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I apt *Vs ft f^f'l 1 & T. H. BEAUL1EU, Kdltor. flC WHITE EARTH. rir* MINK Epitome of the Week. INTERESTING NEWS COMPILATION. DOMESTIC. ^&%*&^ Ow the 15th Assistant United States Treas urer Roberts assumed charge of the sub* treasury in New York, and the sixteen ex pert counters from Washington began counting the $37,000,000 in the vaults. It would take them three weeks to do the work. Maa HANNAH BATTEBSBY, said to be the largest woman in the world, died on the 15th at her home in Erankford, Pa, aged forty-seven yearB. A few years ago she married John Battersby, a "living skele- ton," and when married weighed 688 bounds. At the time of her death she (weighed 800 pounds. i MEMOBIAI services were held on the loth ,at Springfield, 111., commemorating the twenty-fourth anniversary of Abraham Lincoln's death. Flags were at half-mast on many buildings and bells were tolled. The floral offerings were profuse, and in cluded a handsome pillow from Mrs. Har rison, wife of the President. EX-GOYEBNOB JOHN 8. PmLSBtrav, of Minneapolis, on the 16th presented to the Minnesota State University, of which he is a regent, the sum of $150,000. JOSEPH P. STEWAET (colored), who had spent twenty-nine years of his life in prison at Trenton, N. J., was given his free dom on the 16th. IN a struggle with his sonfor a loaded gun on the 16th at their farm near Kearney, Neb., W. H. Pettitt, aged seventy-two years, was killed by the weapon being dis charged. AN epidemic of suicide struck Chicago on the 16th, no less than five persons taking their own lives. Sickness and despondency were the causes. IT was reported on the 16th that the Standard Oil Company contemplated chang ing its base of operations from the Penn sylvania fields to those of Ohio. DOBA WEBSTBB, aged sixteen years, of Fletcher, O., was shot and killed onthe 16th by her cousin, Joseph Heath, with a re volver which he thought to be empty. MBS. JOSIB GuBiiEY was found guilty by a jury in Chicago on the 16th of kidnaping little Annie Redmond, and the jury fixed her punishment at five years in the peni tentiary. A FIBE on the 16th at Muir,Mch., de stroyed twenty-seven buildings. CENTEBVILLE, B. L, was almost entirely destroyed by fixe on the 16th. "WHILE excavating at Dulutn, Minn., on the 16th for anew Masonic temple a blast fired revealed a vein of copper ore of great richness. WITH a capital of $5,000,000, the Beet Sugar Company was incorporated on the 16th at San Francisco. Two MEN entered the State Bank at Min neapolis at noon on the 16th, covered the two employes who were present with re volvers, filled a valise with money and fled. After a brief chase the robbers were capt ured and lodged in jaiL EMANCIPATION DAT was celebrated on the 16th by the colored people of the District of Columbia by a parade of military and civic associations. A PIEE on the 16th at Lynchburg, Ya., de stroyed the tobacco warehouse of J. W. Ohilds, togothor -?rith a large quantity of leaf and manufactured tobacco stored therein. AT Buffalo, N. T., on the 16th Thomas Domincjuez, a Spaniard, killed his wife and himself with a razor. Jealousy was the causae. THE great Jewish festival of the Passover began on the 16th and would be celebrated by Hebrews all over the world for seven days. FRANK LUSBT, a painter, fell from a scaf fold four stories high on the 16th at Lima, O., alighting on his head and breaking nearly every bone in his body. THE loss of the schooner Eva, with her captain, Henry Parks, and five men, was reported at Baltimore, Md., on the 17th. THE factory of the Buffalo (N. Y.) Door, Bash & Blind Company, was destroyed by fire on the 17th. Loss, $100,000. GEOBGE KBAMEB and Charles Heidke, two Oklahoma boomers, quarreled at Kiowa, Kan., on the 17th over the right to a certain claim, and during the fracas both were killed. A fight also occurred between cat tlemen and boomers west of Oklahoma City, and four men lost their Uvea WHILE Perry Wine, of Brockton County, W. Ya., was felling a tree on the 17th it broke across the stump and fell, demolish ing his house and killing his wife and three children. THOMAS F. SOAHLON, a piano manufact urer with offices at Boston and New York and a factory at Boxbury, Mass., failed on the 17th with liabilities of $200,000. AT Butler, Pa, Mrs. James Field shot and killed her husband on the 17th. The shoot big was in self'defense. THE eighteenth annual meeting of the Woman's Baptist Foreign Missionary Society ot the West was opened on the 17th at Cleveland, O. Delegates were present from eight States and Territories. DB. ABB BOBEBTSON, of Patrick County, Va., while fighting the forest fires in that sounty on the 17th was overcome by smoke nd burned to death, Over fifty farmers were burned out by the flames. A FIERCE rain and wind-storm passed over Sumner County, Kan., on the 17th, doing great damage to crops and property, several houses at Wellington were un roofed and others were blown down, and a Mr. Hacker was killed. AT Jersey City, N. J., on the 17th Patrick IfcAtamney, a switchman, jumped before an engine and saved,the life of a ten-year old boy, but he was run over and killed. FIVE men were drowned on the 17th near Bainbridge, Ga., by the capsizing of a boat. THE acting Comptroller of the Currency on the 17th authorized the First National Bank of Hannibal, Mo., to commence busi ness. A FIBE on the 17th at Tarentum, Pa, de stroyed the opera-house and several other buildings, FELICE YIABT, aged seventy-two years, a professional beggar, died in New Orleans on the 17th of debility and neglect in an old thanty where she had lived twenty yeara She was supposed to be very poor, but the boroner in inspecting the circumstances of her death discovered hidden around her shanty $38,500. BEV. DB. BBOWN, president of Wesleyan Female College at Cincinnati, and sixty rears of age, settled a dispute on the 17thton Withhis music-teacher, an Italian aged thir ty-five years, by giving the latter gentle man a thrashing. EDGAB KING, son of Joseph King, a wealthy farmer near Montgomery, Mass., murdered his father on the 18th, set fire to ihe house and then killed himself. He was (apposed to have been insane. THE steamer Everett, a raft-boat beldnf* ^ng-tothe Burlington (la) Lumber Com pany, was sunk at the head of Otter island *n the 18th, andfive'of the sixteen persons ?ftr)n board were drnwrifid. lx was stated on the 18th that floods had ruined the potato, pea and bean eropB in portions of Virginia THE business part of Cheney, W. T., was almost destroyed by an incendiary fire on the ISch. FREDERICK BBODEBICK and Chester Col lins were arrested on the 18th at Bondout, N. Y., for making and circulating counter feit coin. A bag containing about seventy five dollars in bogus nickels, together with dimes, etc., was captured. A wiND-STOBM onthe 18th at Isabel], Kan., destroyed five houses and ruined crops. A BAG containing $15,000 in gold dis appeared on the 18th from the Northern Pacific Express office at Brainerd, Minn., and officials and clerks were completely in the dark as to its whereabouts. A MAIL-POUCH containing valuable reg istered letters for the Cleveland office was stolen from a Michigan Southern train in Chicago on the 18th. BEPOBTS of the 18th from all parts of the country indicated that the peach crop this season would be the largest ever known, that the crop of fruit generally would be good, and that the yield of vegetables would be enormous. THE Steubenville (0.) iron and steel works, which started about one week ago, were stopped on the 18th by a strike. Five hundred men were out. THE ladies of the Chicago Free Kinder garten Association gave an informal recep tion at St Paul's Universalist Church on the 18th, it being the one hundred and seventh anniversary of the birth of the founder of the kindergarten system Frederich W. A. Froebel A VESSEL went ashore on the 18th near life-saving station No. 21, near Norfolk, Va, and ail on board were drowned before any assistance could reach them. JOHN HOSTETTEB, a wealthy farmer, aged seventy years, residing near Campbells town, Pa, committed suicide on the 18th by hanging himself in his barn. AT Jacksonville, Fla, on the 18th Isaac Jones (colored) broke nearly every bone in the body of his four-year-old child with an iron bar and then beat his wife to death. He claimed to be subject to fits, and that he had one at the time." CHABLES BICE, living near Franklin, Pa, sought relief from asthma on the 18th by rubbing kerosene on his breast. While thus engaged the can exploded, burning the house and fatally injuring Rice. MBS. HENRX BENNEHOFF, seventy-five years old, was assaulted by a tramp on the 18th near Tiffin, O., and so badly injured that she died in a short time. THE old Carroll homestead at Knoxville, Md., was burned on the 18th. The tract upon which the old mansion house stood was taken up in 1727 by the father of Charles Carroll, of Carrollton, and em braced fifteen thousand acres. ABBAM W. MABSHALL, one of the most prominent citizens of Petersburg, Ya, shot himself dead on the 18th in the presence of his wife. Financial trouble caused the deed. A LABGE barn on the farm of Bichard Da vidson, near Crawfordsville, Ind., was burned on the 18th with its contents, includ ing six horses and a number of cattle. JOHN H. SWIFT was hanged on the ISth at Hartford, Conn., for the murder of his wife on July 7,1887. He shot her because she refused to live with him. Two OF the men engaged in the tearing down of telegraph wires in New York were pulled from the window of a building on the 18th by the sudden falling of a pole and killed. DTJBING the seven days ended on the 19th there were 311 business failures in the United States, against 239 the previous seven days. FIVE Mormon missionaries were whipped, tarred and foatliarod and drivoxi out of Dale County, Ala, on the 19th. A^NEW commandery of the Union Vet erans' Union at Washington was on the 19th named for Philip H. Sheridan. AFTER an absence of six months on a tour around the world A G. Spalding and his band of base-ball players arrived in Chica go on the 19th and were given a hearty welcome. THE entire plant of the Canastota glass works at Bowling Green, O,, was destroyed by fire on the 19th. v, THE Callendar Insulating & Waterproofing Company of New York failed on the 19th for $400,000. IN Pittsburgh, Pa., on the 19th it was so warm that two men were overcome by the heat and would probably die. MALACHI ALLEN, a one-armed negro, and James Mills, a half Indian and half negro, were hanged on the 19th at Fort Smith, Ark., for murder. SYLVESTER GEUBB was hanged on the 19th at Yincennes, Ind., for the murder of his sweetheart, Gertrude Downey, at Prince ton, Ind., September 13, 1888. A FIBE on the 19th among elevators and warehouses in New York City did damage to the extent of $3,500,000. The east bank of the North river was swept clear from Fifty-ninth to Sixty-fifth street Five men probably lost their lives in the flames, and several others were injured. CHABLES BABXEB, of Boston, checker champion of the world, and James Beed, of Pittsburgh, Pa, agreed on the 19th to play a series of fifty games at Chicago, com mencing June 3, for the championship and $250 a side. A HEAVY snow-storm prevailed through out Southern Colorado on the 19th. ONE hundred and fourteen years ago the battle of Lexington was fought, and at Lexington and Boston on the 19th anniver sary exercises were held. A DYNAMITE cartridge was exploded under a frame building at Middletown, O., on the 19bh by some one unknown, demol ishing half the building and breaking all the windows in the United States Hotel. AT Huron, D. T., John Flaherty, aged twenty-two years, was on the 19th sentenced to life imprisonment for the murder of Hat tie Wilson. A PASSENGER train, on the Short lone was run into by a freight train on the 19th near Glencoe, Ky., and eight persons were in jured. A CYCLONE struck the town of Hinckley, HI, on the 19th, plowing a path one hun dred feet wide through the village, unroof ing or blowing down every building in its course. No one was killed. IT was reported at St Paul on the 19thbut that thirteen warrants had been issued for the arrest of members of the State Legisla ture and others on charges of bribery and corruption. HiPERSONAL AND POLITICAL. BEAB ADMXBAL WILLIAM BODGEBS TAYLOB died at Washington on the 15th. THEODOBE CUNNINGHAM, editor of the first newspaper published at Lima, O., died in that city on the loth, aged fifty-nine years. PBESIDENT HABBISON on the 16th appoint ed William P. Hepburn, of Iowa, to be So licitor of the Treasury, and James A Sex to be postmaster at Chicago. JOHN G. WHITE, one of the most estimable citizens of Albany, N. Y., and well known throughout the Union as the oldest malster, died on the 16th: EDWABD E. LITTELL, of Marcellus, Mich., celebrated his one hundredth birthday on the 16th. He is the father of twenty-three children, has been married three times, and is still healthy and hearty. GENBBAL FBANZ SIGEL on the 16th resigned the office of Pension Agent at New York. The General is sixty-five years old and much broken down byiis son's disgrace. Js the municipal elections throughout Illinois on the 16th candidates in favor of liquor licenses were victorious in a majority of the towns. FEED GBANT, the newly-appointed Minis, ister to Austria, left New York on the 17th for that country. Hon. Albert G. Porter, United States Minister to Italy, sailed on the same steamer. PBESIDENT HABBISON made the following appointments on the 17th: E. S. Lacey, of Michigan, Comptroller of the Currency Bobert P. Porter, Superintendent of the Census and William H. Calkins, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the Terri tory of Washington. -*j BBIGADIEB-GENEBAL SAMUEL "*KENNEDY DAWSON, United States army (retired), died at Orange, N. J., on the 17th, after a short sickness, aged sixty yeara L. BBADFOBD PBINOE was duly installed Governor of New Mexico on the 17th, at Santa Fe. MB. WHITELAW RETD, the newly-appointed Minister to France, took the oath of office on the 18th at the State Department in Washington. THE thirty-ninth regular session of the Wisconsin Legislature terminated on the 19th. It lasted one hundred and one days. WHITELAW KEED, having taken the office under the Government of Minister to France, retired from the editorship and direction of the New York Tribune on the 19th. JUDGE F. FBISBY, ex-Attorney-General of Wisconsin, died in Milwaukee on the 19th after an illness of but a few days, aged sixty-four years. JW*J FOREIGN. PBAIBIE fires in Manitoba on the 15ti did immense damage to property, the Entire possessions of many farmers being swept away by the flamea JOHN ALBEBT BBIGHT (Liberal Unionist) was on the 15th elected to succeed his father, the late John Bright, as representa tive of the Central district of Birmingham in the British Parliament. MB. DITHMAB, United States Consul at Breslau, died on the 15tk MR PARNELL on the 16th instituted a suit against the London Times for libel, claim ing 100,t)00 damages. THE residences of General Boulanger, Count Dillon and Henri/ Bockef ort were searched by the Paris authorities on the 16th and a number of more or/ess compromising papers seized. CHOLEBA was reported on the 17th as raging in the Philippine Islands where, out of fifteen hundred persons attacked, one thousand died. WABBANTS were issued in Paris on the 17th for the arrest of sixty more members of the Boulangist party. Six THOUSAND emigrants sailed from Liv erpool on the 17th, a few of whom were bound for the Argentine republic and the rest for the United States. FIVE persons were killed on the 17th by an explosion in the Bothschild colliery at Tiefblau, Austria, and six other workmen were missing. ADVICES of the 17th brought more ghastly details of the slow starvation of thousands in the north Chinese provinces. In one town on the banks of the Yellow river wom en walked the streets and publicly offered their children for sale to save them from famishing. Missionaries were feeding eighty thousand persons, but this was not more than a fiftieth part of the number that were starving. A FAMINE was raging on the 18th at Bicze, Waa# and Bistritz, in Hungary, and hun dreds of persons were starving and dying. ON the 18th twelve hundred and thirty emigrants embarked at Queenstown on steamers bound for America ANOTHER Nihilistic plot to assassinate the Czar was discovered on the 19th at St' Petersburg. THE rush of emigrants from the south west of Ireland was on the 19th causing alarm, as the country was being rapidly de populated. THE Indian village of Iroquois,in Canada, having a population of eleven hundred, all Indians, was almost entirely destroyed by fire on the 19th. IT was stated on the 19th by French-Ca nadian papers that the volume of emigra tion from .Quebec to the United States this year promised to exceed that of any previ ous year in the history of the province. One paper said it would reach one hundred thousand. LATEST NEWS. THE steamer Missouri arrived at the Delaware breakwater the 21st having on board 340 of the passengers of the steam er Danmark. The Danmark became dis abled April 4th. The next day she met the Missouri and was towed by her for two days. As soon/as the Danmark be gan to sink her orew and passengers were transferred to the Missouri which pro ceeded to the Azores island where the first and second officers and 320 of the passengers were left. A MAN registered at the Windsor Hotel, St. Paul, as Albert Buscher, Fairfax, Minn., was found in his room dead the morning of the 20th. Upon retiring he had blown out the gas and death resulted from suffocation. WILBUR M. RAY, a man about 70 years of age living near Medford, Minn., was found burned to death the 20th. He was engag ed in burning brush and it is supposed fell into the fire and could not extricate himself. BCCKBBE, a small town in Wisconsin was entirely wiped out by fire the 21st Loss estimated at $100,000. DANIEL TABLES was killed at New Lenox, 111., by the Rock Island express the after noon of the 20th. \J4 AT Selfer's coal mine, Morris, Ill.f on the20th, Wm. Cummings wascjrushed by a four-ton rock. W jV*"'f?^?.", r.,-., A FIRE in Dehn's hotel, 'Detroit, Mich.,~ the 21st, caused the death of three men and a serious injury to the fourth. A SHOWER of snails was reported from Tiffin, o., the 20th, during a thunder storm. IN St. Paul, there was no material ohange in the situation of the street car strike the 21st. Everything was quiet. The company, claim they have plenty of men to run their cars but for some reason few ears were run. In Minneapolis a serious riot occurred. Several men and,second-hand policemen were injured. Several cars were demolished and the track for a short distance was torn up. ON the morning of the 20th at Addison, N. Y., Frank Hancock was found dead in ai bed room having hanged himself. In a bed the same room lay the bodies of his four children, two of them with their throats cut, the other two stabbed to the heart A butcher knife was used in mur dering the children. A HUNDRED deaths a day are reported from Rio Janerio from yellow fever. FIRE on the 20th destroyed fifteen build ings in Depere, Wis., causing a loss of 225,000. HENRY G. PEARSON, postmaster at New York City died the 20th from cancer of the stomach. WHITELAW REID retired from the editor ship of the New York Tribune the 20tb. ALEXANDER HENRIQUES, for many yearB chairman of the New York stock exchange died the 30th. PIKE at Chippewa'Falls, WhiVtha 90th PERSONAL AND LITERARY. Of the 482 theological and religious books published in this oountry last jrear, 889 were the work of American authors. #*-t George William Curtis never writes at a table except to sign his name. He writes on a pad in his hand with his pencil, and has a copy made from this. It is said that Mrs. Field, of Bos ton, author of "Two Gentlemen of Bos- ton," can cook and bake as well as write books and poems, and loves house keeping. Two of the most succ essful college presidents in Kentucky are omen Miss Lottie A. Campbell, president of Caldwei'i College, Danville, and Miss A M. Hicks, president of Clinton Col lege. Col. W. Taylor, of S Paul, Minn., the State Librarian, is Presi dent Harrison's uncle. He is seventy five years old, and knows his work so well that he carries the whole library catalogue in his head. John Howard Payne, the author of "Home, Sweet Home," while a junior at Union College, in 1811, started a college paper, called the Pastime, which became very popular With the students. "The Publishers' Weekly" re corded the publication in America last year of 4,631 books (1,111 of which were imported). This exceeded th. record for 1887 by 194, but fell short of that of 1886the heaviest in the history of American book-publishing by 45. In England in 1888 the out put was 6,591 as against 5,686 in 1887. In a new book upon "American isms" some of the less familiar are: Bibibles for drinkables, Bohn for a crib or translation, balditude for a state of baldness to deacon, or to place fine fruit at the top parquet, or the pit of a theater from its mosaic floor pizarro, for piazza skulldug gery, wire-pulling trampoos, to wan der aimlessly, and daisy, for any thing first-rate. A peculiar fact about American literary women is that many of them are domestic in their tastes and have great ability as housekeepers. Lucy Stone is a noted home-maker. Mrs. Elizabeth Cady-Stanton's domestic propensities are well known. Mrs. Annie Jenness Miller, the lecturer and advocate of dress reform, has a hus band who worships her. Mrs. Liver more, the lecturer, is another good housekeeper, and in addition to her public and private duties takes care of an invalid daughter. HUMOROUS. We undertook to print Amelie Rives' last poem this week and failed. It melted the type in the stick. Lincoln Journal. Curiosity is an essentially femi nine virtue, but most observant ob servers have observed that a man is not at all unwiling to listen to the in formation Ms inquisitive wife may have gathered.Somerville Journal. Husband"What does the paper say about the big fire of last night?" Wife(reading the morning paper) "It says the boilef burst and then the scene that followed baffled descrip tion. H. "Is that all W. 'No two columns of description follow that."Yonkers Blade. Eastern lady (in Colorado)"It makes me sick to hear some of your Western names. The idea of calling a pretty town like this 'Wagonwheel'" Resident"It isn't a nice name, and if we ever change it I promise to let you know at once." "I wish you would." "Where shall I address you?" "Horseheads, N. Y." A correspondent of the Writer asks why a pound of manuscript pass ing between author and publisher should need more postage than a pound of calico. The answer is simple. 11 is a wise duty imposed by the Govern ment for the protection of the most defenseless mortals on the face of the eartheditors.America. Rosey Boy"Why didn't you take a wedding trip, Bloodgood?" Blood good"Well, you see, my wife and I came to the conclusion it wouldn't be much of a novelty, for us. We met first on a steamer on the Atlantic Ocean I proposed in Sweden was ac cepted in Russia obtained her father's peirmission in England the marriage settlement was drawn up in this coun try, and we were married in Algiers." Once a Week. First lady (behind a tall hat at the ffcheater) "Rather out of style, isn't ItP" Second lady (in aloud whisper) Yes. They were wearing hats like ^hat in Paris when I was there two years ago." "Yes, I thought it was about that old. What flimsy material it is made of!" Horridly cheap. I saw some of that in the window of a store marked Lady in front (to companion)" It's so dreadfully warm here I will have to Jake off my, .ha "Philadelphia Record. Romance vs. Cold Business.Man paging Editor (at the banquet replying to toast of "Th Press." Extracts from his remarks)" That noble en gine of civilization, whose mighty throbs pulsate in unison with the on ward march of enlightened progress the guide, the educator of the masses whose vast responsibilities," etc., etc.,- etc Managing Editor (in the sanctum)"Get up a column and a half about that dog fight to-night, send a man to interview Sullivan about his last spree, and if that article on the "Dandy Bar-keepers of New York' isn't ready by three o'clock, there'll be trouble up there* and don't you forget A B.f.JOHN80N&Co.aoOMainSt.,Richmond!va /S,"*f* ule ,TO PRESERVE THE SOFTNESS O FLANNEL GARMENTS, W FOLLOW CAREFULLY THESE DIRECTIONS FOR WASHING.^ Sold Everywhere. Office, 44= Murray St., New York. $75 tO $250 ^MOlVTBtcanbeinaaework. can furnish a horse and give whole time to. the business. Spare moments maybe profitably em JeT Dissolve thoroughly in boiling water some IVORY SOAP, shaved fine- Add sufficient warm water to wash the flannels in one by one. Don't rub any soap on the flannels, but knead them well in the solution. Don't rinse them in plain water, use a fresh supply of the solution, warm, and well blued, for the purpose. Don't wring tightly with the hands, use a clothes-wringer. .The freer from water you get these garments the softer they will be. Hang them out immediately, if the weather will permit if not, dry before the fire. If left to stand wet, the flannel will certainly shrink. Never wash flannel in water too hot to bear your hand in. Never rinse them in cold water. Always use IVORY SOAP, it is the best, much experience has proved this. A WORD O WARNING. There are many white soaps, each represented to be'' just as good as the' Ivory- they ARE WOT, but like all counterfeits, lack the peculiar and remarkable qualities of the genuine. Ask for "Ivory" Soap and insist upon getting it. Copyright 1886, by Procter & Gamble. Dyspepsiaisthe Me or tbe present generation. It is for its core and its attendants, Sick Head* acne, Constipation and Piles, that Tuti have become so famous. They act speedily and gently on he digestive organs, giving thorn tone and vigor to assimilate food. Mogriping or nausea. vacanciestheir 80 in towns and cities en&oveZ also. Never mind about aeriking Stamp for reply. Come quiek. Tours for biz, B. F. J.dbCo a-jfAKB ima PAPER mrj mjcuwtik. PENSIONLate JOHNW.MOHHIS Prinoipal Examiner, V. S. Pension Bureau.Att'y *uv^MWf AU-AO.UUAK, nlVTTil| U1UUXOU CU1U U.OpO!A* dent relatives'. Experience: S years lnlast war, 15 years In Pension Bureau, and attorney since then. Picket* wire Fence MacMne for (10 where I hae no KgenU. Guar anteed. Hundred! in use. Freight nid Wire and other fencing material a wholesale to my customers lor machines Circulars free. Address. $20S.H.GARRETT,MaHBfield.Ot.. HTB1MB TH18 PAPERwwytJmeiDUWMsfc $5 TO $ 8 A DAY. Samples worth $2.15 FRE E. Lines not under horses' feet. Write BBEWSTEB 8AFKTT REIN HOLDER CO.,HoUy.Mlelu MAMB ima TAPER BTtryttneyou wit*. Said Mrs. G. to Mrs. CTwaso'er a cup of line Bohea): #k Our pretty hostess yonder. Has gained in looks surprisingly ^.|f*t JJhe^Beems as well as well can Del TOiat is the cause, I wonder? For *run-down,w |\ffiiB COD LIVER OIL, With Extract of Malt and Compound Syrnp ot" Hypophosphites, Cures Consumption, Bronchitis, Coughs, Colds, Scrofula and all Wasting Diseases. It Is as pleasant and palatable to take as honey. Its strengthening effects arenalstost inuae. diate. I does not come up to assert ltaelf aeml occaslonally after being swallowed, aaoth- K* JBnmilalonat certain ly do. I Is a srreat producer or JBOSTE andMnTK- CLE, it purifies the Blood, and patients gala rapidly In weight while taking It. It is a true Emulsion, the only one thatil always ready, always alike, and that never has a thick, gummy and greasy BLOB at the top to upset the PATIEKT'S STOMACH. It is used In all the leading Hospitals. It is prescribed by the most eminent physl* clans a the United States and Canada. Ask your Druggist for it, and take no other. J. A. MAGEE & CO., Lawrence, (Mass. PATENTSFo.rTKFitzgerald,.Attorn*n.s/0.D,40-psAddres.FREEWashington,.INVENTORSLawtBOOWa AFTERNOON 2lEA.^^^pg^ Copyrighted, 1888, by WOBUP'S DtBggssABY MBDICAI, ASSOCTMOK, Propr^rs.' a a TSH ORXGXKTAXi Said Mrs. D. to Mrs. a. She's changed indeed, but then, yon see, V^^PS She put aside dbjectioiw^,, ^JKSJI^I And tried that famous remedy. Which did so much for you and meb Pierce's Favorite Prescription.* debilitated and overworked women, Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is the best of all restorative tonics. It is a potent Specific for an those Chronic Weaknesses and Diseases peculiar to Women a powerful teSl and nervine, it imparts vigor and strength to the whole systemf It promnttv cures weakness ofstomach, nausea, indigestion, bloating, weak back. nervW prostration deblUty and sleeplessness. It is carefully compounded by anISS rienced and skillful physician, and adapted to woman's delicate oSinizatioT Purely vegetable and perfectly harmless in any condition of tte svltem Favorite Prescription'' is the only medicine for women, sold bydru'erfsts. under a positive guarantee of satisfaction in every case, or tric /*i M\^**siHS3f This guarantee n'as been printed on tHe botttSwr^erIS?ffihiuU out for many years. *wt""*u && UTTLE LIVER PILLS. Puri,y ^J v^une^a^v Veaetablfi and Perfectly Harmle.