:i m . N f - H ,1 I IM t TIME r.::,v"3Ci!VJCH9 PLEASANTLY. Doestni..:.! ? j " . :::i.i J.ft- rpfrae And fettered circumstances cad few AUcu J thy ways; In silence wait And look to God"; it will will ba. For time makes charges pleasantly. WH. H.'S" GRAVE. God, for the man who knew lum face to face Prepared a grave apart, a tomb unknown. Where deu s drop tears, and only u inds make moan. And white archangels guard t he narrow space. Ood Rives to his beloved sleep: the placa Where his seer hlept was set remote, for rest. After the forty years of desert quest. The Sinai terrors, and the Pisgah grace. So, clear eyed priestess, sleep! remembering not The Jlery scathe of life, nor tracking years; Not even Canaan's sun kissd, flowery meads. God shields, within his hollowed hand, the spot Where brooding peace rebukes unquiet tears. S!ie sleeietb well who hath wrought such no ble deeds. -31. Virginia Donaghe in The Century. RECOLLECTION. As vrhen a player, weary of the day. Takes up his instrument and plays along; First aimlessly, until unto some song. Heard long ago, his fingers find their way The old tune bringing memories which lay Deep buried in the past, once glad and strong lie feels again those joys around him tlirong, And wecis crew bile to think they cannot stay; So I, a-weary with the passing hours. In musing fell upou the name of one, Now dead and gone, who was once dear to me. And recollections, sweet as summer showers. Came back, swift as the first, faint gleams that run At dawn across a great gray waste of sea. William Bartlett Tyler in Boston Transcript KENYOFS VERSION. We had it rough, Molly and I, for five years. We were New Englanders, both of ns; but I had come west years before when I wasn't much more than a boy, to get rid of the lung fevers I used to have every spring sure, and maybe the fall between thrown in. I had nothing but my two hands to start without as soon as I'd made a beginning a small one, of course I went back for Molly. And then, as I said, for five years we had it rough. In the first place, we were burned out in the town and never saved a thing but the clothes we stood in and my team. Then we started again out on the edge of everything, where land was cheap, and it looked as if hard work might count for something. That time the Indians ran us off. Never saw an Indian? Well, sir, you never want to. I don't want to be hard on anything the Lord saw fit to make. I suppose he knows what they are made for or what he meant them for I know there's a good deal of talk lately about their wrongs. They've had 'em, sure enough; may be I don't see things all round as I ought to. They say all general rules bear hard on particular cases. I'm one of the particular cases, perhaps. Anyhow, they killed one of the children there the girl, 5 years old; shot her right in full sight of the cabin, and Molly hasn't got over it till this day. I picked up a few head of cattle cheap that fall, and for a year we lived in a wagon, camping and driving our cattle across the ranges. You don't know what that life means for a woman, take it month in and month out. Cooking over a camp fire, and not much of anything to cook, anyhow; clothes wet half the time; never warm in winter nor cool in sum mer, and never clean. That year the boy died snakebit. We were so far from a settlement that we couldn't get a doctor, and we buried him ourselves. We got into a cabin in the fall. Four of us, each one poorer than the others, took a section of government land. We had our teams and our health, and we were down to bed rock; not much of any thing to lose nnd everything to gain. A man will work under sucli circumstances, you'll find. Wc built in the middle of the adjoining corners of our quarters, and so had a little settlement of our own. We did it for the sake of the women, for it made an almighty sight of travel for us to get over in the course of the day. They were all New England women, slen der and spare, but solid grit clear through. Plymouth Kock is pretty good stock. Never a whimper nor a complaint out of one of them, though there wasn't a sec ond frock in the crowd; and if there was always corn bread and coffee enough for two in any of the shanties it wasn't fn ours. After awhile, though, we had game enough quail and prairie chickens. Prai rie chickens! I wouldn't be hired to touch one now. I remember one day along to ward spring when Molly struck. We had had tpuail and prairie chicken, prairie chicken and quail, three times a day ever Bince I could remember, it seemed to me. She put her fork down and pushed her plate away and just quoted out of the Bible: "Not one day, nor two days, nor five days, neither ten days nor twenty days, but even until it come out at your nostrils and be loathsome unto you. ' Molly knew the Bible. It really began to look as if we had touched bottom. That next spring we got our crops in corn laid by, rain and sunshine and hot weather all just right; and now and then we would hear a laugh from the houses. But the day the grasshoppers came there was mighty little laughing done. Clayton came in where I was taking my noon smoke and kind of dropped down in a chair by the door, as if he couldn't get any farther. "Mountaineers!" he said, with a kind of gasp. "What!" I said, not knowing but it was another kind of Indian. "Grasshoppers!" It seems he had been there before. I ran out, and sure enough there they were, coming up against the sun like a low kind of cloud. And in a minute or two it was like being out in a live hail storm. We tried to fight them with Are and hot water, but we gavo it up in an hour. All day we sat and listened to that horrible cracking and craunchlng, nnd when they got through it looked as if a fire had gone over us. Not a green thing left, and the corn stalks gnawed down to stumps. Wc held a council of war. The end of it was that we drove our stock into the town the next day, thirty miles, and sold it. It didn't make us rich, but at least we got the price of the hides. Then three of us were to work in the coal shippings, and Jim Clayton went back to stay with the women. He had smashed his shoul der that summer and was of no mortal use with shovel and pick. We were to keep them in supplies, and it looked as if, after all, things might have been worse. And they got worse before a great while. The coal company petered out just as the real cold weather set in. We took back a big load of coal; it was the only pay we ever got for our last fortnight's work, and called another council. Along in November late about the time when they were keeping Thanksgiving on the side where they know what Thanks giving means we started on a buffalo hunt. There was enough to eat, such as it was, for a month in the cabins, and fuel enough to keep them warm; and by that time we thought work might begin again. Anyway, we'd have our meat for the rest of the winter. Well, it's no use to go over that. It wasn't a pleasant trip. We weren't out for the fun of killing. We camped out at night, and rode and shot and dressed game by day, and did not starve nor quite freeze to death; and we got back again on to the plains along in December. I wanted to pash through and get home, but the horses were played out; and all the next day, after we struck the level, we just crawled along. We had not heard a word since we started, and I was pretty anxious Molly was not well when I left her; bnt there was no choice about it, I had to go; the women were with her, and then was a doctor in the town, and Clay ton had a good horse, and we had tn tin about that as we had done about every thing else take out chances. I shan'tlforgct that day. Along in the middle of the morning a norther bcan to blow. It did not snow, although the sky thickened up with gray, woolly looking clouds, low down and threatening. You never felt a norther? A wind that goes through your bones, that clutches your hmrt aiuLstops your brain; that breaks you up body "and souL You don't know anything about cold till you've felt one. If there is such a thing as a frozen helL that's where these winds come from. It isn't pure cold, it's ghost cold, and all the infernal regions let loose, yelling and thundering up in the awful emptiness over your head and round yon. Love the prairies? Well, you can love them a good deal better on paper than anywhere else. But there's an awful fas cination about them, somehow. It's like the sea. A man that's got his living out of them for ten years is fit for nothing else in God's world. He can't get away. He's spoiled for everything else under heaven. He's got to have the sky and a chance to breathe. It's about all there is to get, better than he can have anywhere else; but it's a sure fact that so much he's got to have whatever else gets left. It's like -a poem, may be "I ain't much on rhyme" myself driving across them in warm weather; horses fresh and well fed, with a big tent and spring cots for camping and a supply wagon -with every thing you can think of but ice, and maybe that; all the world a-ripple with summer green; like the south wind surging like a warm ocean and the sky blue and soft and arching away up to the great white throne. That's one thing. To go trailing along, horses dead beat and half starved, pulling a big wagon through sloughs up to the axles or over frozen ruts that wring every bolt in the concern and every bone in your body, while mile after mile of dead grass stretching out to the edge of the world, with buzzards swinging up out of nowhere, more like something infernal than any de- j cent living thing; with coyotes yelping and crying all night tliat's another thing, and the kind that doesn't get talked about much. Perhaps you don't remember that item in last winter's newspapers a half dozen lines or so two families frozen in a Texas norther, horses, dogs and all, just as they stood. That night we went into camp ten miles from home. There was a ravine and plenty of brush, and the horses were ready to drop in their tracks, and that last ten miles was one of the tilings that couldn't be done. So wo got our fires made and our horses fed and sheltered as well as we could, and put some heart into ourselves with buffalo steak and hot cof fee, and the rest of them packed them selves into the wagon. Some one had to stand guard and keep the fires going, and I took the contract. It wasn't a. dark night. There was a goodish bit of a moon behind the clouds, and it made a gray kind of light over every thing. We were at the bottom of a dry canyon that ran east and west, and the wind did not reach us. It screeched and screamed over our heads, and through it all there was a kind of moaning roar, as if we were at the bottom of a tide as deep as the stars are high. I got to thinking alnjut old times away back, of one San day night just before we were married. I had gone east a little sooner than we ex pected, and had to wait for her things to be finished. We went to church, that night. A keen, crisp, still night it was, when the sleigh runners squeaked on the snowand the moonlight traced the shad ows of the elm on the white ground as if they had been put in black drawing. The church was warm and bright and they hadn't taken down the Christmas greens yet, so the air was full of the smell of them that spicy, haunting smell, that seems as if it came somehow from a world before this. It was years since I had smelled it, and I sat and listened to the music and looked at the people, with their comfortable clothing and faces that were cheerful, not worn and wrinkled with care and weather. Molly was an awfully pretty girl iu those days; all pink and white like an apple blossom, somehow. And fighting to keep awake out there in the heart of a Kansas prairie, I got to thinking about her as she was then and how she had changed. Skin the color of tanned leather now, and that wild, hungry look in her blue eyes, as if they were always staring into the dnrk for something that frightened her. And both her children dead, and not even u spray of the pine she loved so, nor a breath of music; nothing but a dirt floor and log walls that did Jill that was expected of them if they kept the weather out. Somebody hailed over the top of the bluff. "What camp's that?" "Kenyou and mates." "I 'lowed it was" scrambling down the sides of the gulch on his sure footed mule "you, Kenyon? News for you. A kid up to your ranch, ten days oW All hands doing well yesterday morning." The rest roused themselves, sleepily. He had got off the trail, and seeing our smoke had struck for it. We knew and lie knew that the chances were that it saved his life; but he swallowed his cof fee and smoked his pipe and turned in with the rest as if getting lost in a norther was one of the things that hap pened, of course, to every mau. Then I sat and thought a while, and finally I roused out Madison. "You take my turn," I said to him; "I'm going home." "Not a brute that will travel." "I'll do my own traveling on foot." "You'll pass in your checks before morning." "No, the wind is at my back; no fords; I'll keep going;" and I went. Went; half running, with the wind driving me on till I was ready to drop. Once I fell and lay there with the wind dragging and tearing at me till I began to grow sleepy, and then I had to get up and go ahead again. Perhaps you never tried crossing a prairie at night without a trail to follow. It's a curious thing, one I cannot account for; one that makes you feel as if your body and all your senses were of no more account than a spent cartridge. It hap pened to me that night, space and time seemed to get all mixed up together all at once racing along; it seemed to me that I had been keeping up that sort of thing for hours. I felt so adrift somehow so hor ribly lost as if I had slipped out of my self nnd was out in space without a land mark to measure anything by. I expect you'll have to try it yourself to know what I mean. I had no wntch; there was no way of knowing how much time had gone. Of all the devils that can enter into a man uncertainty is the worst. Every sort of a fancy came into my head. Perhaps I did not know the route as well as I had thought. Perhaps I had even passed the cabins and was going away from them with every step. I ought to have reached them in three hours at the utmost. It seemed to mo that I had been hurling along for twice three hours. Once I tried madly to fight back into the wind. It was hopeless, worse than use less, i should drop with exhar?ticn in a few minutes, nnd I must keep going. And then I found burned grass under my feet. There had been a lire over the prairie. The ground was not cold yet. A new dread got hold of me. Who knew where it had gone or what had stood in its track? I ran along screaming something praying or swearing quite mad, I think, for a little, till I fell again, and the jar brought me to my senses. I had gone over the edge of an old buf falo run scooped deep by the rush of sum mer rains. I lay still for a little while. I must have gone to sleep, or perhaps I fainted away. Anyway, when I came to myself again the world was as still as the grave. The wind had gone down, as it will sometimes, suddenly and entirely. The silence was horrible. I got on my feet stiff and benumbed. In all that gray, still, ghastly space there was nothing to tell east from west or north from south. I was lost on the big range. It was still enough, but the cold was dangerous. I could not stop. I must move somewhere. I must make myself a purpose a purpose to keep myself alive at least till daylight came. I began walking; it did not matter in what direction. If only my strength held out till morning strength to keep off that horrible drowsiness. I know I stumbled heavily along. I was thinking about Molly and her baby; it all seemed like a dull dream. And then bells began to ring; deep and soft and far off. I stopped in my tracks to listen. It was the sound of bells, cer tain, full and sweet; and I turned and went blindly on, following the sound as a hound might follow a scent. All at once I saw a light. It wasn't a star; there were no stars. And nobody lived on the big range, unless some camper was traveling about, and travelers don't travel in the teeth of a norther. And this light swung and waved, went out entirely for a secor " " and then uurnea up again. And near or far I could not tell, only it was a light and it moved, and I followed it. And I could hear the bells all the time. Then, all at once, another one of Molly's Bible verses flashed into my head; some thing about a "star in the east that went before them till it came and stood over the place where the young child lay." Well. I wasn't a wise man, or I shouldn't have got In such a fix. I don't think I am an irreverent kind of a fellow, either; a man conld live with Molly many years and be that. Only I was looking for a young child too, and babies little ones always did seem to me near enough to heaven to make that story about the star reasonable enough. Anyway, there it was, meant for me or not, and I fol lowed it. More than once I fell, but I always got up and went on. I was talking to myself part of the time, hearing my own voice and thinking it was some one else's. I lost my sense of time again, but kept on doggedly; and then, suddenly, the light flashed brighter, whirled about in a wild sort of a way, and went out entirely. I gave a shout and ran forward. I thought I should die if I lost it And there I was standing on a wide trail, with a sort of square dark shape standing up in the dimness before me, with light and voices coming out of the chinks, and somehow, there was, the door, and my hand on the latch, and in another second oh! it was Molly Molly with a lamp in her hand, bending over a feeding box made into a cradle, with a great armful of hay and a white sheepskin for a cover, and Madison's wife kneeling on one sido and Clayton's wife on the other, and be yond, with the lights flashing in their great, wandering, shining eyes, a pair of astonished horses. And then there came a piping cry from the feeding trough, and I knew I had found the baby. Burned out? Yes, sir. That was the last thing; but they had had warning be fore the fire came down on them. Jim Clayton liad taken the women and struck across for the big road and they took the first shelter they came to, a stable that had been built in the days when all the California supplies went overland by mule train. When the wind fell he took the lantern and tried to find a cabin that used to stand somewhere near, and I had been following him for half an hour. Oh yes, I'm well fixed now; three thous and head of cattle out on the Gunnison. And Molly spends her summers back home, and she and the babies bring back enough croup and catarrh and bronchitis sore throat to last them half the next winter. New York Independent. How the Turku Make Coffee. A special word for the coffee is needed. The Turkish coffee is seldom liked at first by strangers, but it dies not take long for one to learn to like that so well that no other coffee ecr tastes half so good. There is a small brass thing, lietween a dipper and a kettle with a capacity for two, four or more cups marked upon it. Into this is put cold water, a teaspoon heaping full of sugar for eacli cup and a small tcaspoonful of coffee ground as fine as flour for each person. These are added to the cold water, and then the ebrick, or coffee kettle, is pushed down into the coals of the manga, or brazier, and just as it is on the point of boiling, liefore it does the coffee is poured into tiny porcelain cups, which hold as much as half an egg shell. This cup is then placed into a beautiful gold or silver filagree coffee holder, and is served with a tray of glasses of water. First you drink the water to leave your mouth clean enough to appreciate to the full the delicious aroma of the coffee. No milk or cream is added and the coffee Is thick with grounds, and on the top of each cup should be a foam called kaimac, or cream. As soon as you enter a harem the chief lady, or bascadine hanum, claps her hands and the caffeejee, or coffee bearer, brings coffee. Olive Harper in Philadel phia Times. A Queer Japanese Custom. Riding up the wide street a short ais tancc we come to the United States con sulate for a wonder a really fine looking building beyond which, on each side of the street, we notice numerous bamboo poles, from the tops of which are floating immense many colored paper fishes, so constructed as to be filled by the wind. These illustrate a very curious custom iu vogue all through Japan. During the month of May it is customary to float n paper fish in front of each house in which a male child has been born during the year, and very unhappy are most young married couples who cannot display such an emblem. The boy, no matter how ugly or mischievous he may be, is the pride of the Japanese household, and on the Hth of each May his parents must give a festival in his honor, at which time he is the re cipient of all sorts of boys' toys, not only from his own parents, but also from their relatives and friends. It is the greatest social festival of the year. On one pole, just above the paper fish, we noticed a flowing paper figure In blue and white Japanese mourning colors which we im agined signified that a male child hud been born in the adjacent house during the year, but that it had since been car ried off by the grim destroyer. Cor. Bal timore Sun. Device for Reporting Sporting Figures. Mr. D. Wilkins, pressman of The Chi cago Mail, has recently patented a device, the practical workings of which, we are credibly informed, have increased the extra edition of that journal containing the re sult of the baseball matches from 1,200 to 2-1,000 copies. A few evenings since, on invitation, we visited its pressroom, in which are .located two Presto presses, about 5:80 o'clock. The plates were already on the cylinder, containing a de tailed description of the match up to the sixth inning. In these plates were in serted a number of square black blocks, with the names of the contesting clubs preceding them. At the telephone, near the presses, was a teller, who announced the results of each inning, received di rectly from the ground, to the pressman standing ready, die in hand, to impress on the respective blocks the required figures. As soon as the result of the ninth inning was received and the totals inserted the machines were' set in motion, and in twenty-two seconds from the announce ment of the result a paper containing an account of the game was placed in our hands; in less than a minute the news boys were selling them on the street, and before the crowds at the grounds had dis persed The Mail wagon was on hand to supply the demand for the "extra." In land Printer. Physician as Opium Slaves. Many physicians become slaves to the opium habit. A recent Austrian medical author speaks of the incredible number of physicians who have fallen victims to it and of the many who have only just es caped. A Prussian writer had sixteen cases of morphia addiction under his care, of which medical men formed more than one-third. The majority of my own patients are medical men. The physician is apt to resort to the drug because his calling involves special inroads into his mental and physical well being. Nearly always, in them as in others, there Is some form of neurotic disorder. Any form of persistently painful disturbance involves this risk. A medical gentleman (a former patient of mine) says: "I proclaim it as my sincere belief that any physician afflicted with neurotic dis ease of marked severity, and who has in his possession a hypodermic syringe and Magendie's solution, is bound to become, sooner or later, if he tampers at all with the potent and fascinating alleviative, an opium habitue." J. B. Mattison, M. D., in The Epoch. Liquid Solidified by Pressure. Hitherto there has been no instance known of a liquid, properly so called, be ing solidified by pressure alone, but this experiment has now been accomplished by the French chemist, Amsgat, who has succeeded in thus solidifying the bichlo ride of carbon. New York Commercial Advertiser. Hard and Soft Water. The importance of soft water for do mestic purposes is illustrated by the ex perience of a large London asylum, in which a change from hard to soft water has resulted in an estimated annual sav ing in soda, soap, labor, etc., of mora than $4,000. Arkaaaaw Traveler. THE WAR IN DIXIE. A CONFEDERATE COLONEL GIVES SOME WAR TIME EXPERIENCES. A Bant Offering et 8arplus Baggage. Novel Methods of Preparing a Dinner. A Primitive Spring Bed Au Icy Conch. A Predestinarlan. In the spring of 1862 our patres con scripti hadV evidently become convinced that the contest was likely to be both seri ous and long, and volunteers for three years or the war were called for. Soon affer this I was at Corinth, Miss., as cap tain of n comimny "in the Thirty-eighth Mississippi regiment. I had provided my self with an ample supply of bedding, in cluding a mattress, and took along a trunk containing some elegant citizen's clothing for dress or social occasions. One day our quartermaster requested us to send all baggage to the depot for "convenience of transportation in case of retreat." This was thoughtful of him and I felt grateful, but not for long. In a few hours it trans pired that our luggage xcaa not to be checked through, but was to be burned. It began to dawn upon me that I had been somewhat stupid in my military prepara tions, but when I rushed of! to the depot nnd found several acres of similar impedi ments piled up for a burnt offering I felt somewhat relieved. It was clear that my ears were no longer than my neighbors'. That night Cprinth was evacuated. Tho measles, a disease very fatal to soldiers, had already appeared in camp and the ex posure of this retreat resulted in the death of fifty-niue men in my compauy of ISOl The regiment had been hurried to tho front before submitting to the hardening process of a camp of instruction, through the ambitious vanity of its colonel, who was in baste to win a brigadier's wreath. It occasioned no surprise that the lean Jack FalstafT ran away from our first serious fight at Iuka and we saw hini no more. On this retreat a feat was per formed in a culinary way that could not be excelled. Being separated from our trains and having little knowledge of the need of being always prepared for sudden movements, there was neither pot nor pan to be found in the company. In spite of these minor difficulties I dined one day, by invitation, and, as i thought at the time, luxuriously, off of hot loaf bread and butter and broiled tenderloin steak. Dinner was prepared in this way: A pit was dug some twenty inches square and one foot deep with a shoulder half ways down. In this pit dry oak twigs were burned to embers. A clean handkerchief well floured answered for a tray and the loaf, when kneaded, was placed in the pit. This was covered with hark nnd earth and tho oven was perfect and complete. When the bread was done other sticks were made to do duty as a griddle, and with the help of a few necessities obtained from a farm house the steak was broiled and seasoned to a turn. A PRIMITIVE SritlNG BED. After the burnt offering mentioned trunks and mattresses disappeared and, most generally, tents were an unknown luxury to the private soldier in theiield Hero again necessity spurred on invention and a sort of liliputian tent was the re sult. Four stakes about two feet long, with forks for cross pieces, were driven in the ground. On these a platform was made by laying poles lengthwise, thus making a spring bed of no mean preten sions. . About threo feet above this was a ridge pole, across which a rubber or woolen blanket was 6tretched tent fash ion. A blanket laid on tho platform, unci another for covering formed the tmpo rary conch of two men. They entered oa all fours at the end, as a rat enters his hole, but, unlike the rat, they did not turn round to come out. This pretentious style of housekeeping was only resorted to in wet weather. Strict economy in the matter of labor wns the rule among sol diers, and the earth for a couch and tho sky for a covering sufficed iu most cases. I never knew one of these platforms made to avoid sleeping on the frozen ground. The soldier would spread his blanket and lie down until his underside fraternized with the ice, when he would growl and turn over and freeze the other side while the first thawed out, and so on through the night. I well remember one fellow, a fine sol dier, too, who scorned the burden of even a blanket on the march, and so at night, when he failed to steal one (which was seldom), he sat up by a fire and made night hideous with mock sermons of won derful theology nnd doubtful morality. Strange to say, he survived the war, and is now enlisted In the army of the IajtA. At Vicksburg this same preacher was re sponsible for a ready retort under trying circumstances. He was then a firm Cnl vinist, and was always ready to do battle in defense of hia creed. One day he was sitting, with a group, in an angle of tho works, discussing his favorite dogma of predestination. Just then a shell explod ed and knocked the predestiuariiin over without hurting him. When he recov ered his breath and legs lie darted uir for the shelter of a traverse just in front of ns. His antagonist yelled at and twitted him with his want of faith in his own doc trine. He did not pause in the order of his going, but stuttered back: "Cn-ca-can't stop; it's prc-prc-prc-dcstined that I must get on the other side of the tra traverse!" and he fulfilled the decree to the letter and with commendable alacrity. Ex-Confederate CoL J. H. Jones in Philadelphia Times. Tricks of Summer Boarders. There is no end to the mean nnd yiy tricks that some summer boardei play. From the moment they enter yotiv house they seem to do nothing but schemo how they can get more than they pay for. If they see that there is an unoccupied room they will ask that the children bo allowed to use it till it is let, and if they once get possession they will do their best to prevent its being let. I am considered unreasonable nnd un feeling if I object to my hall and parlor be ing made into a playground. And if tho visiting "darlings" like to throw stones at the cow or chase the chickens, they ought to be allowed these country amusements. Of course each family would like to keep a box of beer or some temperance drink i:i the ice4 chest, and when such a thing ta declared impossible, remarks are mado about "being so mean with a little bit of iec." The orchard and fruit garden must be free to the boarders, who waste or spoil three -times as much as they could cat it the fruit were properly picked. My sugar bowls used to be nightly emp tied to sweeten lemonade, and my water cooler robbed of the ice in order to cool the same. I have now to lock my dining room us soon as a meal is over, and the lid of my water cooler is securely fastened down. Let the boarding house keeper beware of the young baby who is stated not to re quire food supplied by the house. After the first meal the young mother says, "Really, Mrs. So and So, your milktooks so good that I think dear baby might try a mile. " x ou assent, ana the next morn ing the fond mother calmly asks your ser vant "where the baby's milk is." The Epoch. Shaving on a Fast Train. A genial young man was talkinn; at the University club with a circle of friends about men who possessed that rare desid eratum called nerve. "Why, do you know," he went on to say, "last spring I was on a Baltimore and Ohio train going to Washington. The train was spinning along at the liveliest rate, throwing the rear car, in which we were sitting, first on one side and then on another in a erack-ing-the-whip sort of way, making it al most impossible to walk in the aisle with out being precipitated violently into a seat. Then, in the rear end of the car in the gentlemen's dressing room, I saw a man with nerve. He was quietly stropping his razor and preparing lather for shaving. It was a broad, old fashioned blade, bright as a silver pocket piece. "Ain't you afraid of cutting your throat,?" I inquired. "No, not a bit of it Just wait and see me mow this wire stubble; it beats a talking bar ber all to pieces." Calmly he lathered his face, and, steadying himself with his left .hand, he took the razor and com menced the downward cnt with the right. The car was Jumping and Beemed as if it Eigjd leave the rails at any moment. witfi a firm and steady hand the young man bent to his work withont fear or trembling, and succeeded in getting a clean shavo without n single cnt or sem blances of a scratch. Tho porter came in while this exhibition was taking placa, and, with an astonished face, exclaimed, "Golly! mister, yons got a heap of nerve,; de most I ever did sec. ' ' Chicago Journal.' IT'S THE UNDERWEAR'S FAULT. A P!iTlclan Who Cures Disorders by Prescribing Woolen Underclothing. "Bad cold?" "I should say I had, doctor," responded the reporter as he smothered a cough. "What kind of underclothing do you wear?" "The same kind I wore all summer." "Linen or cotton?" "I really can't say. Cotton, I believe." "Did you suffer from the beat much duriug the summer?" "Suffer? I should say I did. I nearly melted." "And yon are a trifle chilly, now that the cold wave has come?" "I nm, indeed: but what have my un derclothes to do with that? I have always worn the same kind in summer." "So does almost every one. The use of linen and cotton for underwear Is one of the commonest of all errors in this conn try. Now in Germany we have a move ment which is called the German school of clothing reform. It aims to replace cotton and linen witii woolen goods. There are many reasons why this should lie done. Wool exercises a stimulating effect upon the skin, unlike linen and cotton, and consequently promotes the (proper action oC the po's, glands and superficial tissues. It is a nonconductor of heat and preserves the normal temper ature of the body. It allows a freer es cape of the perspiration, and thus lowers, by evaporation, any abnormal tempera ture of the lxxly, and facilitates tho loss of excessive heat. Also, through its non conductivity of heat, it preserves the normal measure of warmth. Hence it is a better protection against the extremes of either heat or cold than linen or cotton." "Well, those certainly do seem to be reasons enough." "Indeed they are, but they are not all. Wool is electrical, while linen and cotton are not. Wool can excite electricity, but does not conduct it. Therefore a bod) clothed in wool loses less of its ani mal electricity, while fresh electricity is excited on the surface. The intimate relationship between galvanic, nervous nnd vital forces render this peculiarity nf the greatest imiortance to the wearer." "Why doesn't every one wear wool then?" "Because," answered the physician, "the old idea of having something flumsy nnd gauzy next to the Ash is too firmly instilled in the minds of the manufac turers of underwear for them to experi ment with woolen materials. I have cured a large numiier of sick men of seemingly incurable disorders by simply prescribing a change in their underwear. While it is not an infallible cure all," added the phy sician iu conclusion, "it certainly is of much benefit, and its general adoption would result in great permanent good." Protecting Watches from Electricity. "The electric rnilrovj." are magnetizing a great many watches,'" said a jeweler. "The watches become as thoroughlytnng netizeil as though brought within tho range of a dynamo, Here are three watches sent to me from Scranton, Pa., to be de magnetized. The jeweler that sent them said he had thirty-five in the some condi tion." "Can they be made to resist the influ ence of the electricity?" ventured a re porter. "Oh, yes. If we put in a shield made for the purpose they are all right This is the way it works." The jeweler took an ordinary watch cover, put a steel pen in it and moved a magnet on the outside of the cover. The pen followed tho movements of the mag net. He did the same with a pen in one of the shields, but the magnet was power less. "In some of the finer watches we put a double shield," he continued, "and a plate over tho dial. We protected a watch for Vice President C. E. Chinnock, of the Edi son company. He used it two years while superintendent in their place in Pearl street, and walked between two big dyna mos with it without tho watch being dis turbed. Those dynamos are the largest iu the world, 150 horse power each, and each will lift 4,000 pounds. They took on umbrella right away from me." "Has there been any particular disturb ance of watches this summer?" "It has lieen very great. The electri cal condition of the atmosphere this season has doubled the business ln-mainsprings. More mainsprings have been broken than has ever been known before. Nearly all the watches taken in for repairs this season have had broken mainsprings." "Is the effect of the electric railways general?" "Every watch carried on an electric railway will be magnetized unless it has a shield. Every lever on an ordinary en gine is a magnet of itself by reason of the earth's inductive force. Many railroad companies require their engineers and conductors to have their watches pro tected by shields, much of tho trouble of watches being out of time resulting in accident' is due to York Evening Sun. this cause." New The Great Iron King's Heir. Frederick Alfred Krupp, son nnd heir of the great iron king who died recently, has issued this address to his men at risen: "To the officials and workmen of my steel works: On my return from the tomb of my never to be forgotten father, I take the first opportunity to express my heartfelt thanks to all for the last honors rendered to the departed in escorting his remains to their last resting place and for the touching sympathy shown me in my bereavement. This sympathy is to me a proof of the faithful attachment to my father and a great consolation in my pro found grief. It Alls me with confidence that every one of you within his sphere, in remembrance of him who is no more, will assist me in performing the duties de volved on me, thereby contributing to the maintenance of the reputation which the establishment has attaiued by the energy nnd under the direction of. my late father. On my pait I shall consider it a sacred duty to go on working after the example aud in the spirit of the deceased, and, like him, I shall deem it my first core to look after the welfare of the officials and work men of the establishment." Boston Tran script. Thomas Jefferson's VIollu. An untoward accident hastened the work on the new homestead. On Feb. 1, 1770, the family house at Shadwell was burn ed. Nearly all its contents were also destroyed, the principal loss in Jefferson's eyes being his papers and books, which latter he estimated at $1,000 cost value. Not only his law books, but bis records and notes of cases he had prepared for court, everything in the shape of written memoranda, except the "garden bookj the preservation of which Was long un known, went np in flame. The servant who brought him the news in breathless haste had but one consoling item of in formation "they had saved his fiddle." John G. Nicolay in The Century. The Non-payment of Rant. In the reports of the health of towns commissioners it is continually pointed oat that sickness is the chief cause of the non payment of rent. One witness says: "Three out of five of the losses of rent that I now have are losses from the sick ness of the tenants, who are working men. Rent is the best got from healthy houses." Another says: "Sickness at all forms an excuse for the poorer part not paying their rent, and a reasonable excuse," so that filth causes sickness, sickness inability to work, inability to work poverty and non payment of rent, to say nothing of starva tion. Science Book Review. The friends of an Englishman who fell over a precipice in the Alps could not ba tatisfled until they had the height meas ured to a foot. When they got the ligures 560 feet they rather concluded that he was dead, Detroit Free Press. The South Sea Islanders at their last missionary meeting raised $1,381 for a new yucht'to carry the gospel to New Guinea. Cattish Dislike ef France. It is singular how the English dislike the French. This sentiment is prevalent in the very best circles, and is equally strong with the uneducated masses. The secret of the opposition to the construc tion of the' tsmnel does not arise from any fear upon the part of those opposing this scheme that England will be in any more danger of invasion' after the completion of such a tunnel, bnt from invincible dislike i fur the French. Said one of the best and most intelligent English gentlemen I have met in this country: "We don't want anything built or done that can make communication between this country aud France easy and more intimate than it now is." Then he added in a thoughtful, contemplative way: "I think I can say without danger of exaggeration that I hate all Frenchmen, and I do not know of a i single properly trained Englishman who does not feel as I do." T. C. Craw ford in New York World. An Antomatlo Lamp d. B. Bunnell, of Bradford. Conn . has ! invented on automatic lamp which coes by clockwork. When tho right hour comes a cap is drawn over the wick, leav ing a small blaze; the cap is lifted when the lamp is needed again. Several of these are in use in the streets of New London, and go wjthout any aire for several days, a large tank of oil supplying them. Bos ton Transcript. ROMOLA. A poet's vWoa, clad in the fair gain Of a bright lily, all in white and gold Hers not the form for passionate arms to fold; 8be loves, but loves ia such angelic wise As might some wanderer from the upper aUea, Who wears, with rosy lips of teaderest carve. The starry purity of saintly eyes. But if some lofty purpose were to serve. The fair and delicate figure that would seem One who could walk, with straight, unshaken tread, The naming city of the unpardoned dead (Shewn to the Florentine In lurid dream). Serene and scathless thro' the infernal glow Nor touch of fire upon her raiment know. A. C Bowers In New Orleans Times-Democrat. Mr. Ed. F. Bourne, the efficient and worthy cashier of the United States Ex press Co., Des Moines, Iowa, says: "From the lack of exercise and from close confinement to ollie-j work, I have been troubled with habitual constipation I have received more benefit from St. Patrick's Pills than anything I ever tried. I gave thorn a thorough test and am now in perfect health. I horeby recommend thorn as a pleasant and re liable medicine." They do not grasp nor cause the sickness occasioned by the operation of almost all other cathartic pills or medicines. Sold by Dowty & Becher. A report comes from Ft. Smith, Ark., of the shooting of United States Mar shall Heck Thomas by a noted despera do named Tom Lee, on the Deleware bend, about 100 miles southeast of Ft. Smith. About two years ago Thomas shot and killed two of Leo's brothers, for whom largo rewards had been offer ed. On learning it Tom, the remaining brother, swore he would kill Thomas at sight. The marshal! left this city a few days ago for that neighborhood in search of horse thieves, and Lee is said to have come upon him Thursday night alone and killed him. Wonderful Cures. W. D. Hoyt & Co., Wholesale and Bo tail druggists of Borne, Ga., says: We have been selling Dr. King's New Dis covery, Electric Bitters and Bucklen's Arnica Salve for four years. Have never handled remedies that sell so well, or give such universal satisfaction. There have been some wonderful cures effected by theso medicines in this city. Several cases of pronounced Consumption have been entirely cured by use or a few bot tles of Dr. King's New Discovery, taken in connection with Electric Bitters. We guarantee them always. Sold by Dowty & Becher. Mrs. Charles Sehaeffer, of Breslau, while walking mi the path across the garden of George Gaeblein, of the same place the other afternoon, was shot aud instantly killed by Gaeblein, who was lying in wait for tho purpose. He im mediately buried the woman's body, having a grave in readiness. The hus band of Mrs. Sehaeffer oume that wav later on and was also shot by Gaeblein, but received only a slight wound in the hand. Gaeblein was arrested. The tronble has been one of long standing and was caused by Sliaeffor's using the path through Gaeblein'.s property. Good WajtM Ahead. Oeorgo Stiimon &. Co., Portland, Maine, can give you work Hint ynu can do and live at home, makin-; grout nay. Ion are started free. ('api tal not needed. Hoth soxos. AH age. Cut thin out and write at once; no hnsm will lx done if yon conclude not to go to work, after you learn all. All iMitiruIara free. Ilest paying work in this world. 4-ly Physicians of Tampa, Fla., pronounce the existence of yellow fever. Thore are only two cases, lioth of a mild type. There has lieen one death. The people are terror stricken and the town is being deserted. A Ciiresi Nsjrprlie Is in store lor all who uso Kemp's Bal aam for the Throat and Lung, the great guaranteed remedy. Would you believe that it i's sold on its merits and that each drurglst id authorized to ret mid your money by the Proprietor of thit wonderful remedy ir it fails to cure you. Dr. A. Ileintz has iccurf-d the Agency for it. Price 50c and $1. 2'ri'a nize Jree. The entire Ojjeltree family con Bisting of four persons, near Tnllaga, Ala.,were poisoned the other day. All the members of tho family have died, including David Ogletree nnd wife and two children. Their death was caused by drinking whiBky in which Mrs. Ogel tree had put strychnine. She had threatened to poison tho whole family The deaths occurred in a few hours after taking the whisky. No one is well equipped for a journey without a bottle of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. In un emergency its value cannot be estimat ed. Sold by Dowty & Becher. T. L. Kimball, of Omaha, received the other day from Ellsworth, Kaa, speci mens of the rock slate that has recently been discovered at that place. Some months ago the Ellsworth mining com pany commenced to bore a hole in the ground, and at a depth of 730 feet Btrack slate. They went through the vein and found it to be 145 feet thick. At a depth of 1185 feet a flow of gas, that burns four feet high above the ground, was inter cepted and the boring stopped. With this gas, which will furnish fuel for power to mine the salt, the company certainly has a great bonanza. English Spavin Liniment removes all Hard, Soft or Calloused Lumps and Blemishes from horses, Blood Spavin, Curbs, Splints, Sweeney, Stifles, Sprains Sore and Swollen Throat, Coughs, etc. Save $50 by use of one bottle. Every bottle warranted by C. B. Stilhnan, druggist, Columbus, Neb. Personal. Mr. N. H. Frohilchstein, of MobUe, Ala, writes: I take great pleasure in recommending Dr. King's New Dis covery for Consumption, having used it for a severe attack of Bronchitis and Catarrh. It gave me instant relief and entirely cured me and I have not been afflicted since. I also beg to state that I had tried other remedies with no good result. Have also used Electric Bitters and Dr. King's New Life Pills, both of which I can recommend. Dr. King's New Discovery for Con sumption, Coughs nnd Colds, is sold on a positive guarantee. Trial bottles free at Dowty & Bechr's drag store. Thore are about twenty eases and ' four deaths from yellow fever ut Tampa, t la. Many people have tied. Worth Your Attention. Cut this out and mail it to Allen Ji Co., An RUta, Maine, who will !oatl iu free-, itoinothing new, that just coins moey for all workers. As wonderful an thu electric light, as genuine aa pure Kold, it will prove of lifelong valuo and importance to you. Iioth ttextw, all ajjen. Allen & Co. bear expense of starting you in business. It will bring yon in moro cash, right away, than anything elso iu this world. Anyone anywhere can do the work, and live at home also. Retter write at once; then, knowing all, should you conclude tliat you don't care to engage, why no harm is dune. . 4iy A report comes from Havana that ow ing to the almost daily shocks or earth quakes at Santiago, a panic has seized tho inhabitants and business is almost completely suspended. A Good Onc Mr. James Marsh, of Aten, Neb., aftor an experience of four years in usiugand selling Chamberlain's Pain-Balm, says: "It is the best and most reliable liniment ever produced." A fifty cent bottle will accomplish more, in the treatment of rheumatism, lame back or severe sprains, than five dollars invested in any other way. A great many cases hayo been cured by it, after being given up as hopelessly incurable. It promptly relieves tho pain iu all eases. Sold by Dowty & Becher. Owing to the prevalence of Asiatic cholera in Euroiie, an order in council has been passed at Ottawa, Ont., prohib iting importation of rags from Mediter ranean ports. The Population ofi'elambas Ii about ::,000, and we would say at least one half arc troubled with some auV-ctioD of the Throat and Lungs, as those com plaints are, according to statistics, more numerous than others. We would ad vise all not to neglect the opportunity to call on us and get a bottle of Kemp's Balaam for the Throat and Lungs. Pries 60c and $1.00. Trial size free. Res pectfully, Dr. A. Ileintz. Ralph Atkinson, at Eau Claire, Wis., supposed to have friends in Chicago, en gaged in selling notions, disappeared the other day from the Winsor house and has not been heard from since, lie had some money on his person, and leaving his goods here, there is a sup position that ho has met with foul play. Bucklen'H Arn lea Salve. The Best Salve in the world for Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Erup tions, and positively cures Piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction, or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by Dowty & Becher. july27 THE CHEAPEST EATINC ON EARTH i A8K. YOUR GROCER FOR THEMI smug naH coBLPAirs-. er.z.auza.2ta $1,500! tXEXEEfflf Iu3hfsBa42sBV3 Facsimile of Patent Chess and Checkerboard, ad. vertlslmr the celebrated Svnvlta Block Remedies and a UWAU OF Jl,ae. ir you fail to And It on this small board call on your druggliit for full-size. Uandsomely Uthoursphed board, FltEE; or send cents Tor postage to us. COUGH BLOCKS. From Mason Iong. the Converted Gambler. Fort Watjtt. Ind.. April 5. 1SE4.-I have given the Bynvlta Cough Blocks a thorough trial. They cured my little girl (3 years' old) of Croup. My wife and mother-in-law were troubled with coughs of long standing. One package of the Blocks has cureU them so they can talk "as only women do." maso.v Long. WORM BLOCKS. LIMA. C Jan. 25, 1387. The Synvita Worm Blocks acted like a charm tn expelling worms from my lit tie child. The child Is now well and hearty, instead of puny and sickly as before. Jons G. ItOBDINSO.V. IUCUEMY ILOCKS. The Great Marrkcea and Brseaterr Checker. Dtlphos. O- July 7th. "86. Our six-months old child had a severe attack of Summer Complaint. Physicians could do nothing. In despair we tried synvita BisciDerrr uiocks recommenaea oj friend and a few w ac loses effected a comDlete cure. Accept our n feerry Blocks. Accept our heartfelt Indorsement of your Black- JttK. AMD JIBS. J . VJLXT.UAT. The Synvita Block Remedies arc The neatest thing out, by far. Pleasant. Cheap. Convenient, Sure. Handy. Reliable. Harmless and Pure. No box: no teaspoon or sticky bottle. Put up In patent packages. & DO.SE3 S Cents. War ranted to cure or money refunded. Ask your drug CUt. If you fall to get them send price to THE SYNVITA CO., Delphos, Ohio, ' AND BXCrtVB- TTtrX POSTPAID. fWCBECKERBOJJll) FREE with each OIWKIi. LOUIS SCHKE1BER, Blacksmiti and Woaou Maker. All kinds of Repairing done on Short Notice. Baggies wag- oils, etc., made to -1- order, and all work antecd. Guar- Also sell the world-faxaoos Walter A. Wood Mowers. Beapexs, Combin ed Machines, Harvesters, and Self-binders the best made. "Shop opposite tbe " Tattersall," on Olive St.. COLUMBUS. 26-m TRAKS iPT,9!ACtEHir tU bWsW M & BEAST! Mexican Mustang Liniment OTJZUiS Sciatica, Lumbago, SheomatisK. Barns, Scalds, Sting, Bites, Bruises. Bunions, Corns, Scratch!, Ceatraatei fpraia. Mtutles, Strains, Erapu'oas, Stitches, HoefAil, StiffJeiats, ftsrtv Backache, Worns, Galls, Swiaaey, Sores, Saddle Galls. Snavht Piles. Crack. THIS GOOD OLD STAND-1Y accomplishes for every boJy exactly wfcat I clahnttl font. One of the reasons for the great popularity of the Sluatang- Liniment is found In Its universal applicability Everybody needs such a medietas. The Lasafceraaa needs it la case of accident. Tbe Uoasewlfe needs it for general family use. The Cannier needs It for his teams and his niea. The Mechanic needs It always oa his work bench. The Miner needs It In case of emergency. The Pioneerneedslt cant get along without tc The Farmer needs It In his house, hts steels. and his stock yard. The Steamboat man er the Beataaa assde It In liberal supply afloat and ashore. The Herse-faaeler needs it it Is hU best friend and safest reliance. , The Steck-grewer needs It It wtU save aua thousands of dollars and a world of trouble. The Rallread man needslt and trill need It long as his life Is a round of accidents and dangers. The Backwoedsmaa needs It. There Is noth ing like It as an antidote for the dangers to Ufs. limb and comfort which snrrouad the pioneer. The Merchant needs It about his store amoag his employees. Accidents will happen, and when these come the Mustang liniment Is wanted at once. Keep a Bottle la the Hense. TU the best of economy. Keen a Settle la the Factery. iu Immediate ass la case of accident saves pain and loss of wages. Keep a Battle Always la the Stable far win wasted. PUBLISHERS' NOTICE. An Offer Worthy Attention from Every Render of the Journal. tocb choice or folti oood r.vrKKH, razz. SUNSHINE: For youth; alno for thoso of all nKes whose hpartH are not withered, is a hand tome, pure, Uheful and moot interesting paper; it iu published monthly by E. C. Allen A Co., AtiKUfcta. Jliiino, at 50 cents a year; it is hand romely illustrated. DAUGHTERS OF AMERICA. Ljvii full of uwfulness are worthy of reward and imitation, "Tho hand that rocks the cradle rules the world, thronKh its Kentle, guiding influence. Emphat ically a woman's paper in idl branches of her work and exalted station in tho world. "Eter nal fitness" is tht foundation from which to build. Handsomely illustrated. I'nblinhed monthly by Truo A Co.. Augusta, Main at 10 cents jHr jenr. THE PRACTICAL HOUSEKEEPER AND LADIES' FIRESIDE COMPANION. This practical, sensible ihiiht will prove a boon to all housekeepers nnd ladies who read it. It tuts a lxundles field of usefulness, ami its ability ap pears eual to the occasion. " It is strong and Mund in all its varied departments. Handsome ly illustrated. Published monthly by H. Haliett A Co., Portland, Maim-, at 50 cents per year. . FARM AND HOUSEKEEPER. Good Farm ing, Good Housekeeping, Good Cheer. Thla handsomely illustrated paper is devoted to the two mos t important and noblo industries of the world farming iu all its branches housekeep ing in every department. It is abl and up to tho progresstvo times; it will bo found practical anil of great general usefulness. Published monthly by Georgi Stinson A Co., Portland, Maine, at 50 cents per year. SST'W) will send free for one year, whichever of the above named papers may be choson. to any one who pays for tho Jouhnai. for one year in advance. This applies to our sudscribent and all who may wish to become subscribers. Z&T'W'p will send free for ono year, whichever of the above papers may be chosen, to any sub scriber tor the Joukn it. whoso subscription may not be paid up, who shall pay up to date, or be yond dute; provided, however, that such payment shall not be less than one year. 2?To anyone who hand us payment on so. connt, for this paper, for three years, wo shall send freu for one year, all of the above described paiere; or wiU send one of them four years, or two for two years, as may bo preferred. SSThe above described paiers which wo offer free with ours, are among the beet and inntt successful published. We specially recommend them to our subscribers, and believe all will find them of real usefulness and great intermit. ltf M. K. Tcrnzr A Co. Columbus. Neb. Publishers. DSHENDERSON i09 1 W. Klnth St., KMMSAS CtTT. MO. Tht only Specialist in th City who is a Btffutar Graduate in Mtdieine. uver xu years' rraettce. 12 years in Chicago. THE OLDEST IR IKE, AMD LOWEST LOCATED. Authorized by the State to treat ChronlcNervousand "Special Dis eases." Seminal Weakness (niyU fojes).Sexual Debility (toiioftriual potccr). Nervous Debility. Poisoned Blood.UIcers andS welllDgs of every kind. Urinary Diseases, and In fact. all troubles or diseases In sitber male or female. Cure euarantsed or money refunded. Charges low. Thousands or cases cured. Experience is important. All medi cines are guaranteed to be pure and efficacious, beinjt compounded In my perfectly appointed laboratory, and are furnished ready for use. Mo running to drug stores to have uncertain pre scriptions filled. No mercury or Injurious medi cines used. No detention from business. Patients at a distance treated by letter and express, medi cine sent everywhere free from gaze or break age. Mate your case and send for terms. Con sultation free and confidential, personally or by letter. A M page "RftYIT For Beth Sexes, sent Illustrated AJWAa, sealed In plain envelope for6c in stamp. Every male, from the age of 15 to4j,lioul(l read this book. RHEUMATISM THE 6BUT TURKISH RHEUMATIC CURE. A POSITIVE CURE for RHEUMATISM. $60 for tar ca thit trvBtmeiti fail, to core or blp. Greatest dlscovrrr la bbd1 of medicine. One doe fives rllf; few dose remoTe rVterand pain In JIat; Care completes in S to ? daj. 8fit lfo nnt of cue with stamp for CireuXara. Call, or aijreu Dr.HENDERS0N,l09W.hSt.,Ksi.taaCrry1Mo. BEAUTIFULLY ILLUSTRATCO. This Magaziae pertraTS Asaeri eaa taoagat a ad life from aeeaa to ocean, is filled with Bare aiga-class literature, aad caa be safely weU coated ia aay family circle. IKE 28c. MS3ATIA1 IT BAH. Sample Copy of current number mails ansa n eelpt of 25 ets.; back numbers, IS et. Preaslaas XJat with either. Address: S. T. BUSH ft SON, Fablisbn, 130 Ac 132 Pearl St., If. Y. WOKKG CLASSES ftHISJJ?" nam) tn fnrni&h all clteKett with employment at home, the whole of the time, or for thnir Hparo moments. Busl nw new, light and profitable. Persons of either ex easily earn from M cents to $5.00 per evening and a proportional Bum by devoting all their time to the lninei. Bova and girls earn nearly as mnch as mn. That all who koo this may send their addmia. and tet-t tho business, we make thin oiler. To wnch an are not well satisfied we will send one dollar to pay for the trouble of writing. Full particulars and outfit free. Ad dress, (izoRC.K Stisson &. Co., Portland, Maine. decZJ-'MJy MONEY! to be made. Cut this out and return to us, and wo will send you free. Homuthinsj of great valuo and imtort&nre to von. that will start you in businttot which will bring you in more uiomey right away titan anything in the world. Anyone can do the work and live at hoint.. Either ra; all age. Something- new. that just coins money for all workers. We will Htart you; capital not needed. This is one of the genuine, important chancee of a lifetime. Those who are ambitious and enterprising will not de lay. Grand outfit free. Address, Tbcx A Co. Augusta, Maine. dec2i-Wiy BH iipii r '