- " -r " . . kn, W' ?' ' ! SHERIDAN'S FUNERAL Atl That N Mortal - ' I-ttt Ofnfnl of tlit Armv uitl Lal'l to -.t at Arlius- ii.n " AVAsni-VGTf--11??-1- The lat rites for " jthv tlektl vr to-day r-rfomied accord- jB(r jo tw or,linaac- of & Houian Catho- Ij.Ch-fafortl'pH'nryHhernlan.Geu- ?ra'0f the army of the United States and tslody waylaid to ret in lautiful Ar- mcton, the city of the soldier dead. The event tva 5 marked b-a general sus- Insion of public business. The ceremo- nies tnrouphout were in keeping; with the ctiaracter of the man. The strict adhe rence to an almost xml.tary simplicity in the arraupement-. the h-avy-t it -eled cais son for his hear-e. which hud --een ten-ice, lt-Z befittel th clu-mg cenes m the lifts of so prat a o!dier. t. Matth-'.vV. Church, where the re- . ... . y- ij . . . m-nns 01 vrenerai aneriaan natl laiil 111 ate mce Thursday afternoon, and where th- principal burial services were held, is an ancient edifice of modest pretentions, w th -.mcop.1 walls, and but for it- !a-.y, pillared front, would attract little atten tion from a stranger. It is th- most popular Catholic church :n '.Vashmrton. and for many yar it has nu:a!rei aaoa; its conzregatioas the m-mirs of manv of th foreign legations. 4. abmet members, Senators and Congress men. At nine o'clock the doors were thrown ven and tho-e of the large crowd passed uiside who had tick its of admission. They "re conducted to their seats by xi-h"rs lre-sl in rull m.litaryuniforms.uidrrte I.rection 01 Colonel John II. 1N0n of the orjs of civil engineers. Among tfa prominent pr-ons present were Senators Iagall-.. Elmunds. Evarts. Jon-, or Nevada, Sawyer and Far w ell and Justice Harlan and" wife. AtaioBt: --Vi the pall !earer. headefi by General -bermaa in full uniform. entml at til left of the catafalques. Soon the joint commute- vf Congress ajjvired and was con ducive to seats reserved for them in front ana to the rignt of the catafalque. Four jf th-m occupi-d General Sherman's pew. Al-jut!:40 the President and Mrs. Cleve land and Secretaries Fairchild and. Vilas ame in and to-jk tat m the front pew to the nht of the center aisle. Mrs. Folsom. Secretary Bayard and Postmaster-General Dickinson followed and were seated in the v.L.mty. About five minutes after the Presidential party arrived Mrs. Sheridan was esc rted to a seat to rtie left and near the casket. She was deeply vailed Cardinal Gibbons delivered the eeruuui. Before the completion of the services the cais-v-on and the General's horse w ere re moved to a point near the church en trance, and after the casket had been placed on the cxisson the column was formed by w heeling to the left and moved en rout' far enough to permit the forma tion of the column of carriages in the rear. In accordance with the wishes of .Sirs. Sh ridan the funeral was a strictly mili tary affair, and th- e-cort was formed precisely as presented by the army r-gu-lat oa- tor an othcer ot the rank of the de ceased. The pall bearer- were: General Sher man. Secretan-s Endicott and Whitney, Sjaker Carlisle, inator Hawley. Gen eral Augur. G-neral McFeely. G-neral "Wesley Merritt. General Joseph Fu!l-r. Mr. George V. Childs. Colonel Chari. p. ft?.R.'ohi. dej)artment commander of the G. A. II.. Marshal Fi-ld and Vice-President Frank Thomson, of the Pennsylvania rail road. Tne joint Conzressional committ-e was ctntjK)eti of S-nators Hawl-y. Mander s,in. Cuilom. Stevart. Hampton. Gibson and Gray, and Kepr-s-ntatives Hooker, of M -sissippi; Cut"heon. of Michigan? Wh-eler. of Alaliama: Henderson, of Illi nois; Cox. of New York: Gro-venor. of Onio. and MtShane. of Nebraska. Thert-it- was by H street to Pennyl vania avnu-to th Arlington road by way of the aqu-duct bridge. Crowds lined the entire route, and all available plac-s for a i-w of th- ime were occupied. As the caisson came to a hault at the crave th- clergy 111 flowing robes headed a proce ion from the carriages to the grave. Bishoplect Thoma- F. Foley, of Detroit, 1 rother of Bishop Thomas Foley, of Chi cago, who married General Sheridan, was the otiiciating priest. His assistants, acolytes and trained choir of Dominican monks numbered more than a score in all. Next came the pal!-learers. General Sher man anil Secretary Endicott. Seaker Car l.sle and Secretary Whitney walking at ice head, and behind theni. leaning hea-ily on the arm of Colonel Sheridan, cam- the gnef tricken widow. The mourners in c'uded John Sheridan, brother of the de-ceas-d. General and Mrs. Rucker. parents of the widow, her brother and sister, and the military starf and several other inti mate fri-uds of the General. The Presi dent and Mrs. Cleveland and the commit-Te-s ot the two houses of Congress with bare heads followed the mourners. With a sprig of fir plucked from a neigh boring branch holy water was sprinkled over tue grave an i the casket was lowered I v the sergeant-. The regular bursal service, legmaing w th tii- canticle of Zaehary or the tent. d ctus. and Hidia w ith th- chanting of I Protundis" by tn- choir of Dominican pr.--.ts, brought the rehgmus features of the obsequies to an end. The prie,ts then s'.sfdns.d- and remained m a group near inr- head oi the grave. Everv breath was ha-hed wane the widow cam a step for ward and for one brt-f moment looVed u;jn the casket which held her beloved dead. As she turned awav the other m'Hirners m a body jiaid th-.r tribute of love and re-pect ami then at a signal the arti'lery fired a saiuw of seventeen guns. Tn- Legion o: Honor 11101 ed up in a Hue and loosed in upon the still uncovered casket and then filed away. The great hobow square now contain-. but one Iigure. taat of a stalwart cavalry bgler wlo stood facing eastward, his buzle under his arm, at the head of the grave. There was a hoarse command at th- left, echoed and pasd on down the l.ne of infantry, a rattle of steel. 2. mom-nt of expectation and then the simultaneous flash and roar of -Vr muskets. A:ra!n and acam the volley was repeated. Then the bugler came to attention, raised his bugle to his lips and blew t;ps." th- signal for "lights out," the military equivalent for good nisrht. The mourners then slowly left for home and the IkxIv of the military hero was left to its solitude. s-tttinlx.it iturnrd. Glexcove, L. I.. Aug. li The steamboat Bay Ridge, plying between "ew York and Sea Cliff, was de-trcyed by fire at two o'clock this morning while lying at Glen wood dock. Frank Laughlin.'the bartend er, was burned to death in his berth. The loss i3 S"0.(Kh). m Connt; I-iikmt:i1s. New Yor.K, Aug. li. -Senator Kenna. of TVest Virginia, addressed a large audience at the Cooper Union last night, at the meeting called under the auspices of the County Democracy to ratify the National ticket." The strike of the navvies in Paris has ended, the men accepting the terms of fered by their employers. VOMITED RED MUD. ! Peculiar and Fatal Eruptioa or a Volcaaa I in Japan. l Sax Fkaxcisco, Cal.. Aug. 1.".. The steamer City of Sydney, which arrived last 1 evening from Hong K0115 and Yokohama, 1 brings through Japanese journals par- ticalar of the volcanic eruptions of JBandalSan. July IS. The details of ths ' catastrophe came in .-omevvhat disjointed , form and the Choina Svmbun dis- patched a special reporter to the scene. According to the account the villages around Bandai San heard strange rumbling sounds and felt shocks of earth quakes from the i:th. These phenomenon continued intermittently for two days and nights but not being attended by any se rious result no great disquietude was feit. On the morning of Julv l.'i. about eiht 1 o'clock, the smaller Bandal San trembled ' . and roared violentlv. Almost immediate ly afterward ashes began to fall: the skv suddenly grew dark, and the rumbling sounds continued. accom panied by a violent earthquake and flare of dazzling Same. Then the crest of tho small Bandai San appeared to lift bodily upward and then to fall again with a tiemendous noise. Then followed show ers of red mud. mingled with large stones, spreading havoc around. Such indeed was the nature of nearly all the matter erupted red mu i without small stones, but ac companied fc"asiona!Iy by heavy rocks. Above the mad fell a few inches of ashes. In the five villages cf Iwa.se, Yoson. Wa kamua. Misato and Hibara the greater part of the houses were buried to a d-pth of from seven to twenty feet. The state of the liodies recov ered is terrible. Some are literally cut to pieces, others are parboiled so that it is scarcely possible to distinguish lietween men and w omen, and .a few corpses w ere found suspended in the branches of trees, which had caught them as they fell. Up " to the 17th the number of bodies recovered was 47. It is believed that sixty-one are still entombed. The wounded number forty-one. Eighty-seven bouses were de stroyed. Tht? inhabitants of Inawashiro and ad jacent villages fled to Wakamatsea and other places when the eruption occurred. The report of the local ofiicial of Waka matsea says the inhabitants of Inawashiro and adjacent districts escaped w ith their furniture. The wounded are receiving treatment at the schoodious- in Inawash iro. Th-ir condition is shocking. Some have fractured skulls and others broken limbs, and the faces of a few are battered so as to lie unrecognizable. There ara about a thousand people m need ot help. CROP REPORT. Tlie Department of AcrieultnreV Last M.uitlily ('poi Itejxirt. Washivgto.v. Aug. li The Departnsent of Agriculture reports a small advance in the condition of corn, from U.l percent. last month to !,"..".. Kauis have been gen erally seasonable, though in excess m som- distri 't.s and deficient in others. In Kansas, the Carohnas. Delaware and New York the condition is reduced by local droughts. In the Southwest, where droughts sometimes occur at this season, there has been an improvement, anil a large crop is already assured. In the corn surplus States, high condition prevails, with some advanc- over the figures last month. The iercentages of the-States of the central t alleys are: Kentucky. !; "hio. "-: Indiana. l3: Illinois. W,; Iowa, i's; Missouri. .4: Kansas, ill, and Nebras ka. !44. There will le a heavy crop m this section, as is usually and naturally ex pected in a seasonable y'ar following one of extrem" drought. High condition of maize also prevails m th- northern border States and Territories, Dakota standing lowest at "s4. j Spring wheat has fallen from its high position of a month ago. The chinch bug stands at the head of the disasters report ed, involving, more or less. Wisconsin, Minnesota. Iowa and N-braka. and in p. aces doing serious damage. High tem perature, excessive rams, blights, rust and the army worm are locally reported, evidently vithout striously reducing the 1 g-neral condition. Dakota stands highest xv ith an average of i'l. a loss of seven j points. Reported yields run an extrtma j range, from a few bushels to forty per I acre. The reduction of the percentage in Minnesota is from 1U to Ni: in Wisconsin from SI to -: in Iowa from i7 to v4; m Nebraska from lo to M. The crop of Wash ington. Colorado and other Territories, and of New England, is good, and fair ' in Northern Illinois, Northern New York and m the higher latitudes or altitudes of winter wheat Stat-s. The general condition has been reduced from !C.."i to v7.3 during July. This exhibit does not include modifying changes in the first part of August. Harvest v. as about to commence in some districts, and in oth ers the grain would not be ready ill 1 August 20 or i"i. There are no estimates of winter wheat after threshing as yet, but voluntary remarks of reporters m?d9 the yield letter than the early promise in all the States that produce much of a crop. Cases of heavy yields are reported. 1 The change that have occurred in tho general averages of other crops during tho month are- Oats from lC.i to M.T: barley from!l to Si; spring rve fromM.MoiiI.4; Irish potatoes trom 'X. to l'S.'2. The buckwheat crop, first reported in August, averages in condition Jt!."i. BULLETS FOR BOULANGER. Hi-ported Attempt to Ass:tInatt' the IJe !oiilt:iti:' I reiioli Ct'iierut. , Pahis, Aug. !:!. While General Ilcu- ( laug-r was riding in an open carriage through th streets of St. Jean l"A:igly in the Department of Charente-Inferieure , y-sterday. Prof. I'errin. a friend of Mayor I.air. the candidate of the Oppoimni-ts, diew a revolver and fird five shots at him. Al. llataplau. a friend of Iloulunger, rushed forward and managed to turn ' the weajKin aside. The result was tnat Rataplan himself received a ' bullet in the back of the head, but the wound is not serious. Two peasants were also wounded, but General Boulan ger w as not touched. The affair occurred Rt the height of a pitched battle btw eeu J the rival political parties, vv hen the gen- . darmes were charging. Count Dillon re ceived a blow on the head from a stick and other Boulangerists were roughly handled. It is not certain that Perrin intended to aim at Boulanger. --. To supprts Yellow Fovor. "Washington, Aug. li. Senator Call has introduced a joint resolution to appropri ate ?iU0.0CKJ. to be paid out in the discre tion of the Secretary of the Treasury-, for the suppression and prevention of yellow fever in the Inter-State commerce "of tho United States. It also authorizes the Surgeon-General of the Marine Hospital Ser vice, on the request of the Governor of any State, to seize ami destroy, under condi tions and regulations to be prescribed by , the Secretary of the Treasury, any infect ed personal or other propertv which is communicating infection and "disease in ! the Inter-State commerce. This cou ; demned property, it is provided, shall bj paid for out of the money appropriated by 1 li. T..rItTt in.. , ...w ..-v...v... , MAXWELL HANGED. After Three Years nlay the Serttenee of j Deatb i Carrie Into Effect Landgraf Also Hanged. St. Locis, Ang. 10. Hugh M. Brooks, alia. Walter M. Lennox Maxwell, was ex ecuted in the jail yard this morning a few minutes before nine o'clock for the murder ol Charles Arthur Preiler in April, lNd. At the same time Henry Landgraf was hanged for the murder of Annie Tesch in j March, lrtfsi. j At S:it Sheriff Harrington, accompanied ' by a deputy.entered the yard and the sheriff entered Maxwell's cell, where heasd Land graf had been placed together, and an nounced that the final moment bad ar- , rived. Maxwell ".aled and pulled bis fingers nervously His was the first death war rant read and he stood up and heard his doom calaly though he was plainly grow- 1 ing wna'-.er all the time. j As Maxwell passed through the inner yard h. walked firmly but slowly. There was a wonderful change from the appa rently unconcerned man pulling a cigarette and the one en route to his death. His face looked pinched and drwn.of an ashy hue. and his eye were swdfleu. He glanced aliout him piteously. his lips twitching, and his appearance was calcu- Iated to awaken even the tritv of tho-e j who were convinced he ought to die. M. Urookji, alias J.ixireW. C. Arthur PrelUr. i Landgraf locked and moved like a log. with a half smile and a half sneer on hi face. There was no time lost in reaching the scaffold w hich the condemned ascend- ' ed without assistance. While his arms were being pinioned Maxwell bit his lower lip and gulped sev eral times. There was an awful look of despair on Maxwell's face as the cap hid it from view and his knees showed weakness. The noos-s wer- adjusted quickly, and at S:."C the drop fell. Landgraf was pronounced dead in eleven and one-haif minutes. Maxwell's -.trugglt continued for fourteen minutes, w hen h. too. was pronounced dead by the attending physician. ' Landgraf was cut down at 0:12 't. Max well at !:1.. The bodies w ere removed tr the morgue office and photographed, after which the post mortem was begun. It was stat ei that the neck of each man vva broken. 1 juiwellV cuime. The enrae for vrfaich Brooks, alias Maxwell was haaeil wa the killuv; of Charles Arthur Preiler at t!e Southern Hotel. Su Louis. April C. ls-3. Hui:h Jlottram Brooks, that is his true name, was born in the little village of Hyde. near Ma.hester, EnzliMii. hN lather lein; Samuel Norton Brooks, a schoolmaster, of oo2 family Your.:; Brooks, shaped under the parental discipline and quiet l:Je :t Hyde. uaA after twenty-three j ears under the distasttful restraint, with only occasional jr.laipses of the wider freedom he lontreil for. slipped avay from home ;o try life in America. His father objected to hi venturing into the jrreat nw world, and so he pot his trunk away by ste lth and left the parental roof ct mcht. He made hi way to Liverpool, where h' first met hi V.ctim. Preiler. and whre he Hrt chamred ' his name to Moiuell YTalt-r Horace Lennox Maxwell was the pandy arpella tion he ftxed on. Charles Arthur Prel- j ler was a trareltng man for London upholster-e?- a man of means, reaned tastes and luxu-' nous habits. He and Maxwell sa:M together ' frcn Liverpool on th? u,arcr Cephalonia and on the trip became fat .friends. Arriving in thi country they separated, tut continued to corre-poad. Towara the end of M ireh. lssn. ' the Hyde schnolraater's son arrived at the Southern Hotfl in St. Louis, registered under his assumed name and wa assigned to room 11. Preiler arrived shortly afterwards and the two reel- though they occupied sepra:e rooms were continually tosetner at meals, playing pool in the billiard room and loun-sinc about the corridors. They acreed to go to Australia together, diseased the details cf the trip and mapped out plans of life together when they should reach there. On Sunday, April C. they were een together in room 14 by a bell boy who was called there by a na,'. V K. Boss, a traveling salesman wik occupied the next room, heard water run ning m No. 144 that afternoon and several times heard :rroan. Twice thit day Brooks bought chloroform of a drurrgist namfd Fernoa. The second tinvhe wa excited and impatient and said that he Lad spilled that tir-t purchased. I That evening Brooks appeared in th" dining room, excited and distraught, without his fnend. ' He ordered a bountiful dinner, but ate very lit tle. To the head waiter he talked i!dly,told .f being in Turkey, said he killed a man there ' once with his revolver and asUed if one could cet off after killing a man. for Vfl. "Why."" was the reply, "this is a civilized country. They hang murderers here." Next dav Brooks bought a trunk, a handbos and two straps. He went to Hart i Dufl"s and iisked for hat that Tronld make him look like a Yankee, .apai: his name was Tewiik knd he was :-n officer m the Turkish army. He sot a' mouse-co:ored slouch hat. He went to a barber shop and had his Iwanl shaved off and his ap pearance olherwi-" altered. Here fce said his name nas Maxwell and that he had taken part In the Russo-Turkish war. j The Saturday previous Brooks had tried to raise roonty on hi-natch and two Woodbury stereoptkon laatvrns. On this Monday morn-1 ins he had plenty of money and after beins shaved he Iwumit gold nmm"d pc:acle for tN a pair of field glass fur VSi, a ct of man:-1 cure instruments for JIT. a diamond r.ng for JiT and a flute for is. He alo purchased an un-' limited nrst ilass ticket to San Francisco for i:s The flurht to San Francisco, thence to New Zealand, the discovery of Preiler" body in a trunk, the pursuit, capture, return and ini'ict- mntof the pnsoner ire already oC 1 or:, facts. I A lomr trial fo'lowed. the details (; , , are 'ami'" to the reader. Ti e deat XtiS V "? established. Thr p-i,-..,, Ti e deat t.J rel ics'... iaaiuuiua me res-Jii o; a-c:aeni la al- minisi enng chlonf.rm for disease, but all the .i,-,T.f, trufi o (vn f,., ,(., fhium. I The jury found him guilty ot murder m the I first degree, and sentence of death was passed A motion for a new trial was denied and a a.. s--j mmi'fr-mm ., i'Hk. fcM4 V.Utb VAiUid was made. The United States Supreme Court ws then petitioned, also without effect. The prisoner's lawyers then began m work on Gov ernor Morehouso and made strenuous efforts to enlist popular sympathy on b-half of their client. The Dmgfelder episode was played for all it was worth, but the impression remained m the public mind that however scaly a piece of work the prosecution had been rail'vnf, the evidence wrts too -strong othern ise that Brooks Lad been guilty of a dastardly cr.me in the murder and robbery of a fellow countryman wac had befriended him in a strange land. LANDGK.VF6 CIIIJIE Henry Landsr.-f suffered the death penalty for a crime committed on the msht of March 5, ls.sTr. The vnctim vvas his sweetheart. Annie Tiich, a beautifjl cirl or less than eighteen years of ag). Jealo.sy proayteU the deed. H. Two Truly Happy Souls. It was evening and they sat on a bench in the Grand Circus Park. She was a confiding young girl and he looked a-weary. 'Angus,' she said, as the wind play fully stirred the leafy hranches over head. "I have been figuring." "Yes." "On how cheaplv we can live."' "Cert." "I can make a pound of brown sugar last us a whole week."1 "Can you?' 4Tes,dear." There was a long silence, broken at last as he gave a sudden start and ex claimed: "Yes, but who's to earn it?" She promised to take in sewing and support him and Happiness came steal ing through the parity like a beam of silver light, and they clasped hands and were verv quiet and it was set tledand thev will wed. Detroit Free 1 Frcss. m m A Remarkable Little Boy. Mrs. Teterby I think my little boy, Johnny, the neatest, cleanest little boy ever I saw. Friend I saw him yesterday, and his hands and faee were covered with mud. "That's just what I mean; the little fellow, he is so cleanly that he is al ways getting himself dirty, just so he can be washed again. Tcxiis Sitings. It is a mistaken idea that a bache lor always refers to a baby as "it. Frequently he speaks of the little household angel as "that confounded kid.' Soincrville Journal. Cure for Rheumatism. G. G. Treat, of "West Granville, Mass., writes of Allcock's Pokocs Plasters: For rheumatism, neuralgia, pain in the sfdo or back, coughs, colds, bruises and any local weakness, they truly possess wonder ful curative qualities. I have recommend ed them to my neighbors with the happi est results, many of whom but for Aix cock'3 Plasters would be in a crippled condition at home. In every instance where they have been taithf ully and properly ap plied the result ca3 been wonderfully sat isfactory. JVht Ia wie man like a pin? Because he has got a good head, and comes to point. Look Sharp! When your skin breaks out in pimples use Glenn's Sulphur Soap. Hill's Hair Dve, Black or Brown. 50c Tea and coffee are well termed cf the grocer kind." 'luxuries Ir afflicted with Sore Eyes use Dr. Isaac Thompson's Eye Water. Druggists sell it.25c THE GENERAL MARKETS. KANSAS CITV. August 1. CATTLE Slilnpii.' steers 4 . 3 :m 5 1') 3 Do 25 6 -0 71'. 71 vG -- -JO " 2 30 u II 1C '' t 1! 11 0 Uulcn'Tssl-crs .. j Native co as HOGS Good to crioiw hea?y '.VUtAT So. i red No.: -oft ., coi:n No.-j ovrs No. 2 -. RYU No. 2 FLolIIt Patents, pr sac .. HAY Baled BLTTTKB Caoice creamery.. . CHEKSi: Full cream CGGS Ciioice BACON Ham shoulder- 3iUCS POTATOES ST LOLTIS. CATTLE Shipping -leers. ... Butchers' steers ... HOGS Pacfcinc 31ICEP Fairto choice FLOCK Choic WHEAT No. I red ni Si :vj-j-5 1 .' S, ; i: 0 :o- 51- t. Zl) .-. no 3 M c - cs a.'D g r.-i P. 33 COKN No. J t QTg No.i -'U KYE No. : BCTTU.K Creamery POUlv..... -... .. .... CHICAGO. CATTLE Phij-pingsfers. ... HOGS PackuvauJs npiaj.. SHEEP Falrto c.i ! FLOCK Winter. heat li 1 1 2i A 0) 5 s.) ." M J til ft e :s 10 lj s 4 -. G) si4 414 23' 1 s7, Is ;3 cj C.T. 0 4T 5 Ot 23 ' ' 1 WHEAT No., red CuUN No.: vji L o 'J v tj YE V j BCTTE.: Creamery Ni'.lV YOKtC CATTLE Common to prime . HOG Gtwd'cnoice ... . FLOCK Good uic.ioicu. Will: T No. :. n-1 coire No 2 OATS .Ve-t-rn mixed BCrrU.: Creamery ;i ft 4 7A ft 13 r. 'O 2- "' 400,000 To introduce it into LADIES' HOME JOURNAL AND PRACTICAL HOUSEKEEPER FROM NOW to JANUARY, 1889 Four Months balance of this year. OH MCZIfY OP ONLYinCENTS SUvtr or Sumra. EATING RIFLE ICW lofcl 1888. BTtrkt tatier m mmmlsr ton. ttrnatr.U&ter.Omeaianmr. WT Iff TSLL TOC MMM IT. 1SALLARD IAIIEIT, HVTrtrl AWI TMtfT ItflCS- IS5JiMtSjSjIW,Mnl,"eT OKUIIaU gECETTICB. Wichita. aaaiaiasai Kansan. wants to employ tosost Ban aadetectiTetn eery locality. Send us cants to mall yon Instructions. No mkmbkksbif rsx. aw SAXS THIS raFCS mj cm jm nk. DAV. Saraoles worth S1.S4) V aarwiiiBBi ine not ondfr th- horf feet. Wi 'rite i turan EniaetMs ca,. . asrsaxs tsua rarsa mmt "! oa ran lin at Suns aai nak aei tsoacy wwkiag ttt as nun t aBTtUatrclM in tb warld. Elthrr tra Caatly aatst xctsMraaav aaanut ihik ia.ai SaHSIBIa faPla nrrj tatja nm A. ". K. D. o. lsee. WHES WKITING TO ADVEKTISEIt,. please say you saw tho AdTertlsemeat in tala paper. SSSUMRFf S8aK. aaajajBhC- Tuieftacer avfruteT'aaaaaam aaaaaw a A Good FooadatloB. The foundation of health may be deeply laid, if the constipated, the bilious, the de bilitated will but infuse conjoint vizor and regularity into the system with HosTtetter's Stomach Bitters. For a third of a century it has fulfilled its mission of furnishing strength to the feeble and health to the sick. Chills and fever, rheumatism, nerv ous and kidney troubles succumb to it. Tor can't always judge of the quality of a city's inhabitants by the "sample men" it sends over the country. PKi;iiry Ciroit ide. Invalids, aged people, nursing mothers, overworked, wearied 'out fathers, wdl find the happiest results from a judicious use of Dr. Sherman's Pncklv As-h Bitters. Where the liver or kidneys are affected, prompt action is necessary to change the tide toward health, ere the disease becomes chronic possibly incurable, and there is nothing belter to be found in tho whole range of materia malica. Sold everywhere. It is natural enough that the brewers and their employes shoulc get at lager, heads. DuUih Para'jTViiher. m FREE! A 3-fopt, Frwch Glass. Oval Front, Xickel or fTierrv Cigar Case. Mer chants OKLT. R. W. TANsJ.Lt. at Co.,Chicgo. A thing that is lightly passed over is the fence surrounding'"a watermelon patch. Puck. m Moving in the highest circles the bal loonist. P RICKLY ASH BITTERS One of the most important organs of the human body is the LIVER. When it fails to properly perform its functions the entire system becomes deranged. The BRAIN, KIDNEYS, STOMACH, BOWELS, all refuse to perform their work. DYSPEPSIA, CON STIPATION, RHEUMATISM, KIDNEY DIS EASE, etc., are the results, unless seme thing is done to assist Nature in throwing off the impurities caused by inaction of a TORPID LIVER. This assistance so ne cessary will be found in Prickly Ash Bitters ! It acts directly on the LIVER, STOMACH and KIDNEYS, and by its mild and cathartic effect and general tonic qualities restores these organs to a sound, healthy condition, and cures all diseases arising from these causes. It PURIFIES THE BLOOD, tones up the system, and restores perfect health. If your druggist does not keep it ask him to order it for you. Send 2c stamp for copy of "THE HORSE TRAINER," published by us. MICKLY ASH BITTERS CO., Cole Proprietor, ST. LOUIS. MO. CINCINNATI A --HM a - f.. .elMa l sfkv r'Tr", a a aJiaaai"rTfaiTfcaml Mm r a t IapfaBraMME3Bi9t!MMBBBBJMF . Itlifcut- TTWy. . i afcaMaPfTEaaaraaWWTJaaalM rt ILTTP$ ' MBSjrWaatJLSBm6lw Tj"PaaWiffffR,if aajaalah,J'Mja"1"aa7a3atMMa if. " CESTUI ESIOTIOir.'ilO fflLLEY GRAND JUBILEE cerebrating the UNSURPASSED DISPLAY IZXCUR8ION RATES FROM ALL POINTS. TO MAKE A DELICIOUS BISCUIT ASK. VOtTTC GROCER FOR DWIGHTS "COW BRAND" SOD VDWICHTSp s"o"dT AND B ryant & Stiatton Chicago Business College ! SHORT-HAND INSTITUTE and ENGLISH TRAINING SCHOOL. Ie.e STAMi:l lsTn-rn .ri lh.T.ft-pr-jcncn HT THE WORLD! Fall info-m-ion.CtaloBac,t.Tiail.etc..!ien: Hitii. AddrcsH. B. BKVANT 4c fO.N.lraprtctar.Chi-sea. IIL subscribers already? Why not MAKE IT A MILLION? a miLion families vit offer the PHILADELPHIA We have ecgageU lor the coming season the most popular aad best known writers ra America to wnte Expressly for oar coi- umu, original ccpynghted matter. Elizabeth Stuart Phelps, Joslah Allen's Wife. Maiy J. Holmes, Marion Hariand, Rose Terry Cooks Will Carteton, Robert J. Burdette. Eliza R. Parker, Kate Upson Clarke nrs. jonn nvrwooajv Florlne Thayer McCray, Dr. Wm. A. Hammond, Christine Terhune Herrick. Artistic Needlework-FinelT IUratratrt. Everr. thing new and original. Edited by an expert. Pat terns gnatanteed correct and reliable and so dearly explained and illustrated that a novice wonld have no dimcUty in working them. Interior Decorations By Mas. A.R.Ramsst, aVonuely Illustrated. New Ideas and Original Designs New Fashions Br Mrs. Jaxis H. Laxekkt. Hints oa Home Dressmaking- By Emma M Hoomt. Instrnctrre aiticIeaoai"Hnw ta Annrir AA7T1 in Society," "How to Talk Well and Isaprove yotir Grammar." Ms Pills CUBE CONSTIPATION. To cBjy health nosbld have re Imr Taeaatlm every twea y Soar tfmn. The evils, hath aseatal . ahyaieal, resalUaft fraaa HABITUAL CONSTIPATION areaaaayaae aerioas. Far the ear r thla eaataioa treadle. Tact's Liver Pill have calae a peaalarity aaaar aUeled. ElesaaUjraacareaatea. SOLD EVEBYWHESEL This is the BEST SHOE made for boys or girls. WARRANTED no SHODDY and SOLD as ' follows: stac s to lO's, K1.S5 " 11 to 1JV 1.53 - 1 to 2 X.tS Our name i on th bottom ot LeTcrj &. saj your iieaier i"r ririf xu hk KK;n. Ir he uo not Keep tliem ecii to u and we rut lumt-li you a pair- on receipt 01 IN EXISTENCE IS ERIVIAI STREHeTHENINfi ILIXIR. Tbonjrh pleaunt to th tmt. I. not a bererai". Cn- !. (Mrml DrtlUl;. Iitmthw, U'rr ratlmlaU rfflrulliM.Mt. A.k uoarDnijnrt-tfont. ManofJOV urerf by Hrlkl A fOX, Wteialv Dracti'U, AUklMm, In. mr miu this p-irtu mtj u j . DETECTIVES is or Snt Strrwe. l!xprriiK avott'xrj. Prtle3! trre. Gruiu BeteUre Barca Co.iis.:i:i-iiti.3. By return mall. Foil lerlptlac iHB MMdy'a New TntMr yjten 01 ire CutUnc. WOOD V & CO.. Cincinnati. O- H THtt frUL mj ta Ma IM EDUCATIONAL. CHMSTUII BWTHERS' COLLEGE. T. UOVIM. MO. Preparatory. C jmmercial and Culletciate Boanlmscho. 1. TSurtr ncrea grove ana playground. BHO. PAL I.IAN, l'resideat. FRANKLIN Collr'. New Athrn-.OB-a'dfc. room mnd b jk. l,75 pr lc. W A.W 'Kiann. I'res- BICOT. Book pInp.JVcDansM, Arit! tnetic. Shorthind. etc. thorcczhlr ta'srit By jQu. drculars free. KIA.TrU COLLIGB. BUktoS t. Lnwrence BnineiCo:irce and Academy. LarReac. cheapent and bet. A 7 i-pacs ii'ut. cy logue free. E.L. Ucllraty. Sut't.Liwrenc(r. Kanaaa. LINDENWOQD COLLEGE arD,S?SS2 AeMloti BM-aa Heat. 19th. nr:-cl.-- in all its appointment for Hi:her Kdnration. No travcltrir agents. SKXD KOH CATAUHiL'E!-. KOBP.RT 1KWIN, D. St.. !., ST. CHAKLEM, !alo. T510SCOLtfiri.AW.rhln ro-FHlTerrr t Bootn.Cnltlsj:o. J Kinsept.i9. horcircul.irailil II OCT. 27j Settleieit of tlte NortfcwestBm Timtory. TAKE NO OTHER. Finest and most costly illus trations by the best artists in the country. Breakout sad XMaaer Parties Home Cook ing, Daiattes and Desserts. Teas , Sappers , Lunch eons and Receptions. Gives explicitly aQ the httle details women want to know. Tells cow to enter. tain guests, how to serve refreshments, what to have, and and how to make it. How Women Can Make Money By Eua RorjMAK Chuhch. Talks With Mothers By eminent physicians. Greatly ENLARGED and IMPROVED. Handsoneiy printed en fine paper I nn B--m and proftrsely fflnstratei rM9t CUatlZS 7QB1ISXXS0 C0n TaTta,, avavavarsahavav bt C H. PABGO A CO., CHICAGO. 11.1- fjjTBEST TONm MM IN EXISTENCE IS BU jSEEfisEsBasBa. tWk$ wSlawEawlaSaaSaaSaaV ' naaaRarBalawaLaaaaaRaaRaaRaaRBaRs "u-aTzs? " tf LWLmWZLmm3LmmmmmmmmmmmLBmmWSfrm'ZP SBaiawBli aaaaSaaaaVBflsaVBaSEntW7 aSaaSaaaSrVaaa-Bawfewar' aawaawaaw&EVBawSSvv 3 awaaattWR3 0 VawaaMSaa aaffaawaawAaW Cat eaaaaaasaw. saaL n BvavavaarBvavavavaataavaa9 m- ii'li ' aaawZwaaVawaaBBHaT 9 .A iawfal .sRaawaawSaawZffaVaV aam 'bbbV ATflOMaaaSalBlBBBsaMSam aawaawZaaT awaawBaBaaawaawaaawa "5s BaS aawaawaaawBawaawaawaaa o awaawB&awZaawaBawaaeaawaawaawVaf fBfSRBRSSjRRRSSSSSB- 3 aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaar a aaaaaaaaaisaBaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaY . 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