f After th« Uitr-MKbt. IaO*8 knocked early at my door,â€" In tho mem he came to flud me. â€" teyin4{, " Let uit; crosH thy door. And thy cbaiue eh&il ever bind tne." Bat I turned away my heart, Who was Love that he should flud me'â€" Skying, " Well, thuu play'at thy part. but perchance thy chain would bind me. Moontide pawed. He sought my door, " If thou wilt thnu still may'at bind me. And I will ystoroBs tuy liuur; Here again you never find me." But I madly chose uxy part; What cared I to stay and ftnd him ' Love should never win my heart; Wherefore should I pause to bind him ? Mijtbt is here, and at my door Vainly now 1 seek to had him ; Gould he only croea my floor, [ would give all else to bind him. But attain without my door I shJall never waiting find him ; He will never cross my floor- No one thrice has power tu bind him. UKB TKBKIBLJ!: PRBUICAH£KT. Wkjr « YoanK Ljuly Hade Thre« Kound Trips ia the Street Car. T hoard a yarn yesterday that may or . aay not be true. If not, no barm in its â- alation ; if it be true, however, will the keroine of my tale please forgive me ? I 4o not know her name or I would apologiza m advance. A spritihtly lass, IH perhaps, «to<xl on the corner of Fifth and Wabash waiting for a University avenue car. Her taoe wore a pained expression, and there waa an uncertainty, a sort cf hesitancy in her movements as she advanced to the car (hat stopped at her hail. As she lifted her skirt and stepped on the rear platform, the oaase of her uneasiness became apparent to a group of interested onlookers. About her ankle, almost hiding her boot, a silken stocking hang, and to it was attached a fragment of stocking support. She made her way to a seat, gracefully hoisted the foot so she could sit upon it, and waited patiently until the car should be emptied so that she could arrange her hosiery. But the passengers were obdurate and refused to leave the car. The end of the line was reached, but before the car was emptied two gentlemen entered to make the down trip. The lady paid her fare again and resigned herself to her fate. Believe it or not aa you please, but my informant says that she made three round trips before the desired opportunity came, and then she was so lame from sitting in such a posture for so long a time that she bad to ride a doaen blocks beyond her destination before she got the " sleep " out of her foot. Tne poor girl told hor sister, and she told my sister, and my sister told me. Isn't that straight enough to be correct information 7 â€"St. Paul I'ioiuerl'rrtt. A Barbaric .4tuurt«iueut. Phila , about Annie Wakeham, writing to the delphia Uecord from London, Esg prize- tighter Sullivan, adds: fot^dism in the prize- ring is illegal in Bnglaad. and has been for many years, hence the brutes have to go on the conti oent to train for th>*ir contests. Spanish ball tights and prize- tights are regarded by refined (leople as barbaric amusements. Vet this rreature Bullivau is feted as though worthy some great honvr. His laurels are blood and bruises. A noble sbowiiig, u it not .' War is bad enough in all conscience ; at least, though, it is in a raeasare scientific. Norman Proctor, an ex-prize-tighter here in Loudon, has sug- gested that wlit^n nations should ({uarrel the better way than to train armies to kill would be .-mnd two prize-fighters, one from Moh country, to fight it out, the victorious 9DU to settle the issue. At least this method would rid the earth of tbt-ae disgusting objects one at a time. [ appeal to the women of America to put down such logradiag ahowsBS SuUivanand bis tribe are rovivmg this season. How can it be done .' Well, let every woman refuse to speak to jvery man of her acijuaiutauoi^ who indorses these revolting ••sports" o" >ttteiids their public exhibition. Let her brand as * "coward" a man who presumes to call such sports courageous. Soon the pnze-tighter would tind his occupation gone. Let nucb men as Sullivan be hissed off the public itreets and treated as out- laws, wild beasts or highway footpads. And as for the women of Kiiglaiid, let them implore their gracious Queen to administer a public reprimand to her sou, who has so far forgotten his princely traiuiug as to speak to professional prize- fighters save in terms of withering scorn. 1 am sure she is ashamed of her eldest son in this last ex- ploit. Indeed. I alaiost hope she does not know of it. 'Lion'.'" I insult the proud beast of the junglo and desert when I call John L. Sul- livan " London'^ Latest Lion. " PHOPI.E8 ON THE GOLD COAST. Their Savagery Equals Tbat of Any Known C'oium unity â€"Terrible PunishDienrt. Although a great portion of the Tsbi- speaking peoples have for two centuries been under our rale we know compara- tively little about them â€" a fact which is, no doubt, attributable to the deadly oliiaate and impenetrable forests in which they live. Maj. Cilia tells us much con- cerning these peoples which will be found interesting ; but he has gone so completely mto the grosser customs of native life thaij his book is more suited to the anthropolo- gist than the general reader. The low condition which they occupy in fibe intel- lectual scale ia, we are told, probably owing to the enervating influences of the climate, which renders any great amount of mental labor out of the <jaestiou, and to the readi- ness with which the necessaries of life can be produced. That the climate is un- healthy even totl.:.: there can be nodoubt, as it is the cause of diseases unknown else- where. Their relig:ion is not allied with any moral ideas, sin being limited to insults offered to or neglect of the gods; murder, theft, etc., are merely offenses against the person, and in which the gods take no interest. The deities may be divided into four classes, viz.: 1. General, those worshipped by a whole tribe or several tribes. 2. Local, those worshipped by the inhabitants of cer- tain towns or districts. 3. Family. 4. The tutelary deities of individuals. The priest- hood forms a large and powerful class, without whose aid nobody can bold any in- tercourse with deities of the first, second or third class, large sums being fre<iuently paid for their services : they have to take care, however, to make their communica tions anbiguous, as in case of their predic tions being falsified they are not infre quently put to death In chapter 11 it tices of sacrificing h does not arise from the bloodtbirstiness of the people,but ratherfrom atfection for the dead. This may be true, but the frightful cruelty shown in their executions seem to contradict this theory. We quote the fol- lowing as an e.xample : "Uu Jane 5th a murderer, with his hands bound behind him, a knife through his cheeks and two forks piercing his back, was dragged past oar rooms. Commencing at midday, the punishment increased in in- tensity till 8 o'clock, when the poor wretch was gashed all over, his arms cue off. and himself compelled to dance for the amuse- ment of the king before being taken to the place of execution. If he could not or would not dauce lighted torches were applied to his wounds. To escape this excessive torture be made the greatest efforts to move, until the drum was beaten and the head cut off. " Strange to say, in spite of the frightful punishment, murder is more frequent in Ashanti than in the British protectorate. The jeremouies at birth, marriage and death are. we think, rather too fully gone into. The criminal laws appear to be extremely severe, and the following ridicu- lously trivial offeucsi are punishable by death: Whistling in Coomassie, suffering an egg to l>e broken lu the town, looking at the king's wiies, ur not hiding when the king's eunuchs call ta announce their approach, and picking up gold that has been dropped in the market place. From this it will be seen tbat every day life in Coomassie must have its drawbacks. â€" l.un- ODD SIGHTS in JAPAN. What an American Traveller Saw That He Considered Curious. A gentleman, who formerly resided in Washington, but who now lives in Japan, has recently written a letter giving some descriptions of odd sights to an American visitor. He says : "If you could go oat with me in the morning I think the first thing to startle you would be the newsboy. The newsboy here is usimlly an old man. He trots around with wares that look as if he had torn the wrappers from a lot of tea cheats. He rings a little bronze bell as he goes. The bell would be thought an art treasure at home, for it is chased, and has undoubtedly done service in some temple before now. Then the peatman would sur- prise you, for you would hardly believe that the free ' delivery system ' exists here, not as we have it at home, where it ia confined to the large cities, but going to every little hamlet and isolated farm-house. Perhaps we would see a car- penter holding bis work with his toes and drawing his plane and saw toward him. We would certainly see the ' false- hair reviver,' for our Japanese sisters are like the rest of the world, bound to be in fashion, and the elaborate style of coiffure compels them to supplement the natural growth. When the switch becomes rusty it is handed out to a peripatetic hair- dresser, whe pushes a cart containing a small furnace, a covered kettle, and several bottles of dyes, and on the front of which, from a small gallows frame, hangs a switch as a sign of bis trade. He boils the switch in his dye-kettle â€" goodness knows bow many others have passed through it ! â€" and returns it as good as new. Just now the children are playing with dolls, and every little girl who does not have a live baby ttied to her back will have a toy one. I ve often seen a mother carrying her own child pick-a-back and lo the Uttie one's back luuiauooiugsanuuerais would be tied a dolly. The dolls are won- derfully cheap and. generally speaking, good ones. The Japanese boys spin tops, but, of course, differently from our American boys, for everything is done differently here. They usually put a bit of matting over a tub so as to form a shallow basin- then one little chap throws bis lop spinning into the centre. Imme- diately another sets his on, and whichever ' knocks the other out' wins, the successful spinner pocketing both. Mild gambling '.' Yes ; but they always gamble here when they have anything with which to liamble. Travelling kitchens are plentiful, but not in the morning or ilaring the day. when the cook shops are open. After dark you would see plenty of them, anil I suppose they are going all night, for 1 have never been out too late for them. The linrickisbas are legion, and one is importuned by them at every turn. The children all seem to live in the street, and the passers give way to them always. I have seen porters dragging heavily loaded trucks swing oat of the way to avoid a little tot when it AM KNGLISHMA.N INSULTED I The Dlfflculty of Booting Up Pr^udioee Learned at the Muther^i Knee. type- cost them no small Wiik Timet. effort to do so." â€" .Vfw One bright June morning, some years ago, a party of travelling men were gazing out upon one of the most charming laud- scapes in t « Sus(}a--hanna valley. In the party was an English gentleman, whose prejudioes were stirred by the lauda- tory tone of the conversation. He grew restless and exclaimed : •• This may seem to you rawther a pretty scene, but if you want to see really beauti- ful scenery you must go to England, where the air is softer, the grass greener and tlie flowers more fragrant than here." As he finished, one of the party, whose ancestors were of good old revolutionary Yankee stock, turned to him, and, with more candor than politeness, said : •' My friend, in childhood, at my mother's knee, I was taught three things : First, to revere the great Creator ; second, to love the stars and stripes ; and third, to hate a Britisher. This is one of the many occasions when I fully realize the beneficial induences oi early training. ' Among the obstacles that obstract a man's upward progress in this world are the prejudices which, planted inthecharac- terforming period of early youth, he finds have become firmly fixed in his maturer nature. It IS difficult to root them out. Men may battla as they will ; they can seldom en- tirely overcome their early impressions. The progressive mmi discovers that he must leave his prejudioes behind, if he would •• keep step" in the ranks. The barriers in the way of the truth- seeker have been broken. Do you doubt it .' Wend your way to the sanctuary some Sabbath morning, and behold : Universal and Methodist clergy- men occupying the same pulpit ! Do you douot It .' See, as may now fre- quently be seen, physicians of different schools juning in consultation over their patients. See eminent members of the medical profession, like Dr. Rabson, of London, and Dr. Gunn, of the medical college, of New York, publicly recommend- ing a proprietary medicine, like Warner's safe cure, the only su;:e specific fur kidney disorders and the many diseases caused by such disorders, and their views attested by hundreds of regular practitioners of various schools. Note the fact, too, that the leading clergymen, like xiev Dr. Hankin, ex-Chap- lain of the r.S. Senate, and Hev. Dr. Keud- ricK, of the Rochester I'uiversity. one of the international revisers of the New Testa- ment, and thousands less well known, publicly recommend this remedy, because it not only cures kidney diseases, but the many commonnamud diseases caused directly by them. When medical men and ministers unite in such a course, who can doubt that intolerance baa ceased to role in the learned professions at least ? Highly Becommended. " How do yoQ like yoor new writer ?" imiuired the agent. " It's immense !" was the euthasiastie response. " I wonder bow I sver got along without it '.'" â- Well, would yon mind giving me a littl« testimonial to that effect ?" • Certainly not ; do it ."iladly. ' So he rolled up his sleeves and in an in- credibly short time p3unded out this : â- afted Using thee automatig Back- actionnatypewrit,er for thre emontb9 an d Over, I unhesitattinggly pronounce it prono nee it to be al ad even more than the Manufaeturs claim ? for it. During the time been in our possessio n e. i. th ree monthz ! id has more th an paid paid for itSelf in the Saveing oF time an d labrr"? John i Smith. •' There you are. sir" •' Thanks," said the agent, dabiouaty. * ? â€" The Mormon mv second ' questionâ€" Will yo« be An A<lve:iture ^^'Ith Paiilliero. It IS an old saying, " what strange things « person â- if«» when he hasn't got a gun,' says the Culiimhui'i This was e.\actly what Constable Carty said the day btfore yester- day when be met a couple of panthers. Mr. Carty was driving along the road lead- ing from tUover Valley in the Serpentine Flats, and while passing through some timber was surprised to see two largo beasts walk quietly out of the bushes and stop on the middle of the path- The panthers, for such they turned out to be, were only twenty paces ahead of the horse, and as the constable did not have a gun, he waa puni-Jed for a moment as to the best coarse to adopt towards them. After a moment's thought he decided to keep right alioad, and if the panthers molested him in any way ho would arrest them for obstructing the highway . The scheme proved success- ful, and although the beasts cast a longing oyo at the nice fat horse, they saw it would be useless to make any attempt to devour It while the constable was on the ground. The panthers were both very large and appeared to be in good condition ; they have been seen in the neighborhood several times of late and it is probable they will .loou tall victims to their own temerity. WIntvr »t)lea lo .Sululde. â- %iie winter stylus of suicide for !•<(<<•," said Torouer Uert/., '• will differ but little from tbat of last year. Hempen ties stiU continue m favor for neckwear, and throats will be cut a trifle deeper as spring ap- proaches. This latter fashion, however. IS far from popular, and is affected only by the outre, such persons, for instance, as try to make a seusation by the use of ' rough on rats. These things, I need scarcely say. are uol counted good form- -in fact, are vulgar. The must fashionable modes are those of legitimate poisoning and by shooting. If you want lu be m aiyle, dear boy, just slick to those two fashions. They are affected by the elite, and you cannot go wrong in following them. There is nothing like a good reliable revolver for this sort of thing. By referring to my annual report, just handed in, you will find that exactly i'.i per cent, of the suicides for the fiscal year adopted this mode of di-pariiug for the other shore. True, an e<|ual number tried the poison route, but there are poisons and poisons. I'Liere are poisons that allow a man to slip <]uietly out in a gentlemanly way tbat excites the aduuration of every man on the jury, and again there are others which cause a man to shuffle off his coil in a way tbat is decidedly ba/arre, not to sa> fussy. I am torry to see the growing ten dency to use ' rough on rats ' and paris ;;reen. These can never find devotees in the best circles, and you can safely set down those addicted to them as decidedly ' loud.' If you go in for poisous.try lauda- num, or morphine, or pure strychnine." â€" Cliiciiyu Tiinci. UK GUT HIS FKK. Uow it SyravUHe l{rld«*ier<>olu waa Kurted to S«*ttle with the .liextou. A novelty in law suits has been adjudi- cated in Syracuse as a sequel to a fashion- able wedding. The parties to the suit were a church sexton and a physician who was a bridegroom not a great while ago. On the "iiird of September, Dr. Amos W. Jennings was married by Kev. Dr. Cleorge B. Spalding in the First Presbyterian Church and the elegant and i • ttely edifice was elaborately decorated for *, he occasion with fiowers. In order that t. • ceremony might pass off smoothly and impressively, there were two rehearsals before the actual ceremony. The groom and bride elect, and bridesuiaidH, the groom s best men and the ushers all turned out to these full dress evening rehearsals for which the Ijreat church was heated and lighted by Sexton Henry A. roiiipkina. The wedding ceremony was witnessed by a large throng, and the affair was a fashionable success. Sexton Tompkins himself thought it was a pretty nice weddin;;. and worth a fat fee. He waite<l for his fte for a month, and then began dunning the bridegroom. The sec- ond letter brought the reply that Dr. Jen- nings would pay wlien he " ii^ot good and ready." The sexton then referred the matter to a lawyer, and a lawyer to a justice of the peace. There was no ilefencp, and the sexton got judgment for StO. she Ua4l Heart! uf lu First Omaha Lady â€" Have you seen the new crematory '.' Second Omaha Lady -No, I haven t, but I hear they make lovely butter there. â€" Mtlwaukte ientitift. The Poor Man's Orlevauce. Beggar â€" Oh, yes, the charitable assooia- tion gave me a present tor Christmas. Charitable young ladyâ€" But you don't appear to be very grateful for it. 'To tell the truth, miss, 1 ain't very fateful. When I think of the fact that my legs are both out off at the knees and then think of the present I got, i can't rake up naoh gratitade.' " What was your preeent?" "A pair of roller skates."â€" AV!w(M*o ittau fimmai. A Pointed Rebuke. "Georgcy, behave yourself!" said the little girl, severely, to her younger brother who was throwing snowballs at people on the street, yelling like a young Im^.ian, .squaring off at imaginary foes, and other- wise conducting himself in a boisterous manner; " Uahave yourself I Folks will think you're a member of the Board of Trade V'â€"Vhicayo Tribune. Sleeping Car ayiunastles. The Minnesota Railroad Commissioners have not yet got to tbat part of the sleeping oar trouble by which a man travelling rents a lower berth only to be expected to give it up to a lady. Gander-legged gentlemen who have delicacy about displaying their limbs in mounting to the upper perch are still hoping for some sweeping reform. â€" [.ouinilU CourierJoumal. Knterpriae on the Prairies. In the- west they don't think that a town IB enjoying much of a real estate boom unless people are wandering around with lanterns at night ready to close desirable bargains.â€" Nnc York Sun. An i>(>ll>M-lal Tlew. '•''^S^ * Reporter^-How many orimiaal oases ihave yon for the next assizes ? Deputy Sheriff â€" None. Reporterâ€" That's good. I Deputy Sheriffâ€" Well, not w rery good. A Terrible Strain. Omaha employer (nn.'viousl) I â€" Does Mr. De Ooodo drink ' tJontidential clerk- Not a drop. "He has been two hours late for three mornings and he looks as if he had been on a terrible spree." " It's all right. On Christmas he gave his boy a drum."â€" ChkWkj World. • TMK ElllOI'l .\N am ATloN â- â- Says France imto Hisinarck Kor Alsace and Lorraine 111 (.lot even- some day '" To Kussia «ay» .\UHtria : '• Hands ott. and beware ! There^s death on your horde There'H wrath in the air ' " Says the Czar with a bluster Of truiiipei and lauee : " My t'osHScks Hhall pipe and Younij Forthiialid uailce '" Hut^aria'ft princeling, rs. As still uu vou please, ;lu! she riihriin»'(>us trues. Is conrtini^ tlut shade of .Vud Hismarck. the crafty, I'hloginatic in mood. .\R uiuin as an oyster. Keeps on sawing wood. Recent experiments with thirty-six- pounder quick firing guns showed that twenty-two rounds ootUd be fired in two minutes and a half. Seventy pounders are now being made. Dunley (at the supper table) â€" " Yes, 1 have spent niostof thoday at thedentist's." Mrs. Hendricks (the landlady)â€" "Are you having your teeth filled, Mr. Dumley 1" Dumley (struggling with a steak) â€" " Yes, ma'am ; filled and sharpened." â€" Sew York Sun. A oonfeotioner of Newport, England, having missed from the bakehouse time after time dainty morsels, set a watch, and a form resembling that of a boy was seen stealthily oreeping along the roof of the adjoining bakehouse. No attention waa paid to cries to oome down, and a gun was fired. The aim was good aiid a daad monkey rolled from the roof into the road. " JuHt Hear mat cnlld Scr«.aui :" said Mrs. Smith to her sister, Mrs. Davis, as the sound of a child's shrieks came across the garden from a neighbor's bouse. •• What kind of a woman have you for a neighlwr .' Does she abuse her children "" •' No, indeed, " replied Mrs. Davis. •' She is one of the most tender mothers in ex istence. But you see, she believes in the old fashioned styles of doctoring. When a child needs physic, she fills a spoon with some nauseous dose, lays the little victim flat on her lap, holds his nose till be is forced to open his mouth for breath, when down goes the dreadful mess. Then come the yells. " " No wonder. " said Mri>. Smith, " Why doesn't she use Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Purgative Pellets ' 'f hey are I'tT'ctive without being harsh, and are as easy to take as jugar phiuis. I always tiive them to my children " •â- And so Jo 1." said Mrs. I>avis. Four .'<atl«ry rheiu. The sacred writings of the Chinese are called 'â- Five Kings. ' A work of only four kings is aacred enough for a gieat many people in this country â€" though a man often wishes he had five kings when the other fellow holds four acus. â€" .V,;rri« (ifirn lltriiid. The Little SueA. .V httle seed lav iu the carter's path /V htllo r,h(iiM bowed in tile strong win. is wrath ; .\ little sllruh grew, by iLt* rimis held fii^t . t'him a stunt tree braved all the winter s blast. .\ little cough startedâ€" twas only light A little chill shivered the hours o( niijht . .\ little paiii came and began to i;row. Tbuu cousuiu|>t.iou laid all his brave stxeugtb low. Be wise in time. Check the little cough, cure the little dull, dispel the little pain, ere the little ailment becomes the strong, unconquerable giant of disease. Dr. Pierces Golden Medical Discovery, taken in time, is a remedy for these ills. An Fnglish SeU!*Htluii. Cardinal Manning has astonished his friends by announcing himself a convert to the teachings of Anarchy. " Every man, " be says, •• has a right to life and a right to the food necessary to sustain life. Necessity has no law and a starving man has a natural right to his neighbor's bread." Do you feel dull. ian..'uid, low-spirlted. hfe- less. and indii«cnlial>ly iiiiarable, both piiysl- cailv unii mentall.r; ctperience a sense of fuUiii'ss or bloatinif after eating, or of ••gone- ness. " or >'inptini>s8 of st<.>mach in the raora- inif. tongue coated, titter or bad taste in inoiKh, irregular appetite, dlsziness. frB«)uent tiL-adachi-s, blurred cyesiifht, " floaUnir specks " before the eyi<, nervous prostration or ex- haustion. irritsbiUty of temper, hot fluabea, alu-riiating with chilly seusationa, sharp, biting, transient pains nere and there, cold teet, drowsiness afl«-r meals, wakefulne«, or disturbed and unrefreshing sleep, constant, indescribable feelinjf of dread, or of impend- ing calamity ? If vou have all. or any considerable i>amt>er uf these symptoms, you arc suffering front that most ciiminon of American maladieeâ€" litltous Dyspepsia, or Torpid Liver, associated with Dyspepsia, or Indii^estion. The more ^tjinplidiU^ your disease bus t)ecome, the ifreater the number and diversity of symp- toms. No mutter what oumn it has r>-«ched. Dr. PiereeHi Uoldeu nedieal Dincovery will siitHlue it, if tak'-n accopllng to dtrec- tions for a reasonable length of time. If not cured, cMiupiic^ations niuitiply and Consump- tion of the Lungs, Skin Iliwasea. Heart Disease, Kheuinntisui, Kiilney Disease, or other grave iiitdadies are qelte Imlilt- to set in and, suunur or later, induce a fattil trrininHtiun. Dr. Pierce's Uoldeu .lledlcal Dle> oovery acts powerf uilv uijon the Liver, and through that gnat blood -puriiving organ, cl<>anses the system uf all blood-taints and im- purities, fnim «hau-ver caaae ansinK. It ia â- •'lually eflloacioiis In acting upon the Kid- mva and other ••xcntury organs, clitmsintf, strengthening, and healinif their diseases. As an ap|»'tiziiig, nstMratne tonic, it proaiotes dig''8tion and nutrition, thereby building up both di«h and strenKth. In niularlul districts, this wondirlul nn-dicine liiis giuni'<l i^ri^at relebrllv in curing Kever iind .\gui'. Chills and Fwver, Diiinh .\giie. and kiiidr'-d di?«^Hj"-s. Dr Pierce's Uoldeu .Medical Die* "gures all hurrors, r»iM r (^)niiiion Hlotcli. »ir liriitmon. u> the .•â- r • â- ii^rofula. <all-rlieulll, •• Fever-sores, " • aiv ur Itijiigh Skin, in short, all dlsi-aset â- aiisiil by bad blood aro cvmiuen-d by this iKiweiful, porifving. ami invig^'ratliiir medl- •ine. tireat Kuting L'lcei-s nipi.ll.v Inial under iijt iM'iiign Intliieiice. Especiiilly hiis it iiiaui- f^•^te.l Its p.iteiicv m iiiriiig â- rilt4'r. Ki'/t lua. KrisiiH'liis. UinKi'arbi iii-liti, .-ion' Kyes, .Srof- iil,Miii Smii iiii'l .-^wi liu,;.-«. Hi|>-J'>"" Diwase. â- White .•<w||ing>, " il"iir.-, or Thick .Neck. »nd Hnlurg'-d i.liiiuls. .<<iid ten >i-nt8 in iluinps fur a iiu-ji- rn-atise, with ci,liin-d ijntiii. '>n Skm Dim-h*-*. or thi- siiiiie amount !or a Treutise on Sciotiiloiis .Virivtions. •FOR THE BLOOO IS THE LIFE." I'horuiighlv cleanse It bv using Dr. PI«T<-e»» i;oldt'u !n<;dical DiNcovery, ami good ligestion, a fair skin, buovant spir 'j», vital â- itrcugth and bodily lieulth will b<' i-stablished. CONSUMP^^IOX, which 1» S»crof ula of llio L,uuf(«, is arrested 111,! cured t»y thi.'< lenu-dy. if t«ki.ii in the larlier stages of the disi^ase. From its mar- velous power over this urribly fund <ks<-ase. when llrst olleriiig this now w.irld-faim-<l peiu- .â- <lv to the pui*c. Dr. Pierce thoiiglit si-rioualy if" ciilliiHt it his ••Ci>.-«sfMiTio.N Ci^im.^' but ibuiidoni^d thai name as too i-estrictive for a medicine which, tn>in its wonderful com- liination of tonic, or strengthening, alterative, or bUHid-cleansing. anli-bilious, pectoral, and nutritive proiiertii'S, is uni-qualed. no<. onlj- as a n^molv for Consumption, but for Chronic Aineaiies of the on^ Liver, Blood, and Lungs. F'or Weak Lungs, Spitting ul IIIihkI, shoru ness of Bn-ath. Chronii' Nasal Catarrh, Uroo- chitis, .\8thinii. Seven- Coughs, iiud kindred atleetion.'*. It is an ottlcient remedy. .Slid bv Druggists, at tl.OO, or t^ix UotUes for *S.«0. Uf Send ten cents in stamps fi>r Dr. Pierce s book on Consumption. .Vddrcss, Worid's Dispensary Medic; I Issociatioii, tt»3 nalu St.. HVIFALO, >- V. I) «.: N O. t H8 Merchants, Butchers, AND TKADEKS GENEItALLY. Wo waut h GOOD MAN ill your locality w pick CALFSKINS For IS. Cash furnished on aaiistsct.iry guaranty \d.lr»siiC S. I'.VOE. Hy.lo I'ark. Vermont, U. S A StartlluK DlHcuvery. .\ startling and important discovery was made when, after long and patient experi- ments, the combination of Nerviline was reached. A grand victory, indeed, for the suffering have an ever-ready, prompt, offl oient and cheap remedy at han 1, l>o you know that for 10 cents you can buy a trial bottle of Poison's Nerviline and test its great power over pain of every description " Poison's Nerviline cures chills, pain in the stomach, side and back, rheumatism â€"in fact, all pain. Sold by druggists and coun- try dealers. _ Strong tlvideaoe. A Baltimore bookkeeper has committed suicide and loft his aocounU all straight. It is regardeil as oertain that he waa insane.â€" Manchetter Union. The cleansing, antiseptic and healing quahtios of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Bemedy are imequalled. lliUHC i-iis will llnre ind ilii'ii 'i*''" ""•i" fHini enr*. 1 li»v*> mitilc ih'" >li»p»ti' <>' KI INO .H|OKStC>b» ltt«-loD|[itiu..j. lo cmr* lh« wi>i-«l i-«*fc B«»o»ii»e r«Mon fbr not tn'w r*r«)»1nc • «tnp iriAHi Tor • kXAiii. I niraii n riktllcAl IM. Kni.Kr>V orRALl, I «arruil m^ rviv»tly S«nil'«t ono* tor • tr«*tlM »nJ ft FrM Bottle o1 my InfuUlWr r^mody. Ot*» kWF»w »ud Po«» 'JOl'^*- '* "*•" »"° riolhltiK for • trlnl, .nJl win rtir« «<!. IddrM. DB. U. O. BWT, Braacli Office, 37 YoDge St., Torflnto. "DUNN'S BAKING POWDER CONSUMPTION. t h*««tt pQ«ltfv«r«n)mlj (or th* kbov* JIm tbouMn4l of <'*««4 of tb* wont k\a4 au * i>( h«T« h*«n rurMi. Indited, Ao ttn^ait mKcmcf, ttafti 1 wl'l itond TWO BOTI'LKS i Witn » V4l<ni.BLR TRKATrsB on Ihi* i â- wfl^t-ftr. illvfl Aiprv^ar \ntl P O ft(1<1rA«i.. I Rltb tn ru UffMbw I Branch Office, 37 Ton^ St, Tecwto A