MOSS.
Strange tapestry, by nature spun
Oa viewless loom3, aloof from sun,
YLnd spread through lonely nooks and grots
"Where shadows reign, and leafy rest
Oh, moss, of all your dwelling spots,
In which one are you loveliest?
' Is it when near grim roots that coil
Their snaky black through humid soil!
Or when you wrap in woodland gloom,
The great prone pine trunks rotted redi
Or when you dim, on sombre tombs,
The '-requiescats" of the dead?
" Or is it when your lot is cast
-In some quaint garden of the past
-On some gray, crumbled basin's brim,
With coDches that mildewed tritons blow
"While yonder, through the poplars prim
Looms up the turreted chateau
Nay, loveliest are you when time weaves
Your emerald films on low, dark leaves,
Above where pink porch roses peer.
And woodbines break in fragrant foam,
And children laugh and you can hear
Tee beatings of the heart of home.
Edgar Fawcett, in Mail and Express.
CAUGHT INJ. STORM.
i4Wc might just as well have been
etanding behind the counter in New
York all these ten days," sighed Barbara
Hale, "for all the out-of-the-way advent
ures we've had!"
"Who wants out-of-the-way advent
ures';" said Dorcas Dunn, scornfully.
"Behind the counter, indeed I" chimed
in Mary Vannecker. "Can you breathe
in clover scented air like this behind the
counter? Can you get a mountain view
like this from Sixth avenue? What more
would the girl want, I should like to
Ocnow?"
Barbara sighed once more, and shook
her head. .
"It is all so tame," said she. 'It isn't
what I expected at all."
The three girls Barbara, Dorcas and
JIary were sitting on a side hill, under
the bhade of a grand old cedar tree.
Barbara, who had once taken a quaiters
lessons in drawing, had a sketchboard in
her lap, and was trying with but ill
success, it must be owned to reproduce
the lovely, ribbon-like curves of the river
that wound its way through the valley
below.
Mary had her needlework in her lap,
-and Dorcas, with her hands clasped
under her head, had long given up all
attempt to read the paper cocred
snov el that she had brought with her.
"The s'yand the sunshine are so much
Letter!" she said.
They were three shop girls bright,
ambitious, spirited young things, full of
life and aspirations, even though they
were kept down by the force of circum
stances; and they had clubbed together
their slender resources, in order to enjoy
their vacation to better advantage.
Dorcas, the business member of the
tirm, had bought an excursion ticket
1irst. and traveled out to Schcpp's Valley
to see what could be done. But it is
needless to say that the hotel and boarding-
house prices were far beyond their
simple mea'ns. j
"Is there no place," said she, "where ,
we could obtain one room and the very
simplest fare, for less money?"
"Vou might try Old Man Morris's,"
said the portly dame who kept the Valley
House. "It's a quiet place, and Mrs.
Morris she ain't no great of a cook, but
there's them a3 has boarded there, I'm
told."
"Where is it:" eagerly asked Dorcas.
And the landlady went to the door
to point out a slender blue thread of
smoke that was curling up heavenward
from a mass of woods on a distant hill,
and once more L'orcas set forth on her
pilgrimage, this time with undoubted
.success.
She engaged one room. The board,
to-be-sure, was plain, the bed a coarse
Iiusk mattress, with a blanket spread on
the floor for Dorcas he. self, the furniture
home-made and uupainted. But there
was a grove of pine woods in the rear;
the blackbirds piped their silver flutes
all day long, and the bees darted in and
out of the red lilies by the garden wall,
and our three heroines believed them
selves to be in Paradise.
But even as Barbara Hale thus be
wailed herself, a portentous shadow
crept across the sun, and looking around,
. they saw that a mass of livid purple
thunderclouds had piled themselves up
along the western sky, while distant
mutterings, and now and then a sudden
Hash, jinnouueed the coming of a storm.
Dorcas sprang to her feet. Barbara
began hurriedly to fold up her sketching
apparatus. Mary put her thimble and
scissors in her pocket.
"We must get home as quickly as
possible!" cried ail three.
But in availing themselves of a 'short
cut ' across a patch of woods, they got
hopelessly lost. The sun set behind the
purple battlement of clouds, the dusk
fell rapidly in these dense woods, and
the rain began to patter down in huge
dro ps.
Barbara, the aspirant after adventure,
began to cry.
"We are lost !" said she.
"! ost! Nonsense!" said brave Dorcas.
"When I can see the railway track shin
ing down below. Who ever got lost
close to a railway line? Let's make for
the track."
"And get run over," lamented Bar
bara. "Not likely, when there's only one
train a day, and that at noon," laughed
Dorcas. "If we walk along the railway
line, we must come out somewhere, don't
you J-ee?''
"And besides," added Mary, "there
is a little ruined cabin not far from
here, where the railroad Cagman used to
live before they changed the location of
the station. I remember Mrs. Mo:ris
showing it to me once."
h: oh!" shrieked Barbara. "I
couldn't go there! The flagman was
ki ;ied on the tra.k
there !'!
There's a g-g-ghost
4 'Would you rather stay here and be
drenched through with rain:" severely
demanded Mary.
"Or struck with lightning?" added
Dorcas.
And the upshot of it was that the
three fugitives took refuge in a misera
ble old shanty close alongside of the
railroad track, where weeds were grow
ing up through the cracks of the floor,
and a plentiful portion of rain came pat
tering through the leaks in the roof,
while the old stone chimney, all settling
to one side, looked as if no stroke of
lightning could harm it very much.
"But it's some shelter," said Mary,
cheerfully. "We'll stay here until the
shower is over, and then make the best
of our way home."
The shower, however, showed no in
dication of abating in its vigor. The
rain still poured down in sheets; the
thunder still bellowed through the rocky
gorge where the cabin had been built;
the lightning still lit up everything with
sudden spurts of blue flam, like panto
mime effects.
"Oh, dear I oh, dear!" said Barbara
wringing her hands; "it must be mid
night!" "It can't be but nine o'clock yet," said
Mary.
"And I'm so hungry ! Oh, how I wish
I hadn't eaten the last of those sand
wiches! Oh, oh! what is that?" flut
tered Barbara.
An unusually vivid electric flash had
revealed something white and spectral
at the window. All three girU jumped
at once.
"The ghost!" shrieked Barbara, stop
ping her ears and shutting her eyes as
tight as was practicable.
"Astray white cow," suggested Mary.
"A young man in a flannel tennis
suit," said Dorcas, the closest observer
of all.
"Don't let him come in," said Bar
bara. "We shall be robbed and mur
dered!" "Not while we are three to one," said
composed Dorcas.
And at the same moment a voice sound
ed hurriedly at the door:
"Please, may I come in. I know it
seems intrusion, but it's raining a deluge,
and I'm wet throagh."
"Come in by all means," said Mary.
And the ghost entered, dripping like a
fountain.
"All in the dark?" said he groping his
way.
"There are no gas jets here," said
Dorcas, ironically.
"But we might have a little blaze of
sticks," hazarded the new arrival, shak
ing h'mself like a Newfoundland dog.
"I saw by that last glare of lightning,
that there was a heap in the corner, and
I've got my match. box intact."
"Oh, thut would be splended!" cried
Dorcas, who wa3 wet and shivering.
"And I've got some fish on a string
outside, and we could have some sup
per," suggested the ghost, cheerfully.
"I'm so-o-o hungry!" wailed Barbara.
The stranger was evidently used to
mountain camping. He had a fire kin
dled in no time, and the fish, cleaned
by aid of his pocket-knife and washed
in one of the pools outside, were pres
ently boiling over the coals, emitting a
most savory smell.
"You must be a good genius !" cried
Mary.
"I'm only a tramp," said the ghost.
"And I'm ever so much obliged to you
young ladies for letting me in I"
"We couldn't have kept you out if we
had tried," said Dorcas, frankly.
"You don't think I would have thrust
myself in here against your wishes ? Even
a tramp wouldn't do that," said the young
man.
The sticks blazed cheerfully up ; the
ghost economized them to keep the
names alive as long as possible. He told
thrilling tales of his experience in these
woods; he made himself a most agreea
ble companion.
"Are you from the Valley House?"
asked Dorcas.
"No; I am camping just where it
happens."
"Jh!" said Mary. Then you are poor,
like us? We are shop-girls, on our vaca
tion." "For," she said to herself, "I am de
termined he shall not take us for other
than we are."
"And," observed the ghost, "I should
think you were having a very jolly time
of it ! A little more trout, Miss Miss
Hale? And how did you come out in
these wildernesses?"
So then, of course, little Barbara, who
was generally the spokeswoman of the
assemblage, related all her efforts to
secure summer board.
"You see," said she, "Mr. Archer
pays us so small a salary that we haven't
much margin for luxury."
"He ought to pay you more," said
the ghost. "I'm in business myself. I
know how it is. People can't be ex
pected to live on nothing."
"I do believe," cried Dorcas, "you are
the tailor's young man from Cut & Fitt's,
next door to Archer's I I thought I had
seen your face before I But if you ever
get to the head of the firm and a man
can achieve almost anything he pleases
--do pay your employes a decent
sum !"
"I will," said the young man in the
white flannel tennis suit.
And he spoke as if he meant it.
And then Dorcas discoursed still more
learnedly about the rights and wrongs,
the injustices and petty trials of life be
hind the counter.
"We are ladies, you see," said she,
"and we expect to be treated like ladies.
But I suppose you have your troubles,
too:"
"Lots of 'em," said the young man,
gazing absently into the fire. ''Every
one has, I suppose.
So that they all became great friends.
At midnight the rain ceased, and the
moon burst in a flood of glory on the
dripping scene.
"We can go home now," said Dorcas,
clapping her hands. "And I dare say,
young man,"' with a pretty air of patron
age, "Mr. Morris could make you up a
bed on the kitchen floor at our house,
without charging very much for it."
"I should be delighted if he could,"
said the young man, meekly.
And so it was arranged.
The girls made an extra toilet next
morning, to meet "the ghost," as they
called him, at the breakfast table.
But to their infinite disgust, he was
gone when they descended.
"Ye see," said Old Man Morris, "that
there white flanning suit o' his'n had
shrunk up with the wet, so it wasn't
fairly presentable, and he just cut across
lots afore daybreak, an' cleared out."
"I told you so," said Barbara. "He
was a ghost, and being such, he dis
solved into thin air at cock-crow!"
"And I had put on my blue cambric
gown," sighed Mary.
"And my hair was crimped so nicely I"
said Dorcas.
"But he gave me this 'ere." said Old
Man Morris, displaying, on the horny
palm of his hand, a gold half-eagle.
"Rather extravagant for a tailor's
clerk," said Mary.
"That i3 just the class of people,"
said Dorcas, loftily, "who don't know
how to spend money properly."
"I thought he was very nice," said
Barbara; "and I thought, perhaps, he
was going to be the beginning of a real
adventure."
September set in, sultry as the tropics
this year, and the three girls returned to
Archer's great store with unwilling foot
steps. But the cashier met them with a smil
ing face.
"I've received instructions," said he,
"to raise the salaries of all the girls in
this department ten per cent. Young
Mr. Archer himself told me to do so."
"Young Mr. Archer?"
"There he is now!" said the cashier.
And the next minute the hero of the
rainy night had come up, and was
cordially shaking hands with them.
"Then you are not the tailor's young
man after all?'' said Mary, a little taken
aback.
"Did I say I was?" said Archibald
Archer.
At the end of the autumn little Barbara
Hale had a confession tD make.
"Girls," said she, "when I thought
that young Mr. Archer was going to be
the beginning of an adventure, I was
right. He has asked me to marry hini,
and when we go on our summer vacation
next year, we shall go together!"
And Mary and Dorcas kissed little
Barbara, and congratulated her from the
very bottom ot their heart3.
"This," said they, "is an adventure
worth having." iSilurday Night.
A Crab's Antipathy to Dirt.
Habits of thorough cleanliness are not
only required by good taste and good
breeding, but are essential to health.
Those enemies to life and health called
"germs," are always found in connec
tion with dirt. Most animals instinct
ively avoid uncleanliness. The bird
takes its morning dip in the lake or
stream; the elephant treats himself to a
shower bath as often as he likes; dogs
love to bathe and swim in the water, as
do many other animals. Even so hum
ble a creature as the crab, which does
not receive credit for much intelligence,
has a great antipathy to dirt. These
curious creatures have a singular habit
of tearing off their legs on sundry occa
sions. For instance, if a crab gets badly
scared at a thunder-storm or a loud
noise in the water, it straightway tears
o. a leg or two. A" crab often loses one
or more legs in combat with other crabs.
A still more curious thing is, that when a
crab's legs are lost in this way, they
grow on again in a few week's time, or,
rather, new ones grow out in place of
the old ones. Perhaps this is why the
crab values a leg so little; he can get a
new one just as good as the old one by
simply waiting for it to grow.
But we said that crabs are extraordi
nariry neat in their habits. These creat
ures have such a dislike for dirt that if,
by chance, one of them happens to get
one of his legs soiled in any way, he im
mediately pulls it off. A missionary in
the Samoan Islands tells a story of a
crab that was going out one morning in'
search of food, when it accidentally
soiled one of its legs. It immediately
wrenched off the leg, and hobbled back
to its hole, to rema n in solitary confine
ment until it should grow again. It is
claimed that crabs have been known to
pull off all their legs in the same man
ner, and then laboriously drag them
selves home hy their nippers to wait for
new legs to grow. Farm, Field and
Stocknan.
A Polish Father's Curse.
There lived at Shamokin, Penn., some
time ago a Pole named Limbski, who
by the industry of himself and his f ve
sons accumulated considerable property.
Becentiy an appeal to the "sons for
money to pay a debt caused a serious
dispute between father and sons. The
old man sold the property and prepared
to sail, accompanied by his wife, says
the Bethlehem (Penn. ) a ar, to the home
of his childhood. Before leaving he
expressed a wish that the boys might all
be killed in the mines. A few days
ago, Thomas, his youngest son, was
killed at Cameron colliery, and at the
instance of the other brothers the
crushed body was photographed as it
lay on the cooling board, and the picture
sent, labelled "Son No. 1," to his father
in Poland.
Watching the Heart.
A novel case ha3 been brought to the
notice of the Paris Academy of Medi
cine. A man's breast bone was nearly
all removed, with Darts of several ribs.
I'M. '
1 in order to ston the Droirress of bone
; i x a
disease. The experiment resulted not
only in saving the patient's life, but nas
i given several physiologists an opportun
ity for direct investigation of the living
heart and great artery, parts of which
' have been made readily accessible.
A GEY FOR HELP.
F'ever-Stricken .Jacksonville Ap
peals to the Country for Aid.
The following appeal to the people of the
United States has been issued by the yellow
fever-stricken people of Jacksonville, Fla. :
"We, the authorized representatives of the
citizens of Jacksonville, recognizing the fact
that the epidemic has now reached such a
stage that our own funds are insuf
ficient either to cope with the
many cases of absolute necessity, to engagee
nurses or for the numerous other demands
upon us, and owing to the absence of all busi
ness, many of our ablest citizens are unable
to furnish further funds, we now think we
are justified in accepting the many willing
offers of aid that have been received from
you.
44 We therefore wish our fellow-citizens of the
United States to know that we will grate
fully receive the aid they have offered,
and that any contribution will be used
for the benefit of those in need and
where they will do the most good. We
request that anv 6uch contributions niay be
forwarded to James M. Schumacher, Pres
ident of the First National Bank and Chair
man of the Finance Committee."
A Jacksonville dispatch of the 6th says
that "the cry for help has gone forth none
too soon. Up to about five days ago
the number of cases reported was
comparatively small every day, and to all
the doctors wer able to give prompt at
tention and nurses were availabla Now
reports of thirty, forty and fifty a
day are becoming the rule, and if the low
death rate is to be maintained more doctors
and nurses must be brought here at the ex
pense of the public. It is impossible for the
doctors to properly attend all the cases pour
ing in now, .nd if not attended to the death
rate will so ud and keeD ua"
A CENTENNAEIAN DEAD.
Colonel George Ij. Perkins, of Con
necticut, Dies of Old Are.
Colonel George L. Perkins, for fifty year?
Treasurer of the Norwich and Worcester
' Railroad, died of old age Wednesday even
ing at the Fort Griswo'd House, in Groton
Conn., where, with his family, he was
spending his annual vacation.
He had been failing for a week, but was
conscious until within an hour of his death.
He had voted for every President since Madi
son, was a paymaster in the war of 1812, or
ganized the first Sunday-school in Norwicn
was organizer of the Park Congregational
Church and honorary member of the State
Firemen's Benevolent Association, and an
honorary member of the Arcanum Club.
He was one hundred years and one montb
old. His centennary, which occurred re
cently, was made the occasion for a monster
reception and complimentary celebration in
his honor.
NEWSY GLEANINGS.
The late storm caused an estimated loss of
$4,QJ0,000 in Louisiana.
The Archduchess Valerie, of Austria, be
comes a victim of epilepsy.
Six hundred thousand Frenchmen own
chares in the Panama Canal.
The production of the 3,000,000 acres o
cotton in Texas is 1,500,000 bales.
The Congo basin in Africa contains vast
quantities of easily-reduced iron ore.
The pig iron production of the United
Ssates is now lib, 000 tons per week.
The total production of sugar in the Em
pire of China is placed at 250,ol0 tons.
The Czar and Czarina have started upon
a two months' tour of southern Russia.
The fresh fruit crop of California this sea
son has an estimated value of $10,00 J,000.
The largest crop of cranberries this coun
try has ever proiuced will be gathered this
fall.
Ax attempt is to bo made to introduce the
breed of Shetland ponies into the Hebrides of
Scotland.
During the last five years 425 lives have
been lost at sea among the English herring
fisherman.
It is expected that the wheat crop in India
will reach 2M, 000,0 JO bushels of sixty-two
pounds each.
This year's seal catch on St. George and
St. Paul Islands, in the Behring Sea, amounts
to 100,00 skins.
The vanilla bean grows wild in Mexico,
and fresh from the forest sells at ten or twelve
dollars per 1000.
PCottox planters of Louisiana complain
that the crops have been seriously damaged
by worms and rain.
Over one thousand children are reported
to have died from measles in Santiago, Chili,
in less than two months.
It has been finally determined that the
shortage of the absconding Treasurer Tate,
of Kentucky, is 157,000.
Margaret Fexxisal died recently at
Carlisle, I'enn. She was fifty-five years old
and only thirty inches m height.
Returns for ISS'S show that British live
stock has decreased 4.S per cent, compared to
lb-S7, and 7.b' compared with 1SS0.
We consume t52,OJO,OX) barrels of our an
nual 75,000,00 barrel production of flour.
At Minneapolis SO, COO barrels are made per
day.
Miss Isabel Cabaliro. a well known
belle of Havana, Cuba, committed suicide by
shooting her.-elf with a revolver. She dis
charged the veapon in her mouth.
It is said that the remains of Stephen A.
Douglas are as life like to-day as when
they were interred in their air-tight casket
at Chicago twenty-seven years ago.
The one hundredth birthday of Mrs. Lu
cinda Fletcher was celebrated at North
Springfield, Vt., by a reception in the
church,which was attended by nearly all the
townspeople.
Rarely has such a harvest been known in
Russia as that of the present year. The
granaries are already filled to overflowing,
and farmers are puzzled to know what to do
with the surplus.
A coal mine near Tremont, Penn., on
which Henry Heil spent his fortune twenty
years ago, proves rich in coaL Had Heil
driven his drill six feet further he would
have found wealth.
We receive 17,000,030 cocoanuts per year
from Central America. In rainy weather
the tree sheds two cocoanuts in three davs
and one every two days on fair days. They
average about ISO nuts per year.
Gabrille Marillo was struck a few davs
ago in the street at Duluth, Minn., by water
from a hydrant, which knocked his "false
teeth down his throat. He died from hem
orrhage following their removal.
Persons representing the princfpaT ron!
companies of Kentucky and Virginia met in
Louisville lately, and formed a combination
involving about So,000,OtJO capital and 4 -0
acres of coal land, including mines in opera
tion, besides an outside acreage of :.M) in
Virsinia and J-"i,7b0 acres in Bell Couutv.
Kentucky. " ' j
oSn ssvp Avaj v paixiBai naaq oav oj sxjm. j
qcj uacuip i mappns paip uaqj pau ig i
ino Suippa.u jaq jo esuqoand eqi paiaiduioa
om.Q 'uoiSaixe Avdv jo 'shook Auvjt I
Sfr and Effect I re.
Brasdreth's Pills are the safest and most
effective remedy for Indigestion, Irrejularity
of the Bowels, Constipatioa.BilioTine.IIead
ache. Dizziness, Malaria, or any disease arifw
iDg from an impure state of the b ood. They
have been in use in this country for over fifty
years.andthe thonsandsof unimpeachable tes
Imonias from those who have u.ed them, ant
their constantly increasing sale. Is Incontro
vertible evidence that they perform all that is
claimed for them.
Brandreth's Pills are purely vegetable,
absolutely harmless and safe to take at any
time.
Sold in every dru? and medicine store.either
plain or tugar-coated.
The heiress of the King of Holland. Princes
Wilhelma. aged 7. is engaged in marriage to
the Prince of Saxe- Weimar, aged 12.
AYo.Id Von Believe
The Proprietor ot Kemp's Halsam givo
Thousands of Bottles away yearly? Thi in
of advertising1 would prove ruinous if th
Balsam was not a perfect cure for Coughs and
all Throat and Lung troubles. You will
the excellent effect after taking the first dose.
Don't hesitate! Procure a bottle to-day to keep
in your home or room for immediate or future
use. Trial bottle Free at all druggists'. Lurgo
Size 50c and $1.
Russia's new military law will increase her
army by 400,000 men.
A Dih of New P'.
P stands for Pudding, for Peach and for Pear,
And likewise for Poetry and Prose;
The Pa rot. the Pigeon that flies in the air.
The Pig with a ring in his nose;
For Paper and Pen, for Printer and Press,
For Physic, and People who 11 it;
But when you are sick, to relieve vour ditres
Take at once Pierce's Purgative Pellet.
Oh, yes, indeed! These are the, P's for von,
poor, sick man or woman. Nothing like them
for keeping the bowels and stomach regulated
and in order tiny, sugar-coated giannle,
scarcely larger than mustard seeds. They
work gently but thoroughly.
The mouse pest in Australia is much worse
than the rabbit pest.
Don't GiTeup the hip.
You have been told that consumption is in
curable; that when the lungs are attacked ),y
this terrible malady, the sufferer is past all help,
and the end is a mere question of time. You
have noted with alarm the unmistakable
symptoms of the disease; you have tried all
manner of so-called cures in vain, and you art
now despondent and preparing for the woit.
But donx give up the ship while Dr. Pierce's
Golden Medical Discovery remains untried. It
is not a cure-all. nor will it perform miracles,
but it has cured thousands of cases of con
sumption, in its earlier stages, where all other
means had faied. Try it, and obtain a new
lease of life. ..
In 1880 Vancouver, British Columbia.had lX)
inhabitants. Now it has 20,000.
Many imitators, but no equal, has Dr. Sage's
Catarrh Remedy.
"Washington has a summer home for cats. It
Is sustained by private munificence.
,
The best cougTi medicine is Piso's Cure- for
Consumption. Sold everywhere. '25c.
If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp
son's Eye-water. Druggists sell at 25c.per bottle.
1 U I
II
For Rheumatism-
BRAND NEW, STRONQ PROOFS
82 Years. Ntwtoa, HI.. Kay 33. ISIS.
Frm 1863 te 181ft but S3 yn I taSri4
with rhamattliai of tfc hip. 1 waa cured br tii
ma of Bt. Jfccobt OU. X. C. DQfcD.
15 Yesrs. MplHlll, Klch., M t 5, 1888.
Mr. J0HK J. SMITE. Ernie?. Michigan, wfca
fcflicted with rhtuza&Uim IB yari; Ids cm vm
pronroncd lncar&bl by two physician, bet wu
enrad by 88. Jacobs 011 and has remained so two
jaxs. 8. McC.REA.BT, Drugflst.
Since 1885. Ho. Branch. Mich . Ma? 31. 1838.
Fall of 18 80 was taken with Inflammatory Rhea
matlsm and aafsred two weaks; was cured by on
botU of Bt. Jacob Oil. Mr. J. H. VAITOECAE.
AT DRUGGISTS AMD SEAL 2X3.
THE CHARLES A. V0GELER CO., Baltimore, Md.
N T N U 3
Lo UAr.rxs are neithci
fashionable nor in de
mand, bat they were more
comfortable and more
healthy than arc manj
modern dwellings. War
ner's Log Cabin Hops &
Buchu is a reproduction of one of the
best of the simple remedies with which
Log Cabin dwellers of old days kept
themselves well. Did you ever try
"Tippecanoe?"
ELY'S CREAM BALM
Gives relief at once for
COLD IN HEAD,
CUKES
CATARRH-
Not a iquid or Snuff".
AppfyBalm into each nostril
ZLY E iO?.. 50 Warren St.. N. Y
DISCOVERY-
Any book learned In one rradlnsr
Mind wandprlnr cured.
Speaking without notes.
Wholly unlike artificial srslrms.
Piracy condemned by Supreme Court.
Great inducements to correspondence clashes.
Prosr"tns. with opinions of Dr. Wm. A Ham
monri, the worM-famd Specialist in Mind diHaf.
iianiel (reen!eaf Thompson, the great Psychol
ogint. and others, pyit poat f rws by
PKOF. A. LOI3KTTE. 237 Fifth Ave., New Yorlc.
QRTE.EP.fJ FAGIFIG.
LOW PfilCE RAILROAD LANDS &
FE Government LANDS.
MILLIONS of ACRES of each in Minnesota. North
Dakota. Montana. Idaho, Washington and on-aron.
Criin CAD Publications with IJupHdescribina-the
OCfU rUll bft Arricultural, Grazing and Tim
ber Lands now open to Settlors Sent free. Addr:i"
CHAS. B. LAMBORM, ffifffffty-
3100
FARMERS f
SAW MILL, td
Here' Improved
Circular Saw .Hill
With Universal
Log- Beam Recti-
neoun St Workf"
and Double Ec- y
centric Friction X
Feed. Manufac-
tured by the
SALE)! IRON WORKS.
HntJP STUD V. Book-keeping, Inline. Tonr-a.
U HlC Penmanship. Arithmetic, Short-hand. e!c.
thorouffhiy tauirLt by MAIL. Circi)Ur free.
Bryant' C.IIege, 437 Main St. ijufialo. N. Y.
t Dill tf IJ1RIT Painlessly cared in 10 to 30
jrlUM IIMOU Days. Sanitarium or liome
j. reumeoi. inn j-Tee. roTire. .10 ry. 1
Human. Remedy Co., Ia I'nreile. lnil.
MARYLAND FARP3S.
Fruit anl Trucking Lands for pale. For defwriptn.
fcc, addrcsa Klecsxhb t Stewart. Cambridy-. M .
Bi W Great English Gout and
lCair S I IliSi Rheumatic Remefy. .
Ow4 Uox, a4j round, 11 Tills.
mm
v m n
SA1,K i,t ' r-