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A Mongolian Lefts!.
Those interested hi folk lore may per
haps be glad to read the following lo
gend as to the origin of the Knssians
found by Col. Prjevalsky to be current
turning the Mongol inhabitants of Zaidan,
and published in the Human Inealide:
“In former times there lived in a cave,
far away lrom all people, a good hermit
lams, or priest, who passed his life in
preying. A pair of nomads, consisting
of an aged mother and her daughter,
happened to go that way, and the
daughter while tending cattle came upon
the cave of the holy lama, who was at
that time ill. Tho compassionate maiden :
offered him some some sour milk, but he
did not like to taste it. At last he gave
way to her entreaties and took the sour
milk every day until he got well,
Eventually, out of gratitude for the euro,
the lama married the maiden.
“As soon as the czar of that country
beard of this he sent his troops to kill
the priest who bad so flagrantly broken
his vows and committed the sin of mar
riage. When the troops approached the
lama gathered a bunch of reeds and stuck
them in the ground round his tent, and
then by force of prayer caused them to
be all turned into soldiers, who defeated
the troops of the czar. The latter sent
a second and a third army, but both
were beaten, as the lama continued to
pray and turn into more fighting men
the reeds broken off by his first created
defenders, so that the holy lama soon
bad a great number of troops. After the
defeat of his third army the czar left the
lama alone in peace, but the latter did
not wish to live any longer on the earth,
The lama left his wife to rule the people
created from tho reeds, and from those
arose the Bussiiins. They have white
bodies and their hair is often fair, be¬
cause the stems of the reeds were of a
yellowish color and the tops somewhat
darker London Times.
A Land Flowing w,lh Wine and the People
all Drunkards.
Among tho new missionary stations
•established by the American board is
that of Inhambanc, on the cast coast of
Africa, about 200 miles northeast of
Dolagoa hay. Tho missionary at this
station, tho Rev. Dr. Richards, lately
made an inland tour of 150 miles from
the coast, to see what he could see, and
ia a recent number of tho Missionary
Herald is given a very interesting ac¬
count of this journey, from which we
abstract the following:
On the third day out tho explorers
came upon the Amakwakvva tribe, of
whom Mr. Richards says: “They havo
no guardians at nil. They are so fre¬
quently robbed by Umzila’s impis (sol¬
diers) that they have become quite dis¬
couraged. Another reason is that tho
native fruit is capable of sustaining life,
and is abundunt; and, again, the
palm wine flows freely nil over the
country. This palm tree is usually four
or tivo feet high, seldom ten feet. It
manifests little life, ®>avc the top, where
a few leaves appear, looking like a
flower pot on a stump. These leaves nre
all cut off, and from tho cut each tree
yields daily about a pint of delicious
juice, but highly iutoxicating when al¬
lowed to stand for a few hours. There
seems to bo no limit to these trees, and
we were surrounded on every hand by
drunken men and women. Even little
children were staggering about ns in
gloriotisly us their parents. It was ilitli
cult to avoid trouble with theso people,
yet our guns wore respected, and a ball
fired carelessly at a near treo would
produce quiet for half hour. '
nn They
were coarse, rough drunken fellows,
often plundering, often plundered, and
accustomed to ijuurrcls and tights not ul-;
together bloodless. One could scarco
expect to find pleasure in passing among
them.
Tho Queer Things a Naturalist Ate.
One of the most curious traits about
him was his complete intlilTerenco to the
disgusting side of his experiments in the
uses of animal life. Thus, when the pan¬
ther in the Surrey Zoological gardens
died, he insisted on havingit disinterred,
that he might cook a panther chop and
taste it, which he did, with the dry re¬ i
mark that “it was not very good.” And
he seldom lost an opportunity of trying
a new food, however disgusting some
might have thought it. A friend who
found him eating a piece of dead kelt
(salmon at the time of the year when
salmon are unfit to be eaten) asked him
how he could taste anything so abomi¬
nably nasty; to which be replied, “It is
nasty enough, but how can I say so un¬
less I have tried it?”
Again and again lie records hew much
the worse he felt for some of these expe¬
riments; how the lump-fish soup, which !
was “something like turtle,” made him
“rather seedy” the next day; how the
horse flesh banquet resulted in a fit ol
bad indigestion; now he boiled elephant
. trunk for many days without producing
any particular result on tho hardness of
the texture; and so forth. With one
exception—that of an oyster the size of
a cheese plate —he was no more discour¬
aged from making experiments on his
own stomach bv nnv sense of disgust!
than he was discouraged by his dislike i
of cold and physical illness from ventur¬
ing into freezing water in search of sal¬
mon eggs -a pursuit which seems to
have cost him his life .—London Spectator.
The railroads in Pennsylvania cod
$471, 103,“12.
Perslan Punishment.
The £il-i-Sultan at Ispahan and ths
late Ilissam-us-Sultan at Meshed have
been distinguished for the severity of
Iheir punishments. The most common
of the various punishments in Persia is
'that of “the sticks.” Persians frequently
menace disobedient slaves with “the
sticks.” The offender is thrown on his
back upon the ground,-his bare feet are
pasted through leathern loops attached
to six-feet beam of wood, which is
twisted until the loops are painfully
tight about his ankles, and is held in the
strong grasp of two mejn, so that by no
writhing nor efforts can he rise or re¬
move his feet. The sticks are generally
light quarter-inch grepn rods four or five
feet in length,, and if sentenced to “fifty
sticks,” twenty-five are laid on each
side of him upon the ground. Twoexe
cutioners then break stick after stick by
beating them upon tho soles of his feet,
with horrible result, of which a month's
lameness is likely to be tho painful con
sequence. Both these governors are
said to have adopted the same punish
ment for the suppression of highway
robbery—they ouilt the caDtured robbers
into pillars of masonry. The Koran rec
ommends the cutting off a hand as the
punishment lor theft, and there are men'
in Persia who carry about evi
dence that this cruel punishment
jg sometimes practiced. A Persian
governor is alleged to have been success
ful in enforcing taxation by a practice of
filling the wide trousers of recalcitrant
subjects with freezing snow. Crimes of
robbery and violence are more frequent
in the south than in the north of Persia.
Some ascribe this to the large nomad
population, which, according to the sea¬
son, moves from the shores of the gulf
toward or from Ispahan. Everywhere
in Persia it is the habit of wayfarers to
gather together for mutual protection.
Peasants passing from town to town
with, perhaps, a bag of silver in their
pockets, feel happy if they can join some
caravan which includes armed men, and
especially safe if they are in the caravan
of a European. The most common form
of execution is to cut the throats of
criminals, and to leave their bodies lying
in the public square. The bowstring is
occasionally used by skilful “ferashes,”
two of whom twist tho rope round tho
neck of the criminal and kill him by
strangulation with awful rapidity. If a
European is injured, one difficulty at¬
tending complaint is that the Persian
government is so easily roused to indis¬
criminate and wholesome vengganeb
upon its miserable subjects. There will
certainly be some victims for the knife
or the string or the living death at the
hands of the executioners; the main
evidence may bo that the prisoners were
taken near the spot. In Persia there is
but the feeblest and the faintest security
for the adminstration of justice.— Lon¬
don Graphic.
Obeying Orders.
A friend sends us a bit of pleasantry at
the expense of the gentlemen who served
on Governor Cleveland’s stall in the sum
mer of 1883. It has been in print be
fore, but will bear repetition. When
Governor Cleveland visited the State
Camp at Newburg in 1883, he was at
tended by his staff in full rig. It was one
of the few opportunities the governor’s
military family had enjoyed of ap
peating together in public in full uni¬
form, and they presented a very hand*
some and oven brilliant appear,
ance. The governor led the way
through the private entrance to the
camp, closely followed by his secretary,
Colonel Lamont. To tho astonishment of
the staff the gate was then quickly
closed and locked. As may be imagined
disgust succeeded, when in reply to vig¬
orous remonstrances the gate keeper
blandly remarked: “It’s accordin’ to
orders, gentlemen. This is the gover¬
nor’s entrance. The band goet in at the
other gate !"—Buffalo Commercial Adver¬
tiser.
Fought to the Last.
A lad of seventeen, who was with tho
Egyptian army under Ilioks PttRha, was
an eye-witness of his death, and gives
this account: Ilioks Pasha and the very
few English officers left with him, seeing
all hope of restoring order gone, spurred
their horses and sprang out of the con¬
fused mass of wounded,dead and dying.
These officers fired their revolvers, clear
ing a space for themselves, till all their
ammunition was expended. They killed
many. They had ^ot clear outside.
They then took ,o their swords and
fought till they fell. Hicks Pasha alone
remained. He was a torror to tho Arabs.
They said he never struck a man with
his sword without killing him. They
namcd b5m Aboul Dcraa 1)ou <? al > the
hcavy armed (or thick or brawny) ‘ He
ka l >t tbom al1 at ba v ” but he was struck
-
on the wrist with a sword and he dropped
b * s own ’ tbcn
The signal officer on the summit of
Pike’s Peak says the highest velocity of
the wind ever recorded there was 110
m *' es P tr hour, when the instruments
broke and cord ' vond 1, ying down
the mouutain.
The number of plants used by man is
stated to exceed 3,000. Of these about
(100 are used as food, 1,140 in medicine,
and about 350 are employed in the vari¬
ous industries.
FOB FEMININE READERS.
Female Gymnast*.
Every female gymnast, by the way, is
careful of her appearance. They all hate
matinees, because itt the ■Wolf daylight, they
say, ficial they light. cahdpt look as as by arti¬
The remuneration these per¬
formers receive The best varies frbm $5d to $200
a the weeki few, 01 them, and of course
can command the latter sum.
But it must be remembered that lor sev¬
eral months in the year they are idle.
Many, also, have to support a mother, or
younger brothers and sisters. The latter
is the case with one well-known gym¬
nast, who is the niece of a United States
Senator. Her father in his later days
was financially left unfortunate, and, dying
poor, for by his a boy and girl to be provided
her eldest daughter. Her uncle
told she was disgracing her family
by becoming a circus performer, but She she
did not regard it in the same light.
said she was able to take care Of herself,
the brother remuneration and was good, and her
sister had to be supported.—
Chicago Tribune.
1,ladle*' Wearing Trouser*.
Gradually the ladles are coming to
wear the trousers. Says a Washington
letter to the Baltimore American:
The increasing popularity of horse¬
back riding among peopl e of all classes
in Washington, emphasizes a fact that
seems rather surprising to some of the
readers of this correspondence, that a
great many Washington ladies wear
trousers, and it has been been mischiev¬
ously the remarked in certain of quarters that
novel experience wearing pants
has gone a great way toward inducing
some rather timid ladies to under¬
take the task of learning to ride. The
best made riding by tailors habits, here as elsewhere, are
who tnake this line of
business of their a specialty, And back who have in
some wooden horse, mysterious the parlors a
on which ladies sit
while their cloth skirts are draped to hang
well over the light-fitting pants. “Of
course,” said one of these tailors re¬
cently, “of course ladies wear pants
with their riding habits. They wear
them under their riding skirts. This lias
been the custom for some time. They
wear their skirts shorter than formerly,
just so os to touch the ground when
they stand. Then they wear pants un¬
derneath, nothing else; no skirts; Wash¬
ington is very like Paris. Tho ladies
have good taste. I could name lots of
ladles—I don’t know how many—who
come in and have their measures taken,
just as graciously as men would, and
they are much easier to fit and pleasanter
to serve than men. And the trying on
of garments? We have parlors and ihaids
in attendance. They retire to a parlor
and put on the garment, which is basted
together, and when they get it on I am
sent for and go in and fit it, taking it in
here, it marking it for alteration, and let¬
ting I retire, out there. When I have finished
and the lady again changes her
garment. This is the custom altogether
in Paris, and is very rapidly becoming so
here.” The average Washington prico
of a lady’s riding habit is about $100,
Fashion Note*.
Chenille fringes remain popular.
Silk Japanese lanterns are used as lamp
shades.
Plush capes have the high collars lined
with velvet.
Gray woolen dresses are trimmed with
garnet velvet.
Embroidered mull is used for bonnets
to accompany a light summer costume.
Seersucker makes useful and comfort¬
able every-day dresses for the country.
Canvas gauze ribbons with Byzantine
designs ties. outlined with gold are novel¬
Indian fabrics with fancy satin stripes
are used for hat trimmings, with good
effect.
Jetted grenadines in association with
surah or silk make handsome summer
dressos.
Crush roses ornamented with tiny iri
descent beetles are much used on summer
bonnets.
Printed gauzes with many tints nnd
gilt arc very effective scarfs for chil¬
dren’s hats.
Black satins of rich quality have bro¬
caded designs outlined in gold and gold
colored silks.
Among the flowers mostly favored for
millinery are deep red poppies, pansies,
foxgloves in a pinkish mauve shade that
seems somewhat unusual to them, jon¬
quils, marigolds, sweet williams, dande¬
lions, daisies, buttercups, etc.
Whito, dove colored, cream colored,
navy blue and russet cloth jnckets will
be worn over thin dresses by young
ladies. They are trimmed witli basket
braid, are double breasted and loose in
front, nnd are close fitting in the back.
Mourning parasols are shown in plain
white satteeu with fly fringe, or the
canopy consists of a succession of rows
of grass fringe in black or white. Plain
surah parasols, with black gros grain
bows placed on the top aud handle, are
also carried.
A pretty way of making up the fig¬
ured challies or delaines is in polonaise
fashion, opening at the side and falling lons£
over a breadth of lace, plaited in
straight folds from the waist, and hav¬
ing revers, collar and cuffs of velvet of
the color of the deepest figure.
Ribbons are very extensively used in
all delicate shades, and in widths run¬
ning from number twelve to forty. Wide
sash ribbons are used, but they are less
graceful and pretty than surah fringed
and knotted at the ends. If the wearer
chooses, she may, instead ot fringing the
ends of the sash, trim them with deep
lace or gold embroidery.
Kangaroo leather is the toughest
leather known, but not much used.
A New Orleans paper refers editorially
to the wonderful restoration to health of
Mr. T. Posey, druggist, 225 Canal street,
that city, who some time ago was pros¬
trated by an excrutiating attack of
sciatica. After much suffering his wife
promptly appljed St. and Jacobs Oil, which cured him
entirely.
The supreme court of Ohio has decided
that all taxes paid by saloon-keepers un¬
der the Scott law, which has been do*
dared unconstitutional, shall remain in
the different county treasuries.
“Oh, I»r> HU ’Im Again!”
In the early days of Methodism in Scot¬
land. a certain congregation, where there
was bttt one rich man, desired to build a new
cbApel. A chtirch meeting Was held. The
,
Old rich Scotchman rose and said: “Breth¬
ren, We dinna need a new chapel; I’ll give £3
JtLt theri a bit of blaster fallirig from the
ceiling hit him on the head. .
Looking up and seeing how bad it was, hd
said: •‘Brethren, its worse than I thoucht;
111 make it 50 pun’.”
“Oh, back Lord,” exclaimed a devoted brother
on a seat, “hit ’im again !”•
There are many human tabernacles which
are in sore need of radical building over, but
we putter and fuss and repefir Ip spots with¬
out satisfactory personally results. It is only vit/eri Wei
are alarmed at the real danger,
that thing. we act Then independently, it is and do the right
that we most keenly re¬
gret because we did not sooner use our judg¬
ment, follow the advice bom of the experi
enoe of others and jump away from our
perils. Thousands of who will read this
paragraph in persons abject misery
they might are be jtt satisfactory to-day condition, when
ft
They ate weak, lifeless, full of odd aches and
pains, and every year they know they are
getting worse, even though the best doctors
are patching aches and them pains in is spots. the kidneys The origin of
these and liver,
and if they would build these all over new
with Warner’s safe cure, as millions have
done, and cease investing their money in
miserab'y unsuccessful and patchwork, they
wonld be well happy and would bless the
day when the Lord “hit ’em” and indicated
the common-sonse course for them to pursue
—London Press.
Women Cashiers.
Tho movement in favor of employing
women in all kinds of work that was'for¬
merly done earned fcv men only is one that
should be on with caution, for
women and girls have sometimes been
put into situations for Which their sex is
unfit and the resiilt has been a reaction
against their employment in capacities
where they are really useful But of all
the posts as to which women’s aptitudes
are the least open to question that of
cashier must be cited first. Women are
excellent money keepers. While male
cashiers form n the grievously prisoners brought large per¬
centage among embezzlement, to
trial for women and girls,
being seldom exposed to the same temp¬
tations as men in the matter of dissipa¬
tion, betting, gambling known or speculation,
have very rarely been to misap¬
propriate moneys entrusted to them. An
honest woman is very henest; “an honest
man is said, too often,” as who Lord has Palmerston
bitterly tempted.” “ one applied never been
A man once loan
Italian banker for a cashiership, and was
asked to state his qualifications.
“ I have been ten years in prison,” he
said, “and so Bhall not mind being locked
up in a room by myself and having my
pockets in.” searched when I go out and
come
Tho banker admired his impudence,
took him at his word and used to say
that lie made a good cashier. We are
not affirming that antecedents like this
rogue’s are required to fit a man for a
post of trust; bnt we do maintain that
it is very difficult to find a thoroughly
trustworthy male cashier even among
applicants provided with a mass of tes¬
timonials, whereas careful, honest and
well educated women, in whom full con¬
fidence can be placed, exist in great
numbers.
Paper Counterpanes.
A paper making firm has been turn¬
ing out counterpanes and pillow-cases of
paper. No. 1 manilla paper is used, two
large sheets being held together by a
slender twine at intervals of three or
four inches. Tho twine is gummed, so
as to hold the sheets firmly together
where it lies. A hem is placed on the
counterpane to keep it from tearing; the
safety edge is composed of twine. Or¬
namental designs are stamped on the
outer surface of the covers and cnseB,
giving them When a neat, attractiv • appear¬
ance. these counterpanes and
they pillow-cases become wrinkled from us?,
hot flat can iron. easily be smoothed out with a
The counterpanes can be
left on the bed when it is occupied, and
in cold weather will be found a warm
covering, heat. the paper preventing the es¬
cape of The new paper bed-cloth¬
ing is seventy-five cents per set.
The Pensacola Commercial says the
moss crop of Florida is worth more Ilian
the cotton, and can be put on the mar¬
ket at less expense. The demand ex*
ceeds the supply, and there is not a
county in the state in which this product
is not going to waste.
The purest, Bwcetest and best Cod Lrver Oil
in the world, manufactured from fresh, healthy
livers, and upon the seashore. It is absolutely pure
sweet. Patients who have once taken it pre¬
fer it to all others. Physicians have decided it
superior Caswell, to any of the other oils in market. Mado
by Hazard A Co., New York.
Small and steady gains give competency with
tranquility of mind.
Chsppe 1 hands, face pimple, and rongh skin
cured i>y using Juniper Tar Soap, m«d» by Cu
well. Hazard & Co.. New York.
remember Charity:—A Hervice that the receiver should
and the giver forget.
Ely’s Cream Balm was recommended to me
Fever. by ray druggists Have been as using a preventive it directed to Hay
the ilth ns since
of August, and have found it a speci¬
fic for that much dreaded und loathsome dis¬
ease. For ten years or more 1 have been a
great sufferer each year, from August 9th
till Irost, and havo tried many alleged reme
dies for its cure, but Ely’s Cream Balm is the
only preventive 1 have ever found. Hay
Fever sufferers ought to know of its efficacy.
Frank B. Ainsworth,
Of F. B. Ainsworth & Co., Publishers,
I have been afflicted with Indianopolis, Hay- Fever Ind.
for
seven entirely. years—Ely’s H. D. Cream Balm cured me
& Caluhan, Baggage Master.
I. St. L. R. R., Torre Haute, Ind.
Good company and good conversation are the
very sinews of virtue.
_
An Only Daugbter Cured uf Conaumptl**.
When death a as hourly expected from Con¬ Dr.
sumption, all remedies having failed and
H. James was experimenting, he a'videi! tally
made a preparation of Indian Kemp, this which
cured his only child, anil now givas recipe
on receipt ot stamps to pay expenses. the Hemp
also cure* night sweats, nausea at stom¬
ach, and will break a fresh cold In 24 hoars.
Address Craddock & Co., 1081 Race street,
Philadelphia, Pa., naming this paper.
When you retire to bed, think over what you
have been doing through the day.
Important*
wmreaaMn.ojcid'ftS^MUTia^bTrZ'aacf'rto^at Union Hotel, opposite Grand Central depot. tlraBramcl
600 elegant rooms, fitted up at a cost of one million
dollars, Restaurant Itl and upward per day. with Kuropoan plan. Ele
vttor. end elevated supplied railroads the Ml best. Horse cars,
itsgeft live better for less to th» depots. Grand Families
can then other first-clan*, moner at hotel in Unl« M
Hotel at *nv the citr.
Always to speak the truth. Make few promises
Live up your engagements.
Red Star
** TRADER*#*/*AARIC x—
<—■
OUGHfURE
-S^Sksc:
HAY-FEVER
ten heard drearft Ifolrtl
spoken of in the higtidfli
terms, did not take much
stock in it because of the
many quack medicines. A Polo
friend persuaded me to try M
the Balm, and tfith wonder¬
ful success—3\ S', ti-titii;
Syracuse, N. Y.
Cream Balm
has (rained wherever an enviable repu¬
tation known, dis
placing all other prepara- ■■■■*-* r 1
tions. A particle is applied II HAY A If PP1IPR FEVER
n ° ”
TEURSTOR’S K.T00TH POWDER
Keepin g TSotli Perfect and G*m* Health y.
We Want 5,000 ffiore Boo* Agent* to Sell
The Personal History of
40,00000piesAlready Sold,
rivfftff The bock embrace* the General'■ complete ,«rtire and ytft<Ml reliable hist ffttttt*, lad
privMff career, and iff tho moet atj of him
Unt A large handsome octavo volume, superbly fllttstrated
'fie full went one agentin and every SPECIAL Grand Army TERMS Poet TO aod AG In ENTS, every township. areoef Bend
fur particulars bv WcU. for outfit. [Mention thle or secure
at AMERICAN onoe 'ending PUBLISHING CO., paper Hartford J Address,
Bo»lou» Chicago, Cincinnati, or St# JLouft*
Rest for the Weary!
Health for the Sick!
Men and women are often worn down in mind
and body by tho labors and cares of life. Their
nerves giro way under the severe pressure, and
the whole system is involved as a consequence.
It is then that
Pemberton’s French Wine Coca
acts as a direct means of restoration, giving per¬
fect health to mind and body, dissipating every
feeling of depression and lassitude, and impart¬
ing calmness, energy and happiness.
Pemberton’s French Wine Coca
IS THE OKEAT NERVE RESTORER AND JNVIOORA
tor. Gives health to the nerves and the entire
system is restored, for the nerves are tho life of
man. If they are deranged, all else will be, if
liqplthy then, health to mind and body follows.
Pemberton's French Wine Coca
acts specifically upon tho nerves, the muscles
and the whole human organism. In every bot¬
tle there is health and rest and happiness.
For further particulars, send for book on Coca.
J. S. PEMBERTON & CO.,
Sole Proprietors and Manufacturers,
ATLANTA. GA.
T
Indige s ti on Cured,
I suffered for more than five years with Indigestion,
scarcely ach. I declined able to retain flesh, the simplest suffered food all on the my stom¬ usual
In and
depression last, falling attendant And relief upon this anything terrible dlsej else,
to in
menced the use of Swift’s Specific, The m
toned and up the stomach, strengthened the and dlgei
gans, soon all that burning ceased,
retain food without difficulty. Now my hi
(rood, digest a ad can eat anything in the shape of fo____
it without difficulty. JAMIES Take the prescribed dos
after For sale eating. by all druggists. MANN, No. 14 Ivy St
Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed free.
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.,
N. Y.. 157 W. 23d St Drawer 3, Atlanta. Gs.
PENNYROYAL “CHICHESTER’S ENGLISH’*
The Original and Only Genuine,
■aft "Chlekcater’ff aad alvaja rellaM*. Bffwar* fff WffrtklcN Initatioi
Encllak" bwt made. IedlipentabM
Gash Wins.
i can ear® you several
hundred dollars and sell
vou the finest Engine ot
Roller built in America.
Address CAMP.
THOMAS Gft*
Gen. Covington,
BS! Hnntls, Feet, and all their Im
*5=0 perfee nrent, Birth Ions, Marks, including Moles, Facial Warts, Develop- Moth,
^ » Freckles, Red Nose. Acne, Bl’k Heads,
Scars, pitting nnd their 37 N.Pearl treatment. St.,Alba
:» /^*>>ny,N.Y. John Esfb’d W'oodbury. 1870. Send 10c. for book.
OPIUM HABIT, Sure cure in 10 to
30 days. Sanitarium treatment 15
or medicines by express.
years established. Book free.
Dr. Marsh, Quincy, Mich.
D| Dlull a !J. S Dill** ■IIIS* Great English Gout and
Rheumatic Remedy.
Oval SoxiSLOUj round, SO ct*.
da*. Patent Lawyer. Washington, D. C.
HAGAN’S
Magnolia Balm
is a secret aid to beauty.
Many a lady owes her fresh¬
ness to it, who would rather
not tell, and ypu can't tell.
H
Sécure Terfltory at? Once.
Advertising Cheats?!!
“ it ha* become »o common to begin aa>
article in an elegant, interesting adv:rtqom;at, style, thir.
“ Then run it int?«o=io
we avoid all such. attention to the merits of
And sim plv call
Hop Bitters mas plain, honest terms as po*
sible, people
“ To induce which proves
“ To give them one (rial, so wjthmg
their value that they will never use
else.”
*• The Remedy so favorably noticed in alE
the papers
Religious and secular, is
“ Having a large sale, and is supplanting
all other medicines. of , the
There is no deriving the virtues
Hop plant, and the proprietors of Hop Bitters
have shown great shrewdness and ability
“ In compounding a medicine whose virtues,
are so palpable to every one’s observation..
Did She Die ?
M J
« She lingered and suffered along, pining
away all the time for years.” her good;
“ The doctors doing cured no by this Hop Bitters
“ And at last was about.”
the papers say so much
“ Indeed ! Indeed !” be for that med¬ .
“ How thankful we should
icine.”
A Daughter’s Misery.
" IMeven years our daughter suffered on a
bed of misery, liver,
“ From trouble a complication and Nervous of kidney, debility,
rheumatic
“ Under the care of the best physicians,
“ Who gave her disease various names,
“ But no relief, in good
“ And now. she is restored to us
health by as simple a remedy as Hop before Bitters,
that we had shunned for years using.
it. The Parents.
pjf None genuine without a bunch of greeir
Hops on the White label. Shun all the vile,
poisonous stuff witb “Hop" or “Hops” in their
name.__
PensionsSSrSSS
SPRING FEVER needs
At this season nearly every one to use some*
sort of tonic. IKON enters into almost need building every phy¬
sician's prescription for those who op.
BROWp
<s a a
But!”
Dn. O. H. BrNXl.tT, * leading phjrician of
Springfield, 0.,uyB: Isa thoroughly good medi¬
“Brown’s Iron Bitters pmctlee, and find Its action
cine. Inse it in my of In weakness, or slow
excels all other forma iron. Brown toon BitUersis
condition of the system. It is all s that is claimed
nsueil^ s positive necessity.
Uetralne has trade mark and crossed red lines on
wrapper. Take no other. Mode only by
BROWN CHEMICAL CO., BALTIMORE,MT>.
Ladies’ Hand BOO*—osefnl (at and sttractivo. con¬
taining list of prices recipes, information about
coins, etc., given away by sB dealers in medicino, or
mailed to any address on receipt of 3c. stamp.
8
11
1
m
Twelve horse-power Engine, iw either portable or de
tached. Price* S5AH). grinding, .
and Adapted all (similar to threshing, work, strictly ginning, flr»t-cla»g, sawingr cheap
only in price. Other size engines at corresponding
P The “Self-Tramping Cotton Press. ” Complete, self
supporting, ready for belt. Price, J8I50. It saves
one-half of the labor, is quickly and easily durable* erected, The
takes little room, is simplo. strong and General
cheapest, machinery as for well Bale. as best Cotton Press made.
PROGRESS MACHINE WORKS,
ftlERIDIAN, mm
QUICKIE quickmt of any I ever tried.”Any man or woman
making leaa than $40 per week should try our
easy money-making bnsinesa. We guarantee it the best
paying in the land. $1 samples quick selling goods daily. free Ex¬
to any lady or gent who will devote a few hours
perience unnecessary; no talking. Write quick and se¬
cure your county. Address, B U. Merrill t Co. Chicago
R. U. AWARE
THAT
Lorillard's Climax Ping,
Nury Cl I Dpi n (•, and that Lorillard’s Snsflii UV
|h« boat aad ohaauest, quality considered ?
COLLEGE OF
PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS
BALTIMORE, MD.
clinical This School and other offers advantages. to Medical Send Students for unsurpassed catalogue to
a
Dr. THOMAS OPIE. Df.an. STREET.
179 N. HOWARD
MORPHINE'S?,!
EASILY CURED. BOOK FREE.
DR. i. C. HOFFMAN. Jeflsrson, Wisconsin
Stencil*
Kev Kev Checks Checks and and Rubber Rubber SPENCER, Stamps.;
Catalogue free* S. M.
112 Washington St., Boston. M as s .
OPIUM
A. N. 0............. .........Thirty-two,’83
rot
Man and Beast
Mustang Liniment is older than
most men, and used more and
more every year,