——————— Na— Morrie A SUMMER LONGING, I must away to wooded hills aud vales, Where broad, slow streams flow cool and silently, And idle barges flap thelr listless sails For me the summer sunsst glows and pales, And green flolds walt for me, I long for shadowy forests, where the birds Twitter and chirp at noon from every tree, I long for blossomed leaves and lowing herds, And natare's voloes say, in mystic words, “‘The green flelds wait forthee,"” I dream of uplands, where the primrose shines, And waves her yellow lamps above the lea ; Of tangled copses, swung with trailing vines, Of open vistas, skirted with tall pines, Where green flelds wait for me, I think of long, sweet afternoons, when I May lie and listen to the distant sea, Or hear the breezes in the reeds that sigh, Or fnsect voloes chirping shrill and dry, In flelds that wait for me, These dreams of summer come to bid me find The forest's shade, the wild bird's melody, Whtle summer's rosy wreaths for me are twined, While summer's fragrance IMgers on the wind, And green fields walt for me, ~George Arnold. EE ——— DARKEST BEFORE DAWN. HERE'S nothing in! the paper,” said Au- rora Clymer-—“‘abso- lately nothing!" She threw down the printed sheet as she spoke—a tall girl, with wistful blue eyes and hair droop- *, ing a la Psyche over her forehead. “Then,” said Mir- iam, ‘‘that's three And there not 4 cents wasted. many cents left.” “Oatmeal and coffee for breakfast !” sighed Aurora. “And it was and oatmeal yesterday! Ob, dear, how wretched it is to be poor! one does get of is are coffee How sick things : “Try to remember thet it's always ‘darkest just before daylight,’” couraged Miriam. “Sit up to table, dear, and eat something. nice and hot!" Miriam was a sweet, fresh-faced girl of eighteen. Not, perhaps gifted with Aurora's beauty, but when you looked at Miriam Clymer once, you always wanted to look the i time. “Where is Polly?” fretfully ques tioned the elder sister. ‘'It does see to me as if" At that self same moment, however, | the door flew open and a rosy, flushed | damsel burst into the room like a southwest gale. “Breakfast timo already?” cried Polly. “My goodness me, how the time does fly?" * Polly Olymer had very black eyes, which laughed at you like a sunbeam, a crop of short black curls, and teeth which, although rather irregular, were milk white, and her two cheeks were like two roses newly blossomed, “Girls, I've been so busy!” Polly. Aurora frowned a little, “1 wish I was busy,” said she. Miriam helped her younger sister & oatmeal. *1 should be busy too,” said Mir- iam, ‘if there was anything to do.” “How perfectly ridiculous all this is!" cried Polly, waving her spoon. **As if there wasn't always something to do! Of course Aurora would rather do typewriting, because that's the trade she's learned —"' “Trade?” echoed the beauty. “And Miriam knows more about music lessons than anything else ; but if one can't get what one wants, one must want what ono can get. And I've earned a dollar this morning al- ready.” “What!” eried Miriam. “More oatmeal, please,” said Polly. “Ob, yes, I've washed and dressed a dear little girlie in the flat down stairs, and packed her little doll’s toy of a trunk for the train. You see, the nurse got angry snd went away, The mother was that pallid consumptive who was buried last week, and the father is a sort of ne'er-do-well, who plays tho cymbals in Jones's Theatre and don't pay any of his bills, And the janitress was at her wits’ end what | to do, and I stepped into the breach. | It made mo think of the good old times when I played with a doll almost as big as 1 was," “But where on earth Boing?” asked Miriam, “To her friends I suppose, I left her asleep in the erib, and the land. Jedy's little girl watching her, I'm to go back after my breakfast. There, Mirry'' =as she tossed a big silver dol- lar to the honsekeeoper-sister—*‘tako | that to buy more oatmeal. And look here, Miriam, Doctor Puffitt has got a big order for the Rosebud Balm to go to » watering place somewhere on the Jersoy const, and wants some one to paste on labels and tie up the bot. ties, without loss of time. There's a chauoe |" Aurora drow herself up, “I don't think George Belden woulil like it,” said she. “Oh, Goeorge—bother George! He's nothing but a dmg clerk himself. IVs none of his business one way or the other!" cried Polly. “Well, perhaps if yon won't men- tion it," said Aurora, timidly, ‘One has one's professional reputation to maintain, you know." Stuff!” sald Polly, ‘Doctor Paul. fit's a good-natured oid son), and I really think if some one don't rally to en- the It's k seaon n L4H) said ' scandalized is the child | The Silver Beach | features, ‘‘so you are Dolly Temple's ’ h ’ | ing questioningly at her, | Eq J | matting. his assistance, he'll get an apoplec- tic fit.” “And,” suggested Miriam, ‘‘lnce there's nothing in the ‘Wanteds' to- day, you might as well be earning a little in some way, Aurora.” Doctor Puffit was in the front base- ment of the big flat where the Clymer sisters dwelt, surrounded by gallon jars of ‘Rosebud Balm” and moun- | tains of bottles. He looked despmir- | ingly up from this chaos. | ““The order goes out on the three | | o'clock express,” said he, “‘and that | | wretch Alphonse, has not been near | me to-day. Iwill discharge Alphonse. | { I won't put up with his nonsense an- | other hour. My dear young lady, yon don’t say you will actually help me? | Then my business character is saved! hotels will know of | | the greatest discovery of the age, and {I shall vindicate this great prepara- | tion—which is not a | drug, but a marvel!” Polly went back to her baby, who | cosmetic nor a was awake now and smiling like a | medimval cherub in an altar painting. “You darling!" said she, with a hug | and a kiss, “How any one could go | off and leave you, I ecannot-— Oh!” with a sudden stiffening of her rosy father, are you?' Fora middle-aged gentleman stood in the doorway, look- “Well, you needn't come back here. The child’ " i ’ | mother's friends are to take her away at once. And perhaps, if you hadn't been so dissipated and neglectful of poor Mrs. Temple, she might have been here now. I can't help it; some one ought to tell you what the people in this house are don't want to be added, “but if pledge, and try ter for the futur **I really think that is unnecessary,’ interrupted a composed “for 1 m already a strict temperance man You are mistaken, young woman. i am not Sergius Temple, but Mr. Car thew, the father of the Mrs, Tem The telegram was delayed, and the saying about it. I hard u,” she were Lo sign the really try to do bet- on Yo You yYolice, Inte ple. have ouly just received sumin to come." Polly blushed to the very roots her curly hair She had to say for herself ““Oh, why couldn't I have 1 my own business,’ th of not a word ninded mught she, “It's just as t! : the janitress, this m him as to the exigencies o “It's a young lady, sir,” ‘from nd what w her I'm sure I d little miss has took to her so kind The of Mr. bearing abated somewhat. **She is very good,” said he. “‘As I have no one to take charge of my daughter's child, I shall be pleased to engage her services for the present.” “I know that other woman wasn't good to her,” ed the janitross Polly looked at t baby, the baby held ont its little hands, with an in distinct, ¢ bird in he hedges, ment, speedily said one of the other apartme ¢ should] ] wit} have done n't know, sternness Carthew's observ he yoing sound, like a “I'll go,” said Polly. “The train "said Mr Lis watch. Polly rushed up stairs for her hat and shawl. She left a scribbled note on the table for her sisters, neither of with Mr caught the leaves in twenty min- ntes,’ Carthew, looking st whom was in the room, aud Carthew and the baby tran. frist Juss “[— 1 don't know where ing," stammered Polly. “How neglectful of me not to have mentioned it,"" said Mr. Carthew., ‘To wy country seat at Siiver Beach.” “Oh,” thought Polly, “if Aurora only knew! He has got acountry I do hope Mra. Carthew will be good to me. I wonder if there are any danghters, and if they would like a musical governess? Because if Miriam could get a place, I think we should be perfectly happy.” jut she glanced surreptitiously at Mr. Carthew's grave, handsome face, and lacked the courage to ask any more questions, “He must have young,” thought she. A stout lady, in a black silk gown and white muslin apron, met them on the steps of a pretty seaside cottage, with a belt of pine trees in the rear, and the curling fringes of the Atlan: tic Ocean in front, and welcomed the new treasure warmly, “This is my housekeeper,” said Mr. Carthew, *‘Mrs. Mott, Miss Clymer is the new nursery governess for Mise Temple. Mako her as comfortable ss you ean.” “Mra. Carthow is not at home?" Polly ventured to ask, as the black: silk matron led the way down a long corridor covered with cool, checked we are go seat, has he? married very “Bless your heart,” said Mrs, Mott, “there ain't any Mrs. Carthew, If she'd been living, my young lady would never have made that foolish, | ranaway match.” “Nor any Miss Carthews?" “Nor any Miss Carthews," noled Mrs. Mott, i Polly took the baby out on the | beach for a walk next day, It seemed | more like the doll-playing days of her | childhood than ever, or else like a | pleasant summer dream. “I'll walk as Inr as the drug store,” | | said she to hersell, “‘Thero's quite a | | settlement of houses around the hotel, | and some very pretty stores, I've an | great mind to walk in and ask for a bottle of Dootor Puffitt’s Rosebud | Balm for the Complexion.” She did so, lacking in cool audacity, whatever might have been her other deflcien- clos. “Why, Polly, is this you?” de- | ing to business, | only to think of her pasting | them labels herself! | be done hére. i fect long, | 0'er the hill and dale I oan throw Polly Clymor was never | My name is ‘Breaker of Mound and manded a familiar voice behind the counter, “Goodness me |” cried Polly. George Belden!” “Yes,” said the tall, straight young druggist. “Why, didn’t you know it? I've bought out this business, and 1've “It's | telegraphed for Aurora to come down { and marry me. We may as well spend our honeym oon by the seaside attend- The dear little girl, on all Pufitt told me nbout it. Puffit supplies the capital, you see, on condition of my pushing his specialty. I've taken a cottage, and telegraphed Aurora to bring you and Miriam along, too. Silver Beach is a rising place, and there's plenty to “I'm awfully obliged to yon George,” said Polly, holding up the baby, ‘but I'm a nursery governess at present, and can't leave my situa- tion. But I'll call and s2e you and Mrs. Belden as often as possible." Aud she strolled back to the Car- thew cottage along the edge of the Atlantic, talking sott, unintelligible nonsense to the baby as she went, Three months afterward, George Belden shat up the branch" to return to the New York store which Doctor Puflitt had purchased and dec- orated in Alge rian Mooresque style with more gold-leaf and plumes than would have seemed possi- ble to the uninitiated mind. “The Rosebud Balm has been a sue- Doctor Puffitt, ‘‘And I owe it in no small degree to Belden's “seaside peat ek CORs dg wkle 1 ‘ enterprise. Belden's is a genius.” Mrs. Belden had decided to her husband in the store cer than type- “and twice Miriam will ke ep You haven't ventured Carthew whether he'll returning to that Madison Avenue pal- is, Polly?" aasist “It's a great deal 1 writing," profitable, for POT she, said And EY house us to ask Mr be said Mr. Car: ¢} IEW ADY his princely in great awe “And you ontinned on? Car- gov- ’ Polly ROWE rod ' Mr. thew has engage new nursery erness for Dotty . hands tragic “And you wguish eyes which had been temporarily hidden behind D i baby's grand- mother,’ The Matador’s Last Thrust, The art of the matador is not to run up to the bull sad stab him, but to have him come to you end fling him- self upon the sword, while you direct his movements this way sad that with ths soarlet cape. He will follge red cape anywhere, and the chules are busy from the beginning of the fight to the end, leading the bull away from the fallen picadors or the imperiled banderilleros or the matador. Even after the sword is thrust into his neck o the hilt, it takes the bull a long ne to die A harrowing sight it is noble ereature—the only noble nre, as it in the ring stands up as long he can, vomiting forth torrents of yl, as all his en- emies crowd around him, sticking to it natil he drops trembling against the fonder Then in come the teams of mules, gavly decorated with flags and ribbons, to earry the bull and the horses around the ring st a gallop, leaving a bloody track behind. They are not content with removing the bodies Ly the nearest possible exit; oh, no! These gay teams go gallop ing aronnd the whole arena, each drag: ging its bloody carcass, while the band plays another gqnickstep They are hardly ont of the ring be- fore the drum r and the next ball bursts into the na BS until six bulls are . nt an t SECTS, As blo ils Are ) it goes on, done for. All the while our neighbors in the next box are eating and drinking. As for us, we see nothing but the suffering and desth over sud over again. It carries you back to the Roman circus, and yon wonder what civilization has done for Spain, whose population is still so thirsty for blood. The Spaniards are so used to it that they see none of the barbarity, ouly the skill and the science. And the English residents in Spain are more enthusiastic than the Spaniards themselves. ll—— A Historie Gan, The London Telegraph chroniolos the removal of ‘Queen Beas's pocket pistol,"'an enormons piece of brass ord- nance which for generation hw frowned from the cliffs of Dover, to make way for a battery of modern guns, The “pocket pistol” now rests in honorary retirement in a less conspicuous part of the castle. This gun is twenty-four takes a charge of fifteen pounds of powder and has arange, it 1s said, of eight miles. It has not been fired for so long, however, that nobody knows how far it will carry. It is elaborately ornamented with | figures representing Liberty and Vie { tory. This gun was presented to Quoon Elizabeth by the people of the low countries in recognition of her efforts to protect them and their re- ligion. It lias an inscription in Plem- ish, which is popularly supposed to ron “Load me wall, and keep me olean, And I'll earry a bali to Ualals Green." And there is a poplar notion that | the gun was able to sweep the French | port on the other side of the channel. The nccurate translation of the in- | soription is, however: Ahh The ‘pocket pistol” hes long since sanaed ta be Fegardacl ae valtahits lave |e memento of the reign of . OR. B.C. FLONER, And His Congress of Phy- sicians—Miracles in Medicine, ——— Monstrous Tumors Melt Away«The Lame Throw Aside Thelr Crutches and Walks Cancer, Consumption and Chronic Troubles Cured in a Mysterious Manner, Our readers are well acquainted with the name of Dr. R. C, Flower of Boston, His miraculous cures of the most desperate and abandoned cases when given up as incurable by leading physicians has eaused the Infer- Ocean of Chicago, Cincinnati Enquirer and New York Tribune to say if miracles were ever performed, many of Dr. BR. C. Flower's cures belong to that class of wonders. The Cincinnati Enquirer recently interviewed nu- | merous prominent people in all sect f ne | the country regarding Dr. Flower's treatment of patients. Hero is what they say. They | speak for themselves, | gentieman of 1044 Third avenue, { Ky.: {| cured my wife several | be heir to. | Mrs th A Wonderful Cure. Wm. Mix, a prominent lawyer and wealthy Lo of Boston, isville, Dr. R. C. Flower Mass, , years ago of the mos terrible and dangerous diseases womar I ex Fi alo n sider Dr. IWOr 8 Mix rasands of dollars on 1 in Loulsville and New ¥ After several months unde fasts of New worse, and I} despalr, Ur to see Dr, Fi £ she ight her | better than she cot As a ph) 1, 1 believe, He jodgment is the highest auth ie, Fi f the tertaining and met, and & mar wer i one 1itured f the } Marasmus, Whos Henry D Evansville, In er the ot 1 d n't ballev Es t grea distress. [| had wasted to a » given up hope and was given uj AS A very iast resort, I dids Hot asking a question the presen {f a man ness, 1 put proved immediately man today. You oan sa) bas no © jual on earth Fibroid Tumor. Mre Jams E | When 1 wont to see Rn’ 8 your ago I was sufferis vanced tum M ; treated by all th of the country. They all a tion, and stated that unless 1 had formed I would live but afew weeks, and it was by no means certain that an operation would belp me. i me 1¥ trout knew 1 y knew are, and i ’ ’ nyse Rov ith ir {vise me a question. He stated that In his opinion an operation would prove fatal; on the other band, he believed could be socoessfallv treated and cured without a: placed myself under his tre gan to adintely well woman no tumor, no pain happy. 1 wish every ui i Dr. Flower Paralysis and Tumore-A Miracle. Mra Wm. Desakyne Sheridan, sald : About a year ago I visited Dr, Fi I was then helpless, In a paralyzed con went on erat whenever | went tarrible tutaor increased my already ab size rapidly. | measured feet around the waist and over four | hip to hip. The disease had settled In Hob, and I had no use of it; was also losing my eyesight. My nerves were shat- tered and I bad no memory. Not one of my friends ever thought I could be hel The hysicians had given me up as incurable, Dr, Flower had told me my troubles sithout ask. ing me a question, or how they came upon me. 1 took a eonrse of treatment under him, and, thank God, I am today a well Look at me-—tumor gone, natural sight restored, memory go nerves like fron, no erutches —[ can walk for a mile and not feel tired. Why, sir, I believe Dr. Flower to be the greatest nan of this age, He is a marvel la giant in his work, Several of my acquaintances he has cured in the same way The pecpie fn Sheridan Argo wonderful and miracul operation ment and be Iam a ng and knew of improve imu k perso: ’ how ’ 4 a woman in sige, peak Consumption, “1 was a sufferer with consumpt! Mrs. John D. Becker ville, Ind. “I bad de physicians without reliel, n," sald 103 John strest, Evans stored with numer As 5 last (and the lady laughed as she added Flower is always the last resort’) “I went to ses Dr. BR. C. Flower. He told me all about my troubles without asking me to say a word, 80 pleased was [ with the examination that I slaced myself under his care, and began to mprove immediately, and today am a well woman. Ten months ago I could do no work, in reson ‘Dr. could scarcely walk, spent my time lying | down or in a rocking chair ; now I can do any kind of work, walk as much as when | was a young girl. Ieanuot speak too highly of my physician,” sald th's cultured and refined woman, “Dr. Flower is a great man. an bon est, candid man. He fs smart, quick aad keen and wonderfully fascinating, 1 don't think the sick have any cause to fear if under | his care.” Confirmed Invalid. Mrs. Joseph Cromwell, Xenia, O., sald: 1 was a helpless and confirmed lnvalid when 1 went to ses Dr, BC, Flower, 1 could not walk 100 feet without sitting down, Besides, I was a nervous wreck, Ho diagnosed my ease aocurately, diately under his treatment. Can now skip, run and do what 1 want. Am well, think Dr. Flower a medical wonder, Chronic Stomach Trouble. Rav. 8 W, Keister, Dayton, 0, sald “I went to see Dr. RC. Flower asa last resort. He told me my troubles better than I could have told him: he cured me of a dreadful stomach trouble and nervous exhaustion. 1 consider him the most wonderful physician living.” Saved Prom a Patal Oporation, Mr. C. BE. McOmber, of Ballston Spa, N, Y. ld: Dr. RC Flower of Doston, cured me of an enlarged, fallen, inflamed and ule odred womb, An operation by numerons physicians was the only thing advised, with no hope held out of its being successful, 1 had given up as incurable, and had given up all hopes of ever being cured, when as a last resort my husband took me to see Dr. R, C. Flower. I was under his treatment for a few months, began to improve Immedis ately, and in a few months was cured, Gastritis, Mrs. Etta Milles (wile of Sn Millar, the merchant), o ghamton, N. Y., says: x sufferer for with Dr. Flower told me my troubles, | i thelr origin and growil, with bi I began to improve imme | and | mA A WR 08 w—— C. Flower, and ho took my {was permanently Nervous Prostration, Mrs. Joseph R. Sprague, Brewster, N. Y.: “I had been fil for ten years when I went to Dr. RB. C. Flower. After the first month's treatment felt that he had helped ne wonder. fully, Waa in a terrible condition ; had ner. vous prostration and cancerous stomach trouble ; also suffered with terrible head. unches, Had been given up as incurable b all doctors and had given up all hope myself. But, thanks to Dr, Flowers skill, | am & well woman today and able to attend to my house- hold duties and do just what I like, “He also cured my son of enlargement of the liver, “I don't believe there is any need of any- one dying if they will place themselves under his care.’ | consulted Dr. | case, and in a fow months cured, Fungus Stomach. Dr. Brooks, of Brooks & Evans, a promi- pegyt doutist of Portiand, Me, sald “I am an admirer of Dr. KB. CC, Flower, | consider him the ablest physician of the age. Why, sir, he can toil a sick person his disease with. out knowing anything about him or ssking him a question, just as easy as he would read his name, He has most successfully treated and cured me of a very serious and danger | ous internal trouble which threatened not | only my immediate health, but life (fangus of the stomach.) I was almost iheapacitated for work, was wasting away and rapidly ios. ing my strength, Under his tr sprang into health, have gained and flesh, and am | Flower is to me | wonder, He Is | genial man you e brill and | youn to talk with him. ant, The Worst of Blood Troubles. Throat and Lung Trouble. 6id W. Ed + Dan ey Blood Poisoning Boardman m peri Cancer of Breast and Neck. Hiram B Have M Mass { the t i fact nd (and argest “Dr. Fi cast and ary. 1 in each oh ne E na pd. In this 6 went t« s Dr. BR. C. Fiower, of Bost cured me. removing every trace of can tumor and bad blood, and all this without without pain or my losing a tha 1h use of a knife, rd Lio ps an cuth | cured many of my friends of similar dis. eases.” Gastritis. Hon. J. Willard Rice of Boston i C. Fiower cured me of rouble which threatened not only my the best skil { Boston had falled to give { the most abie f this age fascinating “Dr anh macs said Hl beaith, ’ gastr; I } it my life and tha! after New York an rel Dr jonrt and skilfal besides he is a most iant jel wer is one } od physicians sanial and genial and man asd as bril AS & Siar Stomach and Catarrh, J. H. Tacker, a pr nn. , sald ar of Leba Flower has mach and aggravated us prostration, I when | visited wer : inted DY « heir vain attempt to care me. N begin Dr. Flower's treats thi improve; n o at me; ll am all to him id memy hi i asking mea que I could have told hin Natignant Tumor, Mra A. T. Longley nue. N. E.. Washington, years ago De. LC. FI { malignant tum after all kinds of tr had fatied, He sto removed those eating g and wit? Her hushazd, Longley, the superintendent of goverament seed department, sald he knew of other cures equally wonderful A Rheumatic Miracle. Mra J. B.Shrier Jr. S1 Spring street, Char leston, 8, C., said: “1 truly can say that by the skill of De. BR. C. Flower, | eseaped » most horrible death, 1 had bad rheumatism for eight years but lately it developed chalky grate I was informed alter being treated yy the leading physician of this city, that there was nocure for my disease, and that amidst great suffering would gradually turn to stone. Besides my continual suffer. ing I was helpless, had but little use for any of my Hmbe, was suffering from insomais and nervous prostration. In other words, 1 was a helpless, ruined and abandoned wreck. In this condition | was taen to ses Dr. R. OC Flower during one of his visits to Savannah, Under his treatment I began to improve im- mediately, and today 1 can walk as fast and nent {arn BR ( “Dr 1st seri sl gether with starrh and fn absolute de | nervy pair had bean disap soOOner 1 ent ni ITO SOems 1 sok in the finns owe it , beter than ioe 801 Massachusetts ave. D.C Eight me « ut the knife well as anyone; use my limbs freely; the | swelling in my joints has disappeared ; 1 sleep woll ; my nerves are strong, and my cure fis eonsidersd by all my friends as a wiraculous escape from death, From Helplessness to Perfect Health, Hutson Les, the well-known insurance man of Charleston, 8. C.. sald: “My oldest son was restored by De. BR C. Flower from helplessness to the perfect use of his limbs | after the best physicians in our country had falled to give him the silightest relief" A Miracle, Mrs. J. D. Clark, of Jonsboro, Oa. sald; “1 had a supposed incurable spinal trouble double curvature, besides other serious and aimost fatal troubles, a woman heipless in braces and on crutches, The most prominent physicitn in Atlanta bad treated me, the ospitals had bad me for treatment, and they had all given me up as incurable. In this helpless, suffering and dying condition I was taken to Dr. Flower, whan almost, as magio, he restored me to perfect health, don't pretend to say how he did it, but he did Big Cancer of the Tongue, Mra. E. A Selling, Avenue I, and Twenty second street, Galveston, Tex, sald: “When 1 first consulted Dr. BR. 0. Flower of Boston, is a a terrible cancer tongue, ven 1 porfectly well Hg am knew condition Jog | drop of blood. I was under Dr. Fiower's | ——————— ’ - ——— 1 | Bank of Corsicana, Texas, ald: “Dr. B, C. {| Flower is the most wonderful physician I {| ever knew. He cared me of 8 [angus cancers i ous vondition of the stomach and Hver after numerous physicians had failed to help me and I had been given up to die.” Tas above testimonis s are from many of the most prominent, wealthy and fofiuential men and women of this country, They calm= ly and deliberately say that Dr, RB. C. Flower cured them after they had been given up to dis, and that if it had not been for him they would have been in their graves, They rep- resant all kinds of business, sll professions all positions of prominence, and nearly wil sections of the country, The testimony of | one is the testimony of all, proving his ale most supernatural power in curing the sick, and thst his practios girdles the world, Dr. Flower has established & congress or stall of physicians, and is locating a physi- clan In every s'ate in the union, ‘Thee staff physicians are the most skilled and sable men (regardiess of thelr school These stall physicians exnmine patients arrange for their treatment and send sn written diagnosis of each case to him. From that time on they are under his care, the same as if the doctor had personally examined them himself, Thus Dr. Flower's pal be examined and re-examined a lied physicians who are in el ymmunication with the d« wer spares no expense in f his patients pv » of Dr, RB cere nto them as abits into s and pointers, wverhaps the HOPE ¥ The 12001 112eq whole ro org 81 instinctive b nial DOCKING nuch as thelr our setter Lattle girls of teu will one see here whose finish of breeding would have awakened the envy of a duchess at the court of Ix XIV Fer servants ong uis at Versailles. will encounter at a Jag ALCsSe and Rie nner } inet he bous Charm wild at beasts that are African, CO Bonde ph mw 1nd correspondent nd au interest 18 ana ing note abont has already pr rm Known to exception fre wi m Australia; Appearance only large » or fo | 18 either of a rich, raw-beefy col | { 3 | « A lowering i black, the difference of color being a mark of difference of : Fpecic 5 On one ocension a number of natives were together when one of these giants strolied casually into the camp ; the result appears to have a rapid flight onthe part of the natives. The reason for the inspiring character of the worm is its reputed habit of sucking blood. It does not seem probable that the most recent results of zoological research are known { in tropical Africa, but it is a curious coincidence that this research has tended to show that the line of sepa- ration between the leeches and earth | worms is by no means so wide ast | was at one time thought to be. This | big earth worm of West Africa in- { babits a looality that is remarkable; it does not, as do most earth worms, burrow constautly in the ground, throwing up oastings, but lives in | deserted hills of termities. — Natural Seience. ¥ I collected been ii { : AW smminnrimailib——— Bieyelists in the German Army, The sum of $25,000 is included ia the German Army estimates for the | present year for the supply of bieycles | to the infantry. Two bicycles are as | mgned to each battalion. An instruc. {tion has been issued dealing with the bieycle service. Bicycles are to be used for communications between columns on the march and for com- munications between advanced guards, When joo are in quarters bicyolists are to fulfil the fMoctions of vrierlies, especially where mounted orderlios are wanting, They will also relieve the cavalry from relay and intelli gence duties. In great fortresses the whole of the duties now devolving a on cavalry as message obironk ? E ] i —- ! ! transferred bie tw yelista, ---Chicago
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers