows the grain, or. if you piefer, place the iron plates over the cups, exiept tbe ones used for sowing. I prefer to remove ail the teeth not used. I prefer to use a little phosphate in the row, and one tooth each side. This can be ar ranged the same as for sowing the itrain.--J. Q. Munson, in the Farm and Home. the calf's from m> lil&a* dayaoid-- the better. The embryo then like a little lteptiy as a split pea. Tike head between the legs, moisten the spot by applying to it a linger slightly dipped in water and then rub well the little excrescence and the skin close around Its base, touching a spat not larger than a ten-cent piece with the stick of pot ash for a few seconds, holding the calf's head still against the thigh, meanwhile, by grasping its nose with the other hand, and the job is done for ah time. Care must be taken not to get any of the lunar caustic on the naked Angers or hands as it would create merry jinas in no time. A Two-Wheeled Boat. . Every time you see" tbe old mow ing machine beside the road useless and a detriment to the scenery, re member that it may be transformed very easily into a great labor-saver. Draw It onto the barn floor some wet day and take it apart. Remove the wheels and have your nearest black- J smith lengthen the, main axle enough i to accommodate your biggest stone- boat between the wheels when they ! have been returned to their places, j Then have him make a couple of j clamps to flt over the axle and bolt ! down on the reves. In attaching j tbe boat see that it does not balance j but has a tendency to ride on its | nose. Then when loaded and under motion the entire weight will come I upon the wheels This work should j not cost more than 00 to 75c, and ' will greatly facilitate the drawing ot heavy loads for which a boat is com monly used. A most excellent dray has been made by putting the axle within one foot from the rear end, and suspending tbe forward end to a stick of oaK timber 4x4 inches and swinging this end under the center of axle IS a 2 belonging to still an other old mower. These arrange ments greatly lessen the draft. This second axle need not be lengthened. It is easy to fasten sideboards to this low-down contrivance by bolting sticks to them which run through staples fastened to tbe sides of the boat For moving sand, earth, stones, for picking up stones, etc., it has no equal ;y. •. . V:.> J Odrts nd Kndt. j To KEEP ice well draw a piece of j thick flannel tightly over some deep j vessel, like a bowl, for instance, and [ fasten it there. The ice is placed on lop of this drumhead and covered : lightly by another piece of flannel. A. .small piece of ice can thus be kept | near a patient all night, and save many a trip to the refrigerator. To CLEAN the most delicate lace spread it out carefully on wrapping paper, then sijr.nkle it with calcined magnesia; place another paper over it and put it away between the leaves of a book for two or three days. All It needs is a skillful shake to scatter the white powder, and then it is read? for wear, with slen der threads intact and a<* fresh as when new. THE following were the sensible wedding presents of a small-pursed but kind-hearted old lady" to her favorite young friend: A large basket full of cake and breadpans that had been tested in their oven qualities, and wnich were a hundred times better than the stock of new shiny tins, that a young housekeeper usually has to start with; an ironing board, well covered with old blankets and sheets; ironing holders, and sev eral bundles of dust clotha It is safe to say this present was thoroughly appreciated. A NEW way of solving the curtain question that is certainly convenient, and by no means ugly is to have two 6ets of sash curtains, one for the up per and one for the lower half of the window. Both are hung on rods and consist of two parts, so that they can be parted in the middle. The upper set should be made long enough to fall about an inch over the top of the lower set. Thsy may be made of muslin, silk, or any other fabric, with edges hemstitched, frilled or trimmed with lace. The arrange ment is a good one for small bed rooms or for kitchen windows. FOR kid gloves of light color, that are but slightly soiled, but not stained, there is no better mode of freshening than to wind a bit of oiled silk around tbe finger, rubbing vig orously to remove all traces of the mar. Any woman who tests this easy way ot cleaning kid gloves will be sure to keep thereafter a strip of the silk in her possession. A quar ter or even an eighth of a yard is quite enough to purchase at once, as in fancy dry goods houses where it is sold it is kept moist in a large roll, and is thus very pliable. Aioisten the silk, however, when using, as one does a postage stamp. "ANYBODY can wash trousers, either white or colored," said a tailor, tbe other day, to one of his custom- era "The process is perfectly sim ple if certain plain directions are carefully followed. First, wash them | thoroughly in warm soapsuds only | rubbing the soap on very bad spots; i when well washed, rinse in cold j water twice, taking care that no j soap is left on tbe goods. Then j hang out to dry in the shade, never j in the sun. Let tbe water drop off, I but do not wring them. They should | be hung by the waist* and the J moisture that collects at the end of each leg pressed off from time to time with a towel When nearly J dry, but still damn, they should be j turned on the wrong side ancl ironed ; dry, and finally turned on the right | side and creased. If these directions | are followed there will be no material i shrinkage, and the woolen will be as .^l^ind bright-looking as ever." *, ' WELLTDIO~YOUTVERI 'Bow MM Pretty Soagstem Are f>pi«u(| •. * "• eatf Trained. "Of all tbe feathered musicians," a bird dealer recently said, "the mock ing bird Is easily king, and his rich, pure notes are far ahead bf the Eng lish nightingale, about which poets have raved awl bards have sung, The mocking bird is also the gamecock of the bird family, and his pugnacity gets him into all bis trouble. "The mocking birds prefer a dense thicket as a home, and it is here the trappers hnnt for him. Just about this season ot the year they are all busy preparing their nests. The fe males, who have been to themselves during the winter, are looking up their recreant husbands, and great preparations are being made for fam ily cares. Usually four eggs are found in the nests, which arfe light blue in color, with large browa specks. They hatch in fourteen days. After three or four weeks the birds may be taken from their nests and easily reared by hand. "The mocking biru commences to sing when he is about two months old. The first indication you get is a restlessness on tbe part of the bird, with soft, low, unfinished notes. Gradually his voice improves, and as he gets older he adds to his reper toire until be is a finished vocalist. Not contept with productions of his own, he is a great mimic, andean Imitate almost any of the bird fam ily. But tbe song of the mocking bird you hear in the cities is not the song you hear in his native state. There his notes are pure, sweet and resonant, while in the city he often introduces a harsh note in imitation of 80!i.e noise he has heard. "A word about how 1 catch birds. Of course, the first thing to do is to provide myself with su table traps. I have found by experience that the double-deck trap is by far the best. I usually employ three assistants, and we start in different directions at 3 o'clock in the morning. After locat* ing the bird section the traps are set, with a decoy bird of some other spe. cies, preferably a cardinal, in the in terior of the cage. It is here thai the pugnacity of the mocking bird asserts itself, and gets him into trouble, for as soon as he sees this other bird he goes for him, and the minute he lights upon the conven lent perch set for him the drop it sprung and the wings come togethei simultaneously, and he is a captive. At night there is a round-up, so tc speak, and the birds are pla« ed in 8 large room, which is carefully pro tected from enemies. When th« mating season comes on, and the fe- males commence to mingle with the males, our work is over, and prepara tions are immediately begun foi transporting the birds. Large cages, with ample food and water * at con venient places along the route, art provided and sent by express. Ol course the expressage cuts a large fig ure in the account, but we manage to pull out with a little money on the good side of the balance sheet" Why - 1 KIDNEY LIVER W.* Dissolves Gravel ^Mfii stone, brick dust in urine, pain in urethra, •training after urination, pain in tbe back and fclps, sudden stoppage of water with pressure. Bright'* Disease Tube caats in urine , scanty urine. Swamp-Root onrea urinary troubles and kidney difficulties. Liver Complaint Torpid or enlarged liver, foul breath, billous- ae»s uiliuus iu-nuachc, poor digestion, gout. Catarrh of tie Bladder Inflammation, Irritation, ulceration, dribbling, frequent calls, peas blood, mucus or pus. At Druggist* 50 rents and $1.00 Mae. "•tovalids' Guide to Health" free-Consultation DR. KILMER & CO., BINQHAMTOK, N. Y. STEAM EReiREu ̂ 850 Ka^°oS>rrMS^£le, $50 Qlii machine is e»con 1 li and.but hu been overhaul ed. Lion't write unless you hare the cash. Addre* CHICAGO NEWSPAPER UNION, 09 Jefferson St., CHICAGO. ilVs tmk HALM i-yjiHj C A T A R R H WMCE 50 CENTS. ALL DWUCC13TS PATENTS. TRADE-1ABKS. Elimination and Ad-rice as to Patentability of In- •Biitton. Send for inventors' Guide, or How to Get • Fftte&t. IVmuoK OTiwr.i* Washington. O. C. M. X. U. So. 33-M "The German Formula" Clorer as Manure. A Walter in Practical "By underdraining our land, by thorough tillage and in numerous other ways, we have been able to greatly better our condition on the tarm; but after all we could never have attained anytbing'like our pres ent success without the aid of clover. I used to draw manure from town twenty years a«o, and kept a large number of animals so as to make all 1 could. I believed, from reading, that this was the ouly wav to bring my farm up. 1 ut it so happened that one of the first things 1 did on tbe larm was to seed a~ field with clover. And again, I was unable to buy or make manure enough to go over more than a few acres. A (art of the clover field was manured and a part was not This gave a chance to notice the effect of clover. Well, after a fsw years 1 began to get my eyes open in regard to the true value of clover on tbe tarm. Treated properly, it is tbe important crop for ma 1 would not buy manure in town as a gift I cannot longer af ford to keep stock in competition with the great West and make a per fect slave of myself taking care of them (Keeping dairy as my neighbors j JL do . 1 can do better, feed my clover, 1 what is not wanted byour lour horses and one family cow, directly back, to tbe land to grow wheat and potatoes. Tbere is no bill to pay for either - • ' ' , Deborafac Calm. A stick of caustic potash Is the best apparatus with which to dehorn calves. Tbe job can be done in a minute, causing only a slight wound to the skin, and a five-cent stick will dehorn a dozen calves. Moreover this caustic can be procured at al most any country drug store. The calf must IXMaa't This Young l«dy D««l»r* Her Identity? An advanced young woman, says the Argonaut, writes as follows: "I shall ne\er, never be satisfied until I have been permitted to make love to a man according to my own sweet will. Beginning at tne very first meeting, I want to enjoy the novel sensation of telling ayoung man how I admire him: how his large, gray eyes facinate me; how X was struck ! by his graceful figure, h's*tlne, open countenance, bronzed to a soft brown and lighted by such a calm and tho ghtful smile. And then, not with downcast eyesy but looking him straight in his fine, honest face, I want to take his hand and say: (Mr. Thomas. 1 am nonq of your gushing so iety giris, with no thoughts above marrons glaces and pretty-faced act ors. I am a young woman of sense, and ripe, "wholesome sentiment May I have the pleasure of meeting you again?' I'should want to taste in small mouthfuls of bliss that soft and gentle gardient which leads to the telling of one's love in English, with no hems or haw<, but straight to the point. Something like this: •Dear Tom, how gxandly handsome you look to-night. Nay, my dear Tom, don't blusb, you can't help it; I have beard it said that your father was an uncommonly handsome man; it'sa matter of inheritance, dear Tom; pedigree, don't you know. My hair is naturally curly. Don't be afraid of disarranging my bangs. You may ; kiss this hand of mine if you choose, The boys all tell me it's very white and pretty, but I haven't let any of them hold it I've been wait ing for you, dearest Tom. Might I s t oeside you? Don't be frightened, Tom; there's no rice powder to rub off on your coat Thanks again. ¥ou really like me, don't you Tom? I love you with all a true woman's heart and soul. Can't you see it in my eyes? Isn't it visible on my very lips?' And so on through the whole ; ^ Perpetual motion Again. 4<1 honestly believe," said Arthni L. Reynolds of Boston, "that some thing bordering very closely upon perpetual motion will eventually be discovered, although every man who talks perpetual motion now is looked upon as an incipient lunatic. Mj reason for this idea is the rapiditj with which tbe word 'impossible' it being removed from the mechanical engineer's dictionary As far bach AS 1 can remember, 'engineers have regretted the immense loss of powei caused by stopping vehicles, especi ally those used for carrying passen gers short distances. It is said tc take live times as much power 01 force to stop a vehicle as to haul 11 along l$vel ground, and it takes ten times aT mu h power to start it again. Hundreds of ideas have beec suggested lor storing the wasted force on stopping vehicles, but everj suggestion has been impracticable On account of the immense weight ol the machinery required for the pur pose. Now a device has been per fected and is in actual use wblcb weighs but a few pounds and abso* lately retains more than half the power used in stopping a vehicle. When a driver w shes to stop he places his foot on a small lever, '^whereupon a powerful spring does a great deal of the work otherwise re quired ot the brake. When he wants to start again he liberates the catch and the spring uucoils itself. This experiment, when tried With horses on tbe level, worked too well and sometimes threw the horses down by the sudden jerk. Uphill, however, it relieved them of a terrible strain. When applied to electric street-cai service, it should prevent a great deal of burning out of fuses, and also relieve the engines a great deal when there is a sudden resuming of traffic after a temporary breakdowa."--»$t Louis Globe -Democrat. MiiM TatwM«PUeo »« m Tha* Wwni by ttbanoew Home of the most successful and rema kable engineering enterprises have been claimed to owe their ex| Istence to circumstances which, wheo considered in themselves^ seem far too trival to have produced such important results. Though opin ions be divided as to the first trans mission of lower by electricity, for example, it has been strenuously maintained in some quarters that accident, pure and simple, was the cause of the great discovery, and an interesting story has been told tor many years of the attending circum stances. This is to the effect that at the International Exhibition at Vienna, in 1873. the Gramme Com- pany e\hiblted two dynamo ma- ^Ines for plating purposes. One of these machines was In motion, and a workman who notice that some cables were trailing on the ground thinking that they belonged to the second machine, placed ttnm in Its terminals. To the surprise of every body this second machine immediately began to turn, ahd^it was then dis covered that the first dynamo was driving the second. It would be strange, indeed, if there were not others versions of this story and ac cordingly we find several somewhat different accounts,from all at which, however, it would appear that the development of any measurable power In a machine taking its supply of electricity from a primary dynamo was something wholly unexpected and correspondingly starting. Closely analogous is the narrative of the origin of one of the most suc cessful foundry blowers now in use, according to which the inventor was attempting to construct a water motor which persistently refused to go round when the water was turned on. In the determination to learn what was wrong a belt connection was made with a line shaft so that the motion of the machine might be studied. By the same means a re verse motion was given to it, and the way in which it threw the water,and, after the water had been exhausted, drove a current of air, suggested an ent rejehange af purpose, and the ma* chine was finished and put on the market as a blower, instead of as a water motor, and thousands have been built since. This story, often told with various modifications of detail, serves as an additional illustration of tbe fact that Inventors frequently stumble upon success in entirely unexpected directions. -- Castist'i Magazine. «OSB who €oufd not eat Oike, hot biscuit, bread and pastry because of indigestion have found that by rais ing them with Royal Baking Powder they are enabled to eat them with per fect comfort. "/Jr '$i Royal Baking Powder is composed itf chemically pure cream of tartar and bicarbonate of soda, and is an actual preventive €i '1' , • f, • ; / % j 1 * v ROYAL BAKING POWER CO., 108 WALL ST., NEW-YORK. Easterm Metal Work. It is one of the unexplained mysteries of Asi* that the achieve ments of the best metal workers, so long as their work s useless, should be so completely beyond r.valrv. We can unde stand this as regards the setting of precious stones, for, as we once said befo e, many years ago,the instinct of a Southern Asiatic living In painful sunlight is to blend the bright colors he works in till they do not hurt the eye. Consequently, the enameler of Jeypo:e, though he uses flakes of ruby and emerald, produces a surfa e wh ch looks, even in sun. light, absolutely cool. But what helps him or a Japanese, or even a Turk, if a Sultana has given the order, to make a gold or silver ornament which the West can onlf gaze at in defeated admiration, i$ still a problem not completely solved. The Asiatic does not know anything paiticuiar about gold and silver; he has no tools exiept pincers and a hammer; and he has not the powe ol pioducing intense heat; yet he will do things with the metals which his Eu opean brother cannot do with all appliances and skill. No doubt, if he is a hercditarj wo kman, something has passed into liis fingers which cannot be acquired by a new competitor, and he has th« 'Advantage of lemembering patterns Originally designed by the men ol genius, who are apt at intervals perhaps of centuries, to crop up in the artist families; but is that the whole matter? We doubt it greatly and believe that there is an Asiatic i4taste," or instin t fo • the beautiiul, which is as tru$ in its way as the in stinct of Athenian sculptcr 01 Florentine wielder ot the brush.--- The Spectator. liaebntd. Bishop Thirl wall, an English prolate, was silent by nature and by habit. He had the greatest possible aversion to answering question®, and was scarcely ever betrayed into giving a definite reply. One day a tailor said to him when he had Veen suujreoned to take the Bishop s measure men ts: . - "What are ypur lordship's orders?* "I want a suit of clothes.* ^'Here is a verjr nloe cloth, my lori." Ah!" "And this is likewise a very good one." >! •£•• * ** "Yes." "?er3 ia «aother, of excellent qual ity." . H, * ^ "Very." / J k "Which matSriml wiU your lordship decide upon?" ; ' "I want a suit of clothes!" And that was all the answer the tailor could get When the new gardener accosted him as he was walking, book in hand, in the garden, to ask, "How will your lordship have this border laid out?** there was no an wer. "How will your lordship, bo pleased to have this border laid out?" was the next attempt Still there was no reply, btft when the ques tion was ret.ok tea wr the third tim*, the answer came: You are the gardener, I believe,and Libel on Our Beef. A member of shopkeepers in vartewi parts of England have lately liee*. heavily fined for marketing and senta# American, beef and bacon as • products. . - Tbe Ladlet. : The pleasant effect and perfe«&*8a$ai% with which ladies may use the Calilor- 'L nim liquid lasat.ve. Syrup of Figs, un- der all conditions, makes it their favorite remedy. To get the true and genuine article, look for the name of the Call-' -- foraia Fig Syrup Co., printed near th* bottom of the package. r 5 ^ | i ClF sixty-seven of I am the Bishop.' <43ut the Bishop could speak when it became necessary on more weighty matters. A clergyman had asked per mission to hold two .livings which, he argued, were the prescribed distance apart. He unrolled a map, and meas ured the distance, saying conclusively: '"You see, my lord, they are within three miles, as the crow dies." **Yer," he leplied, "as the crow fliea. I see that plainly enough. But you know you re not a crow, and you can't fly. Bv the turnpike road it's a good four miles, and I cannot permit yon to hold two livings." Frequent Umlitiifhtt On tbe delicate membrane of the bowela and Btomach wltti drastic purgatives mnat have their natnral conuqucnoe--to weaken and dis able both or#toa. Nature exacts severe penal ties for lnfrinuementa of her laws, and there is no more glaring one than that which con sists in frequent and unnecessary dosing with violent cathartic.'. This is, however, the course pursued by many unwise people who seem to think that the bowels, unless constantly re laxed, are not in a healthv 11 ite. When a lax ative is really needed, Hostetcer'a Btomach Bitters is the patent and most thorough. It neither gripes nor operates violently or excess ively. It Invigorates the intestines and stom ach, and arouse?? the liver. Regal nrtly and viffor are guaranteed by its use. Sleep pro mpted, appetite restored, are atnoojr us i»e- niirn effects. A tendency to rheumatism and kidney trouble is nullified by it, and it com pletely eradicates mnlarial complaints. The Brute. A woman seeking divorce through the courts at Detroit, Mich., an nounced in her complaint that her hus band once said he hoped to live to dance over her grave. Save Money on LnmbeK Of course, when you build yon want It to cost as little as possible. Then, why pay your local dealer a i'otnmission when yon cau buy better lumber direct from the Pll- een Lumber c ompany, corner of Laflin and SSd streets, Chlcaeo, lit. at irliols--la prices? Write them for terms. THE lace shawl given by Marie An toinette on the scatfold to her father confessor, the Abbe de l'Orme, is Ktill in existence at the church at Neuen dorf. France, - - „ut leav ing their histories a record of misery. Eleven were divorced, nine died youf, •even were widowed, three cruelly treated, three exiled: the poisoned aw broken-heart ed make up the rest queens only thirteen have died without !***! Park--A New Picnic OKHUIA • i,®* *>*ul Park Is located at Morton, Illinois. 14 miles north of Chicago, on the Chicago. Milwaukee and St. Paul Railway. Tij®^ grounds cover eighty aeree on U»- Aforth Branch river. One half is a grove of large maples, the other half is a level! meadow, suited for base-ball, tennis, all oatdoor games. Good boating o*j river, and In every way most attractive^ picnic ground In the vicinity of Chicago For further information, rates, etc. ae» ply to ii K. Lainz, «ty Passensrer A gent. £S^goLMi,w*nka* and P*®* Railway. On euttmg through a teak k» la the Raw mill of a dockyard atShufnesa^ England, recently, a bird's necrih con taining four eggs was found in a fol low spot The log had b?en shi| some months previous from India. Toikkk are 177,855 miles of railroad la. the United States; 531,565.000 ties Mfeesedi to bind these rails together. No such nnasr, tor Is required, however, to bind th^heartti of a traveling public to the Honon Bent* All acknowledge that it is the best line he-, tveen Chicago, Indianapolis. Cincinnati, Louisville and the South. City Ticket OSee, 232 Otark street, Chicago. MRS. ANNIE S. AUSTIN, who wait elected Mayor of Pleasanton, Kaa., in January, says that her husband voted against her. He is now out of politic* J. a PARKER, Frbdonia, N. Y., says: "BbsA not eail on you for the £100 reward, for I believs Hall's Catarrh Cure will cure any case .of tarrh. Was very bad." Write him for paitlea ' !*rs. Sold by Druggists, <5c. IT is a serious question whether lite corkscrew is not mightier than the pea and sword combined. futog's COHSOMFTlOH CURB ift MM«BS pnaranteo It cures Incipient Ogawtfip- tion. It is tbe best Cough Cure. tS'iTnU. 6A cents and SL0& . gamut, until coyne#s, his his collegi whispered * "Wfif" • f* ̂ ;• < i . < >"! • * r with sweet, the bonds of* ness, and he my own." Wellington's Rase. Once during the Iron Duke's cam paign in the Pyrenees, It happened that General Picton's dispositions for receiving the assault of Marshal Soult displeased him. The danger threatened from in front and tbe diiiiculty lay in delarlng the attack until Wellington could eilcct the change he wished. He was, as usual, equal to the occasion. Waving his hat in the air, he galloped to tbe front,of a regiment as if he ment to order a cha ge. The whole ol Picton's line cheered tremendously, and as theroardled away, Wellington was heard to remark,half to himself: •'Soult is a cautious commander, and will not attack in force without as certaining the meaning of these cheers. That will leave time for the sixth divisiou to came up, and we shall beat him." This was exactly what happened, and Soult sustained a bloody repulse where he migb$ Jhaye won an easy victory. ' BEAUTIFUL birds and fragrant lowers are nature's charm, but a divinely lovely com plexion comos front the use of Glenn's Sul phur Soap Do YOUR duty in little things aod you will be faithful in great ones. EIQBTBSN DOLLAR PATS; we pay freight, Address ELGIN SAFS CO., Bum, Iuw DOCTORS ENDORSES IT. Asbdaeut Whys!elan at AvflnHtSNh Xfcar Sir-I wiUaay MAl to you, that Con ^"' ready died prise ofher. fhegotweU. . Q consumption bevuwthtedi She nas bad no for the past six years, •ease can take no better Something About Oar Siifc * Of our fifty-one States and Ter ritories, twenty-seven are each larger than all of England, while the en tire territory of the Union would contain fEngland sixty-nine times. Five of our States and Territories are each larger than the United Kingdom of (ireat Britain and Ire land. Aix of a rich man's philosophy is applicable only to the poor; the wise things a poor man would do depend upon the possession of riches. Cavalry and Cold Steel. If you allow a cavalry soldier to forget the value of cold steel and rei ly on Are action you destroy the dasl|| and clan which make him formidable*! and should be his characteristic. Therefore Frederick, 130 years ago^ ordered his troopers always to attack^ and while he discountenanced the us# of carbines, gave them the necessary; support which fire lends, by organic ing a light artillery to attend theii movements. Napoleon has told us that "cavalry cannot reply to Are, and can only flghi with the steel," and fully recog nizing the weakness of his horsemen, he gave them an auxiliary in the shape of horse artillery, which, so far from hampering their movements, added to the boldness and enterprise when acting independently ahead of his vast armies. The co-operation of the two arms was also then fouud to work in another direction to the ben efit of both, for while projectiles loosen compact formations, and ren- der the attack of squadrons more dangerous, the cavalry force the scat tered units to draw together and pre sent an easier target for the guns. Especially was this noticeable during the pursuit of a beaten foe. A battery, bold and well placed, may deny a whole road to the retreating columns, and long lengths of "train" may have tot be abandoned on the inroad of a few accurately directed aheQtt.^-Saturday iteview. ;% ••j ^ 'f * Aerial Machine. An Austrian has invented a ma chine which is said to solve the problem of aerial navigation. The sails are Ut be worked by steam, and the progression of tbe machine will be on the same principle as the flight of a bee. THK tirst thing some people do when they have made a promise, is to look for some to coax them to break it i WHEN a woman's duty to her bos. band and relatives conflict* she gets an exaggerated idea of her duty to her kin. S T . J A C O B S O I L RHEUMATISM, CURES PAIN, SPRAINS. BRUISES, NEURALGIA SCIATIC/ LUMBAGO, SWELLINGS, BURNS. : Dr. J. H. McLean'sCf Liver and Kidney Balm ̂ Justly celebrated as the Standard liver and Kidney Medicine of America. no - -4 Hii- YOU TRAVili F4CEBIEMI FREE! fitUPP«lt9w . mw --„w Appreciating th« feet thai tkwMtocflaAa of tne U. 8. bw DoloHd njFmBtad,** •ccouolol prioa, which U $9 pur In order that m may fiv* It a fiair trial, I iriU atnda SunpW Bottle,nftly yAi % ail IcbrgnprimM, on r«*tpt oi tSe. FACE I BLEACH rrwioTea and cunm thaoM? &U I frtekln, pfaspjea* moth, btachheafo, sallow. ' pcaa, ae*v«««nat wrinkles crrooghMBaC »Hn, arid beiatitiea tbe w>mpLei!ce. AMrwm 1RUPPERT. Dept. E. 6 E. 14th St.. N. Y.Cit|u PAYS FOR in lOO iitgh grade " papers in Illinois, guaranteed clrcu- _ lation 100.000- ~ w or we can Insert it 3 times In 1,375 coantry papers for . SEAtt FOB CA TALOQVK. CHICAGO NKWSIWL'KR UNION, •8 Booth Jefferson Street, - CMeacet & tEIVOWVOS *•&/£• Ms $10 IF SO, YOU WILL FIND TIME HTCLi, Bsyi an IbmnW m «ak I kwgr wwti nunM •mile B*kMa Wtadw-,» •fcattla,MMMItet -- ^..uttUfUUwMqAifH afahnM NluHlMii Mhaaa, i tun ~r-rt- * iTInt 1st froca factory u4 Mm Mlrt P'SASS?" •MFmaienu. JJJWMIAUML THE BKST LINK NM BBUT uns« em . Wianu, Ask 'for Tickets Via 9. ME€0«IAICK. ». 9, WtMW, Traffic Manm|*r. 6«n't P*ss. « Tit * CINCISi X AT1. CURE YOURS -- -KCiriC m ' ka urinary ul direction! s&fcp •a Me*to*«tM0a