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Jr niiv-'tJrlcx'il Wlr"" yv 1 JXD. me The It lull of Ihr Jeanne! Itt Exa.-dltle lid not .Mrua Failure. Dr. Talnrmpp, on Sunday, lv,k for liia uiViject, "The Jetinnette'a Peavl." In the ojx-nniK jiruver I)r. ThIidiip, rifTi-revl up a jx'lition for all who sidled the Arctic m as. After ttie nun! hymns he ieHn Lin sprmon, tikiii(z th text from Job, xxxvii., lO'-lw the Lreuth of G1 frost is iv-ii; aii'l the breadth of the waters jr htr item 1." lii the mxt ancient times, said Dr. Tii!ni?e, mi l went for h nril assitiied the w:iVr while at lar h-i1 took them ut ver'astinir mj.tivit j. Tne text is dfH -riii'ivo of an Arctic tea. It U the home wh-re all our wint.-rt are hatched I in nest of lt-cl-er under the lrKKUii(r wmj of the north wind. Ther.s are t'.ie castles w!iT the giants of .lie cold live; gre.it liattleinenta of g'l'er; ponderous gut. of gl s that swiiijT open lonjr enough to let adventurers sail in and then awii'g hhut, lenvirg the world to gnea ahont the loot shipping. Great cities of p.'thiec and ca tie and domes u.ij.1 bridges and Ht.tn:irj lifted np with nich Hplfiidors that Uie human eye isex tiiicruihhed if it gaze ! x long. From those, regions come ten silent I an He risers. What a contrast between their point an 1 their coming J July ft, 1M7'., summer dar, steaming out from Han Franeiioo Harbor. Hd's covered with enthusiastic nKvtatoni. Fort I'oint, with iU twenty -oun guns of habitation. Sleum whistles and dipping colors, and by telegraph the whole continent in ynipa'hy with the gallant undertaking. Now their return alter nearly five years ! The poor remains of a fragment of the expedition pissing imid lini h of sorrow ful thoiiHHii.lH, but the chief object of in tercut lieariug not the sound of gun and beholding not one uplifted hat of rever ence. "A failure !" say thousands of JK'Ople, To day I make most emphatic protest against that misleading cry of failure. I shall show von liow ttiut De Long's ex- four respects at least, was a III the tirif p'ace. it flefflrwjstrated be fore h!1 nati iim, and as neacJ'iiJi that our Ik Iv religion may lt carried ; into great woil.ily enterprise, etpi ci i'.ly in those which are seieiitilic. Clirist was not more ceitainly on board the ship on i il ilee ! hau he was on laiurd the Jean-n- tfe. The ice journal of lit- Long tells tremendous st"rv. The diary records that on the first Sunday out the men were gathered together, the articles of war were read and then Do Long says : "I read the I'lvinn service, and what pleased me much wiih to o'oserve that everv man not nli.solutelv on watch vol untarily attended." I sen on every H.ib bath the rccoi d : ' Il'-nil div'ne service," I cotne to the words, "We are in the hands of ( io l, and unless He intervenes we are loht." And now I c-ime to the 1 ..xt S.i'oh-.th tliev f.s-nton e.irtli : "13:? 1 day; eviivbodv pretty weak; rend part of ilisine h. rvice." Too weak to read more than a part. Far s-way from home, hiin.y and tret-zing aud sick and dying, they cm d unto the Lord in their dis tress, and He took thein right out of u Cold earth mfo a warm heaven. 'ro noiu c no expedition a failure which set up the hiui'H is of F.maiiuel on the iin nacles of iceberg till all natioiis saw the C;-iiiho.i s!an.l ir I. Was there no sianiti pance i-i the I n't tliat op monumental inii'or n-tW Delta E!igimH;r Melville ufterwurd over iXn of these men put up h cress on the cotd rore'uP.J. c' ! the world, the beautiful svuihol of our glorious reliiroii? Oh, 1 was a gloiions success f. r Ie Long nnl liis lueu that they could carry this religion into great worldly nndertakii'g, all nations aud all ages to witness. Another preiit success in this Do Long expedition was in the overwhelming ex ample of courage phieh it h.is set tor the world and for tlw church. Iienieinher it was not going klt to tight men. It was not hke t;.,jouien which v. Ucm-tudcil or Iho "o'di-r"gou's; into battle. It was a more iiiRicnlt courage, .because r't was a contest with the dumb elements. The soldii r w hen in ordinary battle knows it is possible that the enemy may be cowardly and I tin, but the icebergs are never pai'icstruck and they are never afraid. The soldier know it is po-ihle that the enemy may be destroyed by a Hank movement, 'm't the Arctic Ocean was never flanked. The soldier knows it Ls possible that the enemy may get out of nminii!Htiou. but the Arctic always has enough ice for shot and ice for ;ju;is aud ice for thunderous borub.'rduient. It whh coMmge against the dumb element-, which show no quarter and never sur render, and lievtr die. In our times, when God w:nt to give nu example of courage, he si tids out a Livingstone or a Stanley into the torrid regions and into the Arctic a Fi ankli i or a Do Long and a'l AmMt-r a:id a Collins and all their gallant crew. I am fo f.l.ul fieie are giants btiil liviinr men a' ile to conquer hunger and cold and physical woe, that they may give the round earth to the glorious cause of geographical discovery. We have found at la-t how the woild is bom.ded. It is Imui.ded on the north and the south and the ensi and the west by courace of mau and the greatness of G od. We want more of that kind of couraee in our churches. This glorious example of courage which De I ig aud his men gave to the world and to the chip eh made their expedition forever and forever a magnificent success. Another success of this polar expedi tion is in the fact that it has persuaded the whole worM tluit it is now time to stop pushing in that direction. It is : great thi.ig for the world to know when it has struck the impossible. Never until now has every reasouuble and enter prising man been willing to call a halt. The impression has ceme iiivjii.i Ti.,-11 hop, fui of us that O.oj7iit.t mean the race t. nvy nna7.M., that way. aJalii'Tier private munificence nor gov ernment d authority pay another dollar v( allow auoth. r life to le lost in Arctic ixpeihtions, except in ent r rin-s like t'.ie Ore ly reli- f party. O 1 has sme r nervations. He must have some paths v'icre He can walk alone without leiug q .estioued by human inqiiisitiveness. The fourth' success fo- the De Long Pa-ty was in the denioiistration which t i- v gave to all the earth a d motistra- tlon more powerful than was ever Iwrt'ore- r'Vca of the fact that the dad are iurs. TiiiV this long funeral march around half the world, f r m Sileri: to Russia and f.oni Hussi.i to Germany and from G-'rii: v.iy ht re. 'vhile one body isshipped nt our port fx r Liverjxxl and has to It? two WH-ks mole in the march of death? Vhy not allow these eallant m'n to sleep wLere they fell? Neither private nor governmental Urgess can build any such s iipei , ions monumei'.t for them as are u.'..;f ted splendors around the North Pole, fcul there is no sarcophagus like Pole, f'l hat J that (I eternal centrealmeut ! Lienten- a.t 11 will n. tCM i p and his men, whose lnxlies e I brought back, are sleeping ;i a grand r Westminster Abbey. voice of humanity says, "Bring i of those recovered to their own Still, tk. home . lard, p t them beside their kindred. Nevr sir.ee G.nl hnag the world on n 'thins has He go impressed ns as by fiese eight thousand miles of obsequies w th til- nations uncovered saying "OotlspeH-4" to the procession. Let dust gt back so far as possible to kindred d ist, aud if there beauv of the dead uu c ainicl 1 -t the Unite! States gove-rn-m nt I? a m ther to the homeless dea-1 a : .lgitherthem into the Naval Cemetery at Ai.narx'lis where she ha eathered so eii m- .il...ro TV nnt r "'WhAt a m-ftat waste of lie ! There ha been uo waste, etkl if these men had lived one hundreel 'ars they never could bo thoroughly impressed u; on tne nauons asiuey e low impressed it the triumphant and eWtrifvirc fact that the dead are A we close this vommn or crystal lography let n rejoice that another l. A r.l l.nman cnffcrincr ia t?ndrt- Nine-tenths of the shelve of the world's i t . it.i triih the volumes of uff-ring adorned with vignettes repre aenting m take an ' rctic ex- peditiot . Overto ping a' Other rolumea of thia library is the ice journal of the XI '1 U a t7 in"." - wotM-a k Explored He who put on" .gaiSTthe Arcua suflering of thia world that tie mignt una i- 11 rmr race, yet ra troten by the world! peglect. The first riff net ta of that ice journal was a dUtrraceful mar.per and the lat au agonizing crnv, God hasten the time when the volnme of the world' HUilirimr shall le cloned ! Ti lth no Drop of ?fro Blood. The Selma Ala.) Tim' tell the fol losing winjrnlar a tor : Mr. Isaac Frank, a white man, was indicted hj the last Grand Jury under the charge 'i living in unlawful wedlock with a uejsrro woman. Mrs. Mary Ann Frank, wife of the ftretlHt-d, ' preneiit ; alo her alleged nKdlier, Lm-iuda Weaver, eol ored Lucindii was sworn, and put npon the witncsH-htand. Her testimony threw new lit?lt njxin the c.ixe and canned a little flutter of excitement anil mrjiritie among those r.res nt. She poke in a htruifrhtforward manner. Not withstand -inir I.nr"ula has alwny l-"i known us the mother of Morv. it turns out that tlj yonn woman's parei.tHjfe is purely white. Lucn.ila ti-tine'l that stie was not the mother of Mrs. .Mary Frank and that Mrs. Frank wa given to her when an infant three daiso'd; that a promi nent gentleman in South Carolina brought j the young child anil pre-eiitcd it t Ivieituhi, rerpiesting tliat she raiKe it as her own. Hhe stated further that the child s-as the illegitimate offspring of an arihtocratic woman, arirl it was her brother who pave the infant to the old i;ee;reK to tdiield his sister's retmtati' 'ii ami conceal her shame. The old negres i brought her charge to Alabama, claim ing her as a daughter, and the r al ! truth of matters very prohshly never j would have been uncovered to the world but for Mary's marriage to the white man and the ind .ctment issned against : him. Mrs. Frank, no'v grown into matnre womanhiMxt, has Hu'ht, straight l hair, a fair complexion, and e'ear, Uric ! eyes, and doenu't bear the re mote si l' ace j of Afncin 11'mmI. A iiiiiuber of gentle i men visited her recently, conversed w ith ' her, and decided that nhe was beyond doubt it white woman. After Lucinda'a testimony was heard, H dicitor I'itts agretd to a verdict .f not g"'- the hapjiy twain departed in j American Mcr The creditrfwaTing India, China, and, indeJFentire Kast to American coujjrwdiie to Elias II. Derby, a HsT. ni IT-!!'. merchant, born in the port in In I'M ho dispatclied the ship Grand Turk, under ('apt. Jonathan In g rsoll, to the C.i pe of Good Hot o on a mercantile reconiioisHance, to discover the need and capacity of the Eastern market. She returned in less than a year with the information sought, was quickly reloaded, and on the 2s:h of November, 175, cleared for the Isle of France, with instructions to proceed thcni'e to Canton by way of liatavia. The ship was laden with native products ti-h, flour, provis'ons, tobacco, spirit and made a successful voyage, return ing in June, 177, wiih a cargo of teas, silks, and nankeens, the first vessel from New England, if not from America, to enter into competition with the incor porated companies of the old world. Her success seems to have 'electrified the merchants of Salem, ISostou and New York, and au eager rivalry for the trade of the Orient ensued, with the result that when Mr. D. rhy's ship Astrea en ten d Canton two years later, ajie found 15 American vessels there taking iu cargo, four of them belonging to our merchant, how ver, who had not lveu slow in improving his advantages as pio neer. This was nit the only pioneer work that he did. H,s b:ik Light Horse, in 17-t, first opened lAmericau trade with Russia. In 1788 life ship At lantic first displayed the American hg at Su;it. Calctitti and Homhay. An other di. the same in Ham; the third was the tirt to ..pen trade with Mocha. In 179i). it is said, his vessels brought into Salem x.js, 1 pounds ol tea, these ventures being among the first in the tea trade. Too Much Freshness. Gen. Joseph MoCook, the dark-browed warrior - Colorado, is relating uue at his Western exjieriences, which, he ob serves, taught l.ini the inadviMtbility of too much fr.'shness. "About a year ago," says he, "I had a long journey to take through the wi-dest part of Arizona. The country wis full of Apaches who were going about in small bands steal ing anything they could lay their hands ou and doing whatever they could in a general way to make things enthusiastic for travelers. 1 hat is to say I heard a good deal about these Apaches, but as I didn't cee any of them 1 thought it was t-imply a case ef scare. My elriver was a quiet Califomiau who didn't say much, but ran the exeditioii to suit himself. Every night when it came time to make camp he wemld turn off at right angles with the road and drive for a couple of miles iu that direction before unhitching the horses. I kick el about it of course. I said it was a useless expenditure of time. Besides it isn't funny to ride over a per-f- ctly unbroken country. It is too much like Wing chucked up in a blanket. But the more I swore the less attention the driver paid to me. Well, one morn ing when we struck back into the trail we foi'nd a place where there had been r camp the night bcfon 'I here bad also been a tiht with the Indians. I never K-t eyes on such a horrible sight. The w hole party of white people had leen kille-d and "fearfully mutilated. All of them were scalped, some of the bodies were dismembered, and one of the wo men was disembowelled. The stock had been run off and the wagons ran sacked. Those people had campeel alongside the trail, and the Indians, who are on the lookout fer such parties, had found theni. My driver didu't get ar.y more of my views of camping. Fie could have driven to the Gulf of Mexico after that if he h.ul wanted to." - ' A Profitable Steamer. The sale of the steamer Senator for a coal hulk to New Zealaud finishes the active career of one of the meM success ful vessels afloat. She was built at New York in 18b. and ran fer a short time ou the E tsteru coast, but during the gold excitement of California she was sent to San Francisco, where she arrived in SeptemU r, 1810. with over five hundred iaseneers. rvmn alter arriving mere she was placed on the Sacramento river, making three trips a yreek, and. with S-V5 cabirt passage and gl-5 for standing room on eleH'k, she soon paid for herself ten times over. In f ct, her receipts averaged close to S20 000 a trip, and for four months, fully $50,000 a week. She is known to have carried in this trade, over one million passengers. She has made more gold than she could carry aud has outlived scores of the finest steamers afloat, which were wrecked or went to decy, while the old Senator, one of the few remaining links tf the "days of old, the days of gold, the days of '49." pi xlded along successfully, until she fi nally had to give way to the march of improvement and to the new and more economical style of craf t, the steam pro peller. The Sneak Ihief Cracker. "This is the latest, I guess," said a ; dealer in novelties, showiug a reporter what lookeei like the motto crackers that ; aer pulled apart at evening parties with a 1 sharp report, disclosing a sentimental ; motto. "It is a motto cracker, ne said, ; "with the motto left out. They are also I tnimls the bit of candy that the motto is nsnally wrapped around. These t crackers are for the nse of the eommer- 1 cial travelers or others who have to travel a great deaL They are made so , as to produce a report as loud as the ex plosion of a pistol. The way to nse the cracker is to fasten one end on the door bv wetting this little surface of gum with the tongue, aud the other end to the jam of the door. The result is that the door cannot be ooened bv a hotel sDeak thief, if he picks tbe lock or shoots back the bolt over the lock, without pro ducing a report that will tiroue the oc- cupant of the room. The alarm cracker i ia nonnlar narticnlarv anions iewelrv , aa w salesmen." " At PAimva. Gjn. Gordsn's parting words to Nubar Pacha were: "I will save the honor of Egypt" Nub j replied : "Never mind Egypt; Nubar Pacha save the s - THE SFEAKEB'H ETE. DlfflralilM I" CaieM It Tha dvaata. I ateblaa tha fwatrahar'a to. A Washington correspondent : Much depends oo catching the Speaker' eve. Strange aa it may appear, a mem ber in the remote part of the House with a feeble voice sometime catches the Speaker' eye, notwithstanding a dozen otters near the Sreaker are shouting and gesticulating wildly and doing their ntmost to attract hia attention. The recognition is usually made under an agreement with the Speaker, made, perhaps, days before. The favored mem-U-r has a bill io which there may be millions or not; but reasons there are hy he shall have the floor at a particu lar" time. He asks, especially in the closing hours of the seasion, for unani mous consent to call up the bill and put it on its final passage. Amid the rush and rnmpns memlx-rs are generally willing to have this done, as it tends to create an opxrtunity for others. In this way some of the most important and the worst legislation tak place. A gentleman familiar with legislation by Congress forty years ago relates an i,!..r..stiiu7 incident It was near the j c'ose of the session. The nonse of i Representatives, sitting in the old hall, was, as usual, in confusioD. Members ' in scores were trying to catch the ! Six-aker's eve for the Wnefit of favorite bills. Every one waa trying his best, and nothing" was being done. Our v,-t-eran recollector, who had the privilege of the tl xr, met ia the corridor an out- sid. r deeply concerned for the passage of a bill for which ho had lalored the entire session. It had passed the Hecate, was not specially opposed, and waa meritorious, as he lielii ved. "I will vou so much," naming aronndsum for these days, "if you will up. lie sai'i. - 11,8 gentleman ng wtarMd to the nuw.vMnjIagatukia was momentarily jenin- Seemingly every memlM qq the floor trying to er's eye. "Had I" said of prominence, "a bill for I cared enough to make the at- empt, I would get the Speaker to recog nize me. "Wrait a moment aud you shall be gratified. " The outsider's bill was produced and placed in the ha d of the eye catching member. "Mr. Speaker!" waa heard from his quarter. "The gentleman from Blank," was the immediate response. '" "I ask unanimous consent that the bill nunjlered blank be put on its pas sage. It is a worthy bill. We ought t piss it." "There being no objection the motion is carried," said the SjH'aker. "The Clerk will call the yeas and nays." The rules were a little different from what they are now. The roll waa ealkd, and the bill passed. Going outside, the promoter meets his anxious friend, who was wholly ignorant of w hat was going on. "Your bill ia through and the work is done." "Meet me at Corcoran t Riggs's banking house to-morrew morning at 10 o'clock and I will giv- yon the promised fee. " The summons was kept and the money paid. After Congress adjourned the promo ter, meeting the eye-catching member, said : "How did- it happen that you caught the Speaker's eye when so many others were vainiy trying?" "I had arranged for it days before, but the intended business having leeu intrusted to another, w ho was then trying to have the SjK'.nker reeegiiize him. and failing every time, I just wished I had a chance to show those who took the busi ness from my hands what a mistake they had made, but I had no bill to do it with. If I did you any good I am glad. You mnst have an understanding with the Speaker in order to catch his eye when everybody is trying to do it." A l ion's Intelligence. The sentinel system of the . crows is very complete. Their guards display a remarkable degree of jndgment anil in telligence. '1 liey will raise a cry for a man with a gun long before he gets in range of them, and they are equally wary of a man who creeps toward them. But a team may pass cioe by without disturbing them, and they will even let a man on foot pass unnoticed if he hasn't a gun aud goes boldly about his business. I hail a curious example of this when. I first begau to study their habits. I commenced by trying to shoot them, but though I had passed them close enough before, I could not get near them after I began carrying a gun. I went out with my gun every evening for weeks. I crept behind fences aud lay in wait in the bushes, but could never get a shot at them. One day. however, I struck upon a plan which I have since operated very successfully. I held my gun close to my side, the bar rel running down the side if my leg, and walked boldly down the road with out taking any notice of them. With their usual disregard for travelers, they let me pass close up to them, when I turned suddenly and fired. Now I can shoot a crow whenever I want to. It Was No (iood. There was a Chicago man who found out that he was not so peculiarly en- elowed by nature as he hael p".ptjecd. An inch more than usual woulet pro verbially be a great eleal on a nose. This man had it, ud in consequence he overrated his nasal importance. A test proved that it des not render him thril ling to the masses. He is a cigar maker by trad. Whenever he teok his walks ab-td he was gazed at in amazement. "If I am to be looked on as a curiosity," he reasoned, "it would be better to make a lazy living with my abnormal nose." So he took his big feature to the man ager of a tt?n-cent museum. "Very well," was the offer which he received; "I'll do just the same by yon that I do by any other new freak. We can't tell what'll catch on with the public. Yon can have a place on the platform for a week. If yon make a failure, I'll give von five dollars. If von hit 'em, I'll fix a square, liberal salary." "But now m l to kuow wneiner hit 'em?' the amateur curiosity asked. "By ftee- insr whether the folks stop to look at you. That s the test. iue nose was not potent. What had been novel in private life was almost disregarded in a professional. The man has returned to his cigar bench. The Soudan. The term Soudan is applietl to a region which includes the whole Nile basin as far south as the cataract below Khartoum, and also an indefinite stretch of country west of that and south of the Sahara desert. It is well watered and fertile, and is inhabiteel by several races more or less negro-like and, on the borders, by numerous trilies of Arabs. During the reign of Ismail Pasha it was brought under Egyptian sway by the able British snd American generals in the service of that Prince, prominent among whom were Sir Samuel Baker, General Gordon and General Stone. The slave trade was suppressed, some systematic efforts were made in agricul ture, and the annual overflow of the Nile was rendered harmless by a simple scientific apparatus. The country has great capabilities, bnt no present means of developing them. The onlv outlet for its products is across a desert, anc ine oniy way oi transportation is by camels. WAtKTsa into a FoBTT-VE. The mau who is all the time saying what he is going to do when he accumolats $5,000 seldom does it Ten years ago two poor ut honest young men, named William ! Henry and John Thomas, sat upon a rail fence trying to pry into the future. Said Wilnam Henry: "Whea 1 aceu- ; mnlate $5,000 1 am going West to buy a i herd of cattle, and in a short time I'll J be a ncn man. John 1 nomas aid not j reply, nut got down on tne ience ana went West while the walking was sood. , To-dav William Henry does not own a j solitary cow, while John Thomas has . more horned cattle out in Wvomingtban you could count ia a week. . i t I LONDON SENSATION. ANOTHLB Btcn urr kMita.SD. CAD1L IN T!.LrVr!;r?,,M " rmt Aw., rar-er Uaakani Aa. May fair, a London aocietv magazine pabube the foliowing:' "Another celebrated case will be that of the gal lant Earl 0f Fusion, who will be the wit Duke of Grafts. The Earl aeeka to get rid of bis wife. Hia contention is that the lady 'a first hnsUod was alive wtien she became Count of Euston, ia now a,ive aod can be produced. His appearance in the witness box will e 'gruy dramatic, for the ladv has seen aim jud declare she knows nothing ""on mm. The approaching trial will nvahe Tichborne case and be the sen eat.'A of the season, lie facta of the"matter are these: ihiiteen years ago Henrv Fitzrov, eldest of Lord Augtjitus Fitzrov, fell in r T tl womau known m "Kte y'bk." She was handsome and 6tylish IfcrPerSOri- and her mnnu,l i.l.snn.'-UM qaite sufficient to caitivat the vonth of enty-three. Unknown to bin fathf-r ho was Equerry to the Queen, he mar ed her. Most eh ge ignored the marriace. Others de- scritKHl the lride as the dunirhter of John Walsh and the widow nf "Mr imith." , In 18S2 the bridee-room's social rosi- tiou changed. Lrd Auenstns Fitzrov sncceeeled his brother as seventh Duke Urafton. IJnrv Fitzrov liecnmn e .v.ow WL-ur. Smith" K-came Countess Euston and filtlirtf Tlilctif.UMr.fnri.ftnn T?m mnV.l had already corns Wtween her and herT-- husband. They separated by Mutual agreement No fault being proved against the Countess since her marriage, the E irl iu vain sought an excuse for di vorce. The mysterious "Mr. Smith" has now appeared and the fouud. excuse is If the case fails Kate Cook will be Duchess of Grafton, and the title created for a mistress of a King will be borne by a woman of the town. The Duke of Grafton was made Knight of the Garter a little over a year ago. He succeeded his brother, who died iu the spring of 18S2. The late Duke was sixty-three years old and was member of Parliament for Thetford from 1S47 until 1852. In 1858 he mar ried Mary Louisa Anne, daughter of the third Lord Ashburton, and in 1863 succeeded tiis father as sixth duke. The first Duke of Graftou acted at the coro nation of James II. as Lord High Con stable r.f England, and commanded that monarch's forces in the action of Philip's Norton Lane. Afterward he esiwused the cause of the Prince of Orange aud received a fatal wound while storming the city of Cork in 1690. The third duke was an eminent statesman, who was Secretary of State and Prime Min ister of Engia- d in 1771. The present duke was born in 1821. Advice to a Young Man. No, son, you can't make up lost time. You can only do the work of one life rime iu a iife time. Yes, you may write six columns te Vay because you neglect ed to write your three yesterday, but you've discounted one day somewh?re about 35 or 40 years further ou iu ihe account You have about 70 year placed to your credit. Every day yon use or misuse is charged to you, and you can't get credit for two days to-morrow, if you waste to-day. Au engine three hours behind time, may reach the termi nal station on time, by ruunicg fifty miles au hour iujtcad of thirty, her schedule time. But when she gets in, she requires nearly all, or quite a'l, or many hours more than the three honrs she made up, in leing doctored for the strain on nerves aud sinews of steel, by reason of the extra effort and speeel. There's something prung here, a bolt started there, a journal burned out somewhere, she limps away to the round house, ovtrheated, rattier g in half a dozen placets, covered with grease and dust aud grime, with an engineer growl ing in his cab and a mas:er machinest grumbling as he walks around her. That's the way you "make np time," my boy. Believe me, you'll last longer if you run on schedule time day by day. You won't make people yell and hurrah aud you won't make such a grand, thunderbolt kiud of a show as if you would go botmiiug through the way stations, swinging along like a cyclone. But you'll go waltzing into the round bouse in supremely better style, with your steel bright and your brass shii.ing, and not a spot on your jacket, and reaely to throw another hundred miles over your shouller the minute the gong strikes. Just make vonr regular time, day by day, ray boy. The superintend eut knows what you cau do and what he wants you to do, and you can't treat yourself better nor please him more, thau to do exactly that much, without a mile wasted or a minute to spare. BrnDETTK. Horace Greeley's Bojhood. Ben. P. Poore, iu his Reminiscences, thus speaks of Horace Greeley: Horace Greeley's personal appearance was always a subject of remark from his boyhood. Roilic C. uallary, a member of Couress from Vermont, who was an able chan'-pion of the American bystem. used te narrate a visit of his to the printing office of a country newspaper at I'oultney, t., bis place of residence. His attention was attracted to a young compositor, who was rather awtwaraiy "sticking tvpes," aud who, though fnU grown, was evidently the youngest ap prentice in tne othce. tiis legs ran a good deal more than "a feet" through his pantaloons, the sleeves of his coat scarcely reached below his elbows, his hair was very white and flaxen, and he was, on the whole, in the aggregate, taken separately and together, the greenest looking specimen of humanity we ever looked at, anel this is saying a good deal, for "we keeps a looking glass." "That boy," said Mr. Mallary, "will make a remarkable man; 1 can't hold an argument with him on Masonry or anything else connected with politics." As Mr. Mallary was considered one of the ablest men in Congress, his remark canned me some surprise; und we not only "made a note ef," but took another lexk at the "devil' (printer's we mean), and could not bnt trace in the expansive forehead "a mind formed in nature's finest mould and, wrought for immor tality." It was vevrs afterward that we became aware of the fact that th.it boy was Horace Greelev. Ia a Bear Trap. The Janitor of tue Lime-Kiln Club announced at the last meeting, that some evil-minded person who had sought to ente-r Partidise Hall the even iDg before by way o?' the side doeir, bad put his foot in a ber-trap waiting there for just such an emergency. The jaws and teeth of the trj were stained with blood, proving that he fellow had been considerably aston hed in his mad ca reer. He had manured to pry open the aws and drag himself away, leaving nothing behind by which his identity could be suspected. , A vote of thanks was given the Janitor for hia vigilance, and the Secretary was instructed to advertise for information concerning the victim; If he will come forward aud state how it feels to step suddenly into a bear-trup, the club will present him with a recipe for removing the marks left bv the tettn. Raised the Roof. The Mayville Di patch give this flood incident: "AJ1 the distilleries were forced to close down on account of the water, but they are not much damaged, unless the material and machinery inside are hurt At one of these a quantity of whisky in barrels had been ttored in the upper story of the distillery. The water rose above it and lifted the whisky, which lifted the roof. The roof floated down street Whisky that is strong enongh to lift the roof off the distillery, is supposed to be a pretty good article, and this is the truest big whiiky Btory ever recorded." Bkttrb three hoars too soon than one minute too late. v . m Tha rtrmrtt OattaJ lW4 u tfc Bra.a autm t Pytkaaxbatra. A dipat-h Erom Paria aaya : The polioe here are convinced that tha ad vanoed Irish party have made Pari their headquarter ia Europe tor the prepara tion of their dyxuuaita ac hemes. Isapecy tor Moaer, attag under inatrSetioaa fxosaJ the Bntiah Hooae hecretary and aidel by a French eoamiMary of polioe, i watch ing the movements of a a pec ted I ri fe me re. The eaUonalist eofoay iarludea representatives of the thnee centre ct the Iriah Republican Brotherhood. The first sprtioa compriaea the former Feniana, Je Stephen, John O'Leary and Gederal MaeAdaraa. The laat named gentleman, in an interview, disavowed belonging tA i h aociety. Hia mission waa to connc si friend of extreme violent viewa, t rt was not hia duty to reveal their attempt, however nefarion or mis taken they night be. He was certain that other e tknalista shared thia view. Captain MaCflerty said the weak were justified in tAiag terrorism against the strong. He re pa dialed affiliation with Continental aerrel societies, ne sym pathized witentionary propaganda ism in Earo- because frelsnd was bene fited thereby; but nationalism, even the most extrem vwas not necessarily linked with nihilism or. anarchy. He denied that he was conspiring actively, but added that experience was valuable to prevent a n petition of former mistakes. The polict) have traoed the arrival of five transfer', or men belonging to the third or active section, the dynamiters, who have been told off for the next at tempts. Tly are all from America, and come frra the following places : inffalo, N. Y. Pateraon, N. J, Brooklyn, NY. T TheT-fkfc2,,' to be rnpllt of Mezeroff. Taoiher Irishmen under watch are CjrncSfg Cullimore, Eugene Davis and Casey. Jalj believed that-the dynamite i'jaiade aJ'XMontrouge. - The supposed rrsnafactureVL is registered as-! an authoriri-i chemical ilrij5n-. measure under which autliraaibu ia necessary isToofined to the making of dynamite. The instructor is believed to be a man named Brady, under the alias of "King." The Brotherhood meet in the Rue Conieille, Rue Saint Honore and Avenue Yictor Hugo. A Fortune lWAx, IjWfaM Of factory? It String. "Ion see that Iarg factory j it covers an entire .block. Half a million of money woaifln't buy it. Well, it was built by a little piece of cord not more than six inc'ies long." Here the speaker paused ..cvufi scrutinized the reporter's coan tenant for indications of incredu lity, not to say astonishment. "4Jut the narrator was talking to a man w nominee the introduction of the telephoue7a-s made it a pnjitof principle to be ready fdrl biii iniiig itu kv ueueve nu luai ue ueis. The speaker added: "Eight years ago ther) lived Tn the third story of a cheap tenement, irNew York city, a poor me chanic, whOjWas kept poor because he had a pissiofi for inventing; it amounted to a passion E He didn't drink and didn't travel with tfie politicians, aud all who knew his raimuy wondered why they should be. so poor. Time-passed ou, and still trfc man was Door, but at last he per fee tent an invention the simplest thing on earth and with his patent in his hand he went down town one day and called t-t the head of a house whose check was ;nrrent for five figures any where in 'the street? The inventor of fered to sell two-thirds of his patent for $20,000 if Uyj bouse would bind it-elf to put SIOO.OW into factories for producing tho little tung that he had .invented. The firm si ned papers in less than an hour from the. time of hearing the pro posal ! and iii another hour the inventor had conver ed the firm's check for 20, 000 into greenbacks. Lots were bought and a fa iory erected. The business speedily g w to gigantic proportions, and at len h the firm acquired all the rest of th. block, and covered it; with brick and ir.rtar, and now the irfventor is able to jA,:ciate with the millionaires V5 lr.0 little .'glove fastener a piece of cord abouilr'x inches long and a dozen little metil hooks or buttons is the thing that was invented." The Judge Flushed. A prominent Jndge and State Senator, who with his family was among the friends of Mrs. Cady Stanton, still felt himself called upon publicly to oppose the married woman's property bills which were carried through our legislature by the efforts of Mrs. Stanton and her co laborers. The judge made several speeches against tne bills, declaring that if wives were permitted a separate estate from their husbands it would cause dis sensions in families. The bills were passed despite the elo quent advocate's opposition. A few months later Mrs. Stanton met the judge iu New York. She held out her hand with a mournful expression of face, though, I doubt not, there was a twinkle of fun in her kind, bine eyes. "Permit me to condole withyou," she said. "Con dole with me!" exclaimed the judge; "on what ?" "On the great unhappiuess in your family the unfortunate differ ence between your wife and yourself." The judge Unshed, thinking that some busybody had spread slanderous tales concerning him. . "Why, what have you heard?" he demanded angrily. "Noth ing, nothing whatoyer," replied Mrs. Stanton; "only, as j-on predicted such dire family quarrels as Uie result of pass ing the property bills, and as they have since passed, I supposed yon and your wile must be on tne eve of divorce, The good judge laughed heartily at the practical joke. "You were right," he said; "I do not think anv trouble will come from those new laws." Texas Fence Cutters. A funny phass of the late fence-cut ting fcpecial session of the Texas Legislature is revealed in the fact now patent, tiat the Legislature really meant o do as little as ptssible to meet the difficulties that for so many months have disturbed the State. While the neb, ranchmen and large land-owners heU full control of the Senate, the smaller land-owners and mith them the fence-cutters, had the House. So when the House require!, -fjit land-owners should put gates in their fences every three miles so as to let fie little men get to mill and to water, tie Senate made tue penalty for not denig so as light as possible. In fact, few of the legislators seemed to care so much about the fences as to be on the fenoe themselves. The amount ap- propnatee for carrying ont the few laws mad: ia ridiculout 'y insufficient It is now stid that the Legislature was wholly unprepared to e'al with the sub ject and: that popular sentiment and opinion wire neither fairly presented nor representet. Things generally will wait probably ill tbe next N ovember elec tion, when', the fence question will be paramount n choosing members to the Legislature Tied Up. Sir Arthxi Welleslev Peel, who succeeds Mr. Brand the honors and emoluments of the Spakership of the English House of Ceamons, is the voungest son of the latejSir Robert Peel, who was twice Premf r, and was born in 18:19. The present baronet, Sir Roliert Peel, elder brothk of the new Speaker, is without a t at in the House of Com mons at prent, having been defeated as the consijvative candidate for Graves- end in Jnlyil S80. He is a political free lan.se, libera and conservative bv turns. and is alwail chsarimr his politics. He was such a tfendthrift in early life that Premier baiet, who had paid tens of thousands olds debts, tied up his estate as tightly asfoosTible, and left hia heir and names ai in a state of chronic im- peenmosity. Is propo; la to its size the Isle of Jersey ex aa many cattle yearly aa are contain m England. The entire island if at&ral would be but six and three-quarts miles each wav, and yet the censui 1S81 gives it 12,000 head of cattle, fcwing that the breeders of Jersey cafe manage to support one head of th fawn-colored dairy cows to eacn acro-eariy a ahowinn uneaualed in the world. i tk mate u Oh, gates of ice! keg fcave y held onr beiovrd. Ye Cruel ! bow eoold ye keeprcta n tbeci iot whom oar heart yeaxiid; oar dear one, cox fattier, our children, our THher, our lovers. CoU and Sleet, Darknea and Ice t hard have ye held them; ye would not kt them go. Their hands ye have bound fast; their feet ye have detained; and well have ye laid hold npon the heart of our be loved. Oh, silent Arctic Night I thou ht wooed from tu onr dear, onr only one. Ob, secret of the white and unknown world ! too strong hast thou ben fur n; we were aa nothing to thee; thou hast drawn them from us; thou wouldst not let them go. The lotig day passed; thou wooldst not lei them go. The lonr, locg night came and went; thou wool itst not let them go. Oh, thou insatiate ! why didst thoo keep them from as 1 What to thee i youth, and life, and hope and love f For thou art Death, not life; thou art Despair, not hope. Nought to thee the rash of youthful blood; naught to thee the beauty and Strength of oar beloveds. The breath of their bodies is not sweet to thee; they loved thee, thou lovedst not them. They followed thee, thou didst not look upon them; bat still, oh, thou in violate! still did they follow thee. Thee did they follow, through storm through perils of the ice, and of the un known darkness. The sharp spears of the frost they feared not; the terrors of death they !ared n 4; io thee, fur thee, lot thee, not for u; only that they might look npon thy f ice. All the,e they endured for thee; the though; of us whom yet they loved, this also thjta&e& Jot thee. il" . Long, long have they tarried thy gat: s, oh, North ! v. But now thou hast given them up.' Lo, they come to us onoe more our be loveds, our only ones. Oh, deare6t, why have ye stayed so l.jng. 1 W ith ye, night and day have come and gone but with us there was night only. But J no, we will not reproach ye, hearts .of our hearts dearest aud best; our fathers, our children, our brothers, our lovers. Come back to us ! Behold our arms are open for ye; ye are ours; ye have re turned unto us; ye shall never go hence again. But why are ye silent, why do ye not stir, why do ye not speak to us, oh, be- lov ds ? White are vour cheeks like snow; your eyes they do not look npou us. Gone so long, and is this your joy to see us once more ? Lo, do we not welcome ye ? Are not our 8e uls gjfcd ? Do not our tears, long kept, rajp.'Uj)on your faces ? Do ycsTePj) then, after these hard and weary labors ? On. now awaken, for ye shall take rest and pleasure here are your homes and kindred. Listen, beloved, here is your sister, here is youfc -brother, here is your lover I iu. They will not hearken to our voices. They are still; their eyes look not upon us. Oh, insatiate, oh, Secret of the white and unknown world, cruel indeed thou art. Thou hast sent back to us our best beloveds; their bodies thou hast rendered up, but their spirits thou hast taken away from us. Irl life thou didst hold them from us and in death thev are thine. New York, Feb. 20, 1884. R. W. G. $oul Burjlng. Whenever an Abchasian is drowned his frieudu search carefully for the Ixxly, but, if this is not found, they pro ceed to capture the soul of the deceased, a measure which then has become a matter of importance. A goatskin bag is sprinkled with water and placed with its mouth, which is stretched open over a hoop, looking toward the river, near the place where tbe man is supiiosed to have been drowned. Two cords are stretched from the spot across the river, as a bridge on which the soul can come over. Vessels containing food and drink are set around the skin, and the friends of the deceased come and eat quietly, while a song is 6ung with instrumental accompani ments. The soul, it is believed, is attracted ov the ceremonies, comes over on the bridge that is laid for it, and goes into the trap. As soon as it has entered that is, when the bag is inflUed by the breeze the opening is quietly closed, and the bag is taken up to the burial place, where a grave has already been prepared. The bag is held with the owning to the grave, the strings are untied, and the bag is squeezed into '.he grave, and the burial is afterward completed. This rite is considered of equivalent value with the burial of the body, and '.he grave is treateel with the same honor as if the body were really within it 'iiuu'ar Science Monthlu. He fame Back. Gov. Duval, of Florida, was the son of a poor Virginian, a stern, eirong, tac iturn man. The boy was a huge youth of 15. At the cabin fire, at bed time, according to the custem of putting on a back log, the old man said, between the whiffs of his silent pipe : " Tab, go out and bring in that gum back log and put it on the fire." Tab went cut and surveyed the log. He knew it as of no use explaining that it W8S too heavy, nor prudent for him to return without having it on his shoulder. His little sister, passing, was not surprised that he requested her to bring out the gun and powder horn, as a possum or coon might have passed, or the brother might have seen bear signs. She brought the gun and Tab started. He found the way through the woods into kentucky, in 1791. Alter an absence of eighteen years he was elected to Con gress. A man of immense size and strength, he started for Washington, going by the way of his old home, to see the old folks who had long since given him np for dead. Entering the little cabin door near bed time, he saw the identical gam log. He shouldered it, pulled the latch t-tring and with nis load stood before the old man, pipe in mouth, as quiet as usual. "Here is the gum back log, father." " Well, you've been a long time getting it put it on the fire and go to bed," was tbe reply. San Antonio Herald, Vim Read "Either Way. Our young friends have heard of palindromes words or lines that real and spell the same backward as for ward. The following sentences, printeel in the London Trulhf simply make sense read word by word either way: " Solomon bad-vast heasures silver nd gold things precious. Happy and rich and wise was he. Faithfully served he (Jod. " She sits lamenting sadly, often too much alone. " Man is noble and generous often, but sometimes vain and cowardly. " Carefully boiled eggs are good and palatable." Youth' Companion. Land Monopoly ia California. " With mere unfilled acres than there are in Kansas, Nebraska and Iowa com bined, the settler who comes to Cali fornia," the San Francisco Chronicle says, " finds extreme difficulty in secur ing a home 160 a res at even four times aa much as 160 acres would cost him in any ol those State. Million of acres have been transferred from Gov ernment to corporation control, and the corporations, with singular blindness to their own interests, seem to be the worst enemy the eettlers have. Other mill ions of our best acres are locked up in large Spanish and Mexican grants, held fcr advancing rites, simply because tha machinery provided for taxing them does not Work with, honesty a&d smooth Bess," ;---.,, ' i v Aa aaMataai ISwry al a r trmt "SriMkimr of trr remind me cf . attl taddect that brPned a few year, ho it i litUe Mcliign xowiu ursus tb mmf - Blanche de Bar and moderately tn v.5ar(n th -te- U ' eeanpany were hunting tVkhs fortuue c. ., jr tiM) wr.;. j ,u' . town more or le cot on tbe mr x but tb- t"-t-v . v that had an th- . ' 1 . . . ... - "a tirely new hall, and opened it inth tper formanceof Th Hald?o Hand. h. n their carpenter owne to cot the trp ir. a.. ... f,v -TXI.rk Dan' or whatever ' . . rVr .1. hi. rm. i lull. v , .- Tmm her foot on the spring m tln! floor, he waa astooisheJ to e that he ; had cat right through into the ator e- j low, which belonged to the owner of tbe ; hall ! The owcer. a jolly, gocl-naturxl, f ready sort of a chap, came np, and end ing that the trap waa ceoeaaary for tl e play, said : 'All riftht, you go ahead anj cnt it I'll fix it np some wav ao that it will be all right for to-night.' lie and the carpenter did fi it np, in some way beat known to themselve. while the rest of the company went away until time for the performance. In the evening the carpenter told them : -Look out for those board over tbe trap under th carpet, and don't kick them away, or yon will leave ihe trap open. When the time come I'll take 'era away, and all "Black lan" will have to do will bt to step forward on the space, and the car pet will give way with him.' A he "aid, ao it waa done. When Capitola put her foot on the imaginary spring, aud 'Black Dau' took a step toward her threateningly be dropied out of sight quicker than a flash. There waa a mo ment' silence, and then up from that trap came a volley of half-smotheml howls, ejaculations of prof ana amaze ment, and wild yell of 'Where am I ?' that were not in the ylay. Trt?y rang down the curtain and investigated. The ingenioua landlord and ear "enter had nailed securely in the trap by it month a huge wool rack, alont fourteen feet long. When the actor went throngh the trap he dropped clear to the bottom of it, and there he was swinging like a pendidnm in the darkness, half suffo cated, and frightened almost to death." Fxvhanyc. A South Sea right report from Auckland states that the go. 'tunient schooner Julia, which is regularly employed in procuring labor ers from ihe different groups of inland in the VaciSc ork on the i-ugar plantations iu the Sandwich Isi'siuis, re cently landed at theiHland of N'anonki with about thirty returned laborers, who belonged to tho islands of Taraway and Apiang, in the same group, the inhabit ants of which have leen at constant warfare with Uit jubafritanbi of oiiki. The retnrned laborers n Nun-laud ing seized a unrulier of young girls and assaulted them," which provoked a fight with the native's, who were armed only with clul and sHars. Twenty of the Xanoukis were killed and many were wounded, while the others escajK'd to the island of Apamama, a short distance away. B.'ing reinforced there, a mini lcr retnruetl to Nanouki, where another affray occurred, in which several were killed on each side, and three or four of the assailants were carried off to Apa mama. New Moltoes. As the meeting of tli3 Lime-Kiln Club opened, the President announced that the following spring mottoes would lie hung on the walls during the coming week: 'Pay cash." "Deal on ele squar'." "Sell your dog." "No man kin sit on do fence an' plant onions." "Time wasted ci shillins lost ont of a liole in de pocket." "If it am poilyticks against taters, take de 'taters." "An hour wid a saw-buck am more valuable dan-au hour wid a statesman." "De man in debt am a swimmer wid his bntes on." A Tata.1 Kcllaoa of all other medicines by lr. R. V. Pierce' "Golden Medical Discovery" in approaching. Cnrivalled in bilious disorders, imi.ure Hood, and cot enmption, which is scrofulous disease jf the luugi. No pbisciple is more noble, as there is none more hoiv. than ht of trn nlxwliescs Yooo Mt or middle ag:d ones, suffering from nervous debility and kindred weaknesses, should send three stamps for Part VII ot World's Dinpensary Dime ?eris of books. Ad dress World's Dispesmaby Meuical Asso ia nos. Buff alo, N. . k. dialect proves poverty . re-onrces. My daughter was trouble J with Heart 1) 8 e se for five year. piven np by physic ans, had sink ing. 'i e ls. constant pain, treat swell ins over her heart ext-ndincrto left arni.and severe 6pells of neuralgia ei e idi ig over en tire body, doctors onlJ not tielp her. Dr. Oraves' Heart Reguln'or cured her wiihin three mon:h-. Jame Tdion, Concord, N. H. I per bot'.le at druggist!. He that is mister of himself will soon be master of others on ihe"oFt7ua7u Dr. Pierce's "I'ellets" the original "Little Liver Pills" (sugar-coated) cure sick snd bil ious headache, sour stomach, and bilious at tacks. By drnggi-ts. Wht is a locomotive hketbeefsveaa r oecauat It good for nnthine without it's Under. PrRE cod-livlb oil. from selected livem, on the seaohore, by Can well, Hazard A Co., N. Y. Absolutely pure and sweet, l'atients who have once taken it prefer it to all otheit. Physiciaus declare it superior to all others. Chapted hanks, face, pimples and -.ronxh skin cured by using Juniper Tar Soap, nude by Caswell, Hazard A Co.. New Sork. Tapped Eight Time. Feelirg deeply grateful for the befif-fi' re ceived from the use of Hnnt'p Remedy. I f e! proud to inform you of the eood it Hhs ice me; for the great suffering I have pns-e.1 ani am now saved by Hunt's Remedy. I d "ire to ?tite my case to the public. o that other sufferers may obtain the benefit of it "H derful curative power? come time. I in to suffer eicruciatinif pains in the region of my kidneys; I had the mo- intetse acony: I wag confined tJ my bed and totally i;n ibis to change my position or move in Hi;y way. I wfs tapped eiirfit time. I then Ik ard of Hunt's Remeely: I bought a bottle, and after taking a few spuonfuls ti e result was n api cal, and in a few days my j uin was gout s .d my water passed freely, and 1 conld eat most anything: myswe'lnt disap; e tre!. I wa-s a hew jrson aho,'e:her. I he doctor had eiven n e np to d:e. paid there was no hope for me. I had one hundred and fifty-sit pounds of water taken out cf me. Was treatisd by s.enteen different d.ictors. and Hunt's Remedy has cured me. I feel proud over your medicixe. Those wh" snJer with the dropsy I hope will give it a trial, and the fzood it will do. It works like a charm. I would ad-ise th'.sa having uitliculty w.th their k.dueys to piv- Hunt's Remedy a trial. I am sare that it will ghetheminstaot relief and give them a permanent cu e. I am willing to give all information in my tower in regard to this most vah able medicine. Yours truly. Mas. David Nobth. Ecorse, Wayne Connty. Mich.. May:0, lKl. W Do it at Osce. For 10 cents get a package of Diamond Dyes at the druggist's, 'lhev color anvrhine the linest and ipot de sirable colors. " Wplla-Kichardson A Co., Bor- lint' ton, Vt gampie card. Si cotors, and bejk of directions for 2c stamp. aha. "Haas-fa t ckta." Knocks a Cough or Cold endwise. For chil dren or adnlta. Troche, 15c Liquid. 60c, Wonldst see uhlhe i joe..1 resh cheeks bejaile, Aye. woaldst see December smile? Wonldst see hosts of new roe blow? Carbo'.ine makes the hair to grow On the baldest of heady. Mother Swma'a Waraa yrmp. Infallible, tasteless, harmless, catl:ar:ic; foi feverishness, wonrta, constipation, 'ib cents. Phtroii Pectoral cures cold and cough. 23c H ia h P r irr al B ait rf. Dairrmen often wonder how their more fa vored comp titors get such high prices for their butter tbe year round. It is by alwaya r.avinz a uniform gilt edred article. To put the "gilt edge" or. when the pastures lo not do it, thev umj Welis, Kichaxdson A Co s. Im proved butter Color. Every butter nsake-r can do the same, gold everywhere and warranted as harmlers as salt, and pe rfect in operation. Camphor Milk cares aches and pains. 25c. Dcetiae tr aiaa. vTeakneaa, Dygpep Impotence, Sexual Da bUitv, ciiredby Welis' Heaitn Eenewer. L Foa a cold ia the bead there is nothing ao good as Piao'g Eemedy for Catarrh. Aa Eabtar'a TtfatiaaMlal. . M. Vatrgbu, editor of the " Orwoa-wa Ktview," irek, O.. wr;t : Last Jaooarr Inet w-.ta a vary severe accident, caased by a rum; ko?e. I used almost every kind of ! to heal tha wound, which turned to runa:a sores, bat fouad aotaux to do sac any good till I waa nceamaaaed Hrary t Carbolic aalvc I boaebt a box aad it herped au at once, and at la. eadof two souths I was ooicelaj weu. it ts tke beat salve ia the market, aatt I 'ail ot tenia or fnends about it. aa4 un. ae it whenever thay need a aalve. I IknA C...- tl J F J- Gld S"-" i l .l.lilMKl''' - - " -.0. ,ha head aad .h K- "J "J '' G-jIU W--T J lUIMia.aMaf tawor aJl.Warrea.F-. - ;rr or Tire t nB caw, .miims r.T." rj. -n vv te ttv ; m M - i f. . -'--aa. 1 tr ni. r tnl i v. :t.. hr lei lb n!r rM-m r ." t 12 . a lew .kT -u h & : . . IT .4 -ST S.,rr. va:or l vaa:4 tb-prw ttm ot " " ?rx -5 nt Um UK- , I , ' ' tWWtf. h.Wrm.l-t n - Wl-.W iu. .It.. ffvil tiai ' hit?, .w.t. t.' ! TV K.!ru ,.f (be IMUTW- ttxi . " t3v V 1 Ha " v.L U ( t, - 1 rT V b4.cril.t ia b e" ! ,UxivfrM a i- "" ... - .1.-. 1 ut tr ti li r a.te Ut .i:ui rmt iHHiiwl nx in a very n .toiti.ktau.ttn.' la o th- .41)- trf UiV f-4 't . Jarf ui arvl Hi 'v tIy. I b $ia-i lop n, i. it.. .. ;fejed nu- tTltJy ; livl. l "O WTWl.tl t... w, ZL .....I..I i!k IV.t tLDlHt. !niui' i- Oi. -u S.aa... vit 'i part .itiii ui 1 1 'ti, n it il... . . n. xr--. ift.jt :fljlll .-. .iii-inii.in- ..t ii.ict f itli"iuU it y ifii't im t!in. i t T ktM-w . fl""lt'H" M 'an t ttutiriiit; i "' tl..it1,ni, ralK r my '- '"; My i 1,4,-iv.W tti -Mt" I m ilv- ran; , luilK'- it di! i. .i -were !: but u:::.. neigl.l. is , ll'X I,. ; a fi Y ! ft ... lt III lltt in?.-:., or hen r.f the hu!.. f).lv i tne- Whim tune u n aony i.i..; mi-!-- .. i ll.it t wa na -' etil . -,..lv that I t hoi kiuvw -hajT i .ii .. ci. i f sr ,, lh,.y .UM II" "".-TJ". . in. in at I iUl.l"l" i. tlire? I"-1 f,,r ih-ath ,,tii-e h"1 tMIII Olfable to lilt thiWiold that i f-tt u upon the Ist ami a. felt unable even to I re (lentil. '.-evt-ral vrar ; ll-i UeW if VN a.-Jimtii. v ..i I At. .1 (fl lit (tlllL.r 'U i all xulmiraxl an. I l.-l . . J 1:1111. till I n ' reiik'Hiltereil tc-iti! o :. where Hat If s.keii iii the lug he t t.tivs ..f a pni-ii" wbi.-h lia.leui.sl..iee. 1 Ins int mint 1 1 iei deteriiuiusl to tiy 'I.I- toinelv. :.cc ingly aeut for it. mi l. I- mat-." short, it -oni'! t.-i r.-toi'-.f bmught nie bn k tr. .111 th i;r.v all 1 have 111 tl, wav f ln-a'tlt to Variir s af. lire. Warners Safe- Ki.ln-v ai am iMtive that if I l.alti whrn 1 ! t the ttr-t svitii scrilx-d. I might have av'..f.-l th. it-on- ; 1 aft-rwant iii.hii-.!. t' m nothiitj; "I tl. i narrow ts ai-e I had fro 11 .1. ttili i Ineir.h r that aU il.:e ta. Is al nig t li j the Mil e t iiulit ! kii..wn, I .-.tlU-1 . -:i I icar K. 1' asM.it, who va- f-.r iiiiiM--ii )'' 1 niU-d Ma'e-. exani nini Miie-n. mil attenled Mr. .Ine u- tlurin his sickne lie stat-i lliat Mr. .'nc ,ti. hiel a ni.-t pi 01 iKt 1 I do think I have four rpti un kuli'e a. an l increaeof hriftht's d:M? fel that Uk pub lic should have the tiei a ran ly th:it ( an Je-coin. he last stiite-s oiiKht irst appreach of this iuhle. At a stand-still The Da. Sanf ibu's Liver tation equal to ai.y me W hen lort it will be time enough of Kidney-Wnt. lis mot-t valuable nu li in- l.iver, Kidneys and present- it. Dr. P. savs : "i lit- past vear ever, and with the ts-tA nstU.s. It is the mort successful remedy 1 hive evi r nsed." Hiu-lr a recomnieudation spi aMs for itIf. Suld by ail irufcpiets. S. atlvt. Folt Si-rei (i. Htks f. .r a'tvrl t-m iu thin ft" r S.1) lu 11.- lll.h-sUi.-r -;l tie- I a.i. r II 11, THE INVESTMENT Made bv Proailnrnt f.ataell. Oi l" Int. ' 1 mast hT help," e .tl:mad 'ity AsfMs.ir Fran cis GowiM, of Rumnr rwt, LoweM, M.s... to 1. phjscimn. l.ik a. mn u-h-T jmiI.iUt msn. Mr. i..w ar.l in .it sr'.y lit. s-trtinir, stalwart arid a irf.'t f ranger ti pltrstcal infirtaitisa K'lt tha sirit-m.-ntk of a I o y life, an.l tbs ni-tis ntr.ia caastvl t.y bn. ena-scsm-nts, t'V"tir. -irhaiis, with a..m int.wrttei tendan. y f- the LnntF U often inlian-4 h.d li..1 him. he. nx.t of my friendn in I,wel) are iwtrs, a uft-rer fr.im k'doey and urmsry troil.. A a matter of r.mts I j.rrs-urd tt.e be.t of me lit a attendance, but witb.'';iieri." IV .is., Sad inllslo ml'-waawSaay-t'l l"lt-rl lmc,. raced, be chanced an luTt-a' ir"t if a d.h.r m K. Illl KEVMIIIVS FAtOltlTi: lttr;.UKIY,.-f K, d..ut. X. V.. d "e -' l. I a new lea. - of life, and on liu nsc. m nendati.m ai. fnend uaed ,i mii)1 frjl reaults. Taiis.nti can L'ndw da'a 7-b. 13. 1. hesajrs "Mj tiealth i the fat it ha been for p- l";lo- FAVOHITK IIK.XtlUl ocraaional f . i t! T rt intheh..ae. I ha.- bad many letters of 10.1- 1- ab-x.t mi rax. and I tlw-. ... rae irrmend it as one . f I" 'e-t nf medicine. Utr au troul.'.e.. tor I Ifl" fc'-See n.il,r Ir-.ae. aifA-..' V.a. d .iemr.t from au.-h a atiawsa onin .i to ai! .uffere-a Da Kood'Sir, .-s. I .re a -'Ja. w, Mm w do neTer ' el a H. hmn hi. ITF. KKMIlllt m his urmctice for twenty Ve 1 ta aan'.y Tttetat.ia. non alc' b4ic, aate, sere, e' if Usen as d:rK ed. 8TRACHAUERS CHURCH MUSIC, fluaatni n n 4 A.l.l OL rui yuaiiciauu uuitji uriOirS. Ml HrnwaM Stfach aT'fr, rat.1 tits'-. ai.d d. i ie.1 t.;.-.. re aul ele- tt 1. in f..r tlie taek. ha. here Me-k of 17 iwrea. Very Uwut it .. Aiy(t,.,. iX'til form of the inirher . hus ti mnvv K,tf .15 V.t e rf-. . . n - . ... . . nif- well - - - - - -- -... . Lll-Ul r. Vr.i a buaiiis. tl.uu taM PranonsciE of Musical rr.Klts '! n all 1 alid CtiVttiieiit umm k f i-tiairea. ia a mt hand- . U4U1'1 lej.j. RUSIIB POa. TMl M 11101 .......a tri l.t. ti t iu .X t"iir1r I'., s .a.1 - v.: r 1 nrasTCBr, of i-'irel.aee X I T.T n rMU- I a a- . " t Srkiaua, l.ie: ilazar. V eber. ..j VoU.. each tl.zii aLj Se-nd for beta. "al. ( ItiJ otl.:.- U'R M.;- SA real.. Kvert-bt-lv I. -. intT them, lim'tiselv TOuUr L-.k. 7 " ti ITR T mMr"' ) i,, .-d ftue collection of brurat aud wpala'r muK. Lists ftirrii-hnl. Any bock mailed foTreta-i Ttw- 0 LITER DIIS0X & 10., Bwtw. C. H. Plta dcCa. HUT Braadway. V. 30 DAYS' TRIAL (traiti iAn-t j APPt l.'-rs ir-srt on .. t.; T- Wt -" U-l.. lOi . ,R jl.I. who are " fr "-"" a-s-EII-rTT IT VtTALlTI rrv-. . . 7 ' Ba 'Bdl1 d:saw-. hef and ctni.w. restoration tj HaaLTH ll!ior.i,ctwTTro. Kead at otx- :or I ft -Ei rimneM. tiwe. Atkrreaa Voltaic Belt Co., Marshall. Mich. $40 PAVSfnr a Ufa """rilfe'ir. to tb tor Cirenlara to H CuLi-M A w a 4. -w'- '4 wn Cr'"' I X:-. ,ti. ul iv ; V - M ft ttl.kf It WW f,.r . f . - ta. thrill- I" lit. llvtllHW ha ixi tvajT. ...-1 I I t. oils :n-o-.e ..,-. noiiiicett ta of Albuminuria or in IKt 1 - . 1. Si I t f 1 1V' CV dtsea e of the kidtievs I hat an at.a -t- f S t3 1 I tiPi hi W wjV "IN showed the .re?tice of aH.ii'i.ei! and ea-t- n XST? 1 k' g f g V "J 1 t areat almudiince and t nut he was in a u V T5 1 J V 4L ,"vtV -p . I U', il I , ditioll where f . w It hi.n errec ver li.s t fA fV7wL U I J reeovcrv was du- t- i-.ru 1 a Safe Cure. .V. V . t U Mr. John V. Hobart, pnenil niniin:er ..f TKvVc'.r V w 6'3 JCCC fll theVermoiitCcnIraliaJr.Mil.state.ltl.atMr 1 1 H I IT "ia.V.i " Ul I Jaorue wa one of the l-t tin t iii' tuitb I .,..! ... . . ., -t ' 1 ' ",'..'.',1' JT , ,. . ful of his employes, tliat hi M.knes Im.l leu I J-'- . Jr;.n,s .'. ---"- -u-Jr an exeeevluinlv M-vere one niet the -oni my - ', . r n. w v 1 I were not only "g'a'l to aain hav his mi vi -s, ... ia flfinTl Tl T" U l.ut grateful to the rem. dv tiiat had curtsl so CTTZLJkl aT-T p-o 1 valuable a mate pISwiw1 A DI ES , Mr. Jaiue. M. Foas. assistant autfrinwn- U&aU ( 1 dent and master inwhnnic of thu erinout lTj! Iri. -t "tl , CJentral railroad, is al? able to co firm this. a-dStVai" -? ' 1 'Z1 I do not claim to be . ereat discoverer, bat IjOtj3 4 rf.r!' ,!: . , L 3 1 1 H,wHh ao.l fiIii...,t!y ASJ MI t M it k tl, i-m I.:i,i:... :,t. ....I f . Illoti. of Munkton, - JJ havt iiHi fJ it more than W Inwil Mnlr I riorer. tiff 1 si I aa r aiSfTB a aa c r- e-. r TA gXH yil V7 IV 'taVefl rV,t. TyatlntrT '-dor m-r-f fe'l l .-a e-twl -m s , o- ' i r-- t "T' v - !.-r the 4 ore 9.( 1 rD:t-EPT.G f:tj. 5i1l'lVa' Z i 'iUU 1-i . r j .- --Vreai.,at I'l v . - ' AWTSV,fKTFp':V-;.K ill ,l"'l""iVill i i f1-1' T.ll. 'e I 1. . - ' d i 'vnrt:R i- !1 a.,-1 i : t - " . y t . ti ' 1 ,r i-.i'ili" -- - i v l(Slor.-- AXLE GREASE (Jet ike aeawlee. prat la " r.ery pnrk-e .,,l.rl I ra-r . rl t I w;ir lr:iite-m.-.. k nt.il la . n.'i i t i n hi. y -,t iiW ATI) ,'( ! '-AKS Tl ( Hr.Ai- l.Mi Excursion Te- r;inii an Csl.lom i. i.rd- f -ai ran h K. -a . Ha- A -,l'-r, t . I-' A t. n e ; p. ke . F,. . n- -a 1. XL - II. l it, l-se.K K .i 1 IB .war." V. Mel II .1.1. Ia".P" . f.r Aa-rwl. IM la lf "1 r-er w. ,- -j ,..-.r ti-, ii . I Ii.' nt. .... iii-.' . - - ... . , . nia'l rtt. t- i ki t a ' Hull'! il L;. WANUD r'.nntry ' - ladle. riT re.t!Ti;'-n. I'l.-aaant at.d ...-etnt l..n. t. .t Ih-:o-. N. ' sn- .f nr.. '. Srim U i ii Hr..,l.)r. N. V S2 le ',a e ry r" ... .,-na-eeit war . 1:1 it. d Al .1 -v t- w tt. S. V. t .ist-s. IVtv I3. V- M A 8SSING TO WOMEN ! r,'.; gr5 M. tt OT ldiea. It eacfc e..-ir.. A Mr l ". Zirot-i r ; . I-:..!-- ' I -a. , yrsw A'TEI lor tb be ail faut a-ianf Wttial B.x.ks ai.d B V. tf redo'-t al Jeot. National MlUia. ..r-.u4t tiaa. aj wVZ2ii i -r to. ai.. s. a 1 (', r. -: j. ta . a- '. - a r.f 1 "?st?" ' ' L' -r 1"- '"'--.., "! - - aif' : '-t"" ; - - :7 t j " v." --Z1 , .rn , i .. . ' -. i.i -- j . " .i -jt . I ;-' . , "T . ' . T -- - - i ' u, "rv ""-,.. .. . f .l!.W . I r...: . , ir-",':- . ".- rT:' :,;:..- 11 '. -... . T Ik'" ' r ' fcrt II t- ; , . -' ' . . . " , t. ir ' ' ...... i . rJ w , aa i - '- "" f - ,', ...tl . acai ! . v. , Sei : . AV. v. ...... ajal,.ul t.. ... e vj j. 1 a . AaiJf.-tL; - I .... ... " J ,-,-v out in - . pmA ilftt.e bl'ie j J'l I I 7 Br I' m iiico "- r- E J K. linttk :il. VI I -a I .ned If ! a-. I I , c.mr.-h We mJ V I ,fe I I a i- it; si..i 1 I luv I.e.ilUt J e a't 1 I o J II Mll.l snent ! j II U-tt-T kno 11 a- I II I Ijmt 1 un. ! II ken III tici-;i. it - ; I I i - w 1 rn i l in tbe above a most 1 I VlTi-A. m h f ! V ' I know ine th unusaal I -J", V. 7 xa ii i f-. ' ' . 1 1 I lltotlt. iiseeaisioi f"v vrLT"" r as-t s-.-t Sf . -l I . tto -.-m more lor the '"'".i" '' XJ' 1 " 1 '''J f ft' le,vpt,ve yet te, r.blc " "JO SPECULATOIt3. (V W- ,a....t h.,.,1..Hs. . ii0Biiera jtco.. i. B.M11U8AC0.. !;L t.l7 iati,l-r. t W llr....v. TW nvigorator has a repn- 111. n n. lil. a... VwY.ik. g'" "' uHAii v rnuvisiun nuiiiti Hs, j-il ... M. ot all 1 ... ; -lit l-l . l . - I V. I.ttlilf 1 , .1 to doubt the reliability i -n. ;.io. i i i . ..t. t. i...-tai.. m. . ai Tl 't nr rs-l) 'ii r - . ! . .,. ii f1-r mm - -t. ttri a j--r'.- i t , ft ,r K..-I, r . i . ; in rii- l.f-if ft-e ! - tit-., , ! n; s i -in-.i -iff .r . 1 i hl! ' ' 'f v.tl ' ,r; f 1, ; , ! , , . (l m j WUr t t.tf : i Tl 1 ; - It i-rt-flf.a . t ! .i.i t . f r ' . 1 ! ' - 1 : : it y .- :,- -1 !' r 'a. - f '--' '' . 4 !t" y o .' ,' m -. ' r n K i - ? ir . f f. r t i ' ' - - ' v. :- A , V A.! I'.'. : i m l ' .;:'.,. 1 26ChDlli:j;i. ?:m:i:JnU z BY MA I PCSTPAIO. ' ------ . j -.- - V KNOW ms-'x G; f l; ! V : 1. . '.It' IT- i- - I- . 1 ' -.!.' ...i I - - - ' ', - ' . ..'.... I ,- ; 1 ' I' .... -a - s ' '. t . ' - - .. fT - '1 r ..n 1 1 ... s... -. -i r. . f, i. I U- I - - - . - t, '. r-r -.! . . I . tt.j. ' !. VI. ! :- -i ' ; ' t ' a: 1 ' - ' - . ' aa aaj-jz-i , . .... ... I aw I I ..-!.. ji . M -J.,:. h j . t I . t ' .. 1 I I t . T'lK-pi - wM k " a i - - & 1.3 It. ' w ' -. -. ' 1 . I -f. . - T - ' ' ' l ' a ' FREE Ra'es lo f .ty - ta. , -l.t IK ' v .1 u. ( U J AS T-.J.,r7l,TTl I ' V r