{ title: 'Richmond County advance. (West New Brighton, N.Y) 1886-1921, August 28, 1886, Page 4, Image 4', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88079199/1886-08-28/ed-1/seq-4/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88079199/1886-08-28/ed-1/seq-4.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88079199/1886-08-28/ed-1/seq-4/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88079199/1886-08-28/ed-1/seq-4/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Historic Richmond Town (digitized by The New York Public Library)
' Mi-mi^, MM mm tm BUttdlng attbefoot, hoyt. „OMlOi at tho Bkr, Ifewth you Btambia oft, boyt, Novpr bo downeut: ^•Z' twyi- Tau'll auoeRed kt last. A Mtory of Tlihaa: hti iiiiii rnimlm iwi^niiiwiiyii for llMa to CMT^M MHyM vho ihoild t years ago m lad of sixteen y< ietl home to ooefc his fortnno. All worldly poasossions were tied up in bundle which he carried in his hand. Aa ho trudged along he met an old neighbor, tho captain o£ a canal boat, and tho following converwation took place, which ehauKudttie whole cnrrent of the boy's life: , \Well. William, where are you go- \I don*t know,\ he answered. \Fath- er is too poor to keoi» longer, and says 1 must now make a living for raysolf.\ \ i hero is no trouble about that,\ aahl tlie captain. \J3o sure you start right, and you'll get along finely.\ Wiiliam told his friend that tho (fily trade ho know anything about wns soap and can'ile*makiiig, at which he bad helnod his fnlher whllo at home. \Well said the old man, \let me pray witli you and give you a little ad- •ico, and then I will let you go.\ Thor both knoolcd U[>oii the towpath (tlin path along which tho horses that drew tho boat wulked;. The old man prayed for William, «find then this ad- vice was given: \Some one will soon be tho loading Boapmakor in New York. It can bo you aw well as ony one. I hopo it may. i3o n good man; give your heart to Christ; give the Lord alt that liolongB t« Him ot every dollar yoti oiirn; niako an honest soap, give a full f juimd, and I am certain you will g'.H to Je a gront, gootl, and rich man.\ : When tho boy reached tho citjt he found it liard to got work. Lonenbme and far from home, he remembered his mnther'n last words end the last words of tlio canal-boat caiitain. He was tlien and there led tu \seek first tho king- dom of (lod ond His righteousness.\ llo united with the church. He re- membered his promise to tho old cop- tain. Tho Hrst dollar he earned brought up the fiuest on of tho Lord's part. Ho looked in the llible nnd found that th.j .Tows wero commanded to give one- tontli, so ho said, \ff tho Lord will take ono-tonth, I will give tliat.\ And so ho <lid. Ten cents of every dollar WUH (incred to tho Tjord. Altera few years both partners died, anil Wi'Iiam became the tsole owner of thn businesR. Ho now resolved to keep hin promise to the old raptain; ha mnde itn hommt floa}),gavo a full potmd, and instru'-ted IUH book-keeper to open I an amnint with tho Lord, and rarry ono-toiith of all his income to that oc- count. Ue was prospcroiiKj his busi- ness grew; his family wus blessed; his soap sohl, and he grow rich 'fi»ster than ho had ever hopo<l. He thei; de- cided to give tho- Lord two-tenths>md ho prospered more than ever; ilien throo>tenths, thou four-tenthH, then Bve-tenths. He then t?clucatcd his fam- ily, settled all his plunn for life, and told tho Lord he would give Him all his incom<>. Ho prospered more than over. This is the true story of a • who has given millions of dollur?' Lord's cause, and left a namp thtA^'rill never die.— OofUfel in . .MtiiiK Fc'lks\ Krferi'l.l \Oh dear!\ said Hay, Ids blue eyes full ot tears; \he's such a hateful boy, that Tommy liriggs is, mamma. I wish 1 didn't ever get aciiuainted witli him. I wish his father didn't live so near by Uoclu Jack's farm.\ Mamma Trevor looked at her boy's flushed little facn, and smiled; but s'he didn't say a word until she had taken Hay to tho wido kit hen sink, and sponged forehead and dimpled chin, bluo eyes and rosy mouth with clear, oool water. \.Vow what iR it, dear?\ she asked. \It's 'I'ommv Hriggs,\ said Ibiy, put- ting out his lip again. \Oh mamma, he's so mean and liateful \ \Ray itayl that isn't tho right way to talk oven about those whom wo be- lieve are our enemips,\ interrupted mamma gently. \Do von think it is?\ \No'ni Itay answered honestlv, winking pretty fast; \but 1 can't hefp ii, mamma, i know Tommy Jirigga is my enemy, and a good deal worse. Why, mamma, don't you b'iiovo \ jiay stopped and shut his white teeth together with a snaii. IMamma didn't sm'le this tiuio. She spoke very Brte himtolf. bttURM^ alnw ha htdal s >igaoC » brim. Ha looked ffliiO0» and Ilia abujp mym epted tlM dooghniii^bc^ \Oh gimaeonel* cri*d 1M. Bat 1M didn't twliere Bty would do it, aU th* •ame; He looked rosolali, aadtaody to ran ftway in • miauto if Aimt 'Btuh* ihonld look oot at tho door. Aa for Bay, he looked at tho two puffy doiiglmtit>lM^ and then ha look* ad at the mischiavoiu faoa that waa a little dirty too. peeing ovar tha fence. Then he started and ran to tha gate. I'll give yon one,\ aaid he, smiling pleasantly; and then he hand* ed Tommy Briggs the largest one of the two donghnut-boys. \They're real aioe,\ said he. Yon can't think how snprisad Tom- mr Briggs looked. He was so snrpris- ed that iie could'nt say a word— at anr rate he didn't; not eve!^ \Thank yon.' But he took the dough&ut-boy- Ray reached out to him, and scampered away, and Ray thought that was the last ot it. \Anyhow though, I don't blieTe he'd snatch my apple again,\ said he to mamma, \by the way he looked.\ \I don't think he will myself,** said mamma. And she thought to herself, though she -wouldn't have said it to Hay for the world, that if ho would he must be a very hard-hearted Ijttie boy, indeed. But that wasn't tho last of it. No- body had even thought of strawberries being ripe, bnt the nost morning when Uncle J ack opened the kitchen door he found a little box of them, red, ripe, and sweet, on the threshhold. Around the box was pinned a bit of paper rery much soiled, and on this was printed in nne%'en letters: \These is for the little boy wot I took his appuL I'm sorry, an' I won't do it agen. From THOMAS Biuo«8.\ \Now what do you think?\ asked Uncle Jack. And Ray's blue eyes fairly danced as he ate his strawberries with sugar and cream. \N'ow isn't that the best way to make folks good?\ he asked. \Isn't it, mamma?\ \I think it is,\ aaid mamma, kissing both rosy cheeks again. AVhat do you think? A liigh-Toned Railroad. There is a little narow-gauge railroad in Central Illinois, says the Chicago Xeics, which is rather amusing. ' It runs through u rich farming country, and u owned and managed l)y wealthy farmers. The conductors, engineers, and brakumen are farmers' sons who Imve grown weory of raising cattle and corn, tiud who have taken to \railroad- ing\ as a relief. The various stations along the line of this little railroad are of no consequence whatever, except to their score or more of inhabitants, and to the farmers of the neighborhood. A train starts from each end of the road every morning after breakfast, runs to the opposite end of the road by dinner-time, returns again for tea, and tics up for the night. As there is no telegraph lino connected with the road, nobody at any of the stations knows when u train is coming until it arrives in siKht. As the rails are laid on ties placed on the flat prairie, and as no grade exists from one end of the road *o tho other, the tall grass has an awk- '•abit of getting under the wheels and* ^ •>pping the train. Not infre- quently,- also, the light rails spread apart and the rars rqn otT the track, and go tumbling along tW 'virgin prairie. Whenever a littje^iWdeat of this kind occufirtUe erf^eer, conduc- 1 tor, brakemen, and passengers jump to the ground and lift the cars into placa again. The passengers ride in a car reserved for them in the rear of a long line of freight cars. Half of this car is partitioned oflT in order that it may also sorvo for c irrying mail bags, express matter and baggage. Xot infrequently passengers walk into a Tillage ahead of tho tram, and announce that the cars will follow them in an hour or two, providing they can be kept on the track long enough. Sometimes a locomotive gets stalled on seme one of the several gentle hills along the line. Tho train men thereupon quietly wait until the other engine appears. Then the two engines draw tho train up the lult Notwithstanding tho oddities which ex- ist in the management of this little railroad, it hauls large quautities of freight, and is making money for its stockholders. battnr ot Johs Qviw? IdiMS,'* It wm b - May, 1846, iriMB haUk wm memt^ « of tha HoMa» a^ lir. IMano kemcd Seeretaty tha bterior) da&ied that the Bio d^ Norta waa tha aorChan bovsdacy of Taxaa. Hr. Adams lirtanad appio^ingly, and vhen Mr. I>elMM> had eoncltsded, Mr. Doug- las said, Tanreoortc ' -I peroaiTe that UamairfmMi atiTalyr *'Yaa, sir,- xepliad tha Old Mas Eloquent, 1 approve and indorae every word and sjUabla of what the member from Ohio has said.\ » \I am glad to hear it,\ remarked Mr. Bonglas, \for I hate wished to ea- tablish the Uet that the Bio del Norte was the western bonndaxy of the Be- public of Texas. How far I have.snc- ceeded in eaUblishing the position I leave to the House and the country to determine. If thst waa the boun< of the Bepnblic of Texas, it has, of course, become the boundary of the United Stetes by virtue of the act of annexation and admission into tha Union. I will not say that I have de- monstrated the question aa satisfac- torily as tha distinguished gentleman from Massachusetts did in 1819, but I will say thall think I am aafe in adopt- ing the sentiment which he then ex- S ressed, that our titte to the Bio del orte is as clear as to the Island of New Orleans.\ Mr. Adams began to sea that he had been entrapped, and tha top ot his bald head became scarlet, as he replied an- grily : \I never said that our title was good to the Bio del Norte from its mouth to its source.\ \Ah!\ ex<datmed Mr. Douglas, ap- parently rising up six inches or more OS ho exultantly went on to remark: \I know nothing of the gentleman's men- tal reservations. If he means by his denial to place the whole emphasis on the qualification that he did not claim that river as the boundary *jfrom its mouth to its source,' I shall not dispute with him on that point. But if he wishes to be understood as denving that he ever claimed tho Bio del ^orte in general terms as our boundary under the Louisiana treaty, I can furnish him an oilicial document, over his own sig- oature, which he will find very embar- rassing and exceedingly difficult to ex- plain. I allude to his famous dispatch as Secretary of State, in 1819, to Don Onis, the Spanish Minister. I am not certain that 1 can prove his handwrit- ing, for the copy I have in my posses- sion I find printed in the American IfileMatewidi thalEnSad States, ^\CabiMt^O^^ iatat^byadeMa thePrarideBtof mtlamen of the amy and aa^, the Ifayor attd City CooncO, andma^dis- ttngoiahadeiti^andlteangaia. Abont half-paat five (/dock tha fnaaral pro^ eaanoQ, a vary large and impoaiog one, church to tha Congiaa- soberly: \Well dear, go on. What did Tom- mj dor '•You know that big, nice opple Aunt *Husha gave me this morning, don't .you?** i<ay swallowed a big sob. \ 'Twas the very last one she had, 'cause •ha'd kept it wrapped away in tissue pa|>er nil winter to sou how long it Woiild'keop, ^nd there oanie a little tiny spee of rot on it, and she gave it to m«. *Twaii tho very last one. you know; ,^atid itsmelloil just as ni.o,and the rest be ri|>e for a long time. Aud I slarUNl cu -Ro out whore tho men are mowing to snow it to Uncle «Ta«;k, aud J whnn I WAS going a ross tho pastum Tommy Uriggs ran up behind me and ctalibed it. and ate it every mite ui> Teacliing to Xemorize. A prominent man who professes to be a teacher of memory says: \In a few lessons I enable one to memorize the most diflicult thing without an effort\ *'How can that be done?\ asked a re- porter. *'Oh, it's a matter of association, ac- cording to a system 1 have worked upon for twenty-five years. It is based npon the alphabet and numbers. I tMe a person and in a few hou«« can get him to repeat or produce a long poem which I have read to him twice or at the most three times. He can repeat it backward or forward, or give you a^ line yon may call for* by nnm- bar. 1 had a boy onoe onl/ 1*2 years old, who, after learning the system, went to bear Beeeher preach, and after- wards repeated the sermon to an audi- State Papers, published by the order of Congress. In that paper he not only claimed the Rio del Korte as our boundary, but he demonstrated the validity of the claim by a train of facts and arguments which rivet conviction on every impartial mind, and deny refutation.\ The young Vermont carpenter had evidently gotten the best of the veteran Massachusetts diplomat, whose mem- ory had failed him. **Mr. Chairman,\ said Mr. Adams, \I wrote that dispatch when 1 was Secretary of State, and endeavored to make out the best case I could for my country, as it was my duty. But I utterly deny that I claim- ed the Bio del Norte as our boundary, in its full extent. I only claimed it'a short distance up the river, and then diverged to the northwara 'some dis- tance from the stream.\ \Will the gentleman,\ asked Mr. Douglas, in his gentlest tones, ** _ tho point at which his line left the river?\ \I never designated the point,\ growled Mr. Adams. \Was it above Matamoraa?\ asked Mr. Douglas. '*I never specified any point,\ said Mr. Adams, and sat down. He hi^ been led into a trap by the Little Giant of the West, and there he had been quoted as authority for the act ot the administration. I'rom that day forth Mr. Adams never had anything to say to Mr. Douglas when he could possibly avoid it. Jenny Lind carried the hearts of the people of Washington and the strang- ers within their gates by storm, and she had a crowded house at her first con- cert. Her wonderful flexibility of voice and perfect exactness of execu- tion captivated and enchanted her list- eners. In the flute trio from Meyer- beer's \Camp of Silesia,\ she rivaled the two flute playors, and so flexible and sweet were the tones of her voice that it was at times difficult to distin> guish between it and the instruments. Her 'n[>ird song\ was a merry gush of melody, and her \Echo Song\ eUcited wild applaui,e, and when ahe sang \Sweet Home\ the audience was elec- trified. The President, Henry Clay, and Daniel Webater were present, and the \Great Expounder,\ who had evi- dently been dwing out, made himaelf conspicuous hj his applause. When Miss Lind sang \Hail Columbia,\ he roae and joined in the chorus, to the great amusement of all present. Gideon Granger, of Connecticut,who was Postmaster General (without a aeat in the Cabinet) under Praaidents Jeffer- aon and Madison, is reported to have answered a question about the abilitiea of liis temily by saying: \I have three akmia Ce«atery, whare the corpae re- mained nnta it wm removed to ite final reating-plaoe at Montpelto, Ya. An- other aatimiAIa lady who died at OoOTgetown in the same summer was Mra. Margaret Wilson, whoae firat hns- baad was Theobold Wolfe Tone, weU known in Irish history as the friend and companion of the martyred Emmett Mrs. Tone resided in France at the time ot her husband's death. The eati- mntion in irhich she was held, and her own moral and literary worth, had gained her many powerful friends. The most eloquent encomium ever pro- nounced on woman was that wnich Lucien Bonapute bestowed upon her, in recommending her case and that of her children to the attention of the French Chambers, the effect of which was manifested by the unanimous grant of an annaal pension, ttbe preserved, in her eigh^-first year, the energy of intellect that made her the companion' of her husband, and the warmth of heart that even her cruel sorrows could not ohilL Her funeral was attended genemlly by the natives and friends of Ireland, the country for which Wolfe Tone died, and which possessed her heart to the last. Samethlag of Cenfnelaii. Hia discrimina^on of character is amply illustrated in the many wise and witty sayings which he has bequeathed to us on the subject, a few of which we have grouped together, as combining his ideal of how man should behave in different positions of life. Thus he tells us how \a poor man who does not flat> ter, and a rich man who is not proud, are passable characters; bnt they are not equal to the poor who vet are cheerful, and the rich who yet love the rules of propriety.\ \A good man in his conduct of himself is humble, in serving his superiors he is respectful, in nourishing the people he is kind, in orderfaig the people he is just\ Again^ a man \is to think of virtue, not com- fort; of the sanctions of law, not of gratification.\ And \what tho superior man seeks is in himself; what the small man thinka is in others.\ He was firmly convinced of its beiog more or less in the power of every man to ac- quire knowledge and thereby wisdom. Hence, as Dr. Legge tells ns in his Cfrntnt^ina\ /1Utt7 ttn t *<l.:a A comox ly-»ord—ni XUDS in niting —thaw b^joaa t venty -five. Tbe barber can be relied 09 for datm in tha making np of \croo\ raporta.— i'onkers GtutUe. TBEBE are few disappointments in life equal to that experienced by a man who expects that he is and auddenly discovera to sneeze can't. K XEP goin^ straight ahead,* says a writer. This is all ytcrj wall. Imt when there is a bnlldog in the path we would rathar go round him.—Boston Courier. THE KIXD OF • MAX TO HAVE. Ahn«b«iid? Xo vonian e'er had & bettor. And IiBppinet* gildi hIa life; He never forgeU to mail a letter Tbkt'i ^Tes him by hii wife. —.Boston Courier. Xo0Na BABSTEn is just learning Oreek and has nearly mastered the alphabet. He said it was no wonder Homer was blind if he had to read hia awn poetry in such outlandish type.— Lynn Cnion. SAID a young lady to a female friend *Why do vo© use two kinds of pape: in writing yonr lovo letters ?\ When; write to Jim 1 use red paper, because that means love, and when I write to Tom I use blue paper, for that meana faithfulness. ** AT Lake Xyaasa, Africa, a man can be bought for forty yards of white cot- ton cloth. This is certainly very rea- sonable : in this country it sometimes takes several thousand dollars and a lot of telephone stock to buy a man, and then be may go back on you just before Congress adjourns.— Estelline Bell. 8An> the henpecked husband, as he scratched his bald head, am not s believer in ^formonism, not by a long chalk.\ \Why not?\ asked the Mormon sympathizer with whom he was conversing. ^'Because,\ replied the henpecked man, \I don't believe in a man having two wives. *So man can serve two masters.'\ HER LITTLE HAND. Her little hand, so soft aod white. Uke an impriaoDed bird to night 1 held within my own. The beaoteona maid I long had woo«d. And for that little hand had sued TiU hope bad almost flown, .^t last in mine it trombltag lay, I felt its flutteriac imlseiplay .K. aoundlesa melodv: 1 the power of every man to ac- knowledg* as Dr. \Life of Confucius\ \(1867 p. CO >, \his house became a resort for young and inquiring spirits who wished to learQ the doctrines of antiquity. However small the fee his pupils wero able to afford, he never refus^ his instructions. All that he required was an ardent desire for improvement and some degree of capacity.\ Thus, to quote his own words. \I do not open up truths to ono who is not eager to get ^owledge, nor keep out one who is anxious to ex- plain himself.\ By stimulating youth to study, he endeavored to create an instructed public opinion which should display an admiration for truth and goodness. That the same love of trath pervaded all hia sentiments is exemi>U- tied by a remark he one day made: *ShaU I teach you what knowledge is ?\ said he. \When you know a thing, to hold that you know it, and when you do not know a thing, to allow that you do not know it; this is knowledge.\ His definition of hypocrites rem'nds ns of their comparison to whited scpul- chers in the New Testament namely— **There may be fair words and a hum- ble count^ance when there is little virtue.\ But lastly, it has often been urged that Confuuus. in spite of his wisdom and the loftiness of bis teach- ing, had nothing to say about Ci od or a fature life. He preferred, liowever to speak of heaven as in the following in- atance: \He who offends against heaven has none to whom he can pray,\ and \Alas!\ said he, \thero is no one that knows me.\ But his friend replied, \What do you mean by thus saying .that no one knows you?\ He an-> swered, **! do not murmur against heav- -en. I do not grumble against men. But there is heaven that knows me.\ Indeed it has been truly said that he was unreligious rather than irreligious. And if he had not a knowledge of a divine ruler it was his misforttme, aud arose from no desire to disparage re- ligious belief of any kind. In short, aa Mr. Clodd remarks, his omitting to speak about God **was not because he was an unbeliever—for he, of all men, had reverence for the sacred, unknown power that underlies all things—but because his nature was so beautifully simple and sincere that be would not pretend to knowledge of that which he felt was beyond human reach an^ 'it.\ But nevertheless, one caO' it r^(ret that hia teaching was not more distinctive in this respect, especially as it was destined to be such a mighty power in molding the Chinese character for nntold generations.— Ouixmr. The trembline captive I caressed. The velvet fln^era wiftlr pressed. While her fair face I scanned; Then, as her color rooe and fell. What joy was mino to bear her tell I'd won the Uttle hand t Oh! Uttle hand. M> soft and white. Whose tonch can thrill me with dsligbt. Oh I will it ever be That that fair hand, with natin skin. Armed with a broom or rolling-rin. Will terrors have for me? A PUILADELPUIA iuveutor predicts that the time is soon coming when the type-setting machine will be perfected and ill use in all printing offices. The Philadelphia man is not far from ri^ht. Prof. Clamp, of £stelline, some time ago became interested in the matter and has labored on it to some purpose. He had but little difficulty in constmct- ing a machine that would set type per- fectly from the most complicated manu- script, sud soon found that by the ad- dition of a couple of cams and a thingumbob it could be used to write editorials. He had some trouble in getting it ao that it would collect the bills and put its feet on the desk, but has finally succeeded. He does not hopo to get it so it will pay the l>ills. After office hours, by touching a spring it will turn out affidavits about the circulation till stopped. One of the most interesting sights in connection with Prof. Clamp's invention is, when two of them are working together, to see ono of them stop and attempt to borrow a chew of tobacco of the other, and being unsuccessful turn around and strike the editor for some. Few editors can look on this without shed- ding tears. The Professor expects to realize a fortune from his invention, and is confident that sales will boom right up to the h'ghest notch as aoon as it is understood that each machine is required to sira the temperance pledge before it leavea the shop.'— Estelline BelL U.Toa are aasUs to taks sack essrete on hstsabaek sr sa* tettkat tteaU famish no foratattinsyaaxaelf ia.d«afB. kat yoa For flTS hvndred ysazs I tried Is curs Coasomptioa hj nstac tho, sad have faUed. Where there i» of the •ecretleaa. wtth •Bcorseme&t of air*ceUa. there Is always pratose sspcctoratioa. Xow Piso*a Core re- moves the encorsemeat an4 tbs deransement of ths secretions, and conseqncntljr (and in this way only) diminishes the amount of tcrexpectormted. This medicine does not dry «p e eoosh, but removes the caoM of It. When It la impontble from debiUtr or other causes to exercise freely in tbs opaa air. apart- inta occnpied by the patient ahonid be so ventilated as to ensnre the constant acceasion of fresh air la abundance. Th« aurface ot the body should be sponsed as often M everr third day with tepid water and a littla soft-soap. (This ia preferable to any othsr.)^ Alter ttoroushly drying, use friction with the hand moistened with oil. Cod-Uver or OUve Is the l>e9t. This keeps the pores of the akin In a soft, pliable condition, which contribute? materiaUy tu the unloadins of waste matter from the system through organ. You wiU please recoUvci we cure llus disease by cnablinc the organs of the system to perform their tunctlons in a nfrmalway. or. In other woids. wa remove obstnxctlon-, while the, reeuperaUve power* of the system cure the disease. \We wm here say a word in racard to a coa^ m the formiac stase. where there is no con. •titQtional or noticeable disease. A couch evilj take may or may not foreshadow serloos evil it in itsmiideacform. to say thi * BUisance. and should M abated. A couffh is unlike any other sj—, •aae. It stands a conspirator, wiih threaten- ing voice, menacing tho health and existence of a vital ornn. Its first approach ia in whls- Mrs nnlntellicible. and at hrst too often un- herded. bnt in time it never fails to mau e itself Qouerstood—never fails to claim the attention of those on whom it calls. If yoa have a coush without disease of the RM\^ BOWEL GOVUnmi DTSEHTKXT. Oiarrhoa, Cholera Mwfto. Jt wflL IM a few mlames. wb« i •ccordln® to directions, cate Oraom StatnaetaT Heartburn. Slek Ueadw Cu«Pl.Al>T. Diarrhoea. DximterT. < the Bo weU, and aU Internal nalns. / THE TRUE RELIEF. 11ADWA^**S BT REUET 1» the oalT remgWg asfvt in -vncne Hut wUJ tastanUy \top rata. . *f Jgr •tantly relie'r«* and toon enre* HeadafAe^www™ Eickcr c<T»<nm. Toothache. Neuralgia. ><i»oqgfg sn<l Hheumatl'tfii. l^ha^ ^Sg snd IVeskiit-M in the lUrk. Sptse <* Ki^eys. ineae B >«H (itAt(> itA coaUnavd u»e toe • lew oaya effect a p *rm?nt cure. MALARM III ITS VUlOIS FIMS. FEVER AND ACUE. Thrrv U not. azent lathe worldthat^ cure Ferrr and Atme snd ail oU»« Mr'— lou«. srail^t andota^ry^-Ter.tsUdel l>y- VIIAJS) »o «ialClt a* BA1)WAYT> BtAD- Price Fifty Oatn. by OR. RAOWAVa •The Only Ceualael SARSAPABIUill BESQLVERl The Great Blood Pnzifler. For corf of all chronic disease*. Scrofula, Wort Talnt«.2>rphllttlcConiptatnt*. CunramxKlo&. Glaao- wlarUK.Me. Ulc*r«. C^broaJc Uneaatatlwiu ErJ^ eU^.. Kl :ti«-y. i:Uodrr ssd LlTcr CompUlat*. ly- p p^ >. Aff«>ctluR>or U)(>l.Bnc« and Thruat. purtaea tbr isjou'l. rcvtunn; bcaitli and ri^uc better, a^ a few do es of Piso's Cure wiil be all you may need, while if you re far advanced in Conbumptlon. several bottles may be required to effcct n permanent care. If you are suffering from Chronic Couch, Bronchilis. Asthma, or Loss of Voice, l)r. Kilmer^s Indian Consh Cure (Conjmm/4iort Oil) will relieve quickly—remove the caufo and cure. -Price 50. and l.ca OJVC pair of boots can l>e saved ye.irly by osiae Lyon's Patent Metallic Heel Siigenera Relief is immediate, and a cure sure. Piso's Remedy for Catarrh. 50c. During Dog Days The sultry or \mncsy** weather Is ^rty depresdTe. maklBC It almost iapotstble to rrstot that Insldioos teeUngot Isislttule aad Uncuor. But with th«aki of Hood's Sarmapartlla the extreme tired f ««Uttc wilt ba overcoee. yoo may have m v>od appcate. aud wOl be expelled from tha btood. It at«o olds dlceetloa aed toaes aad reculate* the atotaach aad ocher oreaas. thos pfwcatinc samm«r com- plaints. OiT* It a trtaL *'IwMS«arraIl7 down, had no appetite, aad seeded a coodtoale. InereruMd anythiacthatdld •MSomuchcoodasHood'iSanapariUa. laowhare • (ood appetite aad feel feaewed all orer; am bat- terthaa I have been for yesra\—E. K. Rajtp, «1 •tfe Street. Oeweco. K. T. *•! have seen tberalne of Hood's SareaparQla In •MintbeXassachosetuaate Prison, and hare alto used Itlamy family with perfect satUfactloa. We bellerelttobecTerythlnsthAtU claimed for If.**— A. W. Knees, deputy wardea. Slate Prison. Charles- towa.auas. Hood'a aarsaparilla flauiirtfldragglit.. •I:.Ufor«S. Pniuradonlr C. L HOOD & CO^ ApotlifcarlM, T^weU. aiui. lOO Dow One Dollar ELY'S GBEIM IS WORTH S1000 TO MT •AN, Woaaa •rCkild SUFFUUSO rSOM CATARRE A. K. KEWMA>% Grmllng, Mich. A parUcIe U applied Into ea?h tjostrll and is Sucu.bymaUoratdrne^ts. Send forclrcular. ELY PROTHmt3. Urasg»*f. O^-rsn. >. V. _ SCO* that Cold. Cou«h,| ' and TicUinir in tbo Throat. Arreas thatOitarrfa.ir-- ' chitistor Afthma. 1 Remedy relieves quickly. a germanentiy. It Oatmeal of better quality is said now to come from the West than from Ireland Scotland. THE After a f«»w usvi.' u— of tb* SsrnaparUlian. beeotnea ciraranrt »*autifii!. 11 mpJIMoti'h*^BlackSpoiS aad frUa £rupti><Q4 are ivmored; iiores and Uieexa soon cured. r«r»-n» jiuilcrins from bcmtula. Ern^ tiv^ or the rrvr-, roouth. ears, len taroeB and clandv that have anramolated and apceaik either fmrn unrur.-«l dlsea.-^ or mereary. may utKio a <nire If tl»e sanMi>aiiUlxn is eoatlBiied a kuttlclent tiiue to laake its luipressloa on the systeak !>iold by l)rnrsi«t>. ai per Ballla. DR. R ADWAV'S PILLa The Great Liver an4 Stomash Remttfr For the cure of AH du\firdeT« of the Stomach. UTBT. Bowel*. KldtJem. Blaa'W.ServousDiJMta»om IdJmjf Api^-tit-, HeAJarhe, Custirenf^a. Indisertipn. Bfl- li>H<n«^. Fvver. laflammatioo of the Bowels. TOm aadalldetaiMjem'-tiWoftheliiteraalVwceta. Par»- I T vet: -talile. coatauiiec no merctuy. mtnemls or deleteri- drtm. Prire ceata per box. Said by aU dracsM. IWSend a Jetf^rtamp to lilt. KADWA-T* . ^Varren ^irrri. >cw\«rk, for ne ssritE TO <;ET it.AWtVAir^ y T X C-33 cts.BirYS A Book teilincyea ho»to DSTSCT SSa CURK OlSiLasi: la this vataaWs a^ 1 run the risk of losiaa year Mmmm tm. Ita not run the risk of losia* year I waot of koowledre to care hlsi. whca^Ve far a 1're^tiso. Bay one and laf«na Rraed'es for all Horse Uiseassa. Pis— how to TeJl the Age of Hnr—' \ \ T . HOW. »»« _ ASK FOK THE W. L. DOUCLM Be« material, perfect lit. equals aaySS orSlwwfc erery pair wsrrMted. Take aone aato* - W, U l>oosl»s' tS-00 Shoe. * arraated.** ~ i ani Lace. Boys ask for (he W. I. I>oaslaa> , •:s.00 .«»l»oe. t»«iae stjirs n » Uie|a{Vsh«>e. If yoa caaaol - Mt IhcM shoe* from deal- er«.sead P^\'* After thm most axhatxstivs pvactlcal testa in kesxritals aad elsewhera, the cold medal and cartiOcate of hlshest merit were awarded to St. Jaooh* Oil, as the be«t pain-curine remedy, at the Calcutta IntemaUonal Eshibitioo. SW^W^iJHL\^* Sootb^ porta ^to«0{,000 hig watermelons ptr trip. . btace to New York Is five cents a ^or^^wmteroeloQ freishS^^d'Mnri^ fl prof. Gfothe. Braoklya Boar^f Health, saya Rad Star Coach Cura Is free fromoplatea. and hi^y cacacioos. Twenty-fiva eanta. IT dead, w hen placed In wat«r come* to U s'hoWn«aUthetlat»of the rainbow. S2.t» S* I darea-J y um-le. a» It to foor outof fl*e T^- ut slcht. Send for S. or fcxr. for . samples («.-ll for^. rsc^it Low prtre. l.y the lOOaodLOWL A Tonr-Khuhwipiloa toooeof fit* paprr»rt»ea W flr«t if.order fnim each county sad to first OMsr meation.a« thU paper. n.lgn^^ ai3 yiala i*<reet. F«rt W^rth.T»«aa. JONES IbSO\ ASEMTS WAKTED Ibr PkATFORM ECHOES •a CaaHaalaa •Mstiaad ky Ktsa'tlmiiicaBSSilrlniLl .r Mnt lir nUt <m T ASOA >T WM. BRKRMRRME. IT- mm /