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A THCOGHT. Sor whra the abhorn o' Toamorrow's Land At washed by the irer of Time. SDaydresm fair rer.d Into the air A cantle if height sublime; ' d worktng he sang Uth rhyme: "IThe are none who wep, there is naught d th thi, the joyous land of To-nmorrow." and higher the castle tall its Ihattlemrnts strong, gleaming tigtht, he placed on the height U Star of Hopa; then long IAd loud he saL.Y hII so g: 0 uAes are none who weep, there is naught d m this, the joyous land of To-morrow." AlI But a whirlwind of Fate all dark, [tne ov.r that regain so blest. h gle ulllig s.ar fell down fromit itfar T111 slhalmerer . Ihi, HIllm lay irr,*-. Down. (idow n ui Liit* Daydra-aIIt 9 I. rat. Dd. did no iie weep nor feel in i,,t i, I t A dream lay dead in the Lout ,f 1I. ,,rrow. -Florenac (onvrrne in New LII Tiue e* 'Iqa,.lh*ino. rat. An Enpraetcnal 'Illiier' I lt.Iiee. Among thIes ctii i iii :eil eteunpactical 1fh onbi in k'ej iipilieit +f thle Miii I ~i r is this: In the catailrv .i + mr:AIIv it iiiav Ix- iaidl when hie is em foot. luo.IiDj 11.1haSo ordered it that t he sword is atatch-iehl to his prer.,n aud remains with hion welwn be is dislo' sunted at the Nreat risk of tripping him up. whaelretas the lir.earum is attachet to his horse seo that if Iparted from that animal. for hio'wevet- r .hu ert a time. he is iicapable cif de'tii."r lig him asif, because tIhew ,.rd i. of il . i awIe to bim whetn off his steed. In :an ideal amy iuch anomnaliee as this 'u'uud (ei r tAiniy be remxedied.-The FortnighLly $e View. The Life of Vegetables. Vegetarians, indeed, a Il say that the universal adoption of th1ir crled would do away with all the cr itlty of the mar ket and the kitchen. Wouldl itt How do they.know that it does niot hurt a potato to be th.iled, ,.r an apple t., he peeled? Animals an i lslhes and fowhln a.e alive. they argu : but so are v.ege tables and fruits :adit'. That an orange makes no outcry w'.,,n it is cut plen is no prooftlhat it don , not feel pain. At any rate. in p,ick ,g and eat:ing it. we deliberately sacri :e its life. a:un that. too, without any iene<*ty oni our iart in doing so. But t e sfti.t hearted of us lever feel an' tlnpu~lnctlla'ioi if con s.lence on thi' :accotunt.-New York Commercial Auvertiser. Growth of the Telegraph. When the first elctliic t.l'egraph was stabliIshed. :according to thIe British postnaster general. the s.xed ,of trans mission was from, I four to five. words a minute on the five nneille in-tritanents. In 14NS the av."ragne rate for a ililllnd r if Newspaper n.-a;."- w:a ý,.r nte.ln words a minute. The pre.enit Iace of the elee tlrp telegraph ietot.. n Loin "n :i 1.)ub 1n, where the \Wlheat.toine aut ,atic in aitrument is employed. reachelws 4ti words a minute; and thus what n as regarded aW miraculous sixthy years ago has mnulti plied a hundredfold in one-hallf century. -Boston Budget. (ekmanames Among the Nobility. Some of the members of the Barrymore Emily were known by names rather ap propriate to their characteC Lord Bar symore, eldest of the fat of Barry, see a short career, and bore the nick ame of "ellgllate." Hi'brother. the ' Bon. Henry Barry, was clubfooted, and dabbed "*('ripplegate." while the Hon. ad Rev. Augu'-tts Barry, even IeeR rp tbable than the two others. went by the sme of "*Newgate," owing to his fre qent incarcerations. The sister's ready ad copious use of oaths ,obtained for her ts sobriquet of "Billunggate.'"-"Rec ads of Noble Families." A Fruitlhse wear-h. Chicago Phlilanthuropist-What's the otter, my poor oanti Chicago Burglar ttearfully- I was in dIt job the' other night where a good dtilen got kilhiel. It was anL a,'cident, ond I feel so I:ul over it I w:it to give myself up an I explainii how it haplsuled. * '* e11. whi d t, ',u o it." "'I can't tind any of the Ijulie or detectiver. They're all oil " orkin' on dews.-Omalha WV4 Ihd. An English Judge' Ileclsion. The demii r:tizng infltenc.e of an in. O.me tax i.s thia r.o rfiz-d I,y the Eng iidt Ibnch: Mr. Jutol". (.i,.ph.n recently amid in- a case before hiin that *the ~ulard of l,ullic mo nrals was ro lhw with resplect to income tax returns that the admission of a false return should not invalidate a man's claim to Iel hl lieved oj, oath in relation to private trans acions."-New York Sun. ("eollne Fuel for Motors. The use of gasoline as a fuel for small mat)rs is taken advantage of in a recent airention of a small engine to Ix attaclIed to biwvcele and tricycles. With this 8 *peed of ten miles an hour can 14 attained on level ground. Sufllcient fuel .an be carried for a run of twenty-fivoe miles, and the weight of the whole plant with tanks filled, is but ltS pounds. Chiago Tines. Italy's P'letrel.u, raoshula logqrist all conmplat that there are no are striking centuInu, left in Italy. and that the people here evren in the, hack rral districa strive to illiitate 'lll inian or English fabhions. I am toll that the1 pmat drels as a picture.lme c.Stullull diappeared except in tlhe iiub of t'l.-T. C. Crawford in New York WVeld. A hFut of Blood. Along the ulpper Nile a wing of the id tribe bleed their ca:ttle monthly Sadcook the blond with their flour and ,mli. They esteem tlli a luxury and the dish is eaten with great relish. I would rather be Henry lBergh with atheory of mercy put to prtºtior. than dI noblet poet ever born who, lnever did ything but s.in.-".Amber" in Chi. eg Journal. I ezams was the cold in Austr. _gi- te watr of 1691 that wolves Sdeivm lnto Vienna and attacked -a eTeweiuhd iram. Whaoe ofee Io Wee eseas. T fabled butterfly seated in th Ims's heart is not more contfident o present sovereignty, and more thoughts lee of the future than the hapless w. man whose face is her fortune and who is content therewith. An un spoiled beauty,. if not a lusus nature, is a specimen of her kind sutliciently rare to warrant surprised inspection. So difi cult is it for her to keep her head steady and to order her heart aright, that even her plain visaged companions accord her magnanimous applause when she suc ceees in doing one or bLth. She is more likely to 1iwas Narcissa., exacting tribute of adoration by inordinate estimate of her attractions. Once convinced that Slhe is the beauty of her family. she aspires to eclipse every wou:al she knows: is loath to perceive the charms of others, and, when forced to do them partial justice, hates her rivals. The speck of blight works fast and far in a nature where the conserving power of soun1d M.l'. has been reduced to a minimum by etcei-sive ranity, bordering upon nmonomania. Flattery, conveyed in various w,,hlules, is her daily d(er, and. if stintedl in supplies, she seeks it avidly, and at any coat -let it be of her own soul. Earth has no drearier sls'etacle than that of a passe belle, who cling.s with l th hands to the scepter clainird hIvy .htinger or fairer pre tenders to thll throne. It is harder for beautiful women to he gooxl than for those who have been taught from babyhood to seek the ap proval which all crave in the cultivation of mental and moral traits. Hard for them to ,put self out of sight. Our beauty is so fair to view; promises such lavish return for outlay so trilling that friends conspire to foster self-esteem. It is harder for her than for her siters to re train froml appeals to tile sensuous love of physical Wbauty in menl that lead- them to critical survey of her as a fine, animal, not the goodly case of a goodlier soul. Harder to be generous to those who trench upon her province and threaten to divide her slpils. -Marion Harland in Philadelphia Times. Fish Living Out of Water. Some years ago in 'frica a detachment of troops camne to camp on a level stretch of country, ljrf('tly dry and devoid of a suspicion of moisture. In dig.ing up the ground to arrange the tents a tis.h was found as dry as a chl--a long eel like creature coiled in a ball and seemingly incaned in a mud cocoon. The fish was I supposed to bie uummnitied and was taken as a curiosity and in the course of several weeks fell into the handls if a naturalist, who placed It in wator. The mud slowly dissolved andI soon the fish gave a gasp, then a convunldire struggle. like a sleeper awakening. finally swiumlung .fIT. Here was a sinl.la.r examile of a fish living out of water. It belonged to a group known as lung fi(, h l ite. em hers of which have a peculiar faculty of migrating overland and of btving able to exist not Imerely days but nlonths out of the water. At certain seasons the lakes and ponds of some localities in the dark continent dry up. and were it not for some provision which enables the fishes to bridge over this time it is evident that many would be destroyed. Nature, how ever, comes to the rescue, and. as the waters dry up, the fishes either crawl away to other ptreanms or immediately descend into the earth, where they form themselves into a round ball and lie in a semi-desiccated condition until the water comes the ensuing season. It is even maid that fishes have bIen known to pass two consecutive seasns in this condition. -C. F. Holder in Philadelphia Times. Relation of Diet to lIreams. "Ah, if our dreams only came true," sighed the young man that boards. "Last night I dreamed that I calle on a lord. I find that I can control mny visions to a considerable extent by dieting. For instance, if I wish to enjoy a calm night with dreams of a pleasant character. I eat toast or bread and milk just before retring. If I wi-h to have a little ex .-.rment, quarrelilg, dli-puting or a little active exercise. I eat silta-h pie. I hace found fromt experience and ol.servation that iquash pie acts str.ongly on the I*s terior part of the brain, where lie the bumrl of combativeness and acquisitivc ness. I have known times when the ctnvumptionl of two pieces of squash pie lh.I hl me to slay a man for hls money within fifteen minutes after going to bed. To make my brain a chamber of horrors, however, I sit down an hour before Ied time and eat three sardines, six olives, a little Rochefort cheese with crackers, washing the whole down with a bottle of Bass. Before morning I charge single handed with inr razor on herds of wild horses, and jump from sundry steeples. Oh, yes, it is Iossible to control one's dreams, and when we understand pay cology aright we can lie down ard map out our dreams as we now map out a day's work."- Buffalo Courier. Treatment for te. ere Burns. I was called in some lhato to a little child, abhout three weeks ago, who was badly burned al.rut the hands andl face from falling on a hot stove. The burns were deep, the pain cxcessive and tin shock very conshiderable. I espied upon the shelf a bottle of pinus canadlensis (colorlen). Remembering its wonderful soothing influence in acute inflamma tions. I at once concluded to try it. Taking a corner of a soft handkerrhief, I rapidly painted the injured parts, l hen. like magic, the pain ceased. You can well imagine my surprise and delight at the result. I directil a camel's hair brush to be purchaedl, and had the mother make free applications, and the case had no more treatnment, sare a little odiofotm ointmest a little later on. Since this I have tried it in several cases, both alight and severe, and with the same delightful result.-(Cor. Medecal Journal. Rentlag Wild Cattle. New fealand now contains grrat num bers of wild cattle, which have descended from those last by the farmers during the Maori wars which ended in 1868. Hunting these animals is an exciting and dangerous sport. The gme is not ily secured, as the anmals hover-seeml~ly for protecticm-about thickets filled with long twlning cergpers, in which pto grmon is very dimcult. Into Ylas thy dash at the slightest alarm, aghl lrg warm that am ither u ea me ms a ll them.--Ar w ',thdwr. NATIVES OF PATAGONIA. Dees of the OMe-Womoe Do AUll t Manual Labe--Orum·ata. Four years ago Chill and the Argentine Republic divided Patagonia between them, the former taking the Straits of Magellan, the key to the commerce of the west coast, and the latter the pampas. Thus in the partition the Indians fell to' the Argentines, but they kept as faraway from their owners as possible, for fear of being impressed into the army. Their .numb'rs have been so much reduced that there are not more than 3,00) of them Ileft, and these remain around Puenta Arenas, wher, they find the so cietv of the ('hillanos more agreeabhle thaný that of the Argentines further inorth. They are still mindful of their tribal relation.. and have similar cu-tion to this- ut the Sioux. The term l'ataLonian is unknown to to them and was given by the early explorers because of their large feet. Those who formerly inh:lhite.d the lower latitudes had the tribal name of Tehuelches, while further north they were calhld ('hennas. The native dress of the men is a chirpa or breech clout; a shirt of cale ). hich is a modern innovation: lI,'ifls of horsehide or the skin of the Iuarma (the pampa lion), and over all a sphmmlid robe of guanaco fur fit for any ki;n. These robes, like the blanket of the North American Inldiian, are neler laid aside, and are worn like the celh.hlratol breechea of Bryan O'Lynn. The leather side is painted in bright colors. with syvnllol and tracery to represent the nchievemnents of the owner in battle or in the chase, and some of thenm bear fantastic designs. A well tanned robe is worth h:alf a dozen horses, and is much prized by the owner, who will not part wit h it unless he is very drunk or thirsty. The leIt ones are made of the skins of young gunnacos, sewed together sllth the sinews of the ostrich, so that the shape of the animal will appear. The fur is soft and silken, the hack. n sides being of fawn color, and the Ilbly of the purest white. One can buy thIem g,f the traders at Pulenta Arena..., It thi'y semlom go to market, as peole h oil Ias-ing ressels pick them up for curia.t is. The Indian women dlreQ as the men do. and it is diflicult for a stranger to distiienguish the sex of a Patagonia native, except from the difference in stature. as the womnen are short and stumpy and generally have a babey slung o r theilr backs. They do all themanl.ad labor, pitch the tents or toldos. as tieey are callidi. skin the game that is Lrought down mn the chase, make the rohbe, cook the meal-4 and everything else in the way of drudgery. for their iords and masters are op;ulws l to every form of work that cannot he done in the saddle. Both the men and women are given to wearing leads of Nlil silver ornanments, munch of which is antique, and hanhdel down from generation to generation. The silver come, from the- Andes. and is o)tained by trading with their neighlros. the Arucanian Indians of Chili. Hlulting is their Iusiness, and their amusements are gambling and horse racing. They are great smokers. but do Rnot have the calu met of their North America:n brothers, using cigarettes exclusively, like the Spaniards, from whom they have ac quired the habit, and rolling them with the skill and grace of a haughty don. Philadelphia Times. Uses of the Willow. It in an interesting fact that not only Is the presence of extensive growtl.s of the willow found to be anti-malarial in its influence,. but that from a certain pecies of this same beautiful tree. or its tbtrk, is derived the comparatively new but well known antiseptic preparation calledl elicine: it is of a pure. bitter t.tre,, highly febrifugal in quality, is largely ued in .va:ious ilutions, ak. in surgical operations, aln is the wrnt effectual pre ventive of putre.faction in the iystem yt t known. For these lur!heis the willow is now Iaing extensively and systemat ically cultivated. At the end of two years the swit,.hes are from foulr to seven feet long. and are cut anmd gathered into bunches like sheaves of wheat; mn the strilpping building they are st.rped in water and the bark at the larger ends i(rseaed for a couple of irnchles by ma chinery; one by one the switches are plhacedl in the' Inechanic:l striplwr and with a pair .f pliers are pilled through with a sudden jerk. kbing then wile'd off with a wadxen cloth, I,undled, and lail away to drv. All the leaves and bark are dried and baled, the average y ield be ing a ton to the acrn, the willows com manding, when dry $200 per to. Frank Leslie's. How the romue "*Drums." I have had some expArience with the ruffed grouse. The Irulhar noise made by themu while drumming is usually made wlule the bird is st-mliig uII)I a log. but the log has nothing whatever to do with the sound produced. The bird while drumming asRumnes an upright po sition and dr,eom his wings until the flight feathers almost or quite touch the log or other perch on which he. stands. He the., by an intense muscular effort, makes quick, spasmodic beats with his wings. In doing this the ends of the wing feathers may, and perhaps some times do, touch the log; but it is the in tense quiver of the flight feathers. as they come in contact with the still air. in the short and intensely rapid beatc that pro. duce the soft. yet powerful and far reach ing sound. No impact of a feather or feathers with a solid sulastance--sjl.cially a m4s covere!d log--could ever limake a sound capable of being heard for a quar ter of a mile. Thle a .r seems to he filled with the ,outhd, soft as it is, ndl it s'ems to come to you frol eviery direction, so that it reqluires a quick and pranticed car to Ieatie it c~rrectly. This is prrd posi tive that it is prodlucal by vibratory ac tion in the air, and not by the imlpact of two solid substances.--Cr. American Field. Iasts About Berlia. A lover of the "curious in number" has arrived at some interestintg fact about Berlin. The city has 910 miles of streets. so that a person might walk ten dlays in the capital without retracing his steps. If the 1.400,000 inhabitants marched in double file they would tor a line nearly 760 mile in length. If the citiens determined to start upon a jour ney at the sarm time, all thi em of Germany weuld eomme6ate but two hirds d the aunbr.-New Yos fie. Iar ljubatal ef Amsrle. A glance at the geologies of the pres. ent day shows that workers in this do. partment of natural history are enabled to map out the continents and seas of ages ago almost as correctly as they can those of today-so distinctly are the old shores and landmarks outlined. Today we ride in cars across the American con tipent; yet not so long ago. geologically speaking, a vast inland sea extended northwest from the Gulf of Mexico finding its boundaries, in all prolatbility, on solme shore now submlergdtl beneath the waters of the Pacific. This was during what is known as the age of chalk, or the cretaceous period and Imllions of years ago, if our geologi cal etiI:ates are correct. 'Theo question as to u hether man existed then is an in teresting ione. Evidence of hunman life has not laen found; yet there were vast areas of land. with animals and plants of great variety, and as there was no physi cal haIrrier to human existence. in the opinion of many the cretaceous conti nents and islands were populated by man. Knowing the actual conditionw of life at this etiarlv time, the stnrange animals that hiv dluring it, it is a cellaratively easy matter to understand or applreciate the daily life of our ancestors. It is evident that they were much more primitive than even the bushman of to day, and undoubtedly were what we would ternm wild men, living in rocks and caves as the lower animals do. They were essentially hunters and fishermen, depending upon game for their suste nance. The small continent of Anmerica at this time had in all probability low, marshy coasts. and the great ocean or gulf. whose coast line can he traced from Arkansas to near Fort Riley, on the Kansas river, up to Minnesota to Canada, near the head of Lake Superior, was a vast shallow sea. On its bordnlers we may imagine cliffs of sandstone worn out into caves and quarries, in which these early fishermen made their houmce.-Phila delphia Times. Ienading rnealed Letters. The *"x)int of etiquette." in regard to not sealing hltters sent by the hand of a friend. is to It. considered. undoubtedly, as settled by the usage of pIlite society. And yet there lire two sides to the ques tion. To intrust to a friend an unsealed letter to a third l.r,.n i a conmpliment to the friend: but wlv should it be thoutht necesscarily untmpliuientary if the letter I setaled) Of'the oth. r iand. the sealing of a letter may lse deemed always advisable, for one good reason at least. The contents of an unsealed letter are never safe. They are safe so far as the honorable friend is concerned. but not safe in any other sense. They may be lo-t from the envelolp' easily and in nocently. They may be abstracted and read by the servant to whom the rote is delivered at the door. or hy any prying individual who may I,.l the mibsive lying on the hall table and awaiting the owner's arrival. Es" i..ly un,.f'e is it to ilace in an un srall i Ia ,a nrticles of large money value. Woui,l any sane man send a $50 bill in an u'l.revh- eonvelope Iby the hand of a friend or anyllloy whomesover? The friend himself, if he knew the nature of the inclosure, would be very apt to pro test against this acritice of common sense at the shrine of etiquette.-"C. 8. E." in New York Commercial Advertiser. Ilow to I'tograpth Blrde. Dr. R. W. Shufeldt suggetts to orni thologists that they may find portable photographic outfits of advantage in their studies. lie finds that by the u.o of tihe instantanmous lhutter blrds mnar he photogralphld in nearly all of their posi tions. "Out here on the pl'rairie.s we will often find an old stump or stalk uinn which a dozen or fifteen slecies of birds will alight during even or eight hours on almo.t any day suitable to use the crnra upon them. Tow, all we have to do, is to properly set our instrumnent i, ar this point. conceal it in such a way as not to alarm the birds, focus it sharply upoxn tho perch where they alight, pl'ice on ' tVur 'snap shutter,' and fix it with a string, and then remove yourn.If far enough away to pull it when you hay a subject sitting to your liking. Birdt that you have wounded but eiightly m:ay be pho tographed under the most favorable cir cunistancees: they may also Ib taken sit tingon their nests; in actual flight, how ever swift; in pursuit of their food; in leading about their young; indeed. the list is almost an endles one. Rlookeries also offer admirable subjectt, and a splendid field is open at those wonder- i fal resorts of water birds in such plrees as the Bahamas or the Alaskan coat. '" Chicago News. A Story of IMelmonlir. The enterprising manager of a Paris theatre ou..ce called upon 31e asonier and asked him to paint a drop c'ene for a certain theatre and name his own terms. "You have seen my pictures, then?" asked Melssonier. "Oh, yes,' exclaimed the manager; ''but it is your name-your name I want; it will draw crowds to my theatre." "And how large is it you wish this curtain to be?" inquired the artist. "Ah, well, we will say fifteen meters by eighteen." Meissonler took up a pencil and pruceeded to make a calculation. At last he looked up and sid with imper turbable gravity: "I have cal,.ulated and find that my pictures are valued at 80, 000 francs per meter. Your curtain, therefore, will cost you jaut ~21.600,000 francs. But that is not all. It taklis me twelve months to paint tw,.nt-ylive cen timeters of canvas. It will, therefore, take me just 100 years to fnlhIi your curtain. You should have cone to me earlier, monhieur; 1 am too old for the undertaking now. (aod morning." Art Amateur. An "AntI.Fat" Treatment. A th' rrrv f ,li*osity. proposd by M. Levenm rv'rntlk. anl descrihcil befor, the Societhe iv Itrlogie, is that it is a nervous disorder, and to be treated by avoidance of mt.Ital and physical fatigue and a diet of eggs, ,up, milk, rice and potatoes. Scientific American. Items fao Coal Delresa Taking into considerstio the gradually diminishing radiating surface, the .IS olusdon has been arrived at that ite s-h cannot give out sdAolest ~l a t o Son the earth alasr IMh lqe 0. u 0gg . a i.... R. G. RIGHMOND., Diamonds, atches Fine Jewelry Watch Repairing a Specialty. STEBBINS BLOCK, MvILES CrTY. tlTABLISHED 1877. JAS. oXMITLLAN & CO., PROPRIETORQ OF THE Minneapolis Sheepskin Tannery, AND DEALERS IN ZDES, SEEPZ ELTS, ýE, WOOL, TALLOW Oinsun and Seneca Root. SHEEP PELTS & FURS A SPECIALTY. 101, 103 s 106 o.md st. ae rtk. MINNEAPOLIL, MN. Shipments Soilited. " . Write fI,r (rLoule. For MAN! For~c~ BEAT i / 4~ * X)ICk X r3Ac!qZ F In Pnjgo~ q4~~OL 44L4 ozCagU) ULW Zsaujr LV~II I~U £aamj r~in4qef .9 CORDON &FERGUSON, Manufecturers and Jebbers of Hats, Caps, Fus, GLOVES AND MITTENS,. BUFFALO ROBES -AND ALL IINDS OF FUR COATS. Large Stocki -AND LOW PRICES. N.o. 216 218, 222, EAST FOUR'I ST St. Paul - Minn DRI. LIEIG & CO. The Europen Medlel saifand rpeclal Surgeonu and i'hy.cLanc of the I.leblg World Iispenesar and lnterunatenal Surgical lnstitute. Tbhe ur gicalbrancl to defonut titles of.y ery kin, and all dis Splisoements req u ring applia nces for C u rv a ture of the *i pine, Ilip 0 Jolult li gS ease, lDia .t o rted S1Limbs or h0 IArruIs sne A rceamfully treated b our newVol a leaeut The medical branch devotes opecarli at l.ein all IChronec, (tmplicated. Private mud wu *M Dseasesl . resulting from badly treated em"W u _ - ute or rpeacal nture, or frem IadlerSmUo o, oyuth, lriging on Myermaerrfhe. NMoim 'esakesse and an unnatural drais frS the body which undermine. the eLoMiltutlee-lBe Debility Deeoy. Loae of Vitality or Mambed, whO resmult fromn ele; s of maturity. The reason se mme u -.ut e ,red o-f sh- e com plaist In owirng to a omplItlOI salled I'roaster hrb. , whiebo our tmet t .ei es cm care. Varlc.eele, wrm/ veinr L ti crotum, tUrlcturr. hlood and cLhin i i" 0peedily cued; *luto privet. trerob, li.c I, oelmnimll ly4 andq ky cared,. O" ftI of the mucous memberanee of he heqSa r eueeeielully treted; a*lo throat and tlg dlemein. Female complaints and all deI O. Jpleated diseaue of womes, earefully atiNm.uIr sew method wherehy se et the "unlu.Il est eomnlinations re required. Dis pbeeiet of ther Uterus cand el aelel eompUlnts reeulpr to emalee, sreetfull d. All l .ee speken and written. Wriin your own Tsoest wpowerfuil ELJ(rTIC IELTS free t paties..tn. 4l o or address Liebig World Dispensary. Ow esqr l., a Ime lrese, ce .~T 0 ".:eI a etb AmeriCa. C~nhnlll. I'o 5' Ce .'iicUs4m fr patUnte car..,..r , t-ar oe inabt.. ·et.. fIlrttl. I. '.d1 Mtatm. e obtain pates In C·ased.. F .,saud. Fm Geminl. and ·al o Ph, roin ntri.. 7hir eap sine~ as ayueaiad sad their Laos itie aaeu thea s td eperilallone rrepsd s ed U ltsPtnnt Offie 00 sh. rs ofr. T~ermlps reeomable. h'o ichare for tart .511as0. of a. fa r d aaenas, Adie rt.y mai fr eemat n·unr ahc.rd ,.rthM ,'nýi'. ·areeUaej Mhe arge omulatmo . Canad is I mt uiie sdIattd I. he t heel pr devot to rele mneshse Iequalned adtheirief fad.olteh an Ros htaDr, aautd .e e o indstri al prepared s a pd S ELed n sr ouutr~ It cunlalestcease 4 sit Patent. rmd ie uo eort aneticlo.. ates oihg tdr hll newedesleve. Ne lage an andentios t s so t pad * ba lare and taedll Illtts ·L-ed $ºr ep~ree o ndo tta po.o w ]irYork. 55.1pt JIeefAy Great English Remedy "' Murray's Specific. A gasranteed core for all nervous i ma* w, such as Werak MaaUr)t. IA,-" of Itrain Pii'iir. Ilyiterla. II la. he, Pist hr tih Itaik. erarmmll5Y lrntatloisi. V..k li,.. I.esnrrbi,i. loiter Before Taklag. newas li.nt-rn' al d lerna lulo of Ig'oer of the (,eno.rati'e Organs; iIn eIthrr -i xau. iJ byr Inds , re. on or 'tear ezar liiin, .51 which iltloately h-adlt Itrrcutaiar tolil d ni. I *,anmmts n .. ( .i,,,.sm sup? lisa. $1.00 a la or sii h~oxe- for IT, tr. Frt 1 tlada Eua6 by mail on rcelot of 1rer. luil part ii Isrrs un ;.mphlet, -.lit ft.,e to cv. ry applcant.. to cure any case. For csery 1-1 tu Older reeivled, wesi sIed uI oCs. with a written guarstule t- refund the umomey if our I SlOt noterai effect a cyw. rfte.lrklr g Ad reras all communications to Iba sole macu tacturan, TlHE Mt BRAY MF.lIC1N ('0. Kiloss C(Ity, No. WII. M. PAR(. 'li H CO., Whelesalr and R.4.11 Agale, ý r H e l en a . E a sr t . Jno. iarter'S, ° k rgoldi E aranvate b A aei a'd h stl ea ýwýnri~i.i r tIrt $100 to $ A0 MOT b e rehesi whem lUitr ee 1 g i v e ~ a 1 t h u s a . W h o l t i me tw t h e h u l m ee s maeN be te kl rn _ _ _ _ I IMA Rab /1.s Naw1 M