THE FELON'S GRAVE, BY BUGENE DAVIS, Bis is no finely soulptured tomb As gorgeous as a throno; Ho sleeps within the prison gloom Beneath a namsless stone ; Ko dow-d ops from the starry skies Waoap the departed brave, Whera, in the ohill cold ground it lies, ‘The Irish felon's grave, Ro epitaph is penned aliove The lay where he doth dwell. No tender words of hope or love No lingering farewell, But yet as ‘ong as time shall roll-— In characters of flame Upon a nation's grateful soul Is writ the felon’s name, fle diad not on the open field, In championing his land; To God his spirit he did yield With gyves upon each hand; He gave tosave a struggling race His manhood {a its prime, And with a smile upon his face The Irish felon died, More dear to ua than Mecca's shrine To pilgrims of the east, More sacra | than the dome divine Where Izis hath her priest, As dear 2s is a Doly grot Where cedar { rests wave, Is that thrice bless'd and glori ous spot—- ha Irish felon's grave, r. HER PROMISE. Old Abper Marsden moved uneasily in his big arm chair, ‘Seems to me Luce is a mighty long time getting that water.” he muttered, as he rose and hob- tiled to the end of the cottage porch. He put aside the vines that screened the view and looked down toward the lower end of the garden, where a cool spring gurgled up from the earth. “Well, if she ain't talkin’ agin with that psuper, Ang Howland,” growled the old man, “Luce! Luce, I want you!" he ~alled. “1’il Ye there in a minute, father,’ called back a comely girl of eighteen, sho stood near the spring chatting with a plainly dressed youth of about the same She reached for the pail of water, which Angus Howland still held in bis hand, and said with a smile: “1 must go, Ang, Father wants me.” “It seems to me, Luce” as he gave her the pail, ‘‘that your father always wants you when he sces me around. He hates me for some rea- gon, but if it's all right with you, I can stand it." Lucia looked troubled “Good-by, Ang,” aod the house. Old Marsden was an extremely illiter- ate man, but in business ventures he had always been successful, and now, though a confirmed invalid, his head was full of schewnes and devices, and he used to sit for hours at a time planning meas- ures by which his hoard 6f wealth might be increased, Lucia took after her mother, who Lad been ‘‘a powerful good woman,” so people said. “Luce,” said the old man as she ap- peared at the door, ‘‘l want this to be the last of your talking with that good for nothing lout, Ang Howland. The idea of friendly with such trash! it, and if he him something to remember me by, say, age, ns she said, turned toward I won't have don't steer clear I'll give * ously. “I do not sce why you should dislike him »0,” said Lucia. “He has had a hard time getting along, but that isa't his fault.” “His father was cut poorhouse,” yelled the old man, ‘‘and why didn’t he die there?” “Because,” Lucie answered, worked hard and took folks.” Her father scowled. was intended for the poorhouse, and no good comes of fightin’ Providence. He died without a cent, and will the young feller. Dut that ain’t the point; there arc plenty of fellers ‘round here that has money, but there ain't many such gals as you be, I reckon. Why, Luce, you have the choice of the town, and it's vour solemn duty not to be rash.” The miserly features of the old man relaxed somewhat as he admired his daughter's comely face. a kind of fatherly affection for her, and was even willing to spend money freely that she might make a good appearance. When Lie saw her dressed in some new article of apparel he would mutter to care of the old 80 back; I know a good investment, for I have made a good many--yes, a good many.” A few evehings after the event above mentioned, Lucia was walking in the arden when she heard some one tap ightly at the gate, and in the moonlight saw Angus Howland, **He wants to see me,” she thought, as she hurried thsough the lilacs to the garden path. ‘Father will miss me if [ am gone long.” said Lueln, on approaching, ‘but we can visit for a minute,” “Luce,” said Angus, “I have come to say good-bye. Your father says for me to keep away from you because [ am poor, and be doesn’t want you to marry a pauper, Well, I am going away for five years, and when 1 come back I'll be rich—rich enough to suit your father,” he exclaimed excitedly, striking the fenee a heavy blow with his fist, “1 don’t care about you being so rich,” said Lucia, ‘I'll like you just as well if ou are poor; but don't stay away so ong,” and she looked beseechingly into bis face. *'You may have bad luck, you know, and not earn v much money after all, but I'll think just as much of ou, Are you going far?” she asked, Doing down at the ud, “Fo California,” ssid Angus, “and I know just what I shall do when I get there, too. Father often told me of a valley in California where all sorts of frait will grow almost without cultiva- tion. Father wandered down there whe: he was out among the mines, and being used to a fruit country he knew ust what a wonderfol place it was, e’d hav» there I if vis sick. and carefully opening it, pointed out by the bright moonlight, which broke through the trees, the Eldorado of his hopes and ambition, “That valley is mine,” said he, ‘“‘and I am going there and plant trees.” “Luce!” called old Marsden from the house, “where are you” “Here I am, father,” Lucia replied. “Well, it seoms to me that you are s fong time gove,” cried the old man ‘but come to the house, for young Hin- ton is here and wants to see you." Lucia saw the troubled look that came into Howland’s face and hastily mur- mured : Father wants me to marry him, but [ won't; I'll marry you. Be sureand write often snd don’t stay so long,” she pleaded as she raised her face for a fare- well kiss, The next morning old Marsden said to his daughter with an inquisitive look, “Young Hinton dido’t stay long last night, did he?” “No,” answered Lucia; long." “Did he ask you to have him ? ¥ added the old man, “not very “but I told him I couldn't.” “Told him ve conldn’t |" screamed the od man. “Why couldn't yet?" daughter, looking her father steadily in the eye. “Jove him, Luce | don't marry for love. make a good thing. worst end of it it's like any other bad bargain; but young Hinton has money and, Luce, you'd better change your mind and send him word that you like him well enough, I'll give you a good start, and you'll find out that you have a pretty good old dad after all.” Lucia kissed ber father, but replied: “Not him. I can never marry him." The years crept slow their. usual Bios of bright and cloudy days. Lucia had grown taller and more beautiful. Her father was still as grasp- ing as ever. *‘I agree with you, Luce, he used to say, ‘‘there's no special I tell ye. people They marry to quick sometimes, it seems to me.” One day he hobbled into the rvom where Lucia sat at work and said in a severe, low tone: ‘‘I hear that you get letters from that Ang Howland, Is it true i" * { have received letters from him," well, 1 understand.” “J don't care how he is doing. That feller'll die poor,” growled the old man, fle went outside and sat down {the garden bench. “I'll see Cicely,’ on 3 Cicely was the girl who sorted and dealt out the mail at the village postoffice. Not long after this Lucia ceased receiv- ing letters with a California post-mark, Time passed, and it was now nearly iten years since Lucia and Angus had stood at the garden gate and said good- bye. Old Marsden had fallen into a state of despondency so utterly abject that Lucia was sometimes on the point of yielding to his wishes, but happened or he'd never have broken his word," One day her fa He was unable now, but lay pt day with his ey “Luc short work of it, I made I staked al the sirst time, Luce, et about the house dd, n very unhappy aid he,” “I'll make he last inveatment land I lost. It was he has outdone them sil, In a month I hoped this sick ness might hurry me off, but | see it's go to the poor-house, Luce, unless,” and less vou save your old dad.” “I't work for you!” cried Lucia. * You shall never go to the poor-house,” And she was more tender in the care of her father after that, f | One day as she stood near her favorite bed of flowers sadly thinking how soon she would have to leave them, a voice broke the silence of her meditations: | very pretty and [ had to stop to admire them," and looking up Lucia saw a tall, i } i ' i f garden gate. ‘I raise a great many flowers myself,” said the gentle nan, “and [ always take an interest in them, but I live in a flower country where thes grow much more luxuriantly than here.” Lucia gave a startled look-—but no; how foolish: it couldn't be he. Angus such a handsome man, “Il declare, Luce, you me,” said the gentleman with a smile. “Oh, Ang! 1 know you now, for you been away a long time,” “‘You stopped writing, and I read in a California paper that you were married,” said Angus; ‘‘but recently learned that it was a false report, and am here once more to ask you to be mine.” “Father, this gentleman wishes to see you,” said Lucia, as she ushered How- land into her father's room. The old man opened his eves and murmured, ‘Well, have a chair.” “I understand that you have suffered 2 misfortune,’ said the gentleman kindly. The old man groaned. “I'll have to die in the poor-house; there's no help for it.” “It may not be so bad as that,” said the gentleman, The old man turned on bim fiercely, “What do you want with me, I'd like to know? Ain't it bad enough to be ruined, but a lot of vultures have got to come aud hover around me before I'm dead ‘I have been investigating the matter,” said the gentleman, ‘and I am sure that it is not so bad as you think, and here is evidence that you will not be turned out of your home at any mite,” and he opened before the old man's eyes the eanceled mortgage. “This place is yours,” said the gentleman, “and all your other pro. perty is safe, for I have been making fu- vestigations,” “Who are you,” cried old Marsden, “that comes at this time and saves me from the poor housel” “It 1» not so bad ns that,” said the gon- tiemun, smiling, ‘but my name is Angus Howland.” "The remaining few months of the oM autumn man's life worked a great change in his . Ome day when the sutu am going. You are an good boy, Ang, and will make her happy,” and his eyes closed forever, —[Chicago News. A ———— a A SUNDAY ON A MAN.O-WAR. Inspection and General Muster the Bare of a Sallor’s Existence, To the average American bluejacket the function known as Sunday inspection and general muster is a specimen of elaborate nonsense that overtops all others. On board a Colintonal man of-war it takes place fifty-two times a year, nnd takes precedence over every. thing else short of shipwreck, fire, or some other disaster. The preparations that are made for it would re an ob- server who is not familiar with the ways of war vessels to think that it was d sort of state affair that happened once in a hundred years. They are begun Friday | night, when grease spots and stains on { the deck are coated with lime to render { them more susceptible to the influence { of the holystone. | Saturday morning all hands are ealled | at early daylight and set to scrubbing and holystoning the decks. When the decks are white and clean, other wood- | work, together with ladders, ramrods { handspikes, ete., Is attacked and scrub- bed into an immaculate whiteness, Af. { ter breakfast attention is given to the { brasswork of the deck and battery, and { both are polished nutil they are as bright us cleaning gear can make them, The day is generally occupied in touch- [ing up spots with fresh paint where the { old has heen worn off, and coating ca- | bles, bitts, and ringbolts with coal tar, | With the exception of the holystoning | the decks, the same performance is gone through with Sunday morning. After | breukfast the crew array themselves in | their best suits of mustering clothes, the marines put an extra coat of pipe clay on their helmets a d belts, and everybody { hides everything that belongs to him | somewhere out of sight. Woe betide | the luckless person who leaves any part of his property lying around. It is | promptly confiscated by the sailor's nat- ural enemy, the master at arms, and the owner is reported for the offence. Finally the bugle sounds the call for inspect on, and the crew muster in the parts of the ship where they belong. The | commanding officer emerges from his | cabin and, accompanied by his first lieutenant and the officers of the deck, starts on a tour of inspection, which generally lasts about an hour, “'Quar. ters” and “‘general muster” follow. The “Articles of War,” which every one among the crew generally knows by rote, are read by the executive officer. The reading takes half an hour or so, and { when it is concluded such general orders as may have been issued by the Navy i Department since the last muster are read. The Paymaster next takes the crew in hand and talls the name of every person attached to the ship, who asswers with his name and rank. The entire forenoon is occupied with these various matters, and the result is that Sunday to the man-o'-warsman is a day of pen- ance instead of a day or rest, The Fish Industry. the import int industries of towns on the coast, but it is a question if any one has ia definite idea of what a bountiful { mother the ses is to us. The Dominion of Canada is particularly voted for its great fisheries, and the value of the fish drawn from the waters on its coast in one sear is about $12,000.00), This does not include fish taken from the waters of British Columbia, Manitoba or the North. west, If these be added nearly $20,000, - {000 will be the total. Another 820. 000,000 will represent the trade done in | this country. fa these figures the vields | from all branches of fisheries are given. Splitting it up into items the largest we have is the cod, the yearly yield being about $6.000.000. Nova Scotia alone se. worth of mackerel, The cod is as far ahead of mackerel as that fish is ahead of all the others, The cod is an inhabitant of the tem. perats zone. He is found in great abund ance off the Cape of Good Hope, where he nibbles freely at the baited hook dropped from the sides of ships by sail ors becalmed om their way home from {the East Indica. He also exists io | Australinn waters, but his chief homes i are the Banks of Cape Breton shore and | some portions of the Bay of Fundy. He is not particular about the bottom. His chief care is to allay the eravings accommodate itself to anything that turns { up without much discrimination. He lies close to the bottom usually, awaiting his prey, his dark back and sides scarce. ly discernible from the surrounding rocks, and darts like a flash upon any of the smaller fry that are so unfortunate ns to come within his reach. If herring nad { similar fish be scarce he searches amon | the stones for crabs, clams or other shell. fish.-—[New York Advertiser, a NSA AAA French Frugality, sb — The French people are noted for their frugality and their systematic saving of money. It was from the remarkable accumulations of the mass of the citizens chiefly that the Freach Government de. | rived the means to pay off the enormous German war indemnity and that the great sums squandered on the Panama Canal were taken, Although the savings of the Frouch are very great, they do not compare in proportion to the population with those of Massachusetts, Boras he enjoyed a condition of and pros. perity since the year 1871, vet the sums deposited in the savings banks, municipal and national in 1891, amounted to onl! $720,000,000. In Massachusetts, in 18 the smount deposited in savings banks was $5628 541,076, while there was §14,. 020,275 additional held by co.operative banks. The population of France is be tween 80,000,000 and 85,000,000, while that of Massachusetts is only about 2,360,000. These figures present a very striking contrast as to the prosperity of the two countries, | Boston Journal, Henn HanNonr of Gotha has satisfied himself that there is a distinct connec tion betweon’ the number of iceberg: the Gulf Stream 4 FOR THE CHILDREN. TOE LITTLE GIRL THAT CRIED, Once the Little Girl that Cried, Looking through her tears, espicd Lovely motes of colored light In the fringes of her eye— Just as when the weather clears, And the clouds are put to flight, There's a rainbow ia the sky. And the Little Girl that Cried, When sho saw this lovely sight, This fine rainbow in her tears, - Would forget the reason why She had thought it best to cry, == Edith M. Thomas, in 8t, Nicholas, LORD MACAULEY AS A LITTLE BOY, Lord Macauley, whose history of England you will some day read, if you have not already read portions of it, and whose essays are interesting to every- body, was un very bright child, When he was still vory young he showed that he had as fine un collection of words in his vocabulary as many a grown man. One day when little full name was Thomas Babbington Mag lessons, his father took him to un after. noon reception. Tom was five years old, but he was delighted to forward with joy which he would have to eat, had he entered the door, gr mth Lowever, than plate full of hot vroup upon the poor little fellow’s logs. Smarting with pain though he was, the little hero would not mar the pleasure of the occasion by crying. His kind-hearted him sore candies and sweet cakes, and took on her lap. “Are you better, few minutes later, “I thank you, m i abated,” re plic d the with a bow, And that was the auley talked when he was still in knic bockers, —[ St. Louis Star Sayings, hostess gave him oe ol Tom, she ad ita, little the great Mac ker. wn BOME The tales that are told by sportsmen after they have returned from { suit of game are often almost to wondes it is difficult when WONDERFUL HUNTING STORIES, the pur { ful to be true, and yet : listening to the 20 wl {ello { them to believe tha ws who i“ | on the hunters part to deceive One of the most marvellous storie the hunting-field of ( { Paris, and } { resident of & small France, who had spent 8 | part of the : late come 5 a follows: town in day in a had wn 134 TOSGIE, OR | for game, and gun many | sight, | pigeon well times ; his way home, of a whit on a very steep hillside, The hun gun was charged with powder, | was entirely ou In this « | gency, and resol thet ] would have the pig { the ground, took out his { and with it pulled seve ! the soles of hi on up in an oak -tiee bat firmly po Ket fai Dave oul Wi With these pigeon i fired, s shoes. bie T iler bs pe es ! loaded his gut. | place. The hur pigeon was pailed to a bran { oak tree with the shoe nailes was almost ia despair, | fastened apparently besond his reach { But he « tre i ! difficult CUiLy and the h of ime 3 th g# the game ed u imbed the to the { hung, and had just t {| when he lost his foot the air, {| As chance would have it { landed in the midst : began to roll rz | slippery hill { he seized a hare 3 {| Then rolling forward, j & covey of partridge { him with th } join © Ken th y 2 fail 3 ir anda jell LU the hunter He steep and ’ of a hare's nest, own the t befor by the hind lege, , and striking about the hare, he succeeded in kill i ing nine of these admirable He then picked himsell up, and took i himself bare, and his partridges, well satisfied { with the results of his day's sport. { This is almost as wonderful, really, as | that old, old story of Barons Munthausen, t who, when hunting for deer upon one occasion, encountered a magnificent i animal, but, like the Frenchman above, ! found bimself without shot, i gathering together a handful of cherry stones, he loaded his gun with them, and { fired at the deer, hitting him squarely between the eyee, not killing him, how { ever. The deer managed to escape, but some time later the Baron encountered him again, and was surprised to see a beautiful cherry tree growing out of the birds and fruit. It is suspected that the Baron other is claimed to be so, although we may all have our private opinion on the | subject, —{ Harper's Young People, SHUFFLE, THE BABY ALLIGATOR. A queer name for a baby! But this baby was an infant alligator. One of the “Pike nose family” and a native of Florida. Mamma alligators build their nests among tall reeds by the banks of rivers or shallow ponds. The nests look like small tepts about four feet high. First, mamma alligator makes a circle on the ground about as large round as a wagon. wheel. A mud floor is smosthed over this circle. As soon as it is hard she packs on it as many eggs as she can crowd to- gether. They are larger than a hen's egg, ant have very hard shells. Then comes asccond mud floor, a little smaller that the first, and more eggs. And soon, until the peak of her house is reached, and there is no more room. Sometimes a hundred eggs are in one house. Mamma alligator k careful watch over them. She fights if enemies come near. Baby alligators follow the mother in water just as ducks swim out after their mothers. When alligators lie on the shore in the sunshine they whine and yelp like little dogs. At first they are not very strong. If large birds peck at them, or ugly turtles poke them, they cry out for the mother. One day a manma alligator went off fishing, and a black boy caught one of her It was about six # for Lis home, There he was happy, and every ono petted him, One day Shuffle was missing, Oh, what hunting there was! All the bhonrders looked through closets, and under beds and sofas, Nothing wes heard of Shaflle all night. Little Daisy Fenn, waking carly, peeped through the bars of her crib, “Oh mamma, ~—see, the paper is mov- ing!” she cried. ** In the fireplace,” added Jack. ‘‘See, peel" “Ha, ha, I see his nose,” said mamma, now wide awake. Master Pike-nose pop- ped out, quite us much surprised as any one. snd put him into his bath-tub home. “Just to think of it,” said all in abreath ; “we all slept in the room with an alli- gator, —a free alligator!” “And nobody was hurt,” added Jack, “That's the funpy part of it.” Shuffle was a very small cater. A bit | of raw beef the size of a pin-head, fas- tened to a quill, was given him, This was all he wished for a day, and some- { times he would not eat even that, Old alligators go whole days without food, In the spring, when Jack returned to bis Northern home, he brought Bhufile with him in a box, a present from the landisdy. —[P. H. Chaplin, in the Whole Family, WHOLESALE MATCH-MAKING. | How Settlers in Manitoba Were Supe plied with Wives, ““Not many years ago I was in the | wholesuie match -makiog business,” said an ex-officer of the army. “It was match-mnking of the matrimonial kind. At that time, in 1879 and 1880, Mani toba being opened to scttiement, nud there was a rash of colonists thither fro n Ont nd Quebec and from Great Brita + settlers were mostly men, Some of them® had families and would send for them soon as they had got somewhat fixed, but very many were bachelors, They were making homes for themselves, and naturally they found that they needed wives, it few them were sons of English farmers, and riy all wera respectable and hard wae Wis in Ba N % of ne rking fellows , They could not afford to go snd get i helpmates bad to un : Young women, 68 to respectial W wives, and so } Iu norted i. iii wers Encland mm ind this business rapidly grew brauch of the immi philanthropic lady i her attention to ex over from great in Important worthy girls by the whence they were to Manitoba, Trains uld into 8, Boniface, across the river from W bringing or three car loads of availabe wives at a tir They were chaperoned with due regard to propre and were consigned to the and wwarded wi Come two innipes, we In iv, 1a ead m to Winnipe re provide Th temporary, beca x mining agents, who conveyed 7, where suitable quar- for their accommoda- was very they were soon dis- i Liu 3 tors we 1 nmodation oi BOCO 9 187 eid of 4 i ho ie settlers who were bachelors ap- for the girls as fast as they were in, Their applicating were not considered unless they were properly guaranteed as to character and ability to support a wife Few of them came to Winnipeg from a er distance than 250 miles Most commonly they wee by letters from land sgents, John Smith, for example, was located on such and such a tract of and, was the owner of 1.5 0 horses, was sound, kind, and forth. On ormal application for a wife neked what sortof a wreierred —whetner blonde srunette, tall or short, plump or thin, tlaving stated his preferences he was introduced to one of the available ladies, whercupon matters were quickly arranged. A remarkable point was that no suitor had ever to be introduced to a second girl, Tovariably he was content wit first one, and married her Apparently the men considered that when they had gone so far as an intro- duction they bad committed themselves irretriey ably, “In this way, by a process of artificial | selection, and other persons officially in charge at Winnipeg made matches by wholesale. The young | women were given free transportation, of course, the object being to make homes in Manitoba, and thus secure the {| permanent seitiement of the country. | Incidentally, the natural increase of the population was provided for. [ remem- { ber one man who drove over 700 miles to get a wife, He was present when a train {load of girls arrived and spotted the | young woman be wanted off hand. Within seven minutes after the train came in the pair were united in matri. mony, and the bridegroom started away with his bride in a buckboard wagon," { Washington Evening Star, pe Jolie i brought short certified stating that a 8&0 maki John i 3 i or ¥ = Soil was we § or | ei. th the myself Ey Jack's Death in t je Flames. “One-half of our town is mourning the | death of as noble a beast as ever lived,” (said Cherles ¥. Hunter of Memphis, “It wouldn't surprise me to see some. body take a hold of the matter and put up a monument to the memory of ‘Jack.’ Let me tell you about him. le belonged to a grocer out on the outskirts of the | town, and early the other morning he { gave up his life to save otuers, Some | ime before daylight the grocer, whose name was Rosenstein, was awakened b the barking of the dos, At first he paid no Rtieptivn to 5 but the Somstant noise angered him and he got up, taking a stick the door, intending to Quiet Jack with a licking. © As he opened door the dog rushed post him and bounded into the sleeping apartment, Barking loudly. he puol'ed at the elothis on the children’s bed till he pulled it off, and with his paws shoved the little ones out on the floor, The then dis. covered that the entire front of his little house was in flames, and that he had scarcely time to get his wife and children out of the house. They wore only thei to look for J. out bin way Ih ed Cent It You Were oa the Meo, If lunar conditions are favorable to human existence, and it iz not cerisin chat they are not, and yon could be trans- ported to the top of Pico or some other tali peak or rock ou the surface of our ssgilvery sister world,” how do you sup- pose things would look from such vant. age ground? You would probably drst turn your eyes in the direction of our but to yon it would he a stranger. In place of the somber globe you would naturally expect to behold your eyes would be greeted with a most wonderful sight, The earth would appear to you to be sixty-four times larger than thesun appears to the residents of this mundane sphere ; this because the earth has eight times the diameter of the moon, there fore she must necessarily show the moonites sixty-four times as much sur. face as the moon shows ue. The sun, on the other hand, would sppesr po larger to you from your observatory on the moon than it does from our globe, been decided that the earth must appear as nu blue ball to sll outside onlookers, What a glorious sight it must be to our Junarian neighbors te look upon abrigat blue, swilt ball sixty -lour times larger than the soul.--Bt. Louis Republic. Hood’s Cures revolving Ww. Va, A Faler's Grafinds impels Him to Tell How His Son Was Saved White Swelling and Serofula Cured, Navy I write this simply becanes | feel it adaty to} . 80 that umanity thers affocied as my son “as may know how to be cured, When ME WER J swelling onthe on knee, drawing his leg susing him intense k snd | considered yours oid a wh te & right jeg below the sp ab right angles, ile ani suffering. ould not wa him A Confirmed Cripple. Al cod and 41 ¢ NW Ti WIN barged fronly. him $5 Cinetn. or a surgical « ration. [He was 30 weak and poor we gave bitn Hood's Sara: arilla to To our great sar Farsaparilla not only gave the sore, after discharging HOOD’S Sarsaparilla CURES several pieces of bone, to entirely heal up. His log straighiensd out, and he Dow runs every. where, as lively as any boy.” J. LL. McMon. BAY. Notary Public, Ravenswood, W, Va r At lengt wih we decided U0 take nati baiic up his strength, prise, gth but Hood's rer CRON foad's Pills are sist digestion, cure headache the best afterdinner Pills, a0 ry 8 box. ——————— Do Not Be Deceived with Pastas, Enamels and Patote which stain he bands, Inliure the iron and bars red. The Rising Sun Stove Polish ts Britiiant, Odes tess, Durables, and the consumer pavs for bo Un or glass package with every No Alkalies RE. Ta Other Chemicals are used in the preparation of W. BAKER & C0.'8 Only 8 Tmommer and a. ieay CLINCH RIVETS.