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H* -Mi.* 'i «v. .4# Rl M"?" #5 '.h v'j I 1 I &~ #1 &?v sdtef PITH Cqwlawta D% jW Vv. iju-i .• ft 1 11 *$« IT", 5^'' ""Si IrH A PUI8HMEHT. Shswlax Tktt IlraglBf rnhen Death (picker ThM Elcetrleltj. At a recent meeting of the Medico Legal Society, Dr. William A. Ham mond, the eminent specialist and physiologist, discussed the subject of capital punishment by hanging and electricity. He and several of his colleagues were of the opinion that hanging was the more painless and certain of the two methods of inflict ing legal death. As New York has changed its laws, substituting elec tricity for the classic rope, the subject was one of great interest from a medico-legal point of view. For interest of science and the en- thanasia of would-be murderers in general, several well-known surgeons determined to perform a series of ex periments on living animals to decide the question, and their results, which are about to be published in a scien tific journal,, are considered of special importance. The experimenters were Dr. B. Curtiss, Dr. George Brown Phelps, and H. S. Lewis. They were assisted by three medical students. Their programme was: 1. Time required to produce death by hanging. 2. Time required to produce death by electricity. 3. Post-mortem appearances. 4. Resuscitation after death by either method. The experiments were chiefly car ried on at the Carnegie laboratory. Boys were employed to obtain the unfortunate canines, and all collision with the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals was carefully avoided by secresy. The room, or laboratory, in which the experiments were made at the rear of the building on the fifth floor. A powerful electric dynamo was ob tained and a gibbet of the most ap proved pattern erected. Boom was also provided for the dogs who should be resuscitated after appa rent death by either means. The animals were securely muzzled before the experiments were attempted, but this did not prevent their howling. The details of each experiment will be published by the experimenters. The results were greatly in favor of hanging. Out of 100 dogs fifty were hung and fifty submitted to the electric discharge. Of those hung twenty were dead in less than five minutes, and from post mortem ex amination it was apparent that they died almost instantly. Five out ol the fifty were resuscitated and are alive, but they are all small. It was found that the heavier the animal the quicker the result of death was ob tained, and wherea weight was added to the dog's weight, death seemed to take place instantaneously. Of the fifty submitted to the electric dis charge of the strength and in the man ner prescribed by the State law for the death of criminals, instant death was produced in only five experiments. It required on the average ten minutes to kill, and in eighteen instances the animal were easily resuscitated. In seven he came to without the slight est treatment within two hours after apparent death. The prescribed dis charge entirely failed to produce death in three instances, and one of these three dogs came to alter double the strength of electric discharge had been given. From the post-mortem appearance of the brain and nerve centers, and from other things observed, the ex perimenter concluded that the elec tric discharge caused the intensest agony, especially when not strong enough to kill at once, while in the case of hanging the evidence pointed to immediate paralysis of the nerve centers and a painless death. Such are the chief results of their investiga tions.— St. Louis Globe-Democrat. SHE ANSWERS THE PREACHER. A Fashionable Woman Who Believes the Ha joritf of Humanity Sinful. "There is nothing on earth more farcical to me," said one ofthegayest of married society women, "than the sermons of preachers about the wretched inward lives and heart sick ness of society women. "I just read a sermon the other day in which an uproarious revivalist was deploring the misery of a hollow life. What does this sanctimonious old brother know about hollow lives? Why does he take hollow lives to ring his changes upon? Why don't he speak of the hopeless lives of women at the wash tub and the cooking 6tove? There are just as many Godless women at those occu pations as in the whirl of society. Women can be hollow anywhere, so ciety has nothing to do with it. We are more caviled at simply because we make a show. We dress well and drive in carriages, and the crowd stares, and good, religious people, pointing out someone among us, shake their heads in pity and say: 'Look at that cray butterfly creature. She married that old man for his money, She is utterly heart less, and yet she must suffer some times when midnight leaves her alone with her soul.' "Not nearly so wretched, my dear good people,'is this heartless devotee of fashion as a young girl living in the country near Atlanta who re cently married a rich old codger for his ducats. The old fellow makes her work, she hates him and has no diver sions in the way of balls, operas and fine clothes. Women in every station of life are constantly selling them selves. It?s not a crime patented by fashionable society. "There are more alleviations to a sale marriage in gay life than any other. People may talk conscience till they die, but conscience can be kept pretty quiet in the body of a beautiful woman surrounded by admiration and luxury." W "But don't^6u Mlevel!tfiat Wiet* is such a thing as a pore, Ugh, Chris tian life?" "Certainly I do, and I believe it's the only life that brings all perfect peace, but how few women of any class know such a life. The majority of humanity is sinful. There is selfishness and want of heart equally distributed in every class. A lot ol ranting is done about the worldly mother who leaves her children to the care of servants. Of course such a woman is not an ideal mother, but the children are not as much to be Iess ntied as those of the equally heart' mother of a lower class who is too slovenly and trifling to take proper care# of her offspring and too poor to hire'servants to take care ol them. I tell you the preachers are all wrong. The worldly society woman, next to the perfect and rare ly found Christian woman, is the happiest on earth. "In my girlhood I gave a romance a few smiles and tears. I played at love but my rearing by a worldly mother did not leave me with a lac^e amount of heart at eighteen. We were in moderate circumstances, and my mother taught me to think money the greatest good. I had quite a desperate love affair the year before I made my money match. He was a blonde and sang tenor. I met him the other day threadbare with a string of little children at his heels. He had that, exhausted, hacked look common to men with empty pockets and large families. "I was driving by in my carriage with my page and my two'little girls. I leaned over and kissed the lot as a a prayer of thankfulnes, for my pres ent happy state welled up from my heart." "And you didn't have an instant's heart throb or a momentary re gret?" "Do you know," lifting large, laughing eyes, "that I wou.dn't be the mother of that seedy singer and those decidedly rusty little brats for anything in Christendom! "It was a little hard to give him up at the time. We made beautiful pictures of love in a cotta ge, and all that, but when my husband came along with money and a four-story brown stone residence, the cottage tumbled, never to be reirretted." "But how could you bear to marry a man without loving him? It seems to me a woman must love or hate the man she marries." "So I've read in books and been told by romantic young women. I'm neither a novel heroine nor the em bodiment of romance. "My husband is not an Apollo. He has stiff, black hair and very large teeth, two things 1 had ever railed against in early girlhood, and he is not as old as my desire to become a widow would have him still, as a husband he is about the best a wo man could have. He pays my bills and never grumbles, is'submissive, uncomplaining, thinks me the most beautiful woman on earth, and likes for metogo out and have .attention." "But what are you going to do when you grow old and the atten tion ceases?" "I won't care for thekind of admi ration then that I have now. The young fellows will be nice to me then for my girls. They are both lovely children, and will make handsome women. I shall be young again in their love affairs and entertainments.'' "Are you bringing them up with the same view of life as presented by your own mother?" "Why. of course: my girls must marry rich. If they really tall in love with rich men, I shall consider their destiny complete but if not, I shall urge the marrying of money without love as the next best thing, and shall be content in believing their lives as happy as my own." Sea Serpent in Sight. From the Richmond (Va.) State. Mr. J. 51. Allen of Hartford has written along article showing much research in which he undertakes to demonstrate the existence of the sea serpent. He says he has often dis cussed the matter with the late Prof. Baird and his associates of the United States fish commission, and these, while not willing to accept the ser pent idea, fully agreed that there might be a monster of some kind, snake or saurian, not yet known to science. Among the evidences educed by Mr Allen is the following, sworn toby his officers ofthe bark: "We, the undersigned,captain, officers, and crew ofthe bark Pauline, do solemnly and sincerely declare that, on July 7, 1875, in latitudes deg 13 minsouth, longitude 35 deg west, we observed three large sperm whales, and one of toem was gripped around the body with two turns of what appeared to be a huge serpent. The head and tail appeared to have a length be yond the coils of about thirty feet, and its girth was eight or nine feet. The serpent whirled its victim round and round for fifteen minutes and then suddenly dragged the whale to the bottom, head first. Again, on July 13, a similar serpent was seen about 200 yafds off, shooting itself along the surface, head and neck be ing several feet out of the water. A few moments after it was seen ele vated some sixty feet in the air. The Lady's Hotel Clerk. The latest fad—I think fad is what they call it—is to have a lady's clerk in the house, says an old timed hotel man. You know that it is no un common thing for a lady to come to the office and "settle her bill now, just the same as a man. Well, old chaps like me are not considered good enough to wait on a lady any more. Hence the lady's clerk. We've got one of them. Just out of college. Wears a collar and looks like the hind end of an old fashioned wagon cover has trousers that are cut on the same pattern as the harem pants in "The Corsair." He has a sort of late-in-the-summer air about him. I mean languid look. He eats up a dollar's worth of toothpicks in a day, and gets mint from the barkeeper to wear in the button-hole of his coat. I suppose it is all right, but I never wanted to be a cowboy in my life un til he came in here, and I think now of going into the business. Csrtof cfctttaf From th# Boaton Herald. Eugene M. Camp, who has collected the statistics on this point says, through the American, that the en tire cost of all the news in the papers in this country is $20,655,000 per year. This is curiously divided. The special bureaus, which are principally located in New York, with the right to look over the proofs every night of some of the morning jourals, cost $345,000. This is divided up among 100 of the leading provincial papers. The business of the Associated Press now amounts to $1,250,000 yearly, and that ofthe United States foots up to $450,000. These two sums, with the special outlay for telegraph tolls outside of the organizations, place the total to all the papers of $1,820,000 for this department. In addition to this there are to be reck oned the special services of profes sional correspondents in adjacent towns and important centers, whose salaries aggregate $1,000,000 be sides. This makes the total cost of all the service about $2,880,000 per annum. In the larger cities ofthe Un ion it costs all the way from $400 to $2,200 a week for the working up of local districts. Mr Camp reckons this yearlyexpense at about $15,600, 000. This is a correct analysis of the expense in collecting news and the proportion in which one branch of the service is related to the other, there are three lines on which this work proceeds—thegntlieringofnews by the local reporter, the news of the telegiaph and the special correspond ent. Each method is closely related to the other. The statement shows that there has been a great develop ment ofjournalism in the matter of news. Every effort is made to get the news and one combination only paves the way for another in order to keep the lead in this department of a newspaper. The greater the combination the greater the result, and the paper that has the news is the one that the public is most will ing to pay for. Towed by a Whale. Cape Ann Advertisr. A letter has been received from the steward of the schooner H. B. Griffin, Captain George Nelson, now absent on the Banks, in which it is stated that they have met with an unusual experience, viz., that of being towed by a whale. The affair occured on a fine day when all the dories were out attending the trawls. The captain and steward were on board as usual, look ing after the vessel and keeping an eye on the dories, when all at once they felt a sudden jerk, and soon the vessel was going through the water at a rapid rate and no motive power visible. It takes considerable to startle a fisherman, but this was something so uncommon, a vessel dashing through the water at a rapid rate with her sails furled and anchor down, that they began to look alarmed. Suddenly* the cause made itself manifest, when a mons trous whale arose to the surface, with the anchor fa *t either in his jaw or blow hole. Iii tore through the wat er at a high pressure rate, and was fast taking the craft out of sight of the dories, thus leaving the crews ex posed and besides this, there was danger of the vessel being towed un der. The only remedy was to cut the cable. This was done, and his whale ship went off with the anchor in tow. The jib and foresail were hoisted, and the vessel was seen engaged in picking up her dories, and on the way to Newfoundland, where a new anchor and cable were secured. There are but two other similar cases of which we have any record, which we have found in the files of our paper, viz: Schooner C. H. Price was towed a day and a half by a whale in 1873, when the fluke of the anchor broke and she was released. Then, again, on the 16th of December, 1874, while the schooner Sultana, Captain Peter son, was at anchor on the Grand Bank, a sudden motion was felt, and soon the vessel was speedingthrough the water at a twelve knot speed. The captain, not wishing to lose sight of his dorymen, cut the cable after he had been towed some distance, other wise he thought he might have captur ed the monster. There was a compan ion whale which swaia with the one who had the anchor, and he was evi dently astonished at the predica ment of his mate. 1 flS* DO NOT FORGET Perry Davis' Pain Killer At this season of the year it is always well to keep it on hand. no not trifle witn yonraeivea by teatlmr untried remedies. Be sure yon cull for. and getthe na ulne I'ain-Killf.h, as many worthleaa nostrums ofthtaTaln^?lemedWne.°nU""tWat OTMrections accompany each bottle. MMXSctiii 50c(ii ib19I pwteHlii •OLD BY ALL DRUOQISTS. it ,iCj ill§i§^-V 1M? DH£GS-t,yman-Elle| Drofc Col lfltO Wdsh, At. N. OROCERS-Gto. R. Newelfjt Co. ad St & lot At N. TT nTvm¥SS'l^?Kl FajHnirtonACp. 200 1st AtS. Bros A Fletcher, lift 2d at S. SADDLERY II w„ Dodion, Plsher* Brocktuattu, IS Mflt. N. Th« re is every prospect of another out break between Wood6uale and Hugoton, in Kansas, as the people of the former place aver that they will be revenged for the death of their four cituens. The situation in Grant county is also so strained that the citizens asked Gen. Miles to leave one company at each of the towns, Cincinnati and Ulysses, as between these two places the bitterest rival ry exists over the county seat question. Both towns are paying numbers of lawless characters from the neutral strip $1 a day and board to remain within their border, ns they can vote on the county seat, question in about thirty days. Arms are said to be in tue possession of the belligerents. Each side is afraid of the other, hence the request for troops. A dispatch from Suakim to the London Times Rays: "The reports concerning the presence of awhite man in the Buhr-el-Gazette district are confirmed. He is known as Abu Di&Ha, ami has a force ofcuormous including a largo number of kafcimked men, RJl- from the Xiam Nium country. Ihis is a strong point in favor of the idea that the white man is Stanley. The khalifa of Khartoum has sent a force of 5,200 men against him. The Nojnis of Abyssinia has sworn to capture Khartoum, aud the khalifa is greatly alarmed." Fob i.osa op appetite take ali.ex's Iron Tonic Bitters. Ail n*onnine bear the sip^ nature of J. P. Allen, Druggist, St. Paul. The body of Joseph Humpert, who was drowned in Lake l'epin, off the excursion steamer Sea Wing, was recovered. A Tremendous Sensation would have been created one hundred years n8° by the sight of one of our modern ex press trains whizzing along at the rate of sixty miles an hour. Just, think how our grandfathers would have stared at such a spectacle! It takes a good deal to astonish people now-a-days,buts»me ofthe marvelous cures of consumption, wrought by Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, have created wide spread amazement. Consumption is at last, acknowledged curable. The "Golden Medical Discovery' is the only known remedy for it. If taken at the right time—which, bear in mind, is not when the lungs are nearly gono —it will go right to the seat of the disease and accomplish its work as nothing else in the world can. Walker's saw mill was totally consumed by fire at Grand Forks, Dak. the blacksmith shop, oil room and pump house being the only mementos left of its former existence. The Are originated in the roof ofthe build ing immediatly over the boiler, and spread with lightning alacrity, enveloping the entire mill in flames within five minutes7 time. T. B. W alker, the proprietor of the mill, estimates the loss at over $50,000 insurance, $23,000, and stated that his future intentions re gardingthe rebuilding ofthe mill are dubious. "Had Been Worried Eighteen Tear*." It should have read "married," but the proof-reix'.er observed that it amounted to about the same thing, and so did not draw bis blue penjil through the error. Unfor tunately there was considerable truth in his observation. Thousands of husbands ore constantly worried almost to despair by the ill health that afflicts their wives, and often robs life of comfort and happiness. There is but one safe and sure way to change all this for the better. The ladies should use Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. Forest fires have been raging fiercely in the townships of Clarendon, Lavant Canonti and Oso., in Canada, and have already done damage to the extent of nearly $500,000. The whole section lias been devastated and many settlers have lost everything they pos sessed. Communication is cut off, ns the bridges and corduroy roads have been burned or rendered impassable by fallen trees. The Ontario government will be c^Bfaled to for aid. The Loveliest Skin. Tub WniTEBT. Clearest, Softest,L'CHEST.skin, free from pimple, Knot, or blemlHh, Ih produced by that greatest of all Skin Beautifies and I'uriflers, the CCTICVRA SOAP. Tncomparable as a Skin Soup, tinequnlled tor the ToUet and ISntli. and abso lutely pure, and without a rival as an Infantile Rkiu Soap. Delicately medicated, exqiiHitely perfumed, aston ishingly effective. It enjoys unheard of popularity, as evidenced by a sale greater than thnt or all ohter medicated toilet soaps In the world combined. Sold throughout the civil ized world. I I'ottek Dkco 4 Chemical Co., Boston.U. s. a. Send for "How to Purify and Beuntlfy the Skin." S1GKHEADACHE CARTERS PtMltlvelyciirrd by theite Little PHI*. They also relieve t)ie trees from Dyspep»in,Iu digestion and Toollearty Eating. A perfect rem edy for Dizziness,N»ute:i Drowsiness, Had Tast* in the Mouth, Coated Tongue.Pain in the Ride TOKl'ID LIVEK. Thcj regulate the Bowels Purely Vegetable. PILLS. PrJcs SS Cents. CASTSS USSZCZ17S CO., NEW TOES. Small Pill. Small Dose. Small Price. WEAK MEN •ft* WOMIM MBOTfctiy cure tiumttivMtf Wait* —........ IrkVltalltr,LettIlea* fro« youl-ful rron, Ae.t4Ketlf mt ko«e. 89 B®olc on All Private sent Ote« iM&led.) V*er(*ctlv rrflnM^. so vestr* ekncril lr. 10. MM* X^WA, ASTHMA fiUpl I II I German Asthmat'ure neTerSMbtoglvem-| mMiaicTtliifin tbevorat cstaenJnsnKsconifort able sleep effect* enrea where •llothenfail. a THAYER'S Catarrh Cure! ANew Departure. This treatment for Catarrh Introduces entirely anew system. The nasal passages are thorough ly cleansed, the living germs destroyed, themuens membrane restored. If thoroughly used It will cure any ease of Nasal. Throat or Bronchial Ca tarrh. Prepared by the U.S. DISPE.VSARV CO.. Minneapolis, Minn. ^3 A MT Are worn Just the same eTer gCVlUEK Boston I lAllI I Minneapolis, is making I I a clearance sale of these useful articles. Cotton Worsteds, 60c. best Jeans, $1 guaranteed all wools, fl.50 stylish Cassa meres, t3.!0, 93, f3.&0 and (1. Fine all-wool Black Worsteds. 94.75. Send an orderfor apiece. co We carry the largest stock of FIXE SHOES in the Northwest. Goods sent C. O. I), on approval. Write for new Illustrated Catalogue aaU Price list. SCHLIEK ft CO., St. Paul. Minn. ST. PAUL SCHOOL FURNITURE CO, &T.PACL.MCW. School Furniture and ScHool feupplie*. Cor* rearondence solicited from district office™, and those detirintrAn cy. Ask for C*U log ue 1). S O A N and Typewriting, Standard system lessons, day, evening and by mail send for circulars. MISS J. D. HESS, Union Block, St. Paul, Minn. It will be to your advantage when writing advertisers to say you saw their advertise ment in this paper. N.W.N.U. 1888 No. M. Jat". BOM of VHeraiwat thiitr neetiiwk jammed Jag w. V. elected this fottomng tflleeri: Commander-in-chief, George Tff. Abbot °J i''inou,: lieutenant geileral, E. H.^Milham Minnesota major general, John Hinckley of MassachuBettx counril-inchief, G. B. Smith of Connecticut, W. E. Bundy Ohio, R. L. Obenstein of Missouri and C. B. Cooke of Da kota. Xoxle. Old men use Moxie the year round to keep their nervous system stronar enough to sup port the functions of their body, and mend up the break down of a long business life. The young city bloods to remove the effects from liquors and a night of dissipation. A tumbler full will break a recent intoxication in an hour, with no ill effects of stimulation. The second congressional democratic con vention of Minnesota at its meeting at- Man kato, unanimously nominated U011. Morton S. Wilkinson as a candidate for congress to run against Lind, the Republican nominee. "Olre Him $3, and Let lllm Gueix." We once heard a man complain of feeling badly, and wondered what uiled him. A humorous friend said, "Give a doctor ?2, and let him guess." It was a cutting satire on some doctors, who don't always guess right. You need not guess wlmt ails you when your food don't digest, when your bowels and stomach are inactive, and when your lienil aches every day, and you are languid and easily fatigued. You are bilious, and Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Purgative Pellets will bring you out all right. Small, sugar coated, easy to take. Of druggists. Gen. Hovey, nominee for governor of In diana, has written some poems, also a book on Peru. When Baby was sick, we g*«« her Caitorla, When she was a Child, she cried for Coitoria, 'When she became Mias, she clung to Castoria, When she had Children, she gave them Castorl% Frank Thulen, a blacksmith at Minnesella, Dak., shot and killed John Clark, also blacksmith. Thulen claims he. saw some person stealing out of his shop at daylight. He fired at him with fatal result*. Faithfulness is necessary in all. kinds of work. Especially is it necessary, in treating a cold, to procure the bcBt remedy, which is Allen's Lung Balsafn, und take it fnith.ully according to directions, and it will care it cold every time and prevent fatal results. Sold by all druggists at 23c., 50c., and 51.00 a bottle. *m A five-months old son of August Von Lin den, of Stillwater, Minn., was accidentally smothered to death. The infant was asleep upon the floor, covered lightly, when a man threw a pile of carpet upon it, not knowing that the heap on the floor was a covered-up infant. Why Don't Ton take Hood's Sarsaparilla, if yon have Im pure blood, have lost your appetite, have that tired feeling or are troubled by sick headache, dys pepsia or biliousness. It has accomplished won ders for thousands of afflicted people, and, if giv en a fair trial Is reasonably certain to do you good. "I have been troubled a great deal with head ache, had no appetite, no strength, and felt as mean as anyone could, and be about my work. Since taking Hood's SnrsnpnrUla I have not had the headache, my food has relished, and seemed to do me good, and I have felt myself growing stronger every day." M. A. Steinman.lu Grand Avenue, Grand Kapids, Mich. Hood's Sarsaparilla Sold by all druggists. $l slxfor$5. Prepared only by C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Moss. 100 Doses One Dollar. in "JONES HE PAYS THE FREIGHT" Scales of all Sizes. 5 Ton Wagon Scale with grata ran Beam and Beam Box, $60. For free Price Ustof all kinds, addrest JONES OP BINCHAMTON, BINOHIUCTON, N. V. O eaa cloths you and furnish you with all the neeessary and unnecessary appliances to ride, walk, dance, sleep, •at, fish, hunt, work, go to church, or stay at home, and in various sises, Styles and quantities. JTnst figure out what is required to do aU these thinga COMFORTABLY, and you can maize a fair estimate of the value of the BTJYEH8' GUIDE, which will be sent upon receipt of 10 cents to psy postage, MONTGOMERY WARD D»k., pi sn£«teftling package, And E*t ti*oyeMln ary. v" The North 8tar Lung and Throat Balsam is a sure cure for Coughs and Colds. Itchlnt Plies. Ftmttow*—Volitate intents IMiIoz aM MlartMi met 11 night wont by KWtcOtn,. If continue tumor* form, which often blMl tut! olosr fte. becoming very tan. NO PKK AAA ft ft ft subscribers already Why not MAKE IT A MILLION "fWVjVW W To introduce it into a million famUiet we offer the PHILADELPHIA LADIES' HOME JOURNAL AND PRACTICAL HOUSEKEEPER FROM NOW to JANUARY, 1889 Four Months—balance of this year, oh aacairT or ONLY CENTS Silver or Stamps. The BUYXBS'GTTIDlfa Issued Xaroh and Bept, each year. It Is an eney« elopedi* of useful infor mation for all who ptuv chasa the luxuries or th* necessities of life. Wa A CO. 111-114 Michigan Avenue, Chicago, HI. Ib the best medicine for nil (llneiues incident to children. It regulates the bowels assists denti tion cures diarrhoea and dysentery In the worst forms cures canker sore mouth Is a certain pre ventative of dyptherla quiets and soothes all pain Invigorates the stomach and bowels cor rects all acidity, and gives eue&y and tone to the eutire system will cure griping In the bowels and wind colic. Do not fatigue yourself or child with sleepless nights, when it is within your reach to cure your child and save your owe strength. Prepared only by the Kumert Proprietary Co., Chicago, III. 8oId by ail Dreggists at 35 cts. Per Bottle. I RAKE UNIVERSITY MD CtLUMM COLLEGE I Open next SeMfon Sept IJtli. Literary. Normal, I Commercial. Musical, Art B'bl**, Luw anJ Ml DepArtmtnt*. AOabto Instructors: Facilities rfor ExpanveaLcw Suri'oumiirfpiPleauuuit. PUR SWATfta's Oihtmmt Mont (tie itching smt bleeding h««U ulceration, *ni tn msny eras remove* the tnmoni. It UaniUTomcaciatu ta curing alt Sktn Disease*, DR. S1VAYNK & gov Proprietor*. Vhilndotpht*. Bvitki'i OMRITCNM te obtained of dnisg&U. Seat by itutU for fin Cents. MfflY Oiticum Rtmtoits Cum 8kw mb Blood Dututa raoM Puisui to 8c*omtAi CAN Z0 JUSTICE TO thr esteem I» which the CtmcuitA Kemedies are held by the thousands upon thousands whose lives have been made happy by the cure of aeonic'nir, hu miliating, Itching, scaly, ani pimply diseases of the skin, scaip, and blond, with loss of hair. CUTICUEA, tho urent Skin Cure, aud Cuticura doap.anexquisite Skin lteaticifler, prepared from It, externally, and CuticuraResolvent,thenew Blood Purlfler, iuternally, area positive cure for every form of skin and blood disease, from pimples to ecrofnla. Sold everywhere. Price, CuncunA, 50c.: SOAP, 25c.: Resolvent, $1. Prepared by the PoTIEK Drug and ChemicalCo., Boston, Mass. rend for "How to Cute bkin Disease*." «W Pimples, blackheads, chapped and oily slcln preveuted by Cuiicuba Soap. "U W 1 I J* A1speedily Rheum itism, Kidney Pains and Wcaknesi by Cuticuka Anti-PaA PLXHTKR,cured the only pain-killing piaster. ^0VK«-) iw Ta W* have engaged for the coming season thi most popular and beat known writers ia America to write Expressly for our col* umns, original copyrighted matter. Elizabeth Stuart Phelpat Joslah Allen's Wife, Mary J. Holmos, Marion Harland, Rose Terry Cooke, Will Carleton, Robert J. Burdettev Eliza R. Parker, Kate Upson Clarke^ Mrs. John Sherwoo' Florlne Thayer McCray, Dr. Wm. A. Hammond, Christine Terhune Herrlckl ArtUtie Needlework-Finely Illuttrated. Every thing new and original. Edited by an expert. Pat terns guaranteed correct and reliable and so clearly explained and illustrated that a novice would have no difficulty in working them. Interior Decorations—By Mas. A. R. 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