The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911, January 20, 1892, Image 4
.. jev ?3 - - 4.--; . iv.5"----'."Tv-:V-; - ..-. .i. . - a." v '- :-. --. " -'. . . . " i " . . - j - ..-.: .5- ---. "? -.-- .- - - 'I'- '- -- r- " ". w. : ... --li -!. v .:- - "r." - -..- .ir - t-"1 - ' s -i; -- " - & " -- -' 15- Yk i- '..-..- "-..-. A. '-uioBierfnl natural curiosity Aaa ' :-- - lately been' discovered In Tasmania nd :- - r .. " . -icscribed-before the.Reyal Society. Near - "..- -'; So. thport,' la -Tasmania, there la' a. large. "".V '' v.cavt: with-anentranccfthrongk limestone . ; V ".": " fbrioWlari. . A considerable stream of -jr..-..- . V .water-flows albnt th. chamber, of th5 J.-.;" 7"-cve-"The"fii,st -chamber reached by the J- '''''. I :-' sxpior.efs"sh:owed- some'" line stalactites .."' vs---. -.ipeji'danV.-'froin'.lthe roof, aud'?talasrrcites -fv -i-'i -.:5oyered. -the'- floor .with-. thousands of ". ;'.":- :lialnfaturesteeplea. " All this -Is .qui e -: . v .""-common Jn' great caves, but nbw omes , .:. ."...:-.--- the-.marveb; The lights, tarried by the ".. - i. ""-."-eiqilbre-.s were -suddenly-extinguished by . ' '';-. '' awHiff-bf "wl5a;and.slmoltaneous!y Hie. . ': V .. ,4 ei.Tngaad 'sides -of. ihe . cave seemed to -. - 3 " -". .rTDnb;ndd"ea with diamonds. TWs.marvel .v .-"-.. :r"--.ou-oilet:t'' afterward" appBarfd, re---.--- " "jMi-ted" from- iffp presence" Of -m Lov$ of. y;:' .-'-:-: V-B7ow-wojmsr hgihg-t&, tbo side ... " " y " r,. ".".."-.'rcof:df.tJJe cAverq' On pa sing i :-- -.; .'" l rhambeii farther front ther entrance ikj :-.'."-"". ---.-Mhfri'r?fdbnd.s!mtfa "but much grand r -"-"" T'i -iijjb-ts," ihe-n'umbeW. of: .tbo glow-worms r--V':'-. :."-:vh'.'rcasirif-wrli'-the' greater iantitfea ''''-'''.vl. .VacUtes-'apd stalagmites. About . "";---' '... three" fourth's, of sT-mlle of cave iensth ;.: -. VV '" -"if as-explored, but it is.a'npposed .that the -'"--" i" -"v-trrme.. length ls..froin- ;three to. four . .-." ;.l: :"milc,": arid- that' -Tasmania., therefore. ?:'-'. .-..-.-I'isoprobablAthV most wonderful cavo. 'y tiluij'if'dlscoreredV '. ;" . -. ..r - 'Safest f tte-MIdst of Danger. -.1 ' . '.-jTlns. jro'nld umpj cpaUdIctton so. ra f-;-.; ;'iut to. UJe:.cye..":But experience haa riovad :.-";- V'r.i-I:rw'iiil.ty.-3k"-tbe- case of .the'In """..!"; HvjJaaX""wbp..atirellB- in' a malarious region. . - -.?j .' rpbct"'"oL"stitut3oniU Jo certain detenu ''V-' -Baiuat"'.-tlie; dreaded chfira. What is? Be-"..r.t-.;rdiKl YiesUni"y, Carering ' a- jieriod little JV-.'qrlVotJialf a-vnt'ury, proxes that Haste t. . '' "a,i" Stomach. -Bitters la precisely tbj. This '.-,---' Vcrtitient dries' 'not Emit tbo field where tbo .--" -.je I cioo;hag:.praTOd its. "efficacy.- In Bomb -. -i. J uiri;- the- Xctbotraa of Panama. Mexloo, .';: ." .-iverywbeiw'.'m fact nbero -niaama-bom df-.--.- ;mv. take 'on'lts iDOBt obstinate and fonuid---" 5-. ;ble"txPr-tbVBttlri'l8 recognized -apcdOe t"T." .'" h.-'iJllinjttJjlo--demand, and prpecrfbed by .-", - " :bys0iauB nTrepute. Totect, too. i it in dis--": '.bideri-ot the lomach, liver andbowelf, and '.:'. ' aiiltstthat destroyer,. la prippe. It improves :. --'".1 "ipe.nte".-'and,leen, neutralizes rbeuiiatiia -na Jadney cempiauiia. '-w A- ;. : 'rifE-l'iG'rarid .Old. lan,t of 3reat C- w".:,v. 3HTaiur grows shorter in stature but ; ;..'-t I-'.ia-ifdcc.rin-character as be grows older. ' ';-!?' hewvs-' "axe. .familiar with the physio .".'.. :v-i .-.iielcahfac't-iha't'th? verj' old shorten in " '. v-" "-:""- -.lfvrltatreahd Jlr. Gladstone is -.: jU-'id "to be. not.fo lail by two Inches now ';- ts hewe4-W.b.en;1ii his prime. ' : -' V 0:v;i?ywWiclw8fTeliorCastorla, ."- - V ".-" Vhenbo'waai'Cnild, sbecried for Castoria, r v'''"--. l-;Avijenabe-b"xeM- ;. '.'!' - J V VYHen'jth hajctuidrao, ato gaTo tbem Csistcrtsk " - vr'-. -..". "-V .-'". j&urkpja.ln Mexico. 'X,'J sV-; .-' Jttlid. -tur)jc.ys :"are ..plentiful in the "-. "inttilicfji -5Iejcieah states. As many as. ;;--'.niJ.facfoehi'arietios ian be seen in a :" '..,-'-." rijuhtJ'PB'.iJ'R .J '"''".'-'BlBttD VccEL8 AKE -'80XETIME8 BUB8T by -'- --.'..-'. wbb5pJhg.congK."Aii.:'HoNET of Hobehotou 4. - "' '."kiTau relics l.t. -..--V v " '..rigt-'ATooTHAcpk DboTs Care in one Minn;. -'V:-. "i. Eovls lllco:ouFp-thefir7tspoonfnl is -:-!.":"- tp'hdC-the.laStlIways too cold. . ':'. '.-. '.' .. r r , - -- : . " "ill. All-rit stopped. free by Dr. Kline's j- ''''. CreatKre;Beitorer .foiitsafterfirstday's -- .- '-i-tistM-Matv.eloiiBcnres. Treatlseand 12.00 trial -; ..-lo"ttJe'Jre.e.to lipases. Send to Dr. Kline. 831 -.- ':: -"-vrcr'SU Ph(Ia; l'a i itn ! .- .--- A' I ,-w- . . - Turn to the riaht mk, i AX&it. j'.a olN " I 'I r. -vvi I M ;. -X- - Al I V'JM'cs V7ttaWX V.l. I fi. . - meat fi.ci if yo.u're a weak or ailinej ;. .-i oirisuu- .-.It's.Dx, Tierce's Favorite ;-:.''."' '-j.I'fetripjion.' v -If .'you're overworked i'QTSijmi6wB it" builds you tin: '-C'VriyciU'je- afflicte'd-.With any of r. - -', .-'i"di8tjsslii --derangements and di C-"-; "order --jiqculiar'to your sex, it r-i. ...rdicya:.an'd: .-cares. .It improves ,'"";.dfgestip.n,mv4gqra&s "the system, y. .ienriclpes the; ' blood, . .dispels acnes. -V,;'ttd;painsi nielJiiichojy and nervous- . - .-j'oeM, proauces reiresning sleep, and .'.:- -restores, fleerr andt'strenfrtK. In the ";.: I' jcnre-xj :'.aU!: functional '4istnrbanoes, l'-j" - w!fes8es, ; and. irregtilarities, it's ' r-' ' L'hutiraMaerf ito-lmvR Katisfaftmn or . .- i. lje: 7- VT I. " .... .v me.'muney -xareiunaea. ii aocs or it -.-;.-.-.; H:vthat's;-claimed for it, .V.':'cculdn.lbesold'in thitv -way. :i:.rv.-f:.;vitCis'i legitimate medicine not ":"?!- a "-ttfivgs.:' ' Cbutains -no alcohol ;.,-jX-irie.onate..iip syrnp or sugar to v.: ' r .ofir pr-f ermerit jn . the. stornach 'and . ...ittse.'disiressi ' '.As peculiar in its rrV-mafyeloHs,: remedial .results as in 'VV:V:itV:cpmrfcsifipn. ' ' iwlPsfi r:.W rSiy JilaSrak .--. . iCT-l 'ST ''' IbpSBBBX sak'rrBjBlS "'K: i''k e-.iiiftfJiod.and Jesuits "when f." ---"v - -:";.?! 3yra pFigiiirJtkeh.it is pleasant .v: ..:"". " injirefijeshine to'.the taste, and acb i: " :ntly.yetpornp'rJy."pn the 'Kidneys, ve."and Bowels, -'cleanses the sysh T -m.-e'ffec!ally; dispels ool4s, head v -l.'icWs-d. (ev'era.nd cures. habitual ns"ilijtoh;v Svrup of" Figs' is the ;'-f iniy'rf mefdy .-of its kind-.ever ro 1 :";. iuc;.'4Ueasingf. to: the' taste and ac-:':.-kipjtablQ. .to -tlie'atbmach'' prompt in v..-v.-ri:iuon'Aud'irDly'' beneficial in its -1:1 nects'p'pced only' from the most : " - -ttya agreeable 'substances,. its W-r.'-niuy e'-ceelleiitUaliUeB .commend it .'f-:W'""su.; have -made itthe most v.V".-?J?ft' TJ&uedy kiowi.. -l.vi l''- Syrup. of; Figs' is " for .sale in 60c .,V-ud;81"qttl.e3 by all 'leading drug ;:v " jits-'"--rAny reliable dniggfet who. .it;".Sa'fnpt."haye-it.;.on handwiU pro '.', .: cu're.-.it rrompUy; for . any one- -who ..-'-''CTshjfo.tjy itv" -K- not accept-any 1;: juBstifeut&.'- - " ' . . . -. i' MUmMA ffl SYRUP CL if..'.'- ':J' ::;-8AH &&. CC. -;-v .- -- iDWSVlUE. aX. JaTaT rdaTC $Lf. TIB taUM T aMI M TUC innr uvek piixsO yiflly aSauUlia; porarjr vcawtablcf awaaoii 11 AWAKatSl8irieJmaat reuei, uu uuitUii- b ju&e nr niiUi oa.t; at araarUtaer sajtaaafcsj MVlfMHSB HII K i A PEW THOUGHTS. Faith I s that enoV-tvhite dove descending . Down from (be realms of celestial light. Pure in son l, on tbo Cross depending, , Guiding mankind through tliis life aright. Rope is that star -which norvea the weary That lone bright jewel which in luster shines, Hifihtim: the path.when oil lite seems dreary. Cheering the feeble when their strength da 'Clises. , Charity is'tfaat saint who soothes the dying. Whose eara are opened to the orphan's wail ; Who hears the voice of tbo homeless crying, Who feeds the hungry and protects the fraiL Peace is that calm, meek, tender glory That fills men's eools with a pride for life, iJeerto the Youth, and to Age when hoary.. Scar to all things free from war and strife! Jor is that f rogrnnt air from flowers Which bloc'm along life's ha)iiy stream. cHieertng tbobeprt in its youthful houra, Lulling men's car like a merry dream. Tnit;, ;g that pr- "i Mnjesli' -i r-!or! ''h t light : "i .i rs inI; j-pest so'ils, I"'.--ingjusl !- - ' m u -m :cniier, A" " gi-s-t- .'- .i-t. r v ?.ata:rengih it holds. -t,!eat Li .de. 3fW COOKING STOVE. BV.CXAKA Al'ilSTX 3rrs, Job Bangs was pos-cS'-eil of a spirit ;&n evil spirit, M;. Iaiigs.saiil; but then men ;irc so prono to iiKiulge In extravagant expressions that it is not well to place too-iuuch dependence In what they s.13'. Mrs. Bangs' greatest ambition was to possess a peculiar kind of cooking 6tove the counterpart of which pre sided, in black and glossy self-satisfac-tion,over thecleanly kitchen hearth of Mrs. Judge 3Iarlows grand establish ments "Queen of the World" was the title in which the 'interesting stove re joiced. The queen herself was possessed of as many dampers, grates, heaters, flues, ovens and nondescript poke holes as a twenty-horse-power engine; and scientific old Wait himself would have been puzzled in comprehending the use of her ''heat refractors'' and "steam generators." Hut Mrs. Marlow fancied the stove and, surety. Mrs. Judge Marlow ought to know about a stove and the consequence was poor liangs could never retire to bed without having "that stove, dear Job,"' dinged in his ears. There is a period to hntnan endur ance, and the time at length came when Bangs could hold out no longer, but consented to make his wife the happiest of her sex forthwith. And three days afterward the deed was ac complished; a magnificent Queen of the World, which cost $45, was in stalled on Mrs. Bangs' hearth, and the delighted lady would not have changed places with the President's wife. The man who set up the stove asked Mrs. Bangs if she knew how to manage it. She langhed in his face. Know how to manage a stove? Of course she did! Why shouldn't she? And before her lofty mien of injured dignity the stove man shrank away abashed. It was in July, pleasantly hot, and dinner was to be prepared for the six hired.men who made Mr. Uangs' farm blossom like the rose. Mrs. Bangs cogitated on the subject of dinner for a few moments, and finally decided on boiled potatoes, stewed cabbage, fried pork and hom iny pudding, with hot coffee, etc "Come, Bangs, love," she said cheerfully, "make a Arc while I clap on the kettles aud see to things, and you shall soon have a dinner worth eating." Bangs flew to do her bidding, but after opening and shutting several doors, with the kindlings in his hands, he was still undecided, and called his wife out of the meal closet. "See here, Sarah, can 3011 tell me where to build the lire?"' "Why, in the place for it, to be sure," replied she. "Yes, dearv, I've no doubt of that," rem- :ced the perplexed ban?s; "but a ''rclinjr t riy idee, it w aid take a -.l..,get i .tr.it man to :ln.! out w h'h im Mace is!" Why, the ouewherc the grate is, of course," said Mrs. Iiangs. "Well, there arc just seven holes with grates in 'cm, and three things that look like strainers; ac cording to my idee, I can't tell to'ther from which." "Stand round, .lob; I'll soon find out. Whj-, Bangs, it's strange that you can't see into nothing; this is the place rite here in front. In with the kindlings, and be spry about it; it's a'most 'leven o'clock now." So Bangs put in the kindlings a generous quantity of shavings, some pitch wood and a hemlock knot ap plied a match and stood by to watch the result. The lire sputtered and hissed; a glorious smoke arose and poured out of every nook and cranny of the queen. Poor Bangs' eyes were rapidly changing to pools of watery jtcars, and his sense of vision fled com pletely. "Good gracious!" screamed Mrs. Bangs. "Job, you've set the house afire." "No, I haint," stammered Job, wiping his eyes on his coat sleeve. "According to my idee, it's that con founded stove." "Mercv on us! Where's the damper? where's the draft? Where's the air slide? Job, Job, where are you, that you don't do something? The new whitewash will be ruined in this smoke!" Mrs. Bangs stood with her apron over her head, and Bangs managed to Set up to a window, at which he ob tained some relief. In a few moments the kindlings had burned out and the smoke subsided. There was no draft but the .tire had been made in the wrong place, and now Job set about systematically to And the right one, by trying a Tiandful of shaving in each cavity of the complicated queen. Fortune favored him, as she always does the brave, and Anally Job could have shouted "Eureka," if he had thought of it. The lire burned splendidly! The numerous grates glowed; the water in the kettles siz zled; ;Mrs. Bangs was radient, and the "spider" of pork and lard boiled charmingly. But suddenly, just as Mrs. Bangs was congratulating herself in being the most favored woman in the uni verse, the "stove gave a.lurch, its three legs quivered and trembled,, the for ward one dropped out, the immacu late Queen of -the -World tottered on her'tbrone! For a second only, then over she went, kettles and stewpans. The pot was hi the fire, and the .Are "took royal "advantage of it. The blaze steamed up the chimney, ignit ing the soot and sending a column of name ten feet out of the top of the chimney. -, The observant neighbors screamed "tire? at the height of their voices; the school children across the way took up, the cry; Mrs. Bangs was ankle-deep in hot water and floating potatoes; the fiouse dog lay prostrate under the ruins, howling with fright "and pain, -and Mr. Bangs had fled to thc-elevation of the kitchen table, from whence he w;is comfortably ur nftl t& eieno, being statad ift tiM broad dish of hominy pudding which his wife had prepared for baking. . The cries of Are called' out the en gine company ever prompt indarige; and stripping down Mr. Bang's fence, they hurried their machine through a fine field of corn and up ta the house. Just as they arrived, cov. ered with perspiration and out of breath, Mrs. Bangs made her exit from the kitchen, screaming and wringing her hands in 'the wildest agitation. The zealous captain of the company was a little near-sighted, and suppos ing the lady's clothing to be oh fire, he seized the end of the hose already Ailed, and let fly the whole stream ol water over herocrsod. The shock knocked her over instantly, and aftei a few somersaults she came to a halt in the rainrwater cistern, from whence she was afterward fished out half drowned and considerably indignant. The grand uproar aroused a high spirited bull that was confined in an adjacent 3ard, the red uniforms of the firemen inspired his bullship with just wrath, and after a half, dozen premonitory bellows, he gave a tremendous leap and cleared the barring. Captain, privates and populace, as tonished and terrified, fled before that elevated head and those smoking nos trils, fled ingloriously, leaving Bangs' chimney to burn out without help, .all except, Judge Marlow, who, being a dignified man, did not compromise his dignity until the last, when he went through Jiis best paces, but in vain. The bull singled him out from the others, caught him on his horns, and tossed him into the pig-pen, where the irate mother of ten promising porcine little ones nearly finished hi in. In fact, the Judge would never have come out of that hog's yard alive had not Mrs. Bangs, recovering from her temporary fright, gone to the rescue with the mop handle. The bull, after scattering all in truders, turned his attention to the engine which was left behind, and never were the walls of a beleaguered city battered and eharged more zeal ouslv than he charged that non-resident "masheen." Mr. Bangs came down from his perch as soon as the crowd .had dispersed, and secured the quadruped, now pretty well blown, from his extraordinary exertions. "The Queen of the World" was sold for old iron, and Mrs. Bangs cooks un murmuringly over the little old con trivance of a stove that shs has had for a dozen 3'ears. Bangs sa3's that, "according to his idee, these here new-fangled stoves ain't the thing; they're great cry and little wool." Basal a Retrog-radlaa;. Henry Labouchere sa3's in London Truth: "I hear that it is expected at Berlin and at Vienna that the furious persecutions which are now disgracing the Government of Russia will assuredly lead to some frightful catastrophe before man3 months have passed. It is not only the Jews who are ruthlessh persecuted, but the Protestants and Roman Catholics also. The Czar is now positively exe crated b3 the Finns, who were forin-erh- his most loyal subjects, in conse quence of the insane attempts to com plete the Russiflcation of Finland. Russia has gone back forty years in a few months. Persons of rank, of the liberal professions, and of both sexes, are being ferociously Hogged all over the countr3r. At Warsaw the other day a Catholic priest of exemplary character received sixty strokes with a birch-rod because he had endeavored to hold a service in open air after his church had been closed by the police. The Emperor has abolished all the privileges of the provincil councils, trial by jury is suspended for an in definite period, and the schools and universities are ruled as if they were barracks or prisons. The political re action which has gone on since the Emperor fell into the hands- of his present advisers, who are as reckless as they are stupid and brutal, can onl3' end either in a revolution or a military or palace coup d'etat. Alexander is eithei a maniac, like most of his fanii'3', or else he is so saturated with apprehension for his own personal safety or with religious fanaticism that he is practically in sane." Driving- on Muddy Koada. A writer in the Providence Tele gram undertakes to show how a wagon may be kept comparatively clean when driving over a muddy road. Accord ing to him this result depends upon maintaining just the right speed, the golden mean, as it were. If the horse Is driven at a walk, say about three miles an hour, the mud which adheres to the rim of the 1 wheel will be carried up by it as it revolves. As it gets to the top its weight will cause it to fall, spatter ing the spokes and the hub. If the horse is going six or seven miles an hour, the rapid revolution of the wheels will send .the mud fly ing", and all parts of the vehicle will receive a copious plastering. But now, if a gait of four and a half or five miles an hour be taken, the mud carried up from the ground will neitner drop nor be thrown ofT, and the consequence will be that with the exception or the rim of the wheels the carriage will come to the end of the journey comparatively clean. Everything depends upon striking just the right gait and maintain ing it. To Avoid Rusting- or Machinery- A mechanic sa3s that in order to keep machinery from rusting he takes one ounce of camphor and dissolves in a pound of melted lard, taking off the scum, and mixing in as much fine black lead as will give it color. The machinery is then cleaned and smeared with this mixture. After twenty-four hours the machinery is rubbed clean for months. The same artisan gives the following method of hardening tools: Forge the tool in shape, then melt in a dish sufficient Babbitt metal to cover the end of the tool as far as it is wished to harden it. Thrust the tool into the metal and let it cooi. This method makes the tool much harder than cooling in oil or tempering by any other process. straace Mineral. I A prospector in Montana has found j a strange mineral that takes fire and consumes itself when exposed to the air. When taken .from the ground it has much the appearance of iron ore and is quite as heavy. The first that was taken out was piled up near the shaft one evening and the next morn ing was found to be smoking. It con tinued to grow hotter until it arrived at almost a white heat, remaining in that condition several days, aftei which it gradually cooled off. It was then found to be but half its -'first weight, and resembled much th fragments of meteors that, are found on the surface. WoxAJf ennccalb only what she duct bo knowi SOME HOME PICTURES. Way By Which Children an Taagtu te Become Coward and Liar. "Tommy, you have disobeyed me, and I am going to punish you, so walk right into this dark closet!" The voice was cold and stern, and the manner was equally unyielding. Tommy, crying and struggling with all his might, was pushed and dragged into the closet, which was certainly dark enough for all practical purposes, and the key was turned in the .lock. "Mamma, it's so dark! I'm afraid. Please let me out!" pleaded the ab ject Tomnl.v. But he Was not 3et subdued. The mother1, stealing nois lessly Up to the door, ' groaned in a most horrible manner, and rattled a piece of chain. "Oh, mamma," shrieked the frightened child, "please let me out! I'll never be bad any .more!" Then the door was opened and the little prisoner came out, white-faced and wild-e3'ed. This was Tommy's first lesson. "Here, Tommy, dear; take this nice medicine the doctor left for you. Come, now, open 3'our mouth, pet, and take 3-our good medicine." "I thought 3ou said it was good!" shrieked Tommy, when he had gulped down the nauseous mixture. "So it is, dear good for sick boys!" was the calm reply, as the mother put away the spoon and bottle. That was Tommy's second lesson. Tommy had been standing at the gate for more than an hour, watching for his mother. The day was cold and the wind blew upon him mercilessl3', but still he waited, his eager little face pressed against the bars of the gate. At last he saw her coming, away down the street, and then how he went rushing out to meet her, his cheeks glowing and his eyes shining. "Give it to me, mamma! Oh, give it to me," he cried, holding up both hands. "Give 3'ou what, Tommy?" asked the mother, pushing pat him. "Wh3T, my candj. mamma! The candy you promised to get me." "I forgot it, Tommj. lou'll have to do without this evening." "But, mamma, 30U promised it," cried Toning, in the mi&st of copious tears, as though that was reason enough. " "But didn't you hear me say I for got it?" asked the mother, as though that, also, were reason enough. And then Tommy was sent- to bed supper less because he cried. There were several lessons for Tommy in this I really can not tell how man3'. "Mary," said Tommy's father one da3' in a grieved voice, "how does it tome that Tommy is growing to be such a coward? I wanted to send him up-stairs after my slippers last night, and nothing could induce him to go because it was dark. The idea of a boy being afraid of the dark! He's going to be a perfect milksop and I was so anxious for him to be a fear less, manl3' bo3'. And then the mother said she couldn't account for it an3' way in the world. She was sure there had never been an3T cowardice in her famil3'. She had never dreamed of such a thing as being afraid in the dark when she was a child, and it was a m3'ster3r to her how Tommy got such notions into his head. "Many said Tommy's father again, a few da3s later, "twice lately I have caught Tommy in a deliberate lie, and I have suspected him of lying haf a dozen times in as many da3's. Now, lying is one thing I can't positively stand. I have tried so hard to teach the boy to be perfectly frank and honest and to tell the truth at what ever risk." And Tomni3''s mother said that she reallv couldn't understand it, that Tonini3''s training had been of the most careful kind: but she thought Tommy must have learned to tell falsehoods from that last servant girl. As for hers If, she had never told a lie in her liie. Whereupon Tommj' was called up and was lectured and talked to and talked at until his brain was in a whirl. He did not say ans'thing in his own defense. He micrht have said a great deal, but he was no ora tor, and besides he did not understand the whole situation himself. Even if he did understand it all it would not have been ver' polite, would it, for Tommy to say (bat his first les sons in cowardice, and meanness, and selfishness, and falsehood, and deceit, were taught him by his mother? The above is mereiy a little scries of pictures, says a writer in the St. Louis Globe Democrat. They were not taken with a kodak, but the camera was a ver3T good one and has taken a vast number of such pictures. Have you ever seen anything like thnm? A Terrible Experience. Rev. D. J. Burrcll, the pastor of Westminister Church, recently took a long railroad journc3', and, as luck would have it, was the occupant of a sleeping car together with the mem bers of a comic opera company. One evening, as a preclude to his sermon, he told his cougreation of the horrors of his trip in graphic language, which must have made the good sisters and brethren gasp for breath at the thought of their beloved pastor being all alone in a car in which the jjjddj' actors and actresses whiled away the time by singing the popular songs of the day, and gave neither him nor thcirselves time for pious meditation. "Lord Bacon," said Mr. Burrcll, "in his essay on 'Friendship,' saj's that a crowd is not company.' This was most forcibl3' brought home to me a short time since, when I was forced to make a journey to San Francisco in company with a comic opera com pany. Closer quarters cannot well be imagined than those of a Pullman car, and I was "only non-professional there. At first there was a little re straint evident, but that soon wore off and they were their own sweet selves. There are men who find ser mons in stones, but 1 defy them to find any good in these. There were i twelve men and as many alleged ladies. All night, when wakeful marl should have been occupied with solemn meditation, the air resounded with the indelicate songs of 'Girotle Girofla,' still more indelicate stories tola by botnsexes, tne rattle of glasses and the popping of corks? and from ine smoKing-ruom was nearu me rat- tie of ivory chips and demands two' or 'three as the case might be. Here, one would say, was a glorious oppor tunitv to deliver a honiily. Uot so. It was a glorious opportunity for keep ing quiet. To cast a homily before them would be to cast jnjarls before swine. Could a more horrible doom be devised for these artists than to be suddenly transported to the midst of bright spirits singing Holy! Holy! noly! Lord, God Almighty! Still, there are those who think there is but oue place to which all will finally come. They wonld feel as much out of place in He:t -i as would the mem bers of our Vfw-suyU'iy drinking been i playinf poker and ftiuginf 'Oirofll Girofla. And is there any less dan ger of contamination by going to see. these people on the stage? No, therej Is cvett more, for on. the stage there is an opportunity for an ven more . shameless display-of indelicacy. I do not mean to say that there are no good people on the stage. Far from it; for I know some of them nysclf whose lives aro as pure as those of any" member of this congregation. .But these very people arc the first to de npuncethc widespread Impurity "of their . professional brothers and sisters." St. Paul Globe. The Ocean No Longer Trackies. "We speak of the ocean as "track les-.' It is st no longer. If two vessels sail from New York for Cab cutta, they will, if intell .- tly navi gated, follow so nea.-U t'ssune course, that their paths, i? plotted on a chart, will hardly diverge by fifty miles at any point. The same is true of every other route. Let us consider the case of a vessel bound to New York from Liverpool. Her captain might, if prepared for a constant bat tle againsts adverse winds and cur rents and winter gales, select a route not very different from that followed by ocean steamers between those ports. Otherwise He would follow the southern route laid down by the Sailing Directors: .and after beating to the westward a few hundrnl miles to make sure of clearing the coast of Spain, would shape a course to the southward, passing as far west of .Modeira, as the westerly wind of these latitudes will jwrmit. Between "Madeira and the Canaries, but a few hundred miles to the westward .of both, he would fan his way across the ba filing "Calms of Cancer," and pick up the northeast Trades. With these astern and freshening ever3 mile, he would sweep down to the South and West, and when well over toward the West Indies, haul up to the north ward Bermuda. Here he would have to work again across the Calms of Cancer, and then, with the uncertain, but probabl3' westerl.v winds of our Atlanta coast, and with the Gulf Stream in his favor, he would stand on and make his port, having sailed fort3'-five hvndred miles between two ports, less than 3,000 miles apart, but with winds and current almost uniformly favorabky.ind with fine and bracing weather. Goldthwaite's Geo graphical Magazine. Aonie CanoBS Sponges. "Some of the most beautiful things that live in the ocean are the sponges of the great depths, which have often very curious and interesting forms," said a naturalist to a Washington Star reporter. "Not least remarka ble are the so-called sca-nests,' which are in the form of spheres or some times egg-shaped. The outer coat ot one of these specimens is a compli cated network over which a delicate membrane is spread. An ornamental frill adorns the upper part while the lower portion throws out a maze of gloss3' filaments like fine white hairs. These hairs penetrate the semi-fluid mud in every direction, thus holding the sponge in its place, while a con tinuous current of water is drawn by waving 'cilia' through all paits of the mass, passing out b3 a hole at the top. In this manner the animal absorbs whatever food may be afloat. "Another singular sponge is the 'glass rope,' which sends down into the mud a coiled wisp of filaments as thick as a knitting needle. The lat ter opens out into a brush, fixing the creature in place after the manner of a screw pile. Still another remarka ble sponge is found in deep water off the Loffodon Islands. It spreads out into a thin circular cake, surrounded by a fringe of what looks like a fringe of white floss silk. Yet another curi osity is the 'eupcctella' sponge of the Philippines, which lives imbedded to its lid in the mud and supported by a lovely frill.'' An Olminate J'"?. A Massachusetts gei. . nan has a large dog, a cross betWv., an English mastiff and a St. Bernard, which is very fond of killing cats. Indeed, it is practically impossible to keep a cat at the stable, so fond is Karl of de stroying them, ne has been whinped and chained up, but though in gen eral he is well behaved, he cannot in this respect be brought to reason. Whenever Karl kills a cat, which happens every week or two, the groom is in the habit of digging a grave, and then making the dog bring the body of poor puss to the spot. Karl takes the IkkI.v of his victim to the place, which has now become quite a popu lous cemcter3', and while the grave is being dug he lies beside it, licking the cat all over as if preparing her for burial. When the grave is ready, he invari bl3' gives puss a vigorous nip on the spine, as if to make sure that she is reallv finished, and then taking her up by the back of the neck, he grave ly drops her into the hole prepared for her. When all this is over, he follows the groom to the stable to be whipped. He knows what is coming, and evi dently accepts it as a necessar3r part of the process of killing a cat: but it does not in the least prevent him from disposing of the next pussy which is brought to the stables. Span I sit Koyalty's Body Vuan!. One of the most curious, customs in connection with the Court of Spain is the provisions which arc made for the safety of the sovereign at night. The slumbers of the little King, and, in deed, the entire palace; are watched throughout the night by the Monte ros de Espinosa, a body of men, who for 400 years, have enjoyed the exclusive privilege of guarding their royal mas ter or mistress from sunset to sunrise. They are bound by tradition to be na tives of the town of Espinosa and to have served with honor in the army. It is ttiey who lock the palace-gates, with much ceremony and solemnity at midnight, and who .open, them again at 7 o'clock In the mornintr. Their fidelity to -the person of the sovereign is as traditional as their strange and ancient privilege. Continental Currency. Along in the latter part of the last century the Continental money issued to the extent of $240,000, 000 had been sinking out of sight. Just before the final collapse a desperate effort was made to hold up" the currency, but notwithstanding all that the govern ment, aided by the leading men of that period, could do, a dozen eggs sold for 85.000 in Continental paper money, and a silk, hat of the period, which would be worth about 7, cost $140,000 in Continental currency. The word war burned into the lan guage, and then, as now, the utter worthlessness of a thing was conveyed by the expression, "It is not worth a continental." c There's no disgrace in being poor The thing is to keep uiet and no lot your ticighUir-i kiiyw anything itout it. HIS TRUTHFUL RECORD. Aa AaUcfed Boy'a Diary of a Yoyag Across the rtrlny Sea. A bOy Of 1?. who went from New York to England w th h.'s 'father on aahorfc' trip, was asked by his toother 16 keep a diary- of all he taw aud heard while gone. Below is given an extract .elat ing the ioc.dents while on shipboard, as repoxtod in the Cincinnati Commercial Gazetto: Jano 1 Le'ft New York at noon and' am having a glorious old time. Havo becn all over tho ship and have got ac quainted w.th the captain and mate But I like to sit on deck best, and I'm going to sit there m: st of the time It's grand to be away out on the ocean put of sight of'iund. They'xe splendid things to cat at th tab e, and I'm having such, a go d tiir.o I wouln't' caro jf we'd be a n:op . rea "? Liverpool. I'm glad' I cv.i d conic ..s glorious. Ji.no 2 Sifk. .June 3 S-ickor June 1 Awiul sick. Juno 5 Sti.l sick, and I don't know as I'll oter livo to get homo, and I don't caro if I don't. Juno(3 i'omo better; ate a cracker. Juno 7 Pa helped mc upon deck, but 1 ain t well vet. June S Mayba we'll got to Cuons town to mcrr w. I wish we wero there now. I'm goin? tp bed. Juno U We can sco the Irish coast I wsti I could walk homo, or else stay abroad forever. I've had a terrible time. State of Omo. Crrr of Totxco, ) .. Lucas Cguwtt. f " Fi-.ajoc J. Cuenkt tuakos catta that he fa tfas enior partner ot tbo firm of F. J. Ciiexkt & Co., doing business in the City ot Toledo, County and Stato aforesaid, and that said firm will nay tbo sum of ONE IIUXDKED DOLLARS lor each and every case of Catahbh that cannot be cured by the use ot Haus Catakbu CutiE. FRANK J. CHKNEY. Sworn to before me aud sabacribMl in ray presence, this Cth day of December. A. I). 1830. . , A. W. GXEASOX, j seal. J- Xotary Public Hall's Catarrh Cure la taken Internally, and acts directly on the blood aud mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CUENEl'4 CO., Toledo, a AT'Sold by drurgista. 75c Electric 3Tall Distributor. Ono of tho most ingenious letter dia-t-lhutors especially adapted for apart ment houses an lar?o buildings, whero each Uoor is occupied by a difforont teu a it. has bco:i pato ted by a Swiss inven tor. At the lower floor of tho house ther is placed a little elevator w.th a receptacle in which th postman places tho parcel for each tor ant When a letter or package is placeJ in this eleva tor an e nctric circuit is closed, opening tho iock of a water ressrvoir at tho top of the building Glling a cylinder, which acts as a counterpoise and raises the ele vator. At each floor there is a simple mechan ism, which causes the parcel for that pla-jc to be deposited in a box, an 1 an e!e trie bell rings to warn the person to whom tho mail matter it addressed that there is something in tho box. These fixed boxes aro locked, so that in the absence of the owners the mail Is safo'y hoi I. When the elevator reaches the top of t'.ie building tb.2 cylinder is auto matically emptied of its water and the elevator returns to the sround floor. The Only One Krer Printed Can Vow Find the "Word? There Is a 3-inch display advertisement in this paper this week, which has no two words alike i-xcept one word. The same Is true of each new one appearing each week from The Dr. Ilarter Medicine Co. This house places a "Cres-cent" on everything they make and publish. Look for it. send them the name of the word, and they will return you book, beautiful uraocnArus, Or PAilPLES FKEE. Derelict Vessel. Com ce ton t maratimo authorities esti mate that, thore aro more than $.000, 0 o worth of derelict vessels and cargoes floating about in the Atlantic, and a con siderable part of tho loss falls uj-on .Maine people. Some of thefo vessels have unsinkab'e cargoes, and unless blown up or burned by government cruisers, or towed into Dort by wrecking tugs, will long continue to be dangerous obstacles on ocean highwa s. Many wrecking t gs aro now cruising for th.' derelicts nearest the ainc coast, aud tome of the abandoned craft will i rob ably be towod in. The least of them would be a rich find for the wreckers. A COUGII, COLD OR SORE TUROAT should not be neglected. Brown's Bron cniAi. Tiiocues are a simple remedy, and give piompt relief. "5 cts. a box. One of -Maine' Queer Hermits. Among the many hermits In Maine. Jo' . iia J f Key's Corner, in Wake- .teld, is tho queerest He lives in a tum b c-down hut, through the roof of which rain and snow, sunl'ght and starlight have easy access. He cooks his own lood. makes his own bed, and doos all the work about his "estate." including the care of an emaciated horse. Ho bo .lieves in witcho?, and every night, de spite his 70 years he mounts guard with a shotgun to shoot any hobgoblins that may issue from the hedges. Coughing Lends to Consumption. Kemp's Balsam will stop the Cough at once. Go to your Druggist to-day and get fl.frte sample bottle. Large bottles SO cts. and SI. A California Mammy. The mummified body of 4t man has (been found in Selma, Fresno County, i al. It is in a perfect stato of prcser 'vation, being thoroughly dried and as (hard as a board, without the least sign 'of odor. The flesh is as hard as sole .leather and as black as tho mummies of the anexnts. The body Is evidently " fa Mc-ciran "PE01PT AND ntiBMUsTIIU Jan. 17, 1SS3, GEORGE C. OSGOOD & CO., RrlKUHIA I IOWI. Druggists, Lowell, Maw?., wrote: "MR. LEWIS DENNIS, 136 Moody St., desires to say that ORRIN-ROBINSON, a boy of GraniteviUe, Mass., came to his house in 1SS1, walking on crutches; his leg was bent at the knee for two months. 31 r. Dennis gave him St. Jacobs Oil to rnb it In fix days he had no use for his cratches and went home cured without them." Lowell, Mass., July 9, '87: "The cripple bov ORRIN ROBINSON, enred by Bt Jacobs Oil in 1881, has remained cored. The younjr man has been and la now at work fevery day at manual labor." DR. GEORGE C. OSGOOD. . .yrBAMr Aberdeen, 8. Dak., Sept. 26, 1838: "Suffered several """ years with chronic stiteh in the back: was given up by doctor.. Two bottles of St. Jacobs Oil cured mc." HERMAN 6CHWAYGEL. EES" E3S: mm Art1" W wveToi Si. Vltaa Dance Cared X VIII. at Ajtdrbas, CaL, February, 1890. may boy, 13 years old, was so aflectaetby St. VitnaJanco that be could not go to school for two yearn. Two bottle of Pastor Koenig's Nerve Tucic rodloro: nis health, and he Is no awtesdiQaT school again. MICHAEL O'CONNZL. eaels It to Maay. BamouB, Ind., Oct. 1, 1890. awy davsghtar became epileptic about five years C through a fright. All physicians' treatment availed aothing. until I used Pastor Koenlg's Kerre Tonic, which at once dispelled tho at !. It la the best remedy lever used.-and 1 hare reeotnsacaded it to many of such as are fxem this dread disease. MARTHA ZICKLER. FREE ' A TalttaMe Beak ea Kervutu Diseases sent tree to say address and poor patieata can also obtalt , tkte meiHclHO bee of efearze. TVia rasaedWkea been Dreeared or the BeTerest Pastor KoenlaT. ot Fort warne. Ind. since IStt. anc uaow prepared under his direction by the KOKNIO MED. CO.. Chicago, lit. 'aaUbTrotTtetaetaiperBetu. . iMMvtMli tlHtwssajr !. . KJV FRAGMENTS. Tin: perfect love-letter Is wVittea witk a Ine disregard for future (fosslbllltiea Tim 'advent of old ago makes a poten tial vitriol-thrower or saaT a fading belle. Even a good woman it thore humili ated at realizing that shqJovcs a fool than that she loves a knave. Results are always more impressive when we have- hot w.tnessed . the processes by which tho'y were attained. Some souls are like covins; their con fines aro too cramped and narrow "to hold anything but cold and rigid creeds. Thk qnalitios we most admire in oth ers are thoso ift which we. are secretly conscious of bsing ottfsclvcs defective. Tho Uae of Ely's Cream Balm, a sure euro for Catarrh and Gold in tho head, is attended with no pai't. inconvenience or dread, which can be said of no other rera cdv. . 1 ietl it my duty td say a few words In. regard, to Ely's 'Cream Balhi, and I do so entirely Without solicitation. I hate Used j: half a year, and.hayo found it to be most admirable.' I have suffered from Catarrh of the worst kind ever since" I was a little boy, ana I never hoped for cure, but Cream Balm seems to do cicii that. Many of h:j acquaintances have used it with excellent results. O-carOstrum, 43 Warren Avenue, Chicaso. III. Apply Balm into each nostril. It is Quickly Absorbed. Gives Relief at once. Price 50 cents at Drujgists or by mail. ELY BROTIIERS.5G Warren St., New Yorx. The Siberian Exllo'n Tabors. Wo labor here as beasts of burdon, writes a Kusfan exile from Siberia For two persons to drag a loaded barge along with towing ropes for forty miles is regarded hore as tho merest tr tie, and as thera are no sails here, hauling aud rowing aro the only m ans of naviga tion Then there is tho autumn fishing, standing kneo-deop in the water aud f oatin; ico. and p ill:ng at a frozen rope thatcu s our hands ti 1 tho blool comes; then mowing in tho deep swamp mud at tho mercy of thj mosquito, often with out any food or any drink but tho water from the bog. pools; then again tho bow ing of treos in winter, and in summer tin towing tf rafts forty miies or more; snd so on, indefinite y. A Remedy tor tho Grippe Cough. A remedy recommended for patients af flicted with the grippe is Kemp's Balsam, which is especially adapted to diseases of the tliroat and lungs. Do not wait for the first symptoms of the disease before secur ing the remedy, but cet a bottle and keep It on hand for use the moment it is needed. If neslccted the grippe has a tendency to bring on pneumonia. Joaquix Miller, tho '-poet of tho Sierras," has three children George Golden, Harold, and .Yau'd. Of these George is a rancher, Harold is accused of being a stage robber, and Maud, now tho wife of London McCormick, is an actress. A Deep-Seated Cocgii cruelly tries the Lungs and wa.stes the general strength. A prudent report for the afilictcd is to U30 Dr. Jliyne's Expectorant, a remedy for all troubled with Asthma, Bronchitis or any iul:iiOu:iry affection. The noted Australian lyre-bird Is threatened with total extinction in New South Wales, thanks to tho American demand for its tail-feathers to adorn feminine headgear. In a single fort night one agent alono imported 1,000 lyre-birds' tails to the United States. Bkecham's P11.1.S cost only "5 cents a Ik.t. They aro proverbially known tlir nghout tho world to bo "worth a guinea a box." Bv net April tho railway to Jerusa lem will probably be opened, as tho work is advanciug rapidly, notwith standing the delay caused by torrential rains. Like Magic Is.tho relief given in msay serers csas of drsDT'la troabos by Hood's SirsapinlU. BohmhuIdk fhs bo.t known utoasch tonics w well sa tt.e beat alter ative remedies, this exoalleat medicine giTes Uis stomach the strength required to retiln scd digest nourishing food.crestes A Good Appetite Kid gently but eStettTelr assists to natural moiion the nbole machinery of the body. Most graiifjlng reports come from people who have takes Hood'9 Sarsaparilla for d.'epopfia. indigestion, and similar trouble. HOOD'S PILLS For the liter and bow. els, act easily rat pronrpUr and eflcientlr. Price :3o. ifjj.'i 1 "Ttis GREAT COUGH CURE, this juccesi- rol CONSUMPTION CURE u sold by drug gists on a positive guarantee, a test that no other Cure, can stand successfully. If you have a COUGH, HOARSENESS or LA GRIPPE, it will cure yoa promptly. If your child has the CROUP or WHOOPING COUGH, use it qtick.y pnd relief is sure. If you fear CON SUMPTION, don't wait until your case i hope less, but take this Cure at once and receive immediate help. Price coc and $i.oo. Ask your druggist for SHILOH'S CURE. If your lungs are sore or back lame, use Shiloh's Porous Plasters. PERMANENT!" , THK PECULIAR EFFECTS OF ST. JACOBS OH Are Its Prompt and Permanent Cures. II 23 aooo-ftos. B - .POTATOES CHEAPJ YOU WANT TO MAKE MONET Ton are a good agent! Tea caa sell ear Siatalileel Account File to ewjrybody who keeps accounts. It will pay both tne agent ana ine parcnaeer. 8nd for circulars to .T "D. VnnDoren Sc Co., CC6 East Stato street. Fremont, Ohio. BORE m"8HI0" WELL DRILL WELLS rfth oar famesm Well JhrH'i-rj. The only .-.-"-t -' clninffna .: jiii2tl'i!iiJ- s.oo.s a NxkiAU.CM-- 'atalea TIFKIV. OHIO. PENN Yon can here get more life insurance, of a better quality, MUTUAL on easier terms, at le3s cost than elsewhere. LIFE Address 921-3-5 Chestnnt St., Philad'a. GRIND B Craaaax Tlanr aad Ci Tet'K ew.i r. Meal. Ojaler gaeUa, . uatin aaii iirn-Uion or, la tU(f .MJhnmuniiu ptit). iff looprrrruu more made In tKilu.' l'..tr. AUal-eWF.U Mll.Ui; ml JAKH rKKI MtttlAi. Ctrrnlireaml taMimonlaJ Hit co ,"-?rj WSGs "August Flower; Mr.- Lorenzo F. "Sleepo: .& very Hrell knowu to the citizens of Apple : ton, Me., and neighborhood He . says: " Eignt" years ago Iwastafcen-v. ... , , -A- tA. - sick, ana suuercu as no one uut.a " dvsoeotic can.. - I tnen'besran take i.- "ing August Flower. -.At'that-tima .-.-.; "L was a great .sufferer. -Everyr.-.": " thing I ate distressed, me-so that:! f;:-" "had to throw it up.AThen in-a. -A " few moments that ho'ma distress": "!. " would come on" and'I. would havfe'- ; i-a "ami siYfsl'v ! For that Horrid Stomach Feeling. " a gai n Itook a V . . , " little of your; nred- . ."icine.xmd felt much; ',' r better, "and. a tetx . "August Flower my'. " Dyspepsia disa.pt- ,; "peared, and since, that tipie .1. " have never" had. the first sign of it-f . "lean eat anything:, without the. V" " least fear of distress. : I-wish alL1' -' " that are afflicted with jjiat-ternble-. " disease or the troublescjiused .b"r -"it would try August FIower,.as ; "am satisfied there is no -medicine . "equal to it" '-I...' i:Hal It Cnree CotiK Coagha. Sore Throat, fcrouip. lutliicuzu. Wlnpiu;s Cougli.. Uroncliltfs.atut-; -Asthma. A ctrtjin i-urel'jr Consumption In ttrit siijjvH. arl nr- relief in itlrunretl tjfe...Ue at n -. Von rill ce theaxcet'e .t eftent lafter. tukinar tlieliratilnkF. So.d by aea.araoel.li'tr4.. Large bott'e-. WceHt awl $UX ..." SOAf 99Pure THE BEST F03 EVERY PURPOSE.';. :A .- RELIEVES all Stomach Distress. REMOVES Kauiea. Senso of FntlnnW, COSGESTIOX, PAIK. REVIVES Tailtno ENERGY. RESTORES Normal Circulation, tO$.. Warms to Toe Tirs. ML HAITEI MEDICINE CO..SL.Mlt,Bf; MENTION THIS fAPCX iimw to immM LIES f. FACTS TTomn wishes to buy a pi? In a ba?. ami no one place confidence in the advertisements of Scale maters which SOUND improbable. " Somo tlilnjrfornothlnir" ran neTerbehad.and when you see Scales adver tised so Indefinitely as to leave a BIO percentage for th Im agination; Investigate carefully. Som peoplo are faf N ' mind-d. and to thctn wa refer the Scale -question. Aotics SPEAK loader than words, and ' when you find a seiw-, inn nrticl" mods of good material FOR a fair priee Is It not better that the facte to the case should bo " hoked into by fair minded tnen for THEMSELVES before buy In any kind of a Scale? FUll information recanlinsr patterns, patent costs, etc., in odo book, cent free by JONES OF BlNQHAMTOff, Binghamtoa, N. Yi- St. IT!rsT Tnparso, ta Bsost noted physician otT.ag land, sajs ttjat more iaia Jialf of alt diseases come frcna ' errors ia diet Seed for Free Sample of Garfield Tea to 319 West tilh Street, JTcwTorkCity. GARFIELD TEA com ratal ta fflM ftHsat 3lBn;cir Mck.IIaclataMt restore iaapiexjoB;cvct.oBaiipa(ian FAT FOLKS REDUCED Hffrm. A lira Mania. Otmob. Mo . rilM' 1 All I 1 "Mrweicht was 33 round, now it U tt&' redaction af 12lb." Fop circular addrpu, wither.. Ur.O.vv.f.BJtXIIKK. MeVickar a i traatra. UInca.llJ. Paiaxoiai-Bw an .T.nifcnai. Ja disabled. $itm for lucre... 'j y car.Vex perlencr. Write tor Laws. AtW.UcComvK A Soara. Wosixbtoii. I. C. at cucimm.t.(..0. Dll tmr Kvrrrrturn. opuin. Ju SaHra7ha r II aT a auppoaltorr. llajUtlY aILXXlKKC Addraaa I I bis faf J. KlULVJkaUioxS3.aw Xark CHJJL.J. iffiteiaasi, t . wiMiiwaa YOP MP aS6TBT- EMWfi'&d.VS'!:. fMrM- Kll KaffsiradflliiiH '- vBLm BBWEKBSfilBBBsaBaH' R& HgDEHflHsKaKS--EU!? 7WwVtWfllwVBaaaBaEVaeBaaa HiTatfTEkTsaTfaeaTsa?! ftUli!MiIIil!Miy iirarori aatfBjQajm.Yw.:tiojtKiv DjCraOlW ra.vatiiH;rtm, o.v. Successfully Prosecutes Xlaimsw. Tat Principal Examiner U.S. Pension Bureau. 3 jrtu last war, 15adjudiealiuclalta. atty aluce. a Taff alTO Quleklr obtained. Ko atVi rt I afcla I Ofea nntll patent Ja..an0wd.- tea nntll patent ja.anowao, CUUMTEHUCT Waalu.D.C,- AdTioe x. Bock tree. aaav a'aaaaaaaiam.aiaaaaB. sfl.h; SO-ra-e'book free- W. T. rVlZUEBAUx- SaATa&sfl I a!w. IV rVlUEBAUV WaauuiuTutf, !;.' G. flHlCrrnMnrnliinr HabitCured fa'-Ier. LflKSaai -1 '-' ?r- yaytill rured. asai il.jow,ji SrtUW3tLebanpn,Qhu,:-- 8. C. X. U. T r.33-'" ' . .. Caaaaatstleaa and peonfe who hare weaa Inara or Asta mj. should nse Piao's Cure for Consumption, It haa carvel thoaeaade -It haa notlnlur-'l eaona ziinui oaa toiaae. - . .. . i . iiuine Dcabcougu syrup. - Svia ererjw&ere: 5e. ."- t - "V.- .', :-" -V"':"K.-.X -f -- . I - - . . - fe .- v- '-: "ti ? - - "-. ' I'. ::-. -V ',-- .t-" ' -, tm'