CaVITIIOUT AN EQUAL JtDCtS. if""' CJRE9 RHEUMATISM, WEURALCIA, LUMBAGO, SCIATICA, 8praln, BWio, ourns, oweiiings, pftOMPTLY AND PERMANENTLY. O Specialty. & , PROMPT SHIPMENTS -WE CAllItY IN STOCK ., Grain and Flax Testers, nl loii, i iimmi .11 ins, l(ir- I'owfW, Spouts, I'ully Sprocket Wheels, Sliiiltlnt:. Ilaiiirorn, lloxm ami Collar, ...,.., liit Htfuni Fit tins. ',,.;. Hrat Goods nn.l l'akiiir i. ink. Fire Hnck, ami (lay. Uvip Steam Outfits Promptly Furnished or Reoaired. r1'- an i:f(o nl Pactinoc anrl Marhino Wnr. rvlllUa Ul woomnjj bhu iiiuuimiiu num. York Foundry & Engine Co., York. Npbrnkn BALE-TIE MACHINE. Makes ft complete tie witn one, riovetwtii or the lever. Hvri ) pun cut, in et i.t i.!t!i ttr. Nti delay In waiting (or lien; Diuke tUcin I'uunicif. ' In U. S. NAY PRESS SUPPLY CO., KANSAS t ITV. MO. II r l!ct Cough Medicine. Recommended by l'hyicin. fori where Ml eiaa iu: ' irwm . K. y. u. v .... fcifewilKHJinHMgr 5 ACADEMY -AND lect School , P THE Iv Child Jesus, U.NX'OL.-, M-.liti-Av. . . ...... .... J , ... H1t '''' J-"" rr"m Hill, rhtlutplihl Pnnylnl". Voting PDAY, SEPTEMBER 14. 1891. -A An A in tl.U 1 rtilcttlf 111) tS Eur)';- jnumrvJ, and rticoliu nf fnlijc.ooao obUcl to do Wtl'BtlDil. (.MOTHER SUFEIUOR, Contwi of 0 Holy Child J IIUl and V BlfMU. . . . . hemiaska. tT7 8 Free Trade Prices N'n Mitfl.foll' $16 W c are now at- 1 Wentrrn lntprnvr.1 SirK' Srwinir Machine a.n a cil-romplrte Uh " iai-linuinl (Inn lor C ver i"f ool '' r rraU. ... r.lf .tu-rtrinn .Jl In- ktMIlM to M. A. hcullm i Co., . 4 W lk.,Oiico,llL I 1 FOR OLD AND YOUNG. Tntt'I.tvrr I'lils urt n klmlly n the rliilii, lt tlcHciff ffiiiitln or iullnu old Tuii's Pills (jlvfl t.)ii ant .trfm:tl lolliR tvi'tik sUiiiv Tf.XAS JOURNALISM. A Ji's ytwrtAiA, wl, La.l lha kiiiii umt liill.mmg Lim.selfi.ua Unk much f,.r mi iieoi vtars. su. , .-nk- -i ...... irul .,l a wjumry w-. k!y, u.l Ja (Le tir,l isfiii; aftir licitimkih.. uuH,.r i... uLlislu-il a small a,J uumvli-iilidii. fJnl in wl.ii li lie Mid: "1 Lc foriiit-r editor of lliis !,. i ..r .,-. t aily and politically iltad! Liu The Sun Miw slill (survives. It U inj .. ,.:i th-iuslj. and ainii'lilv i I. n,.r UJ I a Losut fditiu', and sling one of 'the most Mtu-tic und tiueutubt ijuill, of ttie Hi-d hhit. i Lave- u noril Uliind me wLii li dint need a new covit of whitewa-li every iriug. like that o(li,;r editor which n ctntiy uuUed aud drawtd out of the game. At citua un obitn and if there's any liikti in the program i tan generally fumish a frejh corps.; on short notice, and at the usual slight ad vance on cost of insertion. 1 mcielv throw thH out as a feeler to the oppuJ fchun, whh h, I hear, is a mussing us loin apn me and uiy paj.tr, ami, by Hie In i kle fined, Ixm desired, cock-cycl 'odsoi war, tli. ie'll U- a power of hiirh pric-d i.pcrj uiu.sii: noamifr 111 ttie ajr, it any ol Uieiu try Ui clime uie. "If there is enny corte house liu.; hi this sweet-scented 'locality, I'll j.ct on H it, sure as you're a fool lifgli. li' tle ie i to lie any iminkyiii with the freer I;- in, iiiilrauiuieled country delefales to the n, t county convention, I'll he there with my face washed and hair combed back of my I've licked many a nxA niau. and I'v been lickpl once or twice in my vaiietratu! career, but I've always noticed that them tellers wiio whipped niewcre not the same men afterwards, and drooped alon;; for a while like a sun rtrui k tomato vine, and tinally dropped into the grave with a dull thud, having kinder outlived their useful ucsf. "I want it distinctly remembered thai in in from the back counties, and ain't up to the cortcetiket of the straw berry blonde or the pulpy dude. If I make any miscue' it will i.e more an error ot the head than the heart, but for all that 1 pioposo to run a lam im. hi.uv' hot, nitty little paper, and move nlonj; with the licst kind of har mony, but if harmony bucks and tries to to any sort ot dirt on me. Harmony win have to git oil the track and let me glide lit inter tne commence ot the puune. if thin journal tayn anything out of the way and grieves any mottle faced ten derfoot, rcincuiiier 1 m uie man ne wain to see about it. There ain't no hack stairs ir back windows to this sanctum nane- toriuin. 1 in always in. 1 m ever on ine tripod, and now with these lew brief re marks I cordially invite everybody's co operation and subscriptions. 1 he lone ot the paper will tie Dure in scniimein, ciinsie in expression, and typographically bang up and delirious." THE CRADLE MUST GO, What CONSUMPTION. I tiT. . p wu. rnwljr f'r t! 1jo dianMe : l.r It. dm tl,.a U t etv nl ta. mini kind iui ollnm :. r U.nlnm mrfd. InJ.i Blroujr i my r.UQ i r -,rrl. tint I ".It S"nrt TWO ROTTLU rilll.wilh VAl.l. Alll.RTHK risK i.n luu dia to ui-(-ivrrlww.ll.-odmtl.m KiwiJ P.O. KlJriw. T. A. Nlornin. M. I'.. ISt l'earl n. ft uri.llur Man Kt at Hbi Umt Are llorkfd. A young 1 ithcr entered a furniture store recently in Jla on, and asked to see a cra dle. YA lule one member of the linn went oil to w ait on the customer, the other nu mber stud to a reporter: that u w ill not lie long before not lie kept in stock at allr" The reiirter hail not kept up w ith the ! times in this particular, and asked the rea son. "The cradle is fa-st getting to be a thing of the past, a relic of baby by-gone days, as li were, mysiciuiis nave discov ered that the constant rocking of a baby in a cradle addles the brain, and to this is at tributed tne wcak miudel of this aud pre ceding generations. Minds of the child ren arc allccled liecau.se of the rocking motion, and lhev grow up either idiots or cranks. You now see why there are more cranks than ever liefore in the world's his tory. Then there is another reason why the cradle should go. Look around over the households of "the country and see the weak, sickly mothers. This cornea of rocking the cradle. Ik has lietn clearly demonstrated that running a sewing ma chine is not near so laborious or injurious to the women of this country as rocking a cradle." "How are the born journalists and prob able presidents to lie coaxed to tease siiualliiiir and nut to sleep?" "The straight bed takes the place of a cradle. Keeking doesn't stop a child from sciualliu!'. neither docs it mil ll to Sleep, That's a delusion that mothers have been hugging to their liosoms for years, even centuries. people, and if they don't sleep they are sick. A well and hearty babe can be laid down upon a couch as hard as a boutdmg- house beil and. if bleepv. will drop right oil to sleet, without any rocking whatever How manv times have vou seen a mother rock a baliv for au hour or longer, and yet hear the child sutiall nearly all the time. It would not have squalled near so long if laid comfortably on a rockerlcss bed, and the poor mother -would not have lieen tired out nushiii" a cradle to and fro. 'Then the cradle must go, you think?' "Yes, and with it all those baby scaring songs; no more w ill lie ncani, liany jiiuie, 'Habv's Cot a Tooth.' and all those songs which accompany the rocking of the cradle. You will never bear again: t The late James Hath btdieved himself to have been the fird .rn to put the verb "to boycott" in print. Ab the- story goes, one night during one of his visits to Ireland, he sat writing a dispatch to a New York paper, when J.1t V, f. ,nrl Viiin'lf at. a 1()3S fof ,, : auuuuuiy .o iv"" ...... .- . IO OU S.UOW I - , i ,1.,.. 1,.,,- e cradles will U word to express what was then hap pening toJCaptain Iloyeott. use boy cott's name as a verD," saiaa priest vi his elbow, and Iledpath accopU.4 lue suggestion. Next day Itedpath met the Irish speakers, then just starting out upon a series of campaign meetings, and suggested to them the use ol ttie word '-to boycott." The suggestion urn Hwrited. and shortly after the word had wido currency in both Ire knd and America. The National Medical association have recommended to congrei to create another cabinet officer to be designated The Secretary of Publlo Heal'- . 17ITT LITTLE : Jflfc. .EST w JUTUI WTi A . nwn uvn niau consTiPATion "August Flower How does he feel ? He feels Kabies sleep more than grown blue, a deep, dark, unlading, ayea- n-the-wool, eternal Diue, ana ne makes everybody feel the same way August Flower tne nemeuy. How does he feel? He feels a headache, eenerally dull and con stant, but sometimes excruciating August Flower tne riemeuy How does he feel? He feels a violent hiccoughing or jumping of the stomach alter a meal, raising bitter-tasting matter or what he has eaten or drunk August r town. the Remedy. How does he feel ? He feels Yoc.kev hve lialiy. Inner fee top, Wlienncr win' h'ows o'aille 'ill yoek, VV homier boujrll li'akes e'aille 'ill tall, Down II turn lialiy, e auiean mi til trrarlnal decay of vital power bp feels miserable, melancholy, becauM; all such things keep a baby aw ake . i n(j ions for death and peres. iii.su-.iii ... c""'ft . nMce AUBUSt flower uienoni ' hen vou would Wot oui uie sweei " SAW A SPOTTED SERPENT. Tltir Hip nrV nnwlnlcH 1,-a.line rrn'lV I'.r " unliMi.rnl rtlsel.ttrs"-. 0J t,rlvatllw-"' "."!-,,7 rerulnruto inrtai-dcb It utinif wBkueii pecullM J ftt()tR,MO,ntriTu,lLL hold b Urousltlfc I'UICX. gi.w MAKING UP CAR BERTHS. Vttiy tlm i Th UrrMt ttnek ol ArtiS- rl.l V.m In th W (. A" ....... u-nl to ftllT i ,n i, nn. nr mora and rc- l"a turn llicBUnncti"." ... JfclCrOlfirt lis, SUU ., Cliicmo, ( Hk.ll. A. UAMMKI-D, , at ud optr.tim turfeon to th. Chl: ibi ( olk,( I'mtitnU l di.Unc. If sttl fmutl,tti lucrnl nd wKen i.!tinir Un T aatel botrd ua lorfiiiiw t ronljl r.l. fil.riinr. Now Kldo Hfft'l I-ormo.f. .lilt ll.f " These are the dyins I. ,.f l),m Wt' Ki er ami inc un-mi .. . .,i t,v n fri.nd of mine whom 1 met on the street coming I mm one 01 uie iK.ts He went oil to tell me now mm. wasnlKHit riding in sleeping cars, lie il n eot to alking nooui tne . - . . , :i I . .j f ,i.i maUiu" up the beds oil mm; guocu ..." .. i ...... "Hinu venrs llL'O. lie Willi ..',!.,.,. e!t to tiiukc up those beds with .i .. ),. it.. Piiidnc. which was very ap ,..':.,. t.,r ile.tisthe wav coltiiH are I,w. T CaVried." I.ut f taken to making up these ' ' ! I to the eneiuc. This is infernal, you L.,.w Incikeof itiolli'ioii you arc sure , ' , A far that won 10 orean. " ..' ,r ., ,. f,.. liiue it . ,Jt" '- FIT FOLKS REDUCED . ,. w-. . - Wo., vrtua tWna, ..Kht r-mti. .o. 1 to m lVOKa.llVlki- Trtfi'W'" vcrti'liiii .orter.i sa.V up tie will VALE & B'CKFORD AHornPVfi. iHnrnPVS. JUtlllKKT.J WAKHIKfTOI," . !. UTTIIStloll OI TO I,t. Mlll L"uiin DicraitptTio! oi.m. IcnixD cueo to mi . f. Arrtmol rrtrj tutltrtr ttU llftTIIIII tt c .(....dt. AddrA "i iimn i. it: j, a. iiki v---- m a .Unit !;-, A." Ul ITI Or Morphine Habit lB.COLI.llte. Orlctwl lto"r" I FftlnlrM Oluv Antidote. XeBea . L - it.e titmillt1M HudraU of orlciMl Uwtim.mUta t. oti-ni f. iMtwji' trozr . - - tin ll,11n. MOO- will looks. iSuiHi I it id . :., i.. .... ., n .li e vour ii '. r..rr,l u-ill man your cervical ' ,l; ' , ... ...... f',.,.l The i .u..t u.it' -pit tnvv. 1 linn iiiiii " ( - . , i e .i,,.i n. tlv s more prole, leu in in , r, .. i.. ti.nt ii.vk.Mi.ii uunecoiiip....... he yerVgreen if (hey think m, one Z, ..L, hut racket. The cxplnne o ' ,.f .!,! little cnpcrisUmtwbniapas- "'" . ... . t ... ... ia i in t ii m- (er-er gets killed, tin- law '"'"V "to kooo. while if l..'g;tcrjPl.U'd.tbe couiimny may have to unv S-!5.00l "A llwli Ncnilitr." rm.:. ; ti.a aliihltntf remark that 1b often -nphed to women who i tr, 'to seem youna, tboUKti iney no iuhk.. t riometim appeamneeH are deceitfuL i ....w.irtiium. run niiuuiu .ii...l..n.ente and irregularities Thoee iroubla. ore removal bj r the u iii h- .auty and no longer fiure in society as a wrupper. TlIi, Woman's Art (Tub, of Ch cagt J ro,,iab,ll,a hip o l, tulceubyawomam Il'iil.heldbytbedireeo enthnmphacouwe of rtroo y the art echool, which boast. than f00 PI)il8- Au(l,in:l ftlKl 'I hroiit ""'".. ,- ..... A Jerieytiian Knocked Down by ft Swipe of ft Hie Simk Tale. The people of Klmer, N. .!., mid vicini ty are much excited over an unpleasant visitor in the slmpeof a m ailer snake. A few days ago John Van Meter, a farmer, was cutting down the scrubs and suckers along the lence between his farm and that nf Horace Ii. Shoemaker. While at work he was struck with the tale of a large spot ted snake and knocked down, w nen ne regained bis footing be made tracks tor l.r.nw. 111 R lleeill lie iiasiuy .'"-. ' the monster, and pronounced it as being tulW twenty -five feet long anil as luies. as a stovepilie. When he had recovered from his fright he organized a gang ot a dozen of the local residents and went in search of the huge reptile, nut tne monsu . could not be found. Frederick meyard, who occupied the same larm auoui iwemj years ago, slated he saw uie same irm.iv When he was a tenant. U was ju-t as long ns it is now and was exceedingly uiu. Daniel liitchnci'. wlio was a nu n im.. . u. the Mime time, lor years iciaicu ...i....b stories of the "j ailer coyer oioe. the "Ixiay eonsliu ter that hankered around ,U. lower sawmill and swallowed negro babies." This ii supposed to be the tra ditional snake, and, in consequence, the whole locality is somewhat uneasy when wandering abroad. The serpent w said to make its home in a swamp jest below ti mer and parties are now out every day hunting for him. a I.n.t Car. . , ...m.tiKi nro an east-bound freU r m oveVthc Union 1'aeitie broke , wo , ear Laramie City. Col., while go " 1 , . ,!. it one. 'Ibefronl !s"(iw ,rr;ve. whipped on inn. fjonm ..."."'. " ... -, which went rolling now i a The ear was nneo with choice SUKS, mm )" i, fii.ni the front end was so clean and un i r. dl by a" u8ual shock that he attcnucu ",",,.,,. Thev coupled trn n men urn uoi uu.. ... j . He..T.W""rX,ln.l a big cownoy .0U...1 r ? , l.icture of 'the fond mother bending over the cradle containing her first-born, softly eronniniMir simrimr her tender lullaby us il.e. watches the little smiles and uncon scions laughs chase the ripples over the beautiful dimples; you would tear away the drapery that hangs over the little cradle, and the silk quilts upon which the mother's lingers have worked for so long, and you would do all this for a doctor's opinion!" , "(i. no. mv pov. not, 101 a uuvw. a opinion, but you see there is no money in cradles See that elegant antique ouk crib there'; AVe make more money on that one crib than on a dozen cradles." AN UNDESIRABLE HABIT. of Young edy. How does he feel ? He feels so full after eating a meal that he can hardly walk August Flower the Remedy. w G. G. GREEN, Sole Manufacturer, Woodbury, New Jersey, U. S. A. A ROMANCE OF THE WAR. A Pretty Story ItntoUed by Gen'ral 8h man About it Pcaoti Orchard. EJisod Defines 'Ampere and Volt. The following question was put to Thomas A. Edison by John S. Wise ia a receut lawsuit in wuicii air. oives a pretty clear tlennition or tne words ampere'' anu "vnu wuicu . much u-scd about this time: Q. Explain what is meant dj tne number of volts m an electric cur-reut?" A. "I will have to use the analogy pf a waterfall to explain, oay e have a current ol water aim a iuiu.uo wheel. If 1 have a turbine wheel and allow a thousand gallons per seoood t fail fmm a heie-hl of one loot on tne turbine I get a certain power, we will gay one horse power. JNow, tue one foot t Ian w in represent, uuc - pressure in electricity, and tne thou sand gallons will represent the ampere or the amount of current; we will call that one ampere. Ihus wo nave a thousand gallons of water or one am pere, falling one loot or vou or iaiu one-volt of pressure, and the water workiu" the turbine gives one norse power." If. now, wo go a thousand feet hi"h and take one gallon of water and lefit fall ou the turbine wheel wo get the same power as we had before, namely, one horse power. We have .'ot a thousand times less current or less water, and we will have a thou sandth of an ampere in place of one ampere, and we will have a thousand volts in place of one volt and we will have a fall of water a thousand feet as against one foot. Now the fall of the water or the height from wuicii it iau is the pressure or volts in electricity, and the amount of water is the am- It will be seen tli.it a tnousanu gallons a minute tailing on a niau from a height of only one foot would be no danger to the man, and that if we took one gallon aud took it up a thousand feet aud let it fall down it would crush him. So it is not the quantity or current of water that doee the damage, but it is the velocity or the pressure that produces the effect. Had Seen Fido. ha f. com ihe rear car, steep embankment. P" 01 "7 ll chanced to be go- down a ueepu.u... - , the nearesi ww. ,.lnl, ig " . uu . "1. .I. ,., ; company didn't asked "'e "Bf1" tub agent aecom- was the missint, -. MMv ti,c car was !!k;." " and Valuable contents were found intact. Promiscuous Correspondence Ladles With Men. A habit very common with a number of our thoughtless young ladies, wuo uo a great maiiv things quietly which they would not like to have known at home a habit deserving of the strongest condemnation-is that of promiscuous corres pondence with gentlemen, whether the gentlemen be married or single. lhe young ladies who find pleasure in this habiUise their pens on any pretext that turns up, and sometimes on no pretext at nil We are not really sure that this does not come less under tne nettu ot an u.... sirablu habit than a sin; for there is an in- ,l,.li,-,irv about it nulte amounting to im modesty, Of WHICH no gin Wlio luspeeio herself or who desires uie respecut m uu era will be guilty. These young leuer-wniers, immra, ., J . ..If Iw.i,. ll..irl,t ecnrrallV tet a nirewatu '"u"S"' lessness or inetr cuipuun"j For it their correspondent is a man ol systematic habits, their letters arc docketed and ticketed, and his clerks have as much of a laugh over them as they wish; and if he is not a systematic man, then those let ters are at the mercy of any and every one who chooses to waste lime in reading them. Anil if their correspondent is a married man then his possession ot ineir teitcio, even of the most trivial kind, places the writers at a disadvantage. Sooner ,.i.,t,.r mn in Unit case, the letters tall info the hands of his wife; his wife, who, Ion" after the brief correspondence has been done with, usually remains mistress of the siUiation, reads the folly or the wickedness with Clear eyes, unu u ... writer not only in contempt, but in her power. No young girl can be sure that .r eon-csnondent is not merely amusing himself with her; and it is often the case that ber letters arc unwcieome ami a ance and ho does not cheek them and dots'reply lo them, not from interest in her, but mere maniy cmvai. v. the writer has recovered from her lolly, or forgotten about tier luieness, nine u. i,,?.. oil nrobabilitv still extant, in the leu... , I , , , possession of somebody, she knows not L.i rnofl.r to riso like an awful bctray- Tur srtr alCOICINC r. bwhi Kim wmrraniru 11 " ;uorMorrtilitliHW ifNt. tkiUI uy aU drmutLU. PJ'inAC Mt'br1T 1'iiorm ktab. Bronchial Troches ' 23 cts. ft hox. IIlnlfr ""'."rskedthc .now do rm d tf,1:raa" returned tbc door- I .1 ,.,w . B-i.... la no l m ut w" n I in'-'- man. MAlrr,lll i. fr it lat H't'"1-..... i mire RbouJ iu?. . ' . .i..'-suir ne when he ran maidens iiidigcnoas to g,e Was Happy- ii. ft poetical old gentleman . ...ii...- in Tinknta .j irnvi' im a ' " across one of Uie ltue w, a barefooted, simply clad 1 low rhueueu uei rrtiir r mwtka "- . ,mn ten me, U'u jv" ""'TlTvi, g nlvou do so near lo nature's happy, l'.v.i"6 m"" T nvv vou, 90 far bcftr.l.L,i rom the sordid cares and toi u r r.infti new that vex and fret weuwet ',ind it ..u v irates. Tell mo, are ye not nWcda merry, careless, rippling ?,Sr .ii 1,'erc's no fool like an i 'nnd (lerucd f I don't bleevo.it old fool, and 'it-"1" , " n flirust0 eit. ' Come hyar, .,, heels. and off she trippeu, uo. u.,tt f "lluneomb." named after lo . - - wbQ e be ton11 V.mromoo In thU manlier tended for .Wbm whteh .. i,'t ..rier she. herself has possibly .....leifone a change mat win m lirnndwl with shame tin; letter ever chance to confront her, or rhaps even the memory oi n, Her mo- .' i ..II Imwonn. lit. lllft live may uave uuc" iuy , , - i.t it is loft forever under doubt; aridln fact, except in the baldest business ..r.,ir ii.ero ran lie no excuse, and there- mi. it" i v"-' , . f .,,.,,,,. fore no innocence, in me uiuoei w.jti i.o n iiin leitors to anv man not her o .1 i. .,i.. m.nriliiin. for about personal rauuc , ., ' ., . r.( timsA letters there is an unmaid- ..i':n imt amnnntinir to indecency euiui.;;v' . i.t ;.u,;if and in the end ucr conesii u-"j never thinks other man nuuy v. account of them . ...i,.r wiinfloei from House to House, 1 7 . , , i 1....1 The traveling protcssionais nave uau u novel addition to tueir nuinoeis. ...v newer addition is a uaiuci .... ..mnolls in a satchel, or, rather, "u ploys a lad to do so and goes abou t among olllccs, factories, flats and tenement .,..., town, scraping beards, cutting and trimming hair, cultivating bangs oinn-incitvient mustaches. He graduated 6crman barber and is, there fore, a bit of a surgeon also. He can pull a tooth, apply bandages, cup, "". ' u. . . .ni onrl mo es. and he sells hm meut on commission. His charges are " within the reach of all." and as every babe he lays his eyes on is ''tho prettiest r r ... ' S i.. il 1,1a travels." mothers arc lli interested In his business and give him " ir i,o r,,ni,. across a man ha haves himself lie will hone his razor . mow Im thoucht right. In or At a dinner party given not long ago the General, being warmed up oa the subject of the war, related a number rkable incidents. One story he teld was especially romantic and is worthy of being preserved in print. He aid: " .... "Some time after the close of the Seminole war in Honda, 1. being then a lieutenant in the reauU army, was sent with another young officer along the line upon which troops and supplies bad proceeded from Kentucky and Tennessee to tho scene of conflict i ottiwt PBi-inin claims put forward by people along the route who had furnished horses, commissary supplies, etc. We bad occasion to visit a term or nnniMl MeCov. who lived on the northern slope of the Kencsaw Mount ain. We found him very pleasarft ly. located, and on a plateau near his house he bad planted a peach nreimiil then in ft floiirishiup- condi tion. He told us that be had made the discovery tbat peaches could be raised on the northern side of that mountain, but not on the southern side the warm guns of the spring pushed the buds so rapidly that they were very likely to be cau'oht by a frost. Ho was the tirst man to plant pencil trees ou uie mum em slope and was making a great suc cess of it. "Un liad two very pretty daughter. aud myself and the young Lieutenant took "-rent interest iu them. We pro longed our stay there several weeks auofmauv is the pleasant stroll wo had " 1 1, ,',,, ,rl tli,if In the summer eeiiiuga i,nvu6.. ..... peach orchard. In fact, it was iovo amono- the peach trees. Years after- ard June 26, 1801, I loumi mysoii in commnod of a iederal army at me foot of this samo Kenesaw Mountain. The Confederates were occupying a very strong position uvoi mo After the necessary preliminaries it be came essential to attempt to cairy uie position on the niouut.iin by assault. seut for Mcriierson, assigned mo troops, etc., anu sam to mm. will advance up tne siuu oi mis ...... ain some distauce, when you will come to a plateau covered by a peach or chard. You eau worn your way through that peach orchard, and after that it will bo hard woru auu cioso fighting, but I think you can carry the Mrs. do Flatte-"I$oy, did you eeee stray tu" dos around here anywhere? Smart boy-rYes;m. I just saw one bein' chewed up by a big bulldog, an I saw another bein' tied lo a tin cau all over 'im, an 1 an M..- I'"."': , i .. OCltl cnoppeu ui. " Mrs. de Flatte tailiug for support): Y.w.t llm-i-nrs! I'd ffive 90 lo my little Fido safely back." Smalt boy-"All right, nium. You wait heie half a maall"-Slreet & SrrnMs Good Nr.ws. saw auoiner sausage, nu' rcliileliintr at a tit it .K A I . K camiUHT mo am i is nnmtion ..m'til...... Avnf.iiti.il the orders as best he could, but failed. In the even ing he came to me ant uescuoeu uie dav's fighting, and said: 'General, we followed your instructions as carefully rs possible, and wo ioumi uiai pcao.. orchard just where you said it was, but beyond that we iaiieu. tnmi " wondering about is, how the devil vou knew that pcacli orcnaru was tuiac "I said to him: That is my littlo affair- there is a romance connected with that, Mac, auu uiu unucin. "... ieniiicantly. In tlte train of diseases that follow a tor pid liver and impure blood, nothing can take the place of Dr. Pierce's Golden Med ical Discovery. Nothing wm, after you have seen what it does. It prevents and cures by removing the cause. It invigorates the liver, purines and enriches the blood, sharr ens the appetite, improves di gestion, and builds up both strength and flesh, when re- duced below tne sianaaru of health. For Dyspepsia, "Liver Complaint," Scrofula, or any blood-taint it's a posi tive remedy. It acts as no other medicine does. For that v-t.'-.v it's sold as no other medicine is. It's guaranteed to benefit or cure, or the money is refunded. N. N. U ork Neb 143 Herbert Spencer, tho BcoiologieV, has lived up his three score years and ten. Ho is now a man of 70, though he , looks ton years younger. He is of mo iium staturejand his head is bald, except or a thin fringe of hair. He has an equiline nose, a ruddy skin and ai inntol lectual faco. ,l.mvcr mav bo thought right. this way ho picks up on honest penny two. . mm Baking Powder: Dted In Million of Honci ao Years the Stand --t aV 0, r., '! n.ord b.rtU,H