Iztk-tU : -7 of the IVtt To! TLo 'V- z fcana" during' the sum mer of l""t ft as aa unusually C5il one. There vera a number Of fins ccp.II;Aa ia the first, of seuior class, H'l excellent "soloists" on the yio ir, guitar ami banjo. -; The bnnjoist i. epeniaU was born minstrel, and cotiM doubtless hare done well in ff o fasnktnnl burnt cork. " 1 Bat endet sons were few in nura 1r. "Benny Hvvens O" was the -.mly one hearA in those days. We sang the f.ttuy sonjjs, "When Tais Cmol Mar ia Over," "Hod, Whit aart Uln," "JUlly EoumL the FlAtf," "vingJom Coming," Ad later "lVamp, Tramp" and Millard's stir, ting "X'Jas of the'Ffec," as the war ; Jrew to its clos. What - seemed to be needed h-as a new cadet sonj. rieben had to contribute to ; ih : irenerAl amusement then" m ihy tl iof, and one ereninj in cmp ymu fellow from ; the k Mississippi Valley sevens a aocg.-'t with a catch jog air . and' chorus, he called "Ora . Lee. " I afterward knew . a Mississppi steamer to have the' same- name, but never met any one else who Bang or knew the Hong.' The chorus ran : Ora J",ee, Ora Lit maid ot golden hair ; tSujrMiSue c:tma aloai with thee and sw&l lows in the air. . , The whole corps took it up before Many dayc, but no i one fancied it more than our baujoisfe, "Pomp," who one. evening boob afterward favored the camp with new words to the air of . VOra Lee," beginning: . "Wn've not much longer here to stay, Only a month or two t WUen we'll throw our old gray clothes nway, . And don thtj army blue. ' . Chorus. " Annv ItlriP. Hrmr Mm w..'II Ann tTi nam. blue. . . . , , ' .-. J YiVJi bid tnrewell to oadet gray an 1 don the . army blue. : Then the band learned it as a march jag tnno, and at the lasfc parade" of the class of H5 in the following June, played it as the graduating quickstep ; for the first time, ia plaoe . of the old, "I See Them on Their Winding Way" ana "The Dashing White Sergeant." "Ora Lee," as a song, seems to have l)een lost AotiraW TinA .. known all over the United States. Captain. ?Iing, in Youth'a Companion. Wlvt Windmill ia the World. wmduiill of somewhat remarkable nortiona, and plice'i upon a tower "N.js said to be the highest ever """"that purpose, has been put poraa upon tne prop everai wind ier; had been .previ Mr. Corcoran, but exceeding 125 feet resent tower is l'JO was done because the ;h it -.was desired to upon the , beach and d by the tide, the fyidly from this point. Jnecessary to raise tne 'considerable height in light be above ail ob- u 1000 feet from it. f concrete, forty bar 20,000 bncka, 42,00(1 pine and more than Its. washers and iron M in its construction. mounts this tower is eter and pumps water et of pipe to n height t, delivers water to a Ipacity for 03,000 gal as liUed in two days, inist. ' , ,' " - - y stories are told of properties of . a new oil made from the -yolks The eggs are first yd the yolks are then re- .1 and placed over a ore. I carefully Btirred until is on tne point or eaten a the oil separates and poured oft : One yolk rly two teaspoonfuls of general use. among the oath Russia as a means bruises, etc. --St. Louis line's pensions tr Con er ana w.aows ia yeai fchi or Isbb than $2 pel t " . ?' falarrh fur bal Cure. Price 75o. Hrnotives have been adofted ifor Japanaw railroads. Root, the great blood imrlner, itid olearnees to the com pie x fonstipatlon. & cts., oU cts $1. lured prodnot of Groat Britain lu ti.ioo.ooo.ooa a rear. are U5V"DR TALMAbEi niK BKOOKLVK rfVINKti SUb DAT Terr ; "Tellx trerablft-l and answered, Go thy way for this tim. When I bate a 5U" vtnlent season I will .U ef ihfie. Acta xilv., iS. v A city ttl AatWe Wfis Cansarea wharves of matbW houses ot marhlw, temples; ot mar blk TnlB boln-; the or.linary archlt'-wtum of the place, you may lm-.sr!nsomthjnj oftha uplendor of Governor Felix's resWflnoc. In a room of that palace, floor tnsselSatsd, wlrt rtows enrtalned, cellfn? freitV, tftd whole scene nfflu"nt with TyrUa turtle and stat us and p!ctr6s ) 'carvings, kiU a vry Oark vompletlonAd man ol the name of Fe ll, atd btaUie him a woman of exlraordU nufy btauty, whom he had Btoleu by brealr Inff up another domestic circle. She wan only eighteen .years of ape, a princess by birth, and uuwittlnt-lr waltlns for lnr doorrt that of belnj- buried alive itv the AiW&t and scorlie of Mount VmUvlUSt Whtcih in sudden eruption one day put all end to her aboml nMtonw, : . Wc!lv One afternoon Drusllla. seated In the palace, weary with the masmtflcent stupidi ties of the pace. snrs to Felix f 'Ton have a very distinguished prisoner, 1 believe,' of the name ot Paul. Do you know he Is one of my countrymen? 1 ahOttld Very much like to see htro, and 1 should very much like to hear him Speak, for I have beard so much about his eloquence. Besides that the other day, when he was" belni tried In another room of this palace and the windows were open, I heard the applause that greeted the speech of Lawyer Tertullns' as hesdenoutfbed Paul. Now, I very tnuob. wish I could hoar Paul apeak. Won't you let me hear him epaakr "Yen," said Felix, "I will. I wilt order-him up now from the jruardroom." . Clank, clnnk. comes a chain up the marble stairway, and there 1s a fihufBa ot the door, and In eomesPanl,'a little old man, prema turely old. through exposur4, only sixty years of acre, but looking as though he weretdghty. He bows very courteously before the gover nor and the beautiful woman by his stde. They say : "Paul, we have heard a great doil about your speakinjr. a Oive us nowaBpect raen of your eloquence." Oh, if there ever was a chance for a man to show off, Paul had a chance there ! Ho might ? have har angued them abcut Grecian art, about the wonder ?ul waterworks he had seeu at Corinth, about the Acropolis by moonlight, about prison life in Philippt, about "what I saw in ThessalonioH,' about the old mythologies, but "No !" Paul said to himself. am now on the way to martyrdom, and this man and woman will soon be dead, and this is my only opportunity to talk to them about the thing) of eternity.'.' And just there' and then there broke in upon the scene a peal of thunder. It was the voice of a judgment day speaking through! tne woroa ot tne aocrepw apostle, as ttyft grand old missionary proceeded withhts re marks the stoop begins to goQf'ot his nhoulders. and he rises up, ajgd" his counte nance is Illumined with tbgjoriwj ot a future life, and his shacklesf ittle and grind as he lifts his fettered and with it hurls upoa his nbashedauitors the bolts ot God's 1n lignatioiv1peiiI m van- white about the MPVlIis heart beat unevenly. He put his- nd to bis brow as though to stop the quickness and violence ot his thoughts. He Irew nts rose tigoter aooui mm, as unaer a .sudden chill. His eyes glare, and his knees shake, and as he clutches the side of his chair in a very paroxysm of terror he orders the sheriff to take Paul back to the guard room. ''Felix trembled andsaid : Go thy way for this time. When Z nave a convenient season, I will call Tor tnee. A young man came one night to our ser vices, with pencil In hand, to caricature the whole scene and make mirth ot those who should express any anxiety about their souls, but X met ; mm at tne aoor, nis laoe very white, tears running down bis cheek, as he said, "'Do you think there is any chance for meV" Felix trembled, and so may God grant it may be so with others. v , . - I propose to give you two or three reasons why I think Felix Bent Paul back to' the guardroom and adjourned the whole subject of religion. The first reason whs, he did not want to give up his sins. He looked around. There was DrUsilla. He knew that when he became a Christian he must send her back to Azzius, her lawful husband, and he said to himself, "L will risk the destruction of my immortal soul sooner than X will do that." How many there are now who cannot, get to be Christians because they will not abandon their sins ! In vain all their prayers and all t heir churchgoiug. You cannot keep these darling sins and win heaven, and now some of you will have to decide between the wine cup and uniawtul amusements ana lascivi ous gratifications on the one hand and etor nal salvation on the other. Delilah sheared the locks of Samson; Sa lome danced Herod into the pit-Drusilla Mocked up the way to heaven for Felix. Yet when I present the subject now I fear that ome ot you will say "Not quite yet. Don't be so precipitate in your demands. I have a . few tickets yet that I hare to use. I have a jew engagements that I must keep. I want to stay a little longer in the whin of con- ?viality a lew more guffaws ot unclean laughter, a few more steps on the road to death, nnd then, sir, I will listen to wlial you say. 'uotnyway lor tnts time, wtieu X have a convenient season, I will call for thee.'" Another reason why Felix Bent Paul to the guardroom aud adjourned this subject was' he was so very buvy. In ordinary times he found the affairs of ntate absorbing.' 1ml those were extraor.iinary times. The whole land was ripe for Insurrection. The Sirif, a band of assassins, were already prowHnc around, the palace, and I suppos he thought, 'I can't attend to religion white I' am so pressed by affairs of state. . It was business among other things that ruined his soul, nnd I suppose there are thousands of peoole who are not children ot God beeausAthey have bo much business. It is business in the store losses, gains, unfaithful employes. V . It . is business in . your law ofnce--sub-pcenas,' writs you have to write out, papers you have to v file, arguments you have to make. It is your medical profession, with its broken nights and the exhausted anxie ties ot life hanging noon your treatment. It Is your real estate office, your business with landlords and tenants and the failure of men to meet their obligations with yoa. Aye, with some of those who are here it is the an-, noyance of the kitchen, and the Bitting room, and the parlor the wearing economy of try ing to meet large expenses with a small in come. Ten thousand voices ot "business. business, "business" drown the voice of the eternal Spirit, Bilendng the voice of the ad vancing judgment day, overcoming the voice of eternity, and they cannot near ; they can not listen. They sayV4Gothv way for this time.". Some of you look upon your goods. look upon your profesmioo, you look upon your memorandum booVw, and you see the demands tost are maae tnis very wees upon your time ana your patience ; and ' your money, and wnue I am entreating you about Worn soul and the danger ot procrastination "4 My s ; "Go thy way for this time. When "convenient season, I will call for ' v bis bothered about the af o much more than about ? Do you not know ' vou will have to stop ".he most exacting ""ivment of the -xMpt? The Vo. Death S however I you put affairs of vnvotve : ; Will !nst im I yers ot ;h, Felix, of Tyrlan purple in your palace will fade, and the rrmrble blocks of CrtJwea Will crumble, and the breakwater at th4 beaohj made cf if cut blocks Of stone 'ity feet ItfiVJTi wiM give way "before the per p'ctuul rnah of the sea, hut the rcdanDptlon that Paul offers you will be fore er? And yet and yet and yet you wave him back to the guardroom, saying; "Go thy way fof this time. When I haVe a convenient season, I will call fdf tnee." -,. Again, Felix adjourned this subjoct ot re ligion and put off Paul's argument because he could not give up the honors of the world. He was afraid somehow he would be com promised himself Jn this matter. Remarks he made afterward showed him ttt be fli tensely ambltlousi , Otu hd he hugged ttii favor of men! ; . - I neter saw the honors ot this world in, their hoilowness and hypocrisy so much as in the life and death ot that wonderful man,. Charles Samner. As he went toward the place of burial, even Independence Hall, in Philadelphia, asked that his remains stop ' thers on their way to Boston: The flags were at half mast, and the minute guns en Dost oil Common throbbed after his heart had ceasod to beat Was it always so? While he lived how censured of legislative resolutions s how caricatured of the pictorials ; how charged with every motive mean and ridiculous how all the urns of scorn and hatred and billingsgate emptied upon his head; how, -yvuea struct uowa in source cuamoeri mere were hundreds ot thousands ot people who said, "Good for him; serves him right 1" how he had to put the ocean between htm and his maligaers that he might have'a lit -tlepoaee, and how, when he went off siQk, they said he was broken hearted beoausehe could not get to be President or Secretary ox State ! . . . , O, Commonwealth ot Massachusetts, who is that roan that sleep iu your public hall covered with garlanis and wrapped in the stars and stripes? Is that the man who, only , a few months before, you denounced as the foe i of republican and democratic institu tions? r Is that the same man? Ye American people, ye could not by one week of funeral eulogiutn and newspaper leaders, which the dead senator ooutd neither read nor hear ! nton for twenty-five years ot maltreatment an t oaricftture. .- When X see a man like that, pursued by i all the hounds of the political kennel so long as he lives and then burled under a great i pilo ot garlands and amid the lamentations ' of a whole nation, I say to myself i What an S unutterably hypocritical thing is all human ! applause and nil human - favor Ton too t wenty-tve years In trying to putl down hh fame and then take twenty-five years In tiy ing to build his monument. My friends, wai there ever a herter eommentarv on the hoi. Jowness of all earthly favor? It there are young men who read this who are potpfi" ing religion in order that they maviMrvUthe favors of thia world, let jnaqpersuade them of their complete Jdriy. If yon are looking forwnr I to enjieatorin senatorial or pres WUtlftr oiiitfr, lot me show you your grent Kistake. ' Can it be that 'there is now any young man .saying s "Let me have poKlicril office, let me have ?ome of the high position! ot trust and pows'r, an t then I will attend to religion, but not now. , ' Go tbv way for this time. When I hive a convenient season, T Will call for theo '"' Ant now my subject takes a deeper tone. and it shows whit a danirrous thln is this deferring of relisrion. Whn PnPii :haln' ratt'e-l down the rairble stairs of Felix-that was Felix's last chance for hwaven. Judging from his character afterward, he was re prob:ito and abardoneJ. And so was Dru silla. One day In the southern Italy there was a trembling of the earth, and the air got black with smoke Intershot with liquid rocks, and Vesuvius rained upon DrusUla and upon her son a horrible tempest of nshes and 'Are.; Thev did not reject religion. They only put it oft" They did not understand that that day, that that hour when Paul stood before them, was the pivotal hourupon which every thing was poised, nnd that it tipped the wrong way; Their convenient season came when Paul and his guardsman entered the palace. It went away when Paul and , his guardsman left. Haveyou never seen men waiting for a convenient season? There is such a great fascination about it that, though you may have great respect to the truth of Christ, yet somehow there 1 is . in your soul the thought : "Not quite yet. It is not time for me to become a Christirfa.' I say to a boy; "Seek Christ." He says, "No Wait until I get to be a young man." I say to the young man, "Seek Christ." He says, "Wait until I oome to midlife." I meet the same; person in midlife, and I say, "Seek Christ. He says, "Wait until I get old.", I meet the same person in old age and savto him, "Seek Christ." Ha says, "Wait until I am on my dying bed." I am called to bis dying couch. His last moments have come. 1 bend over the couch and listen for his last words.: I have partially to guess what they are by the motion of his lips, he is so feeble, but rallying himself he whispers until X can hearhim say, "l -am watting--ior a . more convenient season," and he is gone 1 I can toll you wnen your convenient season will come. I can tell you the year. It will be 1894. I can tell you what kind of a " day it will be. It will, be the Sabbath day. I can teli you what hour it will be, ; It will be between 8 nnd 10 o'clock. In other words, it is now. Do you ask me how I know this is your convenient season? : I know it be cause you are here, and because the elect sons and daughters of God are praying for your redemption. Ah, I know it is your convenient seasou oecauBe some 01 you, line Felix, tremble as all your past life comes .upon you with its sin, and all the future life comes upon you wun 11s rerror, 1 urns mgnr air is aglare with torches to show you up or to show you down. It is rustling with wings to lift yott into ugnt or smite yo into de spair, and there is a rushing to and fro, and a beating against tne uoor 01 yoursouis wun n great thunder of . emphasis, telling you, "Now, now is the best time, as it may be the only time." ' v May God Almighty forbid that any of you, my brethren or sisters, act the part of Felix and' Drusllla and put away this great sub ject.; It you are going to be saved ever, why not begin to-night? Throw down your sins and take the Lord's pardon. Christ has been tramping after you many a day. An Indian and a white man became Christians. The Indian, .almost as soon as be heard the gospel, believed ani was saved, ' but the white man struggled on in darkness for a long while before he found light. -! After their peace in Christ the white man said to the Indian, "Why was it that I was kept so long in the darkness and you immediately found penoe?" The Indian re plied "I will tell you. A prince comes aftag, ana ne ouers you u coat. XOUlOOK at vour coat, and you say. My coat "ii trood enough.' and you refuse his off'jr, but the prince comes along, and he offers me the coat, and' J look at my old blanket, and I throw that away and take bis offer. You, sir," contln ued the Iadi-u, "ure clinging to your owa righteousness; you think you are good enougo, and you keep your own righteous ness i but I have nothing, nothing, and jo when Jesus offers me pardon and peace I . simply take it. My reader, why not now throw away the wornout blanket of your sin and take th robe of a Saviour's' righteousness a robe so white, so fair, so lustrous, that no fuller on eartn can wniten it u snepnero, to-ntgut . bring home the lout sheep ! O Father, to nigat give a welcoming kiss to the wan prodigal t O friend of Lazarus, to-night break down tho door of the sepuicner and say to all these dead souls as by irresistible flat : "Live ! Live l". Tine Atlanta Constitution advises F-onthern "farmers to plow up their cotton p.nd plant corn and millet. , It asserts that food forstock will be high Hard Tck the Remedy. The dentists of llie" peruidj who are nothing if not scientific! raise a note of alarm about the growing tendency to decay Qf the teeth of, the present and the coming fjenerfttionsi . Dental caries is said to be increasing in an extraordinary aod alarming' man ner, iacu succeeding generation showa a poorer quality of teeth. This a writer for -The Hospital confirms to somo extent by' the experience of four generations rjf liis own family. ; At one extreme was a granatatuer at eignty six, who died less than a score of years ago, with a mouth full ot absolutely perfect teeth. At the other is the great-grand-daughter of that old gen tlemen, who, at ten j'ear of age, re quires six of her teeth "iilled at th- present moment. What can -be. the canse of this very unpleasant and even alarming . condition oT things? The dentists tell us that "dental caries marches hand in hand with civiliza tion. ! If that bo so, we can only do voutly wish that civilization 1 would find a more encburaging and comfort able companion. But why does civili zation insist npon destroying our teeth? Because, say the dentists "tho increasing' perfection of the culinary art, by reducing the work of the mas ticating organs to a minimum," cause both teeth and jaws to atrophy and decay. So, then, it is the cook, the scientific cook of the schools of cook ery, who, in the last resort, is at fault. Even our domesticated 1 animals, our cat and , dogs, are t losing the . excel lence of their teeth for the same rea son, and we shall no doubt, soon have dentists among, the veterinary , sur geons ns well as among the more august professors of the art of human medi cine, inese be uncomfortable pro phesyingsl , Can anything be done? A little, say the dentists. We mint all go in for . brown bread. Whole meal bread nlone contains in quantity the flourine which is so necessary for the hardness and permane.iwtj- of'the teeth. Wbofe nenl Itread it must be. ttieij, at morning, at noon and at night, if we would avoid the pangs of tooth ache nnd the pains, of deutiutry,. and save our precious teeth. v ,- Artificial Stones. ; , , x M. Moissan had scarcely published the. result of his beautiful experi ment, when it transpired that three other r French chemists, ' Berthelot, Friedel and Rousseau, had been work ing in the. same field. M. Moissan concluded his . experiment without making further progress, although, it was certainly not because of a lack of patience, when it is known that one of tne compact t hocks 01 ice containing the precious atoma which he obtained. was several months in melting. Before obtaining the diamond, how ever, tne irarisian cnemisc nan 00 tained a very hard substance, .which he named suiciumcarbid j but-, tne nres discoverer ; of this was , really. ' the American Acheson. who, with the idea of obtaining - a moderately hard sub stance, mixed coal powder with, clay and heated it m an .'electrical oven. He obtained true crystals which scratched the ruby, but were not, as Acheson had hoped, coal crystallized into diamonds. The manner of procedure was then changed ; the clay was cast aside, and coal powder was mixed witn sand in equal proportions, and, with the ad dition of some of the easily dissolved cooking salt," heated in an electrical oven to a white heat. .After this had cooled and been broken, several layers of different compositions - were found, one of which contained crystals which ranked in hardness between the dia mond and the cornndn m, Pubbfl Opinion. A Chinese Description or the Piano. A Chinaman, lately retnrned from a trip to Europe, treated his country men to the following description of the piano : "The Europeans keep a large four-legged; beast, which thev can make to sing at wilt. A man, or more frequently a .woman, or ; even a feeble girl, sits down in front of the animal, and steps on its tail, while, at the same time,1 striking its white teeth with his or her v fingers, when the creature begins to sing. The Hinging, though much louder than a bird's, it pleasant to listen to. The beast does not bite, nor does it move, though it is not tied ,np. Pas Nene Blatt. Where Dog Trains Still Ran. , In the northern districts of Mani toba dog, trains are still in use, and very satisfactory is the time made by the animals who skim over tue frozen snow at a rapid rate. The last train. arriving at Stanley covered Sou milee in four days well on to ninety miles a day. The railway has opened up communication with the settled dis tricts in Southern Manitoba, but the dog continues to supply the best means of transit for passengers and mails in the sparsely settled regions. lialiiax Critic IT GIVES WARNINb that there's trouble ahead it you're retting thin. It shows that vour blood is impoverished, and your organs deranged, so that whatever you eat foils to properly nourish you. Ana just as long as you remain in this condition, Consumption. Pneumonia, bnd other Scrofulous and dangerous diseases are lifc-.lv to fasten upon you, You should build your soli! up with Dr.- Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, Furif v and . enrich the blool, rouse every organ into natural ac tion, and bulla up ceaiiny, wnoiesoms, necessary flesh. Ocean Port, N. J. Da. R. V. Pi-JRCi! Dftir Sir We have need your " G.M.D." in our faraily and find nothing else to equal iL One or ovir cUMaren naa tn nneumnnia. iind one lun become coDioli dated, but by the use of the " Discovery " she Has entirely recovered, ana 1 now iu gooa beaith. y . jf 1 The Royal Baking; Powder is in dispensable to progress in cookery and to the comfort and conve nience of modern housekeeping. Royal Baking Powder makes hot bread, wholesome. fc Perfectly leavr ens without fermentation. Oual ities that are peculiar to it alone. ; a. ' I S1 V MS nnv . t biiiuii nnumra fn A Home lor Traauts. Boston is soon to have a home school for truants and troublesome boys. They are to be gathered into families of about twenty-frVe, under the care of a superintendent and his wife. A teacher of rare gifts of mind and heart is to be assigned to each group, and, under his direction, three hours a day are to be devoted to study.' The boys are to do all the household work- and to ' cultivate the estate of thirty acres where the homo is to be placed. They are also to devote four hours a day to training for occupations to be had in the city. : The in struction on Sunday morning, is to be moral and religious, and iu tho afternoon it is to be denomina tional. Scientific American. v A Flowery Epitaph. ' In Mauut Pleasant Cemeterr, New ark, N. J.,' on a monutnent directly in front of the entrance, is the following inscription :w- JVN HAND, Born March 11th, 1842.- The Cherry Treo of luscious fruit be guiled him too high, . a branch did break and down he fell . and broke his nock, and : ' . - - ' Died July 13th, 18G2. . . Also Three Infant Children, Some Buds that never Bloonrsd. . New York Tribunet KNOWLEDGE Ericft comfort and Improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who live bet-, tor than others and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world's bet products to the needs of physical being, will attest the value to Health of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced. In the remedy, Syrup of Fig. Its excellence is due to its presenting In the form most acceptable and pleas ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect lax ative; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers ana permanently curing constipation. U has riven satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kid neys, Liver and Bowels without weak ening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Syrup of Fira is for sale by all drug fists In 50o and $1 bottles, but tt ia man ufactured by the California Fig Syrup On. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will not accept any anbstitute if offered. , m si V UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF MEDICINE, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA. J1UNTER MelJ UI11E, 31. U., hh.D., Pre. J 119. A. WHITE, A..11., M.U., Seeds Treai. A HIGH GRADE INSTITUTION mefT&SSS MEDICINE, DENTISTRY. PHARMACY. a DIDACTIC AND CLINICAL CLLEJE, CONDUCTED BY. 40 INSTRUCTORS, Th Ket nlar Helon hegln Heptember 18th atid continura aeva maatlis. , , J For C'at.i Intro e al(lreit Dr. J. AI.I.ISON IIODRFK, Cor, -pc'y. II iehmaad, Tal. f7 THE TOURIST't FAVORITE. WHAT ITS lenl for our Special Uaal Llat We hat -ot Jit wkst wt. ... . i . CAl'AL.OiUE5 rRfcE TO ALL. AGENTS WANTED. II I n ij tin k nr CinVPI C mo 45 7RW hoTe llnitl nuraWr tl our paal a.vn i when! niiin UnAUt bluYuLtrUK a. lOot steadarl make and huh grade quality, which wa are closia out a', tbt above low pries. - A rare chance to gt a first -cl it-n durable w heel at a bar r,in Th av r f nil nlz ffnt' whw!., ball bearing and nttai with rmftomatio tlron. Keo'l fit to guarantee express charges, and we will ship O. Uuslred. Apply to our agent or airoci vo ua. OUR HPORTIStl COOD3 ann.t tj,n nii th m tiLiI noKt of malllnirt ill dred yuga catalogue, eontuluLnx all ksuas or nun n i nypi i a n f Ji)UU It lUiCLLHIIUW 131 Uruncl ht. and 147 Washington tit., tent IAAI I eV MFW-VHRtf. Influence of Color ou Disease.-' Experiments have- been tried with a ! x it .nlni Kaa an ffffect View iu ttauoi nam i vu. - , on certain forms of disease. In mak ing this teet, a number of emaU-pos patients were placed in a , room t. which only red light w admittod.( The patients were for the most part j those suffering from u-iusually sevpra attacks, and about half of them being unvaccinated childred. In spits of .the violent form of the malady, they all made speedy and safe recoveries, with very iittlo fever and but . few soars. There has been but Iittlo enthusiasm about colored glass since the famous blue-glass excitement of some years ago. But that certainly did benefit , certain cases, un an uikuhh since there havd been revivals of in terest in the subject. - New York Ledger.-- x :j' A Curious Organ. , 7 ! - A curious organ is to bo seen fit the Jesuits' Church at Shanghai, China. It was manufactured by a native, a ."brother coadjutor"- of the Jesuit order. The pipes of the instrument are in bamboo instead of metal, and the sonority is of incomparable Bweet ness, "angelic and superhuman," says a correspondent, and such as has never? been heard in Enropc. Chicago Herald. , . . Matthew Smitb, of Newark, "Wis. did the best day's'work of his life re , ceptly. He hit npon seven young wolves while . out hunting. The , bounty netted him $105 under the hW of the Badger State. McELREES WINE OF CARDUI.5 i Pat FfitnalR niRRaRHS. si THE PROGREf "cotton ! O n..tfb .Ira.n-r. urT.hl SlwrW lrJ wlUi Prvi. Packer ha Lv OS'iSrenly to thim handle lo mm nd i. hunp. nnlv Ann man rA. Btonpert A lw l M'f'r' of the rrerreMfs;.Co.,f .e.Bar', Mrrldliia, Bllm. I mm HBi AU USE faitS. I Beet Con b SjrupTTMte 6od. Use I ia time. SoM br drnmrfeu. fj.jfirr.i-25 T W BBSBXM.Bfc.fi t W M BL -fhSV .4 iT . f w jw m rmr m w -m -w Diamond Cycles ARE THE BEST MADE. AM. THE LATEST IMPROVEMENTS. .' HIGH UltADE IN KVEttY RESPECT. , winrt . THE . WONDER OF THE ACE. CALL AND SEE IT. of aecoad-hauil anrf h Bp-worn Wheels. O. D. t W.74, with the privilege of examination, ii LINE IS UNEXCELLED. atamD or money for Inrca Illustrated sporting Goods and hu uircda of oUiur nrtli-J W ii BOSTO' this year, and cotton very low. tag else, ilflt acinar)