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HIDDEN STREAMS.
■WONDERS OF rSOKKGROI XU
AVI! SKA-FKD KIVKHS.
-
Great Snbterrenenn Courses. Meii
can Zsaairs anil I.ost Tor¬
rents — A Kemarksble Case
in New Mexico.
The list of subterranean rirer* of im
portanee i. beino consuntly added to,
and what used to be a very limited list
has now become quite an entended one.
It was only a few days ago that the dis
patches gave an account of the discoyerv
of one ot these streams in one of the
ern Sutes. and its exploration for miles
in a canoe by the two adventurous dis
covers covers. Accoraing Vcconlimt to to the tne nuhlished puuuMiea ac- ac
counts, this stream is even moreremarsa
hie than that found in the Mammoth Cave
in Kentucky. This latter flows a distance
of 300 feet beneath the earth's surface,
between banks about thirty feet apart,
and is a volume of water forty feet deep,
Rolling on for about a quarter of mile it
dmppears in a hank of fine sand, vei ed
in both its coming and its going as the
myrtery of lifeitself. Iasis known, or
rattier less Written Ob ,s the river Lya,
which, on ns entrance into Beigmm
SZSfiVX hasVlmbterrunean h P aff C S The a
Meu«e alw lisUce course ex
rendffig tending to toa a instance ot of six dx miles mues, while n c
£ g *72Tpi™«<^lito ^.T’S^nown , ThrfV ^ 0 tUrtv* '
ume I the Ht :
exo the^orm^o^ new t sDrintrs^vvhicli
are sunnosed to arise from the lost watexa.
la Derbyshire csllts/'th. England ’ifamn there are t wo
small streams and the
Manifold Fo-ined bv the union of sev
era! small snrincs distance the'v flow in the open
f 0r a short and then turn-in close
together under the face of a hill raugc.
Here they have made for themselves a
,Message through the solid earth, and for
miles they flow underground, each main
taming its own complete individuality,
until at length they re-emerge to the light
by apertures only fifteen yards apart.
That their waters never intermingle is
proved by this experiment_that any
floating hodv thrown in where the rivers
enter the underground passage again re
hoi wars j n the separate river into which
it has been thrown, when the strange
ttreams of water issue into the light of
j ay
A somewhat similar condition of affairs
a said to exist about a little Cornish lake
tailed Doz-mere, or Dosmary pool, sup
posed to be that mere into which the good j
sword Excalibar was thrown. It lias
neither visible outlet nor inlet, but it is I
«id that articles thrown into the lake will;
reappear in Falmouth harbor, which at j
least sixty miles away.
Sometimes the conditions are reversed
and th* river instead of disappearing be- |
fore it reaches the sea, comes from the sea
aud disappears in the land. In the article j
in Nature of January, 1886, entitled
“Curious Phenomenon in Cephalouia,”
the writer says; “The sea runs into the
Und in a strong stream, turning a water-I
wheel on the way, and disappears in the
earth about 100 yards from the entrance,
I imagine,” says the contributor, “that
tire water must be_ converted into steam,
which comes out either at Naples or Ceph -j
alonia.”. This is by the only sea-feil 1
no means
river, it appears, for very soon after the |
publication followed of by the another above from statement it j
was a New
York gentleman, who said that such
were common iu Mexico, where they ;
were known as “zanates. “While i
passing through Yucatan in 1870,” he
writes, “I Raw a large river running
with torrential speed within a natural
tunnel, not far from the seashore, and
probably not over one hundred feet below
the surface of the ocean. Its shaft-like
entrance was adorned by n picturesque
old Spanish well-curb of stone, fur
nished with standards of fancifully
wrought ironwork. Nothing on the
surface indicated the existence of the
vast cavern under the monotonous and
flat lowlands of the peninsula of
Yucatan; and though not a breath
of air stirred, the deafening roar
of the torrent under our » feet |
could not be perceived until wo were i
fully inside the cavern. A rapid de
scent brought us to the level of the
pump* used for irrigating n very ex
tensive ixtl plantation, aud from here
we could see by the light of our torches j
the yellow foam of the waters upon
the undefined background of the chasm
below. Descending still further, the
full stream could be seen through a
wide fissure in the limestone of the
cave. Jt bad the rounded appearance
° H J tr< am fl° win o horizontally under
great pressure, ton or twelve feet, in di
mneter, aud looking like agigantie black
icicle Tying on its side. The large vol
time of water plunged with great swift
ness into an unexplored and dark eham
ber with a terrific roar, producing noises
which resembled the hollow echoes
of heavy explosions heard now
and then above, the perpetual rumbling
of the . rmhiru* . . water. The mouth
or
entrance of the zanate was only twenty
eight feet above the level of the Gulf of
Mexico, ,, and . as my , barometer indicated ....
a descent of 140 feet it meant that the
nver was flowing 11 i feet below tm
level of the sea. The manager of the
plantation near which was found the sub
terraneau stream informed the writer
that there were nan;: other such zanates
along the coast, and that they were
looked upon by the natives with almost
superstitious reverence, aud spoken of as
great miraeles which have always been as
1 " ar, ,in "'
Ihe ci phenomenon . of a stream flowing
merrily down from a mountain and then
disappearing in the West, a very com
.non one says a writer 111 an early uum-
7 Mf ' lu f ollowiu «down
loo t^ijude on an enlarged i map w- find
many ^r-. ams entering into it in its upper
cowse. In going down a little farther,
reaching the San Luis Valley they arc
found to suddenly give out un the north
cm side, aud. a few miles farther down,
on the southern side also. The
pal Gibnfce stream, excepted, ot the valley, the
come in full
down the mountain, flow freely on,
terminate in 11 marsh or a small lake
the sand. The beds of those
should empty into the Rio Grande
'hfte- sdmilar but streams there is no water all in
are common over
-outhwest. and the various stream
ill the different stages, from those
really go somewhere all the time,
those which, alive and full of
above, always fail to reach the stream
which they are headed below.
There is one remarkable case in
Mexico, where the lost tributaries
plentiful, but the main stream does
i-xistat all. This is in a valley
lies between the Rio Grande and the
co e Rivers. The valley begins near
NVidia Mountains and is shut in
broken mountain ranges. It i* a
defined ing length valley not of very perhaps broad, 300 but
a
Flowing into it, especially on the
.-ide near the upper end. and on the
ern toward the lower, are numerous
tributaries, while the primary stream b,
sowtyietely oe$ aisappeared that its
<An only lie touud at intervals.
T§t jf ‘«i laidion-dollar jj| Chicago, hotel is about y>
| A , singular A Woaderfnl freak Baby of ___* nature, Mimie. says s
Rainer (Ala.) correspondent of the Pbila
Jelphia Time*, was brought to town by a
colored woman named Jane Garter, who
' lias until recently been employed on a
farm near here. The freak is her three
anvthing said to it or spoken in his pres
'ance. The Times' torwapondent tnUed to
sec the phenomenon and found the child
to be a bright-eyeil little baby, with noth
in S remarkable in its .ppenmnee, though
. possessed of so singular a power.
It is a boy, about the usual sue of an
infant of its age, eating and sleeping in a
, most natural Its speech lim
' manaer. is
ited to repeating words and sentences
which it hears, originating nothing itself.
. of twelve word* of
A sentence ten or one
or two short syllables is as much as it is
■
awe to repeat wunour . , mUtake mismsi, though inougii it i.
will attempt to deliver a longer speech
catching at a word or phrase here and
, five
there. Single wordi of as many as or
rectly. cvcu ’LdT suen ^^ZiJSSmds as we consiaerea a
mouthfuUo the mn.bb*t tongued.
Tbe * arti^Ution^ ’ though^
F onl/an° , is j accent of children
TbM t « only “ cstraordinarilv devel
repi-ating with"e!juaTcorreetne>s sentences
in different languages. The child will
also sigh or laugh, and even sing a short
. f hMr inif such the'’face doinw all
without any ex,ireasiouof Uevo ,id
the one natural to an infant of its tender
J
The colored people about regard it
with sujierstitious awe, and even the
mother seems to have a horror of it, and
says its peculiarity is the neighboring result of some
conjuring process by a hoo- ;
doo doctor whom she had offended. She i
says that it first l«gan to talk when lack
ing only a few days of being six weeks
old, and that she abandoned it for nearly
forty-eight hours, thinking it was “de
debbil himself,” but on hearing it cry
from hunger her maternal feelings con
quered her superstition.
Her object in bringing it to town was
to have it baptized by some white min
‘ 8t< -r here, the colored pastor of liet
church refusing to perform that rite. Hhe
thinks baptism may counteract the eon
juring and cure its affliction, as she re
ijatds it. “ _
Volcanic Island* Sinking.
Letters received from the British ship
Egeria, which has been engaged for a
considerable time on sounding operations
in the South Pacific, state that she has
j us f completed a survey of the Union
group ims of islands, and a line of soundings
been carried from those islands to
Fiji, and thence to Tonga, for the pur
pose of cable-laying, should a cable at
:i t any future time be deemed neccs
‘
., an .
On the 1st of October the Egeria left
Tonga for the Falcon Island, one of the
Tonga group, which was thrown up five
years ago by a volcanic eruption, aud was
then stated to he five miles long hy three
w ai,. ; but, to the surprise of the scien
title officers on board, they now found it
to bo only about half its original size.
The place proved to be composed en¬
tircly of volcanic cinders, with small,
hot sulphurous springs here and there,
ami' in some places the ground was so
hot as to render walking exceedingly un¬
comfortable and in other places actually
dangerous.
Lieutenant Marescaux and a party of
men were employed in putting up mark
flags for surveying purposes, aud had
placed a mark on the highest point of
i„ u ,i „u the island, about 250 feet from
the level of the sea and about twenty
yards from the extremity of the cliff,
Soon after this work had been completed
those on board saw a large mass of
ground fall away into the sea, anil this
was followed by a white vapor which
rose from the water,
Iu less than three days from the hoist¬
ing of the mark the flagstaff erected hail by
Lieutenant Marescaux and his party
completely disappeared, with the whole
of the intervening ground between it
and the sen.
Many pieces of the cinders which cover
this volcanic head have been taken nn
board the Egeria, and, although, very
much resembling ordinary coke, when
placed in the fire they run off in a liquid
form,
It. is considered that should there be
further volcanic upheaval this island
will be entirely submerged in a few
years.
Ages of Congressmen.
Sincc the death of j udge Kelley there
h as been more or less talk that men of liis
OU ght to retire from active part iu
aCsire o{ the Government and allow the
younger men a chance, savs n Washing
ton lpUer to the p ltts btirg/W
h . looking over the old Senators,)
thought that their soft, easy life, lack ol
worry about re-election gives them longci
; lift and more usefulness, even if manynl
them are past the tluoe-score and ten
y UU]{ tllt , | >r0 phet. So l looked nr
their age
Of the older members in both Houses,
i j Hugh, of Alabama, is exactly <0. as ir
Hearst, of California, Beck, of Kentucky,
j aml Wilson, of Maryland, are 68 and fit
, rcS p, :( tiv cl v . while .l„lm Sherman is 67.
Dawes and Banks, of Massachusetts ar«
j { 10 t h 7-1 Bayne, of Ohio, at 80, is the
j
i ators are bolll „ VVT 70 but they decline
I , ,
| giving their ages for publication. Mor
riH , 0 f Maine, is SO. and Reagan, ol
1 Texas, has such strong, swarthy ' features
that hf . fl oe , not show thp 72 voar<
which hc owns up. Philetus Sawver is
T4 . cmgressman Van Dever. of’ Cali
io rnaa. is 73 , and is the only remaining
member of the memorable Congress which
m ,, t ; , | 8 ( ;i, at President Lincolu's call
Bnckal, w. of Pennsylvania, is 69, and
p ather Kelley was 7fi'
Th , ma j or ity of men in the new Con
, ^ ess arc uniler 55 .
, People IVI 10 Worship the Bear.
In the north island of Japan ami in
! some parts of the extreme northwest of
Asia there lives an interesting race ol
people called Ainos. Where they came
from nobody seems to know, for in many
respects they are not at all like the
Japanese aud Chinese.
The men arc well built but rathei
undersized, and their bodies are covered
more or less thickly with hair. They
wear long beards, and the hair of Fieii
head is also long and bushy. ThewomeL
are do not so well-looking, as thev have tc
all the hard work of the tribe.
The folk are not gifted with much iu
telligeuce, and they worship natural ob
jects and animals.the bear being speciallt
selected for this purpose. They spent
their time in fishing and hunting It i<
hard to tell what is the number of tb«
Ainos. But as they are not supposed tc
number more than 50,000 a; the vert
most, it is likely that they will sooner oi
. later become extinct. .
--—--
people enter the matrimonial
,; :t te in London in comparison with the
number of inhabitanU than in anv othu
part of England. The general avor.n
last year was 14.2 per lfktO of the popu
lotion, whereas in Loudon 16.1 Were
joined iti the bonds of wedlock.
.
WOMAN’S " WORLD.
I -
PLEASANT UTKltATt H*. FOB
i I'KMIMM. |U \f»KH
I ___
| son* PAMOt IJOSOF-'
It ** possible to make an ' - -«ied
eatalogue of noted English and American
j wt “' 5p persona! charms have tKH;n
j W®"*® ‘yP?
) I ^u's day is srill iS milestone,
I • i i deen
1 .. •” , . . 1 ,, S° n ,, u r .
v, ® !et ?**’ tieautiful
. of Lm
mouth. Kate Chase, the
j '. H 7 '" ? ‘ \ ^lo bem^ Kuk
.
nan ! Minister Mir^ur at at°W Washington, hburton and a became
tlm Iwlle of St. Petersburg, ra a -mag
j h ^ D ‘.~. I'e . , l,:. Sr
j | £''*“?* ‘ *j„ o'nsuelo ®*** ! ^*L ™ ^
. i A'/nam* e^ves now Lady
Mimdevdle. ’ has brown and black - 1
■■ )d
^ preftU {
Ma ^ 1 Wright £- perhaps L the j
^ rl New y or s been called
“the most exquisite blonde ever seen on
this side of the AtlanUc,” and Mrs. 1
Adolph ‘ pi Ladenberg, k complexion, the married blue belle, and j
curliug^ir „ that* ryes
“is like spun gold.”
Ameiie Hives has tfnw-ookmd hair
which she ties iu a Pysche knot, and
violet eves, iiarie Bashktrtseff, the fair |
lit: dan artiste aboutdwhom the world is
talking, waa a slender and delicate pmk-j
hluildCs I
Many of the ladicsiu the A<lmiuistra- |
tion circles at Washington, including |
Mrs. Morton, Mrs. McKee and .Miss
-Mildred Fuller, are blondes, and the hat
n, *ffht l>e extended indefinitely. If the
blonde is going out of existence she is,
“Vindications, going out in a blaze
of glory.-A^cA.
* tiKKVt v at the latue. j
Miss Nellie Paterson, one of the pret
tiesgirls in the village of Mount Car
mcl, Conn., has just completed a four
years’ apprenticeship to the machinist
trade. She is now working at her lathe
and vise in the factory of the Mount Car
mel Belt Company, and there isn’t a me
clianic in the whole shop who can do a
better job or in less time than the fair
young workwoman. Four years ago,
when Miss Nellie began to think of the
means whereby she must earn her living,
she looked over the whole field of woman s
work. Among the trades or occupations
which the pushing women of this country
Lad made their own, there was none she
especially liked. She was a bright girl,
with a great deal of innkce cleverness,
and considerable ingenuity and inventive
,u ’ ss - 1 he remark «as made by a triend
*' ult s '‘e was so fond of inventions she
ought to become a machinist. Ihe seed
Dins idly sown took root, and she ap
plied for a place as apprentice. For the
past four years she worked faithfully, and
a few days ago her time expired, and she
is now a full-fledged machinist. She is
Dlock up a piece of work on the
planer or turn up an arbor on the lathe.
She uses the drill or handles a file as well i
as any man in the shop. Her specialty, ,
however, is tool making, aud to this she
proposes to devote herself. She ran also ;
draw plans, figure out dimensions, and j j
from the working drawings she can make
anything. She is not afraid of the grease !
aud grime of the shop, aud her beauty is
not in the least marred by a long" swipe i
of dirt across her dimpled cheek, nor a !
spot of oil on her nose. Her hands are
not ns white as those of some of her sis- i
ters, hut they are by no means large,
though they are strong. .She is it great
favovite with her fellow workmen, and is
the pride of the little country village.-
New York Sun.
riiF.TTY FINGER NAILS.
“Your nails always look so nice!” I
overheard one damsel remark to another
not long ago,” says a writer. “Do you
go to a manicure every day ?”
“Oh, no, l have never been to one, foi
it i> the easiest thing in the world to
take care of one’s own nails just a little
care every day.”
"Well, I’ve tried and tried, aud can't !
make mine look decent. Tell me, what
you do.”
Here I listened for the prescription,
which in sum aud substance was a> lol
low s:
“In urder to keep the skin back from |
tin nail I use a nail brush freely, using it j
Oil the nails particularly. Then, in dry- j
ing my hands. I work the towel from the
point of the nail back toward the finger,
l cut my nails often, and dim t let them
get too long. By cutting the nails in
sui-ii a way that the corners do not ad
ln'M'to the skin,hang-nailscan be avoided
and the shape of the nails changed,
" ,<!U ^ IU lm '* s are thin and inclined to
break, frequent oiling is necessary, and :
tie nails should never be polished.except
wiUMt some oi.y substance is used besides
tile powder. I his keeps tin- nails more
pliable, and no matter how thin they arc,
il properly treated they are no more liable
to break than thicker Another
t.img that i* laid lot the nails is polish
iu : ; them ioo roughly. I hey should be
hghth touched and not rubbed until
they become heated, This is one cause
of white spots coming on the nail and
marring its beauty. A little attention
CM -iy day w ill make anv hand look nice.”
To this conversation which I overheard
let me add a word or two about the
hands. To make them white they should
lie occasionally rubbed with lemon juice
and water. The hands should never be
allowed to remain long soiled w ith any
thing that will stain them, But unless
there is some reason for ii, it is better
not to wash tlie hands too often. They
should Ik? dried with a soft towel.
FASHION NOTES.
Prmcess skating costumes are rn&dt
cutirelv of fur.
I'm trimmings are more extensively
used than for many years.
Lace is again used as a garniture, but
>' -et on flatly, as insertions around the
skirt, or iu rows across side breadths.*
•A becoming garniture for a low cor¬
sage of black velvet is a narrow border
of closely curled ostrich plumage.
The ribbons used for loops, both on
hats and bonnets, are of a very heavy
quality and stand almost as stiffly as it
m uie of metal.
Bus;les; they were always bad form,
aud now they are recognized as not onh
being out of the line of beauty, but in
extremely bad style.
Astrakhan is much liked on red hats
and bonnets, and proves so decorative
that all further garniture, save a bow at
ribbon, is unnecessary.
Among petticoats recently made for a
hi id- was one of rich black moire, satin
"added mu scented, the perfume being
introduced between the linings.
The high coi.fl.ire is gradually bein'*
I superseded by t'ue catogan. In inanv
i Odu?.s an excellent aud becoming effect is
attained by the union of both styli w
>.v.ii slut,.* wornufm
and hinged like bracelets are
circle and hold in plat- the , '"*
braids ‘
so popular with vouns i„'.H ladies
The ,' turner mil " worn Enriish’'uvl, v v
4 , 1 i- pMnte.l 1 in “ the c,n usn slyli
, : nable , 6
, 'V * s 1,o style of thi
, "S! [Kii-ijcd style
......., " li i.i about
a uuarter of an toch
POPl’I-lR Sf lENCA
Auti|,yriuiMu i« the name of a new
I malady caused by the abuse of th*- latest
fashionable drag, aatipyrine.
Here i- the way »<> tell hot. -fas! (Ot
ir * - tiereliug in a railway car: Kerry
pa= s over a nil joint inert
is a distant s lick, f ount the number ol
lhMC o! j ek< in twenty seconds and you
have the numla r of miles the train is
hour
A “ oth * r io ; Ili.'li iai lift
J1, . * t " e ' n P ro,,, i<efl. Ii coph(i of oat
D 0 ” 1 1 •>t*. li *ad O Jnrt* til
I' la,ter . •>> »'»!-”*'• «l. uttor tx-t ig
pure gypstw. mSe.1 to a high tempera
**<* phmge.1 iu water. The mixture,
^hc, hot, is a ,*«• and cat. p
Pliod by a brosli or cast in mohb
A A noyeltv novelty is U announced announced in in the th. sSiai* -liaja
Oi a ‘ rc< oriling declared, anil ataiin conip.-ts>
which, it is Vew wifi !«.' grea.fv TE" in
"crease the anfety of i.p
paratus i* -aid to be coaijiosed oi « blu
**** «ud r, corilii g and .hum iustni
menu eonneeteil hy dectrc wire- The
I-rim iple, in brief,'is to sound an alarm
.«hen*ver the course .8 not kept
It has been found that some of the
streams and lakes of California contain
sue!, quantities of uIk dine -alt- as te
render their waters unfit for use in irri
gallon It is now proposed to drain off
bake Tulare, which was once looked
upon as a great natural reservoir for ir
rigition canals. This scheme also m
chub s the re. Iamation of the “alkali
ands ’ const.tnt.ng the bam of the
I4K6.
One of the most remurkablt* ot textile
umterials of recent introduction is the
silk made from wood pulp. The iiure is
produced from a nitrated cellulose ob
taineil from wood pulp by a secret pro
cess. This artificial silk is said lobe per
fectly uniform in thickness and perfectly
round in sect.on. It can be dyed any
color and intern oven with cocoon silk in
manufactured gimds, giving strength and
brilliancy to the fabric,
Among the great successful iuventiom
in the practical application of electricity
the United States may claim the tele
graph, the telephone, the incandescent
light, anil unquestionably the microphone
also. To France belongs the credit ol
the accumulator and the Gramme ring ;
to Italy the battery and the Paeiuotti
ring; to England the self-exciting dy
n&mo; to Germany the drum armature,
and to Russia the commercial arc lamp.
According to a paper read before the
Natural History Society at Indianapolis,
t) 1( . smaller birds are often destroyed hy
thousands during storms by being blown
out over the lakes, notably so during their
migration. The writer spoke of birds
destroyed on Lake Erie and Lake Miehi
gun, dead bodies being east upon the
beaches hy thousands. This destruction
is especially notable from storms that are
accompanied bv a sudden fall of tempera
ture The fact was regarded as imticat
ing one of nature’s methods of checking
the overproduction of species.
Willis a Tucker l,i« rennrt to *l.o
v York State rtcn-il nf He Ith nn the
'
. . .
1 1 U1S txaim ' U1011 01 anous
popular brands of cigarettes, says that
ireful , , analysts , . of tobacco and , paper
laiie ‘ l re '' eal P°' s0n0U8
other Uum tl,e ,rtbacc0 and
l,w J cigarettes contain pure tobacco
* nd * ooa P»P? r - Ih ^' BV ! k °[ W“ e
smoking are due to the fact that cigar¬
ettes are cheap, convenient, and can be
used iu large and excessive quantities,
that the smoke is usually inhaled, and
that children and immature persons
* ree J 1130 “ ienl -
Plants are often killed by frost in val
h-ys and up to a certain height upon the
Dills, while above this limit they entirely
escape injury. It has been found by ob¬
servations that a thermometer attached to
a higli tower in a valley indicates at night
the same average temperature as a ther¬
mometer on the side of a neighboring hill
upon the same level. This indicates that
on a tranquil night the cold air resulting
from radiation at the surface of the earth
settles in the valleys, in consequence of
its greater density, aud the warm and
cold air are arranged in nearly horizontal
strata like liquids of different density.
liaising Submerged Ships.
Captain Falcon, a Chicago diver, was
asked by a Herald reporter how vessels
are raised, nod he replied:
“All sorts o’ ways; mostly by com
pressed air. I have my own method.
which I patented. It consists of apply¬
ing barrels wi' the air pressed out, which
o’ course will raise anything. The w ay
I cum to it was interestin’. It was in
the year’59, an’a party of us went out
to examine, with a view o’ raisin’ a lish
in’schooner called The J’irato-s Bride,
on the coast o’ Maine, represented to be
in ten fathoms of water, but had slid off
into twenty-four fathoms before .wear
rived. I descended for the purpose of
fastening a chain to the vessel, anil while
on her deck I met a barrel wi’one head,
called in fisherman's parlance a wash
barrel, \S al, I jist shoved it outer my
way, careless like, iu the water, and it
happened to light directly over my head,
where the foul air escape) from the lid
met. Iu a moment it was full of air and
the water displaced, and I was lifted
pretty near up to the surface, afore I
could get rid of it. This set me to
thinkin’, and says J, ‘if one bar’l’U lift
me forty bar'ls’ll lift a ship.’ So 1
thought and thought over the process,
and the principle I arrived at was to in¬
sert a hose from an ait- pump into a bar’l
where tin- bunghole is larger than the
hose aud pump away. The water runs
out around the hose, and when it is all
out you stop up the bunghole and there
is your cask full of air. The first vessel
I tried it on was a ship from Richmond,
Me., at the breaking out of the war,
which had sunk at Holm's Hole, Vine¬
yard Sound. We raised her with 400
oil casks, aud did it easy. 1 app’ied for
a patent, aud since then 1 have raised all
tny lake vessels by that process.”
When Spectacles Were Invented.
Few- inventions have conferred a greatei
blessing on the human race than that
which assists impaired vision. Dr. John¬
son rightly expressed his surprise thal
such a benefactor as the discoverer ol
spectacles should have been regarded
with indifference, and found no worthy
biographer to celebrate his ingenuity.
Unfortunately, his name is a matter o!
much uncertainty; and, heuee, a grate¬
ful posterity have been prevented from
bestowiug upon his memory that honor
which it has so richly merited. But il
may be noted that popular opinion has
long ago pronounced in favor of a Floren¬
tine monk, as the rightful claimant,
although some are in favor of Roger
Bacon. Mr. Spoon, in his “Researches
Curieuses d’Aotiquite,” fixes the date ol
the invention or discovery of spectacles
; between the years 1280 and 1311. anti
i SJ J S that Alexandre de Spina, having
4wa a P ;, ' r nude by some other person
j w *»o was unwilling to communicate the
‘ st ' cret 1,1 their construction, ordered t
i pair, discovered the secret and forth wit*
' i,i H uWi, Jtaliau antiquarians
’ D ‘- say
j ‘hat the person to whom Spina was in
d, btpd for bis information was Salvino.
who died in 13J8 ' auA 1 uotcs from ar
says. “Here n ’ anuscri lie- l' t j* Haivino epitaph, Arnota whici dt
Armati of Florence, the inventor ol
spectacles. Mav God pardon his ?in«.’
^
Leprosy is India
* I « i, think.” said a aau wa**
:■ u century in Iiidia.
I hat A e ‘it ath ot
% If f t rt fltrla; *4 the Kn *4 i
%7 in iliud »obUtn of ftpr* to
be relied upous I supjyine there are very
rji.i ids ot leprosy, and some of it
like the discs iws spoke® of Certainly in the Father Bible, j j
Hi! 1 oc very infectious.
Its !t «i>Ai of leprosy i?i Molokai. * ni
m icat«d to him by the lepers around
bin' ii’.tt iUk le|«ers aw? very cumin on
in India, « specially iu the central ar*»i
ij. i ^L\» *-r< m pre is.and though
ever J ii " II *
tom <h po^hfe, nobody ton Oe
fear d< of i>ting iaofumltil ffitli tin- disor
It sei-ms to be almost entirely
DLitti fO »Ilf- native*, and they usually
make their living by it. They a;v all
beow.u., and ride about on -mail
••eliciting bungalows alms. The doors of tin Indian
arc always open, and when a
siihib Irx ks up from his breakfast, and
St t” 3 tit horsemen sitting in bis
aaddle.airnost naked,and looking indc-ari
boblv vvrtfeheil a.-, he holds out his h old
i;i sib nt ip plication, he is aut to he wil
lir.g to part t with a coin to induce his un-;
welcome visitor Icinove on. In fa< t. tlx
• e per won t go until he receives -ouie- ,
thing. II ,; might, 1 suppose. Ik; driven j
away w;:U a stick, hut nobody cares
flagellate him, and he makes a good deal:
of money. 1 never saw a white man with 1
the disease though I believe there are a ;
few isolated cases, it is not necessarily j
fatal, and lepers who looked as though ;
they must soon die of old age, has 0 told 1
me that they were born with it.
Why Mummies Have Kept So Long,
it is hard for those who has,
lived iu a climate like oure in this conn
try. to realize that bodies can possibly
be preserved anywhere for three thousauil
years, like the Egyptian mummies. Two
things, in however, should be remembered J
this connection: One is that a relig
ious custom required the embalming of
each body as soon as possible after death. !
the sistiug other iu is the a natural fact that phenomenon the climate con of j
Egypt is almost positively rainless, of
the latter Dr. Robertson says in bis Pha
raohs of the Bondage and the Exodus:
There might be said to be no showers
ever in Egypt. The X'ile river gives all
the moisture the fields have, with its an
nual inundatian, but this oovers only the
plains; the hillsides are always dry.
Hence it results that, when the bodies of
the dead were properly embalmed, and
then deposited in one of those dry recep¬
tacles of the rocks, beneath the unchaug
%<g sands, they might be considered well
nigh imperishable. whatever It that need the give bodies no sur¬
prise to us of
veritable men and women who lived four
thousand years ago are still on the earth,
Not un changed iu lineament and features.
ands unlikely there are countless thous¬
of those who saw Joseph on his
throne in Egypt, now lying undisturbed
in their sycamore coffins, their hands on
their breasts, their eyes closed, their
funeral garlands stil 1 twined.
Ill Oklahoma.
Base ball nines have already been estab¬
lished. and that portion of the people who
gamble on everything attend the match
games for the purpose of betting. Bets
are made not only ou the result, but on
every the play. ball's Such cries as “Five dollars
next strike,” “Five dollars he
strikes out,” “Five dollars he don't hit
it,” arc heard continually and there
seems as offer. many ready to accept as there
are Guthrie, to One day a horse ran away
at \ulh a young boy on its back.
The youngster looked the picture of
misery, and the horse commenced to act
wildly. “Bet you ten dollars he throws
the kid,” remarked one by-stander to
another. “I’ll go you,” was the prompt
response, ar.d at that moment the horse
pot its back into a graceful curve, bucked
in regulation Texas style, and the boy
was rolling in the sand. The bet was
promptly ceeded paid, and the gamblers pro¬
lo a joint for drinks.
„ boa,pSl0116 ail(i trj.tr Its U8es.
A writer iu a London journal calls at
tention to the unappreciated 1 * uses and
preservative . qualities .... Of . soapstone,
.
a ma
tonal, lie aavs, \vh?bh possesses w hat may '
withstanding be regarded as atmospheric . xtn.ordi.mry qualities influences, in j
tli.K,. especially which have so much to do
With the corrosion of iron and steel, uiul ■
from experiments made it is said that no ,
other material is capable of taking bold of j
the fibre of iron and steel so readily and
firmly as this. In China sonpsh/ne is
largely used for preserving structures
built of sandstone and other stones liable
to crumble from the effects of the atraos
phere; and the covering w ith powdered
soapstone iu the form of paint on some
obelisks in that country, composed of
stone liable to atmospheric deterioration,
has been the means of preserving them
intact for hundreds of years.
Xo wav has been found for making *
, heroism easy, for the scholar. , , Labor, t \
even
iron labor, is for hint. The world was
created ns an anOionce fur him; the atoms
ot which it is made are opportunities.
A Woman in ihe Use.
There always is. She. is the power behind the
throne. A woman’s influence over the man
who loves her is often absolute. To wield ssi
great a power to guide, st rengthen should and help her
husbanu, a woman's mind be deal* and
healthy. It cannot be if she is sutiering from
any functional derangement. How many a
hoine is made unhappy because she who would
be its life and light is a wretched, depressed,
morbid invalid! Wives, mothers anti daugh
ters, why suffer from lives "female complaints" when Dr.
whiclL are sapping your away,
lderce s t avorite prescript ion about will renew Ii your
health and gladden those you/ has
restored happiness to many a saddened life.
YV hy endure martyrdom when release is so
easy? In Us like special the “Favorite flold there Prescription.” never was a
restorative
- - - - ~
To cleanse the stomach, liver, and system
generally, use Dr. Fierce's Pellets. 25 cents.
Only by slow and —. painful ^ : degrees :
can we
furht our wav upwa rd and break loose from the
clinging hold of sel f-love.
1 know the composition of, and have pre
scribed Bull’s Sarsaparilla, ami believe it an
excellent preparation for prtxiucing an altera
it is w hen a man is all run down that he tells
yon he ia all broken up.
March April I f May
Are the best months in which to purify your blood. J Hood's Sarsaparilla Is prepared from Sarsopa
for at no other season does the system so much rilla. Dandelion, Mandrake, Dock, Juniper Berries
neel the aid of a reliable medidne like Hood * and other well-known vegetable remedies, in such
Sarsaparilla, as now. During the long, cold winter a peculiar manner as to derive the full medicinal
th-blood becomes thin and Impure, the body be- vaine of each. It will cure, when in the power of
comes weak and tired, the appetite may be lost, medicine, scrofula, sslt rheum, sores, bolls, pim
Hood's Sarsaparilla is peculiarly adapted to purify pies, all humors, dyspepsia, biliousness, sfok bead
and enrich the bicod, to create a good appetite and ache, indigestion, general debility, catarrh, rheu
overcome that tired feeling. It has a larger sale ,matism. kidney and liver complaints. It over
than any other sarsaparilla or blood purifier, and comes that extreme tired feeling caused by change
it increases In popularity every year, for It Is the of climate, season or life, and Imparts life and
idesl | strength to the whole system.
Spring Medicine Blood Poison
fcarlv last sprin? I w»s very mttoh run down, • For yaare at irregular intvrvali la all seasons, I
had nervous headache, felt miserable and all that. suffered tbe Intolerable bnrnioff and Itching of
1 was very much benefited by Sood’s Sarsaparilla blood poisoning bj lvj. It would break out on m,
and recommend Jt to my friends."—Mu*. J. M. !*s«, in my tnroar and ere«. Lust spring I took
Xatlor, 111$ Euclid Avanue. Cleveland- O. Hood 'j oam.partlia as a blood purifier, with no
•■Hood's Sarsaparilla has toured me of sal* though! of it as a special remedy for tv, polsoulng,
ineuro. which I have bad for years. I do think bui It Las effected a permanent and thorough cure."
i* is a splendid medicine. I am 40 years iff age —CAj.tr>' T. SeetTE. Wentworth, K. H.
an t my ski* is just as smooth and fair as a pie. e I bad bolls »U over mv neet and back, troubling
cf gla.'S. 1 have six children, and when anything la me so much that I t*ould not turn my he-d around
the trouble with them the first thing I go for is nor stoop over Hood’s Ss.-fsps.-iil* , u-.d me la
Hood’s Sarsaparilla- »«f. Ltlia Clam. South two weeks. 1 think Ills the best blood purifier.
Norwalk. Coun. Dasill BgAi.. Eajuas City, Ho.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggist*. $i. six for $3. *repmfd oalyf | Sold by all drug gist* $:, six for #5. Prepared oniv
by C. I. HOOD * CO.. Lowell, Maas- 1 hy C. L HOC*D ft CO., LoweU, Mass.
1
JOO Doses One Dollar IOO Doses One Dollar
The Other Side.
Tbt* pommtmor of tact Lai his
about him, and never row the risk
of giviag offense. nu putter Low pacbv- j j
tieiDiitioui his compamoL*> iiiav be. Few
peopie real!}' enjoy being told that they j
are uruiuly pale or red. thin or stout; to, j
unless you can say. “How well you are
looking!” It tfere better to make no per-
4*, friends na i remark on tell the lady ap|>earance who has of your J
Never a on a »
partintlarlr becoming gown or bonnet j
looks ten years younger her in that j j
tbaii in anvthio^ you have seen wear, j
That i*.at best but a dubious compliment, it is
You mean it to 1 flattering, but I
equivalent to saying. "Ail vour other I
gowns are unlwcoming and makeyou looic
old.** No woman wants one garment j
praised ut the expense of every other that
..^e pomwse*. Don't tell her. either, that!
j, jhe most becoming thing you have;
, vcr g^,, \ ier wear. That is an impeach- j
nu . u) h,. r taste heretofore, thonmt you
probably mat have no such thought. If j
should notice a bit of black court!
piaster on a friend’s cheek, don’t try to be j
w j t t r | )V pointing to it and asking him if
j,,, has"been fighting; he knows it is
there, certainly, 01 it would not be there, j
hence it is of superfluous it. Whatever as well pertains as offensive j
j 4 , sja-sk strictly private to f :
on ,.' s t,,il e t i, of a nature,
a ,„j j| ir well-bred stranger or friend in- ,
t frlm .ddleth don't not. tell When how elderly dread persons and j J
h present, thought of old you Seven
at e the age. I
w hen in mixed company, introduce sub- i
jecta of conversation that might prove !
offensive to ordinarily sensitive people; as
for the politeness rest, by conscientiously which observing from the j
the cornea 1
heart, even the hypt 1 sensitive are com
paratively safe in your presence, and be
the danger of receiving anv serious'
offense. *
The Population of China.
**» »e—
proper, and the total population of the
empire is set down by the best informed
authority on the subject, M. Popoff, of
the Russian Legation in Pekin, at not
far short of three hundred and ninety
million, a population more than equal to
that of Europe. To these provinces—
leaving islands out Manchuria, Corea, and the
of Formosa and Haitian—there
arc only seventeen “open” or treaty ports
where foreign ships arc allowed to enter
and European merchants are permitted to
establish themselves. Thus, with a coast
line of over tjjree thousand miles, there
are but seventeen ports for foreigners to
trade with nearly four million of a popu¬
lation.
The .1 eflnraon flavin Iff onutiieuf.
After the battle of Huena Vista, General j
Zacharr liavis Taylor, against whose her dauirhter father’s wish, married is said Jef¬
ferson
to have remarked to the then Colonel Davis:
“0> oust, you hait xaved the day. Uotl h less you.'
When J tolly irov ’d have you. xhe wax a het ter
judge of a man than I hwi.’* Undoubtedly
those words of the bluff old Mexican and In
dian fighter express the feeling of every native
southern family towards the man whose whole
life is so Interwoven with their history, that
they eon well say, And we whether are the best public judges of the
man’s worth. a monu¬
ment is ever raised to his memory or not,
every southern family should have a monu¬
ment of him all their own, in the form of a
good nor trait for f publishers, lamina. We have just re¬
ceiver from the I. S. Johnson <fe
Co., 32 Custom House stmt. Boston, Mass., a
very fine autograph portrait signature. likeness ot The Jefferson publishers Davis,
with as¬
sure us the plates for it were engraved for
them by one of the most famous houses in
America. The size is J2xM. and has every ap¬
pearance of an framing exquisite hang Sepia Etchinp. parlor It is
suitable for to in any or
library in our land. The publishers propose
placing the portraits for sale in the harms of
every South, druggist that and people genersl storekeeper conveniently in the
them. Ask so can dealer for If get he
your nearest one.
has not got them, urge him to write Johnson
<fc will Co., send as »i>ove about address them; or, postpaid the publishers
one to any on re¬
ceipt by them of t ents in stamps. Write
your name, postofttce and State plainly.
dominance The great of difficulty quantity uiaiut quality. advice is the pre¬
over
Tourists,
Whether on pleasure bent or business, should
take on every trip a bottle of Syrup of Figs,
.as it acts most pleasantly and effectually on
the kidneys, liver and bowels, preventing fe¬
vers, headaches and other forms of sickness. For
sale in 50c and $1.00 bottles by all leading drug¬
gists.
We build barriers against the flood tide; we
Should place some restraints to all prosperity.
Boll. >n<i Crba.rlv,.
It seem* strange that anyone will suffer with
bods, carbuncles, etc., when Dr. Bulls baran
parilla will certainly prevent all such eruptive
tendencies. It is a sure and safe antidote f»*r
rarity delayed. Thousands who found exten
Bull’s Sarsaparilla Invarintil} D an exception, and that
fi.V'.’d “"com.™ Walt I, e-ai' follows Its ure. S.vphl- the
1 ‘and' jSK’
H ktu fm-riom the
digestion is ^ Improved, «SS,SnS?^SSSjt^ aches and pains cease,
e
tendencies disappear* the power of endurance
^^MjMpK'llsaudunnfttu
health Bull's Sarsaparilla becomes a picture of good
and strength. Try it. Use no other,
v°n ^nquirei.
The life of man consists not in seeing \ ision*
^i ^ ^fng i amS, * >Ut * n active cljarity
s«'vice
-------------
Deaiucs* Can’t Be Cored.
local application, for they can not reach the
diseased portion of the ear. There is only one
way to cure Deafness, and that is bv constltu
tional remedies. Deafness is caused by an in¬
flamed condition of tin* mucus lining of the
hearing, the and when it is entirely closed I)eaf
uesss is result, ami unless the inflammation
can be taken out and this tube restored to its
normal condition, hearing will be destroyed
forever; nine cast - out of ten are caused by
catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed con
dition of the mucus surfaces,
We will give One Hundred Dollars for any
case of Deafness (caused by Catarrh) that we
can Send not cure circulars, by taking free, Hall' * Catarrh Cure,
for
F. J. CHENEY & ^ 0., Toledo, O.
tS^Sold by Druggists 75c.
- -- ■ — —
Brie Knilwav.
This popular Eastern I.ine’is running solid
vestihuled trains, consisting of beautiful day
coaches, Pullman sleeping and dining cars,
Ig-tweeu Cincinnati. Chicago, New York and
Boston. All trains run via Lake Chautauqua
during through the tickets season, and passengers holding
I world-famed are privileged Be to stop tickets off at this
iaN. Y., resort. W. sure your read
V is. E. & K. H.
-------
j A few electric volts wouldn't hurt our mil
Uonairee. They need light.
; ! ________
j | |* When V Xdo^aTeftn?otw'’ you think your children S have t^reiSi worms,
B n
! a 5 J hey taste good
are alwavssur. J *
_
&rass as
tears.
___
Rich, fragrant, fine. “Tansill’s Ibin'-h.’’
nil
i
I
L'/M'j ' 11.7
! Willi i a ilf
I V'?-; Ml vs „ :
4mm \\
! I
zrm % 1M- n 1 \ \ 1 t
1 mm V je,x
■r? ^ -*■
*
kG
■ J=r - *
L«
“ I WILL FIGHT IT 01T ON THIS LINE IF IT TAKES
ALL SIMMER.”
admired, The bull-dog is not an animal trait to he
yet he possesses one that
at least entitles Him to our respect,
His tenacity of purpose is proverbial.
It like makes him a formidable enabled adversary.
A. trait has often man to
overcome great obstacles and .win vie
arr. & indomitable wjru .„»«>- circum
of purpose and will-power,
that many successful of life's battles are brought
to a termination.
Disease, like man's more material
enemies, is often an obstiuate adver¬
sary, and it is only by the most de¬
termined persistency in the use of the
best remedy While that Dr. Pierce’s victory Golden 1s attained Med¬
over it.
ical Discovery is guaranteed to benefit
or cure in all diseases for which it is
recommended, yet in ailments of long
standing, inception which arc usually alike slow
in their and progress, the cure
must likewise be effected by slow de¬
and ’ This
grees regular stages. can
$500 the Oj-'jc'JumtlU proprietors of DR. $AGL Cstarrh for S an CATARRH incurable in the REMEDV. Head case by of
SVWPTOJIt* OF CaTARXH. Headache, obstruction of nore. discharges
falling tenacious, into mucous, throat, purulent, sometimes bloody, .'refuse, putrid watery, and and offensive; acrid, at others, thick
w Infr in deafness: offensive breoth smell eyes weak.rinz
ears, ; and taste impaired, and gen¬
eral debility. Only a few of these symptoms likely to be present at once.
Dr. Rage’S Remedy cures the worst cases. Only 50 cents. Sold by druggists,
Superstition itself records no vainer
than the trust in intellectual cul¬
ture ns an adequate antagonist or control
ler to the passions and impulses, which
dynamics of our nature, and in their
constitute character.
STEI/EN S’ PATENT,IMPROVED,
Unequaled for
Durability and
Accuracy.
SEND FOR
Catalogue.
J, P. STEVENS & ERO.,
Atlanta, Go.
•3" srsk SZVCKTCCM SCVCHTV
m !
To cure BUkraaMM^SIck Headncha. ConttlpsUon,
BILE BEANS
Use the SMALT. RIZK (40 lltito keens to the bot¬
tle). Ther ere the most convenient; suit all ages.
Prion (■'either site. 25 cent, per bottle.
KISSINO*' i.is/vilv w pnnel 7 size of 70: this Photo-gravure, picture for 4
cents (coppers or stamps).
J. F. SMITH A CO..
Maker* of ‘ 'Bite Beans.' • St. Louie. Mo.
ELY’S CREAM BALM Wm THt
GIVES KKLLEr AT ONC K FOh|
COLD IN HEAD.
ITTtKS- p Q v riSI aB
CATARRH. y f . ,v- >MRfi
Apply Balm into each nostril. l
KI.Y BROH.'M Warren St., N.Y. Vr .-y y'Jc/
FOR A Double Breech-Loader
“ Brftfi.Lsa4»rt, (4 lo
Wlaffheairr Riffs*. $11 to $12.
Droffh-loading Rlfl««, fi.Cfc to $12.00.
Swff-roekiifr R«foir«n, $2.00,
H*afl " stsmp for 5<Vpa*r Cstslorue sod 25 per **■<.
GRIFFITH & SEMPLE, 512 W. Main, Louisville, Kj.
IMPROVE* EXCELSIOR IR6064T0R
, Staipls, in suecoe3ful Psrfcet sad Bslf-Ragnltilag. H io.
dreda opersklon Unnr«nt«>r.-1
’to hatch larger percentage of fertile eggs
'■f.. ha* at lees oost thnn sj»t other hatcher. 8«nd
i*r« 6c for iiius CsUk «SU. tbXAHLa Qulse/plil.
evd WHISKEY HAB¬
ITS cured sthome wi! fa
out ticnlsrs palo. Book FREE of j.i*r
sent
WiramiLJ .in _■■■ M M. WOOLLEY, M. !»*
ATLANTA. Qit. otitce 65 \i WfaUeh.il 8L
II U0ME
Bryant's thoroughly College. taught by MAIL, Circular? Buffalo, N. free.
457 Main BL, Y.
S£--^ If
u lit
■ [ So, E i
'.«e. 61® fee Up B I *
- a HR 1
52 < "
DR. SCHENCK’S ilJ! 3
***-»«tB wna i
DR. SCHENCX’S i fiNDHAKE FiLLS DR. SCHENCK’S
Seaweed burn, STANDARD Cure Flatulency, Indij*e8tion, FOR OVER Colic, Sour HALF and gtorr.arh. ail A Diseases CENTURY Tlnart- of ULMONIC
the Stomach ; Costlveness. Inflamruallon,
Diiirr htea, Biles,and Discseesofthe Bowels;
TONIC Congestion, lieHilache, Biliousness, Jaundice, Nsuses, SYRUP
deriug Pains, Giddiness^ Nervousness, WAn
and ail Diseases Malaria, LItm CouipJainf,
arising from a Gorged and
Is Positive Cure for Sluggish Liver. They clean the mucous
a casts, reduce gorged or congested condi- Will Cure
DYSPEPSIA tions,break up stubborn coinplicnMons, re- U COLDS*
•tore free, hfalthjr action to th«or»»n., and , 1 All ... I ess. ctpft t,e
And sll Bisordars the lem n chance to recover tono LUNGS
of Di-and strength They are THROAT AND
gesiive Organs. Itislikswiss endVomnn'tcontainApart'd*
S^Rw*!feflRsTl?,^ a Corroborative or Strength- PURELY VEGETABLE,
STRICTLY RELIABLE,
»Jp iLrnartltafPric'’fLOOpertot- I>r. Schcnck New ‘'ABSOLUTELY SAFE.«^ Schenck’»**>* p ^
s Book For Sale !»y all Druggists. Price 25 cts. per Mtle. Dr.
Diver nnd Stomach per 1-ox ; 3 boxes for tio cte ; or sent by on Consumption snd its tui .
_PF s * 1 J 1 .H.Sdlincfc u *2!' ,l k r L* Sow. n ' Phill. mxil, Dr. J, II. fi chenck frt*c, on receipt ilddelrhin. of price, Da. mAilerl Dr.J H free. ScSgnck Addre» fcMw.F Wjj:___ .
_ A Son. Ph
/PI SOS CURE FOR F.
o Best Cough Medicine. Recommended by Physicians
m Caros where all else fails. Pleas.-in* oed agreeable to the
taste. Children take it without objection. By druggists.
#- ____
: ; C ON S U M P TI O N
“MURRKr $5c.?5 buggies ^ $ 5.95 harness
THE BEST IM THE WORLD ! \ , <x THE BEST IN THE
All goods sold direct to the con i
Sumer. No * ‘Pools’ or “Trusts
ior us. We stand on our own f A other two me*** ot
footing, and sell the “ Murray M !H gasaSa^
goods nowned aolely merits on and their low world-re- prices. \f \ f y jy i y^' -
Writ*ffrcata!oyue BUT or »s<l TH« Net M4KrTL0TC*rSS Cash Prices. WILBER AND PATK H. TB* MURRAY AOENT'S ' AM' tAFG M L r Ji l CO-CINGinr. TJcr^N N ATlfO*.
only be accomplished by a persistent
use of this wonderful remedy for a
reasonable length of time. When so
used, it conquers the worst eases of
Salt-rheum, Eczema, T m et f er ' Erysipe¬
i las, c Scalp i diseases, is and all manner of
blood-taints, no matter of how long
standing, have arisen. or from whatever cause they
All Scrofulous affections
as Old Sores, or Ulcers, White Swell!
ings. Hip - joint Disease, Enlarged
Glands and Tumors disappear under
a blood-purifiers. protracted use of this greatest of
“Golden Medical Discovery” is th#
only blood medicine, among the scores
that are advertised, possessed of such
positive its curative properties as to war¬
rant proprietors in selling it, as they
positive are doing, through druggists, under a
guarantee of benefit or cure
in every case, refunded! or money paid for it will
be promptly World's Dis
pensart Medical Association, Pro¬
prietors, No. 663 Main St., Buffalo, N.Y.
■ GOING NORTH
KiJ! OR -
AKr, ONE OP THE WEST
I
BURLINGTON ROUTE
-THROUGH TRAINS FROM-
ST. LOUIS AND CHICAGO
• —•to
Kansas City, St. Joseph, Denver, St.
Paul and Minneapolis.
Tlic Best Unc for nil Point t* North nod
Went and flic Pacific < onsf.
CHEAP LANDS.
Alongthe Lin«h <»f the Burlington Bontc in N’©
lu nskn, C'olorntlo* Wyoming »nd Northwest¬
ern liftmtrM, ThtmuxtiU so.nu Crovi-rnuient Lad a
KwoituiK settlement. Th#d« Lmds are among the bsst
to ho liwtl unvwtiers in t lis country f« r AKricultur*! »'td
Grar.inif purposes. F r piniphiuts »'id oth«r mattor,
giving Burlington lot-*’ i >n and fn Jtoiite !l ptirticulars, thu addres- undonigoed. »ny Ap®nt
>i tho or
MAP OK THE UNITED STATES.
A bandromo Mad o* the Unit' d States,
showing North and South Bnk-ota. mnuntod «nJ
Fuitahie torethcf and home «»», *nd Issued by the
"Hill tinjKlou KoiKr,” wriii ne furniehed r«-*poa
sible parties Free «u anppcatlnn to EI.IJOTT, _
HOW All l> Boutc,
Taws. Agent Bnrliiiutou LonU, Mo.
H.*H. ticu’l TOIM), Hiirllnffton St. Home,
Aigvat Atlnnlii. tin.
o^r^ul |
!
Or FURNITURE. (
m riNVALiDN-A i
i-:. »« D fs
w IS I \ \ WHEEL CHAIRS ,T Antaaui ul
■Wp retail at the lowest FREE
u i 'm ilt goods f<i. forf/ prieu,
a.v id T ship for d«liTory. d«lt»firy. to bo Jr WltEKL < H a lBE>
ou r TO HIKE.
to- jjd tstarap for Cats- \yj 7®BricmL F BSA
loy./ue. Narne goods drtired. ► DKL1V Kftl.
145 _ _______
Ln'UCKIl MFC. CO.. N. 8 th 8t. re KM. ew
AFTER ALL OTHERS FAIL
CONSULT DIt. 1.0KB, 3'4!» North Fifteenth
i'hiladelphin. Twenty years* pxprrienco Nerrou*
In »prcia( dl«pHse.>: cures the worst case* of
Pile?, Comt lRims, Hlood Poisoning, lllotches, Eruptions, Memory,
t'atarrh, V Jeers, Bores, Vision, lmpaire<l
Despondency-, Dimness of confldentlaL Lung, Liver,
fctoinaeh. Kidney iBrtxht’s Disease); snd book.
f y< all or write for question list
arorth $M0; dollsra 1#H. p€0- Th<w
tVf Minda of other Vniied Putos sad ootM.
assrsOT ss-irss'iwsB
7 and arnt t'< strut*. I-*dlff* or K*mu>
>#•
m | brDr. TR ASK'S Magnetic Ointment.
Known over 60 years. Druggist* keep 1>,
m I or will mal! you a bottle for 25 cents.
, P. RANSOM. “ON & CO., Ruttato. N. Y.
OPIUM -xMsaJSJS
r .
* -J^Cars. speciflc for the certain cure 1
& m EaanriS csossavrisua*. ■ i iiiteAK. Amsterdam, *. N. $. 1 1
o 1 .
% ar4<rnlj t 7 ih. Wo have cold BJa G for
Jna» Cttabal Oa. ""JLS
wS h Cincinnatifaction. _ ,
Tnd7^te^H*.-kl*l.00. Bold by Druggist*.
A. N. U....... ..............Nine,