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GRATES OF NOTED MEN.
nuratt nan un nnr,
iMhKt PlkcM •! oar Departed rrael*
daate—Oravea at lUnlailmrr
I Mnraos A mwrtnary Hacwrd.
Ink New York letter to the Troy
Tima the writer says: Grant was the
tint President buried permanently in
this city, the interment of Monroe hero
hiring been only temporary. Concern
ing the places where our departed Presi
dents rest, it may be said: The two
Adams (father and son) are buried to
gether under the old church at Quincy.
Each has an extended epitaph, and that
which commemorates the younger is the
longest in the entire presidential record.
Jefferson rests at Montlcello, his crave
being in the family cemetery, and the
shaft, which is nine feet high, has suf
fered severely from relic-hunters. Madi
son’s grave is on -his former planta
tion at Montpelier, not far from Mon-
ticello. Monroe, who died in this city,
was buried here, but after the lapse of a
quarter of ncentury his remains were con
veyed to Richmond and burled in Hol
lywood cemetery. Jackson's grave is in
front of his former residence (the Her
mitage) and the monument that marks
the spot is the most artistic in this
record, with the solo exception of Lin
coln's. Van Union's is in a little ceme
tery near Kindcihook. Harrison was
buried at North Uend, near Cincinnati.
Polk Is buriod in the family plat at Nash
ville. Taylor was buried at Washing
ton with great pomp, but afterward his
remains were removed to tho homestead
near Louisville, where they await the
completion of a monument erected by
the State. When this is dono the old hero
will be placed in his final mortuary
abode. Fillmore rests in Forrest Lawn
cemetery, Buflalo. Piorco was buriod
in Concord, and Buchanan at Lancaster.
WISE WORDS.
Always use your own brains rather
than these of others.
lie that gains well and spends well,
needs no account book.
A punctual man can always find time;
a negligent one never.
It is the cause, and not the death,
that makes the martyr.
Have habits of order, system, regula.-
ity, and also promptness.
Openness of heart and gentleness of
manner aro nlways engaging.
A penitent’s tear is an undeniable am
bassador and never roturns from tho
throne of grace unsatisfied.
Whatcvor stress some may lay upon
it, a death-bed repcntcnco is but a weak
and slendor plank to trust our all upon.
Learning rnukes young men temperate,
is thu comfort of old age, standing for
wealth with poverty, and serving as an
ornament to riches.
If rich, it is easy enough to conceal
our wealth; but if poor, it is not quite so
easy to conceal poverty. Wo shall find
that it is lees difficult to hide a thousand
guineas than one hole in our coat.
In all worldly things that a man pur
sues with tho greatost eagerness and in
tention of mind imagii
in thi
,goi
nablo, he finds not
half tho pleasure in the nctual poesoesion
of them as ho proposed to himself In the
expectation.
Franknoss nnd openness are the na
tural and healthful atmospheres of good-
noss and strength. Were all men per
fect, there would be no reserve,for thero
would be nothing to conceal. Each
would bo sure of sympathy and appreci
ation for himself, and be generous in be
stowing them upon others.
Fllibnsterlng In the National Senate.
, . , . | We had some memorable filibustering
' •» my *** I one night when
of his relatives remain there, ho fills
solitary grave. Lincoln's tall monu
ment is tho most prominent featuro in
Oak Ridge cemetory, near Springfield.
Johnson was laid in the family plat
at (iroenvlllo. Garfield's monument is
oat contest in tho Senate, over a cer
tain bill, oulminated in twenty hours of
workl Tho majority had determined
that they would ‘‘sit tho bill" out that
night. So thev assembled in force,
*■ i*. acutes. «-<*-» *» i sft’&cr “ srsir; ssas
be . ,0 of the honors of New York. | on nl|nu nolu „ ...
°i f our j X 'S,” , !?, C “mf. ed i n X»d° i hausted. Ab tho hands of tho clock ap-
4th of July, Rn 5* tho su®®". indeed, I onc hed tho hour of midnight, thero
seems to have been a fatal humi for ^ >c|ircc , v 8onator tho room . i
these eminent men, eleven of whom died | romomber t j mt Senator Merritnan led tho
during June and July. . T^^ing back , , t Senator Logan “watched'' for
upon tho first seven in the presidential ,. ■?
tho mi
tho floor,
ajority.
mr, will
Logan
Senator Merriman liail
ill the unlimited privilege of
permii
pared
But occasionally ho paused to allow
another member of tho minority to mnkc
a motion to ndjourn, upon which tho
“yeas and nays” would bo ordered—
“And the clerk will call the roll I”
Thoso words were tho signal for action.
“Call up the Senators 1" cried Senator
Logun; "oall up tho Senators!” camo
from Bonntor Morrlman; “call up tho
Sonators 1" echoed Captain I'.assott. This
is how wo pages call them. Each of us
would rush around through the various
rooms nnd give one of these sleeping
Sonators a littlo tap, shouting "Yeas and
Naysl"nnd dart away to find another.
Somotimos n dozen pages would waken
tho same Senator. In fact, we usually
ran in a lino—all togother.
Boon tho sleepy legislators could bo
scon creeping into tho chambur from all
directions, half awake, with dishevelod
hair, and presenting a woe begone ap
pearance generally. They would me
chanically cast their votes, the motion
to ndjourn would be lost, Senator Merri
man would reaumo his speech, nnd tho
other Senators, except tho "watchers,"
would again vanish as mysteriously nnd
ns noisolessly ns the soldiers of Roderick
Dhu. When he had given thorn timo to
fall nslcopjio would again yioldtho floor
to a motion to adjourn, and the perform-
arszMSjrsK rjs
office, all of this number were sixty-six
“.“iris
dent. Two of tho number left daugh
ters (Jefferson and Monroe), nnd threo,
though married, wero childless, their
names being Washington, Madison and
Jackson. Two baoholors hnvo occupied
tho presidential chair, but a large pro
portion of tho number were widowers.
Scott ana Custer were buried at West
Point, while Worth rests at Groonwood,
but his memory is honored by an impos
ing shaft in MadiBou square. Going
still further back to tho heroes of tho
Revolution, Wayne, (better known
as “Mad Anthony”), diod at Erie,
but hit remains were afterward
removed to hla family residence in Penn
sylvania. Stark, tho hero of Benning
ton, died in extreme age at Manchester.
Mercer, the hero of Princeton, was
buried in Philadelphia, Herkimer's
grave is a prominent feature In the Mo
hawk valley. Putnam rests in his old
home in Connecticut. Three revolution
ary leaders aro buried In this city,
Hamilton, Montgomery and Lord Ster
ling. The latter diod tho year after the
close of the revolution. He was eleven
years older than Washington, who had
n high respect for his character and abil
ity. Greene, however, who was tho
next to go, was Washington’s junior by
eight years, and hence his death gave
FARM, GARDEN, AND HOUSEHOLD.
Common Sfenee In Feeding.
The report of the proceedings of the
Oxford Farmers’ club, of Ohio, contains
among other sensible talk the following
on feeding: The reports of feeding ex
periments at experiment stations are full
of instruction and hints to us. They are
worth more than the testimony of any
ono of us who might weigh our feed
carefully. We would not then know
what percentage of tho feed was di
gested. Too much of the feed often
oes into the excrement nnd isnotaBsim-
lated. By noticing this and ch»-cing
the feed this may be corrected. This is
the caso whore wo see wholo corn pnss
the horse, ox or cow. Digestion is not
right or the food is not suited to the
unimal in such cases. While our weigh
ing animals and feed given will help ns,
still we need more light than this can
give. Tho careful feeder watches littlo
things. No man can be a good feeder
who is not a close obsorver and quick to
note tho condition of every anlmnl in his
charge. Tho chief thing Is to suit the
ration to the animal. Feeding is so much
of an art that not ono man in ten knows
how to feed most successfully. We do
not even know how to feed ourselves to
prevent dyspepsia nnd disorders which
come from improper diet and manner
and times of eating. It is ovident that
this subject of feeding is one we need to
study much, for it is tho foundation of
better husbandry.
Care of Newly Planted Trees.
Nowly planted trees require careful at
tention through the summer, and es
pecially in dry weather. Mulching, by
which is meant tho spreading of coarse
immure, linlf rotted straw, or any olhor
litter on thu ground over the roots of the
trees, will he always found of great ser
vice in keeping tho grouud cool and
moist nnd promoting tho growth of
nowly trnnspiiiutod trees, particularly if
tho Biiccoouing summer should be hot
and dry. Thoro is a substitute for mulch
ing that is perhaps better than n mulch,
but in the hurry of suininor work it is so
sure to bo neglected that the planter hud
better mulch his trees ns soon after plant
ing ns possiblo. If, however, he will
kcop tho ground loose and friable around
his troos by frequently stirring tho sur-
faco anil never permitting it to bccomo
bnkod and hard ho may snfoly dispenso
with mulching. lint because it is re
commended to unread conrso manure on
tho surfaco of the ground lot it not bo,
therefore, inforred that it is over ndvlsn-
food will gain less on it than almost
any other kind of stock. Generally a
little milk or swill is added, but some
corn or oat meal fed now to pigs in pas
ture will givo twloe or thrice as much
profit as that which is led to pigs put up
in tho fall for feeding on grain exclu
sively.
The cow pea, says the Cultivator, is
tho important renovating crop in the
South, mainly from a mistaken idoa that
clover will not suoceed in so hot a cli
mate. Really there is no climatic diffi
culty in growing clover in most portions
of tho South. Where failure nos oc
curred it is from poor preparation of the
soil, or more frequently, from lack of
lime or potash. It is better, even in tho
South, to got the land in condition to
grow clover than to sow cow peas for
plowing under. Clovor is decidedly
bettor for green manure on Northern
farms.
Household Hints and Recipes.
Fried onions should be boiled first in
milk to bo mild and odorless.
To prevent a door from creaking apply
a little soap to tho hinges.
Boiled cabbago is much sweeter when
the water is changed in boiling.
If brooms are wetted in hot suds once
a wook they will last much longer and
always swoop like a new broom.
Whon basting a turkoy take a clean
stick and tio a cloth on the end, and wot
this In the gravy or dripping with which
it is to be basted; you can go over each
part more satisfactorily than with s
spoon.
A vory simple and nourishing dish it
mado of two pounds of lean round steak,
finely minced, and simmered for three
hours in ono quart of water, salted to
tasto. Served with boiled rice. If liked,
curry-powdor may be addod to tho gravy.
Do not iron a rod tnblocloth nt all;
wash it carefully in wnrm suds (not hot),
rinse well, nnd, when ready to hang on
the line, take great pains to pull it so
that it will keep tho proper shape. It
will rctnin its color much longer than if
ironed.
Delicately colored socks and stockings
are apt to fade in washing. If they are
soaked for a night in a pail of tepid
wntor containing half a pint of turpeu.
lino, then wrung out and dried, the
colors will “set," and they can after
ward bo washed without fading.
A delicious cream is made by this re
cipe: Mix some raspberry jam or jolly (a
small cupful) with ono pint ot cream,
bio to pinco fresh manure in the soil ! and strain it into a bowl. Dissolve half
'said of Greene that ho entered the army
During all this speech-making, most
The
,i™ „( hi,: ol II,. innjorily upon
bV“ wh nmirrnil In South Carolina l-°gan and their other leadors) to wako
. ®V, h 0 ’a WhlCh ° C d 8 ° them at tho proper time. They relied
about tho roots of trees. It is very
apt to kill nowly nlautod trees, and
snro to do more harm than good.
If it is thought necessary to enrich
tho soil old nnd perfectly rottod manure
may bo thoroughly incorporated with it,
but the safer way is to placo the manure
on the surfaco nnd let its fertilizing
proportios bo gradually washed down by
the rains. It is vory seldom that trees
which havo been carefully taken up,
carefully planted, and well mulched
will require any watering during the
dry summer wcuthor. If It should bo-
corno necessary, however, to give them
water, it should bo done thoroughly. A
mere moistening of tho surfaco of the
ground is worse than none at nil. Givo
onough to penetrate down to where tho
roots lie and to soak tho ground about
them thoroughly. And now, if the truoB
havo not been mulchod, it should be
dono immediately in order to prevent
the evaporation of the water that has
been given and the baking and cracking
of the earth undor the rays of tho scorch
ing sun. If no litter can be had with
which to mulch tho snmo result is of
fected by stirring the surfaco a fow
hours after the water has boon given and
before the sun lias bnked the earth. If
this is not attended to hotter not to give
any water at all, for tho hot biiii will
only bake tho earth tho harder for tho
watering.
THE WEATHER OUT WESf.
* ow m f£K3?S
The Mnmeeff the Blltsarl-Ssiae Ki.
irasrMaair Tales si ths Effects
I) sf (: release.
A Dakota letter in the Indianapolis
Itmrnal contains the following: Wo
reached Pierre, the terminus of the Chi
cago and Northwestern railway, on
Wednesday evening at 8 o’clock. The
day had been excessively warm, and the
night closed in sultry and threatening.
Within two hours of our arrival we
were greeted with the fringes of the cy
clone that prostrated Highmore, llola-
bird and one or two other towns through
wh’ch we had recently passed, nnd at
which the citizens had earnestly pleaded
for tho commission to stop over.' Tho
next morning a gentle Dakota zephyr
prevailed. Dust was in the air as
thick as a sand cloud, and tho wind
rushed along at the rate of forty or fifty
miles an hour. I tried walking, not iii
the tooth of the wind, but with it. It
carried me off my feet and landed me at
my destination with a suddenness nnd
force that bred a deep respect for the
wind that bloweth whore it listeth in
this beloved country.
The next morning it was cold enough
to woar overcoats ;the next the thermom
eter marked anywhere from 105° to
110° in the shade, and that night a
meet furioiiB storm broke at midnight,
In which the hotel rocked nnd swayed as
a reed, wnile the sky was one glare of
blinding lightning. Within four days
Dakota liad treated its more or less dis
tinguished visitors to a cyclone, to a
siege of temperature between 10.1 ° nnd
and 50°, to a “blow” that would strip
the feathers from belated chickens and
to an electrical storm not to be beaten
outside the tropics. Tho “oldest inhabi
tants,” thoso who have boon here any
where from eighteen months to four
years, declared they never knew any
thing like it before in their lives, and
seemed somewhat chagrined at tho un
In 1785.
I Washington survived not only Lord
Stirling and Greene, but also Putnam,
Bteuben, Sullivan, Prescott, Wayne and
Marion. Steuben died near Utica,where
his sword is still preserved. Marion died
at Belle isle, S. O. Hamilton
was the first leading officer to fol
low Washington to the grave, and thon
in a few mouths Schuyler died. Two
years afterward (1800) Gates and Knox
were laid in honored graves. The latter
was the youngest and (next to Washing
ton) the hnu.t ooklng officer in the Con
tinental u inv. Washington mado him
his first .uc i el ary of war, and he was
also the founder of the society of the
ilnt of longevity all the other Rovo-
Iho prop
upon him to do all tho talking. Ho was,
Cincinnati ^'ai k and Bumter exceeded | ««»»&. P«t -ran^Jclock A. «., tho
In po!
lutioi ... „
ninety-two end the letter ninety-eight.
Sumter wee called during the R '
_ _ Revolu
tion the “Carolina game-cock,” a fitting
tribute to his gallantry. To return to
Knox, It may be added as a feature of
{painful interest in his domestic history
that, though he died at fifty-six, he sur
vived ell ms children, nine in number.
They all rest by their parents’ aide in
the old Penobsoot burial-ground, and
.the old family monument is etill en ob
ject of interest.
Paul Jones, the earliest hero of the
American navy, died in Paris in 1702,
being then only forty-five. The place of
his burial is unknown, and it is a die-
grar to our government that no monu-
meu jt cenotaph has over boon erected
to bis memory. McDonough, the con
queror iu the battle on Lake Champlain,
died the year following that important
action. Ho was in command of a war
vessel on a cruise at the time of his death,
and was therefore buried in the ooean.
His age was only thirty-two, nnd he is
the only one of our distinguished naval
' ' "of
ngu:
commanders who was consigned to such
a grave. Perry, the hero o7 Lake Erie,
died of yellow fever in Trinidad, und
his remains were brought to his former
home (Newport) where his monument
■till attracts attention. His age was only
thirty-four, and yet he had survived the
bnttle which gave him fame seven years.
'Hull, so famous us the commander of the
Constitution, died in Philadelphia, and
■o did Bainbridge. Lawrence, so dis
tinguished for nis dying utterance,
(“Don’t give up the ship,”) rests in
Trinity churchyard, where his monument
is an object of much general interest.
The cannon which stand at each corner
of the enclosure are trophies from the
Britiah. Philadelphia, however, contains
the remains of more naval heroes than
any other city in the Union.
g- »
1 say, prepared to do it. But he mado
a mistake, lie remembered tho courtesy,
but he forgot the rules of tho Senate,
lie had boon yielding the floor to his
friends whenever ho saw fit, and re
suming it again after they had said what
ever they wished. Senator Logan at last
interfered. Ho raised the “point of or-
dor” that tho Sonator from North Carolina
could not speak “more than twice” on
tho matter thon pending. Senator Mer
riman stood aghast I Tho presiding
officer sustained the point of order.
That is where tho* demoralization of
the minority Boomed to begin. At ten
majority passed the bill I
How would you liko to be a filibuster!
—Edmund Alton, in tit. Nicholas,
Where Women Abound.
Women are numerous on Nantucket;
probably more so even than on the main
land of Massachusetts, from the men's
having gone elsewhere to seek fortune.
Tho minister at the Orthodox Congrega
tional church is Miss Louiso Baker, a
native of the Island, and the superin
tendent of tho Sunday-school is a woman
also. To another of tho same box it was
recommended to ride for her health. Her
acquaintances desired to ride with her,
bo sue now keeps a public carriage, which
she drives. Tnis is a pretty safe popu
lation for a woman, the wooden jail
having only one inmate. One of the
popular pastimes in which ladies hnvo
joined is going out to deep water “shark
ing.” When these largo fish seize the
bait the force of two or threo persous is
sometimes exerted in drawing thorn on
board; blows on tho head deprive them
of life, and the bodies dragged upon tho
beach furnish manure for the fnrmor. 1
hear that from sharks’ livors is mado
much of the “cod liver oil” of tho
market.—Philadtlphia Times.
Farm and Uarden Notes.
Turnip seed may ha sown where oarly
peas have been takon off.
Corn-fodder can profitably bo fed as
soon ns tho feed guts into the pastures.
Poach trees that Bhow signs of tho
“yellows” should bo immediately dug
up and destroyed.
Tho ono successful principle of stock
feeding is to feed liberally from birth
until the animal is disposed of.
Somo breeders contend that green
clovor tends to produce barrenness in
all varieties of farm animals postured
upon it.
As n fall feed for oows, pumpkins nro
not sufficiently appreciated, und they
are perhaps moro cheaply grown than
vegetables,
Grapevines will need attention every ton
days or two weeks. Pinch in tho new
growth, so that the strength of the vine
may go Into tho fruit and the wood that
is already formed may ripen.
A French agriculturist recommends ns
a preventive uguiust tho bites of gnats,
horseflies and the like a decoction of
walnut tree leaves in vinegar. Animals
may also bo rubbed with fresh walnut
leaves.
Vicompte Chezellos, the French noble
man who gave evidenco before the Eng-
glish ensiiago commission, is accustomed
to place large quantities of nettles In his
silo, and states that the stock cat it
readily.
One who has given it a thorough trial
reports that lieu lice will not trouble
fowls where sassafras poles aro usod for
perches,
an ounce of gelatine in a vory littlo hot
water, nnd, whon just warm,'stir it into
the cream. Pour tho mixture into a
mold; sot it on ico, and serve whon very
cold.
Often a quart measure or its equiva
lent (four common tumblers) may be use
ful whon the kitchen scales aro out of
ordor, for a quart of flour will weigh ono
pound, one quart of butter (soft) a
pound, and ono quart of powdered sugar
oue pound ono ounce. Three shoets of
gelatine are equal to one ounco, and ■
tablespoonful of salt, ono ounco.
When irons becomo rough and smoky,
lay a littlo salt on a board and rub the
Irons well over it; it will prevent them
from sticking to anything starched, and
mnko them smooth; or scour with bath-
brick before heating, and, whon hot,rub
well with salt, ana thon with a small
piece ot boeswax tied in a rag, after
which wipe clean on a dry cloth.
To got tho full flavor of dried or ovap-
orated peaches, they should first bo al
lowed to soak for at least threo hours,
then cook them slowly; whon thoy are
almost done add tho sugar, thon set
them away and let them get perfectly
cold. If not used until the second day,
they will he still hotter, as thoy will ab
sorb tho sugar and bo much richer appa
rently.
Wax beans make a delicious salad.
Choose young beans, remove the strings,
break in inch-long pieces and cook in
snlt nnd water. While still warm covor
them with a dressing of oil, vinegar, salt
and pepper. Be sure and remombor in
mixing salads tho old saying: “Aspend
thrift for oil, a miser for vinogar, a wise
mnu for salt nnd a mad man for mixing.”
Use at least twico as much oil as vine-
gw.
A Zinc Boat.
The New York Bun says that the
French, who have made more experi
ments in shipbuilding than anv other
nation, once built a vessel with iron
frames, zinc plates for planking, and a
wooden deck. It was launched at Nantes
in 1852 by the builder, Mr. Gulbert.
She was n sloop. Her master, Captain
Johanue, took her out to Rio de Janeiro
for a cargo of coffee. She waB a good
sea boat, and carried a great cargo con
sidering her size. But they nover built
another zinc boat. She cost too much
and did not wear as long as an iron one.
Is is said that John Wesley was ones
wsUring with s brother, who related to
tdm his troubles, saying he did not
know what he should do. They were
at that moment passing a stone fence to
a meadow over which a cow was look-
in* “Do you know,” said Wesley,
why the cow looks over the wall?”
Some Famous Hot Spells.
In 1303 and 1304, according to a
French journal, tho Rhine, Loire and
Seine ran dry. In 1615 the bent through
out Europe became excessive. Scotland
suffered particularly iu 1825; men nnd
beasts died in scores. The hoat in oov-
cral departments during the summor of
1705 wns equal to that in a glass furnace.
Meat could be cooked by merely expo
sing it to tho sun. Not a soul dare ven
ture out between noon and 4 r. m. In
1718 many shops had to close; the
theatres never opened their doors for
several months. Not a drop of water
fell during Bix months. In 1773 the
thermometer rose to 118 degrees.
1779 the heat at Bologna was so great
that a great number of people were
stifled. There was not sufficient air for
the breath, and people had to take refugo
under ground. In July, 1798, tho heat
became intolerable. Vegetables were
burned up and fruit dried upon the trees.
The furniture and woodwork in dwell
ing houses oracked and split up; meat
went bad in an hour.
The Scavengers or Panama.
The narrow, rocky point of land on
which the city is built has a backbone
through the middle and slopes on both
■ides and at the end down to the water’s
edge. No city war ever better situated
for drainage. There can be no apology
for its not being perfectly drained. On
a fine morning when you have taken a
very early cup of coffee, you saunter out
for a walk on the ancient rampart and
encounter a procession of skinny old
hags of the serving class hobbling along
toward the beach with capacious and
“No,” replied the one in trouble. “I
will tell you,” said Wesley, “because malodorous vessels on their iieads. These
she cannot look through it; and that is : are about the only scavengers that Pana-
whit you must do with your trouble; '• ma possesses. Their vocation is as old
Poultices Made or Snails.
“One dollar a pound will be paid for
live snails,” was an advertisement in a
Philadelphia paper, A joweler on Pus
syunk avenue was the advertiser. The
morning following his printed offer for
unscalped specimens, says an oxchnngo,
u long lino of boys, old womon and col
ored men stood patlontly waiting for the
jeweler to open his shop. “One dollar
a pound” had sot thousands to work snnil
hunting. The unwary creatures were
pounced upon in cellars and alleyways
all their dump, slimy haunts were in
vaded by battalions armed with sticks,
jugaand cans, nnd by daylight the hunt
wus ovor. Small boys with a few ounces
of snails and sevorul pounds of dirt, de-
posited thoir moist treusuros in tho jew
elor’s hands, received a dime and left
with uncomplimentary remarks about
his weighing scales. An old colored
man dumped two pounds of assorted
sizes and grinnod as a couple of silver
his pockets,
dollars rattled down into
Tho old women bad been pretty good
hunters too, and bagged large quantities
of the game. All the morning thu little
jewelry storo wus bosieged by snail
catchers, and before noon tho market
prico had declined fifty per cent. The
Of course tUodropplugs should va l' 10 had little effect, howover
be removed frequently, especially during ! ter tho rush contiuu jd till closing time.
1 • * 1 * . . * ll.ifAra A n’/i nnli anni u worn a rlrnrr nn
usual atmosphoric phenomena. Howover,
just after the most solemn declaration
that no such wind had even been known
In Dakota, a sturdy “settler" took the
stand and swore that in a storm his
oooklng stove had been blown out of his
“shuck," hut not another of his effects
had been touched.
This naturally leads to a word upon
a pronounced peculiarity of tho Dakota
people. The air is so rare and bracing
that man seem to lose all sensa of prop
er relation to things. There is no such
thiug as an accurate knowledge of dis
tances iu this country. No two men
will agree os to tho number of miles be
tween to given points. Even tho hon
ored bishop of Dakota, whom ho meets
at service in this mission, has fallen into
tho prevalent habit, and cannot toll for
his life within five or ten miles tho dis
tance to be traveled between any two
points in his expanded and oximusi vo dio-
cobo. And then ths truth I It stretches
even more mnrveiously than distances.
For Instance: While expatiating upon
transcendent glories of the climate, an
old aa highly esteomod citizen told of
an experience of his where the table had
been spread for a family feast, possibly
Thanksgiving dinner. Suddenly n
zephyr camo up and the company re
treated to the cyclone hole. After the
storm had passed, and the family had
emerged, thoy found that every one of
the chairs about the table had been blown
through tho only window thero was in
tho room, and not a trace of them could
be found, while not another thing had
boen touched, nor the table with its vi
ands disturbed 1 You aro expectod to
believe this sort of thing; your hosts
Tool Injured at any expression of doubt.
It is readily Boon what a simple, con-
tiding, ehild-like and bland people such
lmbils of life will nrodtico. Another
story wns tola us, nnu this by a Metho
dist minister, regularly in ordors. He is
s dovoted sportsman. lie has a very fine
gun and an unusually well-bred pointer
dog. Ho said it was nothing unusual
whon he was out in tho field for the dog
to “point” a bird in the evening after ft
was too dark for him to shoot; ho would
go home, tnko a good night's rest, nnd
return in the oarly morning to find the
faithful dog still on the point, whon he
would shoot and bag the bird, thus be
ginning another day’s sport. As a guar
antee of good fnlth, but not necessarily
for publication, I have the name of this
humble and devoted herald of the cross
and ho brought tho gun to the hotel as
conclusive evidenco of the truth of his
story. For myself, I have no doubt of
it, nor have I any doubt of anything else
I am likely to hear. The ordinary rules
that govern human conduct cannot be
expected to app'y to a people who live
in a land where no pent-up Utica con
tracts their powers, but who spread over
a whole boundloss continent.
A STORY OF LONDON.
A THIEF AND HID NT RANGE ACCOM
PLICE.
Oaalse Baanclty that Ouaht ta Hava Baas
Pat la Hcttar Dm.
The story is told of • terrier whloh be
longed to s thief named “Joe” Ball.
The terrier was as good as ten pounds a
week to the mss ter. Ball usod to work
the jewelers’ ehope with it Togged
like a swell, Joe need to go into a Lon
don shop with his little dog trotting be
hind him, very likely without the shop
men noticing it. He wonld ask to be
shown some rings or brooches, or any
other goods that wore Btnall and vain-
able, aud the idea was to fliok one off
the tray when the shopman's eve was off
It. There wns no risk of it falling on to
the floor, for the terrier was that trained
U wonld catch it in hiB month jnst as
though it wns a bit of meat. If the
shop door was open at the time it bolted
ont at onoe ana joined Mrs. Joe, who
wasn’t far off. If it was shnt, as is most
likely to be the case, as most of the
jewelers now have a spring-catch on the
door, the onnning oauino wonld sit
down, innocent-looking ns a lamb, and
with its month shut, until Joe discov
ered that none of the things shown were
suitable, and promised to oall again.
“Tho best lark of it was that one time
Joe got twenty pounds off a ohap in
Oxford street for falsely sconcing him,”
said a friend of Joe's who told this story.
“He hnd been stopped before when the
shopkeeper happened to miss whnt hod
been ‘prigged,’ but had been satisfied to
get off after displaying virtnoua indigna
tion : bnt the time I'm speaking of the
jeweler wns not so lenient, the ring
that hnd vatiishod being a valuable
one. He reaohod ovor the oouuter and
seized Joe by the oollar, and sprang
over and pinned him pretty roaghiy.
“ ’Now I’ve got you,' said he, and
shonted oat for the boy to fetch a
policeman.
“ 'Hands off,’ said Joe. The dog, yon
must understand, with the ring in ita
month, esoapod the moment tho boy
nufoeteued tho door. 'Hands off,’sold
Joe, bristling up, 'yon insulting scoun
drel I What do yon mean by accusing ■
gentleman of suoh an aot ? Here,
policeman,’ said he, ns the boy oame in
with tho bobby, 'I demand to be
searohed instantly. This fellow has so-
oused me of stealing his property.
" 'It will preoions soon he proved,
too,’ sold the jeweler, who was vory oer-
taiu. 'I’d take a hundred oaths, if It
wnrm weather. Lon'ves and boughs of j » uforo <> o’clock snails wore a drug on
sassafras scattered around the henhouse ■ * “ssyunk avenue, and sportsmen could
will help destroy or at leust scatter vor- j not ' eu ' lze 11 l ,cun y “ pound on their
min captives.
,1 „ . .... , ,, Iu nn interview held with tho adver-
If there is any. odd time when tho ! tigor and purohasor|
it was discovered
ound is too wet to work, manure may ‘ ,i. ’ to i,u uaed for a
look over and above them.”
j ss the city.—(Son Erancitco Chronicle.
round
o drawn and spread on land intended
for cropping next season. It will bo
workod through the soil more perfectly
the earlier it is applied, aud on (he sur
face of either plowed or grass laud ma
nure, oven in hot weather, loses littlo
from evaporation.
Many horaes have tho habit of sleeping
standing up.;It is u very injurious habit,
and tho horse should bo broken of it if
possible. The narrow stulls iu which
horses nro often placed makes n recum
bent position vory difficult. It is cruelty
to tho animal to place him in such u
stall after doing a hard day’s work.
As soon as tho presence of the onion
maggot is detected all tho plants at
tached, which aro easily known by tho
loaves fading and turniug yellow, should
bo at once pulled up, burned and lime
water poured into the holes. Strewing
soot or powdered charcoal around the
plants, or saturating the beds with
strong soapsuds, has been found useful.
Making hay while tho sun shineB was
the old-fashioned rule, aud a good oue
under mothods formerly adopted. But
it has boen superseded by tho changes in
hay-making machinery. Hay as cut. now
with the mower is spread vory thinly,
drios rapidly, and, excepting the first
few hours after cutting, most of its cur
ing is in the cock, where it is protected
from rains to which it would be exposed
if made iu tho sun.
A Massachusetts horticulturalist re
commends tho following method for da-
stroyingtent caterpillars: Make a strong
solution of Bolt soap and water, and with
a sponge attached to a pole pass the
sponge through the tent, saturating it
■ horoughly. The work should be dono
morning, noon and night, and the pests
will be deetvoyea easily, while no injury
will be done the trees.
Bo much has been said of the advan
tages from pasturing hogs that many
have probably concluded that pasture
alone was sufficient. The truth is that
a pig running in pasture with no other
that the snails wore to be used for a
medical purpose. Somo time ago a pub
lished article ou oc/emu, or skin disease,
mentioned the case of a prominent Eng
lish dean, who was suffering from this
troublesome malady. While walking in
his garden one warm day, suffering in
tensely with the burning, itching rash
that covered his body, a family of Biiuils
clinging to tho under side of u cool,
green leaf suggested the idea of apply,
ing them to tho affected skin. Laying
a fow upon tho stinging spots, ho dis
covered by this heroic, though repul
sive, treatment a simple remedy for the
disorder. According to the jowcler's
statement, this nrtiolo hud led him to
advertise for snails, having been afflicted
with a troublesome case of eczema for
thirteen years. A week’s experiment
with the novel remedy has relieved‘him
considerably, and the prospect is that
the suail market will recover from its
collapse. Should the treatment prove
effective in this prevalent disorder, it
will be welcomed no less by the medical
profession than by the sufferers.
Cost of Railroad Accidents.
“You occasionally hear people find
fault because managers of railroads do.
not prevent accidents,” said n railroad
man in Jersey City tire other day. “There
may be bears among railroad owners who
rejoice in wrecking railroads that they
do not own, but to the practical rail
roader a train wreck is a big loss directly,
beside the loss In prestige which
follows."
“Is the rolling stock so costlyt”
“Yes, a freight train, for instance,
that rolls down »u embankment, where
halt of it is burned, will give you a gooa
idea of the Iosb. The average engine is
worth $7,000. A common freight car is
worth $475, or perhaps $500. The
ordinary gondolas are worth from $400
to $425. Ac engine is rarely ruined be
yond repair, but a wreck cun knock
$3,000 out of it just as easy us rolling
off a log. A burned car is a ruined car,
of course, and repairs oa thoso that are
crushed may cost anywhere from $50 to
$200 each. If a passenger car, such as
is used ou ordinary roads, is burned,
$3,500 goes up iu smoke. These figures
aro for the cars in use, and not new out
of' the shop. From this you can see
that wreckB may happen which cost a
company $10,000, and yet nothing is
likely to be said about them in the papers
unless some ono gets hurt, and not then
if the railroadmen can keep it quiet.”
—Neio York Bun.
A Petrified Snake.
The petrified snake recently found in
a sandstone rock just lsid down in a
new walk built at Portsmouth, Ohio,
attracted a great deal of attention. The
f ietrifaction is not in the stoue, but on
t, and the reptile seems to have been in-
VtUAl« XU M1RO n uuuuivu VSHHUD, u i
was necessary, that the diamond ring
was in the tray a moment before I
missed it.’
'* ‘You hnd best come to the station,’
the policeman said to Joe. Bat Joe
wonldn’t. If ho did, ho said, it might
be suspected that ho hnd mode away
with the ring going along, and he in
sisted on being thoroughly searohed be
fore he left tho premises; and the
bobby, being an old hand, searohed
him olosely—looked in his month, even
passed hla fingers through his hair.
“ 'How the deuoe oould it be hidden
there!' asked Joe, who was enjoying the
joke.
“ 'It wonldn’t be tho first time,’ sold
the policeman ; 'we had a curly-haired
ohap brought in tho other day on jnst
snob s oharge ss this, and the property
—a voir of earrings and a ring—was
found hanging under bis hair to two
little hooks that were fastened to a silk
thread that went round his head.’
“But no ring was found on Joe Ball,
and sinoe he hadn't moved or got away
from the oonnter all the time, it seemed
oertain that the jeweler mast have mode
a mistake. Foot, he said so himself,
and made humble apologies to Joe fox
wrongfully acoasing him.
“'That will do for the present, my;
man,’said Joe, ‘bnt it won’t reet here.'
And a few days after the jeweler got ■
letter from a lawyer Joe woe aequsT
with, and he was glad to square the
matter for twenty pounds, and of oonrso
Joe had the ring aa well,”—New York
Hour,
Misdirected Tenderness.
Borne of the oontradlotions of hnman
nature in the same individual are abso*
lutely marvellous. Boyne, the German
teaoher, who recently threw vitriol npon
the waiter girls in a Detroit hotel, is
said to havo been very kind to a vicious
mustang which he owned, feeding him
with sugar, and on finding after sellinf:
him that the work was hard, he bongh ;
him back at considerable loss. Bo, too,
the murderer of Mine. Bollerioh, in
Paris, not long sinoe. was a desperate
Imrglar and assoesin bat who lived nn-
saspooted the life of a oountry gentle
man, highly reHpeoted by his neighbors
and friends. He was very fond of damb
animals, and on being arrested for bis
ornel murder be turned to the police
with tears in his eyes and said; “Don'i
forget to feed my fowls 1” If some of
this lavish tenderness of mnrderers and
vitriol-throwers would only spill over on
their fellow boings they would '
"Haw’s Tarn Ltvav»*»
In ths oomio opsra of "Ths Mlkada” Mi
Imperial hishnws says:
"To malm to some extant,
Each evil Liver
A running river
Of harmless merriment’’
A nobler task than making evil livers, riv
en of harmless merriment no person, kina sr
layman, oould take upon himself. The liver
among the ancients was considered the souroa
of all n man’s evil impulses, and the ehanoss
are ton to ono to-day that if one’s liver Is In
an ugly condition of discontent, someone •
head will be mashed before night)
"How's your liver I" is equivalent to the In
quiry: Are you a bear or an angel today t
Nine-tenths of tho “pur.vcuwedneee,” the
actions for divorce, the ourtaln lectures, the
family rows, not to speak of murders,
crimes and other calamities are prompted by
tho irritating effect of the inactivity of the
liver upon the brain. FrothergUl, too great
specialist, says tills and he knif ' ”o also
knows that to prevent such Are- ,
nothing equals Warner’s safe cf
throughout the world, as a nuiure, •—-
“Each evil Liver, kero* >-“*
A running river '
Of harmlese merriment"
Satirists gain tho applause of others through
fear, not through love.
A BALTIMORE WENWAT1CN.
A *•* jsaHns
Among the many pleasantly located and
cosily comfortable homes In tho eastern sta
tion of the city of Baltimore, that ef Mr.
William A. Thompson, at No. 908 North
Bond street, would strike a visitor a* pos
sessing more than ordinary advantages for
home life. Mr. Thompson is a highly
teemed momber of Marley Lodge, Wo. 107,
O. O. F„ and is generally well known In
that section of the city. In order to cou8rsi
certain statement! which had come to him
indirectly, nnd thereby secure data for an
interesting article, n reporter called at Mr.
Thompson’s residence. Mrs. Thompson, be
ing asked for, received him courteously
told the story of her peril In these words:
"I have been a sufferer for fully eeventeen
yeare, during which time I have endured the
most awful misery of mind und body. My
illness became most alarming about Bvayaars
ago, 1 was attended by Professor Yates and
Doctor Stephenson, of this city, both of whoa
stated that I had the moet aggravated cose of
nervous dyspepsia and indigestion that they
hnd ever attended or heard of. I nin now
nearly 00 years of ago and was told by my
>hysicians that owing to my advanoed life
he process of cure would be slow nnd diffi
cult I waited patiently for the expected re
lief. but loomed to grow worse, until finally
I concludsd I hud to die. I did not out the
smalleet morsel without suffering the moet
terrible agony. My whole body wus rucked
with pain and misery. Frequently I hnd
night swouto, nnd. believing that I was dy
ing, would send for uly friends und neigh
bors. My limbs would become rigid nnd
cold, and I hove often thought I was para
lyzed, for I completely lost all power of ao-
tlo», nnd would lie in bed gasping for breath.
During nil tiffs long period of suffering ths
doctors afforded me no relief. I grew omn-
ciated, could not sleep, entirely lost my appe
tite, and was truly the moat miserable wo
man imaginable- My whole nervous system
was shattered. I never expected to get well,
and my friend* have sinoe told me that they
expected to learn of my death at any time.
One day my husband purchased a bottle of
Brown’s Iron bitters and begged me to try
it. I had no confidence In medicine of nay
kind. I believed my case hopeless, nnd ex
pected to die suddenly in one of my sinking
spells, whloh 1 expensneed about three times
each woek. I, however, took Brown’s Iren
Bitters to gratify my husband After usins
three bottle* I began to feel better. When I
had finished the fourth bottle my husband
and friends were able to notice o grant im
appreciated.-
be better
Detroit Free Prest.
New Zealand Songstress.
Madame Marie Oarandiai, Musical Ar
Gst, Wellington, N. Z., writes to th
Christchurch, New Zealand Telegraph.
“I have used St Jacobs Oil, and find
much relief in case of rheumatism, and
for all neuralgic pains ”
TUB LONG THAW.
At the station down in Indiana the
Lake Shore Company employs a lady
tioket agent She is a good agent, and
attends olosely to her business, bat she
is a woman still. The other day a lady
traveler stepped up to the tioket window
and inquired about a train that was
little late.
“Will the train be long ?” she asked,
meaning if it would be long in arriving.
“Oh, yes,” was the reply of the fair
agent, “longer than last season, but
without so many ruffles aronnd the
edge.”—Chicago Herald.
What “ Old Frit/," Anld. ,, ,
It was an aphorism of hrederick the
Great’s that " Facts are divine things.” An
nnffisputnd fact is that Dr. Pierce’s “ Golden
Medical Discovery ” is the most-powerful liver
vitalizer extant, and by its characteristic and
searching action will cure dyspepsia, consti
pation, drnpsv, kidney disease, sick-headache
and otlior maladies which, popular opinion to
the contrary notwithstanding, are directly
traceable to a diseased condition of the liver,
by which its work aa purifier of the blood ’
All druggist*.
Sam Jones, the Southern Revivalist.
It is Bafe to eay, relates a Nashville
coricspondent of the Chicago Inter-Ocean,
that Sum Joues.by a policy of aggretsion,
hns won the heart of everyone here. The
citizens recently • offered him a $10,000
homo free if he would settle down here.
After some deliberation he declined the
offer. At another time some gentleman
presented him with $1,500.
“No," he said; “I’ll take $800of that,
and request you to divide the remaining
among those Baloonists who have re
formed aud destroyed their stock, to
their own considerable loss.”
Relative to his literary style, Mr.
Jones says:
“I have adopted the language of the
people, the language of the street, the
office and the Bhop. When a man
meanB business he takes all the nigb
cuts, even in his language, and so do L
I am always in a hurry. ”
ropt
•tantly killed while in motion, as the
body presents ail the graceful curves of
movement. The snake, in life, was
about sixteen inches long. Some three
or four inches of the tail have been
broken off. The head and proportions
of tho body are perfect, although the
stooe cutter, in hiB anxiety to make it
look nice, did some chiseling around it
which had better been omited. There
are all kinds of theories as to how the
snake got fast on the surface of the rocks
aud died there so suddenly. A thin
stratum of sandstone overlaid that con-
tainiag the snake, with a slight deposit
of clay between the two. The snake
seems to have been moving in what was
once a bed of sandy mud and afterward
baoome stone. It probsbly was killed
by lightning, and tne deposits of cluy
and sandstone around it were the result
of subsequent overflow.
On July 4, 1826, John Adams aud
Jefferson died; July 4, 1881, Monroe
died; Julv 8, 1850, Taylor died in office;
July 23, 1885, Grant died. On July 2,
1881, Garfield received his fatal wound.
A locomotive will run 60,000 miles be
fore requiring general repairs; but some
get discouraged at 40,000 and want a
Rttle “patting.”
made incomplete.
Conversation:—The idle man'* business and
the busiuesB man’u recreation.
Tub pureBt, sweetest and best (Tod Liter Oil
In the world, manufactured from fresh, healthy
livers, upon the seashore. It is absolutely pure
and sweet. Patients who havo once taken it pre
fer It to all others. Physicians have decided it
superior to any of the other oils in market. Had*
by Caswell, Hazard Sc Co., New York.
If a man have love in his heart, he may talk
iu broken language, but it will be eloquence .to
those who listen.
({■rations AMweratilllt
iri tAe molt eminent pAyriotea
Of any school, whsl ta lb# test thing In the
world for allaying all lrritetton ot the nervte
and caring all forms it nervovis oqmplalnta,
giving natural, childlike refreshing sleep
** And*they wffl tellyou unhedltattagly
'• Sane form ef H6pe I IP l
CHAPTER L
Aik any sr all of the most eminent phy
sicians: I ....
" What ta th* enlv remedy that can be re
lied on to cure all disease* of th* kidneys and
urinary organs; Bright’s disease, diabetes,
retention, or Inability to retain urine, andan
the diseases and ailments peculiar to Wo-
And they will toll you explicitly and em
phatically " Buchu til
Ask the same physicians
" What ta the most reliable and surest cure
for all liver diseases or dyspepsia, constipa
tion, Indigestion, bllkiiisntm, malaria, (ever,
ague, Ao., and they will tell you
Mandrake I or Dandelion I\! I
Hence, when thee* remedlosi are combined
with othar* equally valuable,
And compounded Ihto Hop Bitters, such ■
wonderful and mysterloua curative powor ta
daveloped, which ta so varied I n it* ojperatlons
that no dl.
smith can I
r exist
er resist its power, and yet It ta
Harmlets for the most frail woman, weak
est Invalid or smallest child to usa
CHAPTER L -
•)| PeUente"
" Almost deed or nearly dyli
For years, and given up by phyat
Bright's and other kidney diseases, liver eom-
S I amts, saver* coughs, called consumption,
ave been cured.
Womeh gone nearly cravy P 11! I
From agony of neuralgia, nervonsnsm,
wakeful nem, and various dtatsism peculiar to
women.
l’eopie drawn out Of shape from excrutie-
ting pangs of rheumatism, Inflammatory and
chronic, or suffering from scrofula.
Erysipelas I
" Sal trim
"Saltrheum, blood poisoning, dyspepsia,
indijrestiou, and, In fact, almost oil diseases
Hop Bitten, proof of
every neighborhood in
Nature ta heir to
Have been cured b|
which can b* found
the known world.
g*~None genuine without a bunch of gram
Hope on the white label. Shnn all tha Vila,
poisonous stuff with "Hop” or “Hope" in their
name.
ELY’S
CREIM BUM
wh*n Applied Into the no*-
trilK, will be •MovtuBd,
cauaing healthy Moratiolne.
It * lay* Inflammation, jm>-
the mambrana ffom
oolde, emupln.nljr Inhale
oroa and reitoie* the
sensei of taato and email,
HotaLipiorSnnff,
w application* relliiva.
_ (trough treatment will
K re. Agreeable to uee.
nd for oiroular. 6C cfiinta
at druggiate, or by mall.
ULY ItftOTHKHO, Drontsla, Own R. T.
provement in my general appearance. My
ppetlto returned, and I could eat anything
without the least bed effects I rapidly grew
stronger and more fleshy. When I had
taken six bottles I knew that 1 was a well
woman, and at the present time I never felt
better In ray life, and have gained forty-flv*
Hinds in flesh. I firmly believe that
rown's Iron Bitten saved my life, for I had
stopped taking all other medicines and
only used Brown's Iron Bitten, and if I bad
not uaed that I am satisfied I would not b.
alive to-day. I moet cheerfully recommend
that niedlcln* to everybody."
Mr. J. T. Marshall, Pleasant Hill, B. C.,
says: I used Brown's Iron Bitters for kidnty
trouble and pains In my back with th* most
beneficial results. I have no hesitancy in
recommending It as a vary superior medlclna.
Mrs C. Butler, Aiken, 8. C., says: My
husband used Brown’s Iron Bitters for ner
vous prostration, headache aud general de
bility and It not only gas* relief to hta dta
eased frame, bnt permanently cured him.
Mr. Frank T. Ryan (Clerk of Superior
Court), Atlanta, Oa., says: Brown’s Iron
Bitters did me great good—It etrengtliened
me and reduced the frequency and violence
of the attacks of neuralgia to whloh I am
ubject I heartily recommend it
Man is made ont of the dust of the earth, and
some of them are terras all their lives.
A highly perfumed Soap will not heal or cure
skin diseases, neither will it beautify and soften
' ice and hands; try “Beeson’s Aromatio Alum
ifiphnr Soap." 25 oenta by Druggiate, or by
laiL Wm. Dreydoppel, Philadelphia, Fa.
The wings of a party do not necessarily mako
It angollo.
The worst coos* cured by Dr. Sage’s Catarrh
Remedy.
Virginia punishes her State Prison conviots
by witholding their rations of tobaooo. Two
days brings tne worst man to time.
Stbawhteh your old boots and ahoeawith
Lyon’s Heel Stiffeners, and wear them again.
When you speak to a person, look him in the
face.
Chapped hands, face, pimplea and rough
skin onred by using Juniper Tar aoap, made by
Caswell, Hazard A Co,, New York.
The Mlto’y Dollar"—That made up of ohuroh
oollection pennies.
HAY-FEVER
H. Dudley Coleman,
Heslaeo, Rollers aa* Maehleerr.
Representing soven makers of steam engines,
whose goods I have in stock, with nneioellsd
freight facilities by rail and water, and having
an extensive foundry and maoiffne shop in thte
otty, I offer extra inducement! to purchasers.
Bend for prices. J
H. DUDLEY COLEMAN,
No. 9 Perdido 8t, NsW Omani, La.
SS s
I suffered for more than fir* jmn with Indie#*ttoa,
scarcely abl* to retain tha slmpldat food on mjratom*
ach. 1 daollnod In flo«h. and aufVerrd atV t«‘ usual
dopraaalon attendant upon thla terrible dlaca**. At
I nut. falling to Hnd rtf Inf In anything elaa, I equ*
tnonoad th* um of Burlft 1 * Buadflc, Tho medtolM
toned up th* atoraarh, strengthened th* dl
^ a. ea-a i
gan*, and toon all that burning onund. in’
srjgs
. add Skin Pita
Till BWIMf SPECIFIC Ofe.
N. Y.s 257 W. 2U Et. Dratrar 5, Atlanta, Oa.
PENNYROYAL
"CHICHESTER’S ENGLISH”
The Original! aud Only Ssnlse.
Oh! Bat 1 Hallvata* .
clamatlon of an honest phy-
’hom
sician, spoken of on* of hta p*
he had given calomel for th* -
nee* ana a diseased liver. Ar
was th* actual exclamation of an honei
patients to wl
e cure of bilioua-
And he had sali
vated him for certain, from which he never
recovered. All these distressing consequence*
are avoided by the nee of I)r. l lcrce’s "Pleas
ant Purgative Pellets," a purely vegetable
remedy that will not salivate, but produce th*
most pleasing effect. Invigorate the liver, care
headache, dyspepsia, biliousness, constipation
and piles By druggists.
Nothing can constitute good breeding that
hsa r ot good natnre for ita foundation.
Important.
Whan ton visit or lure Nsw York ollr. save bseitva,
eiprsMars and SB cirri ft** him, and stop at tbft Grand
Union HoUl, opposil* Grand Oftntral dftpot.
foe alepftnt rooraft. til UK I up at a ooatof ona million
dollars, SI and upward por dar. 3nropnan plan. 111*,
valor. ItMtaurant aupplled with tba teat. Horse oars,
ttagea and olavatod rafroada to all dopota. Familial
cap live bollar for lain monav at tha Grand Union
u dial than at anv other flrat-olaaa howl in tba oitr.
Your character oannot be essentially injured,
except by your own sots.
0TT0N
PRICES.
_ j STEAM OB WATER. HAND OB HOMU
IpOWER.
Experienced ss II manufacturer for fifteen
years, and with unliixcellctl faculties for Msnn-
I.during and Shipping, I offer speolal Induos-
montf to purchasers aud agents. Send tor oir-
oqIats*
H. DUDLEY COLEMAN,
No. 9 Perdido St. Nuw Oblsass, La.
AWARE
(THAT
Cllttfli Flog.
MORPHINEteKssSu
EASILY OUR1I
BOOK FREE.
•R. j. C. HOFFMAN. Jsllertes. Wltssesta
Iff nnu 15’8 business
JU. U U JI-Ej 0 UNIVERSITY,
^ m has tak«R th* It** fa
M th* tale* of tliat cltu *f
(•media*, *nd h*fl |i»e*
J DAYI^H *lft®*l unlffliul MUifef
'•‘ViURZHV BROS*_
t £
T
flhtswon th* favor of
thu public and now rank*
anion* tha jaadlng Modi-
-*—ofth# oildoa.
‘ SMITH. _
Bradford, Pa-
Sold by DrufgUt*.
Price gl.#9*
RedStar
THURSTON'S K'lTOOTHPOWDIS
Kaaalaw Teeth Perfnet and Him ■fqllhyj
fr*«. BUadai’d
Free from Opiates, Bmetlcs mud Poito«*.
A PROMPT/ SAFE, SURE CURE
Aflthmr, QuImbf, Palaila OhoM* andMtor
n if Action* of tho Throat and Lunffs.
Pun* 10 QEMTfl A BOTTLE. AT D*0**lflT* AM* Dm—I
™ “ ABL " A *i2u." iSStal&fcfcA.
AGENTS «d2lti l M. b *ter J »A n dS,t ■?
BLKS B specialty. Very fow frit-. B- V. JOHNSON
k CO., Pub*., 1QI3 Maip Btr—t, Rich mo ad, Ta.
The best cough medicine is Piso’s Our* for
Consumption. Sold overywher . 25c.
Th» Flotjb Business. —“Push tho
pnoe of flour up another notch," said
the Minneapolis' miller to his manager.
“I sec England sad Russia ore likely to
have war.” “Bat the latest news indi
cates anamicable settlement of the diffi
culty.’’ “Is that so ? Well, thon push
the price np two notches. Of course the
fewer persons killed in wsx tha mors
will live to want flour.”
Taking Sides.—A Florida paper
throws aside all sentiment and oomea
to the kernel of the matter thna: “A
fiddlestick for our ‘dnty’ as neutrals in
the Aoglo-Raesian difficulty. Our ‘duty*
Is to moke all we oan out of the affair,
just os those countries did in our little
lty a tew years ago,’’
Dill* Srsst Esiiltb Gout ss*
Ulall S “III*. Rheumatic Rsmsfiy
Oval B«x, Sl.OOl rawaS. OP eta.
opiums:
SM*. UkiBM. OU*
■am, Pitant Lawyer. Washington. D. O.
A Clear Skin
is only a part of beauty;
but it is a part.* Every lady
may have it; at least, what
looks like it. Magnolia
Balm both freshens and
beautifies,
PentionofifHKSSK
un U m n..
COLEMAN’S CORN MILLS,
WITH SOLID ! FRENCH BOHR BTONEB,
Invented in 185(1 continued and repeated im
provements Hinoel then keep them In th* lead of
all competition. Others f liav* tried to copy
after them and iiftll the imitation* on the r®P®*
tation of the COLEMAN! COHN MILL, »e
"Maid of the South.” Send for price*.
H. DUDLEY COLEMAN,
Did you Sup-
■
pose Must rag Liniment only good
for hones
tion of all
? It ia for inflamiw.