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THE SECRET SERVICE
THE PEOPI-K IT HAS TO I.OOK AFTER
FOR UNCLE SAM.
«*ninrrfclter», and the Terr Sharp Dn.l«r*
They are np (• In Their W <*rh.
tboan bills, but now we think tlmt ho
produces about one a week. The de
nominations nre fifties, twenties and tens,
andthoy areturned into the Treasury for
redemption from all parts of the Union.
This sample book in which you seo
pasted bank and national notes, with
the word bad punched out in each, con
tains $25,000, and wo havo here the his
tories and photographs of 2,500 crimi
nals, perhaps ten per cent, of whom are
womtn, said an officer of the Secret
Service, at Washington. William 13.
It rock way is the most notable person in
the entire collection. He is called the
"King of Counterfeiters," and occupies
the first place in this album. Next to
him aro his two pals, Doyle, the man
who passed the money, and Charles L.
Hmith, tho most expert engraver of
"crooked” work in the oountry. In all
their operations Brockway furnished tho
money, lnid out tho plans, and was tho
brains of tho gang. Doyle passed tho
"stuff’ and Smith was tho engraver.
Doyle is now serving a twolvo years’
sentenco in tho Illinois State Prison.
Brockway was captured somo few
weeks ago on the charge of counterfeit
ing somo railroad bonds, samples of
which wo have hero in this office, and
Smith is living with his family in Brook
lyn, N. Y.
Smith engraved tho plate from which
tho famous $1,000 7-110 bond of the issuo
of ’06 was priuted, nnd $85,000 worth of
it were actually redeemed nt the Treas
ury Department before it was discovered
to bo a counterfeit. Tho impression was
ao good that tho experts woro unable to
determine whether tho bonds were genu
ine or counterfeit, and tho matter was
only decided when tho Government is
suo bearing tho duplicate numbers came
back for redemption. Smith also en
graved what is knowu ns the Hamilton
$60 greenback, and the $100 note on dif
ferent banks, which nro tho finest known
of theso series. Several years ago a
very shrewd dodge was played by ono of
Smith's confederates on It. H. White k
Co., of Boston. A womnn entered their
store and looked at some very expensive
shawls. Finnlly, she mndo up her mind
to take one, and tendered a thousand-
jlollar bill in payment. Tho clerk took
tho money to the cashier, who sent it to
the bank to find out whether it was genu
ine or not. Tho answer camo back that
the bill wan good beyond tho shadow of
a doubt. Then tho clerk said that tho
shawl would bo sent to tho woman’s ad-
dross, but slio proceeded to get very an
gry, and said that if they could not take
her money without question that sho
would go elsewhere, and flounced out of
the store in groat rago. About an hour
afterward sho returned, and told the
clerk that sho had visited Jordan, Marsh
A Co’s., Shepard A Norwcll’s, Hogg,
Brown A. Taylor’s and C. F. Hovey A
Co.’n, but that sho had boou unablo to
find a shawl which suited her ns well ns
tho ono she loft in their establishment.
Sho said she would take it with her, nnd
tendered a $1,000 bill in payment. Tho
shawl was valued at $200 aud the womnn
took it away with her, together with
$800 in change. Tho bill first tendered
was genuine, tho second was a counter
feit, and tho firm was just $1,000 out of
pocket.
Smith engraved tho pinto from which
this counterfeit uoto was printed, aud it
wns so nearly perfect thnt only a minute
examination would havo caused detec
tion. Smith also engraved tho pinto
from which the $1,000 6 por cent, bonds
were printed, but wo captured tho entiro
issue on Doylo in Chicago, amounting iu
all to $201,000. Now I wish to call your
attention to two curious facts. Coun
terfeiting runs in families, and without
exception the men engngod in it aro all
poor. For instance, take the Bullard
family. Thomas, Benjamin, George and
John, four brothers, all in our clutches,
together with an aunt. There is one
brother out of jail, but wo nro satisfied
that he is an honest man. Thomas Bul
lard is a wonderful fellow. lie is the
only pcrsoD, so far as wo know, who has
succeeded in imitating tho fibre paper
upon which the genuine notes and bonds
are printed. At present bo is serving a
thirty years’ sentence as a reward for his
discovery. 11c is a chemist of no ordi
nary attainments, and heiuventod a pro
cess by which he wns able to take a
genuine two or one dollar bill, and com
pletely remove all the trnces of ink from
its surface. Then with a counterfeit
plate of a higher denomination, he would
print upon tho genuine paper, and thus
raise the note. Speaking about raising
notes, here is a check on the Third Na
tional Bank of New York, which was
raised from $451 to $26,968, and paid,
in 1876. Tho perpetrators worked ofl
with chemicals all that was written in
the check except the signature, and 1
regret to say that we have never been
able to discover who did it. Hero are
three steel plates which were engraved
by Ulrich for a five-dollar issue. The
engraving is done on soft steel, and
when completed the plate is hardened.
To give you some idea of the amount of
labor it takes to engrave ODe of these
plates, I can only say that we havo
evidence that Ulrich was fifteen mouths
completing them. Perhaps the greatest
curiosities in our entire collection are
the hills which made their appearance
about four years ago, executed with a
pen entirely by band. At first we
thought that it must take a good amount
pf time for the rascal to torn out one of
Indian Ponies*
"Tho possibilities of the Hioux pony
linvo never been dreamed of,” said a cow
gentleman (one of the aristocracy of the
genus cowhov) to a J’iourcr l'rt hr re-
|>ortcr recently. "You know tho old
plains saying, 'Let a whito man ride an
Indian pony until he can’t mnke him
move a step further, and, dismounting,
give place to a Sioux—the latter will fide
the brute twenty miles further that day.’
"Unpromising looking? Well, they
aro not pretty a« a rule, though I’vearcn
some dandies. Turn Jay-13yo-Seo out
in a Dakota winter, and give him just
what food he rustled for—cottonwood
twigs nnd hark and scanty buffalo grass
mostly—nnd 1 don't guess he’d show np
iu very marvellous shape in tho spring.
I was nt Sully once, just ns retreat was
sounding off—sundown, you know. An
Indian rode upon a pot-bclliod, scrawny-
skinned, splay-footed, mntted-lmired
calico, and gave a letter from the Ad
jutant at Fort Hall to tho Sully Atlju-
tank To nti interpreter who happened
to bo standing by, tho Indian, a Brule
Sioux, remarked that ho had ridden a
good way that day and his pony was
tired. Tho Adjutant noticed that tho
Hall letter woh dated thnt morning, nnd,
his interest being aroused, asked tho
mossonger when ho left his post. Ho re
plied that ho started just after first ser-
gent’s call (after daybreak). Subse
quent investigation proved his truth. Ho
had riddeu that sorry nag fully 101 miles
in less than thirteen hours, nnd much of
tho way tho road would havo been bard
on a bird. I tell you, wo treated thnt
mnngy-looking brute ns if ho hnd the
bluest Mood of all tho barbs in his
veins.
"Almost any officer on tho Missouri
river can tell you of tho famous rido
Gorso, tho scout, mndo from tho Stanley
expedition, I don’t remember tho miles
(something over 300 in loss than four
days), but I know ho only used ouo
pony, nnd went straight across tho most
God-forsakou country in America. The
Indians'
TRAINING BLOODHOUNDS. rot* ancestors’ nerve.
HOW THEY ARE TAUGHT TO I1FNT
MEN.
Animal* L'ncd for Trnrklns Criminal* Id the
Month.
"And theso aro the bloodhounds I
bear so much about ?” I remarked to my
conductor.
"Yes, they nre tho famous blood
hounds —that is, as much blooodhouuds
ns you will find in Texas. They aro
simply foxhounds trained to hunt men,"
’ "Do you keep them shut up all tho
timo ?”
"Yes; thoy would make it lively for
tho hoys if they got out.”
"How often do you linvo occasion to
use them during the year ?”
"Not moro than two or threo times
Convicts will not leave when thoy know
good hounds nro on hand to catch
them.”
"Could yon not dispense with tho
hounds aud depend upon your gnus?”
"No, indeed; you cannot hold con
victs with shotguus. It is the fear of
the hounds which keeps them quiet.
Desortion is useless wheu recapture is a
mornl certainty, ns is tho case when
good hounds nro employed.”
"Do you havo difficulty in properly
training yonrhonuds?”
“Oh, no; thnt is about tho only sport
llioro iH. Hero como tho puppies. Wo
will give thorn a ruu nnd lot you nee
how it is done.”
A trusty was Font down tho lnno and
over the fcnco, through a largo field, on
n run for dear life. When ho hnd ac
complished about half a mile, or half
his circuit, tho puppies, three nix-months
old hounds, wero put on his trnok, and
they started, nosing tho ground nnd
yelping ns thoy ran. On they kept,
over fences nnd through stubbles ami
ditches, never censing their noise.
Hometimos they would run over theT
trnil whero tho trusty had mndo an
1 abrupt turn, but soon they would return
; to tho spot whero thoy lost the scent
| nnd cautiously feel their way until cor-
lain they had tho trail, when they would
j he off again. Tho trusty wns a long
distance runner, hut tho soft ground
, . , ., , . I mado his impromptu trnok heavy, nnd
war pomes aro always tho host i , . , . . . ", ,
, . , * , J . . , , 1 ho lagged as ho approached the cud of
of tho herd, and rccoivo a good deal of i , . ., .. ,
. „ ’ , , , . , r his run, ovidentlv fatigued,
care. A ‘buffalo pony ranks next. You 1
can tell ouo by tho notch in tho points of
tho ears. A good buffalo pony knows
how to elude the ohnrgo of a mad bull
ns well pb I know how to skin an nnto-
lope; stops just nt tho right timo, and
runs at the proper speed. You take a
groon horse nnd hunt buffalo, nnd you’ll
find tho affair isn’t so tamo after all.”
Tho dogs gained on him rapidly and
wero yelping closo upon him. Ho wns
ordered to ruu to a treo or fonco and get
out of their way, so that thoy would
have to find him by the scent. He first
tried to climb a high gnto-post, hut
tho dogs with their noses to the ground
wero upon him almost aud forced him to
take shelter In a wagon which wns stand
Ttt Secret «f Tlirir I nn.not fl*.r Explained
_ and How It can be Acquired.
There w%s Aouietliin? nb mt tUe sturdy
vigor of former generations that c mllemres
tho admiration of every man, woman and
| child. They were noopieures—those ancient
. fathers. They lived simply, mi l me e-sful y
I tnct and overcome difllcult es that would
j have Uhcjuraeod this a.;o and generation,
i The rigors of the frontier were supplemented
. by tho savages; wild beasts threatened their
enterprise nnd poverty was a common Com-
I panion. Yet they bravely encountered nnd
I resisted all tlioic thin-s aud Ini l tho foundn-
I tions of a land whose blowings wo now onjoy.
, Tlietr constitutions wero strong: their health
I muurpa-sed nnd yet they wen* forced to ex-
! polo themselves eon lnually, '1 here certainly
must havo been some go m1 a.id tvle pinte
j cause for nil this nnd for tho physical su
periority of that age over tho pt-o. ent.
it is well known to everyone conversant
■ with tho history of that timo thnt e>rtnin
I home compounds ol strengthening qualities
Wero Used almost universally by those piu-
> users. Tho mnlnrin! evils aiid exposures to
I which they wero mbjected iipcesitnted this.
When tho’r b nlies become chilled by cohl or
| debilitated by the damp mists of ancwcoun-
1 try they were for e l to counteract it by tho
i use of antidotes. Medicines wore few in
i thoro days, nud doctors almost unknown.
; Hence tho preparations above rcforr.vl to.
j From among the number, all of which were
I compounded upon the mini general prluel-
p’o. ono was found to bo more o.llcieut
. and liencj far morn popular than
1 nil the rest. It was well known through tho
; Middlo ami Western Staten, au l was ac
knowledged ns t.ho I>cstt preparation for ms-
j larial disorders nnd general debility then
known. The recipe for compounding tins
vnlunhle article wns ha uled down from one
family and generation t> another, wai
known to the Harrison family, and is used
as tho basis and gcnornl formula for tho
present “Tlpjiocanoe." tho name being
miirgostod by the battle in which (tenoral
Harrison was engaged. Tho manufacturers
havo thoroughly investigntod this subject iu
itHtnluutoit details, aa l nro cortniu that for
urn! assimilation of food, dys|>o]>sia, tired
feelings, general debility, prostrations, nia-
lnr.nl disorders nnd humors in tiio blood,
nothing can oxceo I in value “Tippecanoe,”
which was the medicine of our forefathers
and seems destined to bo tho most popular
pro|m ration of the day.
" rtppecanoe" is preparod uu I glvon to the
i>ubit ■ by Messrs. II. It. Warner A Co., of
Roche;ter, N. Y., proprietors of the famous
Warner's Sn’o Cure, which is now tie'm >*t
extensively u-.1 of n iv Amor lens mo liein
Tho well known standing of this homo is a
Milttciont guarantee of the purity and power
of this preparation which s miss to banish one
of the greatest banei of tho nine
teenth century—mal assimilation of food.
Any one who experiences trouble "f
digestion; who fools le« vigor than
formerly; whoso system has unquestionably
"run down,” nnd who realist's the necessity
of some strengthening tonic, cannot afford
to permit such symptoms tj continue If
the fanner finds thnt his threshing machine
does not so| nrntu the grain from the straw
lie realizes that something ii wrong and tries
to ro|>nir tho machine. When tlio food does
not sustain the life; when it fulls to make
blood, when it causes tho energy to depart
nod a in tilt loll to die, it is a certain sign that
something Is wrong nnd that thohunini
ma' lime needs repairing. It is not a ques
turn of choice; it is a matter of duty. You
must attend to vour health or your sicknoet,
anil nothing will sooner overo mio theso evils
than ‘‘Tipjxjeanoe,” the medic n i of the past,
n i nfeguard for the present and n guarantee
of health fob the future,
I
Exploration of »w Guinea.
* "In connection with the Waltham
Watch Company, it may be stated that
when the proprietorsof the .4.9cdesired to
present Mr. G. E. Morrison(theexplorerof
New Guinea) with n reliable chronometer,
acting upon the advice of Mr. It. L. J.
Ellery, the Government Astronomer, two
Waltham watches were,however,procured
for Mr. Morrison instead. These wero kept,
at.the Melbourne Observatory for a fort-]
night,and thoroughly and carefully tested'
and were pronounced by Mr. Ellery, at the
end of thnt time, to bo fWAr suited for Mr,
Morrison’s requirements than any chro-’
nometer.”—Ext.from the Melbourne Ar/c.
Over 125,000,000 bushels of wheat arc availa
ble for export.
^ Bald It ends,
lien you havo tried everything else and failed,
try our Carbotlne and be happy; it will prove
its merits. One dollar a bottle, and sold by all
druggists.
Mr. Oladstono attained
short time ngo.
life Origin of Mosquitoes,
A Battle Willi an Alligator.
The Indians linvo n very satisfactory
account of tho origin of the Montezuma
mosquitoes. Tho legend runs thus
There were in times of old, many moons
iug iu tho yard, whero ho hid himficH^LK 0 . two lingo foathored monsters per-
Robcrt Carroll, a trapper nnd Imutcr,
while trapping for otters on West Choc-
tnwpatchio River, iu Alabama, had a
torriblo fight with an alligator, so a local
pnper tellH us.
Seeing tho water agitated in a hole
near the river, and supposing that otters
were fishing therein, lie mounted a polo
on a tussock just above the water's edge,
nis stool traps wero in 11 snek suspended
from his ncok. nis only woapou wns
his hatchet. Ho sat ou the pole, with a
nines of vines at bin back. Ho held his
weapon ready to striko an ottor, should
ono artso.
Soon ho saw a young alligator near j b u ffetiug them with tho blanket, jump-
iu (ho bed just as the dogs camo to the
gate. They looked up the gate-post nnd
smelled around n little, then without de
lay followed the trail dircot to the wagon
and discovered their prey, lying panting
like a tug-boat. I looked nttho perspir
ing convict, nud in^r heart smote mo for
being the cause of his race, but I soon
found out that it was a groat privilege,
enjoyed by but few, and giving tho pup.
pics n race wns considered by them tho
very essence of pleasure. The convict
took nn old blanket in liiB hand nnd
slighted on the ground, when tho dogs
fought him fiercely, making vicioim
springs for him. Ho repulsed them by
him. Ilo caught it up and it uttered a
cry. In nu instant there was a torriblo
splash of water, nud a lutgo alligator
with distended mouth nnd glittering
teeth rushed for him. With little hope
of oscapo ho fell back upon tho vines,
nnd ns ho did so kicked tho polo from
under his feet.
Tho terrible jaws closed ou tho pole
and crushed it. Carroll tried to inter
pose tho traps, but a vine bad caught
them and partly held him down.
Beizing his hatchet ho struck into tho
open mouth of his assailant. It closed
ou the weapon, and with great difficulty
he savod the hatchet. Getting free from J Reporters do not figure pleasantly in
his traps, ho dealt the alligator a fatal Queen Victoria s new book. "Tho day
ing away aud thwarting thorn in any
manner without hurting them. Finally
ono of tho dogs fastened liiB teeth in the
convict’s coarse pants, nt a point where
tho most cloth was used iu making, nnd,
holding on with unyielding tenacity, was
swung round nud round, with vigor, un
til tired. Tho dogs wero then taken by
a guard, aud tho conviot went away
highly pleased with his sport,—linos-
lon. Ter a it, Post.
The (Jueen and the Reporters.
blow on the skull as it made tho next
charge.
Ho scoured tlio skiu nnd such teeth as
had not been destroyed in tho fight.
The length of tho alligator wns about |
nine aud a halt feet. Tho hole was its
don. Alligators rarely attack human
beings.
Hottentot Tortures.
Tho following is an extract of a letter
from Wnlwich Bay, southwest coast of
Africa, dated December 14, 1883: "The
atrocious acts of Paul Vistcr (a Hottentot
chief) linvo received further confirma
tion. This fiend hold a raid, and it was
decided not to shoot tho prisoners, ns is
usually done, but to torture them, so it
was decided thnt tlio lower jaw of the
victim should bo severed aud n knife in
serted in tho roof of tho mouth and
forced up to tho brain. These wretches
further amused themselves by putting a
rein with a slipnot round tho throats of
the prisoners, hauling them up to trees,
and when tho tongue of the victim had
protruded somewhat letting him down
again, carrying on this amusement until
tlie unfortunate prisoner was lifeless.”
The London Dai/// News believes that
tho occurrence of these horrible cruel
ties has been brought to tho notice
of Sir Leicester Smythe, Her Majesty’s
Acting High Commissioner at tho Cape.
"I AT.T.rs feels sorry fur do young
feller what is smart befo’ his timo,” said
Uncle Mose. "Do flowers xvbut blooms
do scones’ is do sooncs’ ter die.”
was most beautiful and calm,” slio says,
writing of her visit to Glencoe, whi r#
they pestered her. "I sat down on the
grass for luncheon. Then I sketched.
Hero, however—hero in this complete
solitude—we were spied ou by impudent,
inquisitive reporters, who followed us
everywhere. Ono iu particular, who
writes for somo Bcotch paper, lay down
and watched us with n telescope, dogged
me and Beatrice when we wero walking
about, and was most impertinent when
Brown wont to tell him to move. He
I went away at last. Brown camo back,
mitted by tho Mauitou to descend from
the sky nnd alight on tho banks of the
Benecft River. Their form was exactly
that of tho mosquito. Thoy were so
largo that they darkened tho sun liko a
cloud ns they flow toward tlio earth.
Standing ono on either bank they
guarded tho river, and stretching their
long necks into the eanoes of the In
dians, as they attempted to paddle along
tlio stream, gobbled thorn up, as the stork
king in the fablo gobbled up the frogs.
Tho destruction of life was so groat that
not nn Indinn could pass without being
devoured in tho attempt. It was long
, before the monsters could bo extermi
nated, nnd then only by tho combined
1 efforts of all tlio warriors of tho Cayuga
1 and Onondaga nations. Tho battle was
terrible, but the wnrriors finally tri
umphed, and the mammoth mosquitoes
1 were slain and left unburied. For this
1 neglect the Indians had to pay dearly,
Tho carcasses decomposed, nnd tho
' particles, vivirtod by tho sun, flew off iu
' clouds of mosquitoes, which have filled
the country ever since.
Too True.—A Western paper says
thero is many a mnn mixing up iu the
Porter-Pope affair and telling what each
should have done at tho second battle of
Bull Run, who at tho timo was hustling
around to give a chattel mortgage on his
wife’s piano to raiso money to hire
substitute to go to war.
TrtE following are tho last gasping
words of ft St. Louis suicide, who delib
erately cut an artery in his leg nnd bled
to death; "You sec—1 have done it—
very neatly. I have spilled—the blood
nowhere—and the warm water—around
my foot—mado the blood run fast, anti
I died sooner.
Hard Wobk.— A Senator has np
pointed his son clerk to tho Committee
on Revolutionary Pensions. The young
saying ho thought thero would have > man w jH be kept very busy, as this
been a fight, for when Brown said that oue G f the hardest-worked committees in
the Queen wished him to move nwny, he the Senate. It has had oue meeting iu —
his 72'1 Mr Unlay a
» i
CELEBRATED PAXTON ENGINE
FIRST PRIZE MF.DAT, on Coilllllnril Farm nmt
Ti nollon r.nglnrn nt Bmitnnrn Exposition, Louix-
xil'f, Ky., M fcwi yi) ronCincui.nns. <
! FOUNDRY and MACHINERY DEPARTMENT
HARRISBURG CM MANUFACTURIKG Cl
HAHItlWHfUG, l*A.
f’o.He;* Day «r Mftit.
Jn tho fall of lH7f, m, Kaffct iujoi were
" * win swollen to such pruimrtinfiii that
f>a|XM toy Unit's would bnrst. I I ad the
l>o.t nviliriil talent obtainable, nml nt the
worst stftoo of my illness, when my husband
nnd ninny friends bad given mo up to die,the
late Dr. John Woodbury made a thorough
exAinination of niv water, and pronounced
acute kidney disraso, Inrilcring on
Hright k disease, and accompanied by grnvol,
nnd recommended the immediate mo of
Hunt s Remedy. At this time I was suffering
most terrible oaln in my buck, limbs, nnd
bend, nnd eoulil find no lest dnv or night for
weeks, and 1 wns growing weaker daily until
this kind physician ordered me to t ike Hunt's
Remedy, llefore taking half of one bott'e 1
commenced to improve, nud after taking six
bottles wns entirely enrol. Tills was nearly
eight years ago, nnd I have hnd no return of
l!"' 1 , n '°- I have roemunended Hunt's
Remedy to others iu similar eases, nnd it lias
never lulled to oure, I have also used it for
s.ck headache, ami found in it a sure f'diof,
I think it tho best, medicine made, and cheT-
fully recommend it to all.
Mrs. W. H. NTH,SON,
No. Id Tj lor St,, Boston, Mass.
April 18,_mt.
„ A Welt Known Ainu.
llnnts Rena dy having b"on re 'ommended
to me for kidney and liver complaint*, 1 pur
chased wane at the ‘Tronic's Drug Store’’ nnd
used It In iny family, nnd found it to Im a
very valuable medicine, nnd I gladly recom
mend It highly to my friends, knowing It to
lie beneficial to those troubled with kidney or
liver diwnso.
Rasped fully yours,
» ELiHHA NOYSE,
April 14,1883. 03 0 Nt.. 80. Boston, Maas,
A ; l.nxi M .nnlnelnrer.
I have used Hunt’s Remedy for the kidnoy
complaint, and, having been fu'ly restored tu
health by its use, I can testify to its value.
Daily I recommend it to some one of my
friends, all of whom 1 know bnvo beon bene
fited by its use. Gratefully,
«... x, GKO. l\ COX
AUlden, Mass., April 23, 1833.
Gum Arnbic has gone up in price, K1 Mnhdi
stuck it up.
. ]
A I'nre ol Pneumonia.
Mr. D. H. Barnnby, of Owego, N. Y., says
that his daughter was tak’n with a violent
cold which terminated with pnonmonin and
all tho lio.-it physicians gave the c:uo up and
said she could live but a few hours at most.
She vvnv iu this condition when a friend re
commended Dr. Win. Hall's B ilsnnt for tlio
Lungs, nnd advise l her to try it. She
coptod it ns a last ro-ort, nnd was surprise l
to fin l that it produced n marked change for
tho better, and by persevoring a permanent
cure was offoeto I.
Eaqr to nse. Arerinln cure. £ot Jl'U*
C i>nlti«‘ treatment I
the Kenil, lten liv
kayi. I >no-1 for Cold
marines*, Hay v r, Ac. ■
Fifty cents. ltva,' t Pa._
•ft* ell.. - — .
• lime and (h«n liar* them rotnrn ~„ uv
trt tore. I hero r.wte mo Mimsim "I FITS. sril.ltrsY
rr FAT I.tttfl SirXS F.AS a Ur- 1""R M'tilr. I w ? rr 3"£,^!
rnnedr I" rtiro Urn wo.il car..* ttccanse ctliani have
fallod 1* n" cion for nnt new rncrlvlns n enrr. Sendlei
emen for a trrfttl** A" l A Fom Dnttlo of my Infallible
inmnily. UlTO Kiprom end IV"t (Mice. II coel^jou
OuUilnx fer rierlBt, Sew York.
SOLID SILVER STEM WINDING
FULL JEWELLED DENTS’ SIM
WATCH FOR $12.51).
ri’M.Y GUAR ANTIII*. Tills effnr mad--for do
rtnys muy. iIimmth w»nfc l y I’.ipressO. O. mu j »tt to
im*p«ctton ln'furo purrhnsiHK.
J. I\ HTMVHNM tV r«.» Jewelrru.
A l In ill 11 • I • n •
LIFE LOANS
AT 4 PER CENT
y» Principe! need iictvc hr paid -y,.
•o Inane* lalnfeet likpluf
The canned fruit
worth £2,000,000.
product of California is
"Grina of Hie Nnrlhwrat*'
Is tho title of a Tourists’ Guido issued by tlie
Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Raul Railway. It
is a handsome book well worthy of tho enter
prising management of this great rnihvay sys
torn. Tourists nnd summer travelers should
send to A. V. H. Carpenter, General Passenger
Agent, Milwaukee, Win., andsoenrea copy.
Shipbuilding on the Olydo is unusually dull
at present.
At dawn of womanhood, or in chsngo ol
life, Samaritan Nervine is tho ladies’ friend
He hath riches sufficient who hath enough
to bo charitable.
From N. Hampton, N. H., Mrs. TiirltoD
writes: "Samaritan Nervine cured my son
There urc 7,000 bakers
ninml for 4,000.
in raids, with a de-
Hendnche is immediately relieved by the uso
of 1’lso’s Remedy for Catarrh.
The corn
688 bushels.
production of Illinois is 180,683,
w <Jever fail5>^
HtSvfw*
18 UNTAILIWQ
AND INFAI-UBbR
said bo had quite as good a right to ro- |
main thoro aa tho Queen had. Brown
answered very strongly that tho highest
gentleman of England would not do
xvhat ho did, much less a manly re
porter. Other reporters came up and
advised tho man to como away quietly,”
Not Decaying.—'The Bt. Albans (Yt.)
Mcs&enrjer takes issue with the papers
that say Vermont farming is going to
decay, and shows by the census returns,
that in the last decade the population
has increased 1,735; thenumberof farms,
5 per cent. ; the tillable acres, 213,000,
while the barley crop was 100,000 Inmh-
els larger than ten years ngo, corn 400,-
000 bushels larger, hay 30,000 tons, and
outs 140,000 bushelk; butter lias
8 000,000 pounds, cheese tins lost
000, and sheep and wool havo both
off,
two years, and it is thought there will
l>e another before the end of the session.
Superstition is to religion what as-
trclogy is to astronomy; a very Btupid
daughter of a very wise mother.
THE HORSE DOCTOR
TVe have heard of a "cure all,” but when a
father is taking & bottle of ^no.dicine tor tho
summer complaint to his family m the country
his horse has a sudden attack qj. cho.era irom
I over-feeding, is given the' contents o the bot-
tie and is soon restored, as a case we have
lust heard of. Dr. Digger's Southern Bem-
edv should certainty rgjicve men of diar
rhea dvsentcrv and chfidrin teething. This,
with a'bottle of Taylor’s Cherokee Remedy of
Bweet Gum and Mullein, combining the stnnu-
Uting expectorant pnneipio of the sweet gum
with the demulcent healing ono of the mullein.
,01- the cure ol croup, whooping cough, colds
and consumption, presents a little medictnk
chest uo household should l.o without for the
Epileptie DiU,
Spasms, Falling
Sickness, Convul
sions, St. Vitus Dance, Alcoholism,
Opium Eating, Seminal Weakness, Iin-
potcncy, Syphilis, Scrofula, nnd nil -3 i
Nervous nnd Blood Diseases, j 1
C-S r To Clergymen, Lawyers, Literary Aren,
Merchants, Bunkers, Ladles und all whose
sedentary employment causes Nervous Pros
tration, irregularities of the blood, stomach,
bowels or Kidneys, or who require a nerve
tonic,uppetlzerorstimulant, Samaritan X/rv~
ine is invaluable.
£3?“T h o u s a n d s
proclaim it tho most
wonderful Juvigor-
ant that ever sustain
ed a sinking system.
$1.50 at Druggists.
The DR.S. A. RICHMOND
MEDICAL CO., Sole Pro
prietors, St. Joseph, Mo.
Chas. N. Crltteuton, Agent. New York.
51MPtI.DURflBl£.'5^eQJi^
WHITS^
1m
security rpqti'T^d
fraiiiVqi?I.'ieVII Sen I(/
*31
v! lb*n "nly p^fAnnjil.
r »
U . Huberts, Mmager.m W. i>ta HI. Unclnnutl. «»
I «r«.
TtTbpecuiiuoiN.
U. Lindlilom & Co., V G- Wilier ft Co.,
§ «n«i 7 Cli»mb»'r of Lj* 66 ltn»Alw»y,
('otuiiuTCC, (51ito«fO. Now York.
Crain and Provision Brokers
Member* °f prom runt Prodnrn ICioYmgos in
Nwwr York, ('liioAW, Hi. Luiii* ftn<$ MtlwnnHm.
Wo bnvo Hjchmiv* wlrn
Ohlonfo anfi Nmv Y«*rk. Will meoute ord*r* m «"ir
wlion r«'«uic t«'il. Howl fnr clr«MtUni contiin-
inK particulars, llOlil. LlNDUI*OM A LO., 0 liiongo
~~ " ir. «j. h tlio qtiMVBfli. p1onnt«i%
:c Mir fit an I b nt r«i:i'<ly f«*r
^ livt*r # •tjmich, l»l»«l'lor nut blool
(‘tsetMift, and onW ro’ifcl fdrBti*'' *»rof
ss. (iiscovoi.ft for Bcuto find rnroua
vbouinni'fir.L front, ]
S lea, B‘0. Hsu caro l hop'.
lent cnnnn nmrbt’N dtfff nn« and djr»P‘H'*'A
lonimof rhonmutio d:*ord«T8 in 2 to 13 wn«rj--r II •
inn.mmMory in l r«n r.-l-r t'> I'unrtrsd. o( ral v
hlr p-.titln rnrnd who i«rt trwt In v »' n i.Iu v.v .V
Purely botnnie, hxnrl.wn, /mil nh). In lent. A"k »■)
GOOD NEWS
12 LADIES! ‘
Greatest induc«m«u.ta ever of.
ferr'd. Now’s your i m ' to gr6 op
order a for our ccdot.r ltd Twnt
and t finorft.nnd aoouro a bonutU
fill Gold Hpnd or Moss IIoah Ghina
Tea Hot, «>r llar.dsoine Dec
Dinner S«t t t.r (iold JJnnd Mom
For full pKrtirulara addroM
jjiK 44Iu:at A>ii:in< a.n ti*:a ro., *4
r. O. J<oi HI and SlJVear) .^t., New York. #
I)R F00fE*“ OriKiiinl METHODS
fll [1 CVCC Mndc.Ncw vvlthMitdoe-
ULU L I CO liiiH.inrtllrineorfiliiMrH
Dll DTI I DC lured vvllho’lojicrnttou
ft UI I U nt. or umumfoltaljle Ij iish.
DUIUHQIQ l »rrd without cutting;
mimUOlu new.) nlnlcss.snfc.siiic.
IICDt/miC llrblllty. etc.: enures
lluil V UUO him! lnlUiiinl trcntmciit. <,, ,
CHRONICla^dh” wt'Iio.”' l«i : rurH-»
Address Hr. V. B. FROTK. Box 7* “, %, V. qty.
Paynos’ Aulom. tic Engines and Saw-Mill-
i mini
(I Hli!
ItV
OUR LRADKR. , U1 .....
We o(Ter an P t) In 1!. IV inountnd l.nglnn with MiU,
60 n folid hsw, ,*>» ft. In'UinK, rant-hooka, ri« romplrto
tor oin»rition, on cara. $1.10'. Knuno on akll;*, $l’0
irss. S ii I for cirrnljt. (It). 11. \\ • I '' ^
HONS, MiiniifMr-trr mh of all atylca A iiliiiiinl i<* Ln-
HiiifN, from 2 to 8 o II. I*, alao I'nlleya, llnu^r’ra nn I
buaftng, Klmlra, N, Y. Bo* ls.»G. _
CONSUmiON;
i turn n nnslilvo ttonod v f V tliO above dlteasir, b. It#
• tho above tllteasD ; b, it
i of tho worst kind and of K»n
atindlnK havo born curod. IihIbwI, bo atrong 1* mv faita
V Tts cfSrn. 7, that I wilt nond TWO U0TTLKS FHER, to-
Jr.tlior with • VAM'ABI.B Tllltvrisa on till. UlfuM, to
fti.f auSsHT' Oli o Haprraa and 1 . O. a«l'.ri»ai.
' DR, T, A. bLOCL'Ji, lei 1'aailBt-, Now Torlb
KVERTWITERE to
AGENTS WANTED ^.1 c'a'"• |i> n•'
# l„_ 'tTfirliino nver invnntnd. Will knit a pair of ,0
ttjf 5Sli |l KBI - •»? °fo Wl r.rh
ro.. 1(13 Tiikmcs r hriiK.F r, ROM ON. MAS-..
AGENTS WANTED^mg»n^S
o;Ip. E. V. DIMTERH’llS, (3»velftnil, Ohio.
PATFNT^ 1', i n< oi a np*-
I A I til I O ent IjRwycr, WiiBliingtnn,
PUMPS
K Vr^. ,: N. Hatmli?..,’
!b Idlirbail 1 Hfj 1
PEMSlOWKlK-a 1 "
Send stamp
J.. IllMi-
Washington, D. ('.
r, N1 |:i) I.ADIES TO
A a# • tliwii- htmiH
W V*ncy’w"’rk* *t" t!"*ih./mcn. in r.ly
„n, l .*ra)»i|to!St« l»r for a*",pi- n."l
$40
(CONQUEROBj
p A VM fi r * I,!fo Sctiolarrl.il> in th*
Sww'sar’rbtes
»./S0NFB}»KR ATE
t ' P.-CW I.. > - Sol /i js 5„ u . A.I-
' IV ANTED t« colloi-fc Iiiotnre* toeomr.
7 r r\TS \V ANTED for (ho best *wl "f'b
AND WHISKY HABITS CURED
IN THHEK WE£K8.
Fo rnmphletf. Proofs «nd Terms,
Addr-.s, m coufl
BELLAMY, M
OPIUM
■tamp. W. C .
Atlanta, Georgia.
ith Sot.
Broad Street,
1 Point the First.
pound. It is a tonic medicine
Three Particular Points.
Brown’s Iron Bitters is not an intoxicating com
pound. it is a tonic medicine, not a drink. It is a sktlHully compoun^^
preparation made to restore strength and health; not a^ - g ^
in bar-rooms and taverns. -»»***.' "
Point the Second.—Brown’s Iron Bitters is free from ev-erything
injurious. The most delicate ladies and the mast enfeebled infanta may
use it with perfect safety and with great advantage. • While it ^powe
in its remedial agency, it is gentle in its operation, restoring w a- ted sU g h
and imparting robust health in the most efficient mannei
o point the Third.—Brown’s Iron Bitters is made by the Brown
Choniical Company of Baltimore, a long-established house, whose reputa
tion Swell (mown to the business world and the general comtnun.ty,
There is no risk in buvinor such a medicine.