rfSE- . . r.- f- a i THE LATEST WONDER. ingenious Mechanical Device That Tell tiie Time of Day. Prof. Charles Richel, the inventor of the flying machine, which created so much interest a few years ago. is com pleting a mechanical -wonder which is an a-tonishing piece of mechanism. It promises to create a great furor ! throughout the country. He has been over a year experimenting with it, and has at last' achieved results which at the outstart seemed impossible. He ! w:is given carte-blanehe from a large ' watch manufacturing concern to get up ' the novelty, time and expense being a ' secondary consideration. Prof. Richel . has kept the matter secret, and has j permitted no one to enter his study excepting one or ivro intimate friends. ' A reporter wa given a private view reoentlv. The entrance to the studio is by way , of a dark stair-ca-e on John street, op-1 posiie the rear of the North Congrega tional church. Double doors, a screen i and a heavv curiam shut out the dav light. Electric lights are used to work by. There are all sorts of grotesque heads, arms and bits of plaster anatomy ' hanging around the room, and upon the workbench are brass molds and a variety of fine tools for the purpose ol working in steel and brass. ! The new wonder is a life-sized youth of perhaps sixteen years of age. He i is a fine-looking lad. in perfect imita- ; tion of the average boy of the present ! day. The tigure stands upon the floor, and is attired in knickerbockers and laced shoes, vest. coat. etc. to al) ap pearances a living boy. Prof. Richel ' did not approach the figure, but spoke . to it. saying: -Good evening, Bobby: what time is it?" The figure turned its head and bowed slightly, and xvith its left hand pulled back the J coat. The right hand, which had been j hanging at the side, was lifted up to the vest pocket and drew out a watch. The watch was then carried up to the ear. at the same time the head turned so as to bring the ear down in a listen ing attitude, while the eyes closed. "When the silent vouth was assured that the watch w;is ticking, the hand dropped slightly forward: the head turned sc as to bring the face to look full at the watch, the eves onened and . a pleased smile spread over his feat ures. The head was then thrown back, J the hand which held the watch be tween the thumb and index finger re- turned the watch to the vest pocket and was then gracefully swung back i into its resting position by the side. The mouth opened, and with a pleas- ant laugh the figure said: It's just ( half-past eight, gentlemen.' So naturally was all this performed that for an instant it seemed :u? if the figure was an actual living being. There was no jerky movement, nor the slightest jar or noise. The eyes opened and closed, and the head moved about to all appearances like a living one. Prof. Richel laugh-d and said: "What do you think of it?" and then proceeded to explain how it was operated. Inside the figure is an electric motor. This fcxid. btxin 'jet in operation by touching a eonceaie' button in the floor several feet away from where the professor had been standing. Afterward -iha opened the chest of the figure and ex posed the cams, springs, weigh-bal-ances. Npiral and levers which had caused the arms liiid head to move. The cleverest parts are those which cause the xvrist. thumb and fingers to move. The articulatory mechanism is very similar to that employed in a phonograph. Brvlgcporl Cor. X. Y. World. 1 THE CHRONIC DAWDLER. An Individual Who i Kntitled Neither to Consideration Nor Reaper. There are a good many aggravating people in this unsatisfactory world, but it is to be doubted if to the energetic man there are any who are more thor- t oughly aggravating than the dawdlers. The clever knave who tricks you. pro vokes some admiration for his clever ness: the man who boldly faces one "in opposition, eliets some measure of re spect for his courage, but for the elu sive, unreliable dawdler it is impossi ble to have any other feeling than con tempt and irritation. It is often perfectly right for a man to be idle, and we even forgive a man who is lazy if he sets himself to be in dolent in a whole-hearted fashion. It is the irrc-olute. uncert;un. inefficient dawdler whose life eddieft from point to point, for whom we hat e no charity, and not even a conscientious twinge at wishing to be uncharitable. The dawd ler is to the active mind what the slug gish, slime encumbered stream is to a mountain brook: whatever powers for good it possessed have moldered away into evil. And of all the literary sins, one of the worst is this same dawdling. The story which wanders aimlessly, which does not even loiter straightforwardly, but :oe hither and thither with no ap parent intention of ever getting any where, is a weariness and vexation to the flesh. It is far more wearying to see an author thus turning aad doub ling without effect, than to read the most laboriously elaborate pages of the most erudite of philosophers. Dr. Johnson was capable of inviting his friends "to come down and dawdle over a dish of tea" with him. but the downright, fiery old lexicograpber was of too positive a nature to allow of his dawdling over any thing. It is because the habit indicates a hoprlessly irreso lute and inefficient temperament that it is so annoying. It lowers our esti mate of humanity to find it capable of such inanity, and the dawdler.by thua reflecting upon the race, becomes in a manner a iiving personal reproach upon every member of the race: so that we object to him from simplest instincts Hi elf-preseryation. Boston Courier. THE WHEELING DISASTER. Farther Particular of the Terrible Do. traction Wrought by the Storm at TVheeline and Vicinity. Wheeu.ng, V.". Va, July 21. Thursday Bight' storm extended sixteen miles east of West Alexander. Pa., and the scene all alone the way is one of desolation and in conceivable horror. Where the Triadel phia school house, a large LuHding of six rooms, stood, the creek is now a raginjj flood and not even a vestize of even tha foundations remains, while the whole south half of the town has disappeared as clean as if it never existed. The Wheel in relief committee, which recently raised funds for the Rowlesburg sufferers, ex pended the balance for provisions and sent it to Triadelphia. The Baltimore & Ohio. Pittsburgh di vision, is practically destroyed for fifteen miles, while the Western Union Telegraph Company lot forty miles of wire and m&it of the jioles. Reports from all parts of Ohio County indicate that the storm was more disas trous to life and property in the eountry than in the city, but it can not be stated at this hour ho.v many lives have been loit. The loss in this city is known to be ten, with a number reorted to be inimg. Caldwell's run, which passes through the Eighth ward of this city, was the scene of the greatest havoc. Three houses were swept away and all the inmates were drowned. They were: Mrs. Barbara Stenzel. Herman Stenzd. Alice and Annie Wingert, of Miltonsburg, O., nieces of Mrs. Stenzel: John Honun, Mrs. Thomas Hawley and four children. Hawley wa in the yard and was swept a hundred yards down the stream, but managed to reach the bank in safety. Only two bodies have been recovered Alice Wingert and Mrs. Stenzel. Great damage is rejorted at Elm Grove and Triadelphia. The drou ned at these points were: Mrs. Jane Fay and two daughters, William Warren and wife, Cal Bell, two young man named Bowman. Mrs. John OrTord. a widow, aged sixty years, living at Clinton, this county, died from fright. The greatest loss of life was along Wheeling creek and at Triadelphia. A search this morning resulted in the dis covery of a number of bodies near the lat ter place. Mosi of them were found among the drift which collected at Elm Grove. The body of William Gaston, aged sixty years, a prominent and wealthy citizen, was found near Elm Grove. His wife' remains w ere found two mile le!ow Elm Grove hanging on a barbed wire fence. Charles Caulbell, of the Wheeling .Wtcs Ittter. aged fifty years, was found among driftwood. Mrs. Jane Fay and her two grown daughters. Alice and May. were discovered a short distance below Triadel phia, and the lod:es of two brothers named Gorman were found in a meadow. Twenty-three persons are known to have b-en drowned, among them the sheriff of Marshall County. Two cemeteries were washed out and the coffins with bodies floated down the river. The line of the Pittsburgh division of the Baltimore & Ohio will have to be practic ally rebuilt from Elm Grove to the Penn sylvania State line. Six large and costly bridges were washed away and the track lifted from the roadbed and twisied into all conceivable shajes for miles at a stretch. At some places it is impossible to discern where th roadbed had been, while, with the exception of only an occasional gap on high and solid ground, the entire bed is badly washed. Interest centers in the wreck of the Bal timore & Ohio bridge over tha Wheeling creek at Main street and the fatalities which attended that disaster. Several of those on the bridge were doubtless strangers in the city attracted by curiosity and their absence is not noticed. So; far as can be definitely known there were four women and three Ijovs not since heard from on the bridge when it went down. The thrrteen-ysar-oUl pan of Janiel Ritfhie and a twelve-year-old boy named Eddie Hathaway are missing. It is impossible to give any details of losses for th resson that those who suf fered can not estimate their own loss as yet. and every resident of low ground in the entire valley suffered damage ranging from jT-O to iiO.O". while even those on the hills lo-t valuable crops, fences, etc The Baltimore it Ohio Company' loss will reach SfW.OJO at a low estimate. The coun tv's loss m roads and bridges will be at least SUKM: the Wheeliag Natural Gas Company. SW): the Natural Gas Com pany of West Virginia. c;.r00: W. T. Chambers & Co.. Elm Grove coal works. ?C,0X); Kimmins & Hutchinson. Elm Grove merchants, T.O!0: city, on washes and bridges. ?r.yjO: Pittsburgh. Chicago & St. Louis railroad. j2.."r): Wheeling & Elm Grove railroad. W,0: H. C. Hunter, Tri adelphia brick manufacturer. m,Oji. WESTERN UNION MENACED. A Hill I'a-w-d Itr tke x-nate Canceling Kx clair I'riviiejjr. Washington". July ). The Senate has passed a very important bill with respect to the use of telegraph lines constructed along the lines of railroads which have re ceived londs or laud subsidies from the General Government. The bill, in short, provides that existing contracts which have been entered into between certain of these roads and the Western Union Gom pany. under which the Western Union is given the exclusive control of all telegraph business on the lines of these respective roads, shalL be at once canceled and that these subsidized roads shall forthwith maintain and operate the telegraph lines which they own. on their own account, and shall make rates which are just, equiavble and uniform to all competing companies and shall make no discrimination between competing telegraph companies which de irc.' fo Use telegraph lines on these roads asa means of connection between the At lantic and Pacific coasts. This bill is the outgrowth of an agitation which com menced in Kansas, Nebraska and Iowa. It originated primarily in the effort of the Baltimore & Ohio Company, when it existed, to secure a connection to Colorado and tfao West. The subsidized railroads in ques tion bad entered into contracts with the Western Union Cpnipany, which still ex ist.;under the terms of which the telegraph lines along these roads were placed under the sole control of the Western Union Companv. Storm ia Ohio. St. Clairsville, O., July SO. This place and vicinity were visited last evening by a thunderstorm with violent winds and a rainfall that eclipsed the average water spout. Grain fields were laid waste, the shocked wheat was swept away and the. growing corn is not to be seen. The Bel laire & St. Clairsville and the St. Cla'ifs rille fc Northern railroads are almost en tirely washed out. The incoming train on the Baltimore & Ohio was strandtdat Echo, and the trais men and passengers barely escaped, the water tilled with drift run ning to the headlight of the engine It it feared that a number of lives have been lost. This place and vicinity are daaiage4 ao less than 100.000. STOCK ITEMS. It Is a point to be well considered in breeding cattle that, every sup gained in improvement leads to another, aad as. any animal become fixed upon aay ianl it becomes more or lesa hereditary. Milk or "stripping" left in the udder by careless or incomplete milking, are either re-absorbed into the system, tend - tag to fattening of the cow and her spoha- tion as a milker, or becomes sources of HT!TJf inn nnil (iiGnniM. ' j A difference of four quarts of milk per ; day, at the low price of two cents rer :m) davs. Sii, which is quart, uaKes, lor .w aavs. ;:, r the interest on :4i for a Year. This does not represent the entire difference in value, j as the progeny of superior milkers will be worth many times as much to raise as will the progenv of the inferior animal. No j farmer is rich enough to keep poor cows.- Field and Far.n. ---. A genuine case of equine homesickness signt ol m the course ol XHe play. is reported from Kimball, Neb. Some six ' Probably there is never a play pro or eight weeks ago Louis Richards sold a duced that is not altered and" rear lot of horses and among the number was a , A u.. .u -xa .. i black that had been owned bv him half a 'dozen vears. No sooner had the hors- i chanced stables than he beiran to crow ' sick, refused ail food and vas thoroughly I ill. but when allowed to go free scampered back to his old stable, apparently as well I as ever. J Adair County reports black-leg among j calves: Ida County, great loss from black- , leg; Poweshiek County.many calves dying i and cattle suffering from throat diseass; . Ringgold County, black-leg among year- J lings, all fatal cases: Taylor County, , cattle dying of an unknown disease die in about twentv-four hours after showing the first symptoms: Howard County. cattle - have died for the want of feed. Manv re port the stock in poor condition. loica iitaif Uegister. While a farmer may not hope to have a whole herd of pure-bred stock, he can at I very small expense procure a bull, or the t services of one, so that he may gradually build up a herd of grades that may be j worth, to him. quite as much as the pure bred cows. In fact, the greatest value of the pure-bred stock consists in the service the improvement of the native stock by inter-breeding. But whether by the use of the best nat:ve animal that can be pro cured, or a pure-bred one, the progeny must be cherished and reared with as much care as if they were costly pure-bred calves. jiXdMH'je. I Persistence in the production of milk is a valuable quality in a cow. One of the best recommendations for a cow is that I she will continue milking until she is dried off with difficulty, and this persisteiithabit is one to be encouraged and fixed upon all , young cow. A good and profitable cow i should give milk for ninety per cent, of f the time she is fed. which i equivalent to a rest of thirty-six days in the year, and j she should maintain her full product of mnc tor at least tnree mouths, decreasing gradually until at the end of the tenth month ,the niilk yield will average one third of that of the. first month. FARM NOTES. uourbon County, Kan., farmers are claiming in manv fields' of com one hun- i dred bushels to the acre. A Stockham. Neb., correspondent savs: Crops are looking fine. Flux and oat are largely sown and are a great crop. Corn, j the great staple, has caught up with the season and promises an immense yield. Nearly every acre of wheat grown in this county is now in shock and the farmers say -the yield will be .vary large, some placing the figures at an average, of thirty bushels to the acre. Arkain-ai Clt'i (Kan.) Tra'trter. J. C.Struble. a farmer living four miles east, 6f town. My.ved fortv-live bushels of oats last spring on twentv-llve. acres of , ground, and threshed out 1?V) bushels machine measure. and thtiy over-run. con- tsiaerauiy in, weighing. LMiceu Attn.) i journal. The frequent rains of this eaon no doubt had a great deal to do with the scarcity of insects. Another sea-on like I the present and our fruit crops will be 1 practically free from the ravages of insects fnw stw w ?r-A hi.ii ... -. .-ia...v "1mai-. h for four or tve years to come. Oreaon we meet tells us j (Jib. ) Advocate. i Almost everv farmer meet tew-, us ge. throughout to twentv-five that the wheat 'wll aVera I 1m ni'-'hlMirhvwi- fmrty ttii bushels per acre, and that corn never looked better. There is a very large acre- age of flax in the county and the yield will behcavy.-AiwiiCoiifify(.Vrt.lJHaI. It is the duty of every farmer to make a few experiments each season. If all run along in the same old ruts no progress , will be made. No matter how small it I nicv be. make a break and trv something out of the U'Ual line in your cultivating and harvesting or your farm operations. Utircorie (Mo.) Vindicator. Farmers in the vicinity of Aurora. Neb.f were recently victimized bv Bohemian oats swindlers who in one dav's work 1 secured notes for upwards of SlJXiO. If I many farmers who pay their money to '.raveling-.swindlers wouUi-Iuvest half the amount in good newspapers, thej-. would 4 ( learn how t steer clear of robbers and confidence men. Henrv" Stewart argues in the A". ' T. Tim that one ton of clover hay contains njne or tcir per cent. f albuminoids, while' a ton of timothy hay has only .Vi per cent. of -the. T-ataah! nutrients:" Clover hav is always cheaper than timothy, and often-. , times .i io.vr per' cenicueeper. jaenca farmers should grow timothy for sale and clover for feeding out to their stock. No other crop is so reduced in quantity and value by neglect, or may be so math improved by skillful culture and manage ment as the hay crop Its value is para- mount, for its quantity is the measure of the former s ability to feed stock with profit, to make manure, and to enrich his fields, thus adding to the quantity and value of .every other product of the soil. The -wheat crop in Southwest Missouri and border counties of Arkansas has made a splendid yield and Osgood qual ity. The oats harvest gives evidences of bemg the heaviest yield for years.. Com will make a full crop from all appearances, and as the acreage is larger than usual the yield will be greater than any previous. Fruits look splendid, the peach crop being the large for years. Apples are abundant. Notes. S. Han-din has leaned onepomt-in farm ing that he will not soon forget. He had twenty-two beautiful young shoats that gave promise of much pork. He put a j fcuanttty.Qf rait into, swill and, fed them fy-oue dead shoals'and'one'sick one. Mix ing salt with swill (or "slop" as we Mis sourians say) killed the .shoats. Farmers and tock-raser!, who may not have learned this before, will profit by it. Al bany fllo.) Ledaer. The Italian Government will give -fTJ,-000 in prizes for trotting races this season and for the encouragement ot breeding racing horses. WRITING A PLAY. Folats From a Veteran New Torn Theat rical Manager. Whearof the successful playwrights because their works are Droduced. But I there is a great army of play-writere 1 whose works are never produced, and I who are consequently unknown outside of their own circles. Any manager will ' tu vou tat be receives more MS. plays than he has time to read and ex- firrtlTio TTk wrill nln tk11 T"mi tTl.lfr t)lfl ' . ' novice acts on the assumption that mere cleverness m writing bngnt t - . dialogues, or skill in elaborating a poU suffices in the production of a , dramatic work Everv plav ha3 to , - r - . suit the stage carpenter as well as the i nianager, and he must never be lost " , .... stage manager at rehearsals or after the ' first night. Some of the best business is arranged after the rehearsals have commenced. There are certain effects that can only be ootained by watching the rehearsals. It is impossible to 'time'' the dialogue for entrance and t exit until rehearsals. Of this the j ernbrvo dramatist is blissfullv ignor- ant. Taking the old plays as models he writes long speeches that modern audiences would not tolerate. He does not remember that thore are cer tain mechanical impossibilities, and consequently has a "full set" follow another, whn a front scene enabling a change is necessary for the purpose. As a rule the best acting plays do not read well, and vice versa. Manager Palmer, of the Madison Square Theater, initiated his series of authors' matinees for the purpose of testing the works of embryo dramatists, though these pro ductions have only been made after the play has been carefully read and re hearsed. The few that have lived be yond the experimental performance shows how difficult it is to judge of a dramatic work until it is acted. There is a prominent editor, whose short stories in character dialogue have made him fame and fortune. He devoted valuable time to composing a domestic drama, which he finally sub mitted to a manager. After waiting several months he received the MS. with the stereotyped note that the manager regretted his arrangements would not permit the production, though he had read the play with much interest. On opening the MS. roll the author found that several pages he had deftly glued together had not been touched, conclusive evidence that the play had not been read. Another had three full acts in 'suc cession in one act. and the manager, glancing over the scenes, did not waste time to read the bulky MS., but sum marily returned it with the laconic commentary. "Impossible." A novel ist found fhat his three-act comedy of contemporaneous life would take three lights to play as written. Great skill in, the deft dovetailing of the "business" and incidents is re quired.in compressing the episode in to.an act without anv chauges of scene. 1 ,,!. . ,? , I Tne front pcene 15 generally known as a "carpenter" scene,... from the fact j that it is generally made to enable -tne sceneshifters to change the full set be- hind. The modern tendency is decidedr ly toward the one scene to the act; though in melodramas with many ' changes of scene, the drops and front I . ecene are necessary. There is a future for the dramatist fa countrv but the details of the . , 4 , , .... sta?e e3"-1 e understood; and if the j embryo dramatic author can not master J such any other way, I advise him to -t gee- be" counsel of stage manager- cr acton It is becau5e 0f the actors t. , , ,.-,., r ,.,. !,.,;.. of the stage, that as a rule plays writ ten bv actors are invariably successful. even if indifferent literary eomposi- , tions. X J". Cor. St. , ocrat. Louis Globc-Dan- Doctor "Did you take the rhu barb I ordered?"' Patient "Yes sir." Doctor "How did yu take it?"' Patient "In a .'"Detroit Free Press. THE GENERAL MARKETS. t KANSAS CITV CATTLE Shipping steer.. . 4 30 Butchers steers ... 3 .j , Jul; 7H. 5 & j U) J SO C 0) Native costs . ... HOGS Good U coicii hcary. WHEAT No.i red No. J soft CORN No. KYE No.-J FLOUit Patents, per sack.;. HAY Baled . BUTTER Choice crcamarx... CHEESE Full cream i : cs C8-4 t9 41'r Si 41 2 ) 5IU3 CO). 13 ! 13 Tf4 9 9 V era 4 fa 6 15 SO ?4 tat 43' on 44V. IS 14 11 32 6 j EGGS Choice ..... BAtu.i-itam ,,, Shoulders 9wmI POTATOES - ...... ST. LOUIS. CATTLE Shipping steers Butcbers stetrs.... HOGS "Packing SHEEP Fairto choice.- FLOUR Choice WHEAT No. red rvlw "a w Mk 1&IB Ik 1 ""0 BUTTER Creamery . so a 5.i5 3 50 a 5i3 0 a 44 IS 9 PORK 14 35 CHICAGO. e "so CATTLE Safpprarsteers. . HOGS Packing and shipping.. SHEEP-Fadrto choice FLOUR Winter wheat. WHEAT Ko.S red 4 90 5 70 3 78 Q 5 57 40 4 75 4 50 S3 471 S1L SSk 18 6J 47 Q .. sosa ... &i 15 . woo a BUTTER Creamer?. , NEW YORK; CATTLE Corcmon to prune.. HOGS Good to choice..- FLOUR Good to choice. , ..... WHEAT No. 8 red. ."...". OATS Western mixed BUTTER Creamery 450 3 ceo 3 70 sura MH3 is a, 640 500 o: TS S3 19 FOBK !! 4 13 75 13 00 They Never Fail. Ka 3 FClKW Mabxtt. NkwTork CITT, JaauaxyS&lSM. f I have been using Braxdreth's Pills for the last ten years. They are a wonderful medicine. There is nothing equal to them as Blood Purifiers and Liver Regulators. But I wish to state how remarkably they cure rheumatism, and how easily; I was affected by rheumatism of the legs. My business (wholesale fish dealer) naturally leads me to damp places. I was so bad I could not walk, and at night I suffered fear fully; I tried Balsams, Sarsaparillas and all kinds of tinctures, but they did me no good and I was afraid of being a cripple. I finally commenced using Braxdrbth's Pills. I took two every night for ten nights, then I began to improve I con tinued taking them for forty days and I got entirely welL Now, whenever sick, I take Braxdretii's Pills. They never faiL J. N. Harris. Ancient Greek coins have been discovered with the figure of a horse on them. We are glad to learn at last wliere horse cents originated. Oil Ci y Blizzard. CINCINNATI, - 14 BEgnniiiEiNsmoaio ipin GRAND JIIBItff ctttratiig tie Srttfcmf of tto Horttwtsttm Ttnitory. UNSURPASSED DISPLAY grtjkw5 Excursion rates TO MAKE A DELICIOUS BISCUIT ASU. ITOUR GROCER FOR DWIGHrS "COW BRAND" SOD AND TAKE NO OTHER. VDWICHT'Sp Ms Pills The ypepUe, tbe debllltat4, wheth er front exeeae or work of sain or fce4y, 4rlak or exposure la Malarial Regions, will fta Tmtt'a Pill the meat cental restorative ever ollfereA the rcrteg Invalid. Try Them Fairly. A Tfgoroea body, pare blood, ulron; serve and a eaeeria! mind will retail. SOLD EVERYWHERE. n&18 "TIFFIN" WELL BORING MACHINE! Known as th boat la for Bonsc waua iram a ao ncaaa diameter. Itahw diUla rock. THIS IS THE GREAT "OHIO!" Tubular Well and Pros pectins Machine, fam ous for succeeding where omen save tailed ! Self cleaning! Drill drops GO to 90 times a minute I Cat&logce FREE. looms & ithuit TIFFIN, OHIO. asr xaju xaa r ua otbi tin jwi CURES RHEUSATISM, Reiralaia, Heatfaehe, Sore Threat, Sprains Braises. Burns. Wounds, tun Back. M pans 01 m mnmaatorr "atara. ay gtm SOe.aoar.OO. o book ain.it rmxm. ,. asanas wizard oiuco CHICAGO rVrsis the test Sfcee ai for keys er girls. Warraslei s Shesty an. seM as foatws: ElZXA ItnNU SI. SS II to 15 !. Oar name ia oa the bottom erery aaoa. fVAsk jonr dealer for Vanto's su XI DBDwa. ir bo not Keep toem I to aa ud win Xaraiak too a KE.2s,"ox TBE QXEAT ENGLISH aMJiMmiY1 For LItct, Bile. Isdiantloa. etc Free front Xamaryr aUaSS.ACaw8T.laCaw.Xa. " to-ii a iH IT PvSl r3 1 Ik"0BIV ttfllallBlli i cures a IiESl aaall Ja fa w1 awaw JVT-av aoea BV B apraarv-jeav aand aaar iv v.-aav waul naawB. awi nioaav -w ILsmhav BILIOUS MaW rlLsa-lw9a A 43aad laspols. Dont balk your good impulses, perttpular It that one which incites you to abandon xnntlees medication for dyspepsia, kidney trouble, fever and ague and constipation-,. and adopt instead Bostetter's Stomach Bit term, which supplements the important cre oential of a long and successful career, wfcbi the commendauoDof the medical profession. Give it a systematic trial. Altkocgh a tennis match does not pro voke such noisy enthusiasm as a ball game, the costumes of the players are loud enough. to be heard a mile. AVw Hot-en Nor. Thosk Nuisances, Rheumatism and tbe Gout, are relieved by Glenn's Sulphur Soap. Hill's Hair and Whisker Dye, 50c Some men are fiddlers and others arc performers on the violin : the same sort of distinction is to be found at every turn in Ufa. Merchant Trawler. Sour girls are maidens all forlorn, while others are maidens all for lawn tennis. PitUburun Chronicle. Tserk are two things that a woman will always jump at a conclusion and a mouse. ButiingUn Frn Prtm. m A doctor's report would properly come under the head of the news of tbe weak. Utrl. Al from all points. US MID GOLD WATCH FREE! $A3; ttttVftl ptVvlttetAVMtiaVVwateJimirft.satUla! teeoatfaetbpan!aMtlforIa t&ma ftttL nW t?e both I 4!VtaJ prats tAxt with ork and cu cf tqu&! r-!u-SHE tCKMU5T iafavhWitycaustttrcvc-taof tV t!eatrwtt&aba:BiiT FRF.E. T&e wikn izmj 9 drpttkinj en, not only o n;u poM. bat u stisiCngr ur.c th mot perfect, cornet ml rhabte t!mkrTru tfce worii. Yea ftsk haw ts iM wxmdrf3l o(!r pf-mbl' Wf aaiwr r w wn.i oa prcri is nrh SotAliry to krp m their heme, rn-1 how tC tfcoav tw rati. ecrofrfete tiM of car vi!ab baJ rr ufil BOVSSUOLD Bnru; tbew awcplM. wZ rti-'wa- ii. wt 0nl AUOiXTtXT nK,ft2 after jtc&a V ih. tx yoorncm &r3 month, and thowa tarn to tbe who rzjtf aaro called, taeybaBiCaUlrlyyocarn rrcpe.-T; !t i f rble to make thia prvat offer twniUa,? the fMilUI 4olt WmCfl ad lam Km f vaioaftl? atrr.p: Faze. fort iraaun taaijElM aaawlnf of taaar3ka iaasj l2tr,mj ratzlrhi attrp trtinfjr ; after oar iipT bn tn a local! for a aaoctli or two, we oscal.r : ft-m I.t' S3 $3.4 wla trad frcra the varroundmf cvanr-Tioa Unr' to o at tmc wl rraeina gmt lnH!tfor-arrIjan w-ric a&! trotWa. Tuavth inovtrvvatrlahtoac ! LlrrJ otfr"r knows, triad in onier that oor valuable Uocav-L-ii ?imj may b placed at mc whre they ran b . a!l err An-ri ea; naJer.ItwiUlbetharrlly aaj croolle fr jkk. uituswrinto tbaa whoeiaycmnOTyoorfcpiaaIytrgrrwtrIa.iJb nwc aatiafactmr. A poatal canUoa w tkh t ms c, cosu bat 1. cent, and it. aTer yon know all. voa di not care ta fo frr way no aarm is dcaa. BaC if 71m 'do nd vrjcr -lir tx enrcyoa can rcure. rmcc, A7 ClcgatT S .iUt t.LD, HrTiJ-CA'WjrrCBl and or Jsrr co-cn'rUr ir-eof nla abU IIocslholo 8j.nri.iA. Wo pay aU exrtss ftt.c-,c -.XAJILTBIS VKrTJL rw7 Qm . LIQUOR HABIT la a I!ot nS cub It earel. O. Addreu DirxNi a IUiist Col. US Eti. u:!i 3U KtBM Ctiy. Mo. MIII ffa 4 A A A MOSTH cutoiudt working IWV W ftfWW for ju. Amnti Brefrrwl who ean furnish tbir own horaea mnd sire thr whole time to the buineas. Spre moments may b rroCtibly em-ploj-ed also. A few vacancies in towns and citiea a. r. joajfseji jl cx, iii ; su-, aickawai, t. aV-MlXX TBS Pj?tR otwt Jia . CAI nilTOClLIET PENSIONS, 111 Illagil3it!adi-.ab1ei: pay. etc.: Im Taaaa'aaaaaeerer relieved: Laws free. a. W. COnirEA903S.C!aue,ata Waidastaa,B.C raAaa ran uraa tmt aw j n To laniet.wtn Mtd aaatoat KVacM ( taAl R-Co!.rrI IDE AL CRAYON-UTHO. PORTRAITS Qleveland-Tiiurmane;HarrisonMorton iiain.OskFrmaikar4rrirMe. Gao.FcuTo,Clccincatl.a SaiZi.tm UtftCtm ftifmreiitUa. Q-iura Vasts. mfk UthmmnimxmmoatTWTrk!Ejf'-retiia uUliUL t MTthin fc IntM-w.rM'iaarrMS Co.: 1 ocrCt JaaaT Tarn raaa. Unm, Tail a Co,Ar.taiaa aw-a as saia raria tmj ii TCYAC I im& acr boe acrienlt- nrat and vrmxinir lunit for nL AldrejGOBIXTtFOKTi:K,DaUaHTc:. OT -1AMX THIS FXttt. mmj kw. J ! $5 TO $8 A DAY. Samples trortb $!.. FRKR. XinnitcnIerthhor,fr't. Writ aaansrca aarrtr aauaoLMaco., mjj, aica SaXZ TUU raraa j tmmjtm nav FARMS in Ohio. Cheap. Good. Send tor description andortce. H. K. BascKorr. Jeatraon. O. 'XUtt tu raria tmj as. jw am EDUCATIOVAtV. Baataeaw, Shorthand and atacnah Tralalaa: Scaool, SC Loaia. Mo. Soaa tor oircalar. ISAaSSlf ceiAECE. Endowed brGoreraot JEUardia. JaVat Endlto CMUece taato Weat. ISTeacber. 4 Profesaora. A CUM) prtae Piano for auuic papil next sesnon. r. O. XKXICO. MOl. IANSAS STATE HRHAL SC1IWL f laboraterlea. faculty and attendance maanaae-! br aar dmilar avbool la ta Weau DIPLOMA A. LIFB CERTrncTC IX KAXSAS. Tui tloafrae. ittieacepaklKaaaMatadeata Tor catalusne aad ctmlara. aaarcaa a. K. f ATLOR, PrcaMeat.'BaDorla. 1 LawrwaeoBaataoaaCoIIoMaaaAeaSt Largest, eaeapntaadfecac iW-paaeasat. taaacfiwa. K.L.McIiraT.aart.Laraca;Ki iSAeaSeaax. I INnCNnYflAD WU I CCC For YOTTNCh unit j Sent. II rim-daai la all Ita mnfMitntwata for Hiaacr iintt. SaVDVOR-CatTa DlWDVS. SvTiSwmv, a Ito trarelln JOBSFB CCaUfBfQS, O. D?l D?Preaidet. Bt Prafeaaoraano IBtadcnta. TiUnHTtnltr , Collaalata inJ Prwparator tfvaaiagws ooi laleie at a aodarata. imruauiux. USIS- COLUSKof LAW.Chlcaao. Fan Term be glaa Sept ia. rerctiealar ado. H. Booth. C&lcaco. loodrtt ltoia Wra5j.BBoirX.8ewalaV9toL : o. Hav 11S7. WMSSr WaUTUta WBlTUta TO ADTEKTISKB8. aayTomnaWwha OSniranaiaaHav fafiii l-