vc-T, iii FAUttE, THE NEW MYRIAD OF QUACKS. and invigorate year nerve* and muscles, tone your arfomach and digestive ergans, and build ap your whole system by the use of Hood's Sarsaparilla If you ^ouid avoj|l the grip, pneumonia, Sarsa-J-Jood' parfUa dipW^^sanTis * vphoM fever. Thee. dbvaaesljL^ seek for their aaost^l^ ready victims persona who are weak, tired, debilitate and all run down, owing to im pure and impoverished blood. Hood's Sar- . aaparilla purifies and vitalizes the blood and (has wards off disease. Hood's Pills enr* psnaaa, sick beadaobe. Joseph Addiiion Be wu a celebrate^KugUsh writer, .1 born In 1612. Ills first poem was put* lished In 1003. Ho went to the Con- Qt 4 tinent !n 1600. and In 1701 published his best p*cmr "A letter from Italy." He retnnied to England in 1703. He had boon in the diplomatic service on V - the Continent, and on his return had a good position hi society; in 1704 he ob tained a government office, and In 1710 entered Parliament. He wrote for the "Tatler," and contributed largely to the "Spectator," writing most of the "Sir Roger de Coverly" articles. He wrote for tfie "Guardian," and in 1713 broagM oat his famous play, "Cato." He wrote llfetfe of value after that In 1716 He married the Dowager Countess of Warwick; in 1717 he became one of j the principal secretaries of state, which post he resigned In March, 1718, and he died In Jane, 1719. lie was buried In the Poet's Corner of Westmiastec Abbey. The Nlcanipu Canal. The project of the Nicaragua Canal has been debated in the U. S. Senate very vigorously. <)*e thing should be remem bered aiwat that climate, it is death to al most every foreipenfer who goes there, and laborers esn>ecially succumb. It is said that tfce Pan acini Railroad cost a life for every tie. What an idea of pains and aches is in tins sentence. It is mostly due to carelessness. Every laborer provided with St. Jaoobf? Oil would be armed against these troubles. Men's muscles there are cramped with rheumatic pain and they ache all over. That's just the condition where this sovereign remedy can do its best work. The fearful malady is very much like the break-bone fever in certain parts otf America. *V£- >#S* • » 1 i SirfStew V mw ffit An Iceboat CMng Before the Wind. An iceboat in never sailed with the sail free, but with the wind abeam and the sails trimmed flat aft. The boat can and does outstrip the wind. This is the reason: Suppose the wind blow ing dne north, the iceboat sailing due northeast, then the course of the boat will be the hypothenuse of a right- angled triangle, whereof one side will be any given distance traversed by the wind in a given time. The hypothenuse Will be no longer than that side. Now, the boat holding her course, and the friction of the runners on the Ice being practically nothing, the boat will move along the hypothenuse in the same time as the wind moves along the side, so that the boat will move faster than the wind. Iceboats have sailed from 60 to 1*0 miles an hour, with a wind of from 30 to 50 miles an hour. The result of the election in the French National Assembly was in its way nearly as surprising as the sudden desertion of his post by M. Casimir-Perier. M. Fe'.ix ,Faure, the new President of France, was probably the least prominent of the three candidates who showed strength in t»»o contest. His own following in the As sembly gave him on the first ballot but 216 votes to 344 votes for M. Brisson and 195 for M. Waldeck-Koussean, aud it was only when the latter withdrew from the field that the second and decisive bal lot gave him a majority of votes over M. Brisson. In the French political turmoils of the last ten years M. Faure has played a com paratively inconspicuous part and outside France his name is almost unknown. At the age of 54 he looks back upon a long career of public service, both military and civil, but curiously free from sensational successes or defeats. In tho Franco- Prussian war he was a chief of battalion nnd later was an active participant in the work of putting down the commune. It T was not until 1881 that he made his first appearance upon the floor of the Chamlter of Deputies. Since that time he has been an Under-Secretary of State in three Cabinets, serving in the intervening per iods as a Deputy, and for a brief term as Minister of Marine in the Dupuy Cab inet. Until the temper of the French people can be ascertained it will b> impossible to foresee the possible effects of the elec tion. What is most important just now is that a definite and early decision of tho Presidental contest is a good thing for France. It was more important that the J.,, A „„ m-- Presidency should be tilled than that *he+*,! the c,ty' n,croasinR m den8,ty ns tUe man elected should be exactly the right man to fill it. The avenue through whicn danger menaced the Constitution lay through a possible deadlock in the Assem bly, with tho result of a final usurpation of authority. This danger has been avert ed. Whether M. Faure is the man to con ciliate opposing factious aud maintain a neutral, conservative government is yet to be seen. THE BROOKLYN STRIKE. P&44 t v. Iron rusts more rapidly in the wet than dry weather because it has, or seems to have, a better affinity for oxy gen when the latter is combined with hydrogen. Mothers, Watch Your Daughters. Nature has provided a time for purification, and if the channels are obstructed, the entire system is poisoned, and misery comes. " Irregularities from any cause, at any age, are sure indications of organic trouble. With irregularities come disturb ances of the stomach and kidneys, violent headaches, shooting pains, extreme lassitude, waxy com plexion. " Remove the trouble at once, or a whoie life will be sacrificed. " Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound will accomplish the work speedily. "It is the most effective rem edy for irregular or suspended action known to the world." -- Mrs. Chas. Hines, Box 212, Duncannon, Pa* Wi. f ji*'- - •%-i. The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY'S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS., Has discovered in one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in two cases 0x>th thunder humor). He has now in his possession over two hundred certificates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for book. A benefit is always experienced from tne first bottle, and a'perfect cure is war ranted when the right quantity is taken. When the lungs are affected it causes shooting pains, like needles passing through them; the same with the Liver or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being stopped, and always disappears in a week after taking it. Read the label. If the stomach is foul or bilious ft will cause squeamish feelings at first No change of diet ever necessary. Eat the bestryou can get, and enough of it. Dose, one Jablespoonful.in water at bed- time. Sold by all Druggists. s. w. v IN THE WORLD. j 00 NOT BE DECEIVED with Pastes, Enamels, and Paints which stain the bands, injure the iron, and burn red. The Rising Sun Stove Polish is Bril- liant, Odorless, and Durable. Each package contains six ounces; when moistened will make several boxes of Paste Polish. MAS AN ANNUAL SALE OF 3,000 TOFE Blofbus Mobs in the City of Churches Charged by Militia and Police. Brooklyn, X. Y., is virtually under mil itary rule. Streets are blocked agaiur.t pedestrians by squads of soldiers, and any one who stops to argue the point is told to walk around the block, while a glisten ing bayonet is held within two inches of his face. Thousands of morbidly eurioas citizens flocked to the scenes of Saturday night's riots and helped to swell the crowds that gathered to do mischiof. The green hands had some rough expe riences all through the day and a break down of any kind was the signal for '.lie formation of a savage mob for the demoli tion of ail the glass work in the car. On the Court street and 5th avenue liues ful ly half the cars are in a Very dilapidated condition. The various mobs that gath ered at the car stables and along the tracks of the tied-up lines contained at least 30,000 persons. Many cars went astray Sunday. The switches were broken and obstacles were heaped on the tracks, wires were cut at various points, and on the Whole the day was full of annoyances for the railroad companies. Motormen abandoned their cars at various points and in some in stances left the city as soon as they pos sibly could, so serious did the situation seem. Blood was spilled, but no one was seriously hurt. Saturday was filledj^ith exciting inci dents. Early in the'THSarning the militia, 3,000 strong, were sent to the assistance of the street car companies. There were a dozen or more conflicts with the strikers, in which the soldiers used their bayonets and the mob hurled stones and brickbats. Probably twenty persons were seriously injured, but no one was killed. Every effort to settle the strike has been without result. The strikers, through their executive committee, have made concession after concession, and the only point upon which they stood out was that the companies should re-employ all their old men. This was flatly refused by the presidents of the companies at the confer ence with Mayor Schieren, at which were present Messrs. Connelly, Best and Gib- lin, of the strikers' executive committee, and Presidents Lewis, Norton aud Wick er, of the Brooklyn Heights, Atlantic and Brooklyn and Queens County systems of trolley cars, respectively. Prpsident Lew is made it a point that he is in honor bound to retain the men he has employed since the strike began. This the strikers will not accede to. About 3 o'clock Sunday morning a mob of strikers marched down 9th avenue' to 5th avenue and 24th street. They num bered 300 and were supplied with drums, with which they.made the night hideous. They filed by the militiamen and jeered them, but as the soldiers paid no atten tion to the abuse the strikers soon grew tired and dispersed. An effort was made by the strikers to coerce the men who were at work on the 2d avenue line, which starts from the 80th street ferry. South Brooklyn, into joining the rank* of the Knights of Labor. Considerable ex citement was caused in the neighborhood by the violence displayed by the striker?. A large crowd of riotous strikers began to force back the soldiers defending the stables. They were kept back at the point of the bayonet and desisted from their hostile demonstration. The strikers continue to tear down and cut the elec tric wires, but as the cars were not run ning on the Fulton street line no great in convenience was caused. Between 11 and 12 o'clock a Vanderbilt avenue car was derailed at Vanderbilt avenue and Bergen street. A large crowd of disorderly characters was attracted to the scene and threw stones at the cars, demolishing every pane of glass. The police charged, but the men made a deter mined stand, being led by a man named Gallagher. He was placed under arrest by Officer Staats, of the Twenty-second Precinct. The strikers attempted a res cue, but Policemen Cowan and Connor went to Staats' assistance and marched Gallagher off to the Twenty-second Pre cinct police station. Several of the po licemen were cut by flying stones and pieces of brick, but none seriously. The neighborhood is now patrolled by a strong force or police. In this instance pots, pans, kettles and other household goods were hurled at the police from the win dows of houses in the neighborhood, and boiling water was thrown from the upper floors. Otto Neimann, the Quiney boy who while hunting over a year ago was acci dentally shot, is dead. A post-mortem ex amination discloses the fact that the bul let had passed through the twelfth dorsal vertebra, thereby severing the spinal cord. The case was similar to that of .VjT-iident Garfield, the boy beij^gjahot W the same place. The fact that he lived for more than a year has feeen'innch twin- dered at by the local physicians. ^ ••• SCOTT'S BODY FOUPj&.~ Remains of the Mi#«lng Treannrer ot Holt County, Nebraska, Found. The body of Barrett Scott, tin- default ing treasurer of Ilolt Oount.v, Nebraska, who, while out riding \vitii his family on New Year's ere, was fired upon by a party of vigilantes, and after being wounded was dragged from his carriage, blindfolded nnd tlien placed into another vehicle and taken in a northerly direc tion. was found about 10 o'clock Satur day night in the Niobrara River, about 300 leet below the bridge on the Boyd County side, close np to the bank and ill about seven feet of water. He was in his shirt sleeves, but had his watch and chain and other personal effects on just as he wore them in life. The body was taken to an undertaking establishment and there placed on a board, just as taken from the river, frozen nnd disheveled, the rope around the neck, bauds lied be hind him and clothing and hair filled with sand. Wounds in the right ear and back of the head are plainly visible, but there is no other evidence of violence. Yet to what torture he may have been subjected before death came to his relief can only be conjectured by his friends and re vealed by his murderers. The body was immediately taken charge of by Coroner Hoover, of Boyd County, aiid an inquest was begun. The credit of finding the body cat largely due to the energy and enterprise of the citizens of the vicinity of Northern Bolt a^ul Southern Boyd Counties. The day after Scott's disappearance some of the parties who have since been arrested for complicity in the murder were seen lurking around in the vicinity of the Nio brara bridge, and suspicion was aroused that the body had been thrown into the river. A week last Friday the search be gan. The weather at that time was so cold that many of the searchers froze fingers, noses and ears, and work was temporarily suspended. Saturday morn ing by concerted action by citizens of that vicinity and delegations from O'Neill, At kinson. Spencer and Butte the work-was resumed, with above result. TROOPS USE THElR GUtfSOM BROOKLYN STRIKERS. Day of Slot and Bloodshed--8«VCM Bw>a--* Soldiers and the k Entlro Ocpw y'tfjr .tfcs • Strike May Spread. Violence and bloodshed marked the eighth day of the electric street railway operatives' strike in Brooklyn. Three militiamen are in hospitals with broken heads, two having suffered at the hands of riotous men and wouien, while the oth er was the victim of his own carelessness having fallen; out of a second-story win dow. A score or more of policemen are Buffering from bullet wounds or contu sions of the head and body, disabling them for the time being. To what extent the strikers have suffered cannot be con jectured. If they escafcgd punishment it was not the fault of the militiamen, who. In accordance with orders, tired as direct ly at their assailants as a dense fag, which completely hid objects at thirty yards' distance, would permit The strike is not ended and order is not restored. Seven thousand national gnaWsmen and 1,500 or 1,000 policemen vr*i?euot ou Monday strong enough to n<akc, the r»* sumption of the street rail way* traffic in Brooklyn practicable. In fact, fiays-a dispatch, tho over last Saturday is scarcely perceptibrci The calling out of the First Brigade, composed of New York City regiments, has seemed rather to ad»1 to the tenHk^u^lliau to bring a solution of the difliculties. The task of restoring peace and order along nearly 200 miles of street car line is a vast one. The new levy numbered not far from 4,000 men. They were moved across the great bridge early in the day: The various cohipaniea went by elevated trains whenever it waa possible to the points to which they had been ordered. Generally speaking, th« greetings they met with on the streets were far from friendly. Boys guyed and men jeered them as they passed through the sections iuhabited by laboring peopie. The elements which early in the day were suspicions soon took on an unfriend ly aspect. A Scotch mist settled down on evening approached, and added to the dif ficulties which attended the carrying out of the announced intention of the street car companies to run cars upon lines not operated since the strike was declared. Such attempts in this direction as were made wore futile. A car started from th« Ridgewood station of the Brooklyn Heights Company a little after 5 o'clock and was assailed with volleys of stones and bricks from windows and vacant lota before it had proceeded far on its way down-town. A private soldier was struck in the head with a stone and disabled. The officer in command ordered his men TO shoot, and two volleys were fired in th« direction of the rioters, who, however, were hidden by the dense fog.. About 250 bullets were sent in search of victims, but how many of them found human targets cannot at present be determined. Ths militiamen's orders wero if they shot it would be to kill. Policemen also did some shooting at this point, with what effect is as uncertain as in the case of the militia men. It is ascertained by the militia officers that they only ordered the volley when the violence of the mob made it nec essary to do So. Blt-L COOK CAPTURED. The Notorious Desperado Bays He Will Do Better. Bill Cook, the notorious desperado, whose name has been in the papers oftener dur ing the last few weeks than that of many men more deserving of public notice, has been captured in New Mexico and taken back to Oklahoma. When he was cap tured he confessed his identity and de clared that if he ever got out of prison alive he would reform and live a new life. As a leader of one of the most successful gangs of robbers and desperadoes that ever operated in the West Cook has gained wonderful fame, but he declares he is not as black as painted. "I have not committed half the crimes charged to me," says he. "I have done all my work on the open highway, never killed anyone, nor have I ever robbed a poor man, unless it was of a horse or food that I was com pelled to have when dodging the officers. "My mother and father are both dead. I have one brother, Jim, younger than my self, now serving an eight year sentence in the penitentiary for manslaughter. Somehow I got a bad name in the Terri tory and was always being charged with something I had not done, and came to the conclusion that if I was to have that Reputation anyway I might as Well de serve it." Bill Cook is about 24 years old and a mixed-blood Cherokee Indian. When he was 17 he was put into prison for smug gling. He had fallen in love with the daughter of a white settler, but when be got out of jail his lady-love and her papa went back on him and it made hint so angry with things in general and himself in particular that he declared he wonld "go to the dogs," so he proceeded to go. Dr. M- R- Trumbower, State Veterin arian, reported to the State Board of Live Stock Commissioners that he ordered a horse killed at Roodhouse that was afflict ed with glanders and quarantined eigh teen others that had been exposed. Seven reports of the disease in the counties of Alexander, Marion, Edgar, and Massac haye been sent in and an investigation will be made. Peter Coffey, President of the Peoria Gas Light and Coke Company, is dead, aged 65. He had accumulated a large fortuns. EUROPEAN GRAIN CROMfcv Interesting Statistics Gathered by the Agricultural Department. Grain statistics of foreign countries for the pnst year are given in a report is sued by the Agricultural Department. In European Russia the estimated output for 18D4 is as follows: Rye, 821,534,904 bushels; wheat, 282,042,040; oats, 687,- 876,308; barley, 186,718,218; buckwheat, 43,309,650. The production of Great Britain is estimated as follows: Wheat area 1,927.962 acres and production Cl,- 037.927 Winchester bushels; barley, 2,095,771 acres and 74,553,807 bushels, and oats, 3,253,401 acres and 139,732,723 bushels. In France the output ^ras in round numbers 343,350,000 bushels of wheat, 76,560,000 of rye, 56,550,000 of barley and 278,938,000 of oats. The wheat product for the year in Germany aggregated over 126,400,000 bushels; winter spelt, 33,336,000; rye, 326,633,- 000; spring barley, 130,000,000; oats, 452,000,000; potatoes, 1,239,704, and meadow hay, 22,298,500 tons. The Rou manian Government estimates the prin cipal crop of wheat 43,584,000 bushels, rye 5,769,000, barley 16,906,000, and oats, 10,019,000. In Italy wheat aggregated almost 123,000,000 bushels, oats almost 16,000,000, barley over 8,000,000, maize 54,763,000, and rye almost 15,000,000. Wheat exports from the Argentine Re public for the first seven months of the year aggregated 678,573 tons. In Onta rio wheat aggregated over 20,500,000, barley 11,300,000, oats over 72,000,000, potatoes 17,000,000, and peas 14,400,000 Winchester bushels. Manitoba produced 17,700,000 Winchester bushels of wheat, 12,200,000 of oats, and 19,900,000 of po tatoes and other root crops. Reports from European agents of the department sho.fe that there is a more hopeful feeling in the grain markets of England and that the farmers there are expecting better prices. In Southern Eng land great floods have overrun large ex panses of arable, land and have limited somewhat the area intended^to be de voted to winter wheat FIRST OF ITS KIND. Edifice in Boston Devoted to Christian Science is Dedicated. Sunday in Boston an edifice devoted to Christian science, and known as the First Church of Christ, Scientist, was dedi cated with imposing ceremonies, repre sentatives of the 100,000 Christian scien tists scattered from Maine to Boston be- Wild Geese by the Thousand Oat ia California. c' Near Santa Monica, Cal., one day last week, In a little bay about six cquare miles in area, there were fully a quarter of a million of wild geese. The noise of their quacking and calling to one another was at times heard two mUes away. At Saa Pedro &uu &i the ilttis lafeo la Kcm Co«aty there are said to be even greater numbers of the game, because of the proximity of the wheat fields. Large numbers of the geese are slain annually during their migrations. It is no trick for a boy sportsman to get fifty or sixty of the birds in a few hours, and hundreds of the older hunters in tliis region have often got over 200 geese in a day. A party of four Los An geles sportsmen who went out for a twr days' hunt over In the Orange Cpari^y days'hunt over in the Oronge County marshes last week, came home with •ver 900 dead geese for the city mar kets. Two Bakerfield men had a three a farm wagon loaded down with geese aud ducks. In all the little towns along the Santa Fe Railroad in this section there are a score or two of men and boys who regularly, spring and fall, turn out for a day's shoot at wild geese aud ducks, and the person who does not show that he has tumbled over at least twenty-five of the birds is accounted in poor luck, or a decided novice in hunt- injj. Many persons will ride to the out skirts of the town, and, standing in a buggy or wagon, will satisfy themselves with a shot at the armies of flying birds at long range. Occasionally they will bring down a goose with such random shooting. All the markets and the country grocery stores now have wilt? geese and ducks exhibited for sale at nominal sums.--New York Sun. -- Poor Indeed t The prospect of relief from drastic cathar tics for persons troubled with constipation Is poor indeed. True they act upon the bowels, but this they do with violence, and their operation tends to weakeu the intes tines, and Is prejudicial to the stomach. Hos- tetter's Stomach Bitters Is an effect mil lax ative, but it' neither gripes nor enfeebles. Furthermore, it promotes digestion and a regular action of the liver and the kidneys. It is an efficient barrier against and remedy for malarial complaints and rheumatism, and Is of great benefit to the weak, nervous and aged. As a medicinal Btlmulant it can not be surpassed. Physicians Cordially rec ommend it, and its professional Indorsement Is fully borne out by popular experience. Appetite and sleep are both improved by this agreeable invigorant and alterative. Embracing the Opportunity. I. F. Morris, of 413 East 12tli street, recently appealed to the Humane So ciety for protection from his wife. He Is a sickly-looking man. while she is a robust woman. Morris is smooth-shav en; his wife wears a small black mus tache. Wlien Mr. and Mrs. Morris were taken to the Central police station Mrs. Morris asked the Captain: "How much is my bond?'1; "Ten dollars." :A " She deposited $10 for her appearance In court and a like amount for her hus band's release. S "I don't want to get out," said the husband. ^ "Why not?" d&ftanded Mrs. Morris. "Because I want one night's rest," he said. The jailer led him away to a cell.-- Kansas City Times. > the Younger die beginners in the Cooks, he art of bread and cm k ao f" great, no assistant so helpful, al Baking Powder f it is the perfect leavening agent and makes perfect fooc^ Do not make a mistake by experimenting with any other. • SMSW'V'3- rw • ; • iwink A Good Iiiirestmcnt. Mr. John Walter, chief owner of the London Times, who died on Nov. 3, in herited a prosperous newspaper from his father and passes it on to his sons. The first John Walter founded the pa per in 1788, but it was not he, but his son who really won Its success. The second John Walter inherited the pa per in 1810, and kept it until 1847. At that time, when the third Walter came Into the property, the famous John De- lane was its editor, and the owner had only a limited influence in the political management of the paper until Delane let go. After that Mr. Walter was the responsible head of the Times, and as such had to shoulder the blame and pocket the loss of the "Thunderer's" un lucky attack on Parnell. For more than twenty years he was amember of Par liament. He built himself a great house in Berkshire, raised a family and lived to be 76 years old. He was popularly supposed to draw the comfortable in come of $100,000 a year, free of income tax, from the Times. During his Eton days some of the boys In his house started a court of justice for trying such offenses as did not come within the ordinary rules and regulations of school life. Walter was brought before this tribunal, charged with "never hav ing said a single good thing." The jury returned a verdict of guilty, but strong ly recommended the prisoner to mercy on the ground of natural Incapacity.-- Aragonaut. Tn Olden Times People overlooked the importance of permanently beneficial effects and were satisfied with transient action; but now that it is generally known that Syrup of Figs will permanently cure habitual constipation, well-informed people will not buy other laxatives, which act for a time, but finally Injure the system. . -P R. Ii. Stevenson. Robert I Amis Stevenson wrote his own fitting epitaph: Under the wide and starry sky Dig the grave and let me lie. Glad did I live and gladly die. And I laid me down with a will. This be the verse you grave for ma: Here he lies where he lodged to be; Home is the sailor, home from sea; And the hunter home from the hill. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCH. ing present. The building is a beautiful one and stands at the intersection of Fal mouth and Norway streets. It cost $250,000, all of which has been defrayed l by voluntary subscription. The new ^ church, the first of its kind, claims a membership of 4,000, 800 of whom reside In Boston. Any Christian scientist may become a member by making application "iid signing the rules. How I Made $1,200 By not sowing Salzer's seeds! That is what a jolly farmer said as he entered our sanctum. How is that? Why, says he, Salzer's seeds not only grow but they produce enormously. Ilad I planted a few acres more of Ills oats, wheat, corn, potatoes, grass and clover seeds, I Would have had to double the capacity of my barns; that would have cost me $1,200. It is a fact that if you want big, rousing farm, grass and vege table crops, you must sow Salzer's seeds. If You Will Cut This Out and Send It with 7c postage to the .lohn A. Salzer Seed Company, La Crosse, Wis., you will get free a sample of Grass and Clover Mixture and their seed cata logue. CNU New Scheme of Salvation. The Church of the Apostolic FalVi^ and Order is the name of a hew relig ious sect in St. Louis. The movement- is a return to primitive- methods of Christianity and omits choirs, pews, salaried preachers and the many refine ments of modern Christianity. "A God-Send to Humanity" is what Wm. Snyder, District Court Clerk and U. S. Commissioner, of Car ter, Colo., says No-to-bac is, in writing to the Sterling Remedy Co., of Chicago, after taking one and a half boxes of No-to-bac which he purchased of his druggist, and being absolutely cured of the tobacco habit Mr. Snyder says he now has no desire for the filthy weed. When Men Couldn't Write. The cross mark instead-of a signature was always appeuded to signatures in medieval times as an attestation of good faith. * Apoplectic French. Apoplexy is most common in France, there being 300 deaths in every 10,000 annually from this cause. DON'T ALLOW YOTJRSEI.F to trifle with a Cold, and so encourage the development of some latent Pulmonary and Bronchial disease, which often ends fatally. You had better cure your Cough or Cold by promptly resorting to Dr. I). Jayne's Expectorant, an old-time remedy for all Coughs, Lung and ^Throat affections. It is a bad thing to never do anything that you ought to do without bragging about it, or to profess in public what you are not willing to practice in pri vate. •lOO (toward, tlM. The readers of tills paper will be pleased to learn that there Is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure In all Its stages, and that is catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the oulv positive euro now known to the med ical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly ui>on the blood anil mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building iip the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors nave so much faith in Its curative powers that they offer Cne Hundred Dollars for any case tliat it fa cure. Send for list of Testimonials. Address. F. J. CHENEY & CO., •9r~8old by Druggists, 76c. falls to Nice Summer Resort. ' Yakutch. Russia, is the coldest pl^pe in the world. The mercury sometimes falls to 73 degrees below zero. A Cheap Trip South. ^ Tickets will be sold at one fare rounft trip to points in Tennessee, Kentucky^ Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana any t-, Florida, on the line of the Louisville <$ . N&shvilie, and Nashville, Chattanooga £ ' St. Louis Railroads, on January 8, Felv ruary 5, March 5, April 2 and 30, 18^ *' Ask your ticket agent about it. and if bu cannot sell you excursion tickets write to Atniore, General Passenger Agents •ulsville. Ky.. or Geo. L. Cross, N? w; * Chicago,111. ' . -- . . The expression, "Mind your Ps and Qs," arose from an old custom of inn keepers marking down the scores <* their customers on the wall or dc with a bit of charcoaL Q stood ft) quart, P for pint, and a hint to mil one's Ps and Qs was equivalent to a minder that he was drinking to much. cannoi a P. Louisa pTa., 1 COUI.P not get along without Cure for Consmnptton. It always cu MRS. E. C. MOULTOS, Needham, Ma Oct. 22,1894. W.L.DOUCLAS Cfc CUAE iaTHCMST. ^wl_pnwt riTro* AKIN®. . CORDOVAN; FKEKCHACMMKimCMjr. .*3.®P FINE C/uf UCmmmi. *3.49 POLICE,3 SOLES' 42#*2.W0RK!N<*|£* •EXTRA FINE* *2.*I.^BOYS^OI«L&« MOCKTOtlMaSS. Over One MffilwiPesplswmrtla W.L. All our shoes are equally t TlMjr give the best value for the noan. They equal custom shoes la style ndm. Their wearing qualities *re IIM Tto prices tar® MBlfesm:,- _ Pna $i to $3 saved over other makes. If your dealer cannot supply y ou we can. . I suffered from catarrh Vf the wont kind ever since • boy, and I never hoped for eure, hut Ely't Cream Balm terms to do even that . Many acquaintance* hare used it with excellent results --Ofcar Outrun, 45 War ren Avemte, Chicago, IU. C A T A R R H ;>$ """I SI.V8 CREAM IIM.H Opens and anal Ptstiufe. Allays Pain amllntlwur Ui» Sows, Frotootu the Membrane trom O •tore* tli* SoiiHt*K ot last© uutl Small. The quick: y absorbed and gives relief at once. A particle is applied into each nostril and tea able. Price 50 cents, at druggists or by mail. mx aaumtMHsi. 66 Warren SUM*. NewMfc 1,000 Bo. Potatoes Per Acre./*', Wonderful yields in potatoes, odts, conu^farin and vegetable seeds. Cut /ihis(om and send 5c postage to the JohnVA. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, W is., ior their great seed book and sample of5Giant Spurry. CNU It is hard for us to believe that things that look harmless can be wrong. GOLDEN •DICAL Not Sick Enough Ibr the Doctor, but a little out of sorts. Ripans Tabules would serve in your case. It is well to have them on hand for just such .occas ions. Nut a Large Proportion. Only one person In 15. J0U caches the age of 100 years. H« was madly, passionately in lor®--won by the matchless beauty of her complex ion. Glenn's Sulphur Soap had imparted the charm. It is estimated ihat foreign stocks amounting to $3,819,035,000 are held in Great Britain, and the interest recetva' ble from them $145,000,000 per annum. DISCOVERY Many years apo Dr. R. V. Pierce, chief consulting: physician to the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y.f com pounded thi3 medicine of vegetable ingredi ents which had an especial effect upon the stomach and liver, rousing the organs to healthful activity aa well as purifying and enriching the blood. By such means the stomach and the nerves are supplied with pure blood; they will not do duty without it any more than a locomotive can run with out coal. You can not jjet a lasting cure of Dyspepsia, or Indigestion, by taking arti ficially digested foods or pepsin--the stom ach must do its own work in its own way. Do not put your nerves to sleep with so- called celery mixtures, it is better to goto the seat of the difficulty and feed the nerve cells on the food they require. Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Biliousness and Nervous Af fections, such as sleeplessness and weak, nervous feelings are completely cured by the "Discovery." It puts on healthy flesh, brings refreshing sleep and invigorates the whole system. Mrs. K. HEOTCB, oX No. S96 North Hoisted St., Chicago, ///., writes: "I tt&ard my improve ment as simply wonderful. Since taking Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Dis covery in connection with his ' Pleasant Pellets' I have gain ed in every respect, particularly in flesh and strength. My liver waa dreadfully enlarged aud I suf fered greatly from dyspepsia. No phy sician could give relief. Now, after two uioutns I am entire ly relieved of my disease. My appe tite is excellent; food well digested; bowels regular aad much improved*" PACE TO FACE. Tha pleasnro of a conQdecttal dhattP' doubled by the sweet breath that goes *:ff' with a well-ordered system. And that • Is always insured by Ripans • Tabules* -• • Bwaet breath, bright eyo* elear complexion* Ripans • TatuiteS. W0"!,o™s POULTRY iltlvely (he liuest work. ir% Bdvertlse (ho finest (bott If you want something t you firnl it iihrwHaea 1 better, you will |«t It yoaroMcrtom*. ] PBOt? CLAIM. OFO. P. FUUVAFL tdelpki*. Pa., "it U» It Sfe0*« KMpVitf ipi MliMlti- tifj !•>>•** It contain* M mm. mKmmvl la ̂ •Mora, photo enrrarloft oft ho |arg««t poultrvftun la tCSartllv wart. Aim other fine engraving*, beama Olutrattana of 4ft tha leading marietta* of Pure Bred Fowls* with foil andprtoeaof them, and egg. Give* reoaipa for tho beak Oonfitlon Powder, nr* ramediei for all known dianasa* _ boelplana with iUoKrationt to build chaapandcuatwlt 1 trr ROOM*. Bent to anr addmator 1* aaeU. poetoald: AAiMfc C. C. 9HOEMAKEft, Box 23 Freeporthl.U.S. A» PAYS FOI in lOOhigh grade papers In Illinois, J guaranteed circu- ' Tation lOO.OOO- or we can insert, ttH times tn 1,375 country 1 papers tor SESD rOR CA TALOGUE. V-> CHICAGO NEWSPAPER IMOH. 93 8011th Jefferson Street, - Chtaaga, JQfc" CURE YOURSELF II.OO. Bold by E. ma Htmt, corner nhh Avenue. Beat hr express oa reoeipt ot pries. 4. B- Mas. HENKX. KXAXOEK CO Aoti-Smoke Inhalar Preservers. Th* nest and simple preventive* fire. Pottm. SI. A 146Cedsr St.. N. Y. TBCSS- Better tfcas siiy <m eerthfl;, No Ktsst spring. Bent postpaid oe r»- > ceipt ot prlcw. Slit mea*ve arMutdfv '• hips. Physicians' S|»eo6>lty CoC". P. O. Hoc Stli X«w York CltyT & PATERS. TRADE-1ABKS. Examination ud Advice as to Patentability ot bs-V rsntion. Send for Inventors' Guide, or How toOM ; a#Pstetit. Patrick O'FAKRKI T. Washington. D. (X ^ Send to- in p<-«i's**orea«l»tetfce' l A K t Y K i l TORY. No. '•w York City, sad we wu! l sasn you s->ampi* uozci arse Mrs. SHI.VTHJ.NU STKU* tor < tee tiling: sutteua ibe stunt reetMss iu&an sllsys pain, cures wind colic. M eeat* t bottle. 8. X. V. *io.S~9G ST. JACOB? OIL is t»e Perfect CURB for Fi wrltlnjf to A«l vrrtlser*. piew>r tlt» not fall to mention thi* paper. Adverlbcn tike to know what mediums pay them heist. WITHOUT RCLAP5B, COU^FSK, niRHAP? or ' T| ...