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-`i aqfiaijpn Mat easnotis - ikthe re:.ae'st t i- the -- iznwittato is exit"ne to-ail to f-sebo to see is to believe. Yu 1 aoa hearty welcomeu and an In trip, for cheap railroad rtes will s from all points In the Southeast SRound trip tickets will be sold on ' ugust 2ond and 3rd for two harvest exour mins and can be parchased to any place in g-- bsood to sto iff at-any point on the g trip, within lifteen days from time plet is purchased, and you have thirty dayin all, to make the journey and get home. The rate is one fare for the 41 trip There is no question as to the ,route oved r which you should travel, for there w is bat : e railroad entering the State of O -ltase. which offers the "Home Soaker" a c. hoice of three routes, either via Memphis, Shreveport or New Orleans, and that is ti the Texas a Pacific Railway, which crosses p the State from East to West passing through i its most fertile lands. Correspondence so licited by the undersigned, who will give full information as to rates, tickets and n routes, forward folders, showing time of e trains and connections, and pamphlets de soriptive of the coutntry. If you contem plate going to Texas, it will pay you to write a us, and your wants will be given promot at- t tention. J. H. WORD. TraV. Pass. Agent, i 86 Wall St.. Atlanta. Ga. A. A. GAI.asnars, Southern Pass. Agent. 108 Read House, Chattanooga, Tenn. BissaELL WILsox. South- v ern Traveling Agent, 834 West Main St., f Louisville, Ky. d IT 4 odd how a railroad contractor's t credlors feel safest when they know he is maki.g tracks. Mig Your Route to Chlcago. a POSITIVELY THE ONLY LINE running solid r vestibuled trains direct to the World's Fair t Grounds and stopping at the Exposition Gates. PosrITIVLY Tra ONLY LINE makitnconnec- v tion in Central Union Station, Cincinnati, t with trans of the L. & N. R. R., Q. &C. I. . i. T., V & G. Ry.,and Kentucky Cen tral Ry. and C. & O. Ry., avoiding the dis- t agreeiblo transfer necessary viaother lines. POSITIVELY TlHE ONLY LINE landing passen gers at Suburban Stations in Chicago con veniejit to all World's Fair Hotels and I Boarding Houses. No transfer of passen gers or baggage. Ask for tickets via Tnn Bio Foun Roulre and be sure you get them. i). it. BATIMN, Gen'l Pass. Agent, Cincinnati. O. 1 Tar miracle about the tippler's head is that the less there is of it the more apt it is to go round.-Elmira Gazette. Sustain the Slnking System. This common sense injunction is too often unheeded. Business anxieties, over work. exlposure must and do cause mental and physical exhaustion, which lessens i vigor and tells injuriously upon the system. That must beneficent of tonies and restora tives, Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, effectual ly compensates for a drain of strength and I loss of nerve power, regulates impaired di- t gest ion, arouses the dormant liver and renders the bowels active. It is, besides, a preventive of malarial and rheumatic ail ments. Cox to think of it, isn't the parrot a sort of mocking bird, too Doubt Changed to Faith "My little girl Kitty had 1 a skin disease which the doctors called Eczemn, causing her great agony with its intense itching and burning. Seven or sight physicians gave us medicines but to no good. Kitty Fox. At the earnest advice of a neighbor we tried I HOOD'S SARSAPARILLA with the result I of a perfect cure. Her shin is now as fair and I clear as any child's in town." WILLlAM Fox, Pair Haven, Vt Be sure to get Hood's. HOOD'S PILLS Cure all Liver Ills. IARRHCEA, CIURES DSENTERY, CHOLERA INFANTUM, -AND ALLY AFFECTIONS OF THE BOWELS. Oxvoan LA., July -. iI. centlemen :--We have used your Bodie's Cor dial in our family for some time past, and ere perfectly atisfiedl with its effects. Would not willingly do without it. Respectfully, J. B. Roanxsolr. SOLD BY ALL DRUCCISTS. PRICE, 5oc. and 01.00. Prepared by I. L. LYONS & CO. New Orleans. LN. "German syrup" I y state thatl am Druggist and Post master here and am there fore in a position to judge. I have tried many Cough Syrups but for ten years past have found nothing equal to Boschee's German Syrup. I have given it to my baby for Croup with the most satisfactory results. Every mother should have it. J. H. Honss, Druggist and Postmaster, Moffat, Texas. We present facts, living facts, of to-day Boschle's German Syrup gives strength to the body. Take no substitute. O hEWIS' 98 on and Lye Soap in 20 minutes tottout boutf na. lt Ik the bes+ for eleansilng closets, wahlng bottles. cnints. treea,ets. PreaL.dAy To]r F Wl TWhF' soE8F a * Lye eor. inremteinute P toUL.o hrs. nhin an.d M bachinerfo ScinDies. - waste, ppes. dislfectlngs sinks. closet sre own y botles. aints. es , oo. 8.., SAn ent ? enIrm. MiinreaUon MaBoiod msar upp aies. 5EAL sarme. Wnrite o rueos S:`Treaties on Blood ' YWOiL'S -FAIR CITY. N 0m an Ozremnt =vents a* the Oolumrblan Erpo atIon. rThe Hearrsi Cold sotee a s tr-Atrrva5 oat he Csravrls and the Viking Bhip -The Swedish Building and It r ture Purpose. Ispeetat Chloago Correspondameni All Chicago, including guests and world's fair visitors, is yet in the throes of horror produced by the lamentable fate of the victims of the recent fire at the cold storage building at Jackson park, and subscriptions are still pour ing in for the benefit of the families and dependents of the poor souls wvho met with such an awful death. The exaet.number of lives lost in the flames has not as yet been ascertained, but according to the latest information twenty-three charred and dismembered bodies were found in the rains of the ill-fated building. The unfortunates were nearly all firemen, and the sad fate of their comrades has caused the deepest sorrow among the members of the department throughout the city. Most of the bodies taken from the ruins were so thoroughly incinerated and disfigured that they were beyond recognition, and the mourning rela tives and friends of those who were known to have been lost in the flames were more deeply plunged in gi ief by their inability to identify their dead, and the sad search among the black ened and broken corpses for even the faintest traces of husbands, fathers and brothers was pititul in the ex treme. The building burned was not the property of the fair, as was quite gen erally supposed, but belonged to the Hercules Iron company of Aurora, Ill. The loss occasioned by the fire was nearly a quarter of a million dollars, and has caused the company to make an assignment. The building was put up for the purpose of preserving per ishable supplies for the fair during the summer season, and was well stored with provisions for hungry and thirsty visitors. It also contained an ice-man ufacturing plant capable of freezing one hundred and twenty tons of ice per day, and an ice skating rink one hun dred and eighty feet long by eighty feet wide. Can ice-so called from the system employed in making it-was to be the principal production. Condensed steam, thoroughly filtered, was to be used exclusively, making the ice posi tively pure. The plant was to supply only ten tons daily by a series of sub merged pipes filled with pure water. For the safe keeping of eggs, butter and meat used in the restaurants sixty thousand cubic feet of space were used. This was divided into a great many sections, with ingenious ventilating de vices which were automatic and kept the rooms each at the desired tempera ture. All the processes of overcoming the natural heat of summer were to be shown, including the direct ex pansion, the brine circulation and the F rrrr * * .. W THE COLD STORAGE BrILDINO. indirect circulation, where the air is cooled on the top floor and then dis tributed by means of fans. It required fifty thousandpounds of ammonia to operate the system, this product being used over and over again, and at the close of the exposition the fifty thou sand pounds would have been without loss in bulk. Great expectations had been based on the popularity of the skating rink. It was in the room next the roof. The ice wvas tqDbe five inches thick, frozen by pipes of circulating brine placed close together. Balconies about the sides were erected for spectators and a band. The Hercules Iron company built all the labyrinthvf pipes and tanks, and a German firm put in the boilers, said to consume the smoke, thus being capable of burning the very poorest coal. The loss of this building will 1 severely felt by the concessionai: THE SWEDISH BUILDISG. the fair who depended upon it for sup plies during the heated term, and it is highly probable that the destruction of the suppies stored in it will occasion much inconvenience and some loss in various quarters. There is in this calamity a sugges tion which the fair authorities will doubtless heed, and that is the urgent need of fire escapes on the large build ing throughout the grounds and especially those which have elevators for carrying people to the roofs and higher stories. It is hardly probable that such another catastrophe will be visited upon the fair, in fact no such other dangerous building exists, but outside means of descent are quite as necessary on world's fair buildings as on any others in which human beings are carried to great heights. Dividint the pubti interest with the S6regotg eaClamity Ii the ltdie arrival of the Columnbui feet and the Viking ship. A few days ago the Santa Maria, the Nina and the Pints cast anchor in the basin before the White city, and following quickly in their wake came the Gokstab-fnd with her crew of hardy Norsemen. hatch navrl pomp and ceremony as was witnessed upon their reception was never before seen in Chicago, and possibly zever be fore in the new world. The bosomn of old Lake Michigan has been heaving considerably of late, and it might well heave with pride at such gorgeous dis plays as have been made upon it since the great fair was opened. From the time of their landing at New York these strange vessels, which have been produced in the likenesses of the historic craft of Erickson and Columbus, have been accorded the warmest receptions and have" been feted and honored, and now that they have found safe harbor after their perilous voyages in the waters of Jackson park they will be held as precious mementoes of the great navi gators who dared the anger of the elements to found a new civilization upon the shores of an unexplored world. The history of the caravels has been published broadcast during the last few months and has become familiar to all. The history of the modern Viking ship is of more recent date and will prove somewhat more interesting reading at this time. The ship Gokstab find was built about six months ago after the design of the original ship which was unearthed some time pre vious from a Norwegian mound. It sailed some six or seven weeks ago THE VIKING S1IP. from Christiania under the command of Magnus Anderson, a splendid specimen of Norse manhood, who had a crew of twelve of his countrymen equal in physique and daring .to. himself. In this ship, which was open to the ele ments and rigged in the most primitive fashion, these hardy mariners crossed the raging main and after many hard ships came sa'cly to land, completing one of the most notable voyages ever made to this country. Here these worthy descendents of the ancient "creek-men" find many countrymen to welcome them and join with them in the general rejoicing over their safe arrival. When the world's fair is over the immense temples dedicated to art, the sciences and commerce will be despoiled of their entrancing beauties, and the buildings themselves will be sold to some shrewd contractor, who will care fully pull them apart board for board and utilize the pile he accumulates in constructing other buildings-not so handsome but more useful. The Swed ish building will not suffer this coin mon fate. Though it will "be taken down it will again be reared in its present form. It will change its rest ing place, but will still remain in Chi cago. It has been bought by the 'Martin Luthen college of Chicago, and when the grounds and airy bowers of Jack son park are deserted, and the place that was the center of the world for six months is only a memory. the building will be taken apart and removed to a pretty site in Martin Luther college ad dition in the northwestern part of Chi cago, seven miles from the coujthouse. The building is a unique one, inasmuch . It can be taken apart and put to gether again as often as is desired with out injury to the building. It was made in Sweden, -inspected by all whoa cared to see it, gently taken to pieces, each part marked and shipped to the world's fair, where in a few days it stood forth as substantial a building as any. It may appear that the structure is something of an architectural toy, but this is not the case. Its dimensions are by no means small and the main tower is something over one hundred feet high. It is one of the most curious as well as one of the most artistic. The archi tecture is original, though the designer has followed closely the style used in the ancient "stane" churches of five hundred years ago. It was not intend ed for a college building. so the interior must necessarily be remodeled. As it has fallen into the hands of Swedes, there is little reason to fear that every thing will not be done to retain as much as possible the original design. The outside will no doubt be unmo lested. The transfer from the Sweden gov ernment to the college authorities was made some time ago, but the news never leaked out as far as the Chicago papers, English or Sweden, were con cerned. The government practically made a gift of its share, but the inter ests of several Swedish manufacturing firms, amounting to several thousands, had to be satisfied in cash. Otto Leffier, the popular Swedish commis sioner, played a leading part in the deal. Exx PAsA.s would make a good pet name for a cat on the basis of the uine-degtl andi oga.-Giainvinati F@ot, CiA'iCSKS AND 3UKcaSl'. -ow the Bia'ish Carry Around tL.e Little Filh on Their flacks. aI .The sharks in the marine section of sec the aquarium play every day and all fa the day to big crowds. The sharks do Ge got seem to. enjoy it'much. There are wt only two of them left tdwt therI were of six at first, but the biggest itie, a floe- he footer, and three of the smaller ones Ao died. Chicago-made sait water doedr not seem to agree with them at all. & Some folks who look at these sharks In indulge t gmselves in the pleasing. b fancy tha they ,re looking at real in vicious man-eatess; regular moni ra eo of the deep that go around amusing pr themselves by snapping legs off sailors. w, These fellows are no man-eaters, to thought they are just common sand pe sharks caught in pound nets off the Cat Mlina coast. They are of a species that ri seldom grows to be over five or six feet v, long. They could not eat a man if br they tried, but they can make it livelyb for the fish in sight when they get p] hungry. ci But whether these sharks are man Dp eaters or not' they look 'exceedingly pc sharky and wicked. They are long and se thin and clipper-like, and they flit la about their thinks like evil shadows. A They have curved mouths set away tb back under their inquisitive snouts, nc and the mouths have multitudes of st needle-like white teeth. One of these sharks, the larger one, has a al constant companion that causes a w good deal of comment and guessing as among visitors. It is a slender fish ca about eight inches long that has at- o0 tached itself, apparently by its teeth, E to the smooth skin of the shark's back. a, It sticks closer than a brother or a cG leech. Some of the visitors think it is oA a young shark. The *nard will tell B you that it is a pilot fish, but that v; shows that there are some things which a~ even a Columbian guard does not know. c, The fish is what the Carolina fishermen p call a sucker fish, a remora. If you ask si Prof. Forbes of the fish commission he p will tell you that it is theectieneisnan crates of linne. - v That is a pretty imposing name for so b little a fish, but the creature itself is V, one of the most interesting of swim- a ming things. The remora has set in n the top of its flat head an oval sucker a plate, whereby it has an easy time. The e remora attaches itself by this sucker c, plate to the first big fish that comes r, along and rides around just as lazily as d a fat woman in a roller chair. What ever the big fish gets to eat the remora 1 has also its share; it catches the crumbs I and leavings. There is no fish that has a more fun and an easier time than this p remora. 3" Some of the West Indians make this parasite work for aMliving though. They use him for an animated fishhook. They tie a string to his tail and let him c into the water to swim around until he I falls afoul of a turtle. Then when he has laid firm hold of the turtle the wise t WVest Indian bags the whole outfit and t sets his remora for another turtle. PCdTICAL DREAMS SHATTERED. a Influence o ia Gondola Bide Through thd = Lagoons of the Fair. The music came softly, sweetly out t to the old man and his daughter as they sat, half reclining, on the luxurious cushions of the gondola, gayly deco- a rated with Japanese lanterns. The myriad of gay lights from the cornices;- from the roofs, from the c water's edge reflected in silver and gold the ripples of the lagoon. High up along the balcony they could see the flaming torches, flickering with Roman reminiscence, and the white, ghastly faces and dark forms of the people looking down on the beautiful scene, while all around the lagoon, sitting upon the wide rail of the fence, lean ing against the statuary, or moving 1 about with eager, restless tread, they 1 could see the thousands of sightseers. In the distance they saw the shimmer- i ing., multi-colored waters and heard the gurgling murmur of the fountains. 1 The stoical gondoliers dextrously swung the gondola here and there among the gay craft, laden to the water's edge with merry parties of la goon tourists. Once, in a pause of the orchestral music there came to them the twang of a banjo, then a happy French song came rippling across the dancing waves. l For a long time they were silent, says n the Chicago Tribune. Then she clasped o her fingers, sparkling with diamonds, L- across the old man's knee, and said: - "Papa, I am so happy, I feel so a dreamy, so poetical, something Byron s or lrowning like. Ah, the Bridge of Sighs and Byron. 0, I could love Byron i- to-night and Venice, too. Papa, Brown ing is buried there." a Possibly the old man thought Brown a ing was one of her old dude lovers; they all looked consumptive; probably : he had croaked in Venice. The old man sympathetically sighed. "If ayron and BIrowning could have a liverd to see this, papa, what poetry .we would have from them. They never . saw anything to equal this." "Well, 1 guess there air few towns h could beat this show," the old man . complacently remarked. "How dreamily poetical lHowells s makes Venetian life," she mused; "it r must be something like this. How I , should like to live in Venice always." c "Do you mean to say you'd rather t live in that perennial flood town, Ven s ice, than Chicago?" he sharply interro e gated. "Papa, my life would be a happy dream in Venice." 11 "Now, look-a-here, Maria," he sav r agely said, "I won't have that bow legged dude fellow of yours prowling 11 'round the house any longer, lie puts i. you up to all this moonshine business .r and I won't stand any more of this in comic opera gondolier business, d'y' h bear? I ain't going to be paddled 1 'round in a canoe by a pair of opera .r bouffe scullers. W'e'll land and take it an electric or steam launch, something Sthat can get a move on." i He prodded the nearest gondolier as with his umbrella and ordered an im 2. mediate disembarkation. 0 Colored People to lslt the Fair. S August . will be colored people's day _ at the world's fair. It is expected that Stwo hundred and fifty thousand Afro o Americans will pass through the gates . during the four days of the convoca tion. Public-spirited Chicago men and i women of the colored race are prepar Sing for their reception. For over two s, months the committee has been work te ing on a scheme to enable colored peo s- ple from all over the country to visit e the fair. The details of the plan will soon be made public. eo "tALWAYS put your best foot forward," ai- ePeetI.llZh If tile fellow Ihnt reaIry wiorged I E4U,·-CiL'Vin'.ld Fi4~~te;cr. OP 6ENEt~AL INTERES',. ~dtamutl d taiiogers, of Balti more recently exhibited before an as sembly of dentists a complete set of false teeth that had been worn by George Washington. The base plates were of lead and perfectly fiat. Some of the te&th were of ivory and others, had beet axtratted from a living pet Son. =-'hie waj*s of auctioneers in differ :at parts <f the world Vary greatly. In' England and America the seller Sbeafrs the expense of the sale, but 4 in France the purchaser pays the cost, five per cent. being added to the prioefig pays. In Holland it is still worse, the buyer be.pg required to pay ten per cent. additional for the ex- . penses of the sale. -The beautiful marble bust of Har riet 3eecher Stowe was recently un veiled it the library of the women's building on the world's fair grounds by Mrs. Isabella Beecher Hooker, who placed on the white marble a choice cluster of pinks and ferns. Frederick Douglas was present and tcad several passages from "Uncle Tom's Cabin," several copiesof which, printed in many languages, were placed near the bust. All who were present were saddened by the thought that the beloved authoress no longer can enjoy the honors be stowed upon her. -Azaleas of every hue possible to azaleas make the wqoded island in the world's fair grounds t grand bouquet, and those accustomed to see this deli cate mountain flower in the pink-yellow or white dress which it assumes in New England, Virginia or California are c amazed at the many shades of pink, crimson and orange and the parti-col ored varieties produced by cultivation. Rhododendrons of the tall and drawfed t varieties, brilliant Japanese peonies A and masses of lowly growing pansies, contented to bloom wherever they are placed, give the island a festive and a summery appearance, attractive to all a pedestrians. -Old chests and trunks have a high 3 value as curios, and are largely taken a by the dealers in the like. As paper i was costly in the eighteenth century, many such articles were lined with newspapers then current, and if pleas- I antries of the period are to be trusted, even with rejected manuscripts. A curious old trunk with pentagonal ends recently turned up in the shop of a dealer in old furniture. It still bore a weather-stained card showing that its last delivery had been to somebody in Pearl street. It was lined with a Phil adelphia newspaper of 1773, and the pages exposed bore the tax-list of that year in pounds, shillings and pence. -It is only within a few years, one might almost say months, that the wide effect of the warm, moist Pacific winds, called chinooks, has been known in Blritish Columbia and Alaska. These winds, corresponding exactly to those 1 that make England a fertile country in the latitude of Labrador, keep the snow melted from the plains at the eastern base of the Rockies, and they encourage a magnificent growth of root crops. cabbage, oats and grass a thousand Smiles north of New York. Wheat does not do well and berries are small, t though little attempt has been made to r cultivate fruit. The winters are biting s cold, but dry, and the summer, though short, is so hot that vegetation comes out of the earth with a rush. -One class of people regard our fast cruisers and our white-walled, thun i dering iron.lads with hearty disap proval-naitibly, the artists. A marine e painter, looking at the big fleet that recently lay stretched along the Hud son, exclaimed: "'Yes, quite interest s ing, and ugly! Those are mere ma chines, and machinery is always ugly. 3 All the time that ships have been gain ing in strength and speed they have been losing in picturesqueness and S beauty. There is nothing in that lot of tea kettles, as Napier called them, to equal the old.Constitution and the old Vermont, with their three rows of ports and their big towers of canvas. To see one of the old frigates bowling e along with all sail set-why, sir, that e was a poem" L- -A material lately introduced in the e construction of American warships. n though not yet effectually tested in V war or serious casualty, is called cellu e lose. A naval man in WVashington, speaking of the sinking of the Victoria, '5 says: "I hardly think that just such d an accident could have happened to s, one of our war vessels. Above the pro tective deck in our boats we place a o material called cellulose. It is six feet n in thickness all along the inside of the f vessel's side, and is about seven feet in a height. When this material is wet it x- swells up and closes an opening. In case a shot from the enemy should 1- drive a hole through the ship's side is s; would swell up and close the hole, . keeping the water out. It would ao. n the same way in case of a collision in which the ship's:side was shattered. It e would have a tendency to prevent a y rush of wiater." rI is n* is KNOWLEDGE is Brings comfort and improvement and ' tends to personal enjoyment when d rightly used. The many, who-~~i bet r ter than others and enjoy life more, with ke less expenditure, by more promptly .g adapting the world's best products to the needs of physical being, will attest the value to health of the pure liquid rlaxative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of,.Figs. " Its excellence is due to itpreeti in the form most acceptable and pleas ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly Sbeneficial properties of a perfect lax " ative; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds. headaches and fevers and permanently curing constipation. a- It has given satisfaction to millions and ad met with the approval of the medical ir- profession, because it acts on the Kid o neys, Liver and Bowels without weak *- ennmg them and it is perfectly free trom o every objectionable substance. sit Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug ill gists in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is man tfactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every I" package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, 4 and being- woell informed, youwlU at a£cept ay substituo it .fQ. You can Economiz By using Royal Baking Powder to the exclusion of all other leavening agents.. The official ana lysts report it to be ~% greater in leavening strength than the other powders. It has three times the leavening strength of many.of' the cheap alum powders. It never fails to make good bread, biscuit and cake, so that there is no flour, eggs or butter spoiled and wasted in heavy, sour and uneatable food. Do dealers attempt, because times are dull, to work off old stock, or low grade brands of baking powder? Decline to buy them. During these times all desire to be economical, and Royal is the most S-Economical Baking Powder. 'HOUSEKEEPERS, REMEMBER THAr powdered borax, plentifully used, will exterminate cockroaches and water bugs. ThAT no hamper or other receptacle of soiled clothing, no matter howhand somely decorated, should be kept in a sleeping apartment. ThAT all tubs and basins in bath rooms and kitchen sinks and drains should be flushed with hot water on every weekly washing day. THAT dish water, which is al*ays impregnated with more or less vege table matter, should be thrown on the surface of the ground at the back door. THAT there are few servants so thor ough that they should not inspect the refrigerator daily to see that no liquids are spilled or food allowed to spoil and contaminate the rest. IF you own drains, note carefully how the crops over them are growing. If you do not, go look at the crops over your neighbors' drains. A ONTLEMAN is one who combines a woman's tenderness with a man's courage. SoxE people ride a hobby as thov would a bicycle--simply for exercise.-N. .. World. HEW I Noathing Like It. * Horse Shoe* Satisfies Everybody. I -PLUG. TNADS *ARS. 5 SOAPa "g1ws 14 Hard'or Soft Wattr t bs Soap-worik so-well, that Womre v rat NO OTHEiW THE POT INSULTED THE KETTLE BECAUSE THE COOK HAD NOT USED SAPOLIO GOOD COOKING DEMANDS CLEANLINESS. SAPOLIO SHOULD BE USED IN EVERY KITCHEN. %r'-RATE EXCURSIOS8 Arkansas and Texas -VIA THE COTTON BELT ROUTE, August 2 and 8, 1838. Tickets good for return until 80 days frm date et sal.. For full particulars adress R. T. MATrrEwE, D. P. A., FRED H. JoFrg. D. P. A., Louisville. Ky. [ Memphis, Tenn. W. H. SUTTON, T. P.A., I W. O. ADAM.. T.P. A., Chattanooga, Tean. Nasbhville, Ten. E. W. LABAUM. . 1 P. T. A.. St. Louis, e. MUSOT EA DCEIVE ft Pastes. Enamels, nd Pants wbh StaO las InAVre the Iron,. and bnrn rd. tloB d. un Sntoren po:1. or1·,lllan., Odoro or l UIs pakge With every pomlseaf 11Ec~i clt UW"T oa so . MUST HAVE for Me. Stamp. Immeneee. llesnttlied. Onlynoad one ever invented. Meats weights. Bolee Seta!p l Sea the ealseonemeant of Dr.i.W. Hfatts·,t Spscltdeg of Nmnpte, which Witw appear In tie ye i ae sSq0Per a ag Gan. P. 21W YoruG, the new mini.. ter to Guatemala, writes to an Atlanta friend that he is well pleased with the country, 4ts people and its climate, and especially with the accomplished American wife of President Barrios. - Booru's grave at Mount... Auburn cemetery, near Cambridge, .Wass., is kept covered with flowers. Most of the fragrant tributes to the dead actor's memory have come from Mrs. Jack Gfrdner, the celebrated Boston society leader. and Julia Ward Ilowe. A x&n in Indiana has just died from ex cessive tobacco chewing. The music at his funeral should not he a dirge, but an over chower.-Rochester Democrat. Ws will give $100 reward for any case of catarrh that cannot be cured with Hall's Catarrh Cure. Taken internally. F. J. Canar & Co., Proprs., Toledo, O. WIrP (to corpulent hutband ) 'Stand ust there and let me sit in the shsde." aumoristische BlDetter. RED, angry eruptions yield to the aetiou of Glenn's Sulphur Soap. oHill's Hair and Whisker Dye, 50 cents. A DEAF man cannot be legally convicted. It is unlawful to convict a man without a hearing.-Siftings. Tars. evils of malarial disorders, fever, weakness, lassitude, debility anld prostra tion are avoided by taking Beecham's Pills. EDUCATIONAL. WALL AND MOONEY'S SCHOOL, - . W "AL FRANKUN, TERN. W..amIT.A.. F1T3oT8 Foa COLLEGE 03 BUIEBL. Our mtudent. entel Vlanderbllt. On ceril fla wlthout ermintion. Pott'oiireonr$meteu r dteo ng i dmislon. Poitei .e im. eout1n ihoroy3sh. Addrem W. D. itOONy, Ycieqttyrry. pease Institute FORYOuSN an.rrnzoar >x w PO. rw. LADIES. -One oft" IgreaeSstfemale schools o. tien, sot hr M. grduates in the faculty . usiD .Catalogue tO JAB.DIDDrIgM A.(0t Unl. Vj srlu U am rirssunmrr r - POUNDED IN l8e0. T. ILIA ACADEMY, e alhl, ATennedsee. For VoYuLi~d Calud bw DealauI 81str. w3Au -s t*Nina ! lse.a ass rr-B DICKSON NORMAL COLLEDE r" P A.-s s lK.l . F. rie4, rrI the Beest, Easii stoUwse ard Che.a pest. gold b~druggists or sent by mail. actT. line, Warren. Pa. * A..- ,, K.. F. 1458 wUI wmrnwo 2mz*Uymmm VLAu3 stale Sh see ea w'h &4teteUm .