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JBAVEWIN TIBET. e ,UFFERING3 AND ESCAPE OF 6HUENRY SAVAGE LANDOR. . r,..ftb Intrepid Trawl.rWha " ?f etaro.d From the Coantry Or.od Lama-HU Tortnre. and ..lDrySavaoLandor returned to his aHoronceafewdaya ago from b9 ,u , TT,o(lition to the unex- rlortu v . ,. uu ft vnar aero. little ua 4U"" Mr l!aulor arrived at the Tibetan L oreiared for a two years ah ntlc 1 ..Ligation. He had a quan- W food specially compounded by hit 1; clotbiuR which his many travels SiSSfto t0 Pvide and a com. Vof 80 native Hindoo servants, he theory Korean. His proponed m ....a mt nerilous. From foar, ioorD y::;.r from illness one after the land of natives who SS cut with Under fell behind or i .way until only two remained One of those would not ne u7 Landorand is uowu wu.v vw- ftTjCIJ , able to penetrate far in. 'Jrinto the interior of Tibet than any bite man had ever been before. He wfldeconPlctoand comprehensive maps dra and surveys of every foot of territory passed over. tu ' i,v tho natives, his instru- ' . Mm broken, bis diary, which up to the timo cf bis capture he had kept complete. was taken from him, and his . K .mn wmo confiscated. Then iT.be toelyttlld. cf Tibet the while man was tortured as a uevn, wuu, i tmmnlnd uDon bv crea- t,miihinrd in themselves all tarts wuv , . . j.,fiiifTMirft of men coined to the absolutely unfeeling cruelty of wild beasts. . t- urm,i ho tnnst have enccumbed IU l" bad there not come, Bonie months after his disarPronce, news to Almorah," a little VlliaRO on mu uum uwv.v, where white men were anxiously await- HENRY SAVACE LAKDOK. ing tidings. Tibetans, who bad come down to trado in sulphur and food, ro ported that a white man was to have beeu beheaded far in the interior, who had shown such indifference to pain that the Tibetans thought him a devil, and finding all their threats of no avail to break hid spirit they were carrying him about from tribo to tribe of their nomad people trying new means of tor tnre and new devices of pain. Instantly Dr. Wilson and Mr. Lark in, Englishmen, and Feshkar Karak Singh Pal, nephew of the raiiwar of Askoto, organized a relief party, traveling by forced marches. Though treacherously lent astray by wandering tribes, they at last found Mr. Land or in a dying condition. Dr. Wilson exercised all his skill to revive the sufferer. After three hoars of treatment Landor was able to tell of some instruments he had manag ed to bury ere he was captured and of, the precious portfolios, cameras and maps of which ho bad been despoiled. I3y heer force of will he had made tho na tives give up to him a camera which they bad not broken. He had then turn ed it upon them and procured photo graphs of their diabolical employment of binding his servant on the rack. In a photograph taken of him at the timo of rescue one sees no semblance to the fea turea of his last picture taken beforo leaving Lngland. The smooth skin is seamed, scarred and furrowed from burns and slashes, the hair is burned and singed into a matted shock, one eyo is withered to a mere wizened slit, the aeaa is drawn on one side by the para- IJZing of the tondnna of th duced by his beiniz bound to a bent and twisted sapling and dragged by ponies u mat condition. Mr. Lanuor was made by his tortur- s to ride for 80 miles in a eaddlo Punctured with iroikea. Onnof thno en fered tho base of the enine and disabled Jim so that he will never, as long as o lives, le out of intno nain. lie was labbed -to a- tree for three days wunout rood or drink. - Of this the evi deuces are still In inn- n th iivM and lacerated flesh of bis ankles and wnsts. It was in this state that be was rescued. "But did you not tool fcaln?" I asked -u recently. "Did you never cry out ia anguish?" "To feel pain ia weak," Mr. Lander iea. -i d0 not allQW mygetf to feci. 0 Cry OTlt WnnM liftA VthA moriAfla fTn - w " " till v V lSVVU UIHUUVDiit ine least sign of suffering would have rn aeth to me and to my servant I WM tOO hfAvllv 1lUn ,lft. lntMlln Reveries to lose my chance of escape 7 an instant's relaxation of mind. I do not mind it. To suffer it what I ray for """unave gained. The price is paltry ; "isnothim? " . "How long were you in recovering com your wounds?? . , v "J throe days recovering. "With Kd food, rent, care and cleansing for was Ju a frightful condition I camo around safely. On ih fnnrth da I dii- ptched runners to tbs nearest ; station which news oould bt sent home. llil'l S When my portfolio, my precious diarr. my water colors and my maps arrived, I set off immediatelr. Howavcr. t tm lutTer constantly from my experience on tho rack and in the saddle. The baHO or my spine is fractured, and I never am allowed to forgot a day which, after all, Is not eo very far off. 1 am ushained of showing suffering, and besides I have uwr been ill since I was 0 years old." 'Do you think you will ever really recover?' ' 'I am certain that I shall not. It is impossible. The doctor says that I may regain tho Bight of one of my eyes, but among ' the collection of 83 wounds which I brought out of Tibet there were a number any one of which would have finished an ordinary man. If an animal were in the condition I am in at present, we Bhouid snoot him. " MI see that your eye does not appear to bo blinded. It is only shrunken and a trifle dim." "Oh, no; it was merely withered in the intense heat. The white hot irons were held just close enough not to touch tho skin, though they shriveled the life in the eyeball, I shut my eyes tight as a vise, and. so Baved the ap pearance, but the nerves were killed and I . have no control over the voluntarry muscles. Tho irons were changed con stantly, amid the shrieks and jeers of the natives, and I suppose the agony was great, but I was occupied in won dering how I could get back my sight sufficiently to see to focus a camera." "Are you dictating your book?" "No; I write it all in manuscript I -would not dictate. I write for two hours a day, a few moments at a time."- Helen Zimmeru in Chicago Record. HER LONG TRAMP. Mr. Uradshaw Walked From ltock nui, 8. CM to Wanhlogton. Mrs. Agnes Dradsbaw, 56 years old, who walked to Washington from Rock Hill, S. C, was recently furnished transportation to Brooklyn by Sanitary Officer Frank. Tho woman, who was born in Scotland, came to Brooklyn in 1861 and has lived thero with a mar ried son during recent years. Her Bon, Joseph Bradshaw, who lived with his wife at Rock Hill, was taken sick sev eral months ago, and his mother went to sco him. Sho says ho died on tho 23d of August, and when his widow did not treat her exactly right sho deter mined to walk back to Brooklyn. Mrs. Bradshaw said she thought sho would walk because she did not want to have her son in Brooklyn spend so much money for car faro for her. When she left Rock Hill, she says, she had about $4 in money, and during her four weeks on the road she managed to pay for every night's lodging she was fur nished. Many nights 6he stopped with colored people and paid 5 or 10 cents for the nrivileco. Sho also paid for most of her food, and when her money was nearly all gone 6ho found it neccs Bary to dispose of a coat nnd other gar ments. During a recent rainy spell sho paid 75 cents for four days' food and lodgings at the house or a colored tarn ily in the country. WTheu she reached Wflfihincton. she bad 35 cents in her pocket book. It was a little before sundown wnen she reached here, and, instead of stop ping, she thought she would wend her way as far as Baltimore. But soon aft er sho had crossed rionda avenue, walking on the Baltimore and Ohio frnrka. nioht came, and she was so footsore and hungry that sho concluded to Eton and rest. A rnlnred woman, standing at tne gate in front of her house at Moutello, attracted her attention, and this worn an, who proved to be Colonel Carson's stenmother. Mrs. fcllen Carson, wei corned her to her home and made ner comfortable for the night. After eating supper the weary wanderer retired and enjoyed a good night's rest. In the morning she was fed, and the kind hearted colored woman accompanied her to Dolice headnuartera Sanitary Officer Frank beard ber Btory and fur nished her transportation, as already stated. Washington Star. AN ALASKAN POSSIBILITY. T UmlA That There Will J iubcu Blooey In Gardening There. In thedavs of the movements of great nf crosDectors f rom one gold dig nities to another on the Pacifio slope there were 6hrewd men wno ionuweu nnd mado comfortable fortunes raising . ..ii food crops and Belling their products to the miners. Information gatucreu ey the government goes to show thnt thrre will be a considerable field for this kind of profitable enterprise in AiaL-n Contrary to the impression which many at homo have formed, this land of glaciers and snowarms nuu uv riprap below zero has a period oi long, hot summer days sufficient to grow fine A,rif matnrinc vegetables. . There are rich valleys in Alaska where Bplendid returns from potatoes have been obtained by tne misHiouBc The most of those who go will to gold seekers. ..Probably not one man in 1,000 ,.-ni think .tnrnina to Alaskan agri- nra hnt that one will have a bonk account far larger than the average of the 009. He will have la . marK w Rhanrb all he can raise. He will .iv.t Mi own nrice. The lowest estimate put np6n the number of peo i v, eii en to the goldfields this season is 100,000. The Canadians think that it will be nearer 250,000. Officials of the United States coast survey say there will be great money in gardening In Alaska this year. W. u. a. in o Louis 0 lobo-Democrat. Wsmtn'i "Kmnnclpntlon" Fight. twm rtrioriv. the would be motorman. has boon taken off the brake, and she no longer controls the power on an elec tric car. No complaint was made of her work, but the male employees made s fuss, saying ,that her position on the front platform kept a man ou oi and so to keep peace in his foreo the su perintendent was obliged to let her go. LI HUNQ CHANG ON TEA. Oow the Celestial Diplomat Beferred tht Question to Japan. Upon tho statesmanship of Li Hung Chang will depend in great measure the solution of the muddled questions cow argued in the far cast. His diplomacy and the strict care that China's grand old man gives to details are evldenoed in his .treatment ! of a smaller question that has been submitted by many lead ing tea; merchant in America, among others boing the great house of Thomas Martindule & Co. cf Philadelphia. One might think that while the Eu ropean dog9 of war are baying to be let looHe to tear the Celestial Kingdom into little bits the minor matter of tea would escape the notice of even Li Hung Chang. Letters were written to his ex cellency recently, or which the one from Thomas Martindalo & Co. is a fair sample It incloses advertisements taken from 'magazines showing the ef forts being made by a syndicate to cap ture this market for Assam and Ceylon teas to the detriment of the Chinese and Japanese product, comparing the meth ods employed in the cultivation, manu facture and preparation of teas. Tho matter concerned the empire of Japan as deeply nearly as it did that of li Eirsa cnAKG. China, and Li Hung Chang, involved in tho present difficulties, determined to have the matter attended to 'without China's interference. Ho diplomatically referred the letters and advertisements to tho Japanese government, knowiug that they would bo forced to take ac tion, and that in so doing they would involuntarily remedy the threatened evil for China. So that little Japan will, in spito of herself, bo fighting China's tea battles, and when the great er battles that threaten occur the mer chants of this country look to Li Hung Chang to dispose of them in the same simnle. ditjlouiatio way. New York Journal. NOVEL WALKING STICK. It Is a, Wonderful Fiece of Carving by an Iowa Convict. President Soden of the Boston Base ball club was recently pre ( uted with a walking stick on whi : appear the pictures of every men'. r- : the pennant winners of last soaso i. ' - t auo is also adorned at the ton,i..': io familiar countcnanco of Manager 1 . :n!c Selee. After the Bostons bad v ..u the pen naut nn admirer of the club, who is in Armosa county jail, Iowa, slarted in to mako a nresent to the president of the club. His name is Moran. The cane it self is a very pretty article. It is about 8J feet long. The diameter at the top is about 1 H inches. At the tip it is not more than half an inch. It is of white birch. The top of the stick is mounted with horn, pet with mother of pearl. Directly under this appears two crossed bats, resting between which is a ball. On a streamer floating across these is inscribed "Pennant winners of. 1897. On the other side is the largest of the nictnres. that of Manager Frank O. Se lee. The name is picked in with India ink. Captain Hugh Duffy's face comes next down the line. Nichols and Ber gen, the star battery, are next. Under these are Klobedanz and Veager. Lewis nnd Charley Ganzel occupy the next lower places. Tcnuey occupies a posi tion alone, as do Lowe, Long, Collins, Hamilton and Stahl. The entire lot of pictures were first carved and then picked in with . India ink. President Soden is highly pleasod with the gift New York World. Left nil Seal Cap nnd Took a Straw Hat. Sealskin garments ore hard to find on all trains going in or out 01 Canada Binco the customs officials have received orders from the treasury department to KAiza all seal garments coming from across the border. At Rouse's Point recently a gentle man from New York going to Montreal stepped off the train on which be was a passenger and went to a nearby hotel for breakfast. Tho proprietor 01 tne no tel. noticing that he wore a sealskin cap, asked him if he was aware that if htk tnnlc the can to Canada without a nermit he would have to leave it there. Just then tho bell rang for his train to staTt, and he grabbed a hat hanging on a nearby hook and left his seal cap at the hotel. When he reached his train, he was surprised to find that he was wearing a straw hat New York World. irkm Bjw.i Walk." i Lines suggested v by the recent . par ticipation of Mr. "William K. Vander tilt in a socioty caae wain: Oh. Tng ro' sold trimmed ruier 'long! We wants no common at eel. An wlf a gilt planner put De rag time In to' heel. Detn people In Chkxigo tow a Wlf iity ffwineter wilt When dey byafcft of de cakcwalk dat waa led By BruUmH VandunbUt. To' leaves yo' tas'e to possum home. Dey gives yer terry pin. Be drinks dey fltzea like dey put A sidlits powdah In. pen rasters Is on'y jes' ir show. Dnh won' be no one kilt. Da's mighty enr'ns oake walk ld By Brmthnh VandahMlt. - 'Washington Btar. HIS STRANGE MALADY WILLIAM ALLEN WAS STRICKEN DUMB WITHOUT WARNING. Pbyalclana Saj II Ia Aphaala, Canaed by Tlnjr Wood Clot on the llraln Is Re training Speech by Kffort of Will Un dentamla Word Addressed to IIIui. Woidi aro bluwly reluming to Wil liam H. Allen, the stationer of Brick Church, N. J., who was recently stricken with aphaxia. The man is helping to cure himself by the power of bis own will. He repeats the alphabet, reads the paper,' attempts to name the objects about him and seeks to marshal straggling words into sentences. The strange affliction came upon him when be went down stairs a few morn ings ago. He tried to greet his wife. Tho words "good morning" were what he would have said, only tho syllables would not come to his lips. II? could mako only inarticulate sounds. Mrs. Allen sent for Dr. T. N. Gray, the fam ily physician, who at once recognized a case of aphasia. The part of tho brain which presides over language the third frontal convolution bad been clogged, probably by some fatty substance. Mr. Allen had a fit of sneezing only a few minutes before he lost the power to ar ticulate. This may have been in part re sponsible for the clot upon the brain. Dr. William Pierson, who was also called in consultation, agreed with the diagnosis made by Dr. Gray. Mr. Allen understands nearly every thing which his wife and the physicians say to him. When he attempts to forco a sentence in reply to the language ad dressed to him, he finds that the words which be needs have slipped away. He has tho thought, but the form is gone. His condition is like that of a child. The infant knows the meaning of the words which are spoken to him long be fore he can speak. The impression made by the mind of the child is not strong enough to act as a guide in pronouncing the syllable. Mr. Allen is beginning to learn lan guage all over again. In many cases, however, by a Btroug exercise of bis will, the words come back in twos and threes. He is able to form disconnected sentences. Ho cau write, too, after tho manner in which ho talks. He has been much assisted in his ef forts at learning words by his wife. He began recently by reciting his alphabet A orimer was shown to him. His face brightened at the sight of tho charac ters, and then ho began to recite A, B, C, D, and so on without tho slightest hesitation to the final letter. lie seemed to feel much encouraged. He is a man of rugged health, his physicians say. He is tall, broad shoul dcred, and his cheeks are florid. He does not go to business, but takes walks about his home, at 22 Halstead street, East Orange, N. J. He went about the streets looking at the horses, the wagons and the trees and tryia to forco him self to recollect the names which wcro rnnnfirtpd with the objects which he saw. He went down to his store a few days pgo. ills cierKs were surpnseu iu no biui. " They were more surprised when he picked up a pad of paper and wrote down tho following orders: 'Arthur stay store. Freeman say stand." Tho first of these sentences meant that one of his clerks who had been scut around town on errands should remain in tho store. The other meant that Freeman, another clerk, should have charco of the newsstand near tho rail road station at Brick Church. He went to the telephone in his home the other day. Mrs. Allen called up the 6toro. The word which is always asso elated with a telephone came to his lips. Hello!" he said. ne tried to talk, but could not express the idea in his mind. His wife told the clerk at the store that her husbanU was better and started to hang up the re ceiver. Mr. Allen took the. appliance from her and. said "Goodbyl'; into the transmitter. The hanging up of the tube of hard rubber had suggested a word bo strongly that he pronounced it almost involuntarily. . Dr. Gray called upon Mr. Allen, who wrote on a slip of paper the words, "Recover soon?" The physician told him that be was not certain, but that he honed that he would. Mr. Allen 6iniled. He understood the words per fectly. Dr. Gray then said: "Ton must take a long rest. Vlou must go away from business." A look of eager earnestness came into the man's eyes. "I can do it," be said ouickly. , "Whenever Mr. Allen has a sudden impulse to 6ay a word," Eaid Dr. Gray to me. "he can pronounce it If he had in the sentence 'I can do it' the first connected sentence he has yet uttered stopped at the. words 'I can and tried to recollect, be would have been unable to nroopfd. fnrther. " Mr. Allen was at home when I called the other afternoon; He came to the door id response to my ring. He smiled and attempted, evidently, to say "Good nfterndon " The fact that he saw a stranger before him seemed to em bar rass him.' He mattered something in coherent and nodded toward his wife. He then went up stairs. His physicians had forbidden him to attempt to talk to strangers.1 ' Dr.. Grat told ma that it might be mouths beforo his patient entirely re mverod Air. Allen has ) everything in his favor. New York Herald. ; t Bonnttoa on Rabbit Scalp. TbecommiMionersof Sumner county, Kan., recently rescinded the order for a 8 cent bounty on rabbit scalps, as it was believed that the animals were being imported from adjoining counties. From Nov. 8 until about Jan. 1 bounty was paid on 187,000 6calps, it is said. Rab bits are still reported to bo plentifcl in the county, however. Ne'v lorx itio- one. MR. DONNELLY'S LETTER. II Give IIU Reaeoaa For Marrying Xflae Hansen, Ilia Stenographer. Ton ask me if it is true, as reported, that I am about to marry a lady, Miss Marion Olive Hansen, who has acted as my typewriter.' I answer 3 es. About three years ago she began to work forme in the office of the newspa- lOSAtrCS DONUELLT. per of which I am publisher and editor. She subsequently entered my household and assisted me for a year in my edi torial and literary work. I found her handsome, gentle, amiable, high toned, honorable, intelligent and of the highest moral character. She was born in Nor way 21 years ago of a family once very wealthy, but reduced by the good na- Jure of its head through indorsing for riends to poverty, which drove the children and grandchildren to America, where they have had for years a bard struggle with adverse fate. The young lady's poverty was tome not a disquali fication. It rather endeared ber to mo. And I have always felt more regard for those women who bad to support them selves than for thoso who were dandled in tho idle lap of luxury. Furthermore, while proud of my Irish blood. I regard the great Scandinavian race as the purest representative of the great original Aryan stock, to which all the people of Europe belong. They are the mother race of the fair haired and blue eyed inhabitants of the world, by whatever local name they may be called. I am very proud of tbo fact that aft er I had passed middle life a young la dy of prominent goodness and many ac complishments could seo enough in me to induce her to link her destiny with mine. This ia my auswer to your in quiries. Ignatius Donnelly in Chicago Tribune. HIS HARMLESS FIB. Senator Mason's 1'lan to UbTlate the Watchful Objection of Senator Chandler. The latest story about Senator Billy Mason concerns the energetic Senator Chandler of the Granite State. Long ago the large hearted Illinois lawmaker had a friend whom he has in recent years lost sight of. The friend lived for a time in Illinois, and later tried his fortunes farther west, in the 6tate of Colorado. There he participated in Ro publican politics, won the esteem of his fellow workers, and early in the present session of congress was named by Ma iorMcKinley as postmaster of his town. He bad been bere more than a weelc be fore the session, attempting to secure the appointment, aud, being a poor man, was running very low in purse before his name reached the senate. Then there was a long wait for confir mation, and bo was on the verge of de spair. At last be camo across the mend 01 his bovhood. Senator Mason, and to him he poured out the story of his tri als. He had purchased a round trip railroad ticket, the limit of which had nearly expired, and his nomination was still buried with a heap of similar oth er papers and little chance of its being reached. "Ju6t stay here for a minute," said Senator Masoa offer listening patiently to his story. The meeting was in the senate corridor, and the senate was abont to begin an executive session. The Illinois senator entered the cham ber and immediately called up the Col orado case, requesting confirmation at onca t "I object to that unless there are . 1. 1 Knmo nnnsnai circumstances, put iu Senator Chandler. "Well, there are unusual circum stances." replied Senator Mason, and he began to talk pathetically or bis friend's hardships. "Why. his wife died" "That is enough," interrupted Sen atnr Chandler peremptorily. "I with draw my objection." And the nomiua tion was confirmed then aud thero. "I didn't intend to deceive you said Senator Mason to Senator Chan dler a few minutes later, "but yon didn't allow me to finish my sentence. This man's wife died two years ago. Washington Post Woald Smoke In Good Time. Dnrrant was cool to the last; so was Cyrus, the Atlanta murderer. And, talk- Incr ahrrat cool men on the gallows, a murderer while ascending to the death trap was offered a cigar by a roan in the erowd. He accepted it, when another man shouted: "Don't you want a match, pardncr?'; "No, thanks,". was the reply as the sheriff was adjusting the black eap. "I'll light it when I get there." At lanta Constitution. Vaeclnatloa la Norway. . An effectual way of , compelling peo ple to submit, to vaccinatiun has been adopted in Norway. Citizens who have not bunn vaccinated, it is said, are not allowed to vote at an election. New York Tribune. The Essentials of a Novel. So long as the world holds two men and a maid or two maids and a man the novelist has abundance of material. William Black in Scotsman. AUIHTIOQAL. LOCAL IBWl. Ilaen to Let. Joseph Binton, Apply to 460 street. Fmall pill, safe pill, best pill. Be Witt's Little Earlj Riser cure billiousness, con etlpation, sick headache. SOhJCBUUEX & SOD21iGUN. Wated A reliable Hancock or Calu met man to band e machine, man with experience preferred. Liberal terms to right party. No loafers need apply. Singeb Mro. Co., 350 Fifth St. Ice Ilouae To Ileut r For Male. The ice hour e formerly need by the Val Blats brewery company on Elm street is to rent or for sale. Apply to the Yal Blats brewery company, Milwaukee, Wis. Clothes cleaning, dyeing, repairing. altering and pressing promptly and neatly done. All work guaranteed to proye satisfactory, Michigan Dye Wouks. Over 312 Fifth street. Prosperity comes quickest to the man whose liver in in good condition. De Witt's Little Early Risers are famous little pills for constipation, biliousness, indigestion and all stomach and liver trouble. SOPFKGRKX & BOPERGREN. Te the Public. I have moved my merchant tailoring shop to No. 117 Osceola street, Laurium, where I will be glad to meet my old friends as well as new ones. Suits made to order from best woolens at very mod erate prices. Steve Fuedhickbox. Fall and Winter Style. Having received a fine stock of cloths, suitable for fall and winter suitings, and overcoats I Invite an inspection. Suits made to order, fit guaranteed and the prices very low. Give me a call. M. Johnson, Over Sauerg Sample Room. Miss Allie Hughes, Norfolk, Va., was frightfully burned on the face and neck. Pain waa instantly relieved by DeWitt's Witch Hasel Salve, which bealcd the in jury without leaving a scar. It is the famous pile remedy. SoOEltGKKX &, SODERGREN. Lake Linden Mtace. Stage leaves Pearce's livery stable Lake Linden, every day at 8 a. m., 10 a. m., 1 and 4 p. m. Stage leaves McQure's livery stable, Red Jacket, at 8 a. m., 10 a. m., and 1 and 4. p. m. Thomas Pearce, James McCluex, Proprietors. Mrs. Mary Bud, Harrisburg. Ta., says: "My child is worth millions to me; yet I would have lost her by croup had I not invested 25 cents in a bottle of One Min ute Cough Cure. Ittu'es coughs, colds, bronchitis, pneumonia and all throat andluog troubles. It 1 pleasant to take, safe to use and sure to cure. SODERGREN & SODSRGREV. Portraiture. For while the wines of fancy still are free. And lon view this mitnio ehowoftboe. Time oas but half succeeded In bis theft. Thyself removed, thy power to soothe me left. Cowfu. You see how important it is that your friends poseera a "mimic show" of thy self, as the poet calls a really good por trait. You can obtain a perfect likeness and a most artistic picture at Herman's studio. Bneblen Arnica salve The best salve in the world for Cut, Bruises, Scree. Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever Scores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chil blains. Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and posiively cures Piles, or no pay re Quired. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by D. T. MacDonald. Fer vale. One pacirg drivirg mare, two nice cows, one two-seated carriage, one top buggy, one cutter, three buffalo robes, three string bells, one set double driyiog harness, two single driving harness, one seeder, one potato plow, one potato dig ger, one dek, one No, 4 Diebold afe, one case specimens, one sulky. For particu lars and prices see J, A. Danielson, Calu met, Mich. Mcott'a Uonrerl Orchestra. An organization long needed in this section is now an actuality, and as a re sult, first class music, rendered by ca pable performers, can now be obtained for concerts, church services, masses, etc., as well as for music of a lighter charac ter and for the ball room will be found unsurpassed. Mr. Scott, personally, will also receive a limlttd number of pupils on reed and brass ioRtruments, and on that most delicate of all instruments, the human voice. Address Fbepebick Scott, Jewell House, Calumet. Tie IflnlajMler' Mutual Fire Insurance company ol Houghton and Keweenaw counties, or ganised In 1890 according to the laws o the Btate of Michigan, will Insure proper ty ot ita members. Have paid firs losses) oyer $4,000 and dividends nearly $6,000 during the last seyen years to member of five years' standing. On the first day ot July the company had 541 mem bers, $460,03 worth of property in sured and $11,121.18 in treasurr. ' For further particulars apply to the under signed. Job Blomqvwt, President. A Lkx Lector tw, Secretary. Offlee, 448 Pint street, upstairs dB Jacket Lynn (Mass.; iwm.