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II i 14 J? i 4- tit s r I . H How a Rear Caught Fish. Very few people know that bears take to water naturally. They roam over the mountains and through the forest, di ojitn rott;n los for ants and worms, secure ail the hornets' nests they can and tear thorn to pieces :n i eat the voting Tiibs, pick berries of all description arid eat them, and would seem to belong to the dry-land .miuials. The fact is dill' -rent. They lov water not perhaps as well a-s the moose and deer, but belter than most dry-land animals- They are very f ind of fish anil are expert fishermen, and show more cunning aua instinct, 11 nut rea son, than many city ch,aps I have seen about the lakes. I came suddenly up on a very lare bear in a thick swamp, Jyin;; upon a large hollow log across a brook, fishing; and he was so much in terested in Lis sport that he did not no tice me until 1 had approached very near to him, so that I could see exactly how he baited his hook and played his fish. He fished in this wise: There was a large hole through the log on which he lay, and he thrust his forearm through the hole and held his open paw in the water and waited for the fish to gather around and into it, and when full he clutched his fist and brought up a hand ful of fish, and sat and eat them with great gusto; then down with the paw again, and so on. The brook was fair ly alive with little trout and red-sided suckers, and some black suckers, so the old fellow let himself out on the fishes. He did not eat their heads. There was quite a pile of them on the log. I suppose the oil in his paw at tracted the fish and baited them even better than a fly-hook, and his toe-nails were his hooks, and sharp ones too, and once grabbed the fish are sure to stay. They also catch frogs in these forest brooks, and drink of the pure water in hot summer days, and love to lie and wallow in the muddy swamps as well as our pigs in the mire. They often cross narrow places in lakes by swimming, and also rivers, and seem to love to take a turn in the water. I once saw one swimming from the main land to the big island in Mooselmagun tic Lake, with just a 6treak of his back out of the water, looking like a log moving along. Sometimes you see only their head3 out of water; at other times half of their bodies are to be seen. We account for this difference by their condition. If fat, the grease helps buoy them up; if lean, they sink lower in the water. Correspondent Lewiston ( Me. ) Journal. Money Plus) Talent. James Parton, expressing his opin ion on literary work, says: The great mistake made by most young writers, and which serves as a drawback to their success, is that they arc inclined to depend too much on their self con victions and ideas, which they evolve from their innocent consciences with out regard to practie-t! knowledge of nature and the true philosophy t life. "From my knowledge of authors nearly all of whom are poor I am sat isfied that a writer, to do justice to himself, can only succeed to his own satisfaction by being possessed of at least a moderate competence, sufficient to relieve him of the care consequent uj- on lii3 having to write for a living. Most authors write that they may live. aud, at times, with a love they cherish in behalf of pet ideas and sentiments, and to satisfy their own amijition. With a competence, an author can give his whole soul to the work. He can give all the time and pure thought essential to the proper application 'of genius and a brilliant mind, to a suc cessful literary career. Young men with a literary ambition should first possess a competence be fore they start out in the profession. Aly, advice to such is that they go into the grocery business, or any honest calling. When the- have secured a competence, then they can satisfy their literary bent and achieve that rich suc cess, which alwavs rewards genius and a great mind properly applied." A Railway in the Caucasus. It is only fair to add that" the railway from Porti to Tiflis is a marvel of en gineering skill. It follows the gorgfc of the Fhasis, among the mountains, for about 160 miles, constantly ascending by a grade so steep that the short train requires two engines to draw it. Often the side of the mountain is so steep it required to be leveled for a'space suffi ciently wide for the track. Everywhere the scenery was of the most captiva ting. Noble cliffs, terminating in ba saltic ramparts, often enclosed the roaring waters of the rushing stream; or slopes excessively steep, cultivated from the water to an extraordinary height, seem to hang over the road; or idyllic valleys opened to catch the sun light, giving space for a village of wat tled huts. In several gorges, ancient castles were descried perched on the apex of seemingly inaccessible peaks, and now deserted and alone. One of the venerable fortresses was of vast ex tent. The clouds surged around it like the surf of the sea, and above soared the cagie, the sole tenant of that lofty height. These ruins bore the fancy back to those picturesque ages of ro mance and song which, if they served no other purpose, were at least of use, if they bequeathed sentiment and poe try to age more orderly and prosaic At frequent iutervals the train stop ped at towns of some size and stations well-ordered anti provided with excel lent buffets. Besides the excellent warm m at., in readiness for the trav elers whose appetite was sharpened by the mountain air, each dining room was furnished with the sideboard pecu liar to Russia, provided with caviare, odkyand other characteristic appe tizers, which it doenot take long for the traveler to learn to appreciate. Tie AlanAaUan. rr The Buffalo News has a very able leading article on "Kissing Indiscrim inately." Upon reading the caption the average Buffalo maiden will ex claim: -Oh! my gracious! how could rirl kiss a man with snrh Food AtluUeration- The legislatures now in session are I busily grinding out laws to prohibit ; and punish the aduiterations of food ! and drink. In one a bill has been in ; troduced requiring every keeper of a I tavern or restaurant to put up in his ' house a public notice informing his 1 customers whether he serves oleomar ' garine or butter. It is also proposed I to require brewers to state on their j kegs whether their beer contains bar ley malt or glucose. Other measures equally absurd are proposed. The statute books of most of the states are crowded with laws for the punishment f of fraudulent aduiterations of food, but they have proved wholly futile. In spite of the laws this system of fraud is ex tending to nearly all the food that the people consume. There is but one practical way of successfully combat ting the iniquity, and this is the estab lishment by the state of chemical labo ratories for the detection of frauds in food. These laboratories, provided with competent chemists, should bo connected with the detective police of a city, as it is more important that the rogues who cheat the people and poi son them at the same time should be detected and punished than ordinary counterfeiters and pickpockets. Two or three laboratories in the manufac- ; turing centers of the state, where adul- ; terations are prepared, would do the business. Whenever the citizen can i take his suspected purchase of bread, j butter, sugar, milk, tea, spices, wine, ! or beer to the state laboratory and have j it analyzed at public cost, an effective blow will be given to the business of adulteration. If the adulteration be proved to be poisonous, or any way dele terious te health, it should be made the duty of the police to seize and destroy the whole supply to which it belongs. When the adulteration does not injure the health of the consumer, but is a fraudulent cheapening of food, as in mingling flour with sugar, it should be confiscated and sent to the public in stitutions. Other punishment would hardly be necessarv besides the publi cation of the list of the manufacturers of fraudulent adulterations. Snubbing. This is a serious business in any view that can be taken of it. And it Is cer tainly a most disagreeable one. Those who are snubbed are generally taken off their guard, and this constitutes their main annoyance. They are given a sudden blow when they arc careless aud at ease in the security of social in tercourse, and thus they are placed at a great disadvantage. A snub, says one, is a check, a blank; it is a curtain suddenly drawn down; it is pulling up against a dead wall; it is coal obstruction and recoil. Either the snubber has authority on his side, and we have laid ourselves open by some inadvertence, by a misplaced trust in his condescension, and we have seen parents painfully snub tiieir children in this sort, first allow them liberties. then stop them with a harsh cheek in mid-career of spirits arid in the pres ence of strangers, or perhaps we have given way to enthusiasm and are met by ridicule. Or we have made a con fidence which we think tender, and it is received with indifference. Oc we till a story, and are asked for the point of it. Or we are given to under stand that we are mistaken where we have assumed ourselves well informed. Or our taste is coolly set at naught; or we talk, aud are reminded we are prosy; or we are brought face to face with our ignorance in a way to make us feel it most keenly. The strength of a snub lies in the sudden apprehen sion that we have committed ourselves, and a consequent painful sense of in significance, that there is somebody quite close to us. regardless of our leclings, looking down on us, and os tentatiously unsympathizing. Beware of snubbing any one. It makes a most painful aud permanent impression. It may be done in a mo ment, and yet is not likely to be for gotten for years, if not for an entire lifetime. Story tor Critics. A story for critics is the one told by Professor Austen about Coleridge, who himself related it to the Professor. When Coleridge first thought of liter- ture as a means of support he formed some connection with one of the re views. "He was at that time living somewnere in the lake country, to gether with Wordsworth. A parcel ol dooks were sent down to be reviewed, among the rest a volumn of poems. He wrote a smart review ot the work; every sentence of his article was, he said, an epigram. When he had concluded he read his review aloud to the ladies of the family. One of them, Wordsworth's sister, burst into tears and asked him how ho could write ir. I was thinking, said he, 'how I must feel if I were to read such a re view of a poem of yours or William's. And has not this poor man some sister or wife to feel for him?' Coleridge de scribed himself as so affected that he never afterward wrote a review, and he appeared to me to have even a mor bid feeling on the subject." A Cou fused Woman. The most confused woman ia Ameri ca is Mrs. James Cosgrove, of Balti more. She married James Cosgrove, Jr., twentv years ago: he went into the army, and was reported killed. She demoted the report, and spent her en tire fortune of $15,000 searching for him. Finally she gave him ud: bein still young and pretty she haa lots of beaux, and nnaliy married Edward Godfrey. He died in a few months. and four years ago she married James Cosgrove, Sr., the father of her first husts.tn f. And the other dav she acci dentally met a man from Richmond, whom she recognized as her first hus band himself, and he was also husband to atoiiier woman and liviac with hr. The KJiiaan knows that her imm is Mrs. Jkmcs Cosgrove, but is greatly purz ed as to wnether it ought to be toLwaeU by a -Jr." i Z . I I The Roustabout. Roustabouts there may be elsewhere, after their kinds, but the roustabout of the Mississippi river steamboat is he to whom, alone, the name rightly belong-. Whether he is the outcome of certain conditions, a grovvtu of the humid atuio.-M'here, a gt-nenition of the great river's muddy water-, or wheth er he jut i.-, and would be. independ ent o! all th.--e, cannot be known, lie is there, a part of ii.- strange Ike of that strange laud. The true habitat of the roustabout is the steamboat the great leviathans of the upper Missis sippi and the Ohio; ttie gorgeous pal aces of the plantation trade; the little stern wheelers that, like as many turtles, creep along in the shallow trif utaries where, often, one might wade for miles along the beds of the streams; or those tiny propellers darting around the ineessant bends of sluggish bay ous but never on a i:iiling vessel. Through the mysterious leading of affinity, obeying the vague dictates of natural selection or up from the eddy ing whirl of capricious circumstance, soon or late the levee's white crust is left behind him, the deck of a steam boat is under his feet, and the hot but meaningless oaths of her volcanic mate are raining upon his indifferent head. A negro of greater or less blackness of skin and corresponding thickness of skull, he is a distinct article in the steamboat's equipment, rarely throw ing off the roustabout nature to be come a member of the regular crew, and no longer clambers up slippery banks or mire in the blue mud of the swamp. Performing thus, the extrem est drudgery of the vessel's service, he seems a feature with which she may readily dispense, yet no part in theo- tlie or in practice, in the abstract or in e concrete, animate or iiieiess is more an indispensable factor than he. A Baby at the Masthead. Not long ago an English lady took passage on a vessel bound from Kings ton, Jamaica to London. A large, strong and active monkey on board the vessel took a fancy to the lady's child, a babe about two months old. The monkey would follow the lady from place to place, watching her as she rocked and fondled her little one. It so happened on a beautiful after noon during the voyage that a distant sail attracted the attention of the pas sengers. The polite captain offered the ladv the use of his glass. She placed her child on the sofa and had jusi raiseu me glass to ner eye, wnen a cry was heard. Turning quickly she beheld a sailor in pursuit of the mon key, which had grasped the infant firmly with one arm aud was nimbly climbing the shrouds. The mother fainted as the monkey reached the top of the mainmast. The captain was at his wit's end. He feared that if he sent a sailor in pursuit the monkey would drop the babe, and escape by leaping from mast to mast. Meanwhile the monkey was seen to be soothing and fondling the child. After trying in many ways to lure the animal down, the captain ordered the men below, and concealed himself on deck. In a mo ment, to his great joy, he saw the mon key carefully descending. Reaching the deck, it looked cautiously around, advanced to the sofa, and placed the child upon it. The captain restored the child to its mother, who was soon satisfied that iier darling had escaped without injury. Changes in Niagara's Name. The name Niagara has passed through many orthographical changes in tne last ?w years, in ir was written Oniogoragh. In 1686 Gover nor Dongan appeared uncertain about it and spelled it Ohniagero. Onyatrara, and Onvagra. Phiiip Livingstone wrote in 1720 to 1730 Octjagara, Jag- era, and Yagerah, and Schuyler and Livingston, Commissioners of Indian Affairs, wrote it in 1729 Onjagernoa, etc In 1721 it was written Onjagora. Oniagara, and accidentally, probably, Niagara, as at present. Lieutenant Lindsay wrote it Niagara in 1751. So did Captain de Lancey (son of Gover nor JUe Lancey) who was an officer in the English army that captured Fort Niagara from the French in 1759. These pioneers may. however, be ex cused in view of the fact as wiilbe at tested by postmasters that some letter-writers of to-day seem quite as un decided about the orthography of the world-wide familiar name. Niagara Falls Cottrier. Too Much for Girls' Brains. Think of an undeveloped brain get ting up book knowledge on ten differ ent subjects all the same day, and this going on day after day for several years! It is altogether contrary to the principles of a sound psychology to im agine that any sort of mental process, worthy of the name of brain thinking, can take place in that brain while this is going on. The natural tendency of good brain at that age to be inquisitive and receptive is glutted to more than satiety. The natural process of build ing up a fabric of mental completeness by having each new fact and observa tion looked at in different ways and having it suggest other facts and ideas, and then settle down as a part of the regular furniture of the mind, cannot possibly go on where new facts are shoveled ia bv the hundred day by dav. The effect of this is bad on boys, but "is worse on girls, because it is more alien to their mental constitution. Popular tctenc MontMy. One of the stories told to show the value of presence of mind in times of excitement and danger is concerning some recent riots in New Orleans. The mob was threatening and increasing, and the local militia was called out. At a crisis in the affair one of the citizen soldiers leveled his musket at a promi nent opponent, when the man next to him struck up the gun exclaiming. "Don't shoot that man his life'a in sured in our office!" W. E. Walton k Co, Butler, Mo. NEW HOME DO IV. . i lb SEWING MACHINES. 'A, V' I CfJ'llLfH OUTOF ORDER. NEW H jjghaCH1HI 30 UNION SQUARE NEW YCRK CAe0 AN(?. LAy ill. MASS. GA. FOR SALE BY T? 4 T) ""1 rLon 'an:es R'ver Va, in JlV.1 Ja Northern settlement, Illustrated circular tree, , V, Mancha, Cl.treiiiont, Virginia VV V il 13 O O I v Seven Great .Monarchic-lot the Ancient Eastern " rid lv (jcore Kawlne terrible than war? among publishi'i', 1 on. un icn "What is more less it lc a war what Kiuld be happier, tor rejoicing b O K buyers? Such a v.ar i in progress. ii ice reuueed troni $ i.S,oo toj.pi. Specimen pages tree. Not sold by deal ers; price- too low. Hooks tor examina tion before payment. Jfihn II. Aldcn, Publisher, lS Vesev St., N. Y 2i)i;t i;ifiTio. 15 y mail Finn; iin Post-paid. KM0ff THYSELF. .UiliKAT MEDICAL WOIIK OX 1I.IMIU0I) Exhausted vitality, nervous and physi cal debilitv. Premature define in man, errors' ot Youth, and the untold miseries resulting from indiscre'ioti or excesses. A book lor every man, young midle-aijed and old. It con'ains 125 prescriptions for all acute and chronic diseases, each one ot which is invaluable. So found by the Author, whose experience tor 23 earn is fcuch a probably never before fell to the lot ot any physician. 300 paces, bound in beautitul French mulin embossed corers, full gilt, guaranteed to be a finer work in every sense mechani cal, literary and professional than any other work sold in this country tor $2 50 or the roonev will be refunded in every instance. Price only $1 00 by mail, post paid. Illustrative sample 6 cents. Send now. Gold medal awarded the author by the National Medical Associa tion, to the officers of which he refers. This book whoulu be read by the young tor instruction, and by the afflicted for relict. It will benefit all. London Lan cet. There is no member of society to whom this book will not be useful, whether youth, parent, guardian, instructor or clergyman - Argonaut. Address the I'eabodv Medicine ln-ti tute, or Dr. W. H. Parker, No.-fDulfinch Strtef, Boston, Mass-, who may be con sidered on all diseases requiring skill and experience. Chronic and obstinate di-seas-i; that have Daflfled the skin of all other physicians a specialty. Such treat ed succewfc tullr without an instance of failure. HEAL THY Sr.LF. L lvliljttor postage, and receive free, a costlv box of goods which will help all, of either sex, to more mon- ev r'siht away than ar.vtnm; eii-e in tne world. Fortunes await the workers ab solutely sure- At once address True M Co., Augusta, Maine, 17-ivr SEWARD A. HASELTIHE, PATENT SOLICITOR & ATTY AT LAW, ntiiGr5T;Biir), mo. ftrltil at AyMhiaetoa, D. C J Oomspo laqairia iimmn m aaa prow. ni scrcnctA- It ywt thrwti (its situ?- (1, bv urir indi- Allen Emu food wl oera;- rmman ll vicar. ad Mnncti a'l ti mu?teW finin tad Body, S .fr Sa- At luriM. or by mati fram X.-r- rurma-i rr.SalK SRAIN FQOi ftHs Jill LLEirS DOCTOR LOUIS TURNER, IROl'RIETOK Or THE 1 he great interna! and es:ernal cure of pain and diseases. Cures rheumatism neuralgia, Kiunev uiseases, neart diseas es, liver complaints, headache, dyspciv sia, catarrh, croup, diptheria, diarrhoea, dvsenterv flux, toothache, riles, couuhs burns, colds, etc. Particularly recommended tor all dis eases of the blood resulting in general de bility. 1'rice $t.oo per bottle. Dr. Turner is a regular practitioner of medicine ot xo year's experience, and success ully treats ail chroiic diseases, particularly catarrh, asthma, hay fevi-r, oioncnitis, sore tnroat, anu ail diseases ot the lungs, chest, nasal cavities, and breathing passage, and all diseases pecu liar to women, by the means ot electric OXVI.EN. 1)K. I.UlIS TlRXEK, St. Lonis Mo. Prepared b- wholesale and retail by V. T. Lansdown, dealer in pure drugs, mcd- cines, perfumeries Vc. FINE SUITS. In every stvle price and quality Made to Order guaranteed a tit in every case, all and see me, south room in grange store . J E TALBOTT, v. Merchant Tuilor UNEQUALED FAST TIME! Via th 0 1 n & M i ss 1 ,ss 11 j 1 V From St. Lours to all points East. The (. ..V !. R'y is now running palace sleeping cars without change IroMi ' St. Louis in IO II' H'KS TO I.Ol'ISVII.I.R. to HOUtS TO CINCINNATI. 3D IIOi:i:.S TO WASHINGTON", 31 HOLitS TO 15AI.TIMOKK. 38 HOI KS TO Ni;w YORK. - hours the quickest to Louisville and Cinrinnatti . 7 hours the quickest to Washington. 4 hours the quickest to Ualtimore. Equal Fist Time wich other lines to New York and without change of cars. I rv j rrv TiMs. to Cincinnati 'and . Louisville. VVif Through. Dav Cars, Parlor ars and Pa ace .Sleeping Coaches. The Ohio & Xississippi Railway I now Runnin? i Toiilrl? Ijil.y lino Or" r.4LAi;r: i.ci:n(. caick Front S. I. mi is m Xew Tocwk Willi liaujre. Leaying on morning express via the B.i-iRRandon evening express, vii N Y L E W R R. No Change of Cars for anv ca& of Passengers. Frst nd second-cass pas sengers are a carried on fast expre- trains, consisting of paace seeping car, elegant parlor coaches and comfortable day coaches, all running through Tvith out change. The onyjMne bv which you can get through cars from St. Louis to Cincinnati w ithout paying extra tare in addition to inrjnev paid for ticket. For tickets rates, or particuar infor ipation, ca on tickets agents ot connect ing ines, west, northwest or southwest. In St Louis at tot Si tor. X Fourth SI. W. W. PEABODY, President and Gen'l Manager. W. B. SHATTUC Gcn'iPaM. .Agent Ciaciaaati, Ohi. C. D- ACON", Gaeral gWMtern ruua gr Ajet,St- Lmi,M: 33-t WONDER mm r livncaw. or hri,U 2? Rtainna for Dr t-seribe every ca.se. twAsaa 1 cases of rrook? Tln-y describe In your case eiwu to cas tl!lV ia cerr Mace. r? makes tu diili rem-o hi ? have taken, or ho tu laaj? cure you.Atienil ! Monre toikj .. C- I. H . V . . lJfe, them U Hope.- tjrf Un tcarriinfy of tun jmj. trtry mm t(,riiiv. Consult the Old Doctor. 6Sw and l'arlora I'rUaie. A fnZS h tu r.ori all may have futurtaZ fi-riin: iwl eliuaie. SledtrtlT Books, $c sent evervwh2 cure from Kx(maurr. "Hourvia 8: Kuiulay, a to - Atldrvt u. t i..iitir, si. 0., Hit louit ot., tt. twill, j, Tin LI 11 SKIM CURE Isarpecfflc fclflcfrm fnr Palt Rbran, Eczema, Emtate la, (Vnlilhead. T etter, lllvi iv lMutdruff. ImodI? r.'i.mninir, KinfTWorm, 8unttirn, and uUiaf r-rroiuii riant- if the cutaneous vsti-m, by exudation and art braZ croUon. hereby very particle ot disease lawttfwTms. fniui the cvftrm. Inordinate itching of thai. J? laved at once t'T halhlnff the carta For l'iti's. oiimis. l uta. I'lcenor Sore, m bo orompt in soothing and healine as Part aplUoa'&a Cure Jtdoea not smart or barn. LilrociloD to i ks. guagva accompany every botlla. CATARRH CURE Cora ell dinraocs of the Narol Organs, by Itmrfflsnw -iujectiou or by sr raying, In children or adults. Cini cs tiie nostrils and ieruilU natural liresthlnc. It Ik a specific cure fur Cold la th Bead which fc cauaed I'V Euiiilea changes In the atnKMnoera ttaidha Sneeiinp. Watery f.yrn atid Tain la the Head. I?ronchial CatArah, Acuta or Chrotuo fWtoiit. atso nnreC'ul l, this remedy will permanently euia. i takes the front rnnk as a cure fur Hay Fever, ss aaas testtiaoniola certify. It baa been used several yS StaxesBfUl'7; lanigUmia In teji huiffii.g. COUGH CURE Lan be administered to Infanta without theslirUaf danger. It di j not contain dnipx or cbeiulrai, Mt a hormlew vetielahle pyrnp, very delicious to Um Hub, UU relieves and positively cores WHOOPING COUCH at onre. and Is a permanent curs for ilmnctital oe Wt irr CuuKh, tinmchitts and l'ulmonary Catarrh. litnw tl ilia In tea languages accompany every botUs. iHHlTlJiM I BLOOD CURE A ti eclfic cure for all disease oftbeWnoA. IJvee. acb, lhmcls (mil Kilnes. This medk iue is allutut i-KHuiile. it is the ir srrlptiou of an eminent phr( Clmi. who hu u-d it in lilReperlut practice (brtlifrr veius. l ut ull iiMtu-s orlKiuatliitr hi luiMlnwnt -4 t.,e l)l(xl, Aii:emin. ii k ll.n.Iaclie. SmwiiMt Keiuale Wenkneum, l.tvi-r(iniilttlut,ITSnennia,Jiuia, dice. Uiltuusueaa. and Kiduev i'l-a iuw this inedlcitua at-xi!ntWy sure. 'I'hio nmlli lue dors mit nuitalD isf mineral. Is aIHIutelv veetlkbh rent irru tiie l.ltMI t& hfaltliv condition, n'tmliillni? fimwih oti.l iiik,tlviitf inHits, anu tr'veuia uinrnMS. "irvvlivilS Ui if b 1 uvrng(- :uvonijuy every ixxue. -APILLON MFC. CO., CKICACO. FOX GALE BV f.ii. uu iiLV i:c. i mil af gr-e-ra mat namst TORPID BOWELS, DISORDERED LIVER, and MALARIA. , from tbese Bourcea uiUe ttxree launn ot tlia uine.-9 of tho human rue. 1bm tym ptora ! n cliep.tc the! r existence : Xm m Appetite, Uomli costive, Sick Ilsad- -ticUe, rulln after csitlnar, wcrsta tm ;: exertion of body or mind, EnsetatU ; ftt food, irritability of temper, lsy spirit), A reeling ofhsvlng siea;leet4 some daiy, Iiaxiuas,KIattertrwtka ! Heart, Iat bafora (It ya.llgtoly ore a brlii, COSSTIPATIO.V, nl " , xn&nd tho na of a remedy that acta tHreett; on the Liver. AaaLlTerinodiciueTt, i'f I" ILLS Uav no equal. Their action oato KMneys and Skin la also prompt; remoflnf fdl Imparl tie throagb theso three mmw rngrrt of the eratam, prodaelflf aPP tiw., aoond digestion, resmlar "tools, aei aklaandayla-orousbodr. TtfTT jPQJA catue no nausea or griping nor Internee with daily work and are perfect . ANTIDOTE TO MALARIA. Sold STerywhere. e. OfBe.44 MwrwtygjgjLT. TUTTS HAIR DYEt Caar Has o "WHtaacas change Jj stantlr to a GboMT BlJtCK bj a iaVmC plication of tola Dtb. Sold by PrafaP ' or sent by ernreae on receipt of !. Offlc, 4 Murray Street, Kcw Tot. , TUn'S MAN.&L OF H.CF.I BtUim ffa. sNTimitt. Biversld. r.i. TVa trt sBatajaeaaa MARRIAGESS All that tacdoaMral aariouswe taouaai j komr, dote aad folic biad . tu W sta.papar M'rS naca Gnida. 144 p IS. sent moesisnSj1! nn uiiiimrnai7 at. Charlee ot. I ;un. iini 1 1 icn ur. lcui.8, mo. i Tho aiaat spsciallat, Nervoot lAlt 1 .ImotAif to Marriasa, ooaltatVn and funMffv ALWAYS in the LEAOJ BELDIG'S ? . Pi. l o n IT has iro EQUAI.! all HmUSnL&X. Exhlbltioa. ' IM ;n!r.pne riclarii, it doe w'el to tie Iatri::a:e Merit of the guoU' DROWNING &COYLE,Stloufs,Ko. A-43ta for tfca WZ8T aad 8CCTB. ism w ( HOTHAMfTOM, MM ?, 2e.iM. iw ' - rwAiwsvhArt. TWViag's Knitting SOk. Machine Twist. Bf too-'.to Witt. Mawtrts; llt and EaBBTterr Bilk bare all the potsta e Heajer- . terUr tmal stlnttpfi tixtr BrooC Sa- MM Mr m 4 r: m ss mm w ar . 1 n TrnTTTT T7 vnTT snr tmtwtamamssK3mamammmHmmmmmmmmmmm 1