If Finn I ' if • *^l p; ml 'ii» i THE SKELETON'S STORY- Ride closer It ia two milea ahead to the foot-hills â€" two miles of parched turf and rocky tpace. To the right â€" the left â€" behind, ia the roll- ing prairie. This broad vailny strikes the Sierra Nevadea and stopa as if a wall had been bnilt across it. What ia it on the grass 7 a akall here â€" a rib there â€" bones scattered a^at as the wild beasts left them after the Lonjiiile feast. The clflan-p'ckeid ikpll i^rins and staiejâ€" every booe hnd scattered lock of hair his its story of tragedy. And what besides these relics? More bones â€" not scattered, but lying ia heapi â€" a veitebie with riba attacbjid â€" a fleshleaa skull bleaching ^der^the nilnm^ bun. Wolves? Yes. Countilie heaps oflbones and yon 'wi 1^ find nearly a score. Open boats have b^n picked up at sea with nei- ther life nor sign to betray the'r secret. Skeletons axe found upon the prairie, bnt they tell a plain story to those who halt beside tUeni. Let us listen .- Away off to the right you can s( e tree- tops. Away off to the left you can see the same sight. The skeleton is in line between the two points. He left one grove to ride te the other. To ride I Certainly a mile away is the skeleton of a horse or mule. The beast fell and was left there. If he left the grove at noon he would havd been with- in a mile of this spot at dusk. It ia there- fore plain that he did not leave until mid afternoon, or possibly at dusk. Signs of Indiana may have driven him from hia trap- ping-ground, or mayhap he had exhausted the game and was shifting to new fields. It is months since that lide, and the trail has been obliterated. Were it otherwise, and you took it up from the spot where the skeleton horse now lies, you would find the last three or four miles made at a tremend- ous pace. " Step slcp step " What is it Darkness has gathered over mountain and prairie as the hunter jogs aloDg over the broken ground. Overhead the countless stars look down upon him â€" around him is the pall of night. There was the patter of footsteps on the dry grass. He halts and peers around him, but the darkness is too deep for him to discover any cause for alarm. ' ' Patter patter patter " There it is again It is not fifty yards from where he has last halted. The steps are tco light for those of au Indian. A erizzly would rush upon his victim with a roar of defiance and anger. A panther would hurl himself through tliirty feet of space with a scream to unnerve the hardiest hunt- with a feeling that 'tis but another dark secret of the wonderful prairie. BAVAGED BT A BUBBICAMX. Towns Iievalled, Lives IMt. and SbJtw Blomi Ont of tk« Sen. Capt. G. 0. Davis, who went so Sati'^lo- mlngo last March from New York, had some remarkable experiences in tfbfe recent hniri* cane. U* was in the port of Axak on a unall scbooner, which he had chartered and loaded with ealt. "At 7 AT M.," be say*, "the winl changed to south by eMt» blowing about sixty tqeigh^ miles an houn The. sea rqOed in with We snvta, fcreaking ev^^hiafchefdteit. 'We had two apcber** out, â- whichTreid f as t A vs" "1 t ^lat ii as' near us was at last blown over. TheOsptain then called to me to come on deck. V hail the barometer in my hand. It then marked 29v3. sad w aa f a l l i ng, I stood 4n thA-oom- panionway, and the Captain and crew crouched snder the railing^ the wltd beiag too strong fof'them to stand up. We wire all waiting, when suddenly the Captain and crew plunged over the stern and intd the aea. I clung to the tiller ropes and saw some of the crew struggling in the water, but only for a minute, when they were car- liedoutofmy sight, I saw the Captain and two sailors clinging to the standing rig- ging. Taen a huge wave came and I was bboothvo his bbotbsbb. I A nvrmcTPFKB bcpbwwc*. "WoKf ' whispers the hunter as a howl suddenly breaks upon his ear. Wolves The gaunt grizz'y wolves of the foot hills â€" thin, and poor, and hungry, and lavagt â€" the legs tireless â€" the mouth full ot teeth ihat could crack the shoulde' bone of a liufFalo. He can tee their dark forms tlitting from point to ptiot â€" the pat- ter of their feet en ihe parched grisa proves that he is sui rounded. Now the race b gins. There is no shelter until the grove i^ reached, Instinct guides the liorse, and horror lashes him with such a vhip as human hand never wielded. Over ^pace, thrciigh tiie gloom, almost as swift as an arrow sent by a strong hand, but a dark line follows. A liue ot wolves spreads out to the right Hint letf, and gallops after â€" tongues oat â€" tyjs fl ishing â€" great flakes-of foam flyicg Lack to blotch stone and grass and leave a trail to be followed by the cotvardly ci,yotes. .Men lide thus oulj' when life is thestake. A horse puts forth such speed only when terror followa close behind and ciusss every ueive to tighten like a wire drawn until the scratch of a linger makes it chord with a wail of despair. A pigeon could not skim this valley with such swiftness, and yet the wings of late aie abroad, and long and tire- .ess. The line ia there â€" aye I it is gaining Inch by inch it creeps up, and the led eyes take on a more savage eleam as the hunter ciiea out to his hoise and opens fire from hia revolvers. A wolf falls on the right â€" a sec ond on the left. Does the wind cease blow- ing; because it meets a forest? The fall of le man in a mad mob simply increases the determina'.iou of the rest. With a cry so full of the despair that wells up from the heart of the strong man when he gives up hia struggle for life that a hunter almost believes a companion rides beside him, the horse staggers â€" recovers â€" plunges forwardâ€" falls to the earth. It was a gloiious struggle, but he has lust. The wings of the dark line oblique to the centre â€" there is a confused heap of snarling, tijhting, maddened beasts, and the line ri sbes forward again. Saddle, bridle and blriLket are in shreds â€" the horse a skeleton. .\nd now the chase is after the hunter. He lias half a mile the start, and as ha runs the veins stand out, the muscles tighten, and he woiders at his own speed. Behind him are tl.e gaunt bodies and the tiieleas lega. Ciostr, closer, and now he is going to tace fate as a brave man should. He haa halted. In an instant a circle is formed about him â€" a circle of i-ed eyea, foaming mouths and 3 ellow fcngs which are to meet in his flesh. There is an interval â€" a breathing spell. He looks up at the stars â€" out upon the nitiht. It ia his last hour, but there is no quaking â€"no crying out to the night to send him aid. As the wolves rest a flash blinds their eyes â€" a second â€" a third â€" and a fourth, and they give way before the man they had looked 'tpon as their certain prey. But it ia only f T a moment. He sees them gathering lor the rush, and firing hia remruning bnlleta among them he s«.izes his long rifle by the ba.rel and braces to meet the shock. Even a savage would have admired the heroic light he made for life. He sounds the war- cry and whirls his weapon around him, and « olf after wolf falls disabled. He feels a strange exultation over the desperate com- bat, and as the pack give way before his mighty blows a gleam of hope springs up in hia heart. It is only for a moment then the circle narrows. Each disabled beast is replaced by three which hunger tor blood. There is s rush â€" a swirl â€" and the cry of despair is drowned in the efaorua of snarls as the pack fight over the feast. » • ♦ • The gray of morning â€" the sunlighh of noon- day â€" the stars of evening will look down upon grinning skoll and whitening bones, and the wolf will retam to cmnch them again. Men will not bury them. They wul look down upon them as we look, re id the story as we read it, and ride away jerked from my position and pitched into the sea. The wind seemed to blow from all quarters. I was almost strangled and could not get^into a position to strike out. Though I had heavy shoes on, I could not keep my feet down, but was whirled around on every crest of the waves. After a long struggle I at last reached land. ' ' I grabbed the roots of the trees at the water's edge and hung on with a death grip. It was impossible to stand, the wind was so strong but, after lying where I was, about two hours, I managed to crawl under a cover, where I lay about six hours, too much exhausted to move. Toward evening some persona came with a mule to where I was lying. They placed me on the mule. We had six miles to go, and for three miles we waded through a lake of water up to the mule's back, with the rain pourine down in torrents. We at last reached the village of Azaa, but what was once a dry brook was now a raging river. I was compelled to lie in an old building containing about thirty families whose homes had been blown to pieces. Out of our crew of seven the Cap- tain, mate, and steward were drowned. All that remained of the schooner was a few pieces of timber that were washed ashore. At least one-half of the village of Azua, which has a population of 6,000. was in ruins. All the small vessels off the coast had been destroyed, and there was no way of getting to the city of San Domingo, except by the use of horses. After delay I pro- cured horses and a guide and started for the city, a ride of 100 milea. The first night we stopped at Acre. Here the sea had destroy- ed plantations, torn up the docks, and swept away every building m the place. Cattle were killed in large numbers, and the shore was strewn with dead fish. From Acre to Savana la Grande ,30 miles, twenty-three bodies were washed aahore. ' ' Three daya afterwards I arrived at San Djmingo, and learned that all the ship- ping there iiad snffdred severely. Of three brigantines which were laying outside on the fatal evening, nothing remained the following morning have a few spars and pieces ot wreckage. The vessels had found- ered and the crew." had been drowned. The brigantine Dauntless of Bangor. Me., Capt. Williams which had brought out a cargo ot ice, and which had reloaded with sugar, honey, and wood, was destroyed and her ciew of six men all drowned. Capt, William's life was saved by a remarkable accident. On the Saturday before the storm he went cohoie, and upon starting to return to his vessel in a small boat the wind and current carried him below her. For three days he floated down the coast, finally mak- ing a landing and thea crossing over to Barahona. He returned to S ,n Domingo city by the English steamer to find that his vessel had been lest. '• A Spanish vessel which had recently an ived slipped her cables and managed to get out a lew miles to sea, but this storm drove her back upon the coast, and her crew of ten men were lost. â- ' A Dutch vessel was also driven ashore and destroyed. Taree of her crew climbed up the foremast, and when she struck the shore they were thrown on land. The others were drowned. "At English steamer unloading sugar machinery at Palinca hoisted her anchor when the gale commenced and put to fca. The vessel labored so heavily that it was impossible to pick the anchor up, and it knocked two holes in her bow before the crew could cut the chain cable and let her go. The forward compartments filling with water, the hatches were blown off and the fire room was flooded. For two hours ahe lay in the trough of the aea, but finally the fire-hold was cleared and steam agiin raised. She was then kept with her head to the sea and was finally saved, though badly damag- ed. The machinery which the steamer had landed, together with thirty li((hters was destroyed. "The American schooner Henry Som- ners, from Scarboro' Me., which was load- ing down the coast, was dashed to and her crew drowned. readlnl Tracedy m the Vanalon of an Old KantnekyriunUy. At the old Rogers mansion on Indian Creek, near Blue Lick Springs, Eobinson County. Ky., where 101 years ago ancestors of *he family fought a bloody battkwith the Indiffls, one of that old family JK* two of bis^Wthers, one of whom di«,fand the other, it was feared, after a fewthonis oogld not survive. The thresliro4h«aB w«8 Sw«el G., WilUam 0. and Thomas. W}J^jmJ ' Rogers is an attorney of St. Lot^a., Tmsms is a fanner, and lived ne^the tkfBp^ of the- shooting, and Samuel whodid tW^faoo^ng, ik Ifreiideut of the Farmers^ B«il6 in; Oar- ,4iai*. The father of thsM »eB, jA^ dW a*^ jj an a^aiicsd age, willed his enljB* dfgtte, whi(^ is large, and consists of Unds, to SwflfueUG. and Robert Rogers, and cut off WflHam and Thomas Rogers without a cent Ssmnel Gr ilu^eis irasBisde adoiiBiitraior of the estate. The two brothers who were disinherited poo^ legal; meisn^sjlio" bre^fe the will, and lo that end bafre been engagte* couD(el was the County Common- wealth At- torney.. 8an«l spd ^flbert^ employed as counsel Mr. Lytle ot C*rli«le. During these legal proceedings there have been frequent recriminations between the brothers leading almost to a conflict. At noon, when seated in the old residence where some of the boys were bom, Samuel drew his pistol in a wordy encounter and fired a shot which penetrated the clothing of one of the attorneys. In an instant every- body except the contestants rushed ontof the room. The firing went on until Samuel's pistol was emptied. He then stepped out of the room and returned to Carlisle, where he was arrested. Dr. French of Cincinnati and Dr. Dill of Carlisle were called to the scene. The room in which the tragedy oc- cured was small and nncarpeted. William 0. Rogers lay on the floor, near the front door. The bone of his right leg was shiver- ed, and there was a bullet hole through his abdomen from right to left. He died at 1 1 at night. Thomas Rogers received a shot in the right temple, which came out above the left eye, near the hair, and another shot in the left arm. He is still conscious, but his condition is very critical. Samuel G. Rogers, who did the shootins;, says that bis brothers reached for their pis- tols before he began to shoot, but their at- torney denies this, and says that they made no attempt to draw their pistols. Samuel Rogers was the only man who fired a shot, and he emptied his pistol. Each of the four Rogers brothers has a wite ajid children, and neither of them is under 40 years old, Sam- uel has the reputation of being a quiet man until aroused, and then it is unsafe to trifle with him. Great bitterness has been en- genderd between the brothers in this strife over the will of their father. The two who were cut off charged that the old man waa in his dotage and had been unduly influenced. He died leas than a year ago. PIfforts to settle the case amicably have failed, and from the day of the funeral to the day of the tragedy the fewd between the brothera has increased. His e*ve from an Impending Xc d of men might about a hpose en Tb^ HM noth- pieces Products at tbe Has. The hen has :n ker ovaries, in round numbers, mDre than 600 egg geims, which develop gradua ly and are Buccessfnliy laid. Of thene 600 the hen will lay twenty in her first year 135 in htr second, and 114 in the third. In each one of the following four years the number of eggs will be diminished by 20, and in her ninth year she will lay at most 10 eggs. In order to obtain from them BufScient product to cover the expense of alimentation, they should not be allowed to live over four years.â€" .4n»a/e«rfe la Sociedad Odontologica, Havana. Wbat the Tobacco Koney Bought. Between seventeen and twenty- three there are tens of thousands of young men damag- ing themselves irretrievably by tobacco. You either use very good tobacco or cheap tobacco. If you use cheap tobacco, I want to tell you why it is cheap. It w a mixture of burdock, limpbl'ick, sawdust, colt's-foot, phntain haves, fullers' earth, lime, ssU, alum and a little tobacco. You can't afford, my good brother, to take such a mess as that between your lipa. If. on the other baud, you use costly tobacco, let me say I do not think you can afford it. You take that which you expend and will expend, if you keep the habit all your life, and put it aside, and it will buy you a house, ana it will buy you a farm, to make you comfortable in the afternoon of life. A merchant of New York gave this testimony " In eaily life I smok- ed six cigars a day at six and a half cents eadh they averaged that. 1 thought to my- self oue day, '111 just put aside all the money I am consumiug in cigars, and all I would consume if I kept on in the habit, and I will see what it will come to by compound interest.'" And he gives this 'tremendous statistic "Last July completed thirty-nine years since, by the grace of God, I was em- ancipated from the filthy habit, and the sav- ing amounted to the enormous sum of ?--l\) lt2,03 by compound interest. We Hved in the city, but tiie children, who had learned something of the erjoyment of country life from their annual visits to their grand- parents, longed for a home among the green ti« 1 la. I found a very pleasant phce in the country for sale. The cigar money no* came into requisition, and I found that it amounted to a sufficient sum to purchase the place, and It is mine. 1 wish 1,11 American boys could see how my ch Idren enj ,y their home as they watch the veas«h with their white saiU that course along the Sound â- Now, boys, yoa take your choice, smoking without a home, or a home without smokini? V. T. De WittTalmage. " {Bvffalo, N. Y. News.) One, morning several^ears ago just as t\i6mL gray light W^Pgipniug to show itsel^the east, a si havl^Mn seen dejvo: oftipmepto in«c»tfi1l*ir ipteifcn, bat it wS plain that ttey M busines^rf impor^ tand on hand. ^d^|*^ '"^g*?®^ •t o» of tha wiBwiiitPokan th|atnafaon .Vith^?onStfuI qSWkn»s, "calfJthe roof of the house. ' This man was Tom Ballard, the notorious counterfeiter an«»rmed to the teeth and fally realizing hw situation, he defied iaalwei aii4.j^.ftMal« below, him.. Some or the officers knowing the desperate icharaoter of the man, proposed to shoot hira Inirtil Wvas killed, but one of the number promptlr protested, and declared that if his bfothw efieers w«»fci aswai. him to ^aeoend, he wonld capture the man alive. Accord- ingly he be^ «lB dtecnlt and dangerous task, and succeeded in bringing his prisoner The'mai#hbaoB*nlIisJ»*dfhistasfc was Mr. Thomas Curtin,jtfcipc««eu' superintend dent 4 jcity joUce of Buffalo, N. Y. Mr. Cortiniejk man ^Mp » know? by erery prominent detective and poUoeroan in Amer- ica, and he stands pre eminently in the front rank of his professioii. Quiet and gentle- manly in appearance and manners, he pos- sessei a courage, combined with marked physical powers, that make him the terror of cvjl-doers and the pride of law abiding citizens. Few people can real'ze, however, the trials, exposures, and even privations, to which the members of every municipal pol- ice and fire depwtmmt are exposed. Com- pellsd to be on duty at nnJertiam honrj, sub- jected :o the most inclement weather, and often necessitated by the nature of their duties to protracted undertakings, they en- dure a nervous and physical strain that is terrible. Such was the experience of Mr. Curtin in former days and it is not surpris- ing that he found himself suffering from a mysteiious physicl trouble. Jn relating his experience lo a representative of this paper he said "At time when I waa en duty I would feel an unaccountable weariness and lack of energy. My appetite was also unoertain and toy head seemed dull and heavy. I did not fully understand these troubles, but sup- poied, ai most people suppose, that I was suffering from malaria. I tried to throw off the feeling, but it would not go. I thought I might overcome it, but found I was mij- taken, and I finally became so badly off that it was almost impassible to attend to my duties. I have known any number of men in the police and fire depu-tments of this country who have been afflicted as I was, and I doubt not there are to day hundreds similarly troubled who, like myself, did not know the cause, or really what ailed them." " Your present appearance, Mr. Curtin. does not indicate much physical debility," said ths interviewer as ho looked at the 22 pounds of bones and mutcla standing nearly five fest eleven inches ia height before him. "Oj, no; that ia altogether a thing of the past, and I am happy to say that for more than a year I have enjoyed almost per- fect health, although I now realize that I was on the road to certain death by Bright's disease of the kidney^sand travelling at a very xsapid pice. " "Howcidyeu come to recover so com- pletely?" â- " That is just what I want to tell you, for I believe it may be of great service to many others in my profseaion, who ncay possibly hear of it, 1 began the use of "a popnlir remedy at t Hi* earnest solicitation of a num- ber of frienda in this citv, and found to my great gratificitioa t\^^.t I began feeSing bet- '»•• This feeling continued and I gained in tS" Fashion in onu^ ^- come all the n^^J^^^^'H^^ old fashioued KnaT^'^WrS Ask your druggi^\"[*^* °=«iato Out of sight, o«t of .w. child. "' oimd"' 4 UonsarebeinlbSS^ofh^J SVench blosdsohiBblt "'otw.N give quaUty, ttyK P"^*^, tonH Engliel, draft aodaf^ontJSl hashes bred S^^Jff.u!:^^ hundred Percheron«t5iJ««g. £ toCaaadaduriogtherj^^ Dunham. "Oiklj ***' }llinois:"the"greaC ii*" ^*^^' «.«,.v, -,1,- L* • ^porter of "' ranch, who ha 1,400 head " Oaklawn, All men ever looks have 'eceny, have '"'"S;?*" fanjij im, fections will never find wh.f l"^«» love ourselves notwit A.*"' «*kil and we ought to lib '"'»(! manner. -C^r«,. ** ""f frie. Ffom SIR. ^jj^j^ Erindah, Credit P o t .MTDEAKScrHKBUM;'.^*"-^l» Since I became ao affliciedwthr of the neck and rieht ^L^r^^ my right arm nettt»7 mined to try your "Rk^*"'"' result is thai f am nofe'".«J enjoy the /•«?;«,.o/-m«„,!!"^P health isaUorau.hTr^'.^M the medicine. The Sn"y'ke'3 mc-the third bottle /re'^!?.'""""' J.N.Sutk.rla.d,St.u';ht,^« Extract of Wild ^tri^^i J. standard summer .^dieCf good sale." An uafaliJrr?J^ forms of Bowel ComplSf?^' VV kenever you command add vo-r. for doing so. It is this wiioh dki?' the approbatioa of a man of flattery and gycophani-s o-' adair W. J. Guppv, ot NewbuT J ins used Eurilook RU^ r,2 Mr. us that he ins used iiurdook Bloid }2 the Rev. J. R. bmith has usedita of It in high terms of praise. Itijti,^ system-renovating tonic that cnra ill eases of the Blood, Liver and KidnenJ ing harmoniously with Nature's U 000 bottles sold during the last three Men are never so ridijulou^ fo- •- ties they have as ijr those theji In the â€"Re m â- â€" A bla Woman wa« brought before a magistrate for unmercifully beating her son a saddle-colored imp. and the Judge was dehvenng a reprimand, when the woman broke out with, " Judge, has you eber been a parent to a wooffless yeller loy like dat ar cub of mine?" "Never." ejacuhited the Judge with great vehemence, getting red in the face. "Den don't talk ' AM Xxplanauon that looked nbmetmns. "WiU you please tell me why yon are standing on my toes?" aaked a vei4 polite gentleman of a colored citizen as they stood in a crowd hatening to a humorous vender of patent soap. " Sah " remarked the negro. "I ask will you please teU me why vori are standing on my foot " " .? f Jf'"' ""• ^^'^o'y. sah. 'Cause vj' foot s un'er mme. Dat's riaht saK ift ^i aw;ay Ef it hurts yer sXdl^p^uVi un er dar no mo'"-Arkan»aa Travdll He Baa Mo Objeetloa SUte'^iaS^^^^i^iS-'Ji^^om this objection to giving. I ffircd frJ,i 11°^ matiam of the ba'ck. Ud «me t^ jS^b; ^t^7^"'^S^^^ "" in-tantaneous relilf^J'd finally cured me completelv I thhil •! remarkaole remedy, ^inffi."' JltUViJ ler, strength and vigor until notr I am perfectly wellâ€" and wholly through the iustrumental- ity of Warner's Safe Cure which I believe to be the beat medicine for policemen, firemen, railroad men or any other class of people ex- posed to dangwor a change of weather, ev^r ditcovcred. Since my recovery 1 have re- commended it everywhere, and n«vsr knsw a case where it failed either to cure or ben- efit. I would not be without it under any cmaideratioa, and I am positive it i« a won- derfully valuable aad at the same entirely harmleoa remedy. Indeed, I see that Dr (lunn. Ilea* of the United States Medical OolUge ot ^ew York, indorses it in the higheatt erm«." " So you experience little d.flimUy in the txtcution 8f your duties now -Mr. Curtin de yon " i • "None whatever. Oar departm^t wi never in better oendition thaa at present r.t mT J ° y®? '"^®' **^« ••â-¼ feaf of some of the desperadees whom yon have been the means of bringing to justice ?! ' Not ia the least. ,Snch men not try to retaliate, partially becausa they hjjve not liL?^?^^^"\***?'" »»•«»«•• they re- •Met ollear m^ dees iii« dat^. " and other puWic employes in this country tv'lliJL """•""y 'â- y"'« life. When, therefore, a simpls aad pure remedy that .^k'"',^* w "** •"*•" ***« ^«»1"» » found, lis f-^?"*ii" F^* oongratBlation e»«My;^hen *e^fii|BBd«W' l ^h »fo4s Superirtdrffeff^hoifilsliiS xJuffalo. was umtr.er ana the fail, :k â- climbs the carden wall, For green apples, in his frolic He will eat his fill, till, very ill, He's doubled up with Colic. The antidote is Dr. Fowler's h-.:ii\\ Wild Strawberryâ€" an unfailing rj-i^irl Colic, Cholera .Morbus, Chole.-^ k^J and all Summer Complaints. (30j The ordinary restaurant waiter nis: all his customers from tip to lin. Of all thesweols of which mortals cm i^ed Ihere is ni.u:,'ht to excel strawber.TeTJ cream. Neither is there i,zy .-emedv hw.\ mortals that cm cxcA 'D;. Fowici'sEit of Wild Strawberry an a ca:e !cr C::. Morbus, Cholera Ir.fdutum au allJ:| Complaiiits, (-29) PfofgsRc;- AltxaiJUL':- Graiiam Bsii added a largs room to hid WasiiingKEji for the daily reception of deaf-niitei, d he will tcr.cii tlieu- '..he art cf specci The fiiiit in'.rchants striw'oerriei i not fid the measure; but Dr. Fowlers 1 tract of Wild Strawberry fills the meia every ti.ne in the people's reqairemit!] an unfailini^ rprneily lor all lorms of; mer Complaints. \-' Mr. Thomas Cjii-s an EnglishmE^ hundred years old, aaJ his wile o! eijli have jjst, omigriited f.-om Michigan t«lii^ ingtoii Territory, v/nere the old geii expects to tind good shooting. CORXS Coi;\.s 1 Tender corns, piio^if sort corns, bleed iu;; cornrf, hard corns, WJi^l all sizes, are alike removed in a fewW-T the use of Putnam's Painless Corn Erutsi Never fails to cure, never canses psifi' °'J leaves deep spots tiiat are more annoym* ' the original tfiscomfort. t^ive Putnam! ii less Corn Kxtractor a trial. Bewareoisi^ tutes. Sold by drugRists cvervwhere. "1 Co.. Kingreton, proprs. The German Crown Prince anJ ^^^ are to occupy the Price 3 oi \\alf of Abergeldie tkis fa!!. "A. P.'l*^ •a of and cOurteous^Mion cartes wJgS: phen Walker. Her huS ?2L?*?- Thomas Chanter. who6h«SK o^-*^ m order to preserve the diSJ^S^ ' of hu wife, nrofir-inn k!.. ~r«vr^.^" name name his wif^ prcfixino his mother's «»«, ' IfotrlBioayaaiiiaea. J .An Okakomee ootpBannrian, who is now a isifiatbiteir^trt; .X.^T^^*° P-P-^^rTorX wi^^'°*^'5T"' " °««^ «^i»g happily Satrt^^^." "'^^â- ^ --- wifo'^ni?^ "«™*?«1 di'T^nw from hU ?? GtRkiAi an"P ,|MC»e.J in as wives fi RES. Rheumatism, Lumbago, Bsekache. v-jui* »«r« IhroJ* SwHHnS^SJ^Mfc Bams. Scald" *Jrr .rt il**^ 4«D S oxiua ««»"i: S.*^*" Sola Z, Druai«trtaa »i»i»" •TfTT/S* THE CnkWlSi A. v'Zm^*^ dJIFORwisTEKX AP"*?^*'"^^, 91 from now to end of fj^^'ot^l'j premium, " BOOK OFPOBr^'^ua extra-contains Allowing cwv" j^i inv«rcolflr« Qseen yiotort8.^£^f edorgenerai Olarqms o£ i^'^e: H5fi.TnE: Gladstone ;HDn.E-"j. q^. A. Macdonald: Hon. 0. Moww^^ti -^ )^lcal sketch bfe«$|.^BLN S. BlograpnicaisKeicu«.-5g,g ed. Addlress -AD VEBTIS*" ...-* â- ?-"v T k' ^r