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FAITH AND WORKS.
No answer comos to tho<e that. prav,
And idly stand
And wait for '!'- to ml! away
AtGods command.
H< dl not break th<- binding i-ord
I’pon us lai<l
It we depend on pleading word*.
And do not aid.
When bands arc idle, word" ar* valri
To move the stone :
An aiding angel would disdain
To work alone.
Hut lic who prayetb, and i-qroti
In tuitli and deed,
Ami toileth earnestly, ere long
He will succeed.
The San Jaguelo Mine.
To Joshua Main’s w idow it had aiwavs
Accrued asimjde thing for people to sup
(hoi themselves. Did not girl- and
women do it oftentimes? W.i- there ever
any difficulty almut it?
Vet, wh< n she herself wn- left alone at
the of twenty, -he did not know in
i tion to turn
a soft eyed.timid little woman,
with absolutely no experience at all in
the ways of the world; aud_yj -he went
to her cousin a brisk, bustling ~vn.tov?.
i ?£ v siiiC yii
road to >anta fturl.titjiL
“Altai am I to do?’’ said she, looking
very small and pale in her deep mourn
ing robes. “W hat ito become of me;''
Why don’t you go to Joshua's folks?'’
Mrs. Chcbburn, who was frying crabs
for a party of excursionists who had ar
rived by the noon -tage.
“I have no money,” said Alice. ••He
side, I wrote to his father, and lie wrote
ba< k that we didn’t ask his advice about
getting married, and he certainly
should n't interfere in my business now.
Hn< h a cross, curt, hateful letb r!”
“Jnsl like them!” said Airs, f'heb
burn, lien e!y dredging hei jian of nabs
with flour. “Couldn't you keep miners
to board?”
‘‘l I don't think f have courage lor
that !” whispered poor Alice. ‘Beside,
it would reijiiire a large house, furniture,
capital.”
“Might sewf" suggested Mrs. ('heb
btirn, who had a quick, abrupt way of
speaking which was very apt to discon
cert a s| ranger.
‘‘l am dreadfully slow and awkward
with the needle,” confessed Alice. “You
see. Cousin Chcbburn, 1 was brought up
in a boarding school. 1 can play on the
piano, and speak tolerable French,
and-—”
“O, tny!" burst in Mrs. Cliebburn.
“Anil p'raps you could paint on velvet
and 111 nke wax flowers, or any such other
aeeoinplishinent which would he so use
ful out in these t’alifornia mountains.
There, Alice, dotn'l cry! 1 don't want to
hurt your feeliitjrn, child, but people's
ideas about educating girls are so queer.
< lot me it platter two big platters—for
these crabs. You can stay here for a
while. It's possible you may be able to
help me with the housework. Hut I've
no use for your French and your piano
jiluying.”
For all ’Mrs. '<’hehburn’s short, blunt
speech, there was a kindly sparkle in her
honest, gray eyes, and Alice Main ae
oepted her invitation in the spirit in
w liich it was given.
1l was* >1 range existence for tlie girl
who had been brought up in the artificial
•mrrouodings of San Francisco life, this
wild home 1 cm the plateaus, with ntoustmr
red wood trees keeping watch on the
heights above, passion vines swinging
in purple fringes over the edges of the
difls, and tigs ripening against the sunny
rocks.
With the coming and going of the
daily stage, travelers came and went,
also, of all varieties, and Mrs. t hebburn,
assisted only by a pair of pallid China
men, and a fat old colored woman in the
kitchen ruled, an absolute queen, over
11k‘ place.
“It’s bard work, to-be-sure,” she would
nay; ‘‘but I am my own mistress here,
and 1 render an account to no one. If a
miner talks too loud, I can turn him out
of the house. If a traveler tinds fault
with the fricasseed chicken, 1 can bkj
him go further and suit himself better.
.Joshua's widow is welcome to a home
be re, though I misdoubt me she'll turn
out a poor, shiftless timid thing."
15u( Mrs. Chcblmrn was favorably dis
appointed. .loshua’s widow proved to
lw possessed of better qualities than she
Imd thought.
She was quic k and dainty with the
desserts,‘tasteful in the arrangement of
the rooms, and affectionately anxious to
spare her cousin all that she could of
■work or worry.
*‘l may make something of the girl
vet.' said Mrs. Chebburn. “Poor dear!
she’s very young to be leit a widow.
\\ hat a selfish samp that old father-in
law of hers must lx*! Joshua was as
tine a fellow as ever lived! Guess he
wasn't like tin* rest of hi> folks though.”
It was one December evening, when
the heavy winter rain was pattering on
tin roof of the house and batting down
the shuddering boughs of the redwood
trees, and th< stage \va< several hours be
hind time.
“Supper'll be ch an spoiled," said Mrs.
t’hebburn, with a discontented glance
toward the kitchen, “and then they'll ail
be grumbling. Men are so inconsiderate!"
Jctst then, however, l.tnn, the tallest
and yellowest of the Chinamen, came
w ith the news that the rain
washed away part of the steep and
toad that wound through the
gorge, ihut the stage was overturned and
“allee fo’lksee kill<Hi!"
“Lieu, non are a fool!" stud Mrs. (heb
burn.
“Mistsee look for sheself,” persisted
I.inn. * ‘Alice deal! Ilorsee leg broke!"
And presently two or three men came
up the lull.-oea- ing the senseless body of
an old man. who represented the “allee
folkst c” of'Linn's terrible tale.
M itli this exception,‘the travelers had
been more frightened than hurt.
“Is he deed?" said frightened Alice,
w ith a glance at the yellow pallor of the
fa e, temporarily pillaxved on a folded
shawl.
“No." said Mrs. Chebburn. who had
no contemptible knowledge of simple
>urgery, “he isn't dead Gut there are
some ugly bruts; s on his head, and 1
think there’s a rib or two broken. Get
the little comer room ready.. Alice, as
quick as you car.. Light a fire and see
that the bedclothes are well aired and
that there i< plenty of hot water/’
When Mrs. Chebbarncame down stairs
•gain, to superintend I.inn and Clue Sun
a* they served the cupper and to keep
old Aunty Felicia frnru braining those
brisk Celestials with her pewter spoons
—for there was always an internecine
warfare between the Mongolian and
African races in the kitchen—the stage
driver was warming his chilled hands
before the tire.
“He ain’t dead, eh?” said he, nodding
at the stairs.
“Oh- bless you, no !” Slid Mrs Chel
burn.
“Well, it seem > kind o' w icked to -a*
so,” observed Ceortre G.jth, the driver,
“but I wouldn't "••* been fcf, rrv to lira lie
w dead!''
“( om", come!" s iid Mi . chcbburn;
“don't talk like that. Gcith!"
H* -at on the t*ox - ;t along • > me.
said Gcargo. “He'd come on* hen: to
look arter the San Jaguelo mine. So lie
told me He’d a pow rful gift of the
gab, and i many questions to a.-k. for he
hadn't never lice.’i this a-wav' before. It
si cmed he'd a son t ome out here a spell
ago, and they bought a claim together.
Aud the -on lie got marrie 1 all of a sud
den-like. and then lie up and died.
“And so this old sinner, mind you.
Mi Chcbburn. he mistrusts that the
-on - wife don’t understand bu-ine—: >
lie has come on to pocket tlie whole con
' ern. profits and all for the San Jaguelo
mine, don't ye know, is trebled and
quadrupled in value -ine- they fir-t be
gan to work it.
“ Ain’t vou goiu' -bares with the
woman:' says 1.
'Ain't the paper- all in my name:’
-ay-lie, with a leer. I've al'ayS heerd,’
-ays he, 'that you Western people was
-harp on business.'
“ Not that kind o' business,’ says I.
'I w ar," -ass I, ’et 1 haint the bigge-t
mind I ever had in mv life to pitch vou
off the box into the bed of the creek be
low !’
“And, sure as you live,it wasn't fifteens
piiiinte- afore tin- lurch camft. and ore;
-re —* .L' ’-.‘a* ,
we ati went together! Most like a jedg
incut, now ain’t it? And I declare I'm
most sorry lie wasn’t killed outright!”
Alls. Chcbburn was busy .-preading it
luscious cream meringue over the top of
a pineapple pudding—for the desserts
served by the lady of the Redwood
ltou.sc have acquired quite a local celeb
lity—but she looked quickly up.
“Didn't say it hat hi name was. did
yc?” said she.
“No,” said Gcith; “because 1 don't
know mvsdf. Grasp, t .should reckon—
or Gripe, or Grind, or some such thing."
And he chuckled at the clumsy joke as
he made haste to obey the summons to
supper.
It was late in the night before tlie ,
-tage was righted aud a relay of horses
supplied, so that the tide of travel could
once more flow onward: and the clock
struck twelve when Mrs. < hehburn
went up stairs with lh" caudh in her
hand.
“Who’s that talkin’?'’she asked, as she !
stopped on the threshold of the im
promptu hospital ward.
“It’s the sick man,” said Alice. “The
doctor said lie would be more or le.-s de
lirious for a day or two. Do you know, j
cousin Chcbburn, he keeps talking all the
time about 'Joshua!’ And look at the
color of his eyes, and the way his liair
grows down on his forehead!”
“Yes,” said Mrs. Chcbburn, glancing
keenly from the restless head that rolled
to and fro on the pillow to the pale,
startled face above it.
“I know who it is,” cried Alice,
wringing her hands—“it’s Joshua’s
father!”
“lTusli!” said Mrs. Cliebbom. “I kind
o' Nuspiciotied it w as. Now, don't cry !
\ sick room ain’t no place to get excited
in. Keep cool keep calm, and je4t. let |
Providence workout its own salvation.”
Xear-y two weeks elapsed before old
Sewell Alain recovered— two weeks of
(lain and suffering; two weeks during
I which he looked grim death full in the
i face.
“Who are you?'” be sharply asked,
when first he became conscious that a gen
tle hand was ministering to him day hy
day.
“1 am Joshua''- widow:,” Alice gently
•an > we re a.
H closed his w eary eyes, and ashed no
more. But he thought of many things.
“1 should have died it it hadn’t been for
you, ’shouldn't T?” was his next abrupt,
question. “But how does it happen?
Joshua's •widow here, taking care of me!"
“Hush!” soothed Alice. “Don’t try
to talk now. Don't even try to think!”
But Ire put out his -skeleton hand to
find hers.
“Forgive tree!”-said he. iu a choked
voice. “Only say that you forgive me!”
“For what?” she asked, iu amazement.
“For all that was in my heart TANARUS” said
lie. “For all that. 1 might have done, if
God had not stayed my sinful hand!
Alice-—they called you Alice, didn’t
they?” •
“Yes.”
“You have been like an angel to me.
Henceforward, nothing shall ever part
us. Will you go back to the East with
me. Alice?”
And Alice went, only too happy that
Joshua's lather had learned to love her.
She never knew aught of the darker
side of has character. Stage-driver
Gcith never came that way nowadays,
and Mrs. Cbebburu was one of the few
women who can keep their own counsel.
“lie’s good to the child now,” said
she. “They're as happy together as if
they were own father aud daughter. Why
should I interfere?”
And so the San Jaguelo mine made lit
tle Alice rich in her Eastern home, and
old Sewell Main treasured her as if she
were a rare tropical flower. While every
year there came some loving token of re
membrance across the Sierras to Airs.
( liebhu.'tt, who still presided over the
Redwood 1 louse, and kept the peace,
with ever-increasing difficulty, between
Aunty Felicia at-d rthe two sons of the
sun.
"The child doesn’t forget me,” said
Airs. Cliebburn. with a smile and a tear.
lb 'eu Forrest Gi'oves.
Enel of the Future.
The house of tie near future, the Bot
t att Journal of Commerce thinks, will have
no fireplace, ste*s& pipes, chimneys or
flues. Wood, coal, .-oil and other forms
ot fuel are about togdisappoar altogether
in places having factories. Gas has be
come no cheap that already it is supplant
ing fuels. A single jet fairly heats a
small room in cold weather. A New
York arti-t has produced a simple design
for heating entirely b\ gas at a mere
nominal expense. Is is a well-known
fact that gas throws off no smoke, soot
or tlirt. The artist filled a brazier with
chunks of colored glass, and pi; red sev
eral jets I*, oath. The glass s;hiu bc
t .me heated sufficiently .to thoroughly
w arm a room 10x30 feet iu sire. This
design Joes away with the necessity for
chimneys, since there is no smoke: the
ventilation may lie had at the window.
The heat may he raised or lowered by
-imply regulating the flow of gas The
colored glass gives all the npp< :rauc“ of
fire: there are black pieces to represent
coal, red chunks for flames, yellowish
white glass for white heat, blue glas< f o r
blue flames, aud hues for all the remain
ing colors of spectrum. Invention already
is displacing the present fuels for fur
naces and cooking ranges, and glass tid
ing away with delay and such disagreea
ble objects as ashes, kiudling wood. etc.
The use of paper ruled iu square for
diagonal lines has been forbidden in the
Austrian schools, as such ruling Las been
found to injure the eyesight of pupils.
Only plain paper, or with ruling -‘might
across, wijl {ye used in future.
DR. IMAGES SEEM
MOTHERHOOD.
Rev. Dr. Tali nag.* preached in St. Louis n
his way home from a Western trip, the
twelfth of ho serie- of sermouson “The Mai -
riage King." Its subject was >!■ tb< rh* * -t."
Mr. Talm&ge took for his text:
‘‘Moreover his mother mads him a little
coat, and brought it t • him from y ear to
year, when she came up with her husband to
offer the yearly sacrifice." —I Samuel ii.. 10.
“The stories of Deborah and Abigail are
very apt to discourage a woman's soul." he
-aid. •'Ham ah was the w ife of Klkanah,
who was a person very much like he. s. li—
unromantic aud plain, never liavinz foughi a
battle or U'Pii the subject of a marvelous es
cap:. Neither of them would have been
• •ailed a genius. Just what, you and I might
l>e. that wa- Klkanah and Hannah.
“The brightest tini: in ad the history of
that lamily was the birth of Samuel. Al
though no star ran along 11 1 > heavens pointing
down to his birthplace, t think the angels of
Hod stoojied at the coming of so wonderful a
people t
“As Samuel ltgd lsen given in answer to
prayer, Klkanah and all his family, save
Hannah, started up to Shiloh to offer sa ri
fices of thanksgiving. The cradle where the
child slept ua* altar enough for Hannah’s
grateful heart, hut when the tioy wai old
she took him to Shiloh and took . hree bullocks
and an ephah of flour and a bottle of wine, and
made offering of sacrifice unto the Lord, and
there, a'cording to a previous-vow, she left
him; for thf'> ho to siav ad the davs of
•* .7- _ v
his me aud in nister 111 tlic
“Years rolled on, and eiery year HaTOaa
made with her own I and a garment fof
Samuel aud took it over to him. The lad
would have got along well without that gar
ment, for I suppose ho was well clad by the
ministry of the temple: but Hannah could
not be contented unless she was all the time
doing something for her darling boy. ‘More
over his mother made him a little coat and
brought it to him from year to year, when
she came up with her husband to offer the
yearly sacrifi- e.’
“Hannah stand- befero you, then, in the
first place, as an industrial mother. There
was no need for her to work. Klkanah, her
husbaud, was far from poor. He belonged
to a distinguished family; for the Bible tells
us that he was the son of Jeroboam, the sou
of Elibu, the son of John, the son of Zuph.
“Whp were they?” you say. Ido not know;
but they were distinguished people, no doubt,
or their names would not have been men
tioned. Hannah might have seated herself
with her family, and, with folded arms and
dishevelled hafr, lead novels from year to
year, if there had been any to read; but when
1 see her making that garment, and taking it
over to Samuel, t know she is industrious from
principle as well as from pleasure. God would
not have a mother become a drudge, or a
slave; he would have her employ all the helps
possible in this day in the rearing of her
children. But Hannah ought never to be
asbamel to be found making a coat for
Samuel.
“Most mothers need no counsel in this di
rectiow. The wrinkles fin their brow, the
pallor on their cheek, the thimble-mark on
their finger at est that they are faithful in
tbedr maternal duties. The bloom aud the
brightness and the vivacity of girlhood have
given place for the grander dignity aud use
fulue-s and industry of motheihood. But
there is a heathenish idea get; ing abroad in
some of th i families of Americans; there
are mothers who banish themselves from the
home circle. For three-fourths of their ma
ternal duties they prove themselves incom
petent They are ignorant of what their chil
dren wear, and what their children eat, and
what their children read. They intrust to
irresposible persons thesa young immortals,
and allow them to be under influences which
may cripp’e 1 lieir bodies, or taint them
purity, or spoil their manners, or destroy
their souls.
“Who are the industrious men in all our
occupations and professions? Who are they
managing the merchan lise of the world,
building the walls, tinning the x - oofs, weaving
the carpets, making the laws, governing the
nation-, making the earth to quake aud heave
and rear and rattle with the tread of gigantic
enterprises ? AV ho are they ? For the most
part they des ended from industrious moth
ers who.'in the old hoinesteal, need %o spin
their own yarn, and weave theirown carpets,
and plait their own door-mats, and flag their
own chairs and do their own work. The
stalwart men and the influential women of
this day, ninety-nine out of a hundred of
them, came from such an illustrious ancestry
of hard knuckles and homespun.
“And who are these people iu society, light
as froth, blown every whither of temptation
and fashion; the peddlers of filthy stories,
the dancing-jacks of political parties, the
scum of society, the tavern-lounging, the
store infesting, the men of low wink and
filthy chuckle and brass breastpins and rotten
associations? For the most part they come
from mothers idle and disgusting, the scandal
mongers of society, going from house to
house, attending to ev-eryirsiy’s business but
their own. believing in witches and ghosts
and horse-hoes to keep the devil out of the
churn, and by a godless life setting their
children on the very verge' of hell. The
mothersof Samuel Johnson and oc Alfred the
Great and of Isaac Newton and of St.
Augustine aud of Richard Cecil and of Presi
dent Edwards, for tfa: most pari, were in
dusirious, hard-working mothers.
“Again, Hannah stands lelore you as an
intelligent mother, From the way in which
she talked in this chapter, aud fr< m the way
she managed this boy, you know she was in
telligent. There are no persons in a commu
nity who need to be so wise and well in
formed as mothers.
“Oh. how much care and intelligence are
necessary in the rearing of children! But iu
this and iv, when there are so many books on
the subject, no ; a rent is excusable in being
ignorant of the l est mode of bringing up a
child. If pai etits knew more of dietetics
there would not lie so many dyspeptic stom
aehes and weak nerves and incompetent liv
ers among children. If parents knew more
of physiology there would net be so many
curved spines, aud cramped chests, and in
flamed throats, and diseased lunge, as there
are among children. If parents knew
more of art and were in sympathy withal
that is beautiful there would not be o many
children coming out in the world with boor
ish proclivities. If parents knew more of
Christ and practiced more of his religion
there would not be so many little feet already'
starting on the wrong road, and all around
us voices of riot and" blasphemy would not
come up with such ccstacy of infernal tri
umph.
“Again, Hannah stands before you as a
Christian mother. From her prayers and
from the way she consecrated her boy to God
I know she* was good. A mother may have
the finest culture, the most brilliant sur
roundings. but she is not fit for her duties
unless she lie a Christian mother. There may
be well-read libraries in the house, and ex
quisite music in .the parlor, and the canvas
of the best artist - adorning the walls, and the
wardrobe be crowded with tasteful apparel,
and the children be wonderful for their
attainments and make the house ring with
laughter and innocent mirth, but there is
something woeful looking in that bouse if
it be not also the resideve r-C a Christian
mother.
“One hundred a id twenty < ]°rxymen were
tgether. aud trey were telling their exoeri
enevan 1 the’r ancestry; and of the 120 clergy
men, how many of them do you suppose as
signed as the means of their conversion the
influence of a Christian mother? One hun
dred out of the 124. Philip Doddridge, was
brought to God by the Scripture lesson on
the Dutch tiles of a chimney fireplace. The
mother t hinks she is only' rocking a child,
but at the same time site may be rocking the
fate of nations, rocking the glories of
heaven. The same maternal j ower that may
lift the child up may press a child down.
“ A daughter came toa worldly mother and
said she was anxious about tier sias and she
had been praying all night The mother said:
“Gh, stop praying! I don't believe in pray
ing. Get ever all these religious notions an 1
I’ll give you a dress that will cost SSOO, and
vou may wear it next week to that party.”
The daughter took the dress, and she moved
in the gay circle the gavest of all the gay that
nightj&nd sure enough all religions impressions
were goee, and she stopped praying. A few
menths after she came to die, and in
her clotting mouirnts said, “Mother,
I wish you would bring me that dress
that cost SSOO. ” The mother thought it a very
strange request, but she brought it to please
the dying child. Now.' said the daughter,
'mother, hang that dress on the foot cf my
bed.’ and the dress was hung there on the
foot of the bed. Then the dying girl got up
on one elbow and looked at iter mother, ana
theu pointed to the dress, and said: ‘Mother,
that dress is the price of my soull’ Oh
what & momentous thing it is to be a mother 1
“Hannah stanch before yor. the rewarded
mot lie i For all the coats Tie urate forSaru
tial. for all the players she offered for him,
for the discipline exerted over him. she got
al iind&nt compensation in the piety and the
u- fulness audthe popularity of her son Sam
uel: and that is true in all ages. Every
mother gets full pay for all the prayers and
tears in behalf of her children.”
Concluding. Air. T;lmage said: “Lookout
for the young man who sjeaks of his lather
as 1 the governor,’ ‘the squire," or the ‘old
chip.' Look out for the young woman wbc
calls her mother her‘maternal ancestor.' or
the‘old woman.’ ‘Theeye that invoke h at
his father aud refuseth to obey his m ther,
the ravens of the valley shall pick it out and
the young eagles shall eat it.' ’
A Religions Festival in Morocco.
A Safii (Morocco! letter to the Pull
Mall Gu:>‘U -ays: “The holiday of Mou
loutl is accompanied by the displays of
religious enthusiasts throughout hit
Sh< reetian majesty the sultan of Aforoc
eo’s dominions, but at no other port do
these fanatics aamsc themselves with
such ferocity as at Safii. where the ra
paeiou-m>s of their behavior renders it
extremely dangerous for a Christian or
Jew to cross their path during certain
hours of the da}'. Even the Alussulman
spectators stand with naked feat', fearing
the “Alssowa,” for lack of prey, should
seize and devour their shoes. Non 1 but
an eye-witness can conceive the degrading
scenes which occur during these proces
sions; aud none, even the enactors, can
derive enjoyment therefrom. The “Als
sowa” are naked to the waist, aud wear
their hair so that when necessary It
covers the face, The “Httmaclsha” on
the contrary, ate shlvCd, as is the custom
of Alohammcdans. The principal per
formers assemble at their respective
zowias or chapels in town, and Sally
forth attended by the “gernowa,”
(blacks) who arc usually the musicians
of the party. They beat tom-toms and
play an instrument whose tones it is im
possible to describe on paper. Suffice it
to say, the student of this instrument is
not allowed to pursue his practice in
town, but has to play in a solitary and
distant spot until proficient. This will
convey some impression of the music im
parted to listeners by this barbarous flago
let. As the processionists warm with
excitement, then commences the fun of
the fair. The Aissowa seize any live ani
mal in sight, be it cat, dog, goat, or
sheep. Goats are usually provided for
these occasions by admirers. They tear
them to pieces and vie one with another
to devour the bleeding morsels of flesh.
They struggle, rolling over and over upon
the ground, shouting, leaping, and gesti
culating. They wave the entrails and
skins of their victims in the faces of their
comrades, who try to seize the prey with
their teeth or rut their faces in the reek
ing mass. Just behind and around are
“Hamadsha,” covered with blood aud
mire, singing their quaint and not un
graceful hymn, and chopping themselves
to the cadence of the music.
Such is the strange behavior of those
fraternities on high days aud holidays.
After parading the town by day, in the
evening these zealots return to their sauc
tuary, where a supper is provided for
their edification. It is w orthy of note
that their most exciting beverage is green
tea, take® with a large .quantity of sugar
and flavored with mint. The supper is
followed by a pipe of “keeie,” (the leaves
of the hemp plant, 1 which forms an agree
able sedative after the excitements of the
■aftornoon.
Footwear in Mexico.
The 10,000,000 inhabitants of Alexico
use almost entirely home-made boots,
shoes, gaiters, slippers and sandals, so
far as they wear any foot covering at all.
Shoes in Alexico are a European intro
duction, aud do not properly belong to
the national costume. A large propor
tion of the population (probably a ma
jority) do not wear shoes at all. The
sandal, which is a sole of leather, raw
hide, or woven maguey fiber, strapped to
the bottom of the foot with strings of the
same material, is the only foot covering
used by this class of people, and as every
man is his own shoemaker, and the cli
mate requires no protection for instep or
tinkle, the natiouall sandal is doubtless
the most economical, comfortable and
healthy shoeing that can be worn in this
country.
In proof of this, the infantry regiments
of the Alexican army, armed and equip
ped otherwise without regard to expense,
still wear the leather sandal in preference
to shoes, not solely for the sake of econ
omy, but because it is considered gener
ally healthier, keeps the feet in a better
condition, is more easily repaired or re
placed, and makes easier marching.
The shoe-wearing population of the
republic is chiefly of European origin or
descent and such of the Indian popula
tion as by education and association have
learned to prefer European fashions and
modes of living. This class has inher
ited from their Indian as well as their
Spanish ancestors remarkably small, well
modeled feet and hands, upon which they
pride themselves considerably; conse
quently a handsome and elegantly shaped
shoe is more esteemed in Alexico than a
I sound and substantial one, and com
mands a readier sale. Hence the cheaper
shoes made in the country, if not so
strong and durable, are more carefully
modeled and several sizes smaller than
the average trade shoe made in the United
States. —Boston Bulletin.
Sarah Is Oat There.
A Delroitcr who was returning from
Dakota the other day met an old chap on
the train in Illinois who questioned him
as to where he had been and inquired;
“Alaybj you run across rny daughter
out there? Her name is Watson.”
“I don't think I diJ," was the reply.
“But she's in Dakota She went oat
there as so.ui as she was married.”
“I didn't see her.”
• “Didn't yo t happen to ride by any
house who c a woman was whittling ?”
; -no.”
"t'irah whistles, but you may have
misse 1 her. Didn't see a man and a
woman having a fight anvw here?”
“No.”
“Sarah hollers when she stubs her toe,
and she can be heard two miles and a
half if the wind is right. Meet any
woman in the highway who was smok
ing a clay pipe and -lushing right through
the mud puddles?'
“No.”
"That’s Ser h. you know ! Didn’t stop
in any ne'ghbo.h o l where the school
teacher had been licked and the sewing
society ul> bu-tcu to gish. eh?"
“No”
“That's Sarah agr.'n. I guess you didn't
travel around much.”
“But Dakota is a great Territory, you
know!”
“Acs, I suppose, but if you had ban
at one end white Sarah was hollering her
hu-bsud to dinner ar the other you must
have heard her. Maybe you are a little
, deaf.” —Detroit Free Frcs-i
A Naval Officer's Hardships.
Washington Belle (to young naval offi
cer) —“I suppose the hardships of your
life at times, Lieutenant Sinecure, are
simply frightful;”
Lieutenant Sinecure—“Ya’as, very
The cost of gold btaid alone if something
fexhful ' - - -
BILL AYE
WHITES \ LITTLE St HEED ON
FINANCIAL MATTERS.
The Currency Question ami )*> Sil.
ver Dollar—Cnliappy Lot of a
Luckless Editor—Making
an \ggr<‘s-ive Paper.
l! would seem at this time, tiiat while
so little is living said on the currency
question, and especially bv the men who
really control the currency, that a word
from me would not be out of place.
Too much talking has been done by
those only who have a theoretical knowl
edge of money and its eccentric lubits.
People with a mere smattering of knowl
edge regarding national currency have
been loquacious, while those who have
made the matter a study have been kept
in the background.
At this period in the history of our
country there seems to be a general strin
gency, and many arc in the stringency
business who were never that way before.
Everything seems to be demonetized.
The demonetization of groceries is doing
as much tow ard the general wiggly palsy
of t rade as anything 1 know Of.
But 1 may say, in alluding briefly to J
the silver dollar, that there are worso
calamities than the silver dollar. Other j
thing. may occur in our lives which, in j
the way of sadness and three-cornered
gloom, make the large, robust dollar ;
look like an old-fashioued half-dime. i
1 met a man the other day, who two
years ago was running a paper at Larva- i
bio’s Slough. H was then in his meri- ;
dianasa journalist, and his paper was
frequently quoted by such widely-read
publications as the Knights of Labor at
Work, a humorous semi-monthly journal.
He boldly assailed the silver dollar, and
with his trenchant pen he wrote such
burning words of denunciation that the
printer had to set them on iec before ho
could use the copy.
Last week I met him on a Atiiwaukeo
aud St. Paul trait). He was very thin it.
flesh, and the fire of defiance was no
longer in his eye. 1 asked him how he
came on with the paper tit Larraliie’s
Slough. He said it was no more.
“It started out,” said he, “in a fear
less way, but it was not sustained.”
He then paused in a low 7 tone of voice,
gulped, and proceeded:
“Folks told me when I began that l
ought to attack almost everything. Alake
the paper non-partisan but aggressive,
that was their idea. Sail into every
thing, and the paper would soon boa
power in the land. So I aggressed. !
“Friends came in very kindly and they
would neglect their own business in order
to tell me of corruption iu somebody else.
I* went on that way for some time in a
defiant mood, attacking anything that
happened to suggest itself.
“Finally I tnought I would attack the
silver dollar. I did so. I thought that
friends would come to me and praise me
for my manly words, and that T could af
ford to lose the friendship of the dollar
provided 1 could win friends.
| “In six months I took an unexpired
annual pass over our Larrabie Slough
i Narrow 7 Gague, or Orphan road, aud with
: nothing else but the clothes I wore, T told
| the plaintiff how to jerk the old AVash
i ington press and w ent away. The dear
j old Washington press that had more
than once squatted my words into the
: pure white page. The dear old towel on
which I had wiped my soiled
hands for years until it had almost
become a part of myself, the dark blue
j Gordon press w ith its large fly wheel and
i intermittent chattel mortgage, a press, to
j which 1 had contributed the first joint of
I my front finger; the editor’s chair; the
•samples of large business cards printed in
I green with an inflamed red border, which
show ed that w e could do colored work at
| Larrabie’s Slough just as well as they
| could in the large cities; the files ol' our
j paper; the large wilted potato that Air.
| Alonzo G. Pin khans, of Erin Croners,
| kindly laid on our table —all, all! had
! to go.
“I fled out into the great, hollow mock
j ing world of people who had requested
jme to aggress. They were people who
| had called my attention to various
j things which I ought to attack. I had
: attacked those things. I had also at
tacked the Larrabec Slough Narrow
j Guage railroad, but the manager did not
: see the attack, and so my pass was good.
“What could I do!
“I had attacked everything, and more
1 especially the silver dollar, and now I
was homeless. For fourteen weeks I
j rode up the narrow gauge road one day
• and back the next, subsisting solely on
the sample pecan meat that the newsboy
| puts iu each passenger's lap.
• Wou look incredulous, I see, but it is
I true.
“I feel differently toward the currency
now, and I wish I could undo what I
have done. Were I called upon again to
jerk the Archimedean lever I would not
; be so aggressive, especially as regards the
currency. AVhether it is inflated or not,
j silver dollars, paper certificates of depos
it or silver bullion, it does not matter to
me.
“I yearn for two or three adult dough
nuts and one of those thick, dappled
\ slabs of gingerbred or a slat of pie with
| gooseberries in it. I presume that I could
| w rite a scathing editorial on the abuses ol
| our currency yet, but I am not so much
in the scathe business as I used to be.
j ‘ T wish you would state, if you will,
through some great metropolitan journal,
that mj- views in relation to the silver
! coinage and the currency question have
i undergone a radical change, and that any
! plan whatever, by which to make the
American dollar less skittish, w ill meet
w ith mv hearty approval.
“If 1 have done anything at all through
my paper to injure or repress the flow of
our currency, and I fear I have, 1 now
take the occasion to cheerfully regret it.”
| He then wrung my hand and passed from
my sight. Bill Xue, in Boston GW*.
Wealth of Principal Nations.
The subjoined is the estimate given in
Mulhill’s “Dictionary of Statistics.” It
is only an approximation, of course, but
probably it is as near the correct truth a!
such approximations ever arc:
Argentine Republic §l,to'!.0O!),00J
Australia 4?9V).u0O,00l
Austria IS. 000.000.000
Belgium 4.0.10.000.00:.
Canada 3,250,000,001]
Denmark 1,830.000,00f
France 40)300,000,00£
Germany 31.tll5JZXt.00t
Greece 1,055.000,005
Great Britain and Ireland 43.1500,0; iOJXit
Holland 4.9:15,000.00C
Italy 12,755JJ00.C0t
Mexico 3.190,000,00?
Norway 1,410,000, OCj
Portugal 1885.000.0Gl
Spain 7,905,000 UOl
Sweden 3.475,000. not
fewitzerlani 1,020,000.00?
United States 47,475,000,00?
Baron Leon de Lenval. of Nice, ha ;
j offered a prize for the bert easily carried
instrument for the use of the deaf. I:
• toust be constructed on the principles o:
the microphone, and must be sent iu be
j fore the end of 138 7.
To eradicate dandruff, and keep the seal}:
moist and clean, lire Hall's Hair Renewer.
The lives of many children have been saved
ty the timely u-e of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral.
An Irtdmian wrote home to his friend*
over the briny that in this bless l and land
everybody is so honst, a reward has to
b • offered for theires.
I>o Noi Be Alarmed
) the raising ol blood from tlie tunes. It iv o-e
f the very earliest symptoms of consumption,
•tud only shows the healthy efforts of the sys
tem to throw off the scrofulous imparities'of
he blood which have resulted in ulceration of
!he lungs. Dr. Pierce's “Holden Medical l>is
■overy " is a positive remedy for consumption
and this stage. If taken faithfully, it will
‘•‘cause the blood, heal the ulcers in the iungs,
and build up and renovate the whale system,
I’oreks.—Anything in the nature of
ye will destroy the apple tree borer or
the young borers before they penetrate
the bark very far-
Ladies! Those dull, tired looks and feelings
speak volumes! Dr. Kilmer's Fkm at.k. Remedy
corrects a 111-on and it ions, re-, tores vigor and vitali
ty and brines hook youthful bloom ami beauty.
Price SI.GO-r bottles }s 7 .0 J.
Beware ot worthless imitations of it*, .tones
Red t'lover Tonic. The genuine cures hc:nt
rO he, piles, dyspepsia, ague, maini-ia. and is
perfect tonic and blood purifier. Price 5-5 < ent-
Chattanooga Saw Works, of Chattanooga,
Tenn., manufacture and sell all kinds of saws,
warranted first-class in every respect. They
repair all kinds ol saws griming thinner, re
lemperiug. hammering, etc. Write lor prices.
The use Of Ely's Cream Balm, a cure for Ca
tarrh, Hay; Fever ami Coldin the Head, is at
tended with no pain, annoyance or dread,
which can bb said of no other remedy. It is
not a liquid or a snuff, but is easdy applied
with ttic finger; It affords instant relief and
C’u-es where doctors have failed. All druggists
have it. Price oO cents.
I have been bothered with catarrh lor about
twenty ye ir- 'l could not tell how many differ
ent remedies 1 have tried, and none seemed
to reach my ease like Ely ’s Cream Balm, f
had lost my smell entirely for the last fifteen
years, and I had almost lost tny hearing. My
eyes were getting so dim 1 had to get someone
to thread my needle. Now 1 have my hearing
as well as I ever had, and 1 can see to thread
as fine a needle ns ever I did, and my smell is
partly restored, and it seems to be improv
ing all the time. I think there is nothing like
Ely’s Cream Bairn for Catarrh. Mrs. E. K.
urimes.o7 Valley St.,Rendrill, Perry Co..Ohio.
Foe dyspepsia, indiuotion, depression o.
spirits, general debility in their various forms,
also as a preventive against fever and ague and
other intermittent fevers,lhe “Ferro-Phosphor
ated Elixir of t'at isaya.” made by Caswell .Haz
ard & Cos., New York,and sold by all Druggists,
is the best tonic: and for patients recovering
from fever or other sickness it lias no equal.
Preyekt crooked boots and blistered heels
hy wenring Lyon's Patent Heel Stiffeners.
There is no disease so dangerous as the want
of common sense.
Tt was an old oriental doctrine that women
have no souls. More enlightened philosophy
concedes that they have purer, finer,
more exalted souls than men. But they arc
too often contained in feeble, suffering bodies,
which hamper and retard their full develop
ment. For all I hose painful ailments incident
to i he sex, Dr.Plercc’s “Favorite Prescription”
is the best specific in the world, and is sold un
der a positive guarantee that it will do all that
is claimed for it. Price reduced to one dollar.
By druggists.
The two ears of civilization— pion-ee r
tront-ier. PUttadelphia t Vr II.
Walking advertisements for Dr. Sage's Ca
ny.rh Remedy are the. thousands it has cured.
It is said I hat more money is needed t o pui
Bartholdi’s statue on her last legs.
A Positive (tienlleinnn.
Which is the most posil ive gentleman? Cer
tain. Taylor’s Cherokee Remedy of .Sweet
Gum and Mullein is certain to cure cough*,
colds and croup. It is pleasant and effective.
Instantly Relieved.
Mrs. Ann Laeour, of New Orleans, La., writes. "1
j have a sou who has been sick for two years -, he lias
teen attended by our leading physicians, but all to
no purpose. This morning he had his usual spell of
; coughing, and was so greatly prostrated In conse
quencc that death seemed imminent. We had In the
house a bottle of Dp.. Wm. llai.i.'s Balsam for rim
Lungs, purehased by my husband, wlio noticed your
| advertisement yesterday. We administered it and
; he was instantly relieved.”
i Best, easiest, to use and cheapest, l'i-o'-
I Remedy for Catarrh. By druggists. 50c.
WEBSTER
In various Styles of Binding, wit'- and
without Patent Index.
JUST ADDED
A NKW i>K 1 >?.-< .I N' 'I N
I GAZETTEER
OF THE WORLD, r
Containing over 25.000 Titles, describing ■■ ■
| Countries, Cities, Towns, and Natural Feat
ures of every- part of the Globe.
f’* Webster—it lias 118,000 Worth.
"V W-M B 3000 Kngravings, and ak
Biographical Dictionary.
fWTTTI .Standard in Gov’t Printing i db -.
1 Wa 32,000 copies in Public Schao'*.
Sale 20 to 1 of any other series
BEST Holiday Gift
B iv an invaluable companion in every School,
and at every Fireside.
S. A C. MF.RRIAM & CO.. Pub’rs. Springfield,Ms*.
TCI CfIDiDUV toarn hero and earn good pa*
CLCtMArni Situations fnrniahed. Writ#
VALENTINE! BROS • lit*. W
nr IP IN STAPLE GOODS Hirr
VJI ZIJI No jewelry receipts or trash; but goods FII f r
Oil* ill needed in every house, that for 15.45 111 Life
CASH, sent free on receipt of the addresses of as persons <lB
to 40 years old), and 29 cents to pay for this advertisement and
postage on goods. Certain satisfaction. Order now, as this
offer is limited. NIAGARA SUPPLY CO..
Drawer 168, BUFFALO, N. Y.
f=f WILSON’S
CHAMPION SPARK ARRESTER
Bent open dm light arrester in
the world. No mote gin houses
burned from engine sparks. Sold
on gun ranter. Write for < ircu
inr. T. T. WINDSOR A CO., Nos.
_ jit ta Wayne St...Vf Pledge ville, lia.
Salvo CORES DROITCEMSS
and Intemperance, oof instantly.
but effectually. The only scientific anti
<9 dote for the Alcohol Habit and the
only remedy that daree to send trial
bottles. Highly endorsed by the med
feat profession and prepared by welt-
Wtr. Known Lew York physicians. Send
• tamps for circular* and references.
Address “SALVO REMEDY,”
No, 2 Wot Bth Bt, New York
No flop* !o Cut Off Horses’ Manes, kk
Celebrated ‘ECLIP*K’ HALTER AIL
and BRIDLE Combined. !:a naot
be Slipped by any horse. Sample g#!-r IA,
Halter to any part of IT. s. free, on
receipt of (1. Sold bv all Saddlery . iR
Hardware and Harness Dealers
Special discount to the Trade, rJ
Send for Trice t.tr. AjoA ' \ I”
J. C. LIGHT HO l'fE. W* 7 J V*
Rochester, N. V. - . ■> *
CONSUMPTION.
I bare tt positive remedy for the above disease; by Its
of cases of the worst kimlandof long
etaodlng have been cured. I ncleeri w o strong is rny faith
In its efficacy. tiiKt T wii send TWO BOTTi.ES FREE
together with a\A F.L'ABLETRBATISB on this disease
io any sufferer. Glre e* press and F O addr'H
I)R T. A SLOCUM, itl PsarlSt . New Turk.
E CURED!!
f’urc r fatU in giveH
.* worpl ca**s. insures
where all others fail. >< ■
Pticc *Oets andH
a SaTR. tr. KKKE forH
4 an* Punt. Minn.fi
Ukßil.m SerTSILFStSP IlktAY.
A !ifsexperif-acA. *iri qvtci care*. T- a ..UCA
ages. Send fat K*U-d particular.. Adrfrra,,
Dr. WARD & CO.. LOnsiA.VA, MO.
•SM|Km - book worth S:\on I Miff"
BT O& L t Courtship, sent free I 11 MS
s““ ff a jp by the Union Rub. Cos WmKj * mm
B 3SBB ED Newark.N J Send atampsforpooffe.
o[ft reat English Goul and
PlCSli I illSi Rheumatic Remedy.
Oval Box, £|.UU| round, 30 cm.
M ■ to Soldiers It Hsir*. Sondstamp
rOnSifltlS ! r Circu lar*. COL. L. BlXOb
r Wlldlvltw HAM, At: y, Wiihington. D^O.
nnilS9a ii3hl! ' Quickly and Palmleca
-1 u\2 “ P diali ly cured at home. CorreipoDdence
18 ■ 3i 1 Ufa dfldted and fret trial of cure tea;
il a 9iJ isl honestfnveattgatora. TniHi'xiKj
w * * ■ KzatPT COJrexsY. Lafayette, lnd.
— ' r - r tilfiM Uli wnutrt nl' .;-y tal
54 /" /O f* n n k 7U \j WAelt tt'-m l. The m* POUMFL SLICKER i a pellet riiir.* '.-•, ,ilj
Efl 4uH r\ V44X Yk " 1 -caeratfcertitir.: *a<Jd>. Beware ofimiiicion*. Neca , :ir. without Ibe •‘Ftahl
LIST OF msF.ASF*
always ctrafle by Tsrso
MEXICAN
MUSTANG
LINIMENT.
OF IHMA> FLRSH. OF ANIMALS,
Rheumatism. hh-ratchca.
Burns and Scalds, Sores end Hall*.
Slings and Bites. Spavin, ( l ark*.
C uts and Bruises. Screw Worm, flnh (
Sprains A: Stitches, Foot Rot. Iloo' ill.
Contracted Muscies, Lameness,
Still Joints. S.viiiny, Konniic •ti.S
Backache. Sprains. Strain*.
Eruptions, Sore Feet,
Frost Bites, |St|fihess,
and .]1 external disease*, and every hurt or o tent.
1 or genera! use in family, stable and stock-yard. >i la
THE BEST OF ALL
LINIMENTS
m’kK M c !l
BINGHAMTON N.V
THE INVALIDS BENEFACTOR j
Discoverer of Dr. Kilmer’s
Complete Female Reme^
Ladies' Home Treat * -nr |
Special atul mieoific treatment fori
alt ( omplaint* and Disease* peculiar • o
Daughters, Wives and Mot hers.
!■<*Bins 3 bottle ~
.w Each kind is also sold separately
Female Remedy, ißlond and sy,t*m)st i
Aotumn*LeafKsl.,(lJf*iTnatin't aj ‘ ,
L A O A liolntment,••
the three in one Paekajp>| '■ yo.
Recovers the “run-down,” ix-d-ridden''
or “abandoned." ft Eliminate* Humors
mid Blood Impurities ihat < au--e Scvoi la,
< ’ancer. Tumor, pimple* and blotches.
The *ge for t'es.rii<i ani K\psm*s l„
Woman’s Health ami us. fultiewi aga.n r. -tornl
Dr. Kilmer treat* internal Tumor, rat ’”!'.
You can't afford to neglect esrlv •, m|4oni*
■ of inquiry promptly an,n --d .
■ Pr.Kilmer'a Female Dispcnw. . langhatntoß V v ■
I ''lnvalids' Guide lo Health" (sv nt /•', ,■ • 1
BV A 1.1. IMEt MilSTs.
A Skid Of Beauty <s a *oy roreisr,
DH. T. FFLIX GODBAUD’S
ORIENTAL CM OR MAGiCAL lEAUTIF^R
th teaxl harmful of all tlicSkin ms ' 6r-i : >oUl
will last six moiitlifi, usi ns? It da\ \ijwi Fondr^.Sub
tile remoTM superfluous nair without* in fury io tb>* skin
*ie. M. B. T. UOI RAI D, Holt Proy., AH Ht.. Nen VtH-h.
For BaJe by and Faitcy Gohln £) *jer? n tha
U. S., Canadax, Europe. iCßtwaie of haao imitations
SI,OOO Reward for arrest and proof of one Balling Mine.
Consumption Ccn Bo Cured
-HALLS
lungIBALSAM
('lire* fonuiniplliin, Cold*, Fneumonla, ft*-
llunun, 111 ourtital IMfftcullle*. ilrogrljUtß.
Honrnenea., Aathuia, t’rouu V\ hooping
Cough, and all Ittcease* ol the Breathing Or
gan a. It ■iiothea and lira.'e li e Vlembrnna t
the l.uag*, lallnmatl and poisoned by the dt*.
ease, and prevents the night sweat* and
tlglitncs* across the i'll si which nreomnnur
it. CnnKuiuptioß In not an Inrurntdc mafadv-
HA1.1.10 BAI.NAtI will cure you. er.vn
though p;e lessiatia! aid fnllw
Free Farms
The moat Wonderful Park f> America.
by prosperous minium an ! ni.ibufactur
• uptowns. Partner'* Puradint* crops
inmi I,u ml, subje:t to snO
Lauds for sal*' U) actual settlers at si.O) per Aero.
Long Time. Park Irrigated by Immense eanata Cheap
railroad lates. livery attention shown settlers. ?or
maps, pamphlets, etc., aldresi COI/)RAIX> LAND A
JX>AN CO.. Opera House Block Denver,Col. Box .**o.
H 6 TON
WAGON SCALES,
lm L.w, ftvol lu> X w
Pries li.t WMtlss tktf nrV
■■HHdebTlitate^9
Von sts allowed a free trial of thirty (lay* of tbs tut
of Dr. Dye’s Cslebrated Voltaic Belt with r.lectric 3u
pensory Appliances, fur the *pie<iy y- licf an t pea
maneru cure of Kerxxru* Debility, loss of Vital •> an 4
Manhood, and all kindred troubles, also for mnj
other dlseosM. Complete restoration to Bealth, f'ror
and Manhood guaranteed. So risk Is Incurred, ftluft
trated pamphlet tn sealed envelope matte*! free,by <id
dressing VOLTAIC BF.LTCO.. Marshall. Mich
3nThe A< roe contain, ] 14 tir,.T u Pflllftfl
TL all WITH MIJSIC, snd i> entirety Al | M |*\
A[_ different from sny other collectifltl. fteWMwJ
iAq ai*o 100 Songs of the Day .including ' 'Tilt
v y till Gloods 801 l By,” •• Spring Time and Boyle*
hare Come,” ‘ < limbing op de Golden .Stairs,'’
"Peek-a Boo!" "When Kotnr.* N’e,t
I* I'U Await My Love, ' etc. Both books, and rata,
lofoea of music, noveltie*, etc. free, on re<eipt of 15c.
N. 1. TRlFET.AtftWashhiftonSt.Boston,lfMg.
linDDUIIIC Chloral and
Rl Ulf ■ 111 11 C Opium Habit
KASXLV CURED; AD VICK FRKK.
OR. J. C. HOFFMAN, Jeflarsan, Witconsm.
. ••Vl AQENTS’ r “^ u,r '
g* . * , _ Bsst Detective Book, i
PSOPUSKhT IU.USTRATSD, and EAST 1 O REI I. f„ .... .
e*crts*l*rJrcu’ar,sp*ri.lUrmorya.:*ej.| r a,.rm.to-. .
A Sure. <i. V.' CARI.rrOW * CO.,PaMUS*r,,Kew V r|S
Cl FREE TO F A.M Fi... r. Wed Kncnniae (f tks
MMI Old Sn Tavm in Phi!a<l*'pl •* In **.bich tu* frat
iT N. Amc • rgSL./erd Ri.ii A
jgr ’rite! cf Vfaac?'i< Uo*i 4“d
/%\ ff>>dv w r.',*•. .. j>v. Alao ftitr of fir*’ .
/ A i;.a tp. * %| P.I ODJAO U t it.
biasaitK I'oLuafcera aud M' riv.t'irrri.’t 3 \ -York*
THURSTfIiTS STfIOTHPOWDEB
Keeping Teeth Perfect cud Gams Healthy.
Q A JT MTP C Obtained fecad stamp tor
r** ” ■ O Inventor.’ Outdo. J. Bt- t
H tusi Patent Lawyer Washington D C
PENNYROYAL PILLS
‘'CHICHESTER’S ENGLISH.”
Tile Original and Only tlenaine.
ftf. aodsleay* R.-;‘.lr>:- o' worthiciu. tKi'aUns,
LADIES. Ask T.,r Jtruggtst fee
Chlehcater’e tnfli.h a'jd .. odrr or in.. 1990 4
U u. for pardcjlar! tn by return mall,
NAME PAPER, t'btefaestcr Mtml.*l
liBlS Mfidleun SrjGsre, I’hllsda., Ps
ftld b 7 Dru;**tU everywhere. >. tor ’ Cblches.
ter’ LugUih” Benny royst Pills. Tibs u
Piso’s Remedy for Catarrli is the &&
9 Best, Easiest to Use, and Cheapest. Kb
Headardie, Hay Fever, <tr. .y) ceuti’ ■
I • N • 1 i litres,