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J. E. PETERS, Grand Street, " " * - Monroe, La" DEALER IN Furniture, sash and Doors, Window Shades, Children's Carriages, Wagons AND VELOCIPEDES. EMBALMER And Dealer In Coffin,COn Trimming andletalic BurialCases Aleo Dealer In THE AMERICAN SEWING MACHINE. THOROUGH BUSINESS EDUCATION. The Louisville BUSINESS COLLECE Corner, No. 406 Third Street. BRYANT ANT) STRATTON. Book-Keeplng. Penmanship, Short-hand, Telegraph y For Catalogue, address College as above. DR. J. S. IBE=AZLEY, In charge of Drug Store, Bennedette St., Rayville. La --Dealer in Oriss, lMeicises, Chemicals, Paints, Oils, Pens, Inrs, Paper Envelopes, Fine Cigars and Tobacco. Extracts, Perfumery, Etc. -------.-..... ). ..J. . fIE.\tI,EY .l ffe, r his pnfe'ionn %,",e to lth cvitiaens of Ilayville. ('an Ihl un1li. duriuni tha day at th" l)rug ston*, at night., at his rsideen.e". DR. L LIDDELL teders his.ret.sional services to theo of Rayrfe sad er rounding n phob rod The Doctor will be found at his e, for erl occupied by B.C. Yaantgt , o the n. orer of the court bw square, or at his residence in Rhym' addition to Ray ville. on same e snet,0ý yards south, ee professionmily aiged DAVID TODD, Attorney - i5t - Law, IN Graver Ut., New bOsas I.S Will attend every term th Riehlape ('urt. All Jterse about bmins promptly answered. any-wux n to r" . twoelrid L a? ... t4 I! fio 'tan -b sVcure Healthg action to the Live a drelieveall -i S Jus troublas. lI.K Tqa.Sls: No ^r.:. r..: .25c. 1 DnXL Bulding a Ilome. Presuming that a location has been selected, with a special view of arr.,nge ment of cesspools, wells, cisterns, and outhouses, which shoulil flow down and away from the foundation of tlhe house, and which should at no time flow towardyou from netghboringdwell engs, the greatest thing then to con ider is to preserve sanitary conditions. It seems somewhat superfluous to warn one against keeping decayed vegetables around the cellar, but there are thou sands who, through sheer neglect, in. tite weekly and daily all germs of iufec $ions disease through this most common of household evils. In the cellar, above ll places, plenty of fresh air should I:e admitti#ed. There is hardly a house e , no matter how vigorously the Smay resent this imputation, who is entirely free from the charge of shift. sness. Wherever refuse bits of fool are left to mould, a plate left unwashed, a wash cloth uncleansed, and even where fresh milk, meat, or other goodsI are left uncovered in living rooms a bed rooms, there disease will propag ata, not instatly, understand me, in a virnhat, venomous form, but insidious ly the impurities arising from the de eompmsin matter will leave their effect upon all inhaling the air of the apart meat impreganated by the rising gases. Many homes are now built to rent or all, and constructed in the most flimsy manner. They are built to rent or sell, and the mere advertisement that a house is faurnished with the most improved msaitary appliances should not be con sidaaw s ma suadcient guarantee. Tihe sellr shokld be visited. If its walls are -asked, damp, or colored with mcntld, I water stands upon its floor, and if light and ventilation are not provided te, seek some other habitation. of poease newly constructed walls are al ways damp until seasoned by time. A geat amount of water is used in the -mrtar and plastering, and much of this m t evaporate before the building is It bo oespnea . Neither should a thoe freshly painted with lead paints he oeoapisd until the paint is well dried. T. liviag rooms sbould be placed on te ranny, airy side of the house, and Nb bed rooms examined with reference to their means of ventilation.-PAhila d p Base. There are three tnings u1-alt which a r man knows more than his wife, yes four things about which he will not hearken i to wisdom-when he ought to take his umbrells, when he ought to put on dry I slothes, when he ought not to remove e his flannels and when lie ought not to Sout on a steamer without an overcoat. Thousands of people went out from Tor oanto boat on Dminion Day, and t poaby 75 per cent. of the total of a alecureloeists were advised by sis er, mother, or wife to take overcoats. t But not 2 per cent. were persuaded. It af thet that it was a cold day on the v ake and that the want of heavier cloth ag spoila the day for hundreds. The a romen were as lightly clad as the men, 7 ad saffered even more seriously from 7 ,e chilliness of the atmosphere. And a smuly half of these shivering women a ad urged their brothers or fathers or Mausbids to take overeats. It is ai-ally eas to trust a woman to think oo mucar of te comfort of the men round her ad to neglect to provide for er own wants or to insure her own h rsre Bt the mral of this is that as oa hould vry arely go outon the t she without an vereat, and that when i he women of y r bo leholdaetak you flai ti J ta oI like r C rpu r re al tea itatoue it riad meua hae mausf rther owa comfort, It be ha hsa hbee here Ls g enough, p a we hve imes e long eough to Cn wo ltedr snse than mast of us ex - "W Ds elaos Day.-Tereas to wh, sa Iew Strlm Are Made. Our earth only receives a small fraec tional part of the sun's heat; but, what * err that may be in the year, more or less than the average, the entire rautfae of our earth must feel and lbe subject to the effects. And one thing is certain namely, that a year or series of r.ars, of excessave sunlight will inevitalhly i.e year and seasons of excessive atnmosplheric ,lis turbanhcoea, because increase of heat will produce excess of evaporation, ecexrsive precipitation; and, during a prevahl-ue 1 of this excess of sun-heat, ther- must e over limited areas violent storms both summer and winter. When very large areas of the atino sphere have been, by excess of heat, brought into an unequal state, as large areas of lower stratum of highly-heatoe air sad vapor, which is also intensely electric, the conditions to produce sand spouts, water-spouts, aid t-rnados, are fully rip. The uppkr and colder layer of the •tmoaphere cannot cool the lout r highly-hested and vapor-ladened strat um so evenly and quickly as to prevent vents in the form of funnels forming from the lower stratum to the higher stratum, causing a rupture which takes Splace upward in a pipe form just -as ater in a tank or basin, having a iottiom means for discharge by a pipe flows out with a whirling motion-in our northern hemisphere alwaveys in the di rection of the hands of a clock-and so the heated, highly electric and excess . ively vapor-laden atmosphere bretaks into the cold atmosphere athove when at the level of the "dew lpoint"' invisible vapor becomes visible, Martin,; with its latent heat,whieh so rarities tihe air as to force some of the eondenm'-d at niuslihere in visible clouds, mounting thousanls of Sfeet above the condensed ,Iow point into a region above the highest p-eaks of the highest mountain. .To feed this pipe, or, as in sonme cases, pipes, the lower stratum flows in from all sides to rotate and ascend with the intense velocity of steam power, sittli cient to produce all the disastrous elb:tets of the wildest tornado, there luing almost a vacuum at the ground or water line, as the phenomenon may be on he Y land or over the sea. On the land tre-es are twisted and uprootel, houses are tin- roofed, solids of various kinds aire lifted from the earth, and human beings have been blown away like dadl leaves. There are, also, records of railway n aig one having Ieen blown off tin,' rais. Iii deserts entire caravans have been huri,d a beneath a mountain of blown sand eamels, horses, and men; while in Egypt there are ruins of cities, massive temples and monuments deep buried in the al. joining desert sand. At sea many a good ship caught by a tornado has been overwhelmed and sent to the bet. tom whole.-Pau Mail ;,a:, t,. The Pralrie Shrimp. The Frasshopper plague in Minnes,,ta has assumed ro serious a charaeter that the farmers around St. Paul have il-cil ed to pay $1 a bushel for the insects in prder to stimulate the efforts for their destruction. In Venezuela recently a prize of $4,000 was offereI! to anylodly who would invent a means of pr.-titalh!y converting locusts into grc s". er Iany other us-eful article. We c, a-,t e.i Inh originality for the idea, but why not , adopt the Indian system! Theit aberigin al farmers on thime plains, we have b1nis tolh heretfor,-, do not r--gard the gr.as Shopper as an unqualified eoil. Wihn their wheat cropsm grow undlisturhld I, I these insets, tihe Indians cat tie - heliat after it has been prepar.,i in thie usual way. Wh-en tihe gras]hoiers c rne :,,mI eat the wheat, howe-ver, the litalines eat . the grasshoppers. In this way tthey a're always sure of a good crop, of one kiil a or the other, alnd are happy in any ev,,nt. k There is authority for the statemrunmt that t Sfried grasshoppers are not uipial-tmall-, w tihe testimony of white men whuo have dined on them beting that they have :t "rich, nutty taste," not unlike- !sanut'. s or something of that sort, and that th, most squeamish person would eni joy them if they were served up in I,.st ter or under some other mnme. We d., not care to press the suljyict too fir, but why not rive the frisky visitors a chance to redeem their reputatieion iuy l: transferring them from the fielhd ti tlii '. kitchen, from the furrow t,, the fuvinig- ,b prn' The Indian holds the oyster :,ni, A\ shrimp in scorn, and hia, we know it a c,, I blind and unreasonable prejuelice. Why in sbould we not learn from him at time I': same time that we teach him to esti e(n w our delicacies? Let our friends in Min 3M nesota, then, name the grssshliiper tie ii Prairie Shrimp, for instans, ain gaither im him in and make the most of hii.i- wi Charlesto e'o, ri Fat as a PIg. Real gratitude is always r, freshing,_ t even though the terms in which it ris ila expressed be neither el.e-ant nor gu-uun matieal. Indeed, if time Irishman men-i tioned below had expressed his felings "m't in shaste language, it is most Iliely that hne nobody would ever have thought of re- eI! portmng or quoting it. o An Irishman benloging to a Mainoie I regiment refused to receive any farvrs or listen toany advice from ai age-nt of the c'r Christian Commission, theounh sadly in ju, . need of some articles of clothing. Want, an. imia' however, flnallytriumphed over will, and I"E he was supplied. Seeing the delegate again he said to e,,i him; "Sir, they tell me ve are working sen here jist for the love of time boys, and git iv no pay at all, intirely." 'They are mistaken," was the answer cnr "Weg the best pay of anylbod yn tin f "indade ! And what pay do you git, ; er -ayhow ?" lit, "Did_'t you say 'God blesy !'es ,en I bsought you the shirt and the drawers and the socks the other dayt"n "I mind it," said the soldier. "And did they do you any good?" fioin SGood!" replied Pat. "'Ani didn't the th warm me feet, and warm me Inck the -arm me all over ha"k sio "Well" replied the delegate, "that is no the ay we get.'*ea "asthat it ia that itt" asked Pat mes withalookof admiring wonder. Ai tdhi then grasplag the donor's hand, he er- thi, ela--ed, "God bless you! God bless prit you! an .may you lire foriver, and mayfr, y-ou.wife livel ong, you do, nail mit may ivery one of your children be as fat itei ms pig, and as white !" ever youu The Death of Cleepatra. "1 I youn Dr. Visud Oansd.Marals, of Nante,, as - ha bas holdig a inquest on the di sudden death ofCloata He rejects tom _h th oy that her death w caused o by th Mtel a viper. Shewas aeus- TIl, k i s d to t e st t h e ef e t o f v a r iou s c g a _ouse he dslves, in ore to sseet-. thr, Shaeaused the esistdeath. Hay- coat showm that a. vip.r was found in shall braino ci thfairsmuicide, that her body uI asd motraoe o bites, and that her He iwo mead srvants wee found dead hor yl iatthefood her bed, he comes ,, Sthe auetuaidom that her death was nsaj -~ b~ anbomiemile. FROM PRISON TO HII I HOM Sequel To a Baltimore Sensation of itt or ]Pour Y'ears .1go,. to t ]our years ago (;ill..rt W. Ilaz - eltine, son of J ir. G. W. Hlazeltine 'r of Jamestown, N. Y., killed Masmic lia Thorpe and wounded May White in a ill hou.s of ill-fame in Paltimore. Hazel o tino culae of a mlo.st excellent family. - Ilis father is well knewn, and is one of be the ohlest men n in Jan, st. " i. Bhtt the All young man l:tes will utel ingove'rnb.le'. lie got into fre.lue.tnt seel ains tand brouight no- a groat deal of s. rrow Iu'nl, his pI.-pt1*. Int, lte untmer of lSS4 Itl an, i' eoi,,laettL ge ion met the two Dnung womei. in Canlada. t The four wcent to I:lltinore. Iliazetine sl indulged in a prolonged. spree,. lie ein dtavored to get from the women their oie jewelry. There was a eluarrel, andi it t"r ended in a trage.dv that heatsle oneo of the r aensations of the: city. 'iThe trial th:t at- followed was full of ieten.se interest. int Hlazeltineo's anctler was his h :eal anigel g throughout. lroema the first she has l'ft ner nothing unlone to secure' his life aitl yes liberty. Brilliant conmisel :avedl his ter ne,:k aned got the ternm of nmlrisonnment Sretiietute to live yearl. ,ut "ic, then Mir. ilazeltine, hl:s Ir"?n r constantly at work to gett hunt I lrdolned. li- Se got re.:oimenelctieons Ireci 10 eruem SO i.rs of the jry-, front tihe State's Attor elSy, fromn the' .Iutlge, and she even ks gainedl the interceesi,,n of (,ov. Hill of it Now York. Nellces euenie. (eov. Jack to son gtte her thie p:urtlon at .luitla elis, its andi she came bly the lfirst train to Ilalti to more. The' s~cene Is'tweenl her and lher re t en uwas ,ry afntectini:g. Site will take ,f hin to .liamestown, where he will le to jlace'l iuiler the care of a speceialist in he brain ul:sealse t. 'h.' o nly pr,',tehst against the' , pItrllon wa fromt the fathler eof lManie I, Thor.pe, the murdered girl. II11 is a reputabe' a lisitg on (long Island, l 110 ali his wife thought that their is tdLghtelt was it dr.esesmnake'r in Ca'inatda, ts ati the .sIhck that resulted wlhen hoe , ..ine' teo litimenre juiet after the meurder or nln founl what sort of life ste he had been c Itleliing unsettle I his mimld. Ii . A Narrow Escape. "" A it '.:-v is goineg the' roIund of the 4- nw.p, lrs that anlt e.'.as.in shot through Int the uilow e,f the. Ih see,ef euntor.lohn ý _i P. Jontees with the intetntion of killing S 're.tsident .\rtlhr. Thtis wits in the early !t fall of i.l, whil!e the I'resident was s toeiliararily lit iungt with Senateor Jones. e" awaiting the clec:nintg :nd repairing of S thee White lhouse,. The story is true, s senl was known to, see'ral ,f the corres * lo1' nits ait tie tinlt', whoft kept tlae Sse-ret h'te'ause' it wits feared the publlicJa tion would tncite otheralasasins. When I'resident Arthur went to, Wasehington, itmnueliately after iGartleli's dehath lie a took his lifet in I;ls h.ltl. anl knew it, I lnt he necver e',hiiit.d ieny eiignl of fear. ( a his greae"t a;llxiety war to get the Senlato it together si' , that a l'r',sidelt pro tern. I might be oec.te01 and the s.0.cession es I i sllrtd.t. e was iii gre at mncntatl distress t over tlhe ernel imelutationu that he, to- I Sgetlter with the Stalwarts, halD enour Y eed the' es:t.-inatieon. A day ,r two Y lter lhe arrive.dl he was urged t take a ride for exere.se, andl a eleoe covered n ei-al, witht a ,el to ti:e scteld by the ri r, wa.s ea.t!e . 't',he I're-ildent dit - nii: se(i the' d.eteci\-cte. his triel:is ex It '-stlti:t'teel, hleut hle dice:.lle'l thl t lihe w',,hl not go i, jaic anld snuggest that t !-l.h it thillg as t, --.:-~`i:tiro( ais. possi rll'. "Il.sidtec ." -al lee, "if it is the t j:erptse' of teany er a to kill mce lie will I n -cmjliseh t iin s' ,:t, of all guards and p ptrtetion." .: th.n h... a-1h 41, with t litst ]iathetie' uttteri ce: "i'n !yi proreseint r -statet' of !itnd it ste 'iie:t,es - e'ons to muet I as tthiugh I dide not rare whether I aet k killed e.' noiet." Aside, lhowever, from c t his shcsiting, it is nmet known that there waes et\r anytitiig that ea':ias'd the ldlice and dei'teetives lwho,, lunbkntown to him. sedr' eol the aettch, to entertain the s!i8lhtest .su piciJui. g linis.tering to a Minld iiiqeased. A e, cri,,spmene'tt eavs: --Miss I),,rothv l:;,thl, et .\tleis, i ()lhi, leas for several t.ti. It-eu ll .suileerittt)lhe.nI t of ,le of thile teeeirti:tntt its it the ieitiane asylum at AtleIe, rondl in memi wclr of a fnmily of -'tnesieer.le loromiu.tence. AnmRng the imcante's during the pest year was Osmar 'a,'ri'h, a lrintitr nd newslntpe'r man I' well keewn aill the neiehirhooies and at 'tirii, tt:t, hli .,ler,. ho e his worked. In hler werk of sutl,'rietenhlene'o Miss it Piiithe e"eince oftte'n in centact with Parrish, ct Iwho at firs.t w:s cielztly iv isance, but '' rapiily ientr, eved. Iuring his contine net a 1mutual fs;etiin sprang iup be tw.eenll th twot, bIllt was not genrrallv go it' tice te. Prcterie-le ereeteteed alwaeys to ho or ecesly eulei,'tc'el aleie she itlbprdeiichtel hlimn; iii tl:t jIia p iiene' a-f etlerm's lie wouild oftei - lialee tie le'int sleeItS. Ale'nt three tmonthis l',, It'ri'ihiIm c,;s dielc.lhalretd a well ncman. (eie 'li'e ,l.:lV e'ven'lineg lIe returned to Rd A'h, -, "n,-, hat ig made ilI arrange ie'it:-, w'enlt to tlhe Isylunu, ane1, finding " 31ss l;.erthl, the two re.lairel to the otlite. e'f a juttic ail were nmrried. The Itr'etts of tht. lt l-, theugh living but a few ree. teren the cce .ne of tihe marriage cere--eenetey, kee'w eotlhing of it. The jtI ce',' wcs·i ph',lgedt to secreey and MIr. tnoI M1Is. lert ish weCt away. she return iug to the aylumn anl Ile goinug to his Itret. Tim emarriage has just now bo creme puihlie, anl thee yeung lady's pa tents are e-aitl to he eery angry. Mrs. Pearrislh idmcits that she fell in leve title her lhu.b.ned before he was cereal of his ineannity, and used extra ef fer;s te eritig al,eut his complelte mental restoration. Shte will still continne in her present situatiou, which is quite luctiathve. .Lold Caarry Chalk WithL Them. Hle wore a white waistcoat and a white four-in-handl tie and lie was standing on the frett platform of a Broadway car s:moking a cigarette. Thee street was mnudey. Presently his gheaming waist cenet and his imnmaculate tie were orna- - me nteel with splotches of mud. He looko el annoyet and engry. He said some thing which Cl. ShepMpard would never print. He drew a cmbric handkerchief from his pocket and tried to wipe the I mud off. He only lsuceeed' in rubbing "' it in. He looked more worried than - ever. ly his side was a flashily-dressed: yong man smoking a big cigar. Ki6ander mdldyl " mid the flahy young man in an off-hand tone. "e," s.aid hea of the whit aistcat, as he rublle at the mudedyspots. "And as I den't know what I shall do. I'm going to mske a ail, and I live too far away to go home ·aid change my clothes. The lashy young man poffed his thrust his hand in a side pocket of his -an oat and tiahed out a cube of billiard "Try this," he said, He of thu white waistcoat took the halk and catuully rlubbedl it over the o._- la few minutes they had aill spped and his waisteoat alld ne'cl - -Wie pummly whit,--s.. SEI1ECT SITINGS. A Ieaf ie is three miles. Twhe Ait rs own 10UU0 I uii'iing. Is New York city. A day's journey is thtirty-thri o and one-eighthl miles. A 1iahy has Iben born in ('hitahlgo weighing just one it t int) avoirdupois. A poundi of pennie's ii worth #14'. AI p:,unit of tihe cot picces is wort it A New York coroner r'c'e-e;tiv ni-rro - iLure which .1 S tic ~e' ha.! talk+u pi u4-i `-ew I-, i nit 1 1 ii f r the-it neal ptt' v(-r cc1' il:!. j"ll3 t L/ .it nca ha;i S icic I;.It IllOt' in enr01il1 o' r lue r thri c a littii' lover :x Ilcieir'l. awil !o lroke the tee Iri for t hat 1i it~t~i e'. A llieti.tctr ft l, SaIi.,e~ ii f cljicheti at 'elru.c, I~a thei 'tilr atlit. a122. -.t", c PC1 tee Ihe'I i--it " iig tilt Ieit l' ilut cu~L 13' when iti- iere ,er Lute-el hi,:i. Mr. I v.'. of .Iles.omp. Ial.. h.I;11 aCcow th:t it u r ret Itireie- thlretliglllt F'lelIitizing n "Ilnlln, r,: hId iiily pilts on hut to at a~t th" i oi te I til' . .Atll!.g fit,, ,It'.e. elICllt l of 1I.h riOI I'lallt:lLcli24't. Duke of 4It 'it'eitt-r, fifth i Pciiiinn c,whoe i ti. lot litany yars n.' I tltoli at Mlt. Gcorge', I hlvuer B lu;cre, I"eIll loot?. ITurin:. tie (ihill of -ailclrl a:thir-i tile Ste lincr hore St t itv at It p-tell re litlti, tIe'. Ita fr ,eI a i," t tct li'1. n t'., k4. jtr~f -<'1.2. I thei iiiieeL,al-2.ie ie.1erl loee thine, jinto iii'' wa~te ini the rell21tia4l¶ ijiiik till 'o' out 1 I2 iliuute aui fourteenl be c.it-k1,. notie~I letter wal r iy. 41 byl a eee~tt' Nev 1~ or~. It wa.. w it tIn onl it geu-title att trie'i·e, ant'I it arrivedl at it i 11181 ill 3 dc:'rd;lell I tol theIC Il (Iref 11liedg-facedi Ieo of tfIt- dI21l14' Illme w 'UIO;. oats or.ginally t''etec~ by I!º pl' 4'elulalr Swet 'llt 11l1It, ,leeI1111 I .lll lIr I 11 1:; G1, 1ultl1 U-c' IC b i-ecinlied ,lra Crlil au,I conic d:tieti, feer tint ea'W 'heaIt re of --tleekiheelin. 4'harlev I e'". letter knoewn n, 'W'hi..tt tihe o~ther clayl, ass''ti e12 of tillod cehilrlll Pete~rs of thart l icy. .\ltllotl", eighty -i t its old.llc Illldi ie I:e i- l-llntlca .re aIlleln u'ils~t to til'hge' shv f hiii' e ltc;!I, s:111 i hs hr:ll wit's 14.' 4lelli" Itch heardl for a hl,) ,. k Ile' ih:ne a ;.:etlIa leer r.lig:ta~ti 11.'s tinkger, eite I Iere'I with Illl Ili. I'Il.- lpreity iw'c Ihitti '12 :l (oeIllelll(. I 122111 live) " c i iiiie tlit teal fir. i t l "i , a 21r 1 tIll iCetlns -iv ti, 't th int r44 r to t tr alt mia I rci 1142 p.a'c. milt Ic rtir al ,e'r11 i.iLŽ'I ·114 (;2V l 11.15 the,;I'~ ,lilt.rlyl't cll'r a 'l2 c~ (II iS2111; C o "iC Celc tl I~ lie surtan'cel jof1 piillt I g ines:. 'Iii' 3" itl a lly is eenly si \tc.Inf .car 1e ei. A lever of tile."1dilCSn fliii.,erse i.2 arice i at "Oull· i1tere-tr ' " ;ef"; .1 'I '.treets, so thIt a1 pr-on tlli;liit , a" k -II1 lay'. t)in l' 'lt ert, ia . t 'Ct l t ret t IIIr ' l oIt i 1's l1. II the 1, d le4 at ltllaltn t- - 21t- 4ileell manrit hiin. c:lei,c tie,' they ie,:lth.I te t "2 ,1 lull' a :-het ,n 4l ill". lee II 0oI' y t It ele, 12 .eCl ltr e cat ti ·le' I II till e' II tilt' c~ir; /.,e] ~rlnjay ,v~i~l:,e , 42414luilc) ' r.e(I,'lt Ic'l't f t ·el, (Pil.Je, oI 145 12 a c u r i r- nc'. 4 2 i , ta I, ii e. nt llc'.tal ci' cuv (hl' it lii lcr.it Intcll tit oef aI nii Otil cg. wh'Iile tee itg [.' i. / Ie' feclo'ringei.'hi i hili (1211' e-i tct. ea~rl r to tcccs'il' teour '- so-il llh iileei iher-. or tcyi. :letl;- rl't~criefticeil" en ofeel roes pa-.cl ate I' ilj",Iteciljhil, 'ctre.21 v54' P othe~r "i ilat re' atiecl ery, (ilt it 1. top) Inl iiinit dfai if to Ie Inan ,In. et. A~air~ria 400,000 uscriers re Wh not AK IT A MILLION inest d most costly LADIES' HOME JOURNAL t cot AND PRACTICAL HOUSEKEEPER FROM NOW to JANUARY, 1889 Four Months--balance of this year, o0 piP or We have ingaged for the ug seas the lver most popular and best known wmners i or Amer, a t. writie flr r our col-y L MSQtam umis. ninginal topynghted matter. Elizabeth Stuart Phelps, . - " - - >t =Josiah Allen's W1~4 Mary J. Holmes, FAIER'SE Marion Harland, WIFE Rose Terry Cooke, S.WIll Carleton, a . n o..r Robert J. urdettl , /s or h.w to seot. a Eliza R. Parker, lm ear . TAhYm t U rKate Upson Clarke, m ot rbsgu. Ioa _orn - g-n r ss Mrs. John berw s n.pr: , Moi.!: Florino Thaemr Maonny, =. , frr -,--rt· o Dr. W in A. Hmmo· . ato, d%.l fa Orl o o !l Y .r . /e erLsRo o.ou ros O Es mad oleo to Christinea Torhunn HeIrr Ik. , C o m ad erven shi lae t rhd, len "·e oser an tha mbre . tv e r t 1tar tofor > Artistic Needlework- Finely g rsl a and Dn r drlEelo mC L"O3 rl . lU 3'"IL " ag new and orKinal )lded hyan ecA t I gt- i n- , Dina'e rtis -HmCeLick. 13 L seaai Si reet. Is. Y. L't. terns . tuartace .. . 'ct and rela!k a , in lcarly -i at 1..e ,. in s s. ",e .. "uppen,l Lu.d - exanernd and illustatd that a novice have no 1 u t+ , Ln a el ' a ll thettle dMi{ Il rnyncy in working the da want to L.w 1l ow t a. Interior Decrnations 1y h e. , U RA MSE A liaW. aftli n. m r a I a RIFLE Prlusiy iustrated New Ideaandik.t gnal Dr- - n .. , ni akew to make. it. yiy Lhtoa Hw G oet Can Make MoP y3 , & adr m. w loll tM N.ahions -3 M' s J.rna H. I-.Aux . ion"Aw otoo Et S --l t il.,~ atºr ii ·p" Hints cn Home Dreamakia,- I alks With M" eh. - .y eminentuc "+r at aet 5nr.ietX.' "HIes How to Talk Ws l l Wein . - U . Mrire, , f In p ,U 1T Ga 119 8 -Ms-- - -- m m --m Ath... tO s tate tbilh BEN HARRISON I BEN N R -peýfered also Ialsq wanted. Red -2c-,. - " .LW i K . s Aihee Sue...., DhI.. m I BEiN HU iicsds5... - sta "or rep! n nmlyem, ", tli tyt.w o r ,dr Aidu i na. ia w ea .., , e.,.. ir~ Jk M.memlmum e.l r -I& ~ ''""SY'T rkk~~~lwS#(krlrll*F~~. .cl~ Mu~- LIZY~J~~ Y Th e Aocl* .* I..sI _ !* FNA T K Klyl ?4A iOCAb II"rfl NSW yoas.March ], 1o It gives me great pleasure to add my tet i ma-ny it favor of At.la.oc's PotwOS IPLA 1 P.kn. Iant Cttblaer I had a very severe attack ti of lumbagl ~ and slufferelT utold agony; could ntr taurn in be.l or gt in any position with ,ut ao n.a atantlCe, and with pains almost unbear alr:; the folks sa.gested AIJAt'K'*' P'OROUS PI'r.crTt t. A.s afcn *a posIlbe I had one nal. I IheI to the smlli of my bsrk.and to my gr.at Sllarl.ri-.e I exl eri.ent lmoat Instant relief; I 'oalt ilnued wearing it Iuntil entirely urlt. and M. m ti al y tat pay that I hlve not had thle St nl.le t -t s nllllt at I.nall bago rince. 1 The ,( area ae anderftl ialnd valuable Plaster f r I.lnmaila;no. andl I take much pllasure iln rectm-. ir inrlldin; themL. ._ *V PS.eHILI.U .1 I " t ' . t i" a.Ilint for ti;..5 t and $7 per ato at L.Ia ttct'h t,,r. N. II. tcreter thea a Ilere. 't *'W1ait a c ,wal'd thaat M.ojer samith I." matlid I aea'a tat Ihi'n.t. "wley. the vrrv ighlt af Mt t wo Ideti r iw* I, lito ill. flow lid hea Al.'.r aidn:Itg e rta Ih,ta..'aa l Iattl'aer in t heormy '" I t 't tLa' r at ltt)aiiota aai r ttl | *ttIIltlli' an a' *r*.al Rarhitwa,aa. "ther ri' .avala my lit " '. aSatv, a tat.r if Na,,.a~.tiai. intasihl,.: ri" hI lft ala s'lt mear.nn"" t' i,. ia thae 1 wat In . ith . tir-t k.",.. Ift c,"'n sltllttiO: I wn " r ithl .a r t r,..'t: ih anta vila )" every ai.da.y with thic ra'-r rtl,lt dis.aaaa., withn Smith aiviseal ai to tki e. w tar I'i, r'e't I a;id, n rl . aIdir nl Ih)nmalry. I Ihal at tr I all kit~,iat a,f Ill cit' Ia s withott ictll aCe'ta. at.1 t niltay i cinett l a:i t l t gr~e llt nie tO tarit" yat TI hI.re I n.at. a w all eaver . tllin was. actl I iPt ta tie toSmitntil. A*t t, tohe wondlerful Stlledy r he recanuluamndedl.' h1 M.s. JaI tray in rtl! to Ita warltln $il.1 t Log At s. iTg h.ar a h ,rnlta ,af fa; ,,natl form le. l. at aar . all, L d ht.!r a 'll atllltl i *i'r lel l ay fural,' T ,that aIraKtarit. 'e d t her crpit, baIt wi Dr. al.u'a. ' tarrtad t iRov. I grtatiatl after a Ibieaa self . tl II, aatt witLh Itr. l'ira' Farvl i lre Irt*'reacii-f i!ln Itn dluring wet erihtl her. Itattatl :atv,, a ie .ltly at ivity to the kidlta . a. a. statmachta, ltaa-a., and; other trgantta.atad hier re t turtn to ratata.at tl h .,ltlt Ip:.:.dily fallowed. It IS the t l l'a l medicine ftr wamenttld. ay air a. - i g . i at tat Cra t r atg- e litlr . Uaa t frotl tae Ithal lt ' tat' rersl thaat it will give sit,a fatati ti i ta venr c -. a.r nit-tae) will AIl. refn l. th: - 9I11 ai ter tat. latrth pri,.l- otn the laatt . it wra prta .r, aal fatithfultly c 'rriedl oalt f ior aly dear s.r Tta. fall trade" in dTraeas silk tarantian, tt I.. Sati.ftar taalory . 3'll't haawk. cad blw0, ad aiat, but use Dr. ttaguai .CUatLarh Re,.Kedy. I.I Iltr a.lttIaUa itoat t. ·t*lta at tn att frt.'y mt ifr il grlr i s tut:k dhrang wet welatlh a. iENAND BYS falied !it. Y8 "i blrle ow -"e tia l N AtI eresu artl 1low t • o sHontae I or dndeinla 2 I9.V-AI a.Ol ,ý l/IO wll h we A r £.'l li 01 Colsl Bet. 7ha . a.'"."' flrt et t.., ha,,aaa.! l In. a.- o aa alt. t.ak, t. a. ". t ijia rhr. eta, . " E tu --0} \. .11;Ft AM" MtAa t I I Wk. re m Pa r 80tl Ir k triC . as; wa/Ca 2ta fa itA. Mii . ahndIhst .4 R2 in: OgfT'. . fa% ry plice g, I. ti:ur prl.e n, ad - if. . . 5Ob 's, -ll:. .. U Ui trnlc~r.hsk. Al cla-rttoal eahild e 2ht 7. ta l IntIt ckelj. t awyrl ,o S 0Itaken In trAmy iiT ta_'_ý nItk. i 5 a. ta a. a.l . Ltat'tltk y I atlh ll "aJt t JaI- . era. KIt1' It tIl.T1l@ll l St. i*I. m.¥,. i • IF f •Tll'lata ataantspall. "r ra-a- h tat? w'rr*; ti.luaw deI taa, . .to. 4 ''r. a T lllwlit.*T n thIlrer' lt. gT.....OE.i... .A I... .r r" a..ad hlinu ' FOR OLD PEOPLE In old peolle the neraori tstem is weakened, anIt that mu t Le "rengthe one of the m-t pronm rt medical writers of the day. in T .aking v4 the prct t-Ince of rheumatic troubles ar,:-~g the aged, saWv: " The yarlrs- pain, rh-u mnatie or othlier, which .1 peopr lI ften complainof. and ilwhir it f -tIerially di-t':rb their ccomfort re-lilt fr in di-ordered erve"." Tlhc:rc it i in a nuthell the nedicine fi r oli' jenple must eo a nerve tonic. 1 ll people are itet with constipation, 5atulency, drrwninefo. char threa, indigestinti iar.umlati neuralgia. .1' 5-l ¶Tse-e diseases are of ner;' origin l'aitnr's clhry (,mpound. t!he great nre tonric, is almost a epelific in these di-.rtrlcr., and by its regula';n; intlucrec en the hl'cr, I.,w'.-, and I li, ey:., re mores(. the disorderr pehckir to, ,I age. 1 I 'i e ,hle" fI-I it -timinltmt, to the vital I p.-. rrlunttiv" of "i i' ti', and a ior m ,t'r of dig.-tie n. S,1i tnv ,h,,i-t. , . f. r.. $,. .en t - f t ur .h ..s'ce I ' 't t!; , r' y tr ., l, . h , tv Ili, k d rs ý"'e t ...I , .. cr. ells, Richardsoe & Co., Barlingtc,t If Wise, Ask Yourself rf seald yto O"aPr w!th Thi,-tsleit WHY Shouald Dyapepsia be Endured? II Shoal yo Coquette with Dia.ee LTako say Foolish Risks? when yot can put your Stomach in first-class ordcr and keep it so, with DR. SCHENCK'S MANDRAKE PILLS. A Purely Vegetable Compound.withoon mer cury or any other injurious nuneral. ras " a eOogeted &Ealargeld ilv r Sailt[ with lasses and Bilioeauless w aI e l JrI t andice, Chillsand Malriea Not eowev all Liner Trouble? when you can command the most powerful agent Nature has given for treating the Liv.r and restoring its function, by asking or Xca..* Lag fur a box of DR. SCHENCK'S MANDRAKE PILLS. or Sale by an Druggisth. Price 25 Cts. per hr9! a boxes for 65 cts or sent by mail. restage free. s eceipt ofprice. Dr. J. II. Schec:k . Scn, Pbi4'ia WEBER PIANO-FORTES, (IXDOR.En ItY Tri l.lErhIvN. ARTI.jT9. im IARtIAN.. AND TIIE PRES,.Art TUE BEST PIANOS IMBDE Prh.r a ra.nahilrll. ti-rmq y n . aexoas~O s Wtith thol , -h b workniaa-t-hl,. (IATA LO M1' , tM I LED FRF) . DORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED. WAREROOMS, 1ih AIenue, cor. 16th St., I Y $160 Saw Mil or I'sblt Powern . AIe Maw Illo at all la.r soe I.Uswelrmpn, nilg IlII ( ImuOVEle ig l IIEAM AND 4TI IO i'K. iWrlC for rIeuler,. SALEM 1_01 V1 S. Sae, L. e FLIES! WI 4*'* w**ig eitnm a.. In h in It..¥re. n . r IIilh tNor . I d relP. ' lilqq i a I End'4 h 1W l io kIrk. In ILL AI l ,'I. I 5., I llniiU al ., as .a.. can .... a slmedSa er k