SOME QUEER CUSTOMERS THAT GOTHAMS OUNDBALER3 HAVE TO LOOK OUT FOR- The WnnM-Re SnlcltleThoTnsanply Joalou Idr. and Lastly Oie Thrne Flad Hoys. "There Is no one who has to be a better judge of human nature," said a Broadway gundcalor, .''tlinn a man in my business. 1 enn sue a man up the minutu lie steps into my store, and if I notico anything peculiar in his manner I watch him as clo.'dy as a cut does a mouse. What for? Why, because I don't want my place made the scene of a rensational suicide if I can help it. I began iuircss here in 1 "!, and during that period mmo rather exciting in cidents have happened in front of my counter. . et mc sec, I believe it was in li(," and the dealer scratched his head in a rcmiuisccnt manner, ''that I was at my desk one morning making out some bills, when a gentleman ftdly six feet in height and broad shoulders in pro portion, enmo in. 'Will you let me see 8omo of your revolvers !' ho asked, in an ordinary tone; 'I am desirous of getting one for target practice' I showed him several 01 the finest I had in the cae,hut they didn t t-eem to suit him. Then he asked to sco a derringer. This request, coupled with an indefinable feel ing that I had already felt that thero was something wrong about the man, aroused my suspicions. What on earth can ho want of a derringer for tar get practice: I said to myself, but I showed him one. lie said he would take it, and asked for a quantity of cart ridges to go wiih it. 'I am very par ticular about my cartridges,' ho said, as I was about to do them u,i. 'Will you kindly open one of the boxes so that I may ex uninc them.' The request seemed reasonable, and 1 did so. He glanced at tho cartridges, took a few from the box, examined them, and then replaced them, with the remark: '1 guess they're all right. You may do the package up.' His calm mu.ncr partially allayed my suspicions and I started to wrap up the revolver and cartridges, when the man suduenly exclaimed . 'I!y dove! that's a funny thing,1 pointing toward the door. I turned my head, and, seeing nothing unusual, took a step or two in the di rection ho pointed. Still seeing nothing stiange, I turned to ask him what he re ferred to. I didn't ask him anytlrng, though, but instead umped forward just inxtime to prei cut hi9 brains being scat tered upon the floor. While my head hud been turned ho had slipped a cart ' ridjro which ho had concealed in his hand into the revolver, placed the muzle aga nst his temple, and was about to pull the tr gger as I sprang upon him. My fingers closed on the hammer just as ' it was coming down, and broke its force so that the cartridge was indented but the lea-t bit, not enough to fire it. The man seemed as cool as a c xumber, and surrendered the weapon to mo with out a word. I put it back in the case, and as I did so he looked at me inquiringly. 'Won't you sell it to me?' lie asked, and when I replied most emphatically in the negative he said: i A , - 1 1 i r , i it i i i ti uu, suit, yuumuti, auu wnibeu canuiy out, humming a fragment of a then popu'ar air. I have never seen the ma i since, but lor weeks I watched the papers to see if a gentleman of his de scription had killed himself. If ho did I never found any account of it." "Do you think he killed h m-clfi" "I do not, for this reason. If you have ever investigated cases of suicide you mu-tt have noticed that a person generally kills himself upon the impulse of the moment. Of course thero nie ex ceptions to this rule, but they generally occur among tho lower clashes. -.f a man of any intelligence yields to a sui cidal impulse and is-Hed in his attempt he is likely to telieve that fate has inter vened and that his luck will change. It ? unlikely, therefore, unless he is crazy, 4hat he will ugain attempt to take his , ii me "Have you ever had any other strange experiences of a similar nature?" "I can't remember any just like that I have told you about, but I have had other strange ones. One morning a woman who was refined looking and had quite ladyliko manners, came in and asked to Bee some revolvers. I showed """"""'. some from which she selected one. ttvd'xW do,' she said, 'please load JT.rme.' 1 told her that I couldn't do that, as it was against my rules, bhe urged me for some little time to load it, but 1 still refused. 'Very well, keep it then,' and sailed out in an indignant manner. Hardly had she passed through the door when a de tective with whom I was well acquainted came in. 'Did you sell that lady a re volver?' he asked. I told him I had not. 'Very well, don't sell her one if she should come here again,' he said, and rushed out alter her. Either the same or following day she came in again. 'I'll take that revolver,' she said. 'I've got a friend who will load it for me.' 'I am sorry, madame,' I re plied, 'but I cannot sell it to you.' 'Can't sell it to me,' she exclaimed. That's strange. What's the reason you can't i' I told her that I could givo her no reason, but I could not sell her the revolver, r-he appeared very indignant, and went out, simply saying sho would buy one somewhere else. A few days after I aw my friend, the detective, and he told me that the ludy was well known in society, where she was a great favor vTite. 'She has a fine looking hushand, ho ia devoted to her ' he said, 'but at times she becomes insanely ealous of ' him tor no cause at all. At such times she is really out of her mind, and unless ratchet! would do herself or him some injury. J-.very two or three months she has those spells, whic h generally lust a day or two and then pass awav. At such times I am employed to watch her. I get well paid for doing it, or you can bet I'd steer clear of such work. It's no picnic, I can assure you.'" "Did you ever see the lady again?" "Yes. Not long after 6he pai-sed here leaning on the aim of a tall, handsome gentleman, whom, I mpio?e, was her husbaud. She was chatting gayly with him, and both icemed supremely happy. As they pasted I saw her glance in my direction, but apparently without recognition. I understand that she is entirely cured now. "There is one more curious case that I want to tell you of, and then I'll stop. One cold March afternoon three small boys, the oldest of whom could not have been over 13, swaggered into my store and asked 'ter see 6ome of them puns and pistols.' I showed them some rifles and revolvers, and the oldest one of the crowd selected a Hemiugton rifle, two revolvers, a quantity of ammunition, three bowie knives and some fishing tackle. The whole bill amounted to and they settled it then and there. Of course, I knew there was something wrong, and so while the boys were select ing their outfit I sent my ollice boy out with a note on which I had written 'Call the first policeman you come across.' The policeman came and took the boys, outfit and all, to the station ho.ise. When the ca-e came up before Justice Whitg the next day it wss discovered that the three little meals had robbed a third boy of f tW, which lit father hud sent him with to par the rent. Filled with a desire to bo West and kill Indians they had secured the money and came to me to buy their outfit. The remaining 20 was to pay their fares West. It is un necessary to add that they never got. fur'her than tho reform school, whore I believe they still linger in durance vile." SELECT SIFTINC.9. The total number of Mormons Is 200, 000. t'nder the State law of Michigan no duelist can casta vote. The center of population is in the vi cinity of Indianapolis, Ind. A cooking school In Pittsburg, makes a specialty of educating men cooks. In the year 1SSS, I'awtuckct, II. I., polled IsSS Uepublicau presidential votes. It is said that a man can live and sup port a family on ten cents a day in .Mexico. liarbcctie is derived from the French words .nrV a queue which means from snout to tail. In tho Sandwich Islands the natives paint their faces and knock out their front teeth in mourning for their friends. One of the gifts to the Hussian Czarina during her late visit with tho Czar to liaku, was a bouquet-holder valued at $1 0,000. A talking piano, operated by numerous keys and producing words of all kinds, is one of the curiosities at a New York museum. An Oregon man has in his garden a tomato vino that is th'rtcen feet high, and the branches of which cover an area of twenty feet. Threo Knglishmen now have statues in France Lord Brougham at Cannes, Jenncr at Houlogne-sur-.Mer, and t-hake- speare in Taris. A man who was severely injured in a row in New York the other day. had his wounds photographed so that their ex tent could be shown in court after they had healed. A newspnper man in Liverpool secured the names of 4v3 sailors, and only two among them were named .lack. In all his talk with them he never heard them use a nautical expression. Bread baked from bas'wood sawdust and corn starch passed muster in a Bos ton restaurant as "ludinn bread,-' but some of the caters afterward complained that their hunger had not been satisfied. A new hum tnitarian society has been organized in New York. One of its ob jects as laid down in tho constitution is to compel storekeepers employing coun ter clerks of either sex to provide seats for them While a wedding party was waiting for a squire to pcr.orui the ceremony at Alpharctta, Gn., the groom excused him self and lied. The bride proposed to the groomsman on the spot, and they were married within an hour. John Stokes, of Philadelphia, has just been awarded $UI0 damages against the man who hit him in the eye with a potato aimed at quito another person, and thereby drew blood, and is said to have injured the sight of Mr. Stokes. Orwell was four years a flourishing little town in Kansas, with a good news paper and other tigns of prosperity. Now it has not a single- inhabitant, and the houses t'tue vacantly on the sur rounding prairie. Tho ra lroad was ex tended and the people had to go with it. Mr. Mellclond, of Dakota, has a horse that is just like 'l other horses till you cn'-UO to the pastern joint, below which he branches into two shinbones and stands upon two perfect feet to each of his forelegs. He is quito as nimble as if he had but tho normal complement of cxtrtmit:es. The owner, who has re fused $:5tl0 for half of him, is yet will ing to take $500J for the whole. Pnenmonin's Fatal Progress. According to a medical contemporary, Dr. Oouverncur L. Smith, of New York, has just given some interesting and startling facts in regard to pneumonia. Dr irmith points out that the d sease is becoming worso every year, increasing rathing than decreasing, both in the number of cases and the percentage of mortality. The statistics of the Penn sylvania Hospital shows that the mor tality from pneumonia there advanced from 6 percent, iu lS47to 181 per cent, in 1887, and ol percent, in 1H80. Simi larly, in the New York Hospital the ratio of mortality from this disease is more than double what it was in 1878. Thirty or forty years ugo it was regarded as serious, but it did not excite anything like the a!rm it does to-day. Dr. Smith is rather inclined to believe that the medical art, instead of progressing in its treatment of pneumonia, has actu ally gone back; and holds that the old methods of treating tho disease at the time it was le-.s deadly to have been abandoned for methods more finical but less etlicacious. The first requisite, he insists, is a "superabundance of pure air 1 about the patient. In pneumonia the breathing apparatus only partially per ! forms its functions, for the diseased fmrts of the lungs are substantially use ess. 'The working portion must per form the work of two lungs for a week or ten days iu order to maintain the blood in u proper condition to sustain life;' and, the:efore, 'the patient re quires purer air and vastly more than one in sound health. ' 'Pure a r as a remedial acut in the management of pneumonia and other disorders, both acute and chronic, has ever been a more potent ally of therapeutics than any panacea oUcrcd by alc hemy or any hobbledehoy presented by modern chemistry." Atlanta Constitution. Fantastic Canes of Rare Woods. One of this week's steamships brought over more aod prettier cane and umbrel la novelties than have ever been import ed in one lot before. The larger number consist oi rrencb and r-panh creations, and of woods and ivory from the Holy Land. Spotted palm and i-'trvptian olive are perhaps the prettiest woods among the lor, and when capped and swedged with beautifully grained ivory they make canes which delight the eye or the mo t conservative connoisseur. The Kgyptian olive wood is used priu cipally in umbiolla handles in the un finished state. Uouillion blonde, a very light wood from Algeria, and accasia, which grows in Spain, complete the list of new woods, bleached but khorn handles, with extra laige, full crown, and lizard skin han dles from Tunis, which have a decidedly suakish uppearance, will please the ultra fashionable. Mexican onyx h now being used in various designs for handles; shaped in Masonic emblems, it makes up very at tractively, and bids fair to have a large run. yio York 6 in. The wife of a Wall street banker is reported as having invented a machine , for making wire rope, the patent for j which she has Bold for f i.j.OOO cash and ; a royalty. W. C. T. U. COLUMN. Conducted bg thi Tione.ita Union. The W. O. T. TJ. mmU the id and tth Tuesday of each month, at S p. m. Frwklont Mrs. Ell Holeman. Vice Presidents Mrs. J. O. Dale, Mrs. W. J. Robert Recording Bse'y Mrs. L. A. How. Cor. Bee, and Trans. Mrs. B. D. Irwin. IVos wnro htm that givrth his neighbor drink, I hut rnittr.it thy bottle to him, and tnake.it him amnken also. Hub. Jl, 15. The wicked worketlu a deceitful work; but to him Uiat towoth rightousneM shall be a trne reward. her. 11, 18. The Old Man's tjertiiro. I shall never forget the comniencment of the temperance rotortn. 1 was a child at the time, nlniiit tn jenrs of ape. Our home had every comfort, and inv parents idolize I mo. Wine was often on the table, and both my father and lny mother frequently (rave it to mo in tho bottom of the kIhss. Ono Sun. lay, at church, there wan a startling ennounee inont made to our people. 1 knew nothing of it Import, but ther.i was inn 'h whisper ing among the men. The pastor said that on tho next evi niu there would lie a temper ance meeting, and an address upon the evils of nueliiiM'ianeo in the use of alcoholic drinks. He expressed himself ignorant of the mooting, ami could not say what course would be best to pursue. The subject of the meeting came up at ti e table after the ser vice, and I questioned niy father about it with all the curious eaeerness of a child. The whjsier auit words which had been dropped in my hearing clothed the whole Affair in great mystery to me, and 1 was all eagerness to learn of this same strange thing. 3iv lather snia it was some scheme to unite L hnrch and State. The niuht caiut. and troops of peop'e KAthe'ed cm the tnvern stps, and I heard the, est and lau.cn, and saw drunken men reeling out of tho 1 nr room. 1 urged lny lather to let me go, but he refused. I iniby thinking It would be an innocent gratifica tion of my curiosity, hejmt on his ha. and (Missed ai-nss the green be the church. I re member well how all the people aiiwared as tliey came in, seeming ta wonder what kind of an exhibition was to come off. Ill the omer was tho tavern-keeper, and around him a number of friends. For an hour the eopIe of the plai-e continued coming iu, un iil there whs a house lull. All were curiously watching the dcor wondering what would next apr. The pastor stoie in and took Ins s,at w n inn a pillar un lei' (be gallery, as if doubtful of the propriety f being there at all. Two men finally came iu and took their seats near the altar. All eyes were fixed upon them, and a great stillness prevailed the house. The men were unlike In appearance, one being short and thick in build, the other till and well-formed. The younger had tho man ner and dress of a clergyman, a full round face, and quiet, good lmtured look, aa he eisurelv looked around the audience. Hut my childish interest was ail in the old man. w.th his broad, deep (tint and unusual height; looking giant-like, as he strode up the aisle, his hair was white, his brow deeply teamed with furrows, and around his hamisome mouth l.nesof calm and touching sadness. His eye was black and rest, and .inilled as the tavern keeper uttered a low lest aloud. His 1 ps were compressed, and a nmson flush cauio and went over his late cheek. One arm was otr aliove the elbow, and there was a wi,d scar over his richt eye. I'ue younger arose and stated the ob.;ect of tiie meeting, and asked if there was a clergy man prtscnt to open with prayer. Our pastor kept his seat, and the speaker himself made a short prayer, and then made a short address, at the conclusion calling ui on any one present to make remarks. The pastor arose under the gal ery and attacked the position of the speaker. Using the argument I have otten heard since, and concluded by denouncing those engaged in the new movement as medd esome lunatics, who wished to bar up ttie time-honored usagti of good society, and Injure the busi ness of resectable men. At the conclusion of his remarks, the tavern-keeper and his f r. ends got up a cheer, and the current of foe ing was evidently against the strangers and their plan. While the pastor was speaking the old man nati nxea ins uarn eye utkin turn, leaned forward a if t t Cairn every word. As th astor took bis s. at. the old man arCKe.his tall form towering in its symmetry, and his che-t swelling ns he inhaled his breath throueli his thin, dilated nostrils. 1 o me at the tune there was something awe inspiring and grand in the appearance of the old man, as he stood with his lull ga.e upon tne audience. Ins t-eth shut hard, and a silence like that of death throughout the church. He bent his rye upon the tavern keeper, and that peculiar eye liu.-ered and k:nuled for half a moment. Tbo scar grew red upon his forehead, and I eneuth the heavy eyebrows his eyes glittered and glowed like those of a scrp -lit. The tavern keeper quailed tiefore the searching glance, and 1 felt a relief when the old man with drew bis enze. For a moment be seemed lost in thought, and then in a low and tremulous tone commenced. There was depth iu that voice, a thriving pathos and sweetness, which riveted every heart, in the house before the first period had been sounded. My father's attention bad i ecoine fixed on the speaker with an ntereot which I had never before seen him exhibit, 1 can but briefly remember the substance of what the old man said though the Bcene was vivid before me as any that I ever wit nessed. "My friends, I am a stranger in your vil lage, "and I trust 1 may rail you friends. A new Btar has aris.in, and t iere is hope in the dark night which bancs like a pull of gloom over our country." Wiib a thrilling depth of voice Hie speaker continued: "O (iod. Thou wholookest with compas sion upon the moaterrinK of earth's chiliben. 1 thank Thee that a braen scriient has been lifted, upon which the drunken ci n look and lie helped; that a beacon has burst out upon the darkness that surrounds him, which shall L'uiile back to honor and heaven the bruised and weary wanderer." It is strange what power there is in sonif voices. The speaki-r was s'ow and unmoved tit a tear trembled in every eye, and liefore knew why, a tear droppe I upon mv hand, J illowed by others, like iuindros. The ol i nan brushed one from his own eyes, an 1 co.i tinned: "Men and Christians, vou have just heard i hat I am a vagrant and fanatic. Iain not. As God knows my own sad heart, I came hen 0 do good. Heir me and be just: I am ne old man, standing alone t th end of lilc'v - urney; there is deep sorrow iu inv hear ind tears in mv eves. I have ourneved ove1 1 dark and beaeonless ocean, and all li e'. hopes have been wrecked, 1 am without home, friends or kindred upon earth, and ook with longing to the n st of the id hi ol death, without Inends, kindred or home! ll was not so once!" No one could withstand the touching pathos of the o'd man. I noticed a teal trembling on the lid of niv father's eyt and 1 was no more ashaim d of niy own. "No my triends, it was not so once! Awav over the dark wavei which have wracked tny hopes, there is a blessed light of happi ness and home; I reach acrain couvuls vely or the fehrines of the household idoU, that mice were now mine no more." The old man seemed looking through wicy upon some bright vit-i'm. hii liis apart out tinker extended. involuntarily turned ii the d rection where it (oiuted, dreading o see some shadow invoked by its move m nts. , "I once had a mother. With her heart -rushed with sorrow she went down to the rave. I once had a wi'e as f air a woman -ever smiled in nn artbly home, her eyes s mild as a summer sky, and her heart a aithful and true aa ever guarded ann herished a husband's love. Her eyes grew lira as the floods of sorrow washu way their brightness, and the loving neart was broken. 1 once bad a noble, e brave and beautiful boy, but he was driven out from the ruins of bis home, en 1 inv heart yearns to know if he yit livej. I o ic: had a liai.e a sweet, smiling bane, hut my hand le,ln yed it, and it lives with the line who loves children. iJo not lie startled, triends! lam not a murderer in the com mon acceptation of the term. Yet there is a light in my evening sky. A spirit mother is ioices over the return of her pi otial sou 1 he wiie smiles upon bun who am u turm back to virtue ad honor. Ties child anel visits me at nightfall, and I fe.-l the hal lowed touch of a tiny palm upon mv feverish -beeu. My boy it he yet lives, would tor ;ive the sorrow in,' old man for his treatment which drove him into the world, and the blow which manned him lor life. God for give me lor the rum I have brought upon m and mine.'1 I He again wiped a tear from bis eye. Ill father watc hed hiiu with a strange interest, aid a countenance uuuMiully paie, and c ;lted by buine .trunue emotion. "1 was om.o a fanatic, and followed tl. nialien liu'iit which Ud mu to tuiu. 1 was J fanatic- wlieu I (sacriliced my wife, children, happiness and home to the aecuraod demon of the bowl, I was a drtinsatd. Krnm re pet'tab lit v and affluence I plllmcfd into dog redation ami poverty. I dragged my family iiown With me. I left Wife and children amiil the wreck of their home Idols, and rioted an the tavern. 'lin y never conn lained. yet. fl.ee icn' i- I'liec-ei- nr I. road i n N w Vni-'s night I returned late to the hut where charity had given us a homo. Mary was nn and shivering over the coals. I demanded food, but she burst Into tears, and told me there w as none. I tiercel y ordered her to get soma She turned her eyes sadly upon tne, the tear falling over her pale cheeks. At this time the Iwlw in tlin cradle awoke and Sent up a famishing wail, startling the de spairing mother like a serpent's sting." "We have no food, .lam-s. 1 have had none for several dnvs. I have nothing for the babe. Mu-t wo starve:" "The sad, pleading lac, and those stream ing eves, and the beblo wail of the child maddened me. an I 1, yes 1 struck Mnry a tieico blow m the face and shn fell forward upon the earth. I he furies of hell boiled ill my boKom, and with deeper intensity as I fo!t I had committed a wrong. . 1 had' never siruca tl.ir oeiu.e. o.o. u.w some lernoie impulse tKire mo on, nn 1 1 stoosd as well as I could in lny drunken state, and clutched hotn hands in her ha r. ' "Hod of mercy Jniuc," excla'med Mary, us she looked up into my tlnnlisli counteii uice,"yoii will '.ct kill us; you will not harm A ihie: ' nn I she sprung to tb cradle and grasped him to her e:uhrn,i 1 caught her oMui by the hair, and dragged her to the loor. As 1 lifto I the latch, the wind burst ii with a cloud of snow. With the yell of a lion.l 1 slid dr igie 1 boron, and hurried her out in I ho storm. With a wild ha! ha! 1 closed th door all I tin n I tho button, her p e.iding mo ins mingling with tho wails of t he blast and sharp cry of ur babe. Hut mv work was not complctn. 1 turned to the .tt!o Is'd where -lav my elder son, ami Hatched him frmn his slumbers; and against , s h:ilt awakened strui; es, opened the cioor mil turu-t l.iniiiiu. Iu tho ugonv of fear he called to mo bv a nam' 1 was no lonjor lit to bear, and looked his lingei-s into my pocket. 1 could not wrench that f i on.ied Krapaay, and with the cmi noss of a dovd us I was. shut the door upon li s arm, an 1 with niy knile severed it at the wrist." The speaker ceae I a moment, and buried ois fiii-e in his han Is, ns if to shut out Rome earful dream, and Ins dee i chest heaved like a storm swep sea. My father had arisen trom h s so .t and was Iteming forward, his countenance tiliMvlles, the laive drons stand ing out upon his brow. I'hihs crept back to my young heart, and I wished I was at home, l'ne old man looked up. and 1 never since el. eld su 'h mortal ncunv pictured upon a human Inoe us there was on his. "It was morn. ng when I awoke, and th" Morni hail ceased, but the cold was ii tenso. 1 flrt secured a drink of water, and looked in tht n.vu-tomod place fur Mary. As J missed her for tne lirst time, a shadowy sens;! of sotn h irril.li nk'litinare bewail to lawn upan mv wandering mill I. I though' 1 bat a learlul dream, hut 1 involuntarily oiw ied ihn otitsi l. dour with sliu idering 'read. As tho door op aied the snow burst in fo.lowe I by ti e fail of s uii.c him; across the threshold, scat'ei-iii? the snow, and strik ing the lloor with a saaip, hari sound. My i oo.l shot throng i my veins, and 1 rubtted my eyes to k ep out tie sight, ll was nn, viol, horrible! It was Mary an 1 her babe, iroen to i e. The ever true mother had owed herself over th . old d to shield ft her own person stark an I bare to the storm, -sue had placed her hair over the face of the child, and tbe sit et had frozen it to the whiti' i heek. The frost was white UKin its half opcncvl eyes, and upon its tin v lingers. I Know not what became! of my bravo hoy.' Aeain the old man hqweii and wept, and all that were in the honso went with him. In tones of love and heart broken pathos, the old man cone u led: "1 was arrested, an 1 for months raved in delirium. 1 awoke, was sentenced to prison for ton years; tint no torture could have been like those I endured in my own bosom. Oh, Gi d.no! 1 am not a lana'ic! I wish to in jure no one. Hut while I live, let me strive lo warn others not to enter the path which has been ao dark a on to nio." The old man sat down, but a spell as deep and slronf as sunn wi ai d s breath rested niton the audience, iloii'ls could have been heard iu their isatin, and tears to fall. The uld man then nske 1 thu pciople to s gn th- p.e lge. My f ether leaf s I and suntch'-d at it eagerly. 1 had followed him, and as he hesi tated a moment, witli ien in the ink, a tear fb:l from the old man's eye on ihepijier. My lather wrot-i'Mortiuier Hudson. ' The old man looked, wiped i'.Js teartul 0-es. nr. 1 looked again, his countenance, cltji Uitoly (lushed witha death-li e paleness. "It is no, it cannot be; how strange," muttered the old in in. "Pardon me, sir, but ihnt was the name of my brave bay." My father tremhled, and held up the left arm, from whicti the left hand had beeu fevered. They both looked lor a moment ia each other's eyes, an I reeled and gaspeib "Mv ovvn .njuied son!" "My fath !!" They fell upon each other's nock and wept, and it seemed that their souls would glow nnd mingle into one. Thero wns weeping in that church, and sad f aces urouu I m.. 'It ma thank God for this gre v blessing which has gladdened my guilt burdened soul:' exclaimc'l t lie old man; and kue'ling clown, he poured out li st heart in one of the most melting prayers 1 ever heard. .Uusicuf .11. Oil. ' Temperance New ami Notes. Liquor bills lira otten paid at the luuatic asylum. In Russia, last year, Sfl.O'K) drnin shops were done away with by law. Tho United Kingdom H ind of Hope Union is ra.slng a fund of ten Iho isatid pounds for promot.ug temp .ranoe teaching in day schools. The l'reshyterian Syno I of Tennessee has passed a resolution favoring the suppression oi;tho manu aeture an I s ne of intoxicating liquors by prohibitory laws. In the National Temperance Hospital neither nwiicatcd pills nor tinctures with alcoholic basis areus'd. ltumedies are pre pared in aqueous extracts or saccharatvd powders. A Temperance Temple has been built in Snti lu'eo l.'onnty, t'abfornia, at an expense n( iti,l. Saloon's Willi hi three miles of the building have been prohibited by the city council. It is adeged in the Congo country. Central Africa, ttiere nro seveniy thousand gallons ot rum to every missionary, nn t one hundred drunkards to every convert to Christ. Under the iullueuceot intoxicuiing 1 quors sent iroui Mas-ivcuusotti two hundred natives were killed by their fellows in a sitigle day. Di. Joseph Parker, ilia sermon denouncing thu IA hitechapel inurd rs, c-u is attention to that other and more terrible, slow murder of womea go ng on all over ttie wc rid. As to coudeiiinai lh criminal he iiertiueutly asks if we hud not belter consider how far we are re ponsit.le lor his c: eaiion ov i mining pi oiils o low as to drive young men to gambling and by surrounding them w.th legal ed drinking places, yet lining them for drinking. According to a Berlin correspond ent, news has been received from Egypt to tho effect that the tomb of Alexander the Great, which Dr. Schlie mann Bought in vain labt winter, has now been discovered in Alexandria. The collin ia of marble, and is covered with beautiful decorations. Its breadth is about three and a half feet and its height three feet. The skull of a man was found in it. The coffin, was found in a brick vault, about twenty feet high, covered by about eight feet of earth. The keeper of the museum at Boulak is going shortly to make a thorough examination of the tomb. E.vos Stcroib, 85, of Bmithfield, Pa., is the author of thirty-six votes foi Ilarrii.ou. His three sons, two sons-in law, twenty-four grandsons, and foui gi'andsona-in-law all voted the .Repub lican ticket. One grandson-in-law and one great-grandsou-in-law voted foi Cleveland. Sib Percv Shelley has the heart oi his father, the poet which he keeps as a precious relic. The story is that when Shelley's body was cremated his heart w.d suutchel from the flumes and preserved. Farting the Hair. "On the right, if you please," tald a representative of the Call to a tonsorial artist, who, brush and comb in hand, was about to part hit hair on the left tide of the head. 'AH right, sir," remarked the knight of tho brush and comb; "was going to part It on the other side from force of habit." "How many people part the hair on the right sldel" "Miould say less than one In twenty." "And why do so many men part it on tho loft side?'' 'Because," replied the artist, brushing back a stray lock, "they've been brought up to it from infancy. A mother facing her boy always holds the comb in her right hand, and It being easiest to comb the hair from left to right, she parts it on the left. Tho boy w hen ho grows up and is able to comb his own hair finds the part on that side, and follows tho line marked out by his mother. That's why tho maiority of men part on tho left." San Francitro Call. We Are Japan's llcst Customers. . Governor Hubbard, the l iiitod Stntoi Minister at Tokio, tells me that wo buy more from Jnpnn than any other foreign nation. "Last year," said he, our im ports from this country amounted to2l, OOO.OiM Japanese dollars, or about 00(1,0(10 American dollars. We bought 11,000,000 worth of her raw silk and nearly 7,000,000 worth of her teas. The fair cheeks of our ladiei were cooled last year with $07,000 worth of .lananeso fans, and our noses were wiped with x 0,000 worth of Japanese silk handker clvcfs. AVe buy nearly :;00,ooi) worth of porcelain eveiy year, and our imports of bamboo ware amount to flOJ.OOO of .lnpancse money. Wo buy more than twice as much of Japan as any other country, and our im potts are increasing every year. In 1887 we bought a million and a half more goods than in 1 SStt, aud the United Mates will probably routinuo to bo Japan's best customer." AVce York A Professional IMnner Tnator. Taris keeps ahead in tho invention of employments. Tho pitch of material civilization to which they havo attained has now blossomed in a "dinner taster." Thero is only ono of him. He drives rapidly from one house to another tast ing the dinuor and suggesting improve ments and corrections, adding a touch of oil here, advising the passing of th s carving knifo through garlic, correcting flatness by n.sqtie'c of lemon, etc. Hu ' is a chef of the first order, aud having made a great deal of money contemplalcd retiring, but his artistic nature revolted, so ho explains to a newspaper man over there, against total divorce from tho congenial and sympathetic occupation of a lifetime; and he invented for him self the occupation of dinner ti-ter,iiiany people being d lighted to have the bene fit of the crit ic s n of such a niadcr who could not a It ord to employ such a one altogetbor. A'eie York UrapU: Cure or rnenmonln. llESS liOAD, NtAilVIH Co., N. V., I March Si, lssu. f About a year ago I was taken with a severe pain In both lungs. I w-cu first attacked wltha violentchill, then a dreadful pain and then a cough accompanied by considerable fever. It lcsiked very muchliko a bad nttaek of pneumo nia. A friend of mine procured live Allcock's 1'I.AHHLits. One he put under each arm, on-,! under each shoulder blade, and ono on my chest close around my throat. In a fow hours the cough ceased, tho pain gradually abated and 1 broke out In a profit nersplratlon. 1 fell into a yru'oviK' ieep, and the next day was almost well, 1 wore the Plasters elghtdnys afterwards, and have never bad any trouble, ince, Vii,i.iamAjSawvkii. Nfvaoa contains 1IKI,74C) square miles; was settled InlHiiOat Washoe, and was admitted into tho Union Octotier ;il. Isat. To-Muht and To-.Moi row Klght, And each day and night duriuic the week you ran get at all druggists' Keinp'tf Kalsamforthe Throat and l.unirs, acknowledged to be the' most successful remedy ever sold for the cure of Coughs, I'roup, Itronchitls, Whooping CoitKh, Asthma, and Consumption. (let a bot tle (o-d(i and keep it alw ays in the bouse, so you ran check your cold at once, l'rlce Hue. and $1. Sample tiottles free. Estimates of the number nf dogs In the Uni ted states tlx it at Jo.um.don. uinl their cost of keeping at $Jtl0,0ci,0 U per annum. MhoekliiK Accident. Po read the headlines of many a newspaper column, and we -eruse with palpitating inter est the details of the catccstrophy. and are deeply impressed by the Mtcrirtcu of human lives Involved. Yet thousantlsof men and wo men are falling victims every year t'i that ter rible disease, csiiisiunp ion (scrofula of the bines), and they and their friends ure sati ilied to believe the malady incurable. Now, thero could lie no uri-utcr mistake. No earthly power, of course, can re tore a lung that is en tirely wasted, bat Dr. 1'ierce's tf.ilden Medical Il'seovery will rapidly and surely arrest theravagesof consumption, if taken in lime. l)o not, therefore, despair, until yuu havestrted this wonderful remedy. Cai.ifohnia's production of dried fruit lias increased from S.OTU.cxiU poun is iu 16o3 Ui&, toa.tXIU puunds in IS -7. (ri eel Qiineka, "Yes, It pays," said a hiit, fat physician, w'th a name which is known InrouKhoiit. the- medi cal world. "1 have a pructice worth $0.UIJ a year." "Wonien'r" "Yes, jou've guessed ll first time. They pay $10 every time they come into my office. When une gets on my list I tell you she stays!'! and lir. H laughed l-ng and loud. This is quackery gilt-cdgcd, gen teel quackery to keep sufferiiiK women pay ing tribute year in and year out, and doing them no goocf. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Preset ii tioii cures the peculiar weaknessc and dis eases ot women, ll does not lie lo them uor rob them. Alabama was settled in 1711 at Mobile; ad mitted inln the I'uion Iieceuiber 14, lblU, and contains tA)J4 square miles. A perfect specific Dr. Cage's Catarrh Rem edy. It was a maxim of Marshal Saxe that "every soldier killed cot U the enemy his weight in lead." A Itemnrkable I'aprr. TnF Yoi'TH's Comi'a ion is u. welcome visitor weekly n more tlian .UCI.IKK) families, and litis w-on a place in home lite obtained by nu other publication. It is ulwavs bal'e, pure, instruc tive and entet talnink. The v oitdor is how any family can do without it. Any lie Bubscrilier seutlin' (1.75 now, can have Tiik C'omi'Amon free t very week to January 1, lssll, and for a full Searfromtha date, hum le conic free. Ad reaa Thk Ych-th's 'omi'amos. boston, Maa ( aiarrb Cured. . A clergyman, after years of suffering from that loathsome disease. Catarrh, and vainly trying every knowureinedy, at last found a Lrescription which completely cured aud saved im froindcath. Any biifterer from thlsdread ful disease Bending a self-addressed stamped envelope to 1'rof . J. A. Law reuce. 68 Varen St.. N. V.. will receive the recijti free ot Charge. A Bad ral Cure for Epllvptio Flia. To the JditorPleaRO iiijnrm your leaders lli at 1 liBve positive remedy for tho above named difeeace which 1 warrant to euro the worst caaes. K ttrona ib my luith iu its vir tuea tli at 1 will send iittsa sample bottle and valuable treaiibe to uny fcufTejer who will uive Xii bis P O. and Exmet addiee, Hefrp'v, II. G. ROOT, X. C , ltsi Jeri fet.. New Vork. If afflicted with tore eye use Dr. Isa c Thorn o-aon'fcEye-water. Druggists sell atoo. per bottle who havo used PWi Cure for (Vnibinqpitoo pm U 1 i ol1' ALL, fc TRAD trf V S MAAKI REMedyAIN - IT CONQUERS PAIN. it cunioa Rhdimatlim, Neuralgia, Btckiehe, Hndichs, Toofhicha, Sprain i. Bruiiei, to, at t ratltiu ind DitUrt. MILLION!) Of IlnttlrlBold And In Every On A Cl'ItB TtiaChii. A.VoqelirC. luuam, mcl Diamond Vera-Cura FOR DYSPEPSIA. AKD ALL HTOM AC1H ritUOIILM OCH Air tndtji.itlott, lovr-nionat-l, H.artbara, hftQMft, 014. dinriB. 0naittifttltn, FnllnMi mhir Mltac. Fool Rlalng la lh Moelfe tn4 dUfttrftbui tort ft!M Hf Inf. HtrraMBVM ind Low-Sptr!U, At fvicjcjult nnd ien'ert or tent by mail en i CYtf.C nf -.'j rtj. (5 born ! .Ol) in um;. bantfll nit on receipt i2-irat stamp. THE CHARLES . V0GELER CO.. Hlmor. Ml N IN U-30 M Scott's Emulsion Has Done! Over 26 Pounds Cain In Ten Weeka Experience of a Prominent Citizen, Tn OiT.rroanu Wofir.n oa TBt ) ftrrritrwiToa or Vicr.. 1 8am l-'BANctmn, July 1th, 1RM. ) I took a severe cold upon my ehest and lungs and did not give It proper attention ; It developed Into bronchitis, and In tho fall of the same year I was threatened wltr eonsumptlon. Physicians or dered me to a more eongenl al climate, and I came to Sar Francisco. Soon after mj' arrival I commenced taking Scott's Emulsion of Cod Llvei Oil with Hypophosphltes reg ularly three times a day. Ir ten weeks my avolrdupok went from 155 to 180 poundr. and over; the cough mean time ceased, c. R. Bennett. . SOLD BY ALL DRUCOI8T8! Mrwlnpr-Mitrhln' 1 rrnrt im all fieri, b r-at luff cmr wrm,nt and em-ill hr ih itvpi UM. will d f rpf lo ont iritwit i nt D lor;ity,ih tty beat Mwiit-iurhin ftiati tm h world, with ill ih atta. hrR'nta XV tail' ! (Mid f fr m rtnt!rl iln of ur fMily and vaiuaM art aamitM. In rviiira wt tak thai on new nai w Hna. ia inoao wbo nay ral. at your hum, and aftfr 4 month" all ahull bwt'iiit your own I nr. IhH fraud ina htna i aitrr ih KlngiT pairnia, h hava run out l-Hnr natrnn hi out ll aokl lotfu:i, with iha n ana I ' '' hniftili. and now arlla lot J ItffrV Ji-rtaU 'Wr b.rnr-t.imlua. iiSf 1 1 r,ui hin n ,h ori' ah I IrLiaal 1 1 9 ata'rr No ra vital raqutrrd I'laia, brief inttmcti.Tit ifivm I tn-va who wnif la i our ran ar-. rura fr-ce- flt-'M mnf 'fid, and taa ihowti toa-rltirr in Amrrt--a. 1 If. AIUBU, Mwllttt hwift HrwolAr rnrtri ma of m11rnant Flood ToIaoq ffr 1 hail U n tr-atM In vain with oU n-cmll1 rrnmliM of M-rcurv and Pith. H. K. H not only ru)l in Mloo4 v-lon, lull ivHtvM th Hhfiima tlaut WUlch wan raiinM hy ih ix tn nou mineral. UKO. ltOV&LL, M2S abniw, N. V Nln yrara apro Hrnfnla at'fkvt tvrn of mv rhH rtr-n, ami thT wrtv la-Hv arti-otM with th wht. U rettl tli- trratnii'nt of niy iiitni y ihy trla i I am Mriialid t um Swift Hifc'tHu ly rw:nan ancount of irM In niT 4-oiintr t'irr. Th iinpn rn- a' wan apiarnt fr-im th- tint few - ocr. and in vhort tltno my liUilrcn wrn- rtintt, an.t ar t.t oumlaiid will. Ji'lfN VTU.l.lAMS. I.ck UKtou, a. Kwin'a Rpfnno in rnltr-lr fwotaMn roin- rty and m the only tnMiriti" w lilrh tn rniutirntly cuiu K ii'fula. lilool Humor, t anc-r and t'outaviott Jtlood I'oiaon. Krnd for ilook on l'lood aud hkiu lMaas. mat d frisv 1 H K HV 1 t-T Ml'KflFfC CO., Drawer a, A t Ian t a. Oa MIIVOI! will KA V K MOXKV MrmKCOVl ud will 11 It K r a rium rnriu tinu nnlu D.I h. 1-1 ...L .n.lrll CjS ' r ' i:l A llKOK., 56 Warrrii St.. N. V. 0 H L L 0 n 1 l I iHHrS J-wiuau-. ,. Waar$3 P IU -nil poatali aoawrrr l Umn ; md Cantannial Manufactu i ln-i nt it? u. luring Co., Cincinnati. Ohio, SXUt K! RACCOON! MINX ! and all oil er I'ur Iw ul-Ih ion ueli at liik lutt irirra al-n Hitliti-rtt' and Tiui liia' OuiUu; rvliablu bend lor riic'ilar at onco V..i 111) I ;ilTON. V'S Fond Hi.. Nw Yorli, Blair's Pills Oval llox, .t Ii l onnd I I I'iH-. CALirORNIA ORANOE. RAIBIIf aa rttJIT LAND, ymo Mort-a in any M.t itkcih. Junt ih pluct lorn 'olonv. sp-i-inl tnrtiireniiMit to ai'tlii'ia. 1-.hhv It rniB. filGHOK, 1LRRY 4 BCLOVtE, Saa Dttco. Cat H rue ti iv I)(Kk-V-l4nK.r'Ulni'e Forma. wma t MiMiMUr-lPp. Ailrfrni lii'. Nliorl-hMiid. rlc thoniUMhl v tmitht 1 V MAllu Lin-ill in f r. e. In liiu'a 1 ullrm , 457MaiuJt., liuttulo, N. Y. 0 pijni hA3 t i;r,r i-rlV fllhM ill tt lo lava. KMii.laiiuiu or lloin 'fiiio-ni. ir.a. tiv: Nofurt. No fmy. Thi -i h ii r K it f n p., i.h I'ntriit In S5 I 9M a dnr. Smiiiii worth fi.sn FHJit. I.iitfa not uiicft-r the U'Ua' trrt, rtl liivwMtfirSiiii i H iu li ldei t o., HoUi-y. H. rfllIKAP South Honda llomea. No froat or fever Vftfaiaioi miu.M ciowhy. wr mukiiu tt..Ti tlBUC t 'fwini toimy mviT.il in thin totality. rAnKia it LiniK W uiuu .;i;t liroadwny. N V. PEERLESS DYES CHEAPEST AND BEST GERMAN DICTIONARY OF 624 PACES FOR CHLY ONE DOLLAR. A FIRST CLASS DICTIONARY ATVEKY Mlll.1, 1'ltlCK. It rIvpr KnKll h W'Tla with Ili Herman Fqulvi Ii nu U''d l'l'iiiunclutlon and fii-rnmn Wor 1 wKit tiifcliah iJL-tluiiibUia, btut puatpm ou rectut i of fil HEAD WHAT TH IH l A WAV. f-Ai FK aUbK., Way M. m Pmk Pub. Ifotift. Ifll I,oiKtiii Si.: The tifrinau Uit tl"iiury ia ri'eivfd and ! am much IU'HU w.th 1L 1 tllil not exi.fct to llud au'Ji- U'iur I l lilt I m ao rhi iiti a Lmh-K. J'ltrUM) anal u py to auiti liiclohed hud $1 fur aauio. M. )i. lixnnnHm BOOK PUB. CO., 134 Leonard Street, New York City. Oon- oic oney in MONEY IS CHICKENS if you KNOW HOW To keep them, but it ia wrong tulftt the pour ttiinpa butler ajid of tlto a riuua MaiudifB wliic h altlu t ttu iu ubeii iu a uiHturiiy ot I'hmh a Cure con.d have beu t'ttet ud bad tUu ow ntr pOrVfeeelH:d ilttU kllUW.- edi-e, such as cun Lu pro turtd Irom tho ONE HUNDRED PAGE BOOK We otter. citilracit'U' Uwi liucricil. jii-i.iutK. ru( mm. R. f . . Baft lf"te V f ".olllf-.tO' illilfi CHEAPEST:-FAMILY -:-ATLAS KNOWN. ONIjY BO OU3MTS. 191 Pages, 91 Full-Pnn Waps. rnlofMl Mata rnrh HtaV and l-frilor- In tli 1' til ted hi at. n Afxo IMiitm of triy t ounfry In thn Wirld. 'Ih-Mtir pth iHa i),f fqum'.- milifiiif ra h Ktad': llnm of prf ;n!lt: lH tiiilat on: i-:r rltlea: att-rairf trniN inhiii'; -alnr. f fhv.al ai!(! 1heiriheiiai ioatni-tirn .n t .- Rtr t-: nuinher of r.trina, Willi Ilie;r iron f i tt una!!'! in v:iiue liu rroi ; dilWre't inaniifHi'tiirt-a ft in! tnimler of imlove-., etc.. etr. AIo'h" niM or Ii -' .1 r Tl I'oinitry; liiriiinf (nvrniin in : i'Miinf ten; rrin- 11 a I'tn.u 't (fill Mioir tin iicv vnlii ' iiniimt if timfr: V.-Iitlin- m H of utiij'; ftith' of rntll-o d and 1 !fur ih; innn- 1 r ff h"ti-, t at t u- flitn p, uod a Tut ainoimt uf iu format on vnlimiilr tit nil. EVERY FAMILY SHOULD HAVE ONE. All ntvpiwt-r rrnil'-ra rro fotia(aiil ly n -dimran AIIhh ft f n ft lvn in rd. r to mii ly rinl-r. Ptmiit the ariW' r th .van I viinim-. It l- iirpi iNin Jmw noifh nfn'tiltM n lhi;a tor d aay in th iniiiir', and liow "01 -ft otie 1 ifi-nu'- fj iiitt.Br with tin-chief )Ninl roiifi 1 iiititf all Uh Nattona of Ua Wo'il. I'noipnld f I- rri I. - n 'iivid-. v i-,i 1 ,., r,( ftt..N. Y. rttr. I FDR COKSUiviPTIOMl risn'n Cure U our best st'llinu nictll- rlno. I linvc a pri-nouul knowU-dne of It bent'liclul r (TVcts. ami rocouimenU it. 8. Labht j Druggist, Allegheny, la. MEN AND BOYS ! W-nt to tram all nhout a At HoraP How Id Pltlt Oi ta A "V int TV T7V tlona and an Otiord nKatn Frmid T lrtr-t DlsraMi aa I 1 fleet a CurV when aau pofa til-? T-ll tho Ann I ii.fi et'th T Uhnl (oalllti-DiT.rcnt I'rta uf th uitnal- IlowtoSJn a liorao iopt?riy f Altthl and othrr Va u Information rati I o'Hntnd r rfadh.ft our HM.'A(iK I I.MTK TKl I iHK HOOK, whl.'u wti witl funvarvl, puj( rrcvlptof ouly ti.J rcuta In ainmi- EOOK PUB. HOUSE. 134 Leonard St.. New York City TLECANT LAO! iFE FREE! Tina cut re present cnr, jaditra' KBti and UIotu Varranttd fn- tit tteal. tav Kit ton sr. coin hi 11 yi 'L-iiaiit turtoi hand It taction Guar rttti one rear a auharriptt -ith Am- r.cnn Ktirm lluiua ntetd or 81. K poainnld. iivon ravtoiiiom.'r on (No. I.) Mndinir ua two aut. jcripuuasto tli Aaivr- (llfi 0 ES' Kjl 1 ml 1 ir A AT a. 1 N. if -v x v iran Kitrtii ll.mio hi jv i-ina ':n:h. without, prom mm, 1 A.idisita all ordnn to tvt lt AI. lloMUCO i.iiulu.'d ' WHY WEAR EYE-GLASSES t PR. TE1ZIES ,eK CUKES rvpKi.slorir'i'i WEAK RESTORES '''.-fffVS DISEASES) - - .i-ft -i 1' SIOHT CSr-' - EYES. At all Druggists. . teJ for Clrul.rt. EYE RESTORER CO.. - ALBANY. N. Y. WLCureCATORIl whrre all othrv r-nic-He fll. method ir ttlM'.-i and en liiimns iniHiu-attoti uf the wholt rw vif- t-.i-y kvkIimii fironr- aiinif 1 in .' vl fitvoruhU' 1 KuiiL-i" W iihli'alu So tniik or ihMi!iwhl inti i'. 11.1,1 I ICATKli hiKtK rivinjr full parut ulAivJ i-f uponppU-atnii. COMMON SUSE CmSRt. tURS AS SUito Ml., C hli-MO. Mt. JORTKERfl FAGSFiC. i LOW PiilCE RAILROAD LANDS & FREE Covernment lands- MII.I.IUNS ui AC III W"l i ili 111 Mliuiil. NwtB Imk.-ti,. M.-mmin. l.luhii. i-1iiiii.'ii i ,"r,''",i rri n CftH i'iiiiliiiiiciiiiiliM"l'l' -ninuvtiK 5tnU rUrf l.i -l Ami. iiUiirol. t.iiiritiK mi.l I"" i r I. .11. 1, ni.u 1-1.11 tiis.-itl.-rii Iri-r. Artiln-M CHAS,B.,UlaBOBM, Mfgiy JOJNES P AYS the FR EICHT it Ton Von frB''",i. 1... linn, m.ri ..-.- lw.ilf.niiit H.-.m ll bit sou. t-prv at it- sri. Kor fr pr.a UO erti.'a tht- i'lifr and a.1 trraa mates OF ViNOHAMTINi : niN:MAnN. ti. W GOMSUulPTiCfl I imv,.r poK li-a tvinv for tl.oaborf d (.; Iy it, una thiuitiuiia of rauMNi of m.'or4 koidandut ton-r nlutin tiaw btien cun-d. Ho Mrornj ! mv fnHh in tt a.niav-y u- 1 will Hiid two bott - lit-a. lirctliar w:lli a valunnla tr-atiaroii Una lia-t tu anj tt.irlfi.-r. liivr KvpraHa1 -riaat i-arii1MJTh'iv"'-,l-'M''-aj'i ASTHMA riUJiEP It.f ruiun Aalbnmt ur-ii ru.;u.r:veint tufiiiu :r vii'J iliUi Woil '. U laurr. mifc ahte altP ; eflfMita part't hf rw a 1 ot hern lol A (3 S I.M,oiIriifri'',or livjnsd. Himi'h-1- If Ir.t. WOHHN BLESS IT. itltNA DDAl rM Art t-mutm aud mi. IW mail. Har- lyrw if ii iiiaU tH-mp aiutaat ud for troaiiaa j, 'is. . lUl.l', Find-St,. Jmrr City. N. J. -a Ap mm rroof that 6IOO a month l f MZ i J I J? nm.lo lln.rf our Nt-w hoc a '." Huv tr I uluiMe, aiao Vlollivr, lluiuraml llttrTi. !.' wwwl.t. i:.iiid t T. I- riiylrr.lMJ. 75. ltMitHI lirtMiltitta of file Hitt. Introduction Lr J- lt. 'ncut, J t ii !u WUMt '. K.U.XKbAr,lubluUi:r,7TaUroadwaj,ti.f AXLE GREASE Nl VI IC i I -H!. 'v r rriyj-a or aim, r.vcry 1 1 a (iuai iiu-.-d. hini'l" ordain Holn-itt-'-l. Wr.tr- for It it tf. W rK A x It l ith at niiidt'. r-oldt-r all.lold- ia, )u aifi tlianinniiui'iijirmw, i'l.A It K. V V Jr. C 0.tMiis..a!Kiv.-rht.,l liu-un.'. IIU Fvery DETECTIVES Wanud In avarv Couutr. Shrewd an U act ua4or tnauuciloM loouiH-o'-if""!'-"' Kjtariri..-tf net ue. a.iary . firlwiulwi ff. CCLBt Llva al ban an wake nan money wora.ia fur a Ibaa I at aiiTihtnaalaa In lha world i:iih r ars ( uaily ouifll laruia rtkK. Att'Jraaa, 1 m a iu, AguH, Uauia. Chickens. a mao w ho dpToted 2ft yeaa 6s 'I WISE ol hie lite ioCOMriTl'G Ji Pdl'LTJty .kiD AS A blbll-S. not ua a pas time. Aa ili liviiiL' uf b ui und fumliy tUjiidid oi: it, hu uttss Iho aubiuci tiiili auciii.on ua ouly a Dtfd ol ou-lU will com-, I maud, and tht) n-Milt uua a , prmid ut-ccaa. aitri1 hu had kicnt ntui-h money mid lo t buiidit-de ot Vulllabit) cllH af' vif in expcritut-uniigr. hat h' lf nu U iii jiil tluM) cuia i cmhixl t.di,i tin Lhok, v hu h we MV.ipaid lor J i a v- a uiuor. roeu r Idreaa dre. ton, i v