I BolBf. iver, in a district and are never from rear 01 uie tb will bring up- trooper saw a er den louowea Je boy. lie best possible and the three wolf seemed to ijual care. They Iver anu araim, chased by the iped over rough tie boy running gtas the young i got assistance party out; the bolted together, fn at an Oil tfi U. Jage- I I but growled and iwolf, and tried to I shelter that was iavs he was sent it'apt. Nicholetts. ihe never learned irom grown up en and tried to It his food on all friendly with a 1 let it share his tk up a whole f without drawing never laughed jfoyed all clothes years after his I just before his Jwice, saying his Slicing the word ectator. Can You Kind Uv advertiarnu'iit fn frh" bat. 110 two vinida The me 4' true ol aah eek, from the tibia houe plarca a ttbey mukc and pnb Vui the nauie of the foil HooK, HKAl'TJ MPI.KS KKKK. Time. u and sister ain't you T j "Oh, no, not at i just because she r t She didn't abso tver." 3aid site wanted XI promised not to 'JTM ready." ? kave more'n ten itty now and she '" ce she whs thirty to you." Hi lOO. Its paper will be X there is at least i that science has fM its stages, and I'g Catarrh Cure A "re known to the r.'Catarrh being a viv requires a con ,t i I all's Catarrh j&j, acting directly 1 Mucous surface of r destroying the iuhh, and giving by building up t assisting nature V The proprietors i to iu curative 1 On Hundred ihat it fails to TUnioniali. Ky ft Co., if 'Joledo.O.' IU. kt the adjutant f interesting to himself chief toute or louses jiM cwtenU of )ch IwaMholdvr lutoid his gate niservenoy carta adjutant's opera Jly imagined than t of ibe qiiHiter Jt crows look on tisfied witii the V picks out with )uto the air, swal e becoinei is full )ke a little walk lettle themselves. K Tahr. to explain io his class, when jliey wore not )tiou. "Hoys," he iilxg to explain to jot the monkey 1 gut nt rjit. 0. ytn rvfr pjiry jug the game) .- light in a drove UJITED 8TATB8 COUET. 1H tth As F4ltor Arqaltted mt tba Chars of FrlaMBg a Lottery Adeertlaeaaeat. Joseph Mueller 'who was charged with having published a lottery adver tisement in the Dodge County Pioneer, at JIayville, was acquitted in the United States Court yesterday. The case is an important victory for the Louisiana State Lottery. It was charged that a certain notice that appeared in the paper, which is a Cerniaii weekly, was an advertisement under the new law forbidding the mailing of publications containing lottery advertisements. The card read as follows: CONRAD! COXHAD! COX RAD: TAItD TO THE PCTI-IC While it is true that 1 have been elected president of the Louisiana Mate Lottery company, vice M. A. Dauphin, deceased, I am still president of the (iulf Coast Ice and Manufacturing company, and all orders for material. inacliiney, etc. as well as all oilier business letters should be addressed to me as before. Pa r l. 'ox it a d, box I.33S New Orleans. f!en. K. .s. Hragg, of Fonda du Lace, defended Mueller, arguing that the advertisement did not come within the scope of the statue. The jury was out cut a few minutes. ..iliranLiv, (Win.) .Sentinel, Feb, 4 Thtt Hourre of Hie Imiiu)i-. The little town of Donaueschiugeu, perched high in the invigorating air of the Muck Forest, has been arbitrarily designated the source of the Danube. The prince who owns most of the land in the neighborhood has built an orna mental stone basin for a very powerful spring that gushes out close to his palace and has erected a portentous slab notifying all the world that this is the genuine source of the greatest of European streams, that it is MO kilo meuers to the Mack sea and iT.H meters above tide water. 1 ventured to point out to an intelli gent Mack Forester who stood with me by this monument that the real source of the Danube was higher up, but he regarded my statement as outrageous. "Oott in lliininel!" said lie piously. "Here lives the prince, here Is his palace here is the oflicial statement cut in the stone, what more do you want?" 1 was silenced, but could not lii lp feeling that If un enterprising prmoter could secure some other prince, get up a stock company, hire a spring farther up, build a summer hotel, call the place "Danube High Spring" or Danube Source Original," carve Jt in stone and make the rival princu hold court at tho summer hotel, in three seasons Donaueschingen would he bankrupt-Poultuey Higelow in Harpers. i Each Tear Jinds "Brou Bronchial Troelwn'' in new localities, in varum parts of the world. For relieving Coughs, Colds, and Throat Diseases, they have been prored reliable. Sol't only in boxt. Why People Bogan to Hit When Kalinf . It seems not to be precisely known when it became haoitnal to sit at table. Among the first men it was customary to recline in H circle or to place them selves iu a half sitting posture about the repast, whether it was an animal roasted over the fire or a caldron con taining food cooked by .boiling. Sent s for the kings or nobles were common nmong the Assyrians, Kgyptians and Hebrew, but persons of inferior rank, or even lortu themselves, sprawled on carpets or on the bare ground. The Oreeks reclined at their meals, and lor the rest of the time reoliwd, sat ir lounged, according as they found one posture more agreeable than another or their occupations ptraij.ttu The Romans followed the salne custom though benrhesMd chairs were prob ably more imtuorous air dug them, what were tho custom in this resjiect of the Romans who colonized and whose descendants occupied the countries now called Froce wd Spain, we do not prectsw now, but it ra reasonable to suppose that the habit of sitting at meals or elsewhere iu the house became general on account of the severity of the climate and the different nrchitec ual conditions in which the people lived, it was certainly more natural to recline in a climate that permitted life to be largely passed in rooms oieii to the weather or in the oiien air, than in buildings damp and cold in winter, whore contact with the floorwas partic ularly to be avoided. - an Franciwo Chronicle' Rlfrlrlrltjr far Iafn(. The extent to which electricity is le iiiguse! iti legitimate medical praciii-e is rapidly on '.he Increase, and many of the new devices foe applying it have distinct morit. X recently invented apparatus for the curw of deafness comprises a battery, u Imlt, an elertrode supporter oil the belt and Hhaped to rest on Oie ear, mid connections between tho t letrode and the battery. This provides a convenient and erticienl nnwlH of receiving ihe current, which can be applied in linly graduated stroimlh.-Kxrhanee. Authorities Who Differ About Skating;. That clever writer and amiable wom an, Mrs. Amelia E. llarr, will have to admit that she has been skating on J thin ice, so to speak, in undertaking io instruct tier readers in the mys teries, graces, science and customs of dancing and skating, she collides with the world's champion, and it is not the latter who is overthrown. Mrs. Rarr describes skating as par excellence, ''the pursuit purely idle, gay and aris tocratic, says "half tho work of the skater is done by the foot that is off the ice," tell of ".he Fen skaters of Cam bridgeshire and Lincolnshire who, with their long runners and a fair wind, do their mile in two minutes," etc, etc. The article has come under the eye of Joe Donoghue, who, having beaten all competitors and holding the world.s ikating record at all distances, must be conceded competent to join issue with any skater with the pen. From far off Holland he writes in response to Mrs. Barr. Declining to discuss the "gayety" or "aristocracy" of skating he says it has always impressed him as "anything but an idle pursuit." He gives the "foot off tho ice" no credit except for jeing ready to use when its turn comes. "1 always thought," he says, "that the work is done by the foot that is on the ice." With pardonable impatience, the champion dismisses the romancing about the Fen skaters' "mile in two minutes" by pronouncing it "nonsense," as "there never was a skater iu Eng land who ever skated a mile in less than three minutes." Joe concedes to Mrs. iiarr the dancing floor, but puts his experience and quite extensive ob servation against liar positions regard ing skating and skaters in every im portant particular. If she has faith in her teachings there is only one thing for her to do challenge .loe Donoghue in person or by champion, after the manner of Rebecca, to meet her on good ice in fair contest, the vanquished to crown the victor champion of the theory and practice of skating. Utica Herald. Fil'S r'vm cf &ome-40 Year Uw SUfidtriL Tauirlit i Lesson. A man with large business interests and a handsome income married a lady who, accenstomed all her previous life to the luxuries of wealth, had never formed any clear conception of the worth and purchasing power of money. For some months the indulgent hus band gratiiied his wife's every whim One day the lady, to carry out some caprice, asked for a check for so large a sum that the gentleman was dis turbed. He saw that s'ich prodigality, if persisted in, meant ruin; but not wishing to grieve his wife oy a down right refusal he determined to give her a lesson in finance. He therefore smil ingly remarked that he could not giva tier a check as usual, but woidd send up the money from his'store. About noon the promised money rame, not in crisp bills, as was expected but in silver dollars, the sum total fill ing several specie bags. The wife was first vexed, then amused, mid finally, as the afternoon wore away, became deeply thoughtful. When her husband came home to sup per she took him gently by the arm, and leading him into the room where the ponderous bugs of specie were still standing, said: "My dear, is this the money I asked you for this morning?" "Jt is, my love." was the reply. "And did you have to take this money all in, dollar by dollar, in the course of your business?" was the next question, - - . "Yes," he answered geudy, "it repre sents the earnings of many weeks of iard labor." "Well, then," she said, with tearful t . -, '-Sond a man to take it back to the bank iu the morning. I can't use so much money for so trivial a pur pose. 1 didn't understand about it be fore.'" Youth's Companion. IagneraU Bolton. jM)siou Librarian Ah, ha, my little man; another big book, eh? Well, well, you are a genuine prodigy! That's the way our Massachusetts statesmen are made. Do yon read them all every word? Codwalter Me Mean Xo, sir. I take them home and sit on them at the table. 'ew York Sun. No! an AutIuhi NuliJfH Stranger "That man is evidently crazy, w hy is ne not put in an asyium t Native "His property is so heavily mortgnged that n.ine of his relatives want it." New York Weekly. , Tiiiimeiir and law. Wnnlou - "A dying burglar has con fessed that he committed tho murder for which you were sentenced, and" as it was a clear case of mistake identity, the Governor !;r.s granted yon a par don." Innocent Man -"A pardon ? What am I pardoned for? Warden "For committing tho mur der, of course. Go; but don't do it again." Jev York Weekly. no No fianllammii Mrs. Dubti (angrily) -"Vou'ro fenttanan." Mr. DubU3 (excitedly) "You're nn other." ' How Edison Lives, lie spends whole days and nights In his laboratory, eating little, musing, j living in his head. These long sessions of abstraction must make a tremen dous draught up on his strength. A friend called on at him the laboratory until four a. m. Edison was busy con structing something, and talked un reservedly. "Are you not going home to night?" the friend asked. "Xo; I shall curl upon one of the benches so as to be ready for work in the morning." Sometimes a workman, coming in at seven, finds the great man stretched out on his bench sleeping peacefully as a child, renewing the forces exhausted by long virgils. In such a case the working always takes another bench; Kdison is never awakened by anyone. He is careless about his food A visitor one day saw him eating some red herring and drinking great goblets of water. That was his lunch. He worked in the intervals of eating and drinking. A Boy's Iirave Act. Dennis F. McCarthy, a 115-year-old Brooklyn lad, performed an act the other day which not only displayed courage, hut a rare presence of mind, in the saving of the life of a 2-year-old child of Mr. Joseph Carriero. Young McCarthy was at work re pairing the roof of his fathers barn off lloylston street, which abuts on the village brook. A platfo.-m leads from Mr. McCarthy's house to the top of the barn. The child walked along this platform to the roof, and before he was noticed fell into the brook, a dis tance of about twenty feet. The water was about three feet deep, and the current was quite strong. The child's cries attracted McCarthy's attention, and, realizing the situation, he jumped from the building to the Roston and Albany railroad track. Iu order to save the child's life he had to act promptly, for the arch where the brouk enters the tunnel was only 100 yards away. McCarthy ran down the track and reached the culvert just in time to jump into the brook and to grab the. little one, who was being carried along to certain death. By this time a large crowd had col lected and every one was loud in the praise of McCarthy's courage and pres ence of mind. Boston Herald. Don't Kill Savage. Dogs. I had occasion to call upon one of the most eminent physicians of this city, and he alluded to the reputed bites if mad dogs in East Orange. X. J. "Why did they kill the dogs?" said he; "it was a crime to do it. Very likely the dog was not mad, after all. When a dog bites a person, the proper way is to catch the animal and keep him iu custody, with good treatment. If he is mad, it can soon be discovered, and vice versa. Should the dog turn out to he unafllicted with hydrophobia, from w hat an agony of apprehension would the bitten person and his friends be saved. "Xow, ns to this affair at East Orange, the dog having been killed, there is no way of determining whether he was mad or not. The persons bit ten will be likely to worry themselves into such a state of nervous excitement that their health will suffer, and all of the anxiety would probably have been removed in a few days had the dog been taken care of and watched, for the probabilities, of course, are that he wasn't mad after all I mean hydro phobic madness, of course." It struck me that the doctors remarks were wise Xew York Star. Character in the Thumb. Trust a woman who sits with her thumbs up; she may be determined, but she is not a liar. The one who con ceals her thumbs is apt to be deceitful and untruthful. Look at the thumb if you want to judge of people's strength, for the longer it is proportionately the stronger the brain. We forget the in dividuality of the thumb; we forget that in days gone by, when men did not write, they made their marks by imprinting their marks in soft sealing wax; that was a man's sign manual. And just remember, too, that Sir Isaac Newton said, "If any one ever doubted the existence of a (lod he has only to watch the aclioti of the thumb of a man." Mrs. Kendal and Mrs. Langtry have hands very much alike, large white, firm, well shaped and betoken strong wills.' Lillian Ilussel has a white, slender, small hand that effect you first as essentially the hand of a wo man and afterwards as the hand of a musician. Mrs. Brown-Potter has slender nervous hands that seem to be certain of everything, but never sug gests success iu anything. Bab's New York Letter. laed to It. Guest "I hear there was a panic at the Fashion Theater last night, and a terrible crush at the doors. Were there many hurt?" New York Host -"Only a few coun try people ;who happened to be pres ent. Most of tho audience, fortunately were city people who are used to L roads and bridge cars. "How did that stupid fellow, Crass gain a reputation as a wit ?" "He was once interviewed by an un usually bright reporter." Puck. I CalM- at Manor. I IfctM middle .ages it was the owlftn sjt cary of small states to coin money ha even of the ruoe important cities srhich enjoy a certain degree of inde pendence. This caused many incon reniences, among others the debasement f coin. Askings became powerful they re lt rioted these priveleges' though they till permitted coinage to be carried on in different parts of their dominions under royal direction. Charlemagne was the first sovereign to limit the coin age of northen Euroe and the lirst to ornament the coins with his own Jffiigy after the manner of the Roman smperors. Since his time this prac tice has been general on the continent, though national arms or other local nymbols have uever ceased eutirly to be used, as among the Creeks and Romans in the early periods of their history, when an olive branch, a wine jar.au ox or some other image connected with the origin of industry of the city or the state, was considered an appropriate emblem. Chicago Tridune. Iaugpr In Decayed Teeth. if the teeth are allowed to decay un til the attention required will permit of no farther delay, and it is then desired to preserve them for f ui ther usefulness much that could be avoided by early at tention must now be submitted to, the ume occupied in the dental chair is gieatly lengthened, moie thah if natur tooth is sacrificed (to be replaced by ar tificial material) and increased pain and discomfort usually attend the opera tion, while not the least weighty among other considerations is the additional expense incurred. Neglected teeth are not only unsight ly and offensive toothers, but frequent ly occasion painful nerve complications distressing neuralgias, secondarily in jures the eyesight, induce deafness, while cases of resulting insanity are well authenticated. Then the eflluvia arising from decaying teeth is not only uuenduriable, but the air taken into the delicate lung saructure (over 20,0()0 res pirations each twenty-four hours) is affected by it, and in time surely has a deleterious effect on the health. 15. C. Cornwell, 1). D. S.. in Philadelphia Press. FUll That Kill Kai-h Other. One of the queerist sharks in the thrasher, which has the upper lobe of its tail so much developed as to equal in length the body of the lish itself. This tail is controlled by powerful muscles, and is used as a weapon. Swordfish and thrasher sharks have been seen on many occasions to attack whales in concert and kill them, the sharks lashing their victims with their tails while the swordfish pierce them from below. On the other hand, sharks themselves are often killed by porpoises which will surround a shark and lash the enemy to death with their llukes. ("August Flower How does he feel ? He feel cranky, and is constantly expert menting, dieting himself, adopting strange notions, and changing the cooking, the dishes, the hours, and. manner of his eating August. Flower the Remedy. How does he feel ? He feels at times a gnawing, voracious, insati able appetite, wholly unaccountable, unnatural and unhealthy. August Flower the Remedy. How does he feel ? He feels no desire to go to the table and a grumbling, fault-finding, over-nicety about what is set before him when, he is there August Flower the Remedy. How does he feel ? He feels, after a spell of this abnormal appe tite an utter abhorrence, loathing, and detestation of food ; as if a mouthful would kill him August Flower the Remedy. , a A 1'iiKjeler. Little (iirl (l)e fashion Flat) "Is ihatmy new brother? Ain't he cute? Did the angels bring him?" Mamma "Yes my dear." Little Girl "Did they have llaining i words? Mamma "N-o. Why?" Little girl "I don't see how they jot past the janitor." The foot is named from the length jf that member in the lull grown man. It was a standard of measurment u-cil by the ancient Egyptians. Sy&cobsQil AFTER 22 YEARS. Newton, 111., May 23, iSSS. From 18630 1S85 about z years -I suffered with rheumatism of the hip. I was cured by the use of S1 Jacobs Oil. T. C. DODD. How does he feel ? He has ir regular bowels and peculiar stools August Flower the Remedy. t ar 'uazivs v nhop v f J "il tnr. aormp -pearo)! SoiWPW8 pm nuiai ay pum Mi!i'q itnU fMiiwvM'i9i!Pl A I 1 I ruV U Hi0 ,! """WW I k H(ia23yS'of5jJlF?' I SO Adams St., Ohtoa Cnrm fur Life ll Uroate, 1 Msm.OrfraBi: DtTtlopmasituid Vftrieoeci. Ufe' Hecret Errom' 0111 nd Aqulr-xt ft I maf of MIlflM.IVUIHt with q nation lijt, 4e, GRAND PALACE HOTEL! 81 TO 103 NORTH CLAEK 8T. HH.AfiO. Onlv four minutes from the ConrtJ House. Gable Cars Ps the door. New houre with all modem im orovenients; newlv furnished. On tmericaii and Kr.roicaii plan Rooms $.1.00 weekly: transient ents and upward. Turkish Baths! or Indies sou gentlemen, 0 cents. Cut. out for future use. Oilirk Mr I Transit. Mr. flolhani -"I hear Mr. l)e Pave has been iirre-teil What is the charge against hiniV' Air. lirookliii ''I)cl:i; in; tlm United Slates nun1." ".My poodi.e.ss? In what way?" 'Dftl'avrt is very fat, and when a mail Wiignii r;in over him it lost twenty seconds tiuie and m Used the train." 'liin KtMvlilc' To roveiicTfi IihihWI' on his ousniy a Chinaman icings himself on his neigh bor's door The law r hen executes the Whole laini)',--lim ner's Young People, 11 :tiiufM-turr of TiiutliiiSekH. Toothpicks tire made of the wood of the . spindle tree (Luoumyus Kuropieus) iu (ii-niinuy. Tins manufacture is said to employ hirjre numbers of the peasants in the Crand lluchy of Hesse durinir the winter evenings. There are four kinds made No. rt selling at 2s., per thousand, 'o. 7' lit 3s,, Jio. 10 at 48. and No. 15 at 4s. 6d. i'arletog, or toothpicks of willow wood of nice finish especially those called Flordu Parletos are so d in Portugal at prices ranging trom fid. to is. per thousand. Cham bers' Journal. -555K IN Chichesteii'3 EneuSH, fffo Coss IDiahohd Bito A - THt ORIOIIMl HO OtMUINt TV ami J Softs. r, wl iKW. Pill or mf. SmmSm fMtta t IMw. T.k othar kind. MMlalMa mUtmttmlfm. v mnm.KtlUU. At prum. m mmm 4a la uhi wknlin, wilanUli, Mid "Htllef fcr Vmtlm," Mlmw, ratol on. IO.OOO TMM1W. All t 1 MMUtaH bitx.., pink vwam. arc 4 aM ar aU Laval SWaagMa. Cmicmcbtco CNmicaL Co oooooooooo .rhild, Utm dllr fruwlo or Infirm Q " old ;o upon tbo Tlg-oroun man. w aoaa amall ?TuHsTinyPiiis tmtomMid atreiurth to tho vrakV atimuwh. bowabs kldrM-y mid bladdrr OOOOOOOOOO m LITTLE LIVER PILLO DO SOT CBIITI HOB BIOUS. ra mm far HICK HEAD- ACHC. hnpalntf dHjartloa.eonrth paiion,iorpHi iianu.i t n-j biuuiv tub i vraans. r uii. v mm. lam Maflcal rt an KM- nrl!dhlAridor. Conquer billon nervona at ornem. Kitamt-u nat ural uajli Atirion. on to purlMnt Vrttt.w VtaltllLI. i A 4om If i Wly adlu'tod la rallraw, at m Kill eta 1 aawkatoa much. K.rh Till tci.Uln. 42, rarrtnl In ml ' urM Ilk. IcmI arnril. Bu-lnc.a man'a (ml aaai.au nrt . ' Bamtlfy eompltnlon to Tabn .!. Ih.n imr. :jkara. All amalna nodi fcaWOrwcnt." Sold narr- Saad 1-eant Mamp . Yv rt rac bw wSh naipl- HMTIK MCDICIRI CO.. It leal. Me. i. mmm, iimiTfiR, IBO WABASH m., CNUMCW r 0m laTV I lT"6,,AVfl."l f Oaaraala a.t la " I f MM KKtoMia. I . B urj. v ciciiimi,o.k j Blip CI 1athaacrnowlaSsojt leadmf rar iyforallua tinnamrr ' KbHiaaM prt vale ft am of ao. a, caruia car far tkc daalll tstlnv akaaaa fttllaf 7i., I nraarriria It and f ! I THEtomCmM'-nC". id racommaadlat H to UIV rcifCDcuiE0 T0 fT cimeo. fill I itf Eli Wewant the naaie and ad. riressof every sufferer In tho & ACTUM A U.S. and Canada. AdilrtM, RO I nlllft r.lml.laTM.I.).IUal,I.f niidp $71 III four rMvt nn my Klcctrta Corat'ta and Kix-fUltlea. luo Percent miflt mid ( nh Prftea, samrle free. Pr Brlrtifinan, Broadway, N. Y. Aim I I BoM Cootii Sjrrup. Taatae OooS. V I I 1 I 1 In tlaia. Bold by droaalau. t ! , ,. 17. So. l7-t