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LONDON CITY.
Tinsel Splendor of the Lord
Mayor’s Position.
How tha Government of tVe Great Me-
tropDlis is Conducted.
A London letter to the New York
Commercial Advertiser unys: A greater
difference between the mode of election
and the functions of a lord mnyor of
London and a mayor of New York it
would bo difficult to conceive. In your
mayoralty your citizens vote direct for
the candidates for tho mayor’s office,
and, when elected, that functionary is
tho executive officer of the whole
city. Here things nro totally different.
Thcro is no popular election here,
and tho lord mnyor, when chosen merely
rules over a tiny, infinitesimal por.
tion of tho vast London of to-day, viz.:
the so-called “city” proper, an area ex
tending from tho Towor of London to
the Temple, and from llolborn to tho
river—a mere island in a constantly de
clining population. There nro somo 50,-
000 bona fide inhabitants of tho “city”
proper, and some 4,500,000 outside
who arc without any municipal institu
tions. It seems difficult to realize so ex
traordinary a condition of things, and
yet this is the stntc of London to-day.
Threatened men.it is said,live long; and
the sumo seems to bo true of threatened
institutions. For this little “city” cor
poration which controls vast wealth nnd
which arrogates to itself a position it is
no longer entitled to occupy bus been
threatened for somo time l»y radical on
slaughts, nnd yet it still lives and had
its annual gala dHy last Tuesday.
Nor Is the lord mayor selected by n
popular vote, for the city corporation is
perhaps tho closest nnd least populnr
body in tho country. A lord mayor is
each year selected by rotation from
among tho city aldermen who havo
served tho office of sheriff. Tho persons
who make the selection are the “livery
men” of tho various city guilds, who
meet for that purposo on December 20.
In past times thoso so-called livery men
were genuine traders carrying on busi
ness within tho city of London. To-duy
many of them havo no connection what
ever with tho city; tho livery companies
are now bodios of wealthy men, into
whoso ranks possession of money nnd
profession of tory politics are tho neces
sary conditions of ontrancc. Every al
derman is tho I ivory man of n guild, nnd
tho court of a Mermen have tho right to
grant powers to tho livery companies to
increase fchoir livery, i. c., to iucrcasu
the persons who can purchase tho legal
right to vote in tho election of city offi
cers nnd parliamentary representatives.
Thus the whole government nnd suffrage
of tho “city” is based on monoy, and a
more corrupt arrangement probably docs
not exist in tho world.
There nro twenty-six aldermen in the
“city,” each representing ono ward.
Borne of these wards are absurdly small,
one of them containing less than 300
constituents, so thut a lord mayor of
London may havo boon originally
elected by less than 150 votes as an al
derman. When in office the lord mayor
is a judge of tho central criminal court
(though he may be as ignorant of law
as a Hottentot of tho differential
calculus), a justice of the peace, und
chairman of the court of aldormcn, tho
court of common council and the court
of common hall. Ho is nlso a member of
the privy council, chief butler at a royal
coronation and dispenser-in-chief of
civic hospitality. When I add that it
has sometimes happened that a lord
mayor could not speak the English
language without some painful
errors common to cockncydom,
the reader will have a sense
of the charming incongruity of things.
A lord mayor has a chaplain provided
for him to look after his spiritual wel
fare, but with strict injunctions to avoid
mention of all ugly texts, such ns that
describing tho difficulty of rich men en
tering into the kingdom of heaven. Tho
lord mnyor is further allowed £10,000
($50,000) per annum for his ordinary
year’s expenses, the use of £40,000 worth
of city plate and a huge clumsy gilt
carriage, which is said to be constantly
needing large sums for repairs to prevent
it from falling in pieces. Tho lord may
or has robes nnd a civic chain, nnd the
aldermen and councillors havo robes
also. The common council is composed
of 200 persons. It elects most of the
officers of the city nnd has unlimited
control over the ensh.
A Numerical Error.
A beggar-woman to a gentleman;
“Take pity on me, dear sir; I am the
mother of twelve children.”
“Wlmt age is tho oldest?”
“Very nearly two, dear sir.”—2'id
Bide.
New York Doctors.
There arc at present, it is estimated,
almost 5,000 physicians in this city, or
one for every 300 of its inhabitants,
which is certainly a bountiful supply.
If tho satirical saw, “Tho more doctors
the moro illness,” bo true, New York
should be overrunning with patients.
But it is not; indeed, it is quite a health
ful town, which may account for the al
leged fact that the majority of our
doctors hardly earn a decent livelihood
by their practice, being often obliged to
depend on credit. Many aro constantly
forced out of their profession in order
to get a living; but their places arc
regularly and rapidly supplied. Nearly
3,000 make, it is said, from $1,500 to
$3,000 a year, and somo 1,500 make
from $3,000 to $5,000; only a few
hundreds reselling tho lost figures, and
then when they hsvo passed middlu age.
Forty or fifty perhaps have ineomes from
$30,000 upwards, and these nro so con
stantly hourd of that one might infer
that tho amount is rather the rule than
the raro exception. Moat of tho
physicians who nro pecuniarily pros-
perous arc what aro called faahionablo
physicians—that is, they nra in at
tendance on rich families of social
position. Not u few of these get $50,-
000 to $00,000 a year, and occasionally
a handsome present from a millionaire
whose life they have saved, though it
may not linvc been worth saving. I)r.
Jared Linsly, who was with old Cor
nelius Vanderbilt during his last illness,
received $35,000 for liis services, nnd
Dr. McLnne, who went nbroad witli Mr.
William II. Vanderbilt, towurds the
close of his life, und was called in uftor
tho rnilwny magnate had Ills Inst attack
of apoplexy, is understood to have re
ceived something like $50,000.—Hete
York Commercial.
Itognlnlng u Lost Memory.
The loss of memory in the aged is a
familiar example, Bays Dr. M. L. Hol
brook, and can only be accounted for by
a deterioration of tho bruin elements and
a diminution of blood supplied to thorn.
Ono of the worst features of such cases
is the fact thun an old person is not, for
n long time after decay has begun, aware
of it. I am now treuting a easo of loss
of memory in a person advanced in
years, who did not know that his memo
ry bad failed most remarkably till 1 told
him of it. Hu is making vigorous ciTort
to bring it back again, nnd witli partial
success.
Tile method pursued is to spend two
hours dntly, one in the morning nnd one
in the evening,in exorcising this faculty.
Thu patient is instructed to givo the
closest attention to nil that lie learns, so
that it shall be impressed on bis mind
clcnrly. He is asked to recall every
evening a 1 the facts and experiences of
tile day and ngnin tho next morning.
Every nanio heard Ib written down nnd
impressed on his mind clearly, and an
eifort made to recall it at intervals. Ten
names from public men are ordered to
be committed from memory every week.
A verse of poetry is to bo learned, also a
verse from the lliblc, daily. He is asked
to remember tbe number of the page iu
uny book where any interesting fact is
recorded. These und other methods are
slowly resuscitating a failing memory.—
Boltoa Herald.
(Jrowlh of the Uumun Heart.
Investigation shows that ^lio greatest
nnd most rapid growth of the human
heart takes place during tho first and
second yenrs of life, the second year
allowing its bulk to be exactly double
wlmt it originally was; bo.ween tho
second and seven til year it is again al
most doubled, a slower rate of growth
now settling in until the fifteenth year,
the augmentation of volume during the
intervening seven or eight yenrs being
only about two-thirds. In tho period of
mutiirity wbicli then approaches, the
growth of the heart again makes pro
gress, tile increase keeping puce with
the advance toward maturity of the
other portions of the system—thus, as
compared witli tho six: at the age of
fifteen, two-thirds have been added by
the ngc of twenty; following the latter
year, tho rate of development ngnin be
comes slower, but an increase in volume
is perceptible up to the fiftieth year.
The annual gain in bulk during that
period is supposed to be about .001 of a
cubic inch, nnd tho maximum volume
thus attained is estimated at from six
teen to seventeen cubic inches.
FRIUHTE’IED BY FUNK.
Tha Mjiorl... Main that Martial aa
Kasllab Pbralelaa.
Dr. W is not a timid inan, os his
friends well know. A doctor has many
strange experiences. Somo of his ex
periences were quite amusing, and wera
made especially so to others when re
lated by himself.
On one occasion when wo were riding
over tho Brook road, a romantic ana
lonely path threading tho banka of a
babbling stream, the Doctor pointed to
a decayed stump, out among tne woods,
and said:—
“You notice that old pine stump out
there I"
“Yes."
“Well, that gave rise to one of the
most perfect illusions I ever met with.
“I had a very rich palle it in the vil
lage beyond, whom 1 visited twice in
the ' twenty-four hours, end of course
the lost time had to be when I had gono
the rounds of m; other patients, nnd
that was generally very into at night,
for country doctor! have something to
do besides' writing out prescriptions.
“Ono night when I was driving along
pell mell through these woods, I no
ticed a men with a lighted cigar in hit
mouth, standing whero the stump is,
nnd supposing it was a workman on his
way home I said, ‘Good evening,’ and
rodo along. An hour after I came hack,
and to my surprise the man was still
there, with tho cigar in his mouth, and
to all appearances the same as I had left
him.
“As there lind been robberies and one :
or two fires in the neighborhood about j
> Hint time, which lind not been account- \
| od for, we were nil on the alert to dis-
! cover the transgressor. Tide was what
\ especially directed my attention to the
i circumstance of n man remaining in thnt
; lonesome place that length of time and
so l ite at night.
When I made tho trip in the morning
there was no one upon the road, and J
had quite forgotten the circumstance
when I approached the spot again in the
evening, until my attention was attrac
ted as it had been tho night before, by
a man with a lighted cigar in his mouth.
It was the same man evidently, nnd to
all appearances the same cigar, so I
reined in and, to gratify my curiosity
asked the stranger to rido. As thers
was no answer I rode on a little more
briskly, 1 am free to confoss, and when
I came back I kept my eye upon the
man pretty sharply until 1 was beyond
hia roach.
"By thii time I had made up my miDd
it was not wise to be riding' alone
through these woods at midnight with
such mute people abroad. So the next
night I took the precaution to take one
of my students with me and also a pis
tol.
“Sure enough the man was there be
fore us, his cigar blaring more brightly
than ever.
“ ‘Now for it,’ cried the student
‘Just cock your pistol and I will hail
him.’
“ ’Hallo there, my'friend I A nice lib
tie shower we’vo hud I Any moro rain
to night ?’
“Tho stranger apparently smoked,
but made no sign.
“ ‘I say, who lire you P
“No answer.
“By this time my own patience wai
fully exhausted, and, not relishing th«
young student's civility, I cried out|
“ ‘Look hero, stranger, you have been
prowling about here two or three night-,
and ns 1 havo business this way I have a
right to inquire into yours. You may
advance and explain; I have a pistol in
my hand.’
“The mysterious smoker took no no
lice of the insult. He wot os silent and
steadfast as tiefore.
“I then leaped from my wagon, de
termined to solve the mystery if I grap
pled the evil one himself.”
“Well, and what then t” I asked, im
patiently.
“What I had tnken for a man was
thnt pine stump nnd nothing more.”
“But the lighted cigar; what was
that ?”
“it was a bit of what the boys call
punk; that is, decayed wood, wtiich it
damp places or after rain, glows with a
bluish light owing to the phosporous it
contains. Every boy that is fnmiliar
with swamps is accustomed to the mys
teries of ‘punk wood.’”
A DESPERATE FIGIIT.
ft Is flCado st Nlchi Witli a !*•■>-
Cewler.
"When I was a boy,” raid Judge
Poland to a newspaper reporter, “the
woods in Vermont were mighty thick
and tho settlers were few. At that time
the woods were full of catamounts or
Inup-cerveir—‘loo sevee,’ the hunters
called them—and the farmers had great
to do to keep the tierce beasts from
carrying off their sheep and killing their
cattle. A loup-ccrvlcr is protty nearly
as big as a mastiff, as flcrco as a tiger,
and aa strong as a lion, and is altogether
about as uncomfortable a creature to
deal with as ever lived. My father had
with him on his farm then a man named
Jonas Shepherd, a fellow of prodigious
strength end such great courage that I
don't believe he ever knew the sensa
tion of fear. My father had not lost
much by the loup-cervicrs, because he
hid kept his stock securely closed in a
strong shed, which none of the prow
ling beasts had yet succeeded in break
ing into. The house stood on the edge
of the clearing, and back of it for miles
and miles there was nothing but the
mountains and woods. One night tha
family hod all gone to bed except Shep
herd, who sat up by tho big pine fire
•helling corn wltn a jack knife stuck in
a log of wood. All of a sudden ha
heard a crash from the cattle shed and a
big noise among tho cattle. Ho dashed
out in hia shirt-sleeves and found that
an enormous loup ccrvier. tho biggest of
his kind ever seen in tho country, had
broken in the roof of the shed anil was
in among the sheep.
“As soon si he heard Shepherd ap
proaching he jumped to the roof of the
shed and, crouching for n moment,
sprang through the air for tho intruder.
Shepherd jumped uside and the big eat
landed harmlessly on the ground. In
an instant he was up again and a furi
ous battle between the man and the
savago brute began. Shepherd had a
knife, and for a while he tried to make
it reach e vital spot, while the ‘ioo’
screamed and bit and tore its tremend-
oui claws through the man’s licsh. The
noise of tbe fight awakened the rest of
tha family and father, grabbing up a
E ine torch from the fire, ran out of the
ouse. He was just in time to see a
curious spectacle. Shepherd, without
a stitch of clothing on and covered from
head to foot with blood, was holding
the screaming, struggling ‘loo’ by tha
throat and heeli high above his I ead,
and running as fast as he could towards
the woods. We all dashed after him.
and were just in time to see the end of
tha contest. Shepherd ran into the
brook until he was in up to hit waist,
and then plunged the ferocious brute in
and out of sight. There was a tremend
ous struggle for a few minutes, during
which Shepherd's blood died the brook
red, and then everything was still.
Then Shepherd enme unit, dragging the
drowned body of the. T o’ after him.
We got him to bed os goon as we could
end did everything feasible to relieve
him, but it was moro limn three months
before be was able tso stir, and he never
quite recovered from his injuries. My
father said he counted moro than 300
distinct wounds on his body. Old
hunters said that if ho liad'nt had sense
enough to drown the brute he would
have been killed sure. The fight took
plare where one of the finest churchc*
in New England stands to-day.”
A Frugal Mind.
“Shall I vind do clock, fodder!” asked
Isaac Abrumstcin, as ho shut up for tile
night.
“No, Y'nwcob; peesness vas too pad.
ChooBt let it Bchtop, Yawcob, und ve’ll
save dc year tint tear on de vcels.”
Ex-Mayor latrobe. Unit'more. Met., says the
bast cough niotllcUe Is tied Star Cougu Cura.
Hr. Sa-nual K. Cox. D. D., or Washington. D.
0., after a careful analysis, pronounced It
purely rrgo-.able, and mott eioellsnt for
throat troublse. Prloo, twonty-Bv# cants •
bottle.
PasesnosB-What’s tho matter? Wo’ro
running a little too fast, ain’t we? Con
ductor-Yes, air: the fireman’. run ahead to
chase a cow off the track and tha engineer
crowded on a little more steam in order to
keep up with Mm.
Aa the greatest pe'n-c'Jre. St. .IiicobaCtl 1*
recommended by public mt n of America and
other countries, lion. Hllla Flint, hire Sena
tor o' the Dominion l’arliitiuout, Canada,
found It to act Like a charm.
utterly of the
know what Tin talking
r-, eli! Raid the p-taaen-
What atatlon did you act on at?"
••Ha Fkiale, Mr. la «llear’
A good story cornea from a boje' boarding
•ehool In “Jersey.” The diet wai monotonous
end constipating, and Ilia learned Principal
decided to introduce eome old-style physic In
back hia plate, ehouird to the pedagogue. “No
physic, air, in mine. My dad told me to use
nuthln’ but Dr. Puree's ‘Pleasant Purgative
Pellets.' aud they are doing their duty like a
oharml” The] ate anil-bilious, and purely
vegetable.
A l.iving Illustration.
“Yes,” said a passenger in a street
car, who was arguing with a friend,
“some men are born great, others
achieve greatness, and some—“just theu
a lurch of tho enr landed a fat woman iu
ltis lap—“and some” lie concluded,
havo greatucss thrust upou them.—
Life.
! Lost it. — David Sample, of Boston
: after working hard several vears, savod
: $1135 und decided to net married during j du0 I J r ,t o b '* n '-, n hrou«Tll
the holidays. So he put the money in a ; ganger W ho wa „ complaining
big pocketbook umt t.mt in the inside slow I'me. -‘an’J
pocket of his over-oat. and started out Jer. "i
to buy furniture for is new home. It
grew too warm for his overcoat and he
took.it off, first putting I he pocketbook
in the inside pocket of Ins under cost.
This pocket lind no bottom, and when
David went to look for the money it __ __
was not there. The uedding bn' beea | ?J«^hia«u^anOu.MD,
postponed.
Hs is rich whose income is moro than his
expenses; nnd he is poor whose expenses
exceed his income.—Bruyerc.
The Effects of Mental Exhnoetlon.
Many diseases, especially those of the ner
vous system, are tho products of daily renewed
mental exhaustion. Business avocations often
involve an amou it of mental wear «nd tear
very prejudicial to physical health, and the
professions, if arduously pursued, ore no less
destructive to brain and nerve tissue. It»one
of tho most important attributes of Hostetler •
Stomach Hitlers, that it compensates for this
undue loss of tissue, and that it imparts new
energy to the brain and nerves, lbo rapidity
with wich it renows weakened
and physical vitality is remarkable, and shows
that its invigorating properties aro of the
highest order. Besides inc J®^ 3in S -l _ *
stamina, and counteracting the effects of
mental exhaustion, this potential medicine
cures and prevents fovor and ague, tinned"
tUm, chronic dyspepda and
ney and uterine weakness and other com
plaints. Ph>slctana also commend it as a
medicated stimulant and temcay,
"Hellol" we heard one man say to another,
the other day. # ‘I didn’t know you at first,
why! you look ten years younger than you did
when I saw you last.*’ **I ftcl ten years
K ouncer," was thereply. **You know I used to
e under the weather ail the time, and gave un
expecting to be any better. The doi tor said I
had consumption. 1 was terribly weak, had
night-sweats, cough, no appetite, and lost
flesh. I saw I)r. Pierce’* ‘Golden Medical
Discovery’ advertised, aud thought it would
do no harm if it did no good. It has cured me.
I am a new man became 1 am a well one.”
OIL AS IT BUSS IN HUSSIi.
rtmlna Flawing at the Rat. sf Thai,
•and* ef Tail Daily.
Of tho five hundred petroleum well*
at Baku, Russia, tho majority aro situ
ated on the Balukhani Plateau, eight or
nine miles to the north of the town.
The latest “spouutcr’' of TagielFs is, how
ever, iu a different lornlity, being situ
ated on a promontory three miles to tho
south of Baku. Here Gospodln Tagieff
began boring about three years ago. Al
first tho oil was slow to come, unuat its
best had never yielded more than sixteen
thousand gallons a day. On the 27th
of September last, having touched oil
at seven hundred nnd fourteen feet, tho
well began to spout oil with extraordi
nary force. “From the town the foun
tain had the appearance of a colossal
pillar of emokc, from the crest of which
clouds of oil sand detached themselves
and floated away a great distance with
out touching tho ground. Owing to the
prevalence of southerly winds the oil
was blown in the direction of Builoff
Point, covering hill nnd dale with sand
nnd petroleum nnd drenching the houses
of Bailoff, a mile and a half away.
Nothing could bo clone to stop the out
flow.” It seems that the whole district
was covered with oil, the outflow being
at the rate of thousunds of tuns a day,
which filled up cavities, formed a lake,
and on the fifth day began to escape
iuto the sea. The square in front of the
town hall of Baku was drenched with
petroleum. On the eighth day the out
flow retched the highest ever known—
a rate of eleven thousand tuns, or two
million seven hundred and fifty thousand
gallons a day “Thus,” says Mr. Mar
vin, “from a single orifice, ten inches
wide, there spouted daily more oil than
was being produced throughout the
whole world, including therein the
twenty-five thousand wells of America,
the thousands of wells in Galicia, Itou-
manla, Burmnh, and other countries, and
the shale oil distilleries of Scotland and
New South Wales.” By the fiftieth day
those in charge had got t!ic outflow so
far under control as to restrict it to two
hundred and fifty thousand gallons A
dnv. It was certainly a misfortune that
of the ten million gallons of oil ejected
from Tagieff’s well, most of it was at
first lost for want of storage accomoda
tion. — Chambers' Journal. )
Hew Wane* Weald
Were women allowed to vote, every on* In
tha land who bos used Dr. Pierce s Favorite 1
Prescription” would vote it to be an unfailing
remedy for ths diseases peculiar to her sax.
By druggists.
Motto for a corset factory-sWo have come
If Saffferero Oen Cgnsxmptlga,
Scrofula, Brorn hltts and General Debility will
try Scorr’s Kmllhon of Co A Liver Oil with
Hypophosphitwi, they will find immediate re
lief and permanent benalt. The Medical Pro
fession universally declare it a remedy of tho
greatest raluo aud very i*alatable. Read: ”1
have used Scott’s Emulsion in several cases of
Bciofulaand Debility in children. Results most
gratifying. My little patients take It with
pleasure.”—W. ▲. IIulbkht, M. D* Salis
bury, 111.
Ilf another column of this iasuewill to found
An entirely new aud novel specimen of attrac
tive advertising. It is ono of tl.e neate*t ever
placed in our paper, and weth nk our readers'
will be well, repaid for examining the bup-
You cam get a $1 Family Story Paper ono
year, postage raid, for $1.50. .Sample copy
ire-. Address Tux Chicago Leduer, Chi
cago, 111.
Daughters, Wives and Mothers.
Send for Pamphlet on Female Diseases, free,
securely sealed. Dr. J. B. Marchisi. Utloa, N.Y
When love is blind, marriage is a successful
If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp
son s Lye-water. Druggists sell at 25c per bottle.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Is a peculiar medicine. It Is carefully prepared
from Sarsaparilla, Dandelion. Mandrake, Dock.
PIpelsMwa, Juniper Berries, and other well known
and valuable vegetable remedies, by a peculiar com*
Mnatlon. proportion and prooesa, giving to Ilood'g
Sarsaparilla curative power not possessed by other
medicine*.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Is the best blood purlfler before the public. II
eradicates every Impurity and cure* Scrofula, Ball
Rheum, holts, Pimple*, alt Humors. Dyspepsia, BQ-
louanesa, Kick Headache, lndUest.cn, General De
bility. Catarrh, Rheumatism, Kidney and Liver com-
plaints, overcome* that tired feeling, creates aa ap>
petite nnd buUd* up the system.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Has met peculiar and unparalleled *u ofm at boms.
Bach h&* become its popularity In L iwell, Maas.*
where it Is tuade, that whole neighborhoods are
taking It at the same time. Lowell druggists ssll
more of Hood'* Kurfaparlllu than of all other Sarsa
parilla* or blfo 1 purifier*. #t ; six for $3. Bold by
druggists. Prepared only by C. L HOOD A CO.
Apothecaries, Lowell, Maas.
IOO Poses One Dollar
SOUTHERN SEED for SOUTHERN SOIL
Being desirous of having some of our seed plant
ed in every garden in the South, und knowing,
as we do. there arc no purer or better stocks of
fered in tnc United States than ours, if you will
send us fl.bO we will send to any address thirty
paper* of our regular site packets of Garden Seed
(your own selection) aud a quarter pound of Prido
of Georgia Melon Seed. Southern Seed Com
pany, Seed Growers, MhOOn, OA. Send for our
price list of all varieties of field and garden seed.
W E
if pro
WANT YOU! “TSrSXS
profitable employment to represent ns la every
county. Salary $76 per month aad evpensee, er *
commission on sales If preferred. Goods eSaptSa
Every one buys. Outfit and particulars Free.
STANDARD BILVKUWARE CO., BOSTON,
BMDEH SEEDS -ll-gp
Francis Brill. Hempstead, Lokq Island, N. Y.
Can get the nnvt Practical Business Edu-
H47 oati'»n at Goldeinitlt’e School ol'Hag-
~y Incas,H&Hb Broad_St.Atlanta,Ga. Bend
“flS Dir Circular* A Specimen ot Penmanship.
AA Flat top No. 7 Cook Stove for $10.00
ww with fixtures. Sand for c&talogun. A.P.
Stewart A Uo..tP Whitehall St.. Atlanta, Qa.
t* S9 * day. samples worth |L*) FA1B
Liues not uuder tue horse’s feet. Address
Urewbtkh’sSafktv Ruin Holdkb, Holl y.Mluh
$15.
$5
Pensions
to Soldiers ft Heirs. Send stamp
for circular*. COL. L. BING
HAM, A tt’y, Washington, D. a
OPIUM
Habit Cured. Trcnttcentnenton trial.
Humane Remedy Co., LaFayetto, Ind.