A LIGHT OFOTIIER DAYS. ionEHT3 iw thb Lira or tok MARSHALL. The Krnlnrklitn Who iriorod Troirila win, i in l loqnrnrc and Made Mrht Hideous with Org-le. "Tom" Marshall, of Kentucky, vras a marked character in his day and time, but died, like lleverdy Johnson, without leaving, so far as can be ascertained, any recorci 01 ins career. Air. Marshall was very fond of narrating his experiences, and if they could be written as 'they were told and word-painted in his own lan guage they would be, indeed, a veritable setting cf colloquial gems, admixed, it is true, with much dross. Tom liar Bhall's life was fitful and fateful, and, although possessed of talents and accom plishments far beyond the average of very great men, his fault consisted in lnck of ability to put them to good ad vantnge. It was in the fall of 1850, after the In dian summer of the Northwest had passed and gone, and the air had be come GharD and Chillv. whnn Tnm Mar. shnll mnde his appeal ance at St. Taiil, llinn. lie was unseasonably, indeed, wretchedly, clad, presenting every indi cation of straitened circuniNtances, but the good people of that city, neverthe less, made him welcome, and expressed satisfaction with his announcement that he intended to lecture upon tho lives and characters of George Washington and Henry Clay. The writer made his ac quaintance at that period, and, in com mon with his colleagues of the press and the citizens generally, busied himself to induco appreciative audiences to listen to his addresses. Although unkempt, unshaven and un tidy, bcanng the appearance of a man with whom fortune had dealt neither gently nor generously, Tom Marshall held himself proudly. Straight as an arrow, he sttodo through the streets buttoned to the chin in a drap d'ete coat, leaving to impertinent conjecture the presence or absence of a shirt, yet, never theless, the very incarnation of dignity and assumed superiority. The St. Paul people, with their accustomed hospital ity, fraternized with him in traditional Western fashion, and as a consequence the bowl flowed freely to tho music of Mr. Marshall's superior conversational attractions. Within a brief period every body came to know him, and as thero were many noted characters resident at St. Paul at that particular period the flints of their association came together and many Promethean sparks were there by struck and scintillated. When the evening arrived for the de livery of his lecture upon George Wash ington, Mr. Marshall appeared sadly un der the influence of "the rosy." Nothing abashed, however, he orated upon the life, character and services of tho Pater Patriae in glowing periods and ornate rhapsodies, hut iuterspersed with occa sional commonplaces which grievously marred the effect of an eloquence almost divine. His succeeding address upon Henry Clay was a repetition of the pre vious lecture in nil its beauties of con ception on tho one hand and attendant coarsenesses on the other, and the au diences ' naturally became indignant, if not disgusted. Having reaped a plente ous harvest of dollars, the proceeds of his lectures, he forthwith proceeded to roam the town night and day, in a con tinuous orgie. Meeting him in the street one day he stated ke hnd just learned a lesson in politeness. He had met an Indian, he said, clad in all the gorgeous array of paint, feathers, trinkets and blanket. Struck with tho apparent majesty of the Indian's presence, his hand involun tarily lought his pocket and drew forth a silver half-dollar, which he proffered as a token of peace and admiration. Tho aboriginal took tho coin, silently bowed his thanks, and with tho combined dig nity of Scipio and Jugurtha, strode away. "It was the most magnificient specimen of untutored courtliness and native grace I ever saw," quoth Mr. Mar shall. He was much disturbed, how ever, when informed that Indians were great beggars, and their cupidity knew no bounds. One cold, stormy evening Marshall put in an appearance at the Winslow house, evidently suffering the effects of a protracted debauch. He was the very personification of wretchedness and suf fering, and npproaching the stove, then sending forth its grateful heat, he held his benumbed, skinny hands over it, shivering to the very marrow. All ho said was ''Poor Tom's acold!"and the guests seated in the foyer gazed upon the modern King Lear with eyes of distress ful sympathy. In a few minutes he thawed out sufficiently to peer about in a quaint, inquisitive manner, when ob serving a group of persons seated near by. he exclaimed. "Gentlemen, I do not intend to bo offensive, but may I bo hanged if I ever in my life saw so many hook-nosed men together at onetime!" Involuntarily the guests took each other's dimensions, and sure enough it happened that all of their noses were of pronounced Roman architecture. Tom Marshall happily broke the sig nificant silence by loudly exclaiming: "Landlord, what time do vou have sup per?" "Supperat 7," laconically replied the host, the clock pointing to a quarter to 7. A dead silence fell on all around, which, as the clock struck 7, wis in terrupted by Mr. Marshall, who, thrust ing his hand into his pocket, extracted a set of falsa teeth, and snapping them viciously into his mouth, shouted: "Now bring on your supper and be hanged to you !" How Tom Marshall managed to get away from St.( Paul nobody ever knew, but tho next time the writer met him was at Nashville. Term., during the spring of 1804, after the defeat of Hood's forces by General George II. Thomas. He was in like condition as when at St. Paul, bearing marked traces of dissipation and in distressed circumstances. He was again befriended, and the theatre en gaged for him to deliver a lecture upon Charlemagne. Tho house was fil'ed from pit to dome at $t a head, and. to the surprife of even body, he was duly sober. He opened his discourse upon the Fiench soldier-monarch by paying glow ing ttilm'rs to LU virtues, and quoted bin dying nljuiatiou to his sou Louis, "Love yum- people ns your children; choose jour magistrates and governors from those whose belief in God will preserve them from corruption, and see that your own life bo blameless." At this juncture he drew a comparison with Napoleon Bonaparte, and thereafter the lecture was devoted to the Bonaparte family, to the utter exclusion of Charle mapno, whose name was heard no more. Ho-enforced with several hundred dol lars, ho abandoned the lecture field and returned to the wine cup. His next ap pearance was at a meeting of New Eng land men celebrating Forefathers' Day at Nashville, upon whom he obtruded his unwelcome and inobriatcd presence. Ho refused to retire, and proceeded in language more forcible than polite to denounce the Pilgrim Fathers, Ply mouth rock and all that thereunto ap pertained. "You internal idiots," he exclaimed, "you know nothing of the history of your country. Celebrating Forefathers' Day, are youf The fathers left England in order that they might worship God in their own way and make everybody else worship as they did. What about your blue laws, your Salem witches and persecution of tho Quakers? What, about Hoger Williams, whom the Puritan fathers banished, and who sought freedom of conscience else where?" He was finally brought to bay by a policeman and lodged in the cala boose. Keturning to his home in Kentucky shortly after this episode, he died near Versailles, Woodford county, Septem ber 22, 1864, aged sixty-four years. Chicago Xeic$. Two Great Rnnnlng Horses. Among the hundreds of fine pUces in Woodford county, Ky., there are none which show up to better advantage than tho old Hat per home, and there is cer tainly no spread of horseflesh to be found anywhere upon the face of the earth that will equal what is to bo seen there. It is not a large ono, but makes up in quality what it lacks in quantity. Here are to be seen the finest representatives of two of the most rcmarkablo sires that have ever figured in turf history Longfellow, tho sou of imp. Leamington, and Ten Brocck. the son of imp. Phaeton. Long fellow is a great big horse, standing fully seventeen hands high, with a long, well shaped neck, beautiful head, deep chest, light flank, with an unusual length between the hip and shoulder, and presents, as a whole, a most remark ablo combination of bone, sinew and muscle. As you look at him you cannot but think that the correct name was selected for him. Indeed, I have heard that the great poet once took occasion to thank old John Harper for tho compliment he had paid him in naming this horse for him. Tho old man took the matter quietly (ho was not much in literary af fairs), and remarked to a friend that he had never heard of tho gentleman be fore, but had named the colt Longfellow becauso he was a long fellow. Leaming ton, the siro of Longfellow, was a horse of fair 'performiuce upon the English turf, but was not considered a success whilst in the stud there. AVhen Intro duced in America he proved to be a phe nomenal sire, getting a long list of pro geny, and senlling Parolo and Iroquois back to his native lnnd to show his old friends what he could do in the land of liberty, Iroquois capturing the Derby and St. Leger, and Parolo taking in several less events. Nearly all his get were winners of more or less celebrity. I feel the lack of horso education and tho consequent poverty of descriptive phraseology as I approach Longfellow' stable companion, the great son of Phae ton. Ten Broeck is a blood bay, sixteen and a half hands high, with a small star in his forehead, and may be taken as a model of perfection in all that a thor oughbred noise should be. He is coupled much shorter than Longfellow, which acids much to the beauty of his symme try. He is a rare combination of mus cular development, with very broad hocks, long, firm set whirl bones, im mense chest, broad hips and the most symmetrical set of legs I ever saw under a horso. In standing in his rear the muscles above his hocks, which give tho driving power, appear so unusually large they convey the impression of being a deformity. He could bo shown any where, without telling his name or lineage, and would never fail to attract an audience. As the groom led him from his stall for exhibition to several visitors, he seemed to be conscious of what they had come for, and willing to gratify their curiosity. In disposition he is perfectly kind. " A stranger could go into his stall, bridle and lead him forth without the least danger. He is the most remarkable horse of which the world has any record. There have been other horses that have made them selves great names by their performances upon the turf, but they have nearly all done so bysome display of special merit. One will develop as a great mile horse, another will show hit quality at two, three or four miles. The exceptional time made at the different distances has never been adorned with the name of the same horse more than once. It remained for Ten Broeck to contribute both time und distance, by obliterating ail records of cither. He made the fastest mile ever run, moved up a peg, and set the stand ard for two miles, repeated the perform ance at three miles, and without appar ent effort added tho crowning triumph to his list of victories beating the un paralleled time of Lexington at four miles just four eeconds. Cincinnati Commercial. A Genuine Mad-Stone. Mr. Len Piles, a citizen of Sullivan county, is the owner of a mad-stone, says a letter from Yincennes, Ind. It is gray in color, full of pores, and almost as light as a piece of paper. It is a cren uine mud-stone, and Mr. Piles keeps it wrapped in a piece of soft cloth. It was brought to tho United States from Ire land many scores of years ago by Mr. Piles' ancestors. Great care has been taken of it, and it has been handed down from generation to generation. It is valued at. $400. Over 1,000 applications have been made by it. Two pieces of it were broken off, aud are owned by par ties in Louisville and Torre Haute. Tho record of the stone has been lost, how ever, as it has changed hands so many times. The stone has been in this coun try sixty years, and hus never been known to fail to cure a mad-dog bite when properly applied. It has been in the Piles family 200 years. The editor of a hullivaii paper says that parties who have been bitten by dogs living 150 miles dis tant from SuUivun have been brought to this wonderful stone and cured. The stono looks the same now as fifty years NEWS AND NOTES FOR WOMEN, I Mrs. Hcnrv Ward Beocher is writing a book.- " Fashionable ladies in Paris now wear short silk socks instead of stockings. Narrow colored ribbons round the neck are a very pretty caprico of fashion., Bustles have probably reached their maximum in size for at least six months to come. Green in variaus subdued shades is a leading color ia fall aud early winter fashions. The small capote, with a high crown dressily trimmed, is .the fovoiito head gear for visiting. For evening wear and garden party toilets young ladies wear one small tuft of natural flowers in the hair and another on the shoulder. Very fine silk tulle veils are now to be procured in every color; instead of tho thick dots they are ornamented with small woven-in rings. The only woman railroad official in this country is Miss Laura Braden, treas urer of tho Washington and Waynes burg railroad, in Penasylvania. The great banking huse of the Roths childs at London, employs mainly women, claiming that they are more re liable and accurate in their work than men. The latest thing in parasols are covers . . Jl a. v . I t . ... oi primed nanaKercuiols with heraldio patterns, so laid over one another that the points fit in exactly between each other. Blouse waists, with their brond gimps and fancv trimmis'r. Viavn hoo. , means of again bringing into fashion l - i :j a .1 migo emuruiuercu couars. rnese are executed in Venetian embroidery. Ia Garfield county, Colorado, there are 737 unmarried men and only sixty-eight unmarried women. TaeGlenwood Eclio says: "We are C69 girls short here, and we want all the girls to know It." Gloves are not worn so soiled this sea son as they were last, and there is a dis position to revert to French kid, after a course of Suede. In beige and the shades of fawn so popular now the former look well. The women of Thibet, who are per mitted to wear any color except green, purchase corals and pearls to ornumont their head-dresses, which are the most costly part of their attire, and alone not unfrequently costs $5,000. Neapolitan straw bonnets are liked because of their coolness and lightness, and are shown ia black, beaded with small lead beads, and trimmed along the brim with pink or yellow roses that are veiled with Chantilly lace. In many English factories the girls are rebust as young athletes. Aa It. A. once declared that he novcr found such splendid physical development as anions the factory girls in the slums of Stepney! They work hard all day and spend all their leisure in the open air. The tendency to make waist and sleeves of different material is more and more manifest. For instance, in a satin and luce costume, the bodice was satin and the sleeves were lace. Another, velvet and wool, had the bodice of woolen material and velvet sleeves. Braided piques are new this seJlon, and are much liked for young l&s. The braiding is narrow Hercules orwide soutache braid, covers the flat front and sides of the dregs, the vest, the cuffs and the oollar. The tail of the short basque may or may not be braided, it is pure-W a matter of fancy. A new fashion is just beginning in Paris. The trimmings of the high hats are all to be placed at the back, and the effect is just as though the hat had been put on with the back to the front. A whole cascade of feathers is thus placed on some of the hats, with the curly tips Just showing from a front view. Or else it is a shower of loops ia moire ribbon that falls from the crown to the very edge of the brim at the back, with a few drops from the shower hanging in front. Ia Germany a servant has one Sunday out every two weeks. There is an un derstood hour for her to come home, and if she stays out later she loses her next Sunday holiday. Her pay is never more than $20 a year, and iu some families is only $12. When there is a dispute be tween mistress and maid, it is settled by the police. But one servant is usually kept, and the work is hard, but the washing is done outside, and pies, cakes, bread, etc., are bought. An old style revived is the initial cuff, button. The new buttons are an im provement on the old-time button with its staring single letter. The new styles are unobstruaive and present a bewilder ing variety from which to select. There are buttons with old Enelish, script, block-stitched and engraved initials; monograms iutricate aud graceful in their interwoven traceries, and last, but by no means least, crests and coats-of-arms. A peculiar cus'ora in the Cape Verde islands is noted by a recent visitor there. His hostess was smoking a cigarette when suddenly she drew it from her lips and offered it to him. Though some what startled he accepted it with the best grace that he could command, and upon subsequent inquiry found that it was considered amoug the islanders one of the greatest compliments a lady could pay to a gentleman. HEALTH HINTS." The treatment of eruptive fevers re ceives advantage from the wet sheet pack. The cold douche to the head is the best remedy for the ravings of delirium tremens. Acute mania, cerebral congestion, and sunstroke require the ico-cap, cool com press, or mild douche to the head. Glycerine soap for chapped hands, lips, etc. : Take toilet coup, slice and melt with gentle heat, and add to one pound of soap one ounce of pure gly cerine; when sufficiently cool make in balls. "In 1830, while practicing in Madison county, Illinois," says a writer in the St. Louis Medical Journal, "I was induced by tho representations of an old woman to make the trial in dysentery and diar rhea of tablespoonful doses of pure cider vinegar, with the addition of sufficient salt to be noticeublo, und it acted so charmingly that I have never used any thing else," Tlie Famous Notre Dnnm. On the !10th f)f lAlLllnnnn V St..-. , i, mv (.'l.tuin of tho most noted Catholic ladies semi nary in tho United States, the famous Notre Dnmo, at Uovanstown, near Balti more, Md., made public a card, certify ing to tho beneficial results attending tho use of Bed Star ('niirVi dim In tl.nt n.ti tut ion. They state that they found it cwiracious aiiKO lor relieving coughs, oppressions on the chest and irrifminn f tho throat. Officials of the Boards of Health ot Brooklyn, Baltimore and other cities havo likewise publicly proclaimed tho virtues of this new discovery, which is entirely freo from opiatos, poisons and other objections. A Cincinnati man has invented a pow der which sprinkled upon small oysters will cause them to swell up into lareo and juicy bivalves. Ai.roHoi, was not Intkntkd and min erals wero never used medicinally in the days of old. Invigorating and alterative herbs were then tho only curatives. Sick animals, with unerring instinct, invaria bly select strange herbs for their ailments. Vineoau Bittkks is the greatest herb antidote and tonic ever known. The school teachers of thn Vnifnd States draw wap-es to thn tmnnnt nt $60,000,000 yearly an averago of $400 I'lll'U. "One Null Prlves Out Another," is a trench saying that Hnd exemplification in the way one disease will substitute itself for another and graver one, in very many cases. Liver disease, for instance, will noon inrluee blood disorders, throat ailments, skin afTee-lions and eventually, because of impov erished blood, consumption itself, unless, in deed, it be treated in its incipieiicy and early proKress by Dr. Tierce's "Golden Medical Discovery " which acts as a specific in these ailments, accomplishing a rapid cure by its powerful alterative action upon the great or gans of the body. Cart-off boots and shoes are made into wall paper at certain factories. Your Krlrnitn will Never Tell Yen, but perhaps somebody, who isn't your friend, will, that your presence is rendered offensive by the foul, fetid smell of your breath. Ev ery word you utter, though it be the very echo of wisdom and poetry, disgusts your hearers, and your laugh is productive of any thing but mirth to them. It is a duty you owe, not only to yourself, but to socie'ty, to remove this cause of olTensa Dr. Sage's Catarrh Kemedy will heal the diseased mu cous membrane, will bring relief to yourself and other8.Do not hesitate to employ it. Of the twenty-five members of Grant's turn cabinets six have died. Young- or mitlA-n7ffl m. iifTat-t.m e nervous debility and kindred weaknesses, hmiM I ..... i ' . Kim i-tiutn in stamps tor large treatise giving successful treatment. World's Dispensary MedjkmlAssociation, Buffalo, N. Y. t no sows thorns should not go barefoot. The niirocf. Bwonhi iA liat r.v1 T Oil in the world, manufactured from fresh. "iiuj livers, upon me seasnore. it is ntiso- lllfrtlv rtlirvh ami " , ...1... I. - . . onoe taken it prefer it to alt others. Physi- V.I..13 jvu uoi'ium iii aiiiK-i iiir wj liny OI ino other oils in market. Made by Caswell, Haz ard & Co.,JSew York. Cbapi-kd uands, face, pimples and rough kin cured by using Juniper Tar 8op, made by LYON'S Patent Metallic Heel Kkiffeners keen new boots and shiwa from rnnnine over- Sold by shoo and hardware dealer. "Bekbon's Aromatic; At cm Ri-i.pnmi Soap." beautifies And ftnffAna VncA nnH bands, heals and cures all skin diseases for sure. 25 cents bv "Druee-ist" or bv mail. Win. Dreydoppel, Philadelphia, Pa. If affiictod with sore eves usn Dr. Tminc Thonipson's Eye Water. Druggists sell it 26c. Exolish manufacturers now turn out 20.- 300 incandescent lamps per week. POR 37AT1V. C"HHEl MATISM, NKrilAl.-lA,H ITICA. , '"n,b"f BafkMhe, Urnd.i'ke. Toot. .. Sort Uro.1, bw.lh., Spr.1. Urnkn, B.rm kr.14., troft BOX. olfcr Pl 'IT... '" ""'' ""I ltor. lx,lmlilUlii, iMt mm, i.b a. roi.iii.ia co iuiun, at. t.slii ECZOJ3A! My wife has been torly afnletrrt with Kcirras, or 8alt Hheum from infancy. We trtrtl every known remedy, liut lo uo avail. She oil aluo arnii'tcl with a periodical nervoua headache, nomcthnea followed by an Intermittent fever, o that her life becaui a burden to her. Finally t determined to try 8. 8. S. fhe commenced aeven weeka aito. After tlia third lK!lle the Inflammation disappeared, and nor aitota dried up and turned white and Bealv, and finally aha brushed them oft In an impalpable white powder re embllnK pure nail. Khe in now taking the rlxtu bot tle; every appearance of the dlneane la sou and her neah 1 aoft and whiut aa a ehlld'a. Her headachea have dlvappeared and ahe enjovatheonly good health fhe haa known In i yearn. So wonder ahe derma every bottle of 8. S. 8. la worth a thousand tlmea lu weisht In fold. JOHN K HKAD1.KY. Detroit, Mich., May 16, 1R83. 44 Urlawold St, ror aale by all druKvlata. THK SWIFT 8PF.CIFIO CO.. N. Y., 157 W. gkl St. Drawer Dtl.nti Oa. 1 aalea, and 800 porrt. profit mad br man and women with our labor-eaving inven tion. Aladrcleared ,uinone atreet. An I Agent write:"Your '1'lun hrintra nnn.l iiuiekeat of any I ever tried. "A m man or woman making lena than 4u per Week .hmild In nn. eaxy money-niakiug buaineMi. We guarantee it the bent Paring in the land. 91 aamplea quick Belling gooda free to any lady or Rent who wii I devoto a fw hours dally. Ki fjeriHnce unneceaiiary; no talking. W rite quick andia cure your county. Address, B. L. Merrill A Co. Chicago LIQUID GLUE k A Awarded GOLD MEDAL. LOiinnu ira ri &',M"?D """l'" "d r-iaoo'Ot... Pullman ST"" I ralira ( .r Co.. c Mfd only by th RUSSIA 9&XJL!Hi-GLOUCESTER MAsrtSTB ...-.wTTn.:nc. araiiiipn i m can by Mail, tie R. U. AWARE THAT LoriUard's Climax Plus:. bearing a red tin 'tuium Lorlllard'f Navy 4 iippiiiKMand that lxiillarri Kuull art the brut, ami eticaiHt, tjuullty cuuftl tiered t AGENTS WANTED We want a reliable Lady or Oent In each town and towiihhlp to acll our komIh; alho general agent. Far llcularatree. Addreaa J kkklkaon M V'u t:u., loledo.U. TFI FRHiPHY ''"-ru here and earn ijood Pay. LtUnKrni Situation IiiiuUIiikI; Write VAI.KVi'lVi: IIHO., Jaue.ville, Wis. niofl-V Psllc Gf et English Gout ai L&.cSil S I IIIS. Rh.umatio Remedy, and puna, qu ci 4, rnACOBS nn W lian I.ai. It ! - i . .1 .i ti 4 Una moonshiner, cornered, after tor eight nulling ma rorernment omclals, was asked to surrender, he exclaimed: 'Never, to men who fire at my bark!" Rerore he was taken, fi8 bullets had eons cloor through him, but stranKe to relate, ha (rot well, In the bands of rud backwoods nurse. My the way, if Garfield had been in the . uaricwoncis nurse, he might hare llred. A boan of volunteer testimony arainst tho infallibility of the physicians has beenac cumulntuifr of late, and people are encouraged to do their own doctoring mora and more. It Is cheaier and quite as certain. Before Detective Curtin, of Buffalo, caught Tom Ballard ho "covered" htm with his re oJr. Tom saw the point and tumbled! Joe no wns "covered" a few weeks ago f,nd.J1. tumbll. and did Dan Mace. Death "fetched 'em" with that dreaded weapon kidney disease. But they should have been lively and drawn first. They coulu enjtilv h.v. . v. - i ther covered him with that dratd nhot War ner fUfcfA (Mir wVilrth !...... -I ' ' i " ii 'i iriuii,ijr, oa- W'Ii 1 thePrpyi " is doubtless true t hat porting men dread their enemy more than fnT m'hap of their profession, and presuma bly this explains why they as a rule are ao partial to that celebrated "dead shot." Redmond riirii-. tm. .1 u render when attatked in the back. He srtoum - araw," rare about and proceed to the defence, for such attacks, so common amonir nil iIhm win u - --, ..... icv u at man nvrrr timeunleaa "covered" bv that wonderfully uccessful 'dead shot1; 'Sportaman'$ News, BlRrn ftnd hnTWfind arwna n tvu. . ft iae, 000,000 are made in Kusla annually. When yon vlltt or leave Naw Yora Pity, aave bairirage eipraaaage and .l carriage hire, and atop at the Uranil Union Hotel, oppnaite lirand Central di.pot. Imnerlant. ll.. V. ' i' m ni fmn million J"llara, 1 and upward per day. Kuropean plan. Me. valor. Rrstaurant implied with theheat. iioneran tagae and elevated rallroade to all dpol. Kamiliaa ran h.e better lor leaa money at the Orand Union Hotel than at an nth.. . I u 1 i . , . . r EARLY all the aired Inhnliltnnta nf P., .,'. eat opium. Why Hot Try It If Ton have that eitram. iireH e 11 . . - -. , i t , nra.iiPW) loss of appetite, Indlgeatlon, heartburn, headache, or other symptoms of dyepla, why don't you try flood's Ramaparllla 1 It will overcome the tired feellnir create ... tile, lone up the ttlgeatlve orgnna and cure dyspepsia. wi? tuny nienicine or which ran truly bo enld, "100 Doses One Dollar." which la an iinin.,ir.i.i. argument aa to strength and economy. If you suffer from scrofula, snlt rheum, sores, bolls, pimples, humors of any kind, why don't you try niw " onrffaparuia r It Is purely vegetable, fre rmin .11 ti..-. . gradient. Is undoubtedly the beat blood purifier. an, i. annual certain to ao you good. "This winter I was troubled with a humor, pimples coming out all over me and Itching a great deal. I took several kinds of medicine, but they gave me no relief. At last I took Hood's Raraaparllla and Ihe humor hua disappeared. I feel right well now." Hknbt Stiirokper, 8t. Mary's, O. Hood's Sarsaparilla Sold by all druggist. l 1 six for a.V Prepared by C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass. i OO Doses One Dollar RADWAV HEM RELIEF THK CHEAPEST AND HKST MEDICINE FOB. FAMILY USE IN THK WOULD. In from our to twenty minutes, never falls to re lleve l'AIN with one thorough application. Nomat terhow violent or excruciating the pain, the Ilhett mat c, Bedriddeu, Intlrm. Crippled. Nervous, Neu r?'i.i.c!0.r4,r1",.ri"rd vi'th di-ee.ei mar sufler. RAD- AY'S READY KT.I.IKF will afford iuataut ease. It lustautly relieves aud soon cures RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA, SCIATICA. liRADAf UK. TOOTHACIIK, CONUKnTlO.N, D It L1 1 MEN, INFLAMMATIONS, MMIAINW, SOKE TIIKOAT. BOWEL COMPLAINTS It will in a few moments, when taken according to oin-cnoua, cure triii. ripaame, Hour Htomach, Heartburn, Hick Headache, Summer Complaint, Iiiarrlura. Dyaonterv, fholeia Morbus, Colic, Wind In the Bowels, aud all Internal l'alus. ...T.V''1', "h.uild alwava carry a bottle of HAP W AY K KKADV ItKLlKF with them. A few droi in water will prevent aickueaa or pain from chant" of water. It is better than French Braudy or Hitters as a stimulant. Malaria in it Various Forms. There is not a remedial agent In the world that wi I cure Fever and Ague and all other Malarious. Bilious ond other levera (aided by HadwaVa I'llla) ao 011 ck aalUdwav'sKeady Kelief. Price llfty cents. Bold by druggists. DR. RADWAY'S SARSAPARHUAH RESOLVENT, The Great Blood Purifier, yon the rt'as or SKIN DISEASES, Eruptions op thk Fack and Boiy, Pimplkb, Uliitihe, Salt Khki'M, Old Sou km, t'u bitx. !r Itn.fl way's Knraannrllilnn Hrtolvrnt x- rem nil reiupiliiil giux, It pun fir thn blood, ro HtoriiiK t.i'.i!th Hiid vinror; clear kiu, bttutiful com- llL'l.iuli BsiircH tn nil. Chronic Liver Complaints, etc. Not onlv doen the Harnaiarillian Kenolveut -xol nil tvmiMtiiil RxentH in thtoiirott;)innicHciMfulUM, fJoiiHtituUnual mid tikin Diaetvtbti, but it u the only .OMUve cure ior Kidney and Bladder Complaints. Urinary and Womb Ofeafteii, ravH, IHaK't', Drnp v. Stopping, of Watt-r, Incoutiiicii(o of Trine, liritrlit a Imrae. Albuminuria, aud all canna where thiTH are brick-duHt dexmilH, or the water in thick, cloudy, or niiied with Rubstance like the white oi au VK. or there ih a morbid, dark, bilious apiHarance nd white bone-diiMt depotutH, and where thero Inn prickling, burning ttfiiHation when paswuiK water, aud pa 111 in thcHiuall of thback and aloun the loin. hold by nrucalat. Price 91 per Ilottle. Dr. Rail ay's ReplatiHE Pills For the mini nf all fllunvr1.ra nf 11. a T I.,.. liowete. kidneys, lllatldcr, Nervous Dmeanea, Female t ontpiHihtK, j,ohh ot APltlte, Head.'iche. CollHti. lion. t'oBtiveniHB, IndiveHlion. lvKtenia, llilloiia. Si Ka. Fever, lnflaininatioiiol the HowcIh, I'lles and all erauiteinenta of the Internal Viscera. Vureiv vck elalile, containing no niercurv or deieterioiiadniKS. I'rlrct 2A cente x-r lioi. Hold by all rirntrKiata. laT-ricnd a letter stamp lo lr. ItADWAY A' I II.. No. 32 Wnrren Mreel, Now Vurk, Ior ralne aud Irae." IOHEDIATE RELIEFr Gordon's Kins' of I'aln relieves palnot whateverna- tnre, the momriit It u applied, and Is a household remedy wherever known for UheuinatiHm, Neural gla, KeadaA'he and Toothache, liurua and Kculda, sprains aud llruli. Illarrhiea Uyaenu-rv. Sore riirout, Ulcers, Fresh Wouuda, etc. liurua will not tiliMer If applied, and Urulaea will heal lu a day that would require a week liy any other method. The remedy ia furnifthed lu powder, with lulieln, eU'., and la ai-nt by mall, untune paid. It Is put up In 50e.. $1 and $. pai'kaKeii. The h.:, or trial packiiiie, when rcdui ed to liquid form, will fill U iut. bullies, which are worth at retail, $,,. Aitenu can coin money sell lux It. It la worth ten tlmea its cost for burna alone. Kind postal notes or two cent stomps. Address K. ti. KlCHAKllS, bole I'ropiletor, Toledo, Ohio. MPs sVMaBBwassassssI tir. Mil IT. Pure cure In in to . '"iwcui, edlcliiea by express, li eBM,llHhu.l 1I....L KfltlitMrliin, . Mui ah, tlulucy, Jailc-h.' GEN. GRANT'S MEMOIRS. fMieclnl Mrruiiiteniriiisunil extra terma secured ty ad.lreasiuK Al'WlM AT'lOX," iio 17u, i'liila Fa TIMSTON'SfflOOTBPO UiSi HareOumlust au J faluea, with Foctiftt- bUOli COIIlbilltHl. 3 IMaUiplig, ioo, liij. mouny lor aaeiits. Couibiu4l Fooael IwwJtUu., An, Church he, Mew Yurk. PATCNTQ Obtained. Keml ,tmp or rH I Cll I O luvebtura'Guiaa. L UlMii. HAM, Faleut Lawyer, NsUlu.-iou, V. C. """ Pensions toSjldieraAHeira. 8cudataiu;i 11A.U, All'y, WasniuKLou, ii. C. Moruhiuc llublt t'nred In 10 tn till m. Knitn .111.. j R. s h I ilw, 1. bl l.CH. JLauuu. (Jbuv Take all In nil. Take all the Kidneys and Mrer Aledicintii Tsk all the Wood purtflsrs, Take all the Dynprpsia and Indlfrestioii cures, Take all the Ague, Fever, end bilious Petc. Take all the Brain and Nerve fore rseirst. Take all the ffrwit health restorers. In thort, take all the best qualities of all these and the brut, Oualities of all the best medicines In the world, and you will Hnd that Hop Bitten hare the best t;uratire qualities and powers of all concentratfd In them, And that they will cure when any or all of these, singly or comhinerf. Fall! Ill A thorough trial will give positive proof et this. Hardened Liver. Five years ago I broke down with kidney and liver complaint and rheumatism. Hi nee then I have been unable to be about stall. My liver became hard like wood; my limbs were puffed up and filled with water. All the beet physicians agreed that nothing could cure me. I resolved to try Hop Bitters; I have used seven bottles; the hardness bus all gone from my liver, theswollinn from my limbs, and it un u orkrd a miracle in my rase; otherwise I would have been now iu my 5 rave. . W. Mobbt, Buffalo, Oct. 1, 1881. ToTei'ty and Suffering-. "I wn dragged down with debt, poverty and eurferinfr for years, caused by a sick family and large bills for doctoring. I was completely discouraged, until one year ago, by tho advice of my pastor, I commenced usinir Hop Bitters, and in one month we were all well, and none of us have seen a sick day since, and I want to gay to all poor men, you can keep your families well a year with Hop bitters for less than one doctor's visit will cost. I know it" A Working m Art. fT"None genuine without a bunch of green Hops on the white Inbol. Mmn all the vile, poisonous stuff with "Hop" or "Hops" ia their name. SH U-3U OnlyTcmperauco Hitters Known. UratefDl Thousands proclaim VnrsoAR BiTTicaH the most woutlcrf ul luvlgonuit that ever sustained the sinking system. 11 ailo from California roots and herbs, free from Alcolaolle Stimulants. A JPurg-ataVO and Tonic. This Hitters cures Female Complaints, Inflammatory and Chronic lllieumnlltm, Gout, Hillous, Remittent and Intermittent Fe vers, Uliod, Liver anil li Id nr y Illnesses. Dyspepsia or Itidiiteallon. Headache, Pain in the Shoulders, Coughs. Tightness of the Chest, Dizziness, Hour rttomach. Furred Tongue, Bilious Attacks, Palpitation of the Heart, Pneu monia, and Pain iu ihe regions ot the Kidneys, are cured by the line of the Outers. For Kkln Ulseasea, Emptions, ' Bolls, Erysipelas, Scrofula, Discoloration, Iluinorsand diseases of the Skin of whatever name or ne ture, are literally dug up and carried out of ll system in a short time by the use of the HI' :i It Invlaroralea tho Moniacli, and ui ulatttsthe torpid Liver and bowels, wh',, der It of unetitialed efficiency in cleani , ' blood of all impurities, and imparling ' and vigor to tho whole system. :' It" long un j l is, no i-rrvon can take tlie llltters and reJa- well. destroyed and removed from Ihe system. Cleanse Ihe Vitiated Itlood whenevs. It is foul ; your feelings will tell you when. Keel nn iani nanata WArmai. . tne Diood pure, and tho nealth of the system, will follow. III ronrlnalon : Olve the Bitters atrial. It will speak for Itself. One bottle will prove a bet ter guarantee of its merits than a lengthy ad vertisement. M. 11. McDonald Drug Co., Proprietors, Ban J ranoiaco. Cel.. and If.. Ml ftrcl Washington Ht. Cor. Charlton Kl., New York. Sold by all Dealers and Drug-gists. Ve Want (1,000 More BooK Agents to Ball ti. Personal History of U. S. BRANT. Tn Vwk MbrtcsMUkt UsntaJ ntlr BitKlsvrr, tl Mrvlt tm4 vrisalt CAffwr, and Is lbs aiutl cumpUia and laluvbls niaisri W him m UnL A larg batdMsns aciafs olunis, nupsibly lUantraietl fut full as.iKulsrs and bl'Kt'UL 1 kHMM TO AUKNTrf, ar tthu Mf at Sues t ndinr Oairts. r.,r autkl. f Mniifla this Datrsr ) aidJrcsa AMKHU'AN l'l l-l.l-illlNtj CoTllarifoVw Utiatuu, lliicuso, iin innuil, or M. I.oula. BEST TRUSS EVER USED. Improved Elaalin Truss " o m n i tr h t a n 1 1 . 1 . w b ItivHv cuivs Kiiptnre. Kent hv mail everywhere. Write for full descriptive circulars to the New York Elastic Truss ( Vim nn nv 744 B'dway, New York Real In the World. Madeonly by the PraserLuhrlca tort.o. at Chlcaiso, N. y. 4 fSt.Loul. Sold evcruwlurt. 1IIIOK FHKK DR. J. C. HOFFMAN. Jefferson, Witeonsin. h(Uker,,h ra4 a lliewle. ! tlit tU of emediei, nl ha sivcs. litiukt Univ.!.. MUalsW- MURPHY PROS,, Pm. Te Uhaiwon Ihe tavor of th public an i now rok "'"'K (tic lead in McUl UUCsnflhe O.M.mi. A. L. i,MH ti. .... H'ltl. p. Solntiy Ii..ffi,ua IV:- - tut. Mr4 oa. bv the l trial Cssale Co. Clnolnnati.CJTia V. Ohio. NNYROYAL tiW CHESTER'S rNr.i icu Tlie Oritcii.nl and Only (sruulnA. Hale and aiwa.s rriia6l- He-arof UrtfaicrM liuiiati.n. TO LADIES. a-Jitlala, i-Uj., m t,ti nitiwu'M r.aall-arr the bt.t ii.a.1. ludi.,,- ,,., , IU0ius4c (slaU pa I fur Larikulali I f 1 O ? . - -'N,.:' ; .J-.J S3 ( fBL AST VCV GRAZER AXLE GREASE. l TO Y'J" YsM r yUuarkuteed not mU unit 8lrlotur. E J I 9 "'""i1- NAME PAPt SPILLS! SO atadlaa ka..lki:.4it.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers