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t. English Synonyms. tbe English difficulty of The copiousness of tODsrue, as well as the acquiring the ability to use its immense vocabulary correctly, is well exhibited in tne following array of synonymous words, which, if not new, is yet a capi tal illustration ot the nice distinctions which characterize so many of vocables. It is no wonder that we slio occasion ally, even the wariest of us. A little girl was looking at the picture of a number of ships, when she exclaimed "See what a flock of ships!" V,re cor rected her bv saving that a Hock of ships is called a flpet, and that a fleet of sheep is called a Cock. And here we would add, for the benefit of the foreigner who is mastering the intrica cies of our language in respect to nouns oi multitude, mat allock of girls 13 called a bevy, that a bevy of wolves is called a pack, and that a pack of inieves is caned a Granjr, and that a gang of angels is called a host, and a host of porpoises is called a shoal, and a shoal or bullaloes is called a herd. uim ;i ueru oi cniiaren is called a troop, and a troop of partridges is called a covey, ana a covey of beauties is caned a galaxy, and a galaxy of rullians is called a horde, and a horde of rubbish is called a heap, and a heap of oxen is called a drove, and a drove of blackguards is called a mob, and a mob of whales is called a school, and a school of worshippers is called a con gregation, and a congregation of engineers is called acorus, and a corps of robbers in called a baud, and a band of locusts is called a swarm, and a swarm of people is called a crowd, and a crowd of gentlemen is called the elite, and the elite of the city's thieves and rascals is called the roughs. San Francisco Xcv)s Letter. wm it was a peneci revelation to an American. Not a word or murmur was heard irom even women who stood with children on their arms. Mean while an American railroad, in the per son oi us accredited representatives, waxeti wroth. "If we dared to do any thing like this," said the European aent, "tne people would mob us. and they would bo right. Tin's comes of centuries of endurance! They'd better import an American railway." and so on to the end of the chapter. It availed nothing. Completely fa;rred out v.'e finally reachod Copenhagen. On tbe way home I was suddenlv aroused lroin my lethargy. I smelt a smelL it n;w a sirong smuu. une that was richer than any of the hundred smells in Cologne, and stronger than any to be found in Naples. It came from uanish cheese store. They have verv ninny cneese stores here, and each emells worse than the other. It brought fcacK to memory bbsKspeare's famous uuscnpiion or a Copenhagen chensn lactory: iMjiuewunjr is rotten In the State of Pen- T' ! ' - . 1 . . . . .mid is me somethinir referred tn. anu tae description is quite correct. WTT AND HUMOR. There is a jjreat carnea on r.s ltiskiv as ever. hv does Ihna gt nioro beaux than 1? asked the elder sister. don t fcaovr, unless she is a little arch er, said :amma. with a quiver of her ups. A Poiiusylraithi made a fortune iu is advertising lor New Things In Watermelons. the foremost of living historians, has ! Just published another volume of his Universal History; he will be 89 years I 1 here is a great depression in the next December. Carlyle and Emerson j easiness of masing glass bottles. The lost none of their vigor until they business of emptying them seems to be reached three-score years and ten. And to-day. who imagines that Oli ver Wendell Ilolmes, already on the verge of 75. is old? Longfellow did some of his best work shortly before his death, at 75, and Whittier i3 now two years older than that. The vast energies, whose sum in many direc tions are know n as Victor Hugo, show no signs of decrepitude, although it is now more than eighty-two years since Victor Hugo was born. Historians, it may be remarked, have usuallv been long lived. Voltaire hd at 84. Thierrv and Michlet, at 76: Mignet and GuizoL at 87. George Bancroft is now 84, and George Tieknor lived to be 80. In nnh. i? Tt i i . . nc c ailivu iiuu several recent ex amples of great men whose power for statesmanship did not diminish through age. Gladstone is nearly 75, and Palniorston was Prime Minister at. t!. time of his death, two days before he nad completed 81 Tears. lipnmin Franklin, in the last century, lived to An Abyssinian Belle. With tho large majority of the nativo females in Turkey, the prevailing tint is yellow. Nine out of ten of them are pigeon-toed and all tho blondes have freckles. They never wither and dry up in growing old, as do the natives to tho north and west, but fatten and grow oily, developing ridges where there ought to bo hollows, growing at the edges and settling in height, until at early womanhood they havo no more shape or liguro than a Hubbard squash. If I were to liavo my choice of tho whole invoice. I should tako an Abyssinian brunette. They are di vinely tall and slender and black as tho aco of spades. Tho features are clearly cut and regular, tho eyes liquid and the lips red and full. Tho hair is black and waving, but somewhat coarse in fiber. They dress in pure white, and the black face and red lips ao-ainst tho white setting of the burnous5 give an effect that is as enchanting as a picture. San Francisco Chronicle. 'V Marvclou? Engineering. Tho London Inner Circlo railroad is a marvelous feat of engineering skill, says tho Philadelphia tress. It runs throughout its entire distance under the busiest center of the largest city in tho world, and the operations attend ing the excavation and construction have proceeded without serious injury in or interruption of business or traffic. Quicksands have been passed through. beds of old rivers spanned, lofty ware- j4v-v ..n't luassno uuiiuiugs secured wuue tneir iounaations have been undermined, and an intricate network of gas and water pipes sustained until supports had been applied to them from below. Added to this, the six main sewers had several times to be reconstructed. Dav and nirht tho work nas been earned on for eighteen months, and now the engineers are able to announce that their tunnel is complete. The laying of tho rails and mo ouiuiing of the stations are the only portions of the immense work that remains to be done, and in a very short time trains will be passing over tho whole of this wonderfuf sub terranean road. "Any new varieties this year?" "Well, we have tne vanilla and th lemon ilavored watermelons. Thfiv are got oy injecting tne vanilla flavor or a bit of lemon into the stem'whila the melon is growing. The flavor is taken up by the pulp and niakes n. de licious combination. Oniv nnicurpa know of this wrinkle, and we therefore have few of the doctored soecies on sale. You can get a toothsome dih by plugging a melon, iniectin a littln fine claret, restoring the plus and al lowing the wine to be taken" un bv tho fruit. But. beware: the combination is a3 seductive as Roman punch." "Any new ways of preparing the melon for the table." "Well, I've been eating melons for forty years, and I still prefer them plain. Some of my customers, how ever, like 'em mixed. One of my best uoarumg-iiouse customers has water melon salad every Sunday in the sea son. She prepares it. she sav-s. f:it. ia she does lettuce cuts the red part of the melon up into, bits and adds pep per, salt, vinegar, and oil. It ought to make 'em sick, but she says her board ers just light for it. Another familv that I know of pour molasses on their melons. A good many people, I be lieve, always" add a squeeze of lemon to tho fruit. A Boston familv that deal with me are always particular to have their melons lirm and just ripe, and don't haggle about tho price wiien they get 'em to suit. They have the melons cut into little strips, and eat 'em with cold baked beans. But, as I said be fore, for my part I like 'em plain." Philadelphia T-vics. In the Iand of Nods ami Clay Pipes. a man irom the outside world of reanties descnoes the life of Arkansas as follows: Long davs of doinc noth ing beget little energy. Little food is needed, and less new elothiiif. Tn tb tall and winter the crons ar cntlipro.i and turned over to the merchant who holds the mortgage. To sum un thn labor of years: I was on the place yes terday, and found an old double log house, so nearly rotted down that it 7s propped up all around; the windows were without glass, the door-frames were without doors, the children could pass out between the lo3 in anv direc tion, the lady and a friend were sitting in tho "gallery," a space between the two cabins, on splint chairs, contented. ly "dipping" smilf, while the lord and master, in dirty, begrimed clothes, sat under a tree doinr nothing hn WL-. ing happy as the day is long. Fences rotted down. and lean Ti 'T wit h "pokes" on them, two sorrv-Icoking horses trying to pick a living" from the short grass, and little children, half a dozen or more, with but a single "ar nieut on, were listlessly playing iiMhe shade. Tho lands, brhrinallv nn.r with !.t tm.r. .i.- : ' . .i ...... uuu ,...., K,L imcu menus OI sou on the prairies, were worn out and aban uoned. A Blushing Chinese llride. mm xuero was great commotion in the neart of Chinatown yesterday after- anraumjinHiju nre was on tne tapis, ana a crowd of 400 or 500 ninamen surrounded tho home of tho hriitu i n i . . , v.uv, in uu vuueavor to catch a glimpse of tho lady as sho went to meet tno happy man. When the irl started down the narrow stairs," in charge of an old woman, tho curious neathens mado a rush for tho door way, and when she appeared upon the sidewalk, with her blushing face hid oehind a fan, tho excitement becamo so mtenso that the services of the po liceman were necessary to clear a way to the carrinTu I't-on. ;.. . i - surging crowd was adorned with a gen erous grin, and a chorus of "Ahs" greeted, me rare and radiant miMon who was about to launch upon tho un- s n r . . oi matrimony. a no oride s urcss was of pale blue m-ioug, inmmed with rare old toynh. wane me pantaloons were of six full widths of yellow sigee. Her hair was dressed a ia Hong Kong, there bein no bangs of any description. Her yuarming mue feet were half hidden m a bewitching pair of sUk slippers with the heels knocked off: This vis- loveliness was carefully placed m a closed carriage and driven to the apartments of the bridegroom, who was wondering what sort of a compan ion h! f1.;-. , . . . . ill. ,." irienas caa se lected for him. There the scenes enacted on Slorri floa street were repeated as the brido showers of rice and papers. A Shakspearean Sentence Explained. a MSfl-0- Bnt never can k lQe eribe tho monies of getting back. Tho S?At ?t , "i r7 . """-inai to the tr.k of f 7 neirs Claimed, in ordpr p? p0rUn? 15000 rooP. and tbe to oney-he wrotTWofhis hSSnST 1131 n to wait two reate5t tragi&,? Did ntt Heboid! i'l tt atniues. let "wtiu as iortv? Goetha. t were so pai.eut and r.::.,? i every one know ;7me' 4 i h,nii - , yen in oi ez. V on Kanke, True Approciation. The observation of great writer on having half a dozen bottJes of brandy sent him by an anonymous admirer is well known. "This.'" he said, with complacency, "is true fame." For my part, as is only in accordance with the rules of proportion, I have had to be content with a much inferior liquor mere ginger beer, a drink which i ef fervescent, no doubt, but while it lasts h retresiung enough. I once lost Persian cat. which (I had almost writ ten "who ) was very uoar to me, and went xo a suburban police office for professional advice as to handbills and rewards. Vv hat 13 your name, sir?' inquired tno intelligent inspector. (It is cynicauy observed that inspectors are always called in the newspapers "intelligent." but this one. as will' bo seen, fully deserved tho title.) As my Business was a lawtul one, I, of course. gave mm no alias. "James Payn?" he echoed. "Are you the story-teller?" 1 modestly murmured tlm'r T T"l, T ,"m L . , 1 ... a ivii uu wiKii, no saut, in a tone in which generositv and gratitude were nneiy blended, "you are out of my district, but 1 11 take tho case" And ho took it. That was my brandy. I have also had sums of money bor rowed ot me at various tiu.es hv .- mirers of my genius but that has ny en me Jess satisfaction. James 1'ayn, in Vie Cornhiil Magazine. Voiulooism. The Voudoos of Louisiana thosn no. groes who still make ih fvp nf s John an orgy of wierd in.--m! -n ;.r were recen't'y viewed at The funeral of a negress. one of the O let us of W doo. In a shanty she lav :n a fantas tic garb. On her head was a -;i'n.i of bay leaves, while about her neck a dead snake was twined. Th tltfJi light from a bunch of rosinon ?vr cast a smoky glare over a hundred' ne groes, who. with ioined iiand -,t the ground and swayed their bc.-. back and forth to the rhvthm of a mo notonous droning son-, over -in.! letting out an unearthly scream. Then came a march bv torchlight tr ti, grave. The torches were t the ground, and a dance was dren with such vigor that before it ended many of the dancers had fall sheer exhaustion. Then tho clothes of the dead woman were thrown into the grave, one garment at a time, soma of them being torn in two before beintr cast in. 0 ! -1 no ,.uex.c:ui government seems to ue vVing with ispain 111 the ingenuity and uurdciiaomeness of its taxation 1 . ah incomes over ? 1,200 are taxed 12 percent. According to the provisions "i stamp tax. adopted last April neaily all artless above 99 cents must iiaye a stamp slhxed. These articles include nearly all wearing apparel and many kinds of food, canned goods, as weii as tobacco, oils, medicines, brushes ciocNS, jeweiry, etc. ihe whole of ui:m s stock must be stamped, r.nd tne end of tne year the articles must bo restamjied. a at unsold TiJippin- a 'J' Xiabor and Ijonge t!i0 was p:. sui - . a'.--ago, in olu'iiieiico to an India by Mr. Ke;eh -for A tiger track was ioup leaning to the rec-Jy 1 A pit about twenty ie in the path and c branches o: trees :.'.. natives then c.rr.'Ai' at .night the "Jgivs i!i L' water, crhed ti;ixg ii anl lay, purtiaiiy snume i heiples5 :tt the hot '0111 .f 1 was itt.owed ". there 1 The ai'.Htth oi the pit wa ; and for seven davs say iiv I- !-ir ; liess witi'.out treatment vi-r is the only k;; them from tn food y oft-11 own m: s" ale succeeding their e.u like submisr imi. When at j:;st lii again removed the ti. was found to be an v : She was, however, w-v ous bounds to reach tii pit were inort p.t with every eflort. months sent to er kind. . f- ir.n i-.iygie 1 n rive - .,ei ; w:-.s an" el? i. ov.r with 'rM'.Wi.ou. The ''"t'' H-'S and il'-ffi! to the ; covering. an-.i wholly :e pit. She r a week. gain closed 1 :n (tark- or w:-.u-r. Such ki.i. ; ier but oi r itncin"- - savage frenzy iaie to anvlhinf l' TIlU-u.fVC! around her. coverings were a unuim. d Fanny 1 -tig but subd ued". and her f;;ri- mouth of the r;w shorter Degan to angle lor her. It was hard and dangerous fishing, but slowly noose after noose was dropped around her body, her fore legs were drawn tightly to her sides, and she was nulled up ni, nisi urmiy oound r.ni v.ner cords were thrown and with her leet m the air and her back down, she was lashed to bamboo poles, and carried by a score of men to the place of embarkation. She had very little life left in her when she was placed on board ship and dispatched to many. When she landed in Europe, howev er, she had quite recovered, and Mr. Eeiche, who is living in Germanv, was delighted with her appearance. Ha gave her the name of Fannv, and se cured her passage to America. Shn i worth perhaps $3,500. X. Y. Sutu o.l king who has the last three vearu a w:ie. erv proper ly, he uemauds that the ladv shall be "rehned. ' It is a time honored custom in Quin- cy, t ia., to saiute a newiv-mamed wo man by bring a cannon. This is t re mind them that tne battle of life has fairly begun. A correspondent says: "It i3 won derful how manv caves have been dis covered in Tennessee." We would suggest that the same remark has been applied to Wall street. Boston 1'ost. A hen's egg measuring G bvSV inch- U - lis 1 . 1 . - , 1- ". - u.ia uccu ism on ine Taoieoi a Geor gia editor. He proposes to keep it and let it ripen for the next dramatic com bination that comes down that way. "First come the missionaries, then the Consuls, and then after them the armies," said King Theodore of Abvs sinia some years ago to a French trav eler, explaining his abhorrence of ex plorers and missionaries. "You ourht to put a sign over that hatchway," said a poiiceman to a store keeper, "or some one may tumble into it." "All right," replied the mer chant; and he tied one of his "Fall Owning" cards to the railing Q-.ieen Victoria invariabiv has her ico crt-iim anahit-d bv a chemical esoert. As yet, i:ot:ang but pure chalk and wa ter and corn-starch have been discov ered, lhetj.uen lives m hones of striking a trace of cream sometime. , . . . , i ouug man meaning to oe verv ..u " . ' , , , . . ,-aiiuui, piesenieu a i::ay with a rose. saving: "..Madame, allow 111, to n vui ou 10 one 01 your sisters. Judge of his chagrin " when a In crawled out and sat down in the mid dle or the rose. J.weive-ycar-oid oad boy: "Sis, your teller s in a tigut piace. bister. maiuieu: ny, wnai. do vou mean. xjuu.- "iv iien 1 wus getting your lace powdi-r in the drugstore this in-on T 1 - it- s 1 i saw mm in oeiund the screen. " SU. ter: "Sua: papa will hear." Bad uoy: -Pa was there, looVUurhmj- lou j rcc 1 . Ceo. A writer in the Century says it would take a limited express train several hundred years to reach the sun, and the fare at tho customary rates would De over sz.ouu.ow. That settles it! We shall never make a railroad jour ney to tho sun. Tho fare is reasonable enough, but wo couldn't neglect our business so long. Aorristown Herald. xne ionowing 13 the curriculum of the schools of journalism: "Don't write on but one side of the paper. Use capital letters when necessary. Uon t make a paragraph only where ouc is neeueu. open proper names correctly and others as nearly correct as convenient." Bv observing theso rules anyone can become a great jour- uuiisu Old man Pctigrew, of Austin, is very ficvj.oo in ins siaieiuenis, and is also a strict constructionist. One mornino- a neighbor rushed in on Petigrew while 1110 latter was eating his breakfast and exclaimed excitedlv: "Your house is on tire." "Sir?" "Your hnnsa i burning up." "lou are wronc sir. ioug.- "xes, sir: in:s is not mv house. 1 only rent it." Texas Sift- lays. boy howling. His mother gives him an apple. "Don't want that old ap ple, he cries. "I am gia i of it," the mother rephes, "for it is little sister's. and sho 11 want it when showakiis iin. -llieu he wants it. "Gimme!" ho cries, and he is not satislied until the apple is gnawed bevond recognition. ... . - ihen he reels better. I he maioritv of boys do not grow up to be good citi zens. Arkansato Traveler. I Walton & Co. Butler, Mo. are Agents for the NEW HOME & DOMESTIC SEWING MACHINES. THE.A-f-RUA7cn i v a t i i 1 n Hal Mita wve em 9c -4 IFECTkKTICUlAR C no EQt'A'- OUT OF ORDER. J 30 UNION SQUARE NEW YORK FOR MASS. SALE BY GA. FINE SUITS. In every style price and quality Made to Order X guaranteed a fit in every cas Call and t-ee nie, south room grange store . J E TALBOTT, 47 i". Merchant Tailor UNEQUALED FAST TIME! Via the On 10& Mississippi V From St. Louis to all points Eat. The O. & .M . K'y is now run'dng palace sleeping cars without change Irom St. Louis in IO HOURS TO LOUISVILLE. IO HOCUS IO CINCINNATI. tO HOUItS TO WASHINGTON". I I HOUKS TO I1ALT1MOKE. To free canaries and other catre hird from the insects which infest thorn, the following method is recommended by ono who has successfully practiced it ior years: i.very mirht iust at dnslr the cage or aviary is covered with a white cloth. During the niht n.iri- sites will crawl from ofF tlwj birds on to the cloth, where they may be seen run ning about when the cloth is removpd daybreak. The insects mav be kill- into bon in? 3S HOCKS TO NEW YORK. 2 hours the quickest to Louisville and Cincinnatti. 7 hours the quickest to Washington. 4 hours the quickest to ISaltimore. Equal F ist Time wiih other lines New York and without change of cars to ed by putting the cloth water. A repetition of the process will soon clear away the m;sts with.vir r, Insect powders will parasites, but the uring the birds no tii, Tity. Erricsson. the ol years old recently 11 ; , ient health, and worka. it u teen hours a day. proving an exeepUon to the general rule, like many others that are received withnnt n .i; a fallacy. Perhans it micrht i, ,t i uusy men iive longer than idle men; that work is. after Sit ti, iv noteworthv idea will t-,-.o. ; . - -w vi. me. aiany r lncfanjtAa t , . , , , O- - VKlutlUCJ iujaraDie mental activity easily occur to the reader. V as not SonhtviAa m. . 1 when, to prove that he was not in 90, bis France is not prospt-rons. Allowing or the million and a half taken jiwp by Germany, the population has made no progress at all since 1SG0. It num. l rs are smaller now than thev were lira-en years ago, while the ioad of taxation has almost doubled in mere charges it has much more, than dou bled. Equally stationary has been tho export trade. The average of recent years has indeed been lower than for u.e years immediately succeeding tbe war. Imports have, on the other hand. .- igtuen;i-d much, but not because the coun try has iven intprnaily prosperous. Ihe increase is tho consequence of bad 1 arvt-sts, and indicates a furih-r ue-i-ud:itioc of the wealth of the people. It issaid the New York Herald has i spent $ 173. tX lighting the newsdealers. I 1 1? .arges; ziac-proluciag locality ! i?i ;i:e worid is the district around Ga- I .cna, K is. Last year 70,000 ions were ; mi tied. . '-"'ereare about 3S.0iV locomotives I in the United States. Jilt)!; kill rus as w.-ii. Among the Chinese the torLni n,i the .-i:i:iive have been chosen emblems of martial security against attack for 3,0U0 years. It would appear also that the Chinese belief that a great affection exists between these two classes of creatures has some foundation in fact. A correspondent of the Chma 2Jau writes that one evening as he was walking on the bank of a river in Slian se he saw a tortoise swiminin-' .-.cross the current. He lired at the tortoise, upon which it dived under the water, and a snake, cut in two by the bullet, floated on the surface. The snako seems to have been using the tortoise's back for a ferry boat. Cazas y Oeho.i died Iiks a hero. He was a. S ian.urd iu the government civ il service. At the time of the collision of the steamers Gij.n and Laxhatn. a few weeks ago, he was a pasenger on u lormer. in tue midst of iue p-mic he remained b aaing over the rail of t.ie .-.ted steamer. He declined ter the ma.U boas, because he tl ario iaT person wo-tid safety t.f a:;. Tin. :ovf ::i i.:.- water swaying to aii.i 1 sons ia the small beat jhoute He lit a cigarette. :-.:j;i.-,te-i bi-we i eyeglasses i,;eu tn;. ssei h: "V lllia i'.tU'. ro v:oIe;.lli. ;nsg to enough; 1 -'tl.ed ariil was i iie per- -hv. hand. A ed and the sea. go- ii-- goilt- vsiVed his to Cincinnatti and Louisville. With Through Dav Uar. Parlor f'ars and Pal ace Sleeping Coaches. The Ohio & Mississtooi Railway I now Running a Tonll; Dsil.v OF From St. i.imu to er lurk without change. Leaving on morning express via the B, ui ' R R and on evening expres. vis, XYLE IV R R. .no i.-riansre ot Cars for anv fas&engers. r rst and second-cass pas- Bciigcra are an carnea on rat expre-h trains, ronsisting of palace sleenin" car. e.egant parlor coaches and comfortable day coaches, all running through with out cnanee. The or-lr line br which io! n through cars from St. Louis to Inrinnatt without pa ir.g extra tare in addition to monrv pa-.ti nrtickei. For t?cl.;r!s r-ate, or particular infor mation, ca'l on tickets agents ot connect ing lines west northwest or southwest. I in &t Louis at 101 A: cr N Fourth St. IDrliratc "r""nJ two H r.ULJ X 00 5 1 iiT.B li ut S bllliy in rtrry mtr. nikes no ilnUTriKB ht yog bv takrn, ir ho hits lulled curj. you. A U. n1 t oncf to thU. for It saps l.ire's liumul lri,vt- y?'' JVrwk ! -Whll.Mh.-7ii; Llfr. tberals Hoiw rar nw ten earrmty 0 i-i.r tficc trv ana .nt.rt.iLrm. ConvnltthenM IKirlor. flfflm "1 Parlor IVItal. a rri.-a.lly l tt.-r,ur-all i:iuy itiive rtitumuf. r.ri:)(t aud haae. il-du-lnea. lSookjs AiVjiK iu rverywh. ro curefrxmiKuMarf. IC.urs.lita ; isiiDilmy.OtolX Addrraalemxa K U. rLAUHB. M. O., tilt Locutt St.. 6f. Louit, Ma. UnriTaHed !n Appcaraaca Ucparalleled in Slnplicltj. "Unsurpassed in Construction. TJsprccedcstcd ia Dara-bilitT. XJnoz:cllci in Eccnomy cf PasL Bnilsputei fn BROAD CLAIM of being to VERY BEST OPERATING, QUICKEST SELLING, HANDSOMEST AND Ever offered to tho Public. MADE ONLY BY THE EXCELSIOR MANUFACTURING CO. ITos. 612, 614, 616 k 618 27. tf tin St. ST. LOUIS, MO. oxux xi-s "1 lJ. u AIcDijidi: & Co. ti 1j LLS TORPID I.OWELS, DISORDERFP LIVER, and MALARIA. From tlme onree arlao taree-rourthaof tlio i:iH;asea of tba banian rueo. Ilusm eympiijuwiiKhtato Uielreiiatence : Xx of Appetite, Boweli costive, Mlek lf.ad ache, rullnea. after .atlna;, v.ralun ta exertion of body- or mind, llructailoit of food, IrrltablUty ot temper, l,trrr spirit, A feeling of harlnr aeKrcted nmedniy, Jizxlnea,Flotterliia;attha llrart, lut before 1 1. ere,lic,Ulr eU orL Cr," TIPATIO., and d. xaand the two of a rt-m.ly tlmt a m rilretlr ontlio l.ivir, AsaLlTcrrncdlciimTrjTX'M I'H.I.S bHve r.o Csiual. Their action on tho I. i !ncj-s nnd Skin is also prompt ; removing nil ii,ipuritie through tlie.! thro mt. eiig.-re of tlia ayst.ni," prcKluclnff a;.p. litc.nonnartisfeatlon, rffftilur M00M, nrii-nr sklnaKlaTioroubolr. TCTTT'S I'lJLLS ciiu.rM no naurtea or griping nor lnterXwo v. ita dally wort tind gra Tii-rfnvt ANTIDOTE TO MALARIA. TUn'S KA!R DYE, Ftantiy toaOlo(T Black bv a single ftp rlicatlon of this Vrn. 80M by Dnurrlata. orient by xpru oa receipt of !. OH-". 4i .Turrny Pre-t, Stir York. TUTT'S UAMAl 6F USEFUL RECEIPTS fl recs. AkWAYS In the LEAD BELD-aVC'S For Length, Strength I Elastisfr IT HAS NO EQUAL! .T.lo.l HIGHEST PnEMIUMSat ii llia'STRIAI. ExMbiti&ii. 11. ,1 -.1. 'ii! ."!(!:ji i; , u uae soielr to Vat Tit i,f V.l" S'mhU. HGY5!NGCOYLE,StLouis,Blo. As-Tsta fr tba WZSXand SOCTK. , rt 1 m 1 ROCKViLir. rriMU ? VI fVi If I ROCKVICtC CONM. ti I SaO MONTREAL. CtHAOA. 11 1 ' WORTH AW! PTOM, Milk For Sal by Dealers Everywhere PMi:iS' Kniuint' f)Jk. Machine T it. Ilot-ton-Iw.ie Silk. Sewitia Si!lc ami KtnAt.tU Elabmidery silk have all tha p.rlnt f Snper- Urity that .StirnuUh their KroL 8il Or.G.W.FITZPATRICK, Pre I'K.nOIY, 1H1 i... n i v. Ik-.ludc'ti 'iMa into Cincinnati. Ohi G. U.BACO, Genera" ger Aent, St. Loufs, i: n?'er. W. SHATirC. i a ;en- Offlca SOS Wyaadotfs St, KA5S CITY, MO. A IKI'LII rHT!ri axd srsoBos. Mt a rf-icialtt or Tna i,ir., or TBI EYE, EAIS AM) THROAT. Located la Kan. C'.tr !r.-e Vn. (ynV-mt for Cataract. Fal Pojl. P"-Tr!om nf CrwEjre. Bccef 1 1 Jr perf Wt O m r. j , a.; ri J, it an -1 iv tj! b loo Sore KTe. etir1 In iVm time. j jn'.l nnjcet cf treatmeut. Iefn. K.ztf.oi In ttx f.n ana ttarrh trared: ao. rr uod B'.rt f-r. iwerroa. Hi;nln-. r.d Wk t.y. AnTiriruLKru "IibeX'4",'i''- "'" l-n. i,.-,-.-. r-K abie. CisTituluwm rrti. c.i or writ Laije uu 1 .1 r he V!m men at t!i si ' IS ct .75 ct IS ct I Silv . it vcr ited c 1 W 2' ' a. 8 PA1 or The Mt as J aV